MSGR. MEDEIRO
AMED IS -UP
Pope Paul Appoints Diocesan Chancellor
To Diocese of Brownsville,· Texas
The ANCHOR IF\CIJU Riveli'o Mass., 'Thursday, Aprii 21, 1966 ,Yol. 10, No. 16 ©
$4.00 per Yeor - PRICE Uk·,
1966 -V:he Anchor
Special Gifts Phase
Of CCA in, Action
A dedicated corps of Special Gift Committeemen for 25th Catholic Charities Appeal are in the midst of \'Meir work in advance of the General Phase of the Appeal )W'hich opens on Sunday, May 1, as the house' to house ~mpaign will be conducted Protestant imd Jewish faiths as fum all parishes of the Diocese. well as from Catholics. -During the Special Gifts Outstanding monuments to 'the generosity of Appeal donors in. [Ilmase, business and· profes ~e
I
lJional interests are given the itpportunity' of contributing to flbe 30 Appeal agencies which 'benefit in whole' or in part lrI'om the funds collected every 1r'l'ar from every portion of the
~ese and from those of the
the past are the fi ve home for the aged and inf.i,rm already op erating in the Diocese lind estab lishing the Diocese as tile leader in the eastern part of the United States in' caring for, our seilior , Turn to Page Thirteen, "
Most Reverend Humberto S. Medeiros ,
Pope Honors Four Monsignori Protonotaries Apostolic First in History of Diocese
Bishop Medeiros was born in , Arrifes, Sao Miguel, Azores, on October 6, 1915. His parents were Antonio' Sousa Medeiros and Maria de Jesus Sousa -Massa Flor. His father passed away on February 9, 1950; his mother on September 26, 1963. He attended Candido Afonso MSGR. JAS. DOLAN MSGR. GALLAGHER MSGR. CONSIDINE MSGR.BEJRUBE elementary school- in his native TauntoD New Bedford FaIR River New Bedford town. After graduation, he worked in a wholesale store and in the law office of attorney Jose Pope Paul VI today hon in the 62-year history .of the', Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor Oliveira San-Bento in Ponta title has been of St. Mary's Church, Taunton, diocese that -.ed four diocesan priests by bestowed Delga~a, Sao Miguel. upon IlJl¥ of the priests and, a diocesan consultor. l)ppOinting them as proto of the diocese. The honored four In April 1931, before he ,was Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, Mtaries. It is the first time iKe: Tum to Page Twenti-twe l i ~ears of age, ~ ~other 0
the
'
His Holiness Pope Paul VI haS announced through Most, Rev. Egidio Vagnozzi, D.D., Apostolic Delegate to the United States, the appointment of Rt. Rev. Humberto S.Medeiros, S.T.D., .chancellor of the Diocese of Fall River and pastor of St. Michael's Parish, Fall River, as Bishop of the Diocese of Brownsville, Texas. ' . Bishop-Elect Medeiros succeeds the' late Most Rev. Adolph Marx, first Bishop of Brownsville, who died on Nov. 1, 1965 in Cologne, Germany, as he visited his mother while' . in Europe for Vatican Council II. The Diocese of Brownsville was established on July 21. 1965, from the Diocese of Corpus Christi. Its general. popu lation is 371,348 and its Catholics numoer 234,700. It is 4,226 miles in area and comprises the fouJ" counties of Starr, Hidalgo, WiHacy and Cameron. The See city of Brownsville is situated in Southeast Texas, at the mouth. of the Rio Grande River where the river flows into the Gulf of Mexico. ' 'brought him, his brothers Lionel and Manuel and his sister Na talia, to Fall Riyer, where his father awaited them: He attend ed the Border City and Danforth Street schools in Fall River and the Swain School of Design in New Bedford, prior to seeking employment al! a sweeper in the Sagamore Mills in the .Fall of 1932. On January 8, 1935; he entered B, M. C. Durfee High School in Fall River, from which he graduated in june 1937. in the Fall of the same year, . B ish 0 p James E. ,Cessiq Turn to Page Twelve· ~
.2
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan_River-Thurs.April 21, "'66
Vermont Catholic Hails' .Educator , Improved Ties
OFFICIAL
CHICAGO (NC)-A Cath olic schools superintendent says a Vermont C~holic educational community is
Diocese of Fa I' River
enjoying a vastly improved re lationship with public schoClli authorities.
Appointments Rev. Antonio Pedro Pinto, to Immaculate Conception ~hurch, New 'Bedford, 'as assistant. Appointment
effe~t~ve
"In most cases we have foundl noo only that our suspicions are un-Christian, but that they are unfounded,'1 Msgr. Jol:m A. Lynch of Burlington has told ·the 63rd annual National Catlr olie Education Association coQoo ·.ventiorl' here. :.
Tuesday, April 19, 1966.
Rev. Peter N; Graziano, assistant at Holy Name Church, Fall River, as moderator Of spiritual development of. the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women. . , Appointment
eJl:fectiv~~ayi
.Jibes N'lIDS 'His remarks were made against . ,the background of increased ~r contacts . betwe.en Catholic . arull publie school authorities since the passage of the Elementary and 'Secondary Educational Ad of 1965. The act enables paro- ehial and public school young. *rs to benefit equally from projects funded by the federal! government and administerecll by local public. school offid~bl.
April 19, 1966.
~~.~~.-.P~ Bishop of Fan River
<::::..-/ .
Historic. ClmlJirch. 'on New' Y@uk Begins Centenll1lial Observance .\
NEW YORK (NC)-A Solemn ·Mass of Thanksgiving offered by Auxiliary Bishop Joseph M. Pernicone Sunday opened centen·Rial observanCes here for the Church of St. Anthony of Padua.' ,·ftr$t· Italian' chUrch iii this .city.. ·and second oldest Italian chun:b: in the nation.
Mass Ordo
SYMBOLS OF CAUSE: Farm workers who trekked 300 miles in 25 days from Delano, Calif.,' to the' state capital" building in Sacramento, at -a cIimaxralIy holds symbols of tJ!leir cause--an· American. flag, a: flower~decked cross,' I d M· · 0 ur L a dy 0 f Guad .a'. b aDJier 0 f a upe. an a exwan fl ago .NGI)hoto. "
Th1e church, at Sullivan and . West Houston Streets, for ye8I'B
has been popular with thousands of travelers because of its loe.
. Msgr. Lynch said thatCatho lic religious communities are getting 'along better with :eadl other as well as with non.Catb oiles. He cited the Sister Forma tion Movement and other insii~ tu~s for Sisters as evidence 'of • ~ spirit Of intercommu- >:D.ity cooperation among religioUII . :,' ~ «Immunities.' . ' . ,
t10n near Pennsylvania Station. .' The original church, dedicated 'con April 10, 19~, waS 'in~ a va eant Methodist. church on Sum V2D Street. "''-However, .'there 'are still s~ First pastor of the church i Sisters who-are' insulted if. the;, FatlK!r Leo PaCillo,O.F.M., who :MO,rttreal' Ca~dlnal Paul Leger IEmp'hlasizes are asked to staff a new scbOGI had been directed to open Ii !Dis jointly' with another religio. sion here for Italian immigrants.. '.. : Need . of' Chu.r~h-Directe.cIJ . Trainil1lg .~unity., he said. Father Pacillo and ~ his feBow .
Gotham Siiuatloq FranciscarrFriars of the Prov-, '. MONTREAL. (NC}-It is in responsibilities of p II r e n't s',
ince of the Immaculate' COIicep- .. valid ·to Pose a contradiction be- teachers,. Chureh authorities and Earlier, 1he SUperintendent ClII ticm remained the oDly priests . tw~iithe .spirit of the Vatican students in education in the schools of the Brooklyn Diocese working with the Italian popu- . COUn~il and the institutional Faith which he said is the'CGn ;alse 'Prai!led ..the reri:larkable re lationof.New York UIltill883. 'beoos of Catboli~ education, says eem of the entire Christian lationship of cooperation" . be - lOuring the ye8I'B the work of Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of community.· ··tween the Catholic and publie tile parish eXpanded. A sc:lic!ol, .Montreal. . . .' "What is needed for s,ociallife Eehools of New York City; UJD.der supervision of the Fr3n-The archbishop, Speaking at in general .is needed also' for '. : ~ has b~n o! great ciscan Sisters of Allegany, N. Y., . the annual meeting of the Fed- the Church which adw-essesit .. fit'to the Catholic Sc:hool sY~(eJli was opened in 1874. '. eration of Quebec' SChool Princi- self to 'the same kind of men and .of Brooklyn," Msgr. Eugene, ~ The building. of the p~ent pals: IlSserted:' whiCh must pursue its nlission in Manoy smd.'· He'. did not lad church and :anonastery. was 1JD- . -' ''Neither the Council, nor e.ven the society," he declared. ~ .New York City Board' 01 dertaken in 1886, and the church the IOlpe of the' Council, orient 'Edu~tion, however, He ealled was dedicated on Jime 10, 1888. us toward abandonment of ell ~ a "timorous" board "tbat Nativity Scene Christian institut.ions. mU:TAl CITATION seems to thoroughly disapproWJ The main church was comIt would Qe "an ill-founded in 'Dlocesan lnllunal title spirit of the Element~ Diocese Ilf Fall River pletely restored in 1955 when the terpretation," he .emphasized, to lmC1 SeCondary Education Ad,.tIJ Fall River, Mass. present Shrine_ of St. Anthony sugges1t there- is a contradiction R~IIi" .of Marria;ie (Powell~eal) Since the actual place Ilf msldence 0'1 was constrocted above the main between the general spirit of the Mrs. Gtend3 Powelt, the respondent altar. At the same' time, the Council and what the Council In the case Shockley Powell·Neal Is unknown . we clle "the above mentioned person to appear crypt church was converted for . decided, about Christian educa personally before the sacred Trlburial of the use as a parish hall so that thetion. Diocese of Fall River on May:!, 1966, at memorial hall constructed at the 19:00 A.M. at 344 Hiilhland Avenw, Van end of World War II .eoUld be Cardinal Leger ··outlined ti1ec RIVer, Massachusetts, to give tllstimOllY to establish: , . used entirely for recreation. . Whether the nUllity of the marriage exists b this case? -
Among church activities whim Anfl'i.•Poverty Force Ordinaries of the places or 0111er pastors
:Dttract city-wide attention are baving knowledge Ilf the reside11ce of tile
above person, Mrs. Glendli SbocUey Powen
an out'side nativity scene which J~ssist ~Burners ~ must see to It that she Is properly advised draws thousands of visitors each WASHINGTON (NC)-An ad ill ftl8llnl to tills edictal citation.
Christmas, and an annual Italian hoe '"task Foree of (Experts" on S! William ~L Galvin
365 NORTH· FRONT STRm ( ,,, ..... r hi .. Be rrettePresiding OfficiaJ "festa" celebrated for a week. anti-po'verty projects and pro ... nallrna .... N~~ . . each June to commemorate the ~EW. BEDFORD ' . (. grams bas been established here . Si.Ven at the seat Ilf the Tribunal of Fall AlV8f , feast of St. Anthony. .aI tI'.l1l tile 15th day of April,. 19'56'by the National Catholic- CoOr ~. . WYman 2·5534 . Preaching ·at· the Masso! dinatin!t Committee on Econom Thanksgiving which' opened the ,ie Oppt:lrtwrlty.· ---~~-----'. {"",,~~1 . eeIi.tennial was Father Antonine The ltask force, composed of DeGuglielmo; O.F.M.,director of studies for the Franciscan Order 15 .prie~:ts and laymen with 12J[ at its Rome heaquarters. Masteli' perienct~ in developing and ad FUNERAL HOME, INC. of ceremonies was Fat Ii e!l , ministeJing. anti-poverty pro FUNERAL HOME grams,will be available to IllS 1L°MaRet lay - G. Lcrralno RaJ Thomas M. Nicastro, O.F.M., su Roger LaFllInco sist dioteeses who request help. perior and' ~r at st.' AD 469 lOCUST mEET ' thony's since 1964. . FUNEUl DIRECTOI~S The National Catholic Com FAlL RIVER, Mass. . munity Service, 1312 Massachu IS BlI'Yingt'on Ct. QS 2-3381 setts A"'e., N.W., in Washington 995·51166 , will pl'Cl,cess requests for assist Wilfred C. James It. New Bedford ance ·mt behalf. of the coordi . APRIL 30 DriscoD SuOivan. b . nating t~mmittee. Rev. David.F. SheecJ,Y, l£i3O, Pastor, st. John EvangeliSt, At. tleboro. O'ROURKE
Ed,uca·tion~
was
0
.'FRIDAY-SS.Soterand Caiu, .. Popes and Martyrs. m Class.' Red. Mass .Proper; GlorY; no . Creed; Preface of Easter. SATURDAY, - Mass of the Blessed Virgin' for Saturday. IV Class. White. Mass Proper, .Glory; 2nd Prayer St. George; DO Creed; Preface of Blessed Virgin. OR St. George, Martyr. Red. Masll Proper; Glory; 2nd / Prayer Blessed Virgin for Saturday; no Cr(!ed; Preface of Easter. ISUNDAY - II Sunday A f t.e r Easter. II Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Prellace of Easter. :MONDAY - St. Mark Evangel ist. II Class. Red. Mass Proper; Glory; '2nd Prayer Rl)gatlons;' Creed; Preface of,Apostles. TUESDAY-..:.sS. Cletus and Mar celiinus, Popes and MartyN; III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Glory; no' Creed; Preface of Easter. WEDNESDAY-St. Peter Cani sius; Confessor and Doctor of the Church.. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Preface of Easter. THURSDAY - St. Paul Of 1he Cross, Confessor. III ClaSs. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no ~reed; Preface of Easter:
DEVOTION April 24-Holy Ghost, Attle boro. St. Joseph, New Bedford. :May 1 - oUr Lady of t!lIlIl IlIlmacu.lai~
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Founder, ImmaCUlate Ccmcep ~on, North Easton. Founder, Sa ered'Heart, ',Fan River. .' . •
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D. D. Sullivan & Sons
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AIUlBERTINE
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May 6-St. Vincent's B~me, :ran River.
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Necrology
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BROOKlA~fN
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Heiel1 Aubertine Brough
William H; Aubertine
Brian J. AUbertine
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Publlsheo. every ThUrsday lit. 410 Rt. Rev. M. P. LeonidaBlLa 'HIghland Avenue~' Fall RIver, Mass.;' 02722 .' " .... WY'~';'2957'" ..IlY. tile· catholic ~rllSS Ilftlle '01_e. ot.. fl1D , riviere;' ·196S,·:.Pastor,' st.: :;,Jean . River. 'SubscrlptlOll price IlJ Mil. jlOStpaICI '''t~ ltiil~1' NeW Bedfant $4.OO'peI JUL" , ..... -,' .... ' ..,'". ·"Bapwieo·:.Fa1l :Kivu.. ..... ",,, :.'
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THe ANCHOR-Df~ of fan Riv«-Yhurs.Aprii 21, 1966
3
Bishop Connolly, Bishop.;.Elect Medeiros Statements
Bishop MedeBB'OS Pledges Self My first thought is one of affectionate, h~artfelt thanks Pope Paul VHh., for honoring the Diocese of Fall River fl'l his choice of Monsignor Medeiros for the high distinction 00: becoming Bishop of Brownsville. ~
Texas is to carry off one of the most distinguished clergymen in all New England. He may not be liOfJ'ex'as-tall, or slim as a branding-iron," but he is all shoul <!ers, all brain,. and all heart. I expect it will not be long before Texans become as. proud of him as we are. Our loss lli their' gain. His priestly, open-door, open-mind zeal has l!aft a permanent mark here in Fall River's thousand square miles. It is big enough, and more than big enough, to span f;he region of the Rio Grande where his fluency in Spanish. 'ielill make him to the Manor born. ~atholic
Faith knows no frontiers; it knows no walls of separa: Texans and Yankees are still Americans. Vatican ~uncn II, just concluded, has achieved a high level of . pnuine brotherhood among men. We are· allcha.llenged 00 be as broad in our sympathies, interests, understanding lilIDd services as Texas is big in mIles, men, and material jJ)rosperity. Monsignor, now ,Bishop Medeiros has contributed t;a the Council. He ,has been there for, all four Sessions. He l'mows the mind. He expresses the programme of Constitu tions, Decrees and Declarations to the full. We are not too ~ppy to lose him. But the chief lesson of Vatican II is that the Church, and Christianity should become one in devotion tJn God and service to man. We wish the new Bishop of the most promising See of Texas "God-speed!" We salute our ltrethreli in Christ and congratulate them ,for the new lihepherd that is being sent to inspire, guide ,and serve the, 1l)iocese of Brownsville. ~on.
Says Ecumenism Comes -to' Life 1fhrough Inter-Church Boo'rd eQLUMBUS (NC)-"Ecumen- liDn has come to life." ' With these words the Rev. N. , lI:. Vander Wed summed up the l!irst three months of the Inter ~hu'rch Board for Metropolitan Affairs, an organization eshib ~shed in January to serve the @olumbus area. The young Protestant clergy man serves as fulltime executive director of the board which rep rresents 13 religious denomina Mons, inclusItng the Catholic dio cese of Columbus. "We believe the Inter-Church moard is the first of its kind in America for four reasons," he !laid, "It is metropolitan. It is Gienominational. It is Protestant ~atholic. It a.ctually serves as a J!l'lanning body, not,just a feder ation of churches." Common Voice The board, the Rev. Mr. ,Van I!ter Wed said, has made "posi tive progress" in working to ful lliU the objectives set when its
<tStablishment was announced ;tointly in January by' Bishop .John J. Carberry of Columbus QlIIld Dr. Raymond Dronsfield, ~esident of the Columbus Area ~uncil of Churches. '
language SchooW Has New Program eOCHABAMBA (NC)-Twen t7-one u.s. missionary priests, lkothers and Sisters have cOln jpleted a six-month course at ~e Maryknoll language school lltere under a newly inaugurated "e student to one instructor ~rogram,
.~.
The school, directed by. Father LU'thur C. Kiernan, M,M" has a fJeaching staff of Bolivian na Monals who are assigned to one ii*udent for the' course. The current program is for IiPOken Spanish. Two Indian _gUages, ,Ay,mare and Quech., ~, spoken in wide, areas, ,of !»olivia and. Peru, will be ill faNdueed ia tbe futulf~.
..eal',
Its basic purpose, Bishop Car berry explained at that time, is ·'to serve as an instrument through which the churches can speak with a common voice on pressing community problems, Since that time, the board, fi nanced by member churches, has already established a perman6l1t office and employs two full-time staff members as well as a re search associate.' It has lau.nched an extensive study in this Ohio city's Near North Side to "develop a strat egy for the church in the area." This study, the Rev. Mr. Van der Wed explained, is examin ing the 28 churches in the area and is seeking answers to su'ch questions as "What are the churches doing now? Is the church as an institution relevant or irrelevant to the people in the area? What can the churches do to make themselves meaningful to the people in the area?" , The board has also set plans for an urban seminar to be held at Ohio State University in the Fall to educate the local clergy 1» problems of the metropolis.
Seeks Proclamation To ,Mark Millennium
WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi dent Johnson would be "a'uthor ized and requested" to issue a, proclamation marking 1966 as the 1,OOOth anniversary 'of Po land as a Christian nation, under a joint resolution introduced in Congress by Rep. Clement J. Zablocki of Wisconsin. The President would be asked ~ issue a proclamation "com
memorating the occasion of the millennium of the origin of Po land as a Christian nation, which event will be celebrated by the people of Poland" throughout the calendar year. 1966, and calling u.pon the' people' of the United States to observe stIch millen .aium with appropriate eeremo.. aiei and aetivities." , ~,
Gratitude is certainly the first sentiment of my heart now as it must always be: gratitude to God for the "multi tude of his tender mercies," (Ps'alm 50. 3); gratitude to our Holy Father Pope Paul VI. whose sweet yoke of love for the whole flock of Christ he so graciously invites me to share with him; gratitude to Bishop Connolly for the many years of encouraging example in priestly zeal and love for the Church of the living God, and for the priceless gift of his fatherly affection so often and so variously manifested to me; to all the Fathers of the diocese of Fall River for the favor of their example and never failing kind ness and courtesy; to the dearest memory of my parents to whose prayers, sacrifices. and love I owe, next to God, whatsoever good I may have done and will do in the Church of God; to my beloved family whose strong Christian affec tion,- reverence and sacrifices for me only the Divine Redeemer can and will reward; to all my friends of the clergy and laity, both Catholic and non-Catholic, who have brought me closer to Christ by the light of their example and the warmth of their affeCtion; and lastly, and yet they are first, to my cherished people of St. Michael's parish among whom I grew up and whose pastor I have been privileged to be for the past five and a half years; to all of these the warm expression of profound gratitude and the sincere offer of humble service in the things of God. Of them all I beg the charity of a remembrance in their prayers and sacrifices. ' To the Church of God in the diocese of Brownsville whom I do not yet know personally but love in the Lord with all my heart, I send a word of joyful greeting with a solemn promise to "spend myself and be spent" (2 Cor. 12. 15) for them. Our common effort and prayer shall always be inspired by the blessed will of the Lord: "Thy kingdom come," To my brother Bishops who shepherd so lovingly the Church of God in Texas, I humbly offer the homage of my love and service, pledging all my strength and whatever blessings the Lord in His goodness has bestowed upon me to cooperate with them in giving faithful witness to Christ 'for the building up of "His Body which is the Ch'urch." (Cf. Col. 1. 24) Like theirs, this is my fervent prayer and
my burning desire: "Thy kingdom come!'
To all my fellow citizens of the dioc.ese of Brownsville,
whatever their religious persuasion, and to our civil au thorities, warm greeting and promise of sincere and close cooperation in every common endeavor to improve our com munities and to protect and develop all truly human values for the greater good of our country and of the world. While I feel a deep sense of regret in leaving the dio eese of Fall River, my faithful friends of many years and my beloved family, I am at the same tim'e filled with joy at the expectation of meeting other children of God and joining with them in loving and praising Him. I already feel sentiments of pride for the opportunity offered me to enter the old and rich Catholic tradition of Texas through
which I hope to receive many blessings from the Lord for
the good of the Church.
a
New. Brownsville Ordinary
Calls for Support Of U. S., Policy
WILMINGTON (NC)-Bishop Michael W. Hyle of Wilmington has called for support of the UnIted States policy in Vietnam. The bishop took exception 'h.
calls for the withdrawal of all American troops and, to pleas for an all-out .war in Vietnam. Speaking in St, Peter's here, he
said the former course "does not '
seem realistic" and the latter "would be both inhuman and
immoral." "With due respect for indi
vidual consciences," Bishop HyJe TAIPEI (NC)~Father James said, "I think 'we should 'support Roche, S.J., a former reporter, our government and have suf cameraman, and naval officer, is ficient faith in the integrity of the newest staff member at the our civil leaders, to believe that Jesuit-operated Kuangchi radio they are in a position to knoW and television program service all the facts and that they will here. not do anything' unnecessary The program service, founded' that would continue or extend in 1958 by Father Philip Bourret, the terrifying destruction and S.J., of San Francisco, produces agony of human beings on both ,radio and TV p'rograms for sides of the conflict." broadcast in Taiwan and in many parts of southeast Asia. Father Roche, from' Lawrence, The sixth annual President's Mass., was a newspaperman for Dinner honoring the president 13 years and served as a naval of Stonehill College will be held photographic officer in World tonight at Five Seasons Restau War II.
rant, North EastOn. The event, He started with the Boston sponsored 'by the college Cen Post in the depression. "In those tury Club, is a token of recog days," he said, "a reporter car nition by leading citizens of the ried' a camera "and took his own contribution Stonehill makes to pictures." , southeasterll ·Massachusetts. , While in the Navy he was in Among guests of honor will be volved in documentation of the Bishop Connolly, and many first atomic tests in Operation . wives of Diocesan' club members Crossroads. whO·serve. 'on the hospitality He also helped' Father Patrick eommjttee for tile ciinner. Pej'Wn. O.S.C.. ciicectoc, ei u.e
Jesuit, Former Reporter, Joins Staff of Taiwan TV Service
Dinner Tonight
Family RoSary Crusade, to pro-'
duce some of his early films.
Father Roche not only produced
but wrote' the script for Father
Peyton's "Hill Number One."
The 56-year-old 'Jesuit entered the seminary in 1951 and was or dained six years later. He comeEil to the Kuangchi service when it is expanding its program to in clude motion pictures. Kuangchi began with one re cording 'room, producting pro grams for a diocesan broadcast ing station. Today, it~ studioo and equipment are located in & four-story building with radio, TV, motion: picture, and engi ne~ring departments.
Eucharistic Crusade - The annual Eucharistic Cru sade rally sponsored for gram mar school pupils by the Apos tleship of Prayer will be heIdi Saturday, May 14' at Holy CroSiil College, Worcester. An' atte'nd ance of 3,500 from central Ne.. Eniland ili ,,-<peeted•
,4
THE ,
ANCH6,,':-Di6ces~'~~ . . • _. .,;:.[r
..
Foil River-Thurs. April 21 ;1966 •
.
.•.~.
",
. k' I W,a r on . 5mut . •.. . '8 rlea .: j!n·,. Deelslons i,
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viding; among other things, for
the creation of special- educa-:
tional-centers.
- Msgr. Donohue said there has,
been less Catholic participation
under Title III than under the
other two titles only because
Title III, being the most experi,;."
mental and challenging, has aI~ci' '.
been the slowest to get moying;,' ~
Shared Services :: ,'.~.' Sister Miriam Joseph of 'Gn~:.· .
roy, Calif., stressed that the con':, .
cept of "shared serv1ces," QY'
which the servic'es are provided .
wherever the cl'.ild 'actually goes·
REV. :P. R. COLLINS, C.S.C. to school, is a built-in provision \ of ESEA, and has several distinct
advantages over shared' time.'
Shared services present "less of
a challenge to the principle of'
the wholeness of truth;" she said; ·New~Q!7'B £pe~ker
and require less "herculean"
Rev. Patrick R. Collins" C.S.C., scheduling. will be the guest speaker at the Msgr. Hochwalt undercut two 12th Annual Communion Break-: fairly common notions here. He fast of the Newman Club of. said the "holding power" Qf. S.M.T.!. New Bedford Branch in American seminaries is greater the basement of St. Hedwig's than ever. This is due to im church following the 9 o'clock proved selectivity in admitting Mass Sunday, May 1. candidates, he said. He also Father Collins' was born in stated there is "not a chance in Chicago and received his early the world" that Catholic educa education in Canada.. He earned tion is going to phase out-on' his A.B. in Philosophy at Stone:" any level. hill College, and his M.A. in
Fr.. C:oUons,
Hails FOlrmation Of Association
Pope P~ul ViSii'ts:. City Hall
Youths
New Bedford Blind:
CHlCAGO (NC)-Recent SU-, by ~ Citizells f01: Decent LitePo>'i preme Court decisions are' "8 ,atun:: but there is still a goocl' real break" in the war on pOl'.., deal, to be done here,"WaJ:4 nography, State's Attorney 'Dan':':, ~aid~' iel 1'; Ward said here. ."B€.('ause of the great d~al ~ Ward ,said the new rulings by objectionable material in th0 the court, inc1uding ODE~ which area, we havE'" put together @ permits advertising to he con- special squad to work on the sidert.:d in judging whether a' problem." work is pornographic, "should Ward added that pornograp~ provide much greater fadlity in is "a sensitive area of law. MaD7. prosecuting obscene books ·and publications, although offensive, magazines." are still prote~ted legally." "Chicago has been called the cleanest city in the United States
PDay Ab~ut Prayer
Novitiate Hec:IId '.','" WINOOSKI I' ARK (NC) Jeremiah T. Purtill, S.S.E., .vice president of· St. '. Michael's College here in Ver mont, has been hamed superior, of St. Edmund's Novitiatte, Mys tic; Conn., and director of E<I mundite cominullity d,evelop.;.:,1 ment.' '. Fa~er
esc·
,English at Fordham, University. He took further graduate studies, at Catholic University of Amer . ica and Harvard University.. .He has taught at Notre Dame BUFFALO (NC) - A profes- High School in Bridgeport, Conn. sional association for lay edu~a- and has served as Dheetor. of tors in secondary ,schools has '. Postulants at the Holy Cross been organized in the diocese of ,Fathers Seminary. He is pres Buffalo, and its initial plans ently pr,ofessor of English at have been hailed by the Di()c-: Stonehill College. esan Education Office. . ':' ' " i L The 'S;M.T.!.' New Bedfci~d Designed to promote Cathol,lC :aranch Newman Club, the first' education by improving commu-' Newman Club in thedloceiie~ nications between administrators' was' .organized in 1954. Officers an'd teachers and by improving 'are Lloyd Wajda, 'presidimt; .the professional status of iis Robert' C,illesple, vice-president; niem'bers,' the Secondary Lay Lorraine' .Desrosiers, secretary;' Teachers Association hai.... been Paulette DOval, t,reasurer. . " in the planning stages fortrlore. ,Rev. Je'hnF. Hogan'is chaplain' than a month. ,.,., ,~~:, and ProJ:. Anthony,J. John' is ' -A' steering committee com-' faculty' advisor. posed of representatives fro~all.. diocesan high schools has dr,awn: up a constitution for the associa tion and it will be' distributed to all lay high school teachers.. Rom4~ The constitution lists the as , Rome (NC) - For the first sociation's purposes as promot time silll:e the papacy 'lost 'its . ing the interests of'Catholic edu cation; enhancing communica- temporal dominions in Septem ,tion between the Department of . ber, 1870, a pope has returned th Education and teachers; advanc-: Rome's municipal seat atop' the ' ing standards of the teaching Capitolinl~ Hill. . Pope Paul VI ,visited the profession; promoting' general welfare of members; promoting. Campidoglio, the city hall de-' signed by Michelangelo, to thank better understanding of· educa tional problems among t{;\achers Rome's city council for"all 'it and the community; and enhanc- . and the city did for the Second 'ing the unity of the professional ; Yatican Council. . .. " staffs of the school. With a vanguard of 24 CitY Formation of the association policemen, mounted on Illotor
cycles and. wearing gala uni
was hailed by MMr. Leo E. Ham merl, diocesan director of schools, forms, thle Pope arrived at the
who ,said it could do much to Campidoglio' while dusk was
foster the "apostolic spirit" of settling over' 'the ,city. Mayor Amerigo Petrucci received him teachers called for in the Decla ration on' Christian Education of , and led him up the ceremon.ial stairway to a reception hall; Vatican CO!l~cil II. There the mayor·read an address.. of homagE: and the Pope replied ~ll1lqUiosotive with a speech of thanks. WASHINGTON (NC; - Sen.. " The mayor gave the Pope the Wallace F. Bennett of Utah and only gold me'dal struck in com memoration of the seventh cen members 'ofhis staff ate jug gling a "hot potato.'" It came tenary of the poet Dante's birth
wrapped neatly. in a leiter from': and the :~,719th anniversary ·of.
a 12-year-old boy in Provo,: Rome.
.After the formal ceremonies,
Utah, where a court is Wrestling. with an anti-obscenity'; ordi-. the Pope ;appeared on a ba,lcony
New Bedford 'Catholic' GU)ld nance. The boy asked: "Would and gave his apostolic blessing,
for the Blind will hold its you please send me some por- I, to the people ·in the square and
monthly meeting at 8 tonight' in . n.ography so' I can see what '; to . the city itself, spread' out'
: everyone is talking ahoun" ; below· hiIIl in 3 great panorama. Knigh~ of Columbus Hall.
I'
,:BELFORD (N C) "Nino iu!:lges," a play about the value of ,prayer suitable for production: by schools and organizations, is being offered royalty-free by the . M~rY Productions Guild here ,~': New Jersey. The guild is a non-, pr9fit" organization supp1yipg plays .and scripts to schools, So--' cleties and missionaries in thb, covnti-y and abroad. . I
!3ISTER
~"ENARD:
I-JERE ~ro STAY
'll'Ik1E MOLY Il'ATHIER'S MDSSlllllIIJ 'JUD .TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH ,
If YCIU broke your'leg In Vaipur two years agCl you'd have to be. carried 12 miles on people'. shQlIldersto get It set. Today you might have IHEALnt chol,era, a result of India's famine•••• Vaipur .WITH is in Kerala State, south India, where scab entERS covered legs and.gummy eyes show you disease in swarms.of little children...• "TeD people we are here to stay because this Is where Christ would be In 1966," you hear Sister Venard say. You watch her taking the temperature of a Hind.. woman In 'the new makeshift hospital named for St. Martin de Porres. You wish you could stay in India to help•••. What can you do In ',,-> canada and·the U. S. A.? Send money gifts for medicines ($500,. $250, $100, $75, $50, $25, $10, $5,'$2), of ~ourse. But the Sisters also need a place to.PJ:'.y~ to rest, have. Privacy. A ',' convlmt to last. (witl1 chapel) will cost onl, , " $3;2ClO (the-'priceof the materials) SInce people • in th,e village (t.1~~,~ms and Hindus Included)' ':, , wil,l work.fr:~e·of.t:l1a'rge 'In grati~de. NamelC " for yciur favorite slilnt,· If you build It all by you... : J self..... Share you'fgood health·wIth people III pain, In your 101ied ones' memory? Mall 'your ' ' :'[ '. gift today; .. ,I SHARE
YOUIR GOOD
II
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.HOW 0 To train a native Sister (like Sister Venard)' t TO :costs only, $12.50:8 month, $150 a year, $300 ' ".: . HELP' altoge,ther. She'll ,be your .'other· self' In India" ',.' INDIA . al;'ld she'll 'pray fwyau. " • Train a poor girl' who wants to be a Sister? We'll send you her name on receipt of your first gift, and she'll write to you.
!J What can you do.with $8.50? That will bur 10,000 "mlracle" Dapsone tablets (enough for
43 leJ;~rs fOr one year).
,0 ·••• AND The HI~1y l,and. where Christ preached peace, Is ,
tHE a battilefield ,today; with 1.2 million Arab ref"" '
HOLY Bees. 1'he,Pontifical Missl.on for PaleStIne. organ- ,
LAPm Ized 115 ~rs ago by Pope Paul VI (then Molt- .
slgno~ MQritlnl), helpS feed', clothe, end teacb
them. In ~nks for' each $10 feed-a-famlly gift
we'll sand 'you an Olive Wood RosalY from the
Holy L a n d . ' . , .'l
Dear
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IIcmsJBnor Nolen: Please
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CITY
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THill CATHDLlCNEAR EAST WELIJIARE ABSDCIATDlllN ~
NIEAR EAST N'ISSIDNS President' fRAIIICIS CARDINAL SPELlMAN,'
MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN•. Natlonal Secretary WritEl::CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue' New York, N.Y. 10017 TeleJ>hon~ 212/YUkon 6-5840 ,
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Catholic Community Service Marks Anniversary Today
Cardinal Shehan Forms Council
WASHINGTON (NC)-In the wave of ecumenism that has swept the Church since the Second Vatican Council it is generally overlooked that an official Church agenc; was established 25 years ago for the specific purpose of eooperating with non-Catho tatives in 151 of the 165 VA hos mc groups in pursuit of a pitals. The hospital service common goal. This ecumeni marked its 20th anniversary @al pioneer is the National yesterday. Catholic Community Service, which marks the 25th anniver sary of its incorporation today. Shortly after German troops marched into Poland in late 1939, representatives of various reli-· glous groups met to discuss the· possibility of inter-agency eo operation to provide recreational facilities for the rapidly growing V. S. defense forces. Out of this meeting grew the 1Jnited Service Organizations lor National Defense (USO), ~hose main purpose was to set uP and maintain USO clubs as "a home away from home" for gervicemen. Catholics were represented at l1his meeting by the late Supreme Knight Francis P. Matthews and flhe late Supreme Advocate Luke E. Hart of the Knights of Colum bus, which had perfomed a sim l!1ar ttlsk for the Church during :'World War 1. . At· their' annual meeting in November, 1940, the U. S. Bish 0Ps decided to establish a body to unite Catholiic efforts, to rep l'.esent all Catholic groups in volved in the Church's program and to retain contact with the &overnment. Founding Agency As a result they unanimously 'O'Oted to establish the National eatholic Community Service, which immediately became one (If the founding agencies of USO. Matthews became chairman of the NCCS' executive committee and continued to represent the organization. USO's early plans were for lIOme 330 clubs in about 200 com munities, but before the war was oyer NCCS was operating more Cban that itself. At the peak 01. operations ·USO had some 3,000 dubs in' 1,400 cities and towns. lllCCS hit a· peak in January, 1944, with its staff operating 486 elubs, in addition to n inde pendent operations financed by the Bishops' Emergency Fund. During the course of the war a total of 674 USO clubs and of fices were staffed partly or en tirely by NCCS personnel, with <!Wer 650,00 volunteers working in these operations. Almost 300 .m.illion persons were served one . way or another in NCCS liJSO club building. Serve VA Hospitals At last count NCCS wasdi
Jlectly involved in the USO pro
gram in 75 points of service
around the world, with 41 pro
fessional NCCS staff members.
Although the greatest portion . by far of NCCS's work is the' tJtaffing of the USO clubs, it also operates the NCCS-VA Hospital Service, which aims at bringing' VQlunteers into Veterans Admin- . tstration hospitals to perform personal services for the patients and distribute religious articles to them. So far there are. NCCS repre sentatives or deputy represen-
,in
BALTIMORE (NC)-Lawrence Cardinal Shehan has established an Archdiocesan Council of Clergy, Religious and Laity to assist him in pastoral and ad ministrative duties. lCreatiQn of such councils was suggested by the Second Vatican Council. Five pastors, five as sistant pastors, a priest-religious . superior, a Brother, two Sisters, 14 lay men and four lay women, comprise the ·council. First meet ing will be May 18, with quar terly meetings .thereafter. € a rdinal Shehan urged forma tion of similar advisory groups at .the parish level. He said. the new archdiocesan council will study the work of similar organ izations in St. Louis,· Detroit, Pittsburgh and Manchester, N. H. The group will also help form recommendations to the forth coming archdiocesan synod con cerning its future membership, terms of office and functions.
. NCCS's latest venture is in the war on poverty, where it pro vides one of the chief stimuli behind the National Catholic Co ordir:tating Committee on Eco nomic Opportunity.
Government Aids College'Students WASHINGTON (NC) - More than 176,000 needy college stu dents will receive federal work study grants to help them con tinue their studies during the second half of 1966, the U. S. Office of Education said today. Grants totaling more than $59 million will go to 1,379 colleges and universities for the six month period starting July 'I. The grants are authorized under the Economic Opportunity ,Act of 1964, as amended to help stu dents of limited means work their way through college. Students in the program through the end of the year will average $400 in earnings. The basic wage is $1.25 per hour. Students work up to 15 hours per week when school is in ses sion and up to 40 hours at other times. Students will fill library, lab oratory, research assistant, main tenance and clerical jobs. Off camps jobs are in libraries, so cial work agencies, boys clubs, community action and anti-pov erty programs, The federal gov ernment pays 90 per cent of the student workers~ wages and the remaining 10 per cent is pro vided by the college, university or off-campus agency employing the students. .
Seton Hall Opens . Research .Center SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-Es tablishment of a Center of Urban Research has been announced by Bishop John J Dougherty, presi dent of Seton Hall University. The center grew out of discus sions between Seton Hall offi cials ·and the Essex County plan ning officer on how both might increase theIr effectiveness in urban and regional studies through a joint research effort. Bishop Dougherty said: "The major purpose of the new center will be to focus research on the physical environment of cities and regions, and the social, eco nomic, governmental, legal, tech nical; and esthetic forces that shape them, as well as the inter relations . between urbanization and society."
Fr. lennon Heads
National Socie·ty
See Cuts Sl.IImm"er Youth Aid Project PLANNING DCCW CONVlENT.D:ON: Arrangements for the annual convention of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women on April 30 are being completed by the following leaders: Seated, Mrs. Michael J. McMahon, con vention co-chairman; Mrs. James A. O'Brien Jr., diocesan president. Standing, Miss Margaret M. Lahey, chainnan of guests; Mrs. Anthony J. Geary, co-chairman of luncheon; Mrs. Vincent A. Coady, co-chairman of luncheon.
Diocesan Women Council to Convene on Saturday, April 30 At Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River Women from all parts of the Diocese are working together to make the annual convention of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women memorable. To be held Saturday, April 30 at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, it will be highlighted by a Mass celebrated by Bishop Connolly and addresses by Msgr. John C. . Kf\ott, Family Life Bureau di':' rector of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, and Miss Mary A. Sullivan, director of Katharine Gibbs Secretarial School, Providence. Convention Co-chairmen are Mrs. Micha~l J. McMahon and Mrs. John J. Maloney, while clerical advisors are Msgr. Thomas F. Walsh and Rev. Ray mond W. McCa,rthy. Mrs. Anthony J. Geary is secretary, publicity chairman, and co-chairman for the conven tion luncheon and. Mrs.· James Leith is treasurer. Serving with Mrs. Geary in preparing for the luncheon is Mrs. Vincent A. Coady. Making arrangements· for guests will be Miss Margaret M. Lahey, and chairman of the cof fee hour that will begin the day is Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley, aided by a large committee. Other committees are handling details in connection with the convention Mass, nominations and eleCtions, registration, hos pitality and literature displays. Mrs. John J. Mullaney is con vention parliamentarian, and
. ST. PAUL (NC)-Father Jo seph L. Lennon, O.P., dean of Providence College, was named president o,f Delta Epsilon Sig ma, a national honor society for Catholic colleges and universi . ties, at the organization's annual meeting here at the College of St. Thomas. CATONSVILLE (NC)-A 13 Father Lennon, former vice acre site has been purchased by 1lhe Little Sisters of the Poor, president of the society, succeeds ,--adjacent to St. Charles College Dr. John H. Ford, chairman of here in Maryland, for a new the department of philosophy at Bellarmine College, Louisville, borne for the aged. The archi MONTREAL (NC)-A simple tects have employed an open Ky. T-shaped steel cross, raised flhree-Ievel scheme in which the Electee secretary-treasurer of Easter Sunday on Notre elderly will live in grade level the 93-chapter honor society was Dame, today marks the start of lIesidences-three units for men Father Robert L. Ferring, asso . construction of the Christian and three for women, each ac ciate professor of political sci Pavilion . for "Expo 67,". the iDOmmodating approximately 4D ence at Loras College, Dubuque, world fair being planned for persons. Canada's centenni<il celebration•.
Home for Aged
Expo '61
Ile
......
5
'fHe ANCHOR
_ T"'urs., April 21, 1966
students from Mt. St. Mary Academy and members of the Fall River area CYO will serve as usherettes and in various other capacities in the course of the day. It is noted that those attending the convention will use the Whipple Street auditorium en trance to the academy; and it is also stressed that the meeting is open to all Catholic women in the Diocese, whether or not they are affiliated with a guild or council. If it is not possible to attend the entire program, registration may be made for. either the morning or afternoon session.
(ASA BLANCA
Just Across The
Coggeshall St. Bridge
Fairhaven, Mass.
Finest Variety of.
PITTSBURGH (NC) - The Pittsburgh diocese's Neighbor hood Youth Corps program will not operate this Summer because of a fund cut-back by the re gional office of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Another casulay will be the program of the Pittsburgh Board of Education, which operated LI Neighborhood Youth Corps of its own and was the agency through which the diocesan project was financed. ~he diocese had requested $116,634 to finance a program for 300 students. The public school board had requested $855,000 to help 1,200 students. Both now operate Neighbor hood Youth Corps, but current programs are funded only through June.
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6
THE A"lr~I0R-Diotese- of Fall River-Thurs. April 2.1, 1966
A'
PTt.nJ!~~1t
f 0' Guida;nce
Ar~l1b~~hop)
Krof Deplorre$ Polish
Pattern to the Flock
Ian· on va'sas;
Lovingly does, the first Vie-ail"' of> Christ, St. Peteu,.
,exhort a bishop to becom~ "from the heart a :pattern to
the flock." Such a one has Pope Paul chosen ill summoning Bishop-Elect Humberto S. Medeiros· from his labors as' .o/pastor and diocesan chancellor to beeome "frOID tHre' heart a pattern to the flock" in the ChUJ7CD: of Gocli in Blrownsvirll'er Texas. . ' Pious, 'brilliant-with the added virtue o:J1' ll.{)t :realli: zing as do others the' full heightS' oj! his'. intellectual: ait.
tainments, self-effacing", possessmg a deIightfm sense' o:t" humor, the perfect gentleman with. 'a hem 0;f' c0uT"tes,y and concern for all, fluent in severnI Ta:nugag,es' and! d'e.., . lighting to read the Old Testament m Heli>rew amclJ tFr-e'
New Testament in Greek, Bishop-Elect Medefuros'· has p!"3Jye(i~ and worked in the Diocese with his .rnfe of lime to be 21 "pattern to the f l o c k . " · " Love of God, love of the Church, IO'\Te of the. chiId:reni of God-these have been riot words: to l1im but fibers 0]' his being. All-Catholics and IlBn-Catholics-withfu:r the Diocese' of 'Fall River rejoice [n the action of Pop~ Fau1" aJ:m:lJl they aSSU1"e Bishop Medeiros that as he' goes to· Texas! he carries' within his heart alongside his love for this: DIocese' theiir prayers for him as he sets out as a successor of the .AP(i)S~
.tIes to become the pattern to another p0r1ii0n ef the Lerd"s flock...
PHILADELPHIAl (NC) Arehbishop Johni JJ•. Krol 01. Fhiiadelphia has' denounced the Polish; government's baJJ.
H ono...s~ Pope. Joh,n' I
Frightening Wayr '
I
In its decisions, the Supreme Court o:f the U'n.it-e<d States Artist. flrG:nc:k Turns Former' Gris,l~ insists again and again that it hears each case on its' m.'erits' ~d makes a decision on' the basis of prineiples. :But laws' MiU Into Sm;aU Chapel · are ordinances of reason and reason isa faculty I€ f man•. ' at with my own;pain," hE~ said, And so--while no one would say it teQ; loudly-despite i,ts' WARWICK (NC)-"Pacem in Terris?' is the name of a former "Pacem ill' Terris" is elf stl'ik- protestations to the contrary the j-us. tices of the' CO~lt]'ta..re . grist mil] tU1'ned' into a smalI in'g, design w.ithi the roo:6 flaring influenced by the attitude~ of society, by the' judgements" chapel whi:ch opened! on Kaster oulr like the' wings of ,a dave; of men, by their approval or their objections. . Sunda,y' hel1e in., New York. ' -Symbols of the major religions. a.re· used irn the stained.. grass 'This is true in cases involving obscenity, wi,th· :rec~nt Its creato.r and builder is Dr. court decisions being somewhat niore strict than was' the Frederiek Fl1anck, author of the windowS" "The light ot. the SUR' impartiall\Y through· them' case a year or so ago. The voices of men and women clamor- recent book, "Outsider in the falls: ·Vatican." He calls it a "place of a11;' Franck. slrld. 101': Franck. (!D;visioF.IS the ing for protectinn of society and its ,members against a inwardness" and has dedicated chapeli to. be' the: future' setting; flood of' obscenity have been heard in quiet iudiciial it to' Pope: Job. XXliII. chambers. But men and w{)men must make their voices Four years ago, after reading fo1" crea~, phHosophical' and' gatberiIigs , c(meel'ts; heard. It is not a question. of decisions befug imIuem.coo}1)y Pepe ,k'hru's opeRing' speech at reltgi:ouSl J;llays; andl..semmaIls,,·The· c,pening;' pressure groups; it is a.· matter of decisions being, arrived- the Vatican council, Frederick );lreg,ram- 0Dl Eastel1;, eallled' "In' at only after aU interested voices have been heard. And', Fl1anell:" dentist, autnell'" and art- Sol:ita1'Y Witness\:' was:· pei':" ist, 'dropped everything except therefore, aU to often the voiceS' heard are the voiees; ().f- his pen and!. tfuw t6' Rome t~ formed. by. anl interdem~miila" license, the voices of unbri(lled fJ!eedom, the v~·iees ef the wItness: what; he believes: to' be tional group. "anything goes" school of thinking. These voices .sTreaK, fer' ''the' mig:l1ti:est religious event of . , ene element in society but do not speak for all men a nour. dcent.ui'"';~'· -" Enmo!;sy" women. But there remains the ever-present dange~ that He De,~an1e artist-in-residence at the council'; the only artfst te they will be heard as the "voice· 0f the people". simply be- aftemf ali]; four sessions' and' the Bol's COrdinolrs; cause no· one else is bothering to speak. .e IT l' Y norr-commissiened!, n0nLONDON (NC)' - The' Polisb, Nibbling. away at the m€lraI roots of society are'voices Catholic' lay artfst at Vatican I'll.' embassy: here· has refused per that.are heard just because they are the enly enes 1"aised.:Pope John gave him the·medal' mission:. to, the "United: Kinl:dom~s. voices advocating legalized abortionr free and easy tliverce, of hispontillcate for his d'raw two resident. cardinals, to travel to' Polandi to ioin in the: eele procedures, marriage contracts \vrittel:1, un. en at five-years ings ofth~ fi'rst sessIon.'" . P Dr. Fbmck refers to his b00k, bratiens, of the 1,OOOth au'.nivel' at a time basis, child.rearing in twenty~four ho'ur- a, day "Outsider in the Vatican,'" as' sa.ry of' its con:ve];sion. ta 'Chris, communal nurseries, freedom to experiment with "sex and payment of the debt he feel's to tianity. drugs as a personal right without social 01' mQoraI impIic2l- Pope' John. John Cardinal JiIeenaR- &f tions and ramifications.' , "The Vatictan experience is· Westminlster. had plannt!d t-o These voices advocate the weird, the unusual, the also responsible' fou the bl:lilding leave here. M'aiY 1 at tfie head ef the ch~lpel, "Pacem in Terris:" of a- pilgrimage \!)~ abeut70, pel1 bizarre, the bold, the far-out, the immoral, the' amOl:al: :But 'Franek ~Iays it, is his artistic' 8Oms. WilliaDh Cl::a);dinal CillfiW~ they are voices that are heard, and they capture attention: sermon, the expression air his ef Armagh;, N~JIthelTll. Ir,~laHd" because they are unusual and they even gain sup~rt if own med:utati:ons "on what mat wl;o, is.. l?cima:te 0:6 All:. Ir,~lalld~ was, to have led another 00' pil' they are the ones making the 'most din. After a while the teFs.~r 'My SernwD' g:llLms.. good, the moral, the reasonable, the k.in~these peeph~' F()r mere than; 18 m(!)Jwths he' In re:llm;ing; to; issue visas, to' ~re made· to seem the odd, and they are driven il'ltc!)~ a defen wo·rked U~ convent the niill intO' the pl1el'atel!i, the' Polish embassy:' sive position. a. l\:ind. ojl Jl)e'lT3Irnnal: statement. He said it could not cOElpel1ate wi1!kl Every time' a voice is raised advocating what other Elid ft, entDIrely a;rene; fil!lianei:ng, celebrations organized iil- "a men and wemen believe to be wrong and hal'mfuF and un- sculpture, mosaics and -stai!Fledi private h6Stiile' waiY.~' glass. "ThBs; was; to, be; whatever An embassy spokesman sllid ef: ·r~asonable; it 'must be countered by another'v{lice. lJy many its; naWll~ m,y: work oj! art,. my v{)ices, presenting their own. positions with reasonableness pl'a-yer' an:d my sermon" worked the dens oF: III visa1 fel e"al'wilal'. HeenaflJ:: and calmnes~ imd clarity and firmness. "The custom, in\ Poland is", feE'
Po';sh'
(.)
Joint. lIac.c.aJQUrreate -..... .' For Fllin.t Schoofs
oil· visas, for Catholic prelates during Polanr1's celel>ration ClI ilie millennium of' ehristianitr' there;
Iil~ P. sharp statement shortJ,r af.fer' he was infimned10rthe baDt tile archbishop called- tile actiOll "al'ibtrary''' and, "as' iiIcr~dible all it; is deplorable ".
Tlle archbishop: was notified .E& the ban by S.candinavian Ail' lines System', which' was to carry al30ut 40 PhiHleIpUians and' tliousllnds- of ethers: :from around the country to tlie celebrations at! the Polisn national shrine ,of ID'ur Lady of Czestocllowa. "We were 3!:sured'there would \'le no problem in. obtaining visas," Archbishop Krol said'. He was to hav~, led' a, pilgrimage group.
"Now, after months of pub licity and aImost. on the eve of. depart'..re, the Warsaw regime Bans the schedllled'pilgrimages.The archbishop." added~ "We rei:ret the ser:,>us. inconvenience caUSed' the many; who made plans to participate and we ex tend' OUJI deep sympathy, to· an tlie. pt'ople- of Poland;' more the 90; p~r cent. 01: whom. are Catfttj .
Mc~
Allow Tourists AU!iough. I)anned1 from
'the
country, the' archbishop said, "we wiTh unite' with· them ill spirit" in the celebrations. 'J1lie archofrhopl said' tile pil glJimage' was' plannedi "to honor tile' good' people: of·' Poland ~ JOIning' them~' im tlie' celebration. Edward :a"roznialf, Polish am bassader' to- the> Whited' States, sam- in W'ashi'ngt'ml' that all though no visas' aFe' W, be grant~d: to prl.'fatesj, ether toM ietS; including' pl'i$ts; wiD' 1M allewed' to'enf'''r' the' c6untry. lIe said Pol~md~s aCtieR wa. fakes' I)ecausc Poland's pl'ima~, 'St'ef"aR CardinaL: Wy.szy.nsKi, in vitM' the pr~l;,t'es "witliout eoa suIting or discussing; this wita, Hie PoIfsh gp,~ernment,.,,' The, pilgri'mlllle~from, the' Phil-· adelpbia' arc1uliocese' has beeD . !llaFmea . sinr.e DecemBer, and A.rchoishop: Kroll applied tor a ,:,isa some two monilis .ago;
Nuns leGiVe' Cteistfr .To Rebuild Con-vent . ALICANTE' (NC) - Twenty five contemplative' Sisters Gi the Holy F"~ce I\ere' m. Spain are themselves: reliuilliing; their eon ,'eflt tliat. was' deli1ilJoi¥edl by l'e'" eeflt fI:6odS. ./Ii:: collection Ilere> gave thelll. funds with wl1ieh> t!o. acquift"" builtling mateDial!l" Some> B.UBI willt had. been I'm tn:e: clbistep' Iv more thaDl 30, yea!'Sl witnout liee-· i'ng: l!l'!e' outsfd~ WG:iJldJ workM al' e"icklayemn, . Tiley received' pePMissioli" fr&. the Hofy see fo' leave' the' elmst er' oo'.rebuiTd' theft" mEmasfery•.
aH very impol7tant pel'Stms' al'lt!ll. CailTdinal 'Jlreenaru is. at VB? Bor -to visit Poland' with, the' FUNT'(NC)-Four MrEcAtgan- kno-wledge ef t1'J.e· authorltiles: i.il' Visit to Pofand' BERLIN (NC)'-The' Catholie ..... Catholic hJ.gh schools, here wiU Warsaw.. U:n£~1'tunatel:Y: ClUdi:-· parti:cipate in a preeedeL"1t-setting. l1'a1 WYSzynkSl',. !he. PI1.lmate: o1l b i s 1'I;0'p's: of communist-ruled interfaith community g,accalau- Poland ,sent.the mVltatroil'v?!h" East Gemnany have: been fer
reate service' :fior gJTaduating. selit- out. consulting, the' authaJ:ltres. bidden' by theil7' government ...
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF nilE DIOCESE OF FAll RJVER~ iors ef public and' parochial go' toi PoIand\ for' the festivities
"]nl tn'i:g, case; Cal'diri'aF l'fe,~nall\ surrounding, t1'J.e milleflnium elf . weu'Id! not Ere caBling' as a prf · Published' weekly by The Catnolic Press of the Diocese of foil River' schools JUlile 5. Msgr. Henry' M. Mayotte, dean vate' eitiizem We' are' not tli:ere . Christianity tl'lere: 410 :;ighfand Avenue of tl'te Fli'J~t. d'eane'I!Y, said seJ'.l- :f!011e in 3' posiifj'on' to gr~nt firm" HerliJll's: A'rcl1bisllop' Alfred Fall River" Mass-. 02'722 675-7151 i~l'S; from St. John Vianney, St. a. visa, but this does not mean' B'engscl1>, wfl'Oi resides ift' East· PU~lISHER l\.:lichael, Sacl1ed ~ Hea,rft and! St. he' cannafl, eome' to' PoFandJ at any Bel'lin; was; refused! permissiOll Most Rev. James L. ConnoUy, D.O.,. Ph&., . .A,gnes: hEt:nschooIs: will' be time. We- woult'IJ.li:ll:e' to; be llElor-e' lily. the adininistll'atieR' in' the GENERAL MANAGER ASST.. GENERAl MANAGER affiEln'g some' ],500 sefIiers' at tl'le polite and! l'eeeive C'aL'a'inal' Jiee-' geviet sect'OJ1. ~' fuldl plannetl Rt. Rev. Daniei F. Shelloo, M.A. Rev. Jon" P. ~riscoll sel'Vices: in a· Focal! auditorium' na11l, bat, Roit when' ffte eeleara~ te' ge to> Gniemo; tli"e J;tl"imatial MANAGING EDITOR' wifn: graduates: frElm tne city's ttens: are-· ol'gllniized' in' sudI' a see ef porand\, fOr cel'earati&M' Hugh J. Golden f&o'. f.lUbIh:~ hiigh sckooJs. private ant!t.Rostile way. i& the cathedral there.
Reds
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Thurs., April 21, 1966
Mixed Marriage 5ml~tf'vM«:to~~ Has
~HICAG0
{NC)-A Cath education expert said here religious - operated in lititutions of higher learning ~ic
should bring more laypersons m.to top policy-making positions. When a 'presidency is avail oole in a college or university, i;\1; should ,be the "most naturai liihing in the world" to assign £1: to a layman, Father Neil G, McCluskey, S.J., of Gonzaga University S po k an e, Wash., mated. Father McCluskey, at a ses.., sion of the 63rd annual National eatholic Educational Association oonvention, replied to a paper delivered 'by 'Manning M. Pattil llo, Jr., on ithe Danforth Report and Catholic Higher Education. Pattillo, director 'of the Danforth t::Dmmission on Church Colleges and Universities, also had rec 4lmmended ;this course of BctioR. Says 'Feai' Reason The reason why the "most Ilaturalthing in the world" does DOt occur more frequently, Fa ,ftler McCluSkey said, is because .r fear "We . are ,worried about ';the ,property ,we ~have amassed and ~ are wor-rieaabout the cur ~cl,l1um," Ihe, stated. ,' The forefathers in the religi ous life ,who founded teaching eommunities did not undertake their wotk for the sake of prop- ' erty, ,Father McCluskey 101(1 delegates of the NCEA college and university department.' It is doubtful they would shal'e ~cern for it, he said. The Jesuit educator said the ~perating ,word for administra tors should be influence, not oontrol of l')roperty. The best way for Religious to exert mean ingful influence on the institu Mons of higher learning is to associate with themselves lay' persons of like-minded educa tional ideals, he said. Provide for Planning Pattillo recommended that' eatholic colleges which have not ,yet enhanced the position of their lay faculties do so immedi ately, in the light of principle, ood not ·because circumstances force them into -it. Catholic colleges and universi ties'should'mal,e better provision ft>r institutional planning, he said. They establish offices of research and development tEll provide the data for policy form ation by the administration and faculty, Pattillo said. He warned that Catholic in I'ltitutions, as well as all colleges and universities, will need to' establish 'better guidelines for the maintenance of freedom. He ,also said the rights and freedom of dissident groups in a school 'must not be allowed to take pre ©edence over the rights of oth
7
THE ANCHOR-
Favors Laymen In Top C@ttholic CoUege [p@$ts
~ew
§~mg'nt
COLOGNE (NC)-One of the most important changes in the Church's recent instructions on mixed mar
~EPISC()PAL CONGRATULATIONS,: Most ~v. J:ames J. Gerrard, V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, left, a 'd! Most Rev. James L. Connelly, Bishop of ,the Diocese, f-elicitate the new Ordinary 01 the Texas Diocese, Bish~p Medeiros.
Sc:hool:s :Need Exce1lence
B:ette:r Pu'blic
Unnoti~ed,
CHICAGO (NC) - Warning Catholic school teachers against "self-inflicted !hair shirtitis'" a university professor cautioned if they do not -rebel llgainst being classified as second ,best, they IiUly wind upon such '8 "compla cent plateau. Discussing innovati~ in sec ondary education, Melvin P. Heller, professor of education at Loyola University.here, told the 63rd annual National Catholic Educational Association conven tion: "This - is a competi-, tive world and it is no longer f;lshionable to wear a hair shirt. To cure the Catholic schools of self-inflicted' h 'a i r shirtitis' would indeed be 'an innovation.'" ',He told the educators they should unload their stock in "agonizing reappraisal" for a vastly ;improved program of public relations.
-
,
Says 'Loyola Professor
"Criticism has its' place, and if :the shoe fits, 'wear it.," Heller said. "But when :allegations are unfounded ilM when excellence is unnoticed, it is sheer follY to hide under a cloak of false huniility." Singling -out as an 'example "the well publicized -dedication to excellence at the University of Notre ':pame," Heller cau tioned "most Catholic schools" against a tendency "to -hide their light under the proverbial bush el." Negativism and silence are bad for everybody's morale, and . "if you believe ,in what ypu are do,ing, your'integrity cannot suf fer if you publicize it," Heller advised. There is urgent need for more innovations and innovators in Catholic educatio.n, he asserted. "Many teachers and adminis trators agree that changes are necessary and important, but
Best Days lie Ahead c@~ ~ey EmphQ~ize$ Cath~)lc Schoo~s
Face
Vall'Gc(i1lml C@fl.!lll1ldcr' ChaUenge
CHICAGO (NC) -New York Times religiouS news editor John Cogley told Catholic edu cators here that the greatest days of U. S, Catholic education lie aheaC: because Of the Vatican Council. Cogley said the success of the changes flowing from the council depends largely upon Catholic ers. schools. Catholic education, he said, Airport (ji]fr' Shannon Aaces the "challenge of making the council real, bringing it to 'NOWlH©$ CQnvent life. A pre-conciliar education SHANN0N (NC) - Shannon for life in a post-conciliar world, I need not tell you, simply makes :P:nternational Airport has its first Religious community. Four Da ' no sense." minican Sisters from Stone, En Cogley spoke at the final gland, are transforming two res general meeting here of the 63rd iidences on the airport's housing annual convention of the Na (\!State into a convent. tional Catholic Educatiomil As Initially they will act as. sociation, organization ofU. S. Burses. Later they plan to open Catholic school teachers and ad 41 hostel for girls working at the ministrators. airport and its factory complex. Cogley; a former editor of Commonweal, weekly Catholic TraJl.l~q;~1.i' Relics review published by laymen in PADUA (NC) - Relics of St. New York, hit hard at the theme Anthony of Padua will be sent that the impact of the Vatican council is completely revolution temporarily 'to Lisbon, Portu gal, for veneration during June. ary. "I believe that it would be The saint, who was born in Lis bon in 1195, died near Padua in hard to exaggerate the revolu tionary aspect, the radical na 1l.231. The relics will be trans .ported aboard the ltalianlilJlilllt', ~ul:"e of Vatican II. Not that the ~ulll implications of what went 55 Giulio Cesare.
:Reil'ations
on in Rome have yet been gen erally accepted in the Church far from it. That would be ex pecting too much too soon. "For a while yet, we are going to hear tedious warnings against magnifying the revolutionary impact of Vatican II; we are going to be assured periodically that nothing basic was changed by the council. At the same time, however, the religious news col umns will belie all assurances," he said. Speaking to an audience com posed predominantly of Sisters, Cogley said ,he was impressed by advances made by Catholic edu cation in the past decade and especially by' communities of teaching Sisters.
,BLUE RIBBO'N
LAUNDRY
their agreement often is solely on the verbal level," he declared. "When to this unknown but mighty number of well-informed do-nothings we add the numer ous and vigorous advocates of the status quo, we ,end up with an imposing total which far ex ceeds the small, number of edu cators who do something positive about education." , Heller told the delegates that current educational thought pre sents numerous innovations in methodology, curriculum and facilities. He' said that team teaching, non-gradedness and educational television have high priority.
Sisters of the Poor Adopt New Habit
riages is the new spirit of toler ance and new attitude shown toward other Christians, Augus tin Cardinal Bea, S.J. wrote in a tkrman ..uew;spaper. The cardinal said he realized that some persons had criticized the instructions, b.ut he said that they had been disappointed because they had expected too much. Some people, he said, see only the practical aspects of the in structions. The essential aspect& are in the- new spirit, in the re spect shown for the conscience of the non-Catholic partner in ,a mixed marriage, he explained. Cardinal Bea, who is head of the ,Vatican Secretariat' for Promoting C h r i s t ian Unity stressed that the new instruc tions must be examined and ob served in practice, and that it is possible that they will be changed. Plans to change the instruc tions, he said, will include ecu menical talks. He also emphasized that the limitations involved in, such projects should also be recog nized, because a complete solu tion to the' problem of mixed marriages can only be achieved by the unity of all Christians.
Et Tibi, Pater LEICESTER (NC) -An altar boy from the Nazareth Home for Boys here begged to be excused from his regUlar duties March 27 whf'..n the most recent changes in the Mass were instituted. Ques tioned by a priest as to the rea son, the boy c,mfessed, "I haven't learned my Latin in English ,yet."
NEWARK (NC)-The Fran ciscan Sisters of the Poor ha ve adapted a new, simpler habit. The hem is now six inches from the floor and the stiff, white frontpiece has been eliminated while the veil has been modified. This is the second time the habit has been changed since 1854. The first change was made in 1960. Studies are still going on' to modify the white habit worn by Sisters engaged in pa tient care at the community's hospitals.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 21-, ,1966
It's .Tedious' Process Learning To 'Re-U·se Arm after Fract~re
HILLSBORO (NC) -. Mary Coffman of this Ohio c0m. munity who became 100 yeails old Tuesday, called the chan_ in the liturgy "wonde~ul."· The retired businesswollld commented: "Whim' Fat h'" brings CommuniOn to me n~ I can follow everything he sayw;"l She reads the Mass prayers JB English every morning at aboutl the time Mass is being celebrated, in nearby St. ~ary's church. A widow for the past 36 years, she continued her husbancftJ laundry business until sl)e . . tired ~n 1950. '. She still rises at '1 A.M. ad says her "office"-a lengthy ~ lection of rosaries, novenas, and other prayers for family, frien. the Pope, and others. She keeps in touch with tbe world through tbe daily pap~ news magazines, and a constaDt stream of visitors-some of them: looking for business counsel, bafl many just stopping by because they enjoy her homespun wis dom. If they're lucky, they alae get some of her own homemade bread. Mrs. Coffman points out tmdi she's not the first of her famiJ, to live a long time. "My grand mother lived to be 105," she said.
By Mary Tinley Daly "'One touch 'of nature makes the whole world kin." And how! A couple of months ago we mentioned breaking an arm, awkward on ice. Theri, 10 and behold, we found we'd joined a new club. Initiation . impartial X-ray would foretell symbol: a plaster cast. No unerringly our immediate fate: officers, no dues (unless you All.in one 'piece, bonewise, or. count medical expenses), no back into all one piece ....:.. of meetings, but what- camaraderie! Among those in the cast-class were neighbor and fellow ice victim, Dr. Charles Pat e , feminine mem bers E I e II nor Keating, Peg Shortley, Sister. Sr.eila, S.N.D. Esther Jon e s and Margaret Kane, among us sporting an as sortment of boners ranging .from ankles. 10 shoulders and way stations in between. : Thank goodness nobody had a broken jaw, so we could commu nicate via telephone in a "misery 10 ve s company" atmosphere, comparing notes as to progress, symptoms, frustrations, wit h practical hints on how to make do in our boarded-up condition. We were a jolly bunch of 06 teologists, all right! Then :we began to hear from, the' out:-of-town membership:' Mrs. Daniel P. Norton of Spring Valley, Minn., who told of her experience with two arms in cast (she really should be president); Mrs. Robert Sweet of North At tleboro, Mass., who. wro~ Of suffering a banged-up arm when' her husband' was away on busi":' ness and her .sole home compan-: ion was a' d'og;, Mrs. Elizabeth Brown of Chicago'with'a broken leg; ~'Fellow Caster" from Syra euse with a broken back. Special Camera Back to the 'local chapter and our telephone hook-up.' Each of u:. knew exactly when fellow members were to have cast· re-' moved and '''sit for the picture," fa-- more intriguing than any photograph, when that purring
plaster. As the first "outcaster," I was totally unprepared, physically and psychologically, for parting with that supportive right arm bower of all those weeks, auto graphed by the grandchildren, ("Please be m 0 r e careful, Grandma," Lu Ann had written.) Get rid of the cast and go about your business wa.s what I'd looked forward to on that happy day. Not so.· Uncast; that with ered arm was more useless and immobile than ever, even after its stay in ancelastic bandage. "That's O.K." said the physical therapist, cheerful Mrs. Esther Geib. "After therapy and the ex ercises' you do at home, it· will be fine. Do you have a dish washer?" ... "Yes. A male dishwasher who's become quite adept at the job." "That's the end of h's. job,". Mrs. Geih smiled. "You wash the dishes from now on. Best therapy in the world, gentle RIo':'. tion1l in hot soapy water." No Babying That was 1ust step orieiri ·,th~ unhabying of a 'hypochondriac.~,· Grumbles about ··..It's so slow. And -I'd hoped to pairit'a bed room" were met with,'" ·"Finel. T hat ·back-and-forth motioii' with a paint. brush will do' won-.. ders." Then there was the day I . was,' sure··the bone had cracked
'~:t~~n;t~~ a:~~~::,~,ak~~~.
Geib.
Priest Directs Alaska'
Crippled Children
ANCHORAGE (NC)-A pri_ on leave of absence from' Ide'
church work is serving as tilt · executive director of the AlasJla · Crippled' Children's Associatit" ,Father James Van HoomisseD. C.SS~R.;. took over the' post special pe.rmIsSion from his . . periors folloWing five years · vice as superior of. the Redemp. torist Fathers on the K~n" peninsula at Soldotna.' He has permission to wear civiliail garb in his new post.
w. sa.
alaill
FROM DIOCES~: Three Carmelite Sisters for.the Agoo
said matter-of.:.factly....Au: the .and Infirm advance. inreJigious life in ceremoniE~s at 81; Past 01 Regents patients feel like that when it'. :. Tere;~a's Motherhouse, Avila on the Hudson, Germantown, Past regents of the Daughu. raining. Just wait until the sun . N;Y. -From left, Sister M~ Paul Vincent of the Holy Angels, shines" then you can work in d.aug'hter o.f Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ro.gers, Fall 'River, whO of Isabella will hold their bi your garden." . -.annual. luncheon meeting .. Rig h t again! Shamefacedly . made first' V9WS; Sister Juliette Marie; daughter of· Mr. 12:30 Sunday afternoon, April :Ii spurred on' to type, dust,' keep·· and Mrs. John Barrows, Hyannis, who made perpetual vows i at 1200· Beacon Street Hotel, moving and not favor it ·unduly• . Sister M. Luke of the Holy Angels, daughter Of Mr. and Brookline. Speaker will be M& the clipped wing began to get .Mrs. Manuel S. 'Amaral, New Bedford, first vows. The com- .William P. Suzan, former exteD through to this impatient patient. niunity s.taffs the. Catholic Memorl."al Home, F'all River,' and sion· service agent and active ill 4H Club work. Among gueslll Fellow broken boners went ' along more philosophically and Our :Lady's Haven, Fairhaven. will be Mrs. Charlotte Charroo, Bars Bible Distribution less grumblingly with the ad-' North Attleboro, state DI regeJd, monition, "Don't use it and you To Public School Pupils lose it." CEDAR RAPIDS (NC)-Dis And now, .we're happy to say, tribution of small size New Tes- . the entire membership is· out taments to public school studentS cast and we've become' the· He- . HeadS __ ioDogist at Bridgeport Uni,'errsity here in Iowa by the Gideon So covery Club, members of. Fra~ Cites Family Disintegration SignCllis lCiety has been halted' by Super~ .... tures Anonymous. . " .. ' . intEmdent Arnold Salisbl,Jry. . MONTREAL (NC) - Disirite- 'signs of disintegration," he AVAILABLE FOR
Salisbury said he issued the '. gration· of the family could lead . warned. Mid-West Ff,al1dscans halt order after' several school Banquets • .Testimonials
. to .the' fall of. Ameri,can socfety Dr. Roucek cited the' high cJj::' principals reported they had re:' a'~cording to a prominent socivorce rate, the rise in young Fashion Shows
Form· F.ive Provinces' eeived complaints froin parents .ologist,· . . .marriages, the 'increasing num:" LA CROSSE (NC)-ona.four Special Parties
about the Gideon program. Sal ~'We are in a. phase ~f transiber of working mothers and the isbury said there is a board' of year experimerital' basis, five.: tion," Dr.. J:0seph S'. Roucek, cultural 'gap between different education policy Which bars provinces have been established· .chairman of the Department of generations as both signs of and WYman 90.6984 . simultaneously by 'the Fran'cis-' schools from promotirig or dis Sociology: nd Political Science _at factors in the grim pieture he or MErcury 6·2744 can Sisters of Perpetual Adora seminating materials for outside the 'University of Bridgeport painted of American family Hfe. tion. .~ groups. (Conn.) .
Mother Ann Marie,' mother Harvey Goodenough, s tat e "Either we must return to the
president of the Gideons, said general of the 116-year~0Id or "I'm very' disappointed" because der, . has announced·' that the old family values or we must
"school boys and girlsbave provinces include a "hospital find new ones. The rise and fall CONVEII~IENT' available a lot of· reading mate- . province," the first of' its kind .of a so~iety can be 'seen in the WITHOUT TRAFFIC.& PARKING PROBLEMS rial that they should not have." in the United States; a Southern solidity of its family struCiures," . The Gideon Society supplies free Wisconsin province in La Crosse; he continued. ill the , ."About 90 per cent of our ac
Bibles and New Testaments to an Iowa 'province in Cedar Rap hotels, motels and members of ids; a Western province ihSpo- . tivities are based on the family.
kane, Wash; and 'a Northem It has always been man's chief·
'tbe .nation's armed forces. SOMERSET, MASS•.
Wisconsin provinceoOin 'Wausu,c . preoccupation, and now in
Wis. . .• Americ.a, it is showing· alarming
Approve Lqan St. Rose Convent will eontinue . :The ..most frie~'d!y, democratic BANK offering WASHINGTON (NC)-A $1.3 to serve as the motherhouse. and ..H,onor· Fighters million U. S.loan to Alma Maria generalate for· the ';five n'ewiy Co~pl,te One-Stop. Ban~;ng LONDON (NC)-'-A garden of
College for Women,conducted organized affiliates. The: coJriJri" Club Accounts . Auto Loans. remembrance around a erucl
nity now has about" 1,200 mein- by the Sisters of St. in Pax ehecking Accounts . Business Loans . ton, Mass., was announced here' bers active in 12· dioceses' ';iD 'form' 'lake for those who died in eight stateS-Wisconsin, Idaho, 1916 'in the fight for Irish' in- . by the Community Facilities Ad Savings' Accour.1ts Real Estate Loans ministration. The money will be Mississippi, Montana" Oregon, . dependence was opened in Dub. . At Somerset Sho,tping' ~~":'Brightman St. Indue Utah, and Washington and ill lin by President Eamon de·Val- . used in construction 'ot a. dor mitory addition and ia :· student the Vicariate of Guam 'and Xl era' and· blessed by Archbishop' . ·M(!mber Federal DeDosit Insurance' Corporation . '4, ,. .......
cen~. . salvador, Central-.AiDel'iea:. . ,JohD e.' McQuaid of DubliL . ,.
Alarming Signs
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ANCHOK-
Thurs., April 21, 1966
College tQ HanoI" Good Samaritans WINOOSKI PARK (NC) Two "Good Samaritans" from Selma, Ala., will receive honor ary degrees from St. Michael's College here at June 6 com mencement exercises. The honorary doctorates of law will be conferred on Dr. Isabel S. Dumont and Miss Joan Mulder in .recognition of their • 22 years of service to the Negro sick in Selma. They have been associated with Good Samaritan Hospital in Selma since its open ing by the Society of St. Ed mund ,which also conducts ·St. Michael's College here in Ver mont. Dr. Dumont, a native of Co logne, Germany, is graduate of Women's College of Medicine, Philadelphia, and studied ob stetrics at St. John's Hospital, Pittsburgh. She has delivered some 3,000 babies in Selma, and for 10 years conducted a bi weekly maternity and pediatric clinic for the Dallas County Health Department. , Miss Mulder was born in De
. venter, Holland, and studied bi
ology at· Trinity College, Wash
PROBLEM EVERYWHERE: Water is precious the ington. She has served Good
world around, as here in Maiduguri, a town in northeastern Samaritan as an X-ray technici~
Nigeria, where this mother. ,draws wat~r at the pump:.' an and medical technologist, and
NC Photo. . . is currently an assistant to Dr.
. Dumont;
..New Methods
Retreat' for Women
, A retreat for' women will be "heldat Our' Lady of Good Coun sel . Retreat House, East Free . town,the'weekend of May 20. .Reservations may be made with ttonal Liturgical Conference and the retreat' house or througb the National Council of Catholic parIsh guilds or councils. Men. .
YOUR BANKING IS 'MADE WIER FOR. YOU.••• at with
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T<tDedicate Plaque A plaque will be dedicated in" Yankee Stadium, New York: City, Saturday, June 25, to com
memorate the Mass of peace of- . .. ferec~ there last October by Pope Paul VI. The ceremony will highlight Knights of Columbus
Day .in the stadium, when the
Yankees will play the Chicago
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Educator Urges Parish Boards For Schools
THE ANCHOR T~urs.,
April 21, 1966.
.Director Praises Pa u~ i~ts' Reccrd
CINCINNATI (N C) Parish boards of educatiOJ'.l are "almost an imperative'" in any plan for, improving
Dn'Newman WClrk MEMPHIS (NC)-One of every seven PaulistFathers is engaged as a Newman apostolate chaplain on an American secular ·college. or university campus. Father Richard J. Walsh, C.S.P., Paulist secretary-general, 'Nho directs activities of 40 Paul-, ist priests working on secular campuses from Berkley, Calif" to Boston, speaking at the new Catholic Student Center dedica tion at Memphis State Univer sity, said the 1()8-year-old com munity of Catholic priests, 'founded in the United States by Father Isaac Hecker, now con , tributes a larger proportion of '. its manpower to the Newman apostolate than any other reli gious community or diocese in the country. There are 256 Paul.., ist priests in the community, he added. An increased awareness by Catholic leaders concerning the importance of Newman work to~ day stems primarily from sta tistics which show the majority of Catholic students ar~ matric ulating at universities and col le<les not under Catholic aus .pi~es, he said. . '.' 'Of six million U. S.' college students, ~atholics attending Catholic colleges number about 39(),000 while Catholics at secu ular institutions number 920,000, Father Walsh said. ' 'More than 1,000 U. S. secular campuses have the services.'of:a part-time New man chaplain, Father Walsh noted, and 159 priests are serving Julltime as New~an chaplains. Nuns on Campus One of the most recent devel opments has been the presence ,of nuns on the secular college earnpus, he sai~. There are ap proximately 65 Sisters now' working in Newman centers, he said, and predicted that their number, as well as that of priests, will multiply many times in the years immediately ahead.' He also cited a major increase in the number of Catholic men and women on the faculties Of major secular universities and colleges. The Paulist Fathers entered' the Newman movement shortly after the turn of the century at the University of 'California in Berkeley, he said. In the World War I era the universities of Texas, Illinois and other institu tions established courses in reli gion for stuaent credit, he noted. Later, at the University of Iowa, a fulltime department of religion wall inaugurated, and today, the Newman movement has become one of the most im portant apostolates in this na tion, Father Walsh said.
ECUMENICAL DISCUSSIONS START: Planning ,the program of ecumenical meet mgs under the sponsorship of the F'athers at' St. Anne's Parish, Fall River, are left to right: Rt. Rev,' Anthony. M. Gomes, Our Lady ,of the Angels, Fall River; Rev. Allen Hollis; Central Congregational Church, Fall River; Rev. Pierre Lachance, O.P., of the host parish. . '
Czech~
Are Faitl1ful' 'to· God and 'Ch:urch'
'Exiled, Co rdina I Asks Prayers for Countrymen'
parochial schools, a Catholic edu- cator said here Fa'iher Herman H. :Kenning\, assistant archdiocesan superin tendent of schools, said he based his opinion on the declal:ation is sued by the Second Vaticalll Coundl in which "lay people aFe called to' share in the work fJil the Church to a greater degree' than ever before." Father Kenning, who empha sized that he was speaking onI:1 for h;mself and not for the school office, addressed the St. Clare par ish Parent-Teache'i" Association. ·Five Point Plan Outlining a "five-point phm for improving' your parochial school." he placed the parish school board first. He called » "consistent with the kind oJ/ society in which we are living consistent with the Americ8llll way of life." He said 'such a board would be h€:'aded by the pastor anQ! would include the school princi pal and a group of "represents-' tive lay peoplt.:>" to make polie;. decisiC'ns on l1uch subjects as the ,budget, teacner qualificationS. salary schedules, and "impl,e . menting at thE' parish level the policies of the' archdiocesall board of educAti(m."
.Stone of Prejudice: LAFAYETTE (NC) "The' 'great stone' of prejudice and injustice must be rolled awaY jf we hope to accept sincerely and truthfuily' the message Of the angel of the Resurrection," Bishop Maurice ·Schexnayder-of - ,Lafayette said in his EastS , message. "We must find Christ aild see Christ in our, fellowme.m jf Christ's resurrection has real ly happened in us,". the' LouiSi ana prelate declared. .
"Pt:a3' for our land and our Mass were Archbishop John J. PHILADELPHIA (NC) - As a elimax of, his ,day-long visit people, the majority 9f .whom ,Krol of, the Philadelphia Arch here 'Josef Cardinal ,Beran, ex,;. ,remain faithful ,to God and the 'diocese and' Msgr. Anthony L;' Ostheimer, editor·of thElPhila' iled Bishop of ,Prague, offered a Church," he said. "In Czecho pontifical Mass' at the tomb-, slovakia I did not· know the , delphia Catholic Standard' and shrine of his compatriot; Blessed, ' whole world was praying for me Times. John Neumann. but I felt the strength of all your Calling Cardinal Bera,n, who Bishop Neumann, whose can-, - prayers: was imprisoned by the nazis for onization Cardinal ,Beran has Laudmg the Cardinal at the four years during World War II, . a "symbol of living martyrdom," petitioned for in Rome, was the Archbishop Krol compared the fourth Bishop of Philadelphia. , SERVING-visiting prelate to Bishop Neu He is'buried at St. Peter's church. I FINE DTAllAN FOOD I mann. He said that they had far Both prelates were born in more in common than the same Prague. In a brief address, the Cardi The Ma'rian Committee and birthplace and each was "small nal. \': no left Czechoslovakia, in the Catholic Committee on . in size but a giant in stature.." e RESTAURANT and LOUNGE Msgr. Ostheimer declared that volu', tary exile in' February Scouting of the Dio~ese of Fall on Lake Sabbatia after more than 16 years under: River will sponsor their seventh Cardinal Beran had "wrought n094 Bay Street communist confinement, asked annual awards dinner at 7 brilliant witness to Christ today" ~ 1 prayers for his countrymen. Wednesday night, April 27 at and said that together with VA 4_8754 White's restaurant, Westport. St. Cardinals Wyszynski in Poland, George and St. Anr-1e medals will Mindszenty in Hungary, and be presented to men and women Stepinac in Yugoslavia, Cardi from all parts of the Diocese nal Beran had suffered a "white active in Catl,olic aspects of the martyrdom." Boy Scout, Girl Scout, Camp EL PASO (NC)-All diocesan Eire Girls, and Daughters of ~UMBER and religious priests having fac.. Isabella programs. COMPANY . ulties to hear confessions in the Presenting the awards will be El Paso diocese, have been di"; Bishop Connolly, and Diocesan rected to attend a series' of 'three lay chairman fo:" the event is Complete Line
seminars on birth 'control by Robert V.' McGowan," K.S.G: Bishop Sidney M..Metzger. . Diocesan director of youth ia Building Materials
i ~ Th,e sem,inl!rS are desighedto . ·Rev. W~llter A. Sullivan. aid· Past,ors ,and ~nfesso~s 'ill :,_ The guest speaker will be R~v.: I SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN
,Warns Monop~ly , . CP!l,?se~ing ,p! ~; e Q t s. ~eg~rding . _Edmond, C. .Micarelli, Newman. fanuI~ .planmng, decl,~lons and - Club chapl~i~ at the University WYinan 3-2611
Educat.iorn: practIces. : ~' 01. Rh'ode Island . lS!!!!!! ' WICHiTA (J\l'C)....,...The head of , _Bishop Metzger said: ," ' . the Wichita chapter, Citizens for "Only urgent parochial duties '" PB'e:sident 'Retires Educational Freedom,' asserted are legitimate reasons for ab here in Kausas that "no greater sence." He also noted that repeat , ,ALBANY (NC),-The presi mistake can be made than to . seminars will 'be held· in other ' dent of the College of St. Rose, give any level of government il locations at which priests will be Sister Catherine Francis, C.S.J., monopoly in education." expected to attend any session has retired after 13 years'service. . "This is precisely what we do missed. by supporting public education Topics to be-discussed win in only," Bernard A. Hentzen, chap clude: 'parents' responsibility in ter president.· told a home-school deterrriining family size; legiti- . ~NlUFACFURERS . gr.ouP meeting here. "If we hope. , macy of practicing rhythm; use (o~q to find quality in, public educa .9f pills for hormonal control; use , tion we must permit' a healthy of .artificial' methods' of birth Reg. Master Plumber 2930 of HIIUSTOL C»UNTY
competitor to exist." control; counseling' practices in GEORGE M. MONTLE CEF' is a nondenominational 'the confessional and in inter ()ver 35 Years
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NORTH AnLEBORC e MANSFIELD questions relatin'g to' birth' con equity in the American educa 806 NO. MAIN STREET
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Exiled C'o',dinal Beran Hopes
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ANCHOR Thu~s., April 21, 1966
To Return to Homeland
Says Education Board Blocks School Aid
NEW YORK (NC)-Josef Cardinal Beran of Prague, C'zechoslovakia, a prelate of small stature and enormous 4etermination, said here he hopes to return some day to hin communist-ruled homeland. He now lives in exile in Rome. Cardinal Beran, 81' Czeehosolvak Society of Arts and !'iving for the start of 811 Sciences in America. 18-day visit to the United In a short speech he spoke States, told a press confer warmly of the United States, eee that not returning was a tIOndition under which the re gime permitted him to leave Czechoslovakia last year after 16 years in prison. . ''But,'' he added, "I am an. 0p timist. I intend, God willing, tD ~tum some day to my coun Clry."
The cardinal said he· accepted ehe invitation to come to the ilJ. S. to "visit my fellow na «lonals who have come to live' an.d prosper under liberty." He said, too, he hoped to "ob I!rerve the American way and to tmplant this way of life in my native land, if possible." AJl']lIori Greeting
Cardinal Beran was greeted al:
Kennedy International Airport upon his arrival from Rome by Xl'rancis Cardinal Spellman of New York.. his host during his ~o-day New York stay. ' 'Cardinal Spellman said he waS iikilighted to welcome the Czech pi-elate who "representS so much
and is an inspiration and .ex:': lUriple to the entire world." ' '. '
<::ardinal Beran' was impri~ ~ed by the na& iri 1942 and liberated by American troops m 1945. He woo reimprisoned by the communists shortly after ~y took over Czechoslovakio m 1948. IT·. S. Leading' Nation ·A small group of dignitariea aDd Czechoslovak people were en hand to greet the 77-year-old cardinal at the airport. Two'chilo «'Iren dressed u1 native costumeS gave him a bouquet and an older mvup gave him rye bread !iwi salt, a traditional custom m bonoring guests. . .i On the evening of his arrlval Cardinal Beran ·officiated m Benediction in Our Lady of Per petual Help church. Later he at .ended a reception given by the
BROOKLYN ('NC) - The New York board of education has been accused of "calling a halt to the new era of
saying it is the world's leading nation because it has been able to combine many different cul tures, not submerge them. The cardinal's itinenUy calls for him to visit Philadelphia. Baltimore, Washington, Chicago and other cities. On May 2, he will be in Warsaw, N. D., for ceremonies marking the millen nium of the Christianizing mis
sion of SS, Cyril and Methodius
to the Slavic countries. In Chi
cago he will receive an honorary doctorate from Loyola University. •
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BERLIN (NC) - The Polish communist government has an I10unced plans to stage mass celebrations. April 16 and 17 at Ghiezno where Catholics had scheduled rites marking the LOOoth anniversary of Polish Christianity. ,
~rybuna Ludu, the party news raper in Warsaw, reported that ckremonies commemorating the fording' of the O'd e r oR 'i v e r against the retreating GermaruJ in 1945 would coincide with the Church rites. Two big soccer matches have been .set for May 3 when other celebrations will be held at the Marian shrine at Czestochowa. . Stefan 'Cardinal Wyszynski and 63 other P~1ish bishoPll will be. in "Gniezno, Poland's oldest diocese, fora tWo-day episcopal conference, beginning on the HUh. There will· be public Mas ses, sermons and ceremonies.
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AF'll'ER EIGHT YEARS IN CHANCERY: Rt. Rev. Msgr. JOhn H. Ha'ckett, Episcopal Secretary and vice-chan cellor, right, offers his prayful wishes to Bishop Medeiros following~ight years workhlg together in the Chancery Office. .
New Spirit of Charity Dcminican Mastew General Praise~ W Qrk of Missionaries
CHICAGO (NC)-<SA spirit of be victorous.· "On the other hand," Father g r l! ate r comprehension and charity" marks the work of the Fernandez said, "this emphasis missionary· in the post-concilla&' does not mean that one should world, the head of one of the not also explain differences and Church's largest Teligious orders refute errors when it is deemed opportune to do so." said in an interview' ·here. ."But we must do this with Ii Father Af,iceto. Fernandez,O~ Georgetown Operis P., master general of the world's spirit of greater comprehension $26 Million Drive . . 13,000 Dominican priests and and charity," he explained. WASHINGTON (NC)....:.George ~rothers was in Chicago on one Positive Exposition town Univer:;ity announced the leg of a worldwide tour of the As far as the council's direct order's 89 provinces. Diocesan Commission opening of a $26 million Prog Pointing to current emphasis effect on the work of the Domi ress Fund to finance the bulk
nicans is concerned, Father Fer Has First Meeting of a development program at its on those things which unite nandez said that it showed the Christians and non-Christi:ma annual Founder's Day luncheon BURLINGTON (NC)-People here. . rather than· divide them, the necessity of the order, which DO poor that· they "are ashamed has as its purpose to "defend, Father Gerard J. Campbell, Dominican master general said ao go to MallS" and the need for S.J., university president, said that such an attitude "can favor explain and diffuse Christian & greater understanding of and doctrine through preaching and participating in the liturgy were Georgetown bas devoted' "yearo an acceptance of the Gospel and teaching." of the troths, which will alwaYs among the topics discussed at of intensive study" to a develop "In our day, a need w felt ment plan that will co~ the first meeting of the Burling for the diffusion of culture and $33,851,000. ton diocesan pastoral eommis Directs Boy Scouts III diffusion of Christian culture -'He added: ''In recognition of &on, which includes priests, Re is also necessary," he pointecll the soundnlOss of Georgetown'a Catholic Relations. ligious. and laity. out. plan and of her service to the Among the topics to be eoD NEW BRUNSWICK (NC)· -;. "But the order must do this sidered in the near future" at nation's welfare, federal, agen William H. Condon of New today in a greater spirit of com an levels in the diocese, are the cies have approved the award ,oa Brwiswick, N.J., has been named prehension and openness,. in eftectivenes:!l of the no-drinking $7,851,000 to help supply PhYS director of the Catholic Rela sisting on a positive exposition ')pledge at ~nfirmations, the ical facilities needed for George tionships Service .of 'the Boy of the evangelical message and elimination of differences in town to discharge her responsi Scouts of America. of theological and philosophical . . 'Mass stipends, the taking of the bilities." He will .succeed A. A. Kirk. doctrine," he' continued., parish census. and the setting Condon, who has worked for ,"()ur position as DominicaDJil Ill- of "storefront churches" to, EcumenismSociety's the' Boy Scoutssiilce 1939, win in the Church in transition," Fa t1lerve outlying areas.. coordinate activities oi the 13, ther Fernandez said, "is neither "Active and knowledgeable Convention Theme 917 Scout units now sponsored behind nor ahead of-but solidly parish committees are a must if ST. PAUL (NC)-Ecumen.ism by Catholic orga'nizatioDs with-the Church in its 'ag. the work of the diocesan com giornamento' or updating." will be the theme of the national throughout the United States. mission is to bear fruit," Bisb op Robert 'll'. Joyce told the m.eeting .of delegates, from 00" chapters of Delta Epsilon Sigma, meeting. "The dialogue must 'be national Catholic honor society gin in the parish, withpriestB at the College of St. Thomas here amd people planning and work in Minnesota Saturday. fing together in a eommcn ef . SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS
Dr. Leonard J. SWidler, pro !art." fessor of history at Duquesne Spaew'Os Firelkoof Sleeping Quarters-Boys "I to 14 yrs. Old
University, Pittsburgh, will Six-week season: ,June 26 to August 6
Doorstep speak on "Fret'dom 'and Respon Register for' 2, or 4. or 6 we!!ks Free Tutoring if desirei
FAIRFEILD (NC)-Theoval sibility: Requisite of 'the Ecu THE BROTHERS iIJlF Tim SACRED HEART
menical Age," and Dr. Warren ~ne Qltar table to be placed m the Newman center being A.Quanbeck, professor of sys tematic theology at Luther The Ilmilt at the University of 'Ver mont is being cut from the ''blue ological Seminary and observer SHARON, M&SSACllIUSETTS ~ flagstone" doorstep of II iaxm- ' ,at Vatican Council II, will dis
'!lnuuse thaI: now belongs .to the cuss "What. DOeS Dialog Be
ll.I1te£iident School for }ROYS GU08.mmar Grades 4-5-6-"1-9 .... family of Father Philip J. Bran quire?H CAMP OR SCHOOL, Tel. 61'1-'784-5'762 on. university Newman chaplain. The talks will be followed b;y
The doorstep was placed in 1813. panel discussions.
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coope\l\tion between public and privat~ education in the city" by Msgr, Eugene J. Molloy, su perintE'ndent of Brooklyn dioc esan schools. Magr. MoUoy strongly pro tested the board's action in re jecting the plan of the Superin tendent of School Bernard Don ovan for the extension of federal! aid to disadvantaged children in nonpublic schools under Title IT of the 1965 Elementary and Sec ondary Education Act. The plan presented by Dono van c"lled for remedial reading and speech ·therapy classes lor poor childre,l in nonpublic schooh' during regular hOUrs; specialists in art, music, health eduC!ltlon, nutrition and library scienCe! for enrichment pro grams. out-of-door remedial and tutorial instruction and. guidan~ centers; and '1 demonstration and training program for teachers of nee d y pupils in nonpublill: schools, Reier-ts Intent , . Msgr M~lloy accused the board of. substituting an emas culated pro~ram that fails io meet the comparab,ility stand ards of the federal legislation. rejects the intent of Congrem, and violates the spirit and lettea' of the law. _ He .:aid the board "is pretend ing to fulfill the requirement of law to help disadvantaged chil dren in nonpubHc schools, but Un effect it is failing to do so. ][a view of its !lew decisions, lIlot more than $2: million will be spent on nonpublic school chtl dren. "Thi.l! is less th3h three per cent of allocat~d funds spent om cll,ildren who' represent 30 pel!' cent of the city's school children.
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District Serra ns Convene Mondo, mn Newport
THE ANCHOR.,... Thurs., April 21, 1966
Bi~hop Assigns New Assistant
The 1966 District No. . . meeting, of Serra Int~ national will be held at tlne Viking' Hotel in Newpori'v
Most Rev. James L. Connolly,' Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, has announced the ap-, pointment of the Rev. Antonio Pedro Pinto as assistant at 11)10: maculate Concepticn Church, New Bedford. . Father Pinto was born' June 29, 1931, in St. Eulalia Lousada,' Portugal and ec)ucated at the Seminary of St. Felgueiras and St. Tetesinha Felgueiras. Ordained in Portugal on Aug. 5; 1956,' the new assistant at the New Bedford Parish has 'been serving' in the Missions of the' Archdiocese of Lou r e n ,t 0 ' Marques, Mozambique. The appointment becameef fective on Tuesday, Aprif 19.
Monday, April 25. There will be a District GoV" ernor's conference with newlw· elected officers of the distri~ clubs at 5 o'clock in the Lounge. At the same hour there will al~ be a tea-reception for out-o:lf.. town wives. Dr. William fI. Downey, Jr., of New Bedford i:l District Governor, and Mrs. Michael F. Walsh of Newport ilD chairman of the Newport Cluil> . Wives. Committee. . Tht' Head Table reception a~ a SOCial hour will begin at 6\, with dinner in the Colonilli Room scheduled for 6:45. 114.. · William Sullivan is Chairman 4ilfj , Corivention Doubles. . , th'e Newport Club' Dinner Com- mittee. At Family Reunion Guests of. honor will be n.' . CHiCAGO (NC)-Conventions . Most Reverend Russell J. Me- ' 0ften bring. :friendly reunions but' Vinney, D.D., Bishop of Pro. :liew coUld equal one get-together· dence; The Most Reverend JamefJ . that took place at the National: L. Connolly, D.D" Bishop ol! Catholic Educational Associa- " Fall River; Mr. Joseph Reill3i., . tion's' '63rd annual- conventron· International Trustee, the Dw..: here last week. . trict Governor, and the Depu~ Catholic education is a family District Governor, Joseph Tal. affair" for the' Sitzmanns' of pf Providence. Kings'iey, Iowa,' and the NCEA The Salve' Regina Colle~ eonvention saw seven of its 11 Glee Club, Mrs. Marian Vali members on hand 'for the acti ,,:.. , . Slyke conductIng, and Sister jties. 'Mary' Rosina, R.S.M., assistinG, .Enjoying their first reunion in will entertain following the dillF . . three years were Father Al nero phonse Sitzmann, O.S.B., Con Serra International is an (JlI'>o ~eption, Mo.; Sister Marie Je rome, Chicago; Mother Mary ganization of- leading Catholic Rosalie and Sister Mary Faith,. hiymen formed to help foste!' .. Yankton, S.D.; Sister Mary Am:' vocations to the Roman Catholle PAPAL AUDIENCE: Bishop-Elect Medeiros and Bishop Connolly hiLveaudience priesthood and to assist in the brosej Detroit; Sister Robert Mary,' Adrian, Mich., and Sister ,with. the late beloved Pope John XXIII. eoucation of yoUng. men there Mary' Marcella, Omaha. for. District No. 40 is 'comprised : of Serra . Clubs. of' Newpo'" ' The Sitzmanns, ,whose parents Providence, and ~ent Countj,' .. are deceased, 'h;we' another' R,l., arid Attleboro, Taunton,' brother, a. priest, another sister' Fan River,.; New Bedford, cmcll Continued from Page One Hea'lth Camp for the Summer. his secretary, assistant chancel • nun, and· two married sistet·s. 'sent him' to prepare' for the He remained with·Fr. Harriilg- lor, chaplain, ,to, the Sacred Hyannis (in process of form.' th d t th C th' 1" ton until January 1949 when he' Hearts Academy and Viear. for. . tion): .nere·asing ·Ia o.gue" . .pne~,.,oo .. a . ~ a 0 l~ 111-, was sent toassi,st Rt. Rev. M.sgr.. ' Re.lig·ious. In April 1953 he was, verslty of AmerIca, Wash~ngto!1,.. Aids Peace Cause " ' b. C. After completing two year" Antonio P: Vieira, Mt. Carmel: appointed' vice-chancellor. an d ' of college there he was' given'~ church, New Bedford. After an- some,time later chancellor of the. QUEBEC (NC) - Increasing schOlarship to the Basselin F,oun-: other Summer at St.Yincentde diocese. On February 3, 1958, he dialogue between those of dif- dation '.of the same University, Paul Camp, ·..h e·" was sent by was made a Domestic Prelate. He ferent views has given new hope with ,residence at Theologic.al Bishop .Cassidy 'o' to·the No,dh' was appDinted pastor. of' St. ' 10 the cause of world ,peace,ac- College. He received a Master of American' Colle~~ hi Ro'me to . Michael's. parish on October 5, ' , MIAMI (NC)-TelegraJDll eording· to Father Dominique : Arts Degree in Philosophy i'n do research for' his' dissertation' 1~60, ,while retaining his office, have been sent to Pope Paull Pire, "O.P., 1958 Nobel Peac'e ','funeI9,4 2. He was awa~ded the 'on "The de,my'stei'iis:and:thede of Chancellor. He has remained . VI, Raul Cardinal Silva Hea Prize 'winner. Licenti;:lte in Sacred Theology sacramentis" of St. Ambrose. . in these two posts until his pres_, ri(juez of Chile and ChiJea Disiumament' will come onjy in Jllne 1946 .and was ordained. This is the dissertation' he' de- ent appointment as Bishop of·. President Eci'uardo Frei Mon 'When' 'the sources of' hate are' to the ;Priesthood 'in St. Mary's fended a't Catholic University in the Diocese of Brownsville, t~lva, asking their interventioe· Glvercome 'and' di'alogue between Cathedral, Fali River, on, June, 1951 and! for which'he received Texas.
in gaining freedom for the people sincerely' seeking to 15 of the same year, by Bishop a doctorate of Sqcred ·Theology
Franciscan priests 'recently .... wnderstand' and appreciate ·the Cassidy. ' ' . in 1~52.-
rested in Cuba for giving a'syluJlll . Delegate to' Pron1ote "'oint of view of others will do He retur/1ed from Rome <t.o a man who tried Unsuccessfui- . 11:' After ordination he was sent " . . HI much in this direction, Father Fall River in July 1950 and was ly to force a Cuban airliner .. Pir~ asserted. to assist the' Rev. Augusto L.· appointed immediately a part Unity in 'Ho~y ,Land land in the U.S. JERUSALEM (NC)' -:.. Arch Tne' Dominican priest, who Furtado at St,' John of 'God par-· time asssistant at the Holy Name
. The telegrams .were sent lllf' bishop' Aug us tin: Sepinski, fourlded the University' of Peace ish, Somerset. In NoveI:Uber of' .church, Fall River, and was it: Belgium' in 1960 to promote' the same year he was assigned. brougl1t 'lo the Chancery to help O.F.M·., the new apostolic dele the Committee of Young CuballlJ the practice' of worldwide' dia: ,to ·the Rev. Joseph M. Silvia, St. Fr: James E. Gleason, thech~n gate for Palestine,' said here his in Exile,which' claimed ·that t~ iogue;"is'visiting Canada in 'con ,Michael's parish,,' Fall River,., cellor. Upori Bish,op Cassidy's work.' is . that of ~'promoting arrests were the start of a new· campaign. of persecl,1tion against' , junctiOn 'with the 'publication of .. ,~ith whom pe .stl\)'ed until June ~eath on May 17, 1'951, Bishop' unity ampng all without distinc of 1947 when he was assigned the Catholic Church in Cuba. . tion of race, creed or rite.'" bis n~w book, "To Bliild Peace." ..·for two months.toassist Fr. Joao Connolly appointed Fr. Medeiros Angel Betancourt Cueto, flight The former minister general V. Resendes at Our 'Lady of, o(the Franciscans said in·an in-· engineer who tried to hijack the B~-LinguafWee,kly " .Health parish, aiso in Fail River. Rever!;eS Decision terview, "I conceive my role here 'plane, was arrested in St, Fran .. In the Fall of 1947· he was reas in accord with the motto 'ut , 'cis' monastery in Havana alon. Ma'r.ks, 75t'h . Year signed to' Catholic University to I'n CLilstody Case unum sint' (that all may boeone) with Father Miguel Loredo, 0. _ Issue. study for th,e Qoctor,ate'in Sacred MIDDLETOWN (NC) F.M., and Father Luis Serai. . DES MOINES (NC)-'-The Iowa which I chose at' my consecra Theology... Afterfinishi~g 'his Supreme Court, reversing a No. 4,000 (April 13, 1986) of Jed tion." Ajurja, O.F.M., the superior. The in June 1948, he was as 1ower court d eClslon, .. nota (The Unl'on), a bl'-ll'ngual .courses monastery is now being patroll . ruled the 'Archbish~p Sepinski's post is weekly l'n Slovak and s,igned:t9 Rev. William JI. Har ""atholl'c \L. . wishes' of children "should be' that of 'papal representatLve to· ed . by militiamen and severa1l rjngton to assist'him il,l the run-' given little; if any, weight" in the Catholic hierarchies o:E Jor-' other churches· are reportet1l Engll·sh.publl·shed here l'n Penn sylvania, marked the 75th year : ning of St. Vincent de Paul making divorce I case custody dan, Israel and Cyprus. His "under surveillan,ce."· of the official organ of the First decisions. headquarters are in the Jordan Catholic Slovak Union, a frater New Jersey Masons' The state high' court over ian sector of Jerusalem. lIl al society. turned a ruling by Judge W. L. The pape~ was founded and Hear Arclhbishop Huiskamp of Lee County Dis G d I iedited by Father Stephen. Fur NEWARK .(1':lC) ..:.. Archbishop trict Court, wllo awarded cus Ll,ICY at' ua a,!LI ~ek ip, E:leveland,' May 12, 1l!91. Thomas A. Boland of Newark tody of' three' youngsters to ·MEXICO CITY '(NC) ---: Luci He. also established the First was the pdncipal, speaker at a . their motJrier,·Mrs. Ruby Herron Baines Johnson, visiting Mexi <pathQii'c Slovak 'Union (Jednota) meeting of Masons here. The oc of Keokuk. co: Ci~y with her father, attend ~ 1890,and several other frater-casion was the" sixth annual The' Supreme Court instead ed Mass .at the: world f~lJ1ous lIIal a';ld cultural organizations brotherhood-dinner of the SpirHs ,awarded custody· to the father. shrine of- Our Lady of Guada.- 101' A.Il,'Ierican Slovaks. Square Club, c0111Posed· of ,Ma- The high court said Judge Huis_ lupe. The President's daughter The. weekly has a circulation sons in the alcoholic 'be:verage 'kamp relied too heavily on ex-· w:ent to 9:30 Mass on .the tnorn-' of 40,000 throughout the United industries. ·The· club ,presented . pressed desi'res of the, couple's .ing after· she arrived here. The States" in Canada and in 27· other. its brotherhood award to Angelo, 10-year~0]ld'.son. The Herrons ,Fjrst Lady's press ,s,~cretarjr said I .Jhe Falmouth NatiOnal Ba_ FalmouU1; . Mass. , ~untFies."Joseph C. Krajsa' has . ·Be&teUi, former "Notre' . Dame have another' son, 3, 'and a Lu'ci"wanted to ,go· to Mass and \ .,. tiM '"i'.le crHil Slltce' ,.21 :iDee» 'e~itor since February, 1~4.. ··.. Al1-~eJ'ica· quarter-back:;" "."" daughter,.~" . .:. i4l .see the-' 16th-century. church. .
·Msgr. Medeiros' Bishop of Brownsville'
".. . ,
'Do I' , ....,. .
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Fecir Increasing Castro Arrests
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THE ANCHOR:"::'Diocese. of Fan. ~~-Thurs. April ~.. ' " '
FORMER CCA CHAJRMEN AND 1966 CHAIRMAN: Gathered at the annual meeting of Bishops, priests and laymen for the opening of the 26th annual Catholic Charities Appeal were, left to right: J. Harry Condon,
13,000
to.
Jesus .Mary Academy auditori Continued from Page One um, Fall River, emphasized the citizens. The two Nazareths; in Fall .spirit, of love that has been so River ·and Cape Cod; are attesta . evident in past campaigns. He stated; "the 30 agenCies of Cath tions' of Bishop Connolly's devo tion to ·the exception.al child arid .alic Charities are 30 symbols of 10ve~LI)Ve. for the aged, love addition'al proof of the expres for the. young, love for the sick, sion '~'He Cares~'. Chairman William H. Carey, love 'Jor' the underprivileged; Esq., Fairhaven resident and love f~r all facets of our society that are· in need of love." New Bedford lawyer, in address; ing a capa.city audience in the .. . The' chairman con.tinued, "This
Attleboro; Harold E. Clarkin, Fall River; William H. Garey, present chairman, Fairhaven; Joseph E. Fernandes, Norton; Frank L. Daylor; former resident of Fall River. .
Work for Appeal appeal should be an Appeal for Gratitude-gratitude to Bishop Connolly for his great work in the field of Christian Charity. I ask you to accept, Bishop Con nolly, through me but in the name of all our Christian breth ren our deep appreciation to you for the great leadership you have shown to us and the tender care you have been able to sup ply to those of our brethren who
so desperately need our help." "We will all agree; however, that we cannot rest upon our laurels of the past. There is still work to do for Christ in the field of Charity~and plenty of it. This need for Charity will never stop. We will always have with us the poor, the underprivileged, the sick, the aged, the orphans. They may be others today but tomor row they· may be one of us. So
of
Heart
we cannot minimize our efforiIJ modify our goals. On the con t.rary, we must intensify our e1l forts and expand' our goals tC satisfy· the never ending need Iw our Charity. The waiting lisw at our agencies continue W mount particularly at our home!! for t.he aged as our elderly folk!J continue to become more elderly and t.he need for their comCoii and care increases." .
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Fr. Arrupe Says Jesuits Study
Methods of Combating Atheism
Holy ·Cross Sister Does Population Research·, NOTR'E DAME (NC)-A youthful, unassuming Sister of the Holy Cross has earned a place among' the world .scientists attempting through research to answer sevel'al questions about the human reproductive cycle and thus close in on the problems of family planning and popula- of detecting the time of ovula tion control. Sister M. Jean tion in advance." . F~llowshipS Vianney, C.S.G., biologN' in'Sister chose this 'field of restructor at St. Mary's College "search while working on' her. here, already is internationally Ph.D':-at the University of Notre recognized for preliminary reDame 'from' 1961 to 1964. Her search in predicting 'the time of·· work 'at Notre Dame was done' ovulation in mice. on several graduate fellowships, This Summer, .with a· ~rant I including one from the' National from the PopulatIon CounCIl of . Science Foundation.
the Rockefeller Foundation; she ,'.: In 'her work ·this· Summer will~',,:otk with Dr.. Hilton,. A .. , Sister Jean Vianney will hav~' ,. Salhomck at the Harvard Med'7 'several'months to spend on re ical SCI1~ol doi'1~ research on th~ . search· to link her discoveries MODERATOR: Rev. Peter biochemistry of the menstrual with 'mice closer to the human .:N. Grazlan6, assistant at cycle' iii' hunians.. .. reproductive cy'cle.. Meanwhile, she nas been 'in-' , , .Holy' Name Church, Fall vited by Leo Cardinal Suenens River, has been appointed by of Malines-Brussels t(j attend an Christian Brothers Eishop Connolly mo~lerator international confereilce on the of spiritual development of nature of the sexual cycle in Recognize Union women next month in Belgium. '. SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The the Diocesan Council of To her knowledge, Sister John Christian Brothers of California Catholic Women. Vianney is the only nun doing have alll19unced willingness to research in her field. However, recognize the National Farm: she ,considers it· far .from a Workers Association 'as the rep strange choice of work, resentative of farm workers in U After all, as a 'woman- and a th'eir vineyards. Catholic 'I should be vitally in-' ".' In a telegram to Cesar Chavez', RAMSEY (NC) ~ Mo~e than terested in' both the problem of ',NFWA' president, the Mont. La. family ·planning· ·and the world-,· Salle Vineyards,. owned by the four tons of medical supplies~ wide problem of population con-., ,Christian Bl'Others, said it would quadruple the total collected a trol. .r. feel that this is an ex,.. recognize the union "as the or,. year ago-have been gathered tremely worthwhile field of .re- " ganization through which social· for Catholic Relief Services-Na search," she explains. justice may be realized for our tional Catholic Conference in a She further advises that "this California agricultural workers." cooperative drive' organized in research is not of interest to Expressing. pleasure at the this New· Jersey community. Catholics alone. Many popula- telegram, .C.havez, who recently The drive was launched by tion experts today believe that led 80 stnklll.g f?rm workers on .Father Edward S, Cooke ·of St. contraception is on its way out, ,. a 25.,.day 3.00-mlle m..Jlrch. from, Paul's parish with assistance of as a method for worldwide pop_· I?elano t9 Sacram.ento to drama other clergymen, nurses and ulation control. They feel the tlze the grape workers' plight, doctors, on behalf of the over big need is for accurate' methods said: "~e, i.n0~r mutual concern seas relief agency of U.S. Cath for SOCIal Justlc.e, are prepared olics. to meet with ~rothe,r Gregory A story' in the' Advocate, and his representatives as soori Newark archdiocesan newspaper, . B~aHle Books as a date c!'n be arranged." NEWARK (NC)~A total of' brought the drive to the at tention of nuns at Villa Walsh 722 Braille books fi;>r the blind u~.' S.· .Fr.oe' nds' A.od. were produced in 19(j5 by yol." . Convent, Morristown. They col unteer workers of the .Mount LIMA (NC)~Friends in the lected 23 cartons of supplies. Carmel Guild· here in New Jer-. U.S. contributed 20 ··per cent of Another' 100 cartons were col sey which also reports 437 tape, t~e cost of .building' the' new' l~cted by seminarians at Im recorded reels' were pr<iduceci to .. Our Lady of Guadalupe church maculate Conception Seminary, provide textbooks and peri6di- iri. the Balconcillo district of this Darlington. The New Jersey eals for blind children and Peru .city, ,composed mainly of Medical Society, Auxiliary con a~ults. lower middle, income persons. tributed 133 cattonso
C'RS To Rec'eive ,MedicQISupplies .'
.CHICAGO (NC)-The Society of. Jesus is currently "thinking· and re-thinking" its attitudes toward atheism in order that it may bend its energies toward combating it, the Jesuits' general said' here. . "We are currently ,working to see how we chn present our atti- . tudes with the greatest compre ,hension and understanding for . the atheist;" Father Pedro' Arrupe, S.J., 28th general of the society said, adding that today's greatest problem is "presenting things with true clarity." "People will recogriize truth," Father Arrupe pointed out, "but to acc'ept it and integrate it into eyeryday life is another' problem.'" . . Turning' to the society's Jiiis sion work, he said that the Cath olic Church "is no longer' looked upon as merely a 'colonial tool' . in developing nations." Rather it is now "recognized for 'its hu manitarian work and the fact that it is interested in raising, the standard of the people." Church Has Answers "In developing nations, people.' are not clear on many human problems," Father Arrupe said. "But with past misunderstand ings all but forgotten, they look to the· Catholic Church because it has answers to many of the questions." , The Jesuit general also said that the society' "plans. to get ,more involved in Newman work because it feels that there is tre
New Canadian Paper Sales Rise Sharply EDMONTON (NC)-Two dio ceses in western Canada have suspended publication of their diocesan newspapers in favor of the Western Catholic. RepQrter, an independent Catholic weekly published by laymen since last September. The Reporter, edited by Doug las Roche, was founded by' Archbishop Anthony J 0 r dan; O.M.I., to serve all 'dioceses of the Alberta province. Since its founding it has nearly tripled the circulation of the Western Cath olic which it replaced in Edmonton. < •
mendously important work to 100 done." Turning to another "spedaU apostolate," the head of tbtl world's 36,000 Jesuit priests, Brothers and seminarians, sahli.. that the society has "more. aJKl more to do" in the field of radit) and television." Bot.h .media present "excep tional means of reaching maDy . people," he said, "but both al$G require especially talented p,eople."
Film to' Explore Social Problems
, . BOGOTA (NC)~A commu~ cations institute directed by twe priests and a lay journalist i!J preparing .a documentary filHl on Latin America's populatiOlll explosion. . The film, "El Mar Humarull'" (The Human Sea), is one of 1irst major film efforts of the Inst.itute of Audio-Visual SYfJ-> . t.ems (ISAV) aimed at creati1)l1 an awareness of social problemIJ in Latin America. ISAV .was founded here thrH years ago by a journalist, J~ Igna~i,o Torres, and Father Gus tavoPerez, a priest-sociologi~, Later they were joined by a U. & priest, Father Thomas F. Me Mahon, M.M. They plan to difJ-> tribute the new documentarw film throughout Latin Amerioo for television presentation. ISAV's headquarters contaiM a 280-seat theater, classrooms, sound studio, television and film ing studio and equipment neede€ l to produce aupio-visual materia1\.
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Antioch Patriarch Plans U. So Visit NEWARK (NC) -- Patriarcia Maximos IV Saigh of Antiocb, Syria, is expected to preside ~. the seventh annual North AmeJil ican Melkite Association co&;. venti on here in New Jersey JUDe' 3(' to July 3. The convention wpl! honor Bishop-designate JustiIl Jajmy, recently named Ordinarry of· the 26 Melkite churches iIIl North America.·,·
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BACIRED HEARTS. NORTH FAIRHAVEN
A joint meeting of the' Catho Bc Charities Appeal committee and the School Improvement committee will be held at 7:30
tonight in the scho:)l cafeteria.
Ladies of St. Anne will receive oorporate communion at 8 o'clock Mass 'Sunday morning, April 24 and will hold their monthly meeting at 7:30 Monday might ,in the cafeteria.
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COIRPUS CllmlSTI, SANDWllClEI
Corpus Christi - St. Teresa's , Guild will hold a special meeting at 8 o'clock Monday night, April 25 in Father Clinton Hall, Sand-' wich, to plan a Summer lawn party for Saturday, July 9. All parishioners willing to help with :" arrangements are requested to attend. llt'll'. FIRA-NCIlS XAVlllER,
lBrn'ANNllS Mrs. John Lycett, and M,rs. John Moda are serving as co chairmen for the Rummage Sale
-00 be held Monday starting at 9 o'clock in the morning in the
Maspni,c Hall, Main St., Hyannis. ,Articles may be left, at the, Masonic Hall SundaY' evening:
between 7 and 9,o'clock.,or, other
arrangements may be, made by ~~tacting ~ither of the ~, chairmen. "The regular monthly meeting of, the Women's Guild will ,be held tonight at 7:30. A, covered dtl;h supper will ,be served, and there will be a, reunion of past presidents. Mrs, Mary Morrissey, chair man, has announced that Joan Ellis of the Falmouth Theatre Guild, who played the lead in the Sound of Music, and Mary Mann, pianist, will prov~de the entertainment. " , , Mrs, Albert Bourgeois will serve as chairman for the ham and bean 'supper scheduied for May 14.
ST. STANISLAJ)'S.
FALL RIVER
The Holy Rosary Sodality will
conduct a Polish food sale from 9 to 6 today and tomorrow in the school hall. ST. MARGARET, BUZZARDS BAY, The ways and means commit tee of SS. Margaret-Mary Guild wfU hold the last of a series of whist parties Saturday, April 23 in the school hall. Donations of
prIzes' and pastries are re
quested. A Spring rummage sale is planned for Saturday, May 14.
Donations of' clothing and white
elephants will pe accepted the Wednesday, Thursday and Fri day preceding the event. , A penny sale will be held
during' July and' members are
requested to contribute trading
stamp books and small gifts. ,
Next inWd- meeting' is Wed nesday, May 4 and will be held
at the Onset Catholic Y-outh
Center, featuring a covered dish supper beginning at 7 o'clock.
Slides of the shrine of Lourdes
will be shown by John Sanna.
ST. MARY, MANS FllELJl) ,The following slate of officers of the Catholic Woman's 'Club has been elected for' 'the 'coin': '
JUBILANT HOUSEHOLD: Rev. Joseph C. O1~veira, left, and Rev. Evaristo Tavare~ center, assistants to Bishop 1YJedeiros in St. Michael's Parish, F'aU River, congratulate their pastor on being named Ordinary of the Brownsville Diocese.
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~~:. ~::~'d~~~':~~~~:e~~a~~~~' S~LkJ~@ffi
f@lf
@gftedl Y OUt~D 'Bec(1j)~es ,Reality'
vice-president; ,Mrs. E d war d Torrance, treasurer. ,e[}n~D$ti'O@JW'i) ~fr'@fther. $ L~(tu§er$hJp Also, Mrs. Frank Prohodsky and Mrs. Albert Zaffini; as re-CHICAGO (NC)-The story of More than ,300 candidates from tured" periods wheJ;l the chil cording and corresponding sec- how three Brothers and one full the hlner city of ManhHttan and dren are, tree to study whatever retaries, respectively. time'lay teacher operate a school the, Bronx were ,tested and in- they like. They have the option Miss Rose Vasarielliand Miss for thE!,gIfted youngsters in New terviewed. Each boy took a de- of attending such afternoon ac Mary Driscoll will serve as 'dI.. ' York's "inner city" 'was told 'tailed questionnaire ba(~k to his· tivities as a seminar on non rectors.' , here by aC!lristian Brother. prinCipal' and classroom teacher. western cultures, a guidance The organization voted to do-' The, school- is located on" the Brother Charles and his small movie, or a science club meeting. nate $2,000 in memory of their top floor, of a parish elementary staff were looking for qualities 'Some of the pupils make mar late pastor, Rev. "Edward L. school ,on Manhattan's West Side. of creativity, responsibility, and velous use of these advantages O'Brien, towards'the new tCD There, some 65 b;right children potential for leadership, he said. and others do ~ot, Brother, c;enter which will' bear hill' from, varying ..ba~grounds get, ' Firtalii' ih~ boys were' seleeted .Charles reported. ,name. .the kind oftraiping~hich willi. -two' classes of 40 sixth 'graders, enable them to become potential and one, elass of, 25 seventh lui part of the guidance pro 5S. ~ETE!tANDPAUJL. Christian leaders" rather, graders. The four fulltime gram, 20 men from the school of FALL RnVER highsc~hool, dropouts. teachers Wl:!re eomplemE!nted by education of Manhattan College Cub Scouts will have'a father fou:parttimeteachers, of music, ,supervise remedial work in Brother Charles Patrick, F.S.C., son kite-flying contest Saturday math, ,reading and science. The morning, April 23 ,in ,Kennedy principal' of, the' Msgr. William art, Italian ,and speech. 'A board of adinissions wases- ,personal concern which the a»1Park. The monthly pack meeting, R. KellyS,chool, detailed its op lege, men show for the young VlSJlTATlON GUILD, eration in an address to the 63rd' tablished, consisting of' mem- sters featuring an exhibition of home is often as valuable as their N,ORTH EASTHAM: annual National Catholic Educa grown plants, will be held, Fri bers of the archdiocesan school actual ,instruction. " tional Association convention Guild members will be- host day, April 29; and a picnic and board, supervisors of various religious communities, pIincipals Brother Charles said this fur an open meeting of District nature ramble are' slated for here. Five of the Diocesan Council of S~nday, April 24 in Freetown, The Kelly school' got its start, of high schools and elementary Spring the Kelly school plans to Catholic Women at 2:30 Sunday State Forest. ' nearlY. a year ago, Brother schools, the dean of a sc::hool of inaugurate a program based on afternoon, April 24 at Visitation Boy Scouts will hold a parents' Charles said, when Coadjutor education, and a parish priest the' principles of the Young church hall, M~asoit Road. night tonight, featuring informa Archbishop John J. Maguire of from Harlem. As the Kelly Christian Students to foster Guest speaker Larry N~wman tion on the Summer program at New York, and Brother Ber school expands to an eventual' Church le-adership among the will discuss Vietnam. In charge .. Noquochoke Scout Reservation; trand L,eo, F.S.C., provincial of six classes and an enrollment of boys.
of arrangements is Mrs. Edmund and Saturday, April 30, will the Brothers, of the Christian 150. the board will pass on poli-
Hebert, aided by Mrs. Arthur sponsor a ham and bean supper Schools, District of New York, cies of adniissiorul and consider
Cestaro. in the church hall. decided to establish a program the candidates' credentials.
aimed at inner-city education. Independent Stuib' They agreed the 'archdioceSe PupilS are given thl"et! inde would open the school speci'" pendent study periods II week fically f,or gifted children of the during whicl1 they may work inner city, 'and it would be wliere they choose - language staffed by.- O:hristian Brothers. lab, library, science 'lab and so WYman ,~' Parish schools in the inner' city on.. Teachers are available to 3-6592 were asked 'to give up soine of give special help during: these their be!;t students to the proj '. r periods. There are also "ullStrue-' CHARLES F.VARGAS ect. NEW YORK (NC)-8ociolog Cracow university students eon 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE "WithoIie or two exceptionS; teal studi~s of Polish students cluded that 74 per cent of those the response of the'schoolS WaD lulve' demonstrated that a vast polled were believers: NEW BEDFORD, MASS. BIG DIVIDEND NEWS; r one of l>Verwhelmiilg' approval majority of them are religious In all cases the surveys re-, Charles naid. believers and only about one SYSTEMA11C fifth consider themselves to ,be vealed that only a fractionol '5~25% year SAVlNiQS, the students considered them- , Fall River Guild Marxists. Polls taken among students in selves "deeply religious and sys , Fall 'Hilver Catholic Guild ifor INVEm.ENr II Warsaw and Cracow between tematically practicing." But a the Blinel will meet Sunday af year SAVING
1958 and 1963 were reported in large portion of them declared ternoon ;in St. ,Joseph's School, they were normally religious and REGUla
East Europe, a magazine of east a following Rosary and Benedic SAVINGS ' year ern European affairs, published churchgoers: Many others, be tion in the church at 2:15:"" lieved in God 'but did not attend in New York. religious ·services.' , The first poll, taken in 1958 at
11) Warsaw universities,. revealed
Another' sUrVey~o{students at tl!-at 66 per cent of those ques Warsaw ~olYtechnical Univer tioned felt themselves to be be- ' sity in 1958 and 1961 sh'-owed that o 0' 0 ~=DeaIliJSeff~ '0 .. 0 llevers. Most of these were prac few of the students consider ~ SOUT&I "~RMllIU1l1i
ticing their religion. themselves to be MarxiSts, al h~~o 9 DENNIS POW
A survey completed among though the number is rising. In 941 l'REMONT STRlEfiI' Students of 18 high schools in the first poll, less than nine per 0HYANMIS. " Cracow three years later found cent stated they were' Marxists. iA1.IJNTON, MASS." • VARMoum~HOMh'G M!i
that 83 per cent listed themselves By 1961, that number had in , TeB., VAndyke, 2-062'G ' .OSTERVlLL~
believers., In 1963, a survey of creased to about 19 per ce~t.
Show
Til",con Boys for
than
SAVE MONEY ON
R~~ngion Strong
YOUROILHEATI 'eatt
Surveys of PolDsh Students Demonstra,te Va'st Majoroty Believers
•
4.50% .4.25%
,C@~DeWio~e'Xh)lrou
-''c
as
Bass River
S~"i'ng$ 'BGn.~
'Italian Priests
'THE ANCHORThurs., April 21, 1966
Laud CCD Work In America
Form FOlD~dation To Study Role Of laym@(i1
SAN ANTONIO (NC) The Confraternity of Chris tian Doctrine was seen as "the power of the Chur~h in the United States" by two Italian priests who have completed a special study of CCD work in the San Antonio archdiocese. Msgr. Stefano Patrone of the Genoa diocese and Father Aldo Vacalda of Venice visited the Texas archdiocese on the invita tion of Archbishop Robert E. Lucey as part of a religious fact finding tour of the United States. In a recent interview both ex pressed admiration for the many parish religion schools they viewed, and the cooperation be tween priests, nuns, and lay peo ple who operate them. "I should like to lay stress on two great and very important things I' saw in this country," Msgr. Patrone said. "One is the beautiful realization of a school of religion in every parish, and the other is the very 'moving collaboration of lay peopye, Sis ters and priests in guiding the young. "It is the cooperation that makes the school of religion a reality in every parish," he con tinued. "The American attitude must be exploited by Italian priests," Msgr. Patrone stated, ."particu larly with regards to establish ment of the parish school of re ligion and arousing mOJ;e and better collaboration· of the lay people and Sisters." Father Vacalda also' stressed the importance of the coopera tion between priests and lay peo .pIe which he witnessed in Sari Antonio. "In Italy," he said, "the priest must worry too much about eco nomic matters. In the United States, .13¥men ~re cpl)cerned about financial matters and work for the Church. The priests can do more useful things." He was also impressed by the· lay discussion clubs he saw, and said that they could be intre>-' duced in Italy as a means of en-' couraging more interest in re ligion. He said the most important thing about CCD in the United States is "'that the priest, parents and youth take it seriously." "This is not true in Italy," be added. _ Before returning to Italy, the two priests will also visit Dallas, New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Washington and New York.
Woman Writer Wins Ed McQuade Award SAN FRANCISCO (N C) "" Lisa Hobbs of the S1m FrancisCo Examiner won the 17th Mc Quade News Award of the Asso cip.tion of Catholic Newsmen here for a series of articles ex posing conditions in' nursing and convalescing homes in the San Francisco area. The series eveJ;l tually helped lead to new state legislation controlling such facil ities. The McQuade Award, given annually for the article or series which best reflects the teachings in the Sermon on the Mount, is named after the late Ed Mc Quade, former San Francisco newspaper editor. The Msgr. Walter J. Tappe Award, presented annually to a college journalist, went to Thomas Fitzpatrick, editor of the University of San Francicso's Froghorn, for his' "The Many Roads to Selma" story. The award is named for Msgr. Tappe, former editor 01. the Monitor, archdiocesan newspaper, a Ii d founder -of the AeWmneD'1 auo ciation.
15
MONTREAL (NC) - A foundation to study the role of the layman in the Church and the community, to edu cate him to his responsibilities, and to' maintain dialogue with Monb·eal archdiocesan officials has been formally launched here. The group has been given a mandate by Paul Emile Cardinal Leger to ~tudy the modern Christian's status, to interpret pastoral teaching to the commu nity and to present problems to the cardinal. Cardinal Leger told the meet ing of the foundation's 40 char ter ml'mbers: "We are trying to find 'dialogue between bishops, priests and Pf'ople. I ask you to delibprate, to express the thoughts of your group and 1k> present probl!?ms to me." OVl'ralI Aim The key tea"hing of Vatican II, he said, is thp newly defined role of the Jaymar.. "EvNY decree and document of the counc!} appeals to the laity to exercise its responsibility for the salvation of the People of God," he said. "In fact, you have as much responsibility as' I have." The overall aim of the founda tion, according to Dr. James Tomecko, chairman of the exec utive board, is to "change the attitudes people have with re spect to their religion, so that people will recognize they are missionaries .- in the sense of being examples of the Christililll
MILLENNIUM OBSERVANCE: Opening celebration of 1,000 years of Christianity in Poland, Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Prim ate of Poland, enters the cathedral at Gniezno, NCPhoto. . .
Millenni"umof Christianity Opens May 3 Polish' Catholics Return to Czestochowa Shrine
The 1.,000th anniyersary of Polish Chi-istianity_ being celebrated this year recalls . two historical events that cast an ironic shadow on the claims of the country's present Dfe." day communist rulers. On May 3, the bishops of Catholic' Poland, along with hundreds of
clergy and thousa!1ds of the faithful, will assemble at the famed' Marian shrine of Czes
to~howa to ask divine bless
princess from Bohemia. up to the clergy to rally the peo ing on their country and to Christian Whatever 'his motives were, pIe against the invaders. Citizens give thanks' for blessings of Mieszko .in' 966 was baptized a armed themselves to halt the the past thousand years. Christian, and his whole king- Swedish im'asion, but Charles'
·
Communist authorities in War saw have tried in recent months to take the spotlight away from
the celebrations. First, they have denied permission to foreign churchmen, even those fro m other communist countries, to visit Poland during the millen nium period. Next, they have an nounced plans to stage large secular events such as Commu nist party rallies and athletic contests to detract from the re
ligious services. Failing this, the communist leaders will claim-as they have· in the past-that 1966 marks the anniversary of the Polish nation, not of the Catholic religion Dn Poland. But the Polish people know better. They realize they are called to acknowledge a fact of History that today'~ communist rulers are most loather to admit -that Poland is and always has be~ a Christian nation. The first Christians probably came into Poland from the south. They were Christian Moravians, driven out of their country by Hungarians, and they oottled in . ·the southern part of what is now Poland among Slavonic people who honored vengeful gods.
But the real birth of·Christian ity . in Poland' occurred during the reign of King Mieszko (M Mieczslaw) who had united many Slavs under his rule at Poznan. In the year 963 the first German Christians began to pen etrate Poland from the west. Mieszko realized immediately that he must aec:ept Westem customs if be was to stem a threatened German invasion. He was helped by the fact that ear-' lier Christians had made bis subjects open to new ideas, and be Wat3 encouraged ~ bis wife »abl'OWkQ ..... ~r(Wka). ..
dom was converted with him. Poznan 'became the See of a bishop. Mieszko made himself a tributary of the Western Emperor Otto I and. placed his lands under the protection of the pope. Thus the German invasion was halted, and the religious futUJ::e of Poland was settled in a single moment. Christianity took roots quickly in Poland. Under Mieszko's son Boleslaw, Gniezno became the first archiepiscopal See. The Benedictines appeared in 1006, and by 1200 the Church had won . its independence from govern. ment control. The religious turmoil of the Reformation affected Poland less than most European nations. Reformers were free to preach and hold office during the reign of King Sigismund II (1548-'12), ~hich marked a golden age of Polish culture. They won few converts, however, and their in" huence gra~ually waned; , By the turn of the century when the Jesuits began' to arrive kt. great numbers,.Poland had two archdiceses and 15 dioeeses. There were 750 Religio~s houses staffed _by 20 orders for - men and 15 orders of nuns.
It was a Jesuit named John
Casimir who rnled Poland dur
ing the next great crisis of its
history. Educated in France and
made a cardinal, Casimir was
called home at a time when Poland was being invaded by the Swedes under Charles X from the north, .and by the Tartars
and Cossacks from the east. He
made an alliance with the Rus sian Czar, but finally was forced to flee into Silesia by the other
invaders.
Then came the turning point
that Poles still remember. With
1he aovenunem m :night. It 'W8Il
army swept through the country
until it arrived in 1655 at the
Pauline monastery at Czesto chowa.
Two thousand crack Swedish
soldiers attacked repeatedly, but the monastery, under the direc non of Prior Augustyn Kordecki, would not fall. Finally, with their ranks broken by the attacks, the Swedes broke off the
battle and withdrew from Po
land. In the following year at Lwow,
John Casimir proclaimed the
Virgin Mary to be the protector
and patron of Poland. The image
of the Black Madonna at Czesto chowa (which tradition says was
painted by St. Luke) has since
become the focal'point and the
symbol of Christianity.
On May 3, Polish Catholics will return to Czestochowa to
recall the conversion of King
Mieszko 1,000 years ago. The
communist rulers of 1966 are
claiming that the celebration is
ar: attempt by. Church authori
ties to infringe on the rights of the modern state. To 'Cathholics,
it is the state that has 'failed to
keep faith with the national-' heritage.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River,...Thurs. April 21, 1966
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Your daily people, important and unimportant, who have broken the Commandments during ~he day. But if youwou1d like to know how many good souls B y R t. Rev.· sgr. ohn S. Kennedy t;aptain James Cook was a;'.pioneer in the' white man's there are who keep the Commandments, sit at my desk and read · exploration of the Pacific. He made three epochal voyages, the spiritual outpourings of the good and the saintly. In the the first lasting from1,?:68 to. 1771, the second from 17'72 . correspondence immediately before me, I note first a deep sense to 1775, and third from 1776 to his death. in Hawaii in of thanksgiving fOlr the blessings of God. When reading MISSION these people see how much more blessed they are th.an others, .1779. Alan Moorehead gives as it had been. Venereal disease and th~y seek to balance things by a little sacrifice. "God has been some account of these under-.· and other illnesses previously generous to me. This is the least I can do in return-from now on takings, especially the first .unknown there became prevaI intend to give as much of my pay as possible to the' most worthy two, in The Fatal Encounter . ,lent. As they grew acquainted charity, The Society for the Propagation of the Faith." This note (Sarper .and Row, New York. with European ways, views, gadaccompanied a check for $50 sent by a young man who felt that , "$5.95). But his chief purpose is; ,gets, the natives. gave up or he was "able to live on les~ than half (his) salary." Thanksgiving to show the devastating effect on greatly modified their own an- ' is dependence, and the absence of it, as, in the case of nine lepers, · aborigines and . . cient attitudes and customs. .saddens the Heart of Christ. wild life of t h e . Change was obs,ervable e'ven in -- 'white man's .' Cook's lifetime, but it became Secondly, it hi noticeable that generally it Is the poor who coming, , fro m much more drastic thereafter. help' the Missions. They seem to have a sort of spiritual antellDZ NEW METROPOLITAN: .the time of In1797,forexample,theLonon their souls which makes them sen Cook's arrival don Missionary Society, ultra- Archbishop Joseph T. Ryan 'saUve to the needs of others in mission
'l1ntil scme' 80 ,. Protestant, puritanical, and: fahas been installed as first Rands. Perh:lPs the reason that Our Lord
rs L', ~r, " natical in zeal, sent out an expe- are hb' with poverty was' _ in lshop of Anchorage, bbegan His . .lBeatitUlles ·t' f yea the I:::'". Mr. dition of only 39 people which ecause It IS the c,~ndl Ion 0 all Chris-
Moorl:::::~: trains . h.ad as its aim nothing less than Alaska, by the Apostolic Deltian co~passion. There is a third striking
our attcl',:ion o n ' "to recreate, the island in the eg.ate in the' United States, note that all these letters have in com three CCl1trasti m ag e of lower, _ middle _ class Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi. mono Many of thOSf~ who have little give
ing locales: Ta. :.Protestant England." To an NC P h o t o . ' , even more t;han they can afford. This is
hiti, the c::t8rn 'amazing degree, the missionaries a Samlllie letter of a good woman who
coast of Australia~ and" the succeeded. In the next 20 years, . sent $3 saying: "A year ago ]I promised
Antarctic. '"the Tahitian way of life was ~11@[)'i) ~f<5)f!,""'/"M"Il1 $7.50 if my husband: did not go on strike.
Cook made, four visits to Ta- ".completely destroyed. 0 IS U U ISW U lbV 0 )J II have not been abUe to get that amount 0 ,. hiti. He was there for .three ;;.", The. missionaries foisted their [?n'\l[j' [Ultr>J ..JI J1 together at anyone time, so here is part months in 1769, for 16 days in ·'ij~wn dictatorship on the people, " \,\u 1flJ1l>6I1i1l~Q<eap~e~, of it. I hope I can gather the rest soon. 1773, for three weeks in ,,1774, which determined' dress and 'l'he Taunton Catholic Listener I know what it is to need medication. My husband had a heart :.' and for six weeks in 1777.' That even the' way of wearing one's Library and the Catholic Union' l't~ack. ~nd they found that he- ha.d diabetes also. That means pills .. :'amounts to a total of about .siXi ,.hair. The old rats and skills were., .()f the ,Sick of America will: co-.· fprboih. Our yount:est daughter has epilepsy and needs dilantin r': months over a period or: eight .::lost. Industry and. trade were ,!lponsor a day of recollection' and phenobarbitol. She and I both ha~e asthma a.nd an allergy ", .years, less than a month a Year, ~ 'introduced. ".,' .' from 9 to 5 Saturday, May 7 at '.' ~n!l. neecJ.tablets and oint~ents: I ltope' that this ;$3 help but more. than enough to cha/lge The population dropped .'off •. 'La Salette Retreat House; Attle- ' . some s.ck child in the Missions.": Mrs. A. c.' .,.. " Tahiti' forever. sharply (by 1840, there were bor,). '. ; . ',. i. ';" ' -- ::',:., . Cook was not the first to. b.ring " .onlY.·9,000 where there 'had been '. ,Merrill A. Maynard, .director:. . Almost all. o~ the gifts included ii-t· these three ·ciasses. were ',,, .• ship to Tahiti, but his .. tbree"ii.'40,OOO). Cook had suspected that". of the Listener Library, .which .,between $1 and $50. Are there no.t in the,United'S~at~spri~st.s.and '. predece: :Jrs. there' had each.' ·the' coming of ,.the ·European·provides recorded material for' .-lay· people who would be willing to"give' in; proportion to these made only' a single verY',,~rief > would not benefit the Tahitian, . the blind, is in charge· of. ar-· good people? We know that there' are I11any appellis b~t there is "stay. His sailing ship of 361l. tons, ·,·and the event.proved-him all too rl.nl~ements for the unusual only· one Mission Scociety which cares for all missionaries in all with a crew of -70, took eight· right. spiritual event. He notes that·parls.of the world and that is th~ So~iety:that'belongsto the Holy months to make the trip .f.rom Australian .Aborigines' '. the Attleboro retreat· house "win Father. There is ano·ther reason-:in these trying times the Church .,England. rhe purpose . of , this:. " But Tahiti was only one. of the be' ..taken over ,by stretcbel'S, "in America' 'must sa'fe itself through, increa.sed prllyer, sacrifices, .:venture was to observe..: the,. points of interest:. which conwheelchairs; crutches,canes and. holy ·hours. and abovl~' all by sharing ou'r sup~rabund'ance with the transit of Venus. There w~ .sci.,. _ cern~d Cook. He perfo~ed a . those :who use tbem, and· that poor of the world. Let me hear. from you. God Love You! ,..entific equipment for that, as "gr~at f~at of discovery, a~dan-. volunteer nurses, individual.' at .well as an astronomer appointed.. other of navigation, in his explotendants, drivers and many otb(}OJ). ~OVE YOU Mrs.L.it.· fqr' $3. "i'bi$ is small, but I.had ."by"the Royal Society, . arid. a., .r~tion of the. e~stern ~ast of·' ers will combine their efforls to, t4l.save .PClnnites to send it." •.• 'fo Mr. C. R. "We are people of .. ' number of. naturalists and.art- .. Australia in 17.69. Tbe.existence' ' make possible a day of spiritual' lIl~esLme.an~., We tlon't ~ve,a television:· set. or I' car, but we 1•• ·.)S.1:8 t~ record' their obse~v~~i!>ns::: :.~f A:~stralia (or#!tiiillIly, s.tYled; ,renewal. and social satisfaction."" h~-w:~,a g~~, bome and .~. garde~.and so we manage. to get along. n~.iled as Paradise, ,.: . Ne~.. ,H~lland).~al1' reco~!zed, ' 1 1 ' He expressed appreciation to, .. In th~nksgi~iJ;lg for the!ie gifts we are. send,ing:. $1,01)0 to help At Cook's coming, Tahiti had but not Its con~in~ntal exten~.. .' .theLaSalette Missioners of the '" , ~ho,se .less fortunate.'" a population of 40,000. 'l;'hey I~ wa~ Cooks first expeditIon'· re~rE~a~ house who are 'cooper-. " .,. ' " :"..'" . were, handsome people; with WP.I~lt first e?c.ountered the Aus..;··· .atmg 'l?- plans for the day, and., " :Th~. ~olor of each of, the WORr--D ,MISSION ROSARY'S dec lustrous eyes 'and perfect teeth, t~ahan abon~mes, a dark and' also ~ald. ~hat o,:er 40 pastors of.,., ades, sywbolfzes one of ,the five. continents of the world where and it was their commendable .. d~rty Caucasian people m~ch .th~ l' all RIver DIOcese have sUP-, missionaries are laboring to bring souls to. Christ. Those of you custom to. bathe three tiines a ~~fferent ,from; and ~~re pnm.plI~dl..names. and addresses of ;who. c~0t.. g(j to the Missions.,can strengthen ,.those who work .'. :ilay.' They lived in a delightful , l~I,:e . t~an, the. TahItIans, 'and .panshIOners who are p~ysicall!.in .Y0lll' place by pra~ring .for them. To receive the WORLD MIS ',. c;limate, in tlie midst of extra- . ,livmg m .a settmg .much. m(he ·unable to attend Mass m '.theu: . ,SIQN ROS~Y which has. been blessed, by,. Bishop Sheen, send ". ordinary. natural beauty,'. ahd sever;. WIth a sense of wonder ownchurche~.. .ypur. I:~uest and an ,offering of $2 to .The "Society for the Propa ,·they.did il1most no work. Work . Cook s com~any saw t~ekan?a- .' Persons wlshl?g to make the ga~ioD,. of the Faith,. 3:66 Fi1th Avenue, New Yor", N. Y. 10001•
.. ," was not needed' food and other" .roo, the flymg fox, a fIsh' WhiCh" .. day -of recollectIOn or offer· 88-, .
necessities wer~ there for the' le~ped about on land a~d even: sistance' in' preparations may Cot .out this column. pin your sacrifice to it mrid mail it to .",taking. . chmbed trees, enormous numcontact Mr. Maynard at 1'11 Most·Rev. Fulton J .. Sheen, National Director of The Society .... The Tahitians readily' wel- bers of crocodiles and sharks. . ~ashington Street,. Taunton. n fer tile Propagation I~f the Faith, 366 Fifth' 'Avenue, N. Y. 10001. comed the Englishmen, who, I~ Botony Bay, (the n~e IS hoped the day .wlll become an <H' . . your Diocesan IDirector, Rt Rev. MJ;gr. Raymond T. Consi '.' after their long, hard moiltllS at .~hlCh Cook g?V~ the pl~ce of hiS annual, event. diDe, 368· Norih Mahl Skeet, Fa"ll River, Massachusetts. .." "'sea. were enchanted by every-' . fir:'t landfall 10. ~ustraba) ~uld ., .thing about this paradise " not· no. match Tahiti for 10vebnesS;' ~I'" 't' ., least, the sexual code. ' ,. a~d if the inhabitan~ were.'less alII .acca aurea \it . I~ was as.a paradise that Ta-:: a(lvanced and attrac~lve, at)eas~.,·~A$$.einbly.in. • ,'i' hIt! was haIled in England and' i, th~y were content Wlththelr lot;. " , , . ,; . ,:., .. ~~. the Continent once. reports' and che~r£ul. But they were not· .' . GAl~DINER (NC);,- A,~ac ~ 'J,", ' - , " ',' _. 'Jrom Cook's expedition, were :,to,remam.~o for long.... . , ~alau.~ea~e ~bly, instead of. .. 'published there. Here was.man Ill; 1787 It was declded.,to. es-"" sel'V1~e. WIll be hel~.'·at· Gardi":" . : '., in his natural state, sai~~ the .. ' ta~hsh a penal settleme":t',at Bot- n~r lhgh School here in ·,June.. I;,' . European' savants, uncompli-: ,any Bay. By then, ~enca could with ,Protestant and CatholAe "..cated and unspoiled, innocent, . no longer be ~e~ as a dUplping students attending. . good, and happy. . " ... ,'.grounds for cnm1Oal.s frOm .the , ~ecause of the generally re :. >'1, ...'. ,'.,In the first rush of'.enthusi",i.,mother c,ountry, .Hen,ce ,800. of, UgIO.WI natur:e of ba~~a~reate ·a$ID, it was .noticed that among them ~ere sent .out on.an eight : sel'V1CI~s' ~a1Oe CatholIc high 653 Washington ~Street,,, F~irhciven the Tahitians there was indeed month s sea Journey whi~h'" school semors have not beelll · a class structure, that human. brought the~ a~ last ~ the site'· allowe~ to participate in. ~ .'WYman' 4.-5058 . ,sacrifice was practiced, and. that of th~ p~esent city of Sidney:. Yt;ars. A s~ial.agr~ment from war was waged. An idealized. . ThIS I.S a m:la~cholY ~Ital,. BISh~}:j Damel J: Feeney o~ Port... ~.~.e impression of the island' _ l?ced With inCidents of excep- land now pernuts Catholic stu v ailed , and.it was used a:r:n tlOnal .heroism and evidence of dentsto attend the reviSed pro .. ' 'argument against the Ch~istia~" exceph~malendurance."Blit its .·g~m.. Raymond E.Stickney, the e,a'm~ i. ~eligion and .Christ~an s6Ciety. suggesh0I!- t~at. progr~ss, .as. w.e· high. school principaI, said ar- .
But Tahiti did not long remain underst~nd It,· IS an IllUSIOn, if rangements for·the baccalaure-, '" . . .... . . . . .. , not a mockery, is, perhaps not' ate "progratnhave been under., ", . :. ..BoostsTunt'ion the' point which the facts estab~ "way in cooperation with st. Jo ..... . ,'. .... ' . lis.h·. , seph's chu,rcb leaders 'for' about;. i>. •• GUIll' Hi"','Rdute '. ~A~fHEsrER . <N.C) :-.St... .. Ratl1er, the poil).t may be that· . ,two YE,ars... ..' . '..
A,rl~l~ s.~ollegeh~re WIll m- progress .comes .only at a price':···· Lay-churchmen, . instead of,'i, . '" ,'" Alwa,'$ :'at Y~urSe"ice"
i', cre~~e t~ltI~n:by ~100.per semes'and ternble" n1lstakes may be·.': clergy; will ,deliver tbe,prinel.paIl: '.
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,.,' 1', a~ad:mlc ye~.r. F~ther PI~cidus the way. However, any violation . talk ,may be e1.vie v1rtue;·duty·."
:;-. ~l1e~, O.S.~., pr~sldent, said the. of natu,re, which is obvious in', to country. or something similar .. ',:' . 17: ,:. A" 'I~'
, Increase \Vll~ .brmg St. A-.ri~ellD'll·· ~uch of ~his, .history,is ' alto-· . rather " than,' a religious'" topte., : ;1:' ,~emester ·tultlon to a total of ,g~t~~r too high a price, ancl'i' All are;ilc!ergy ,will .be seated CIa ,.' ,.. ', . ~' .. r • . • ' 'D:ARTMOUTH, MASS.
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THE ANCHORThurs., April 21, 1966
Students Favor, Summer Uniforms In Vote Taken at Bishop FeehaniJ Bishop Cassidy High Schools ,
,
More Dqngerous Th@l!1 Ru~sia ,
It's impossible to satisfy everyone, and the adage holds true in the matter of sehool uniforms. At both Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton and Bishop Feehan in Attleboro, recent pollB have uncovered practically as many opinions as students on what the ideal lished, with girls attaining marks uniform 'should include. At of 85 or better in subjects volun Feehan, where girls wear teering to assist fellow students. emerald green blazers, pleat The student council is sponsor
ed plaid skirts, white blouses, ing the project.
A Vietnamese child will be and black knee socks;, and boys
sport grey blazers, charcoal grey sponsored with proceeds from a trousers, white shirts, and green student council social held at ties and everyone wears black Feehan, and also at the Attle loafers, 70 'per cent of girls and boro school a "College Bowl" program was presented with 82 per cent of boys polled sug representatives from each class gested changes. Chief among feminine desires competing. Some 600 teens and eVAO was a change to an A-line 'skirt
members improved this week's and saddle shoes, and often of fered was the suggestion that vacation by participating in a there be two uniforms: one for CYO-sponsored trip to Washing warm weather. Meantime, boys ton. Highlights of the trip in said they'd rather have yellow cluded a solemn high Mass at the than white shirts, and would National Shrine, a tour of the prefer brown to black loafers. White House and Capitol and a Many also voted for plaid-ties visit to ,Kennedy's grave. A and dark green instead of grey moonlight cruise on the Potomac concluded the visit. blazers. The annual Sodality Union Very popular at Cassidy as well was the idea of a Summer Day will be held Sunday, May :B. at Feehan High, 'and will be at uniform, specifically a pastel colored shirtwaist, although some tended by representatives of all students dissented and suggested Diocesan high schools. Patricia Niedbala of Domini cotton skirts and blouses. Conclusion: no matter what can Academy has added to her manges might be incorporated scholastic laurels by winning a into present uniforms, there'd Firestone scholarship enabling her to attend the college of her still be the dissatisfied. choice anywhere in the United Student Councils States. Among .students winning Upcoming for student coun cillors at Diocesan highs are the certificates of merit arid savings Southeastern Mass. Stu den t bonds in recognition of out Council Convention Thursday," standing high school.re.cords was April 28; and the state Student , Margaret F. O'Brien, ~nior at Council conclave Friday and S~cred.He~~ Academ!,. ;Fall Saturday May 13 and 14 'the ,RIver. RecIpIents of Fnestone ~atter to 'be held at Stang High.- : a,wards.are the,cpildren of Fire , And Coyle High in Taunton wilf stone TIre and Rubber plant em-' be sending junior William Mans-' ployes. field to a week-long student Poetry Wmnen, council workshop at Kelly IsAt New Bedford's Holy' Faro-: land, O. ily High 20 students have Won Homemaker or' Tomorrow at certificates from' the National' Mt. 'St. Mary' Academy, 'Fall High School Poetry Press, and River, is Carolyn Walas. Robert Gaudreau has heeD. National Honor Society mem-, na~ed winner of' a $2400 schol"; bers at Prevost High in Fall arship from Providence College. River are preparing to survey If it was good enough for Liri alumni "in onler to help plan the coIn, it's good enough for NHS future of the school." The NHS members at Prevost High -:... so boys are also planning a card they journeyed to Tiverton dur sale. . ing this vacation week to split Faculty members at Stang hi. logs. The results of their labor North Dartmouth "reigned su- were sold and the money added preme over the students when to their treasury. Also at Prevost~ t~ey squelched all possibility of Pl)ul Proulx has received a upset in the annual faculty-stu- $1,000 scholarship to Assumption dent basketball game sponsored College, renewable yearly. for raising money ':lor senior Typing Production' a war d s scholarships. " have gone to students at Domin" "Fine shootin'g on the part of ican Academy, with 12 girls re the faculty and particularly ceiving junior awards and 22 football coach Charlie Connell, earning both junior and senior the game's high scorer, gave the citations; and cheering tryouts teachers an easy 85-63· victory. are 'in progress with a View Juniors are pre,sently plann~ng towards selection ,of next year'. the faculty's downfall next year, leaders. thus ending their unblemished Mary Ellen Newby of HoI)'" victory record," reports William Family, New Bedford, has been Sullivan, Our Man at Stang.' selected as ~ost Valuable and Journalism Awards All-Star ,Player in CYOgirls' Recognized for their work iii basketballior the city. Also it reporting school news for Sportsmanship Award went to Providence Journal were Rich- Frances Mulcurns and another ard Charland of· 'Prevost and All-Star citation to Mary Louise Lorna Riordan of Feehan. They O'Rourke. ' and other student writers were Featured .on the College Bul honored at an awards dinner letin Board at Mt. St. Mary's, a sponsored by the paper. project of the National Honor Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall' 'Society, is Northeastern Unlver River, can boast its own folk sity. The display of its charms singing group, composed of sen- was arranged' by Carol BednarZ. i?rs Jane Collins, Margaret SulAlso at the ,Mount, five jun livan and Elizabeth Rapoza, and iors, accompanied by Sister Mary former stud~nt Janice Benoit. Benita, R.S'.M., attended a High They've performed at New Bed- School Honor Students' Day at ford Tech and. will be heard - UMass.· The day was designed tonight at an area ,CYO meeting to recognize outstanding English at Anawan Street Hall in Fall students and afford them the River. They're also scheduled tID opportunity' to visit their state appear Wednesday, April Z'1 at university. Requirements for a Dominican A~a~emy, Fal' River, . college English major were eX in a performance sponsored by plained and students were given tile pan River JuniOlr' Music the opportunity to question faC Club. ., ulty and students. PPanel discusAt Dominican Academy also, • ,nons and a campus tour were in~ ~ lle.l'Vice au· Deal estabeluded, in, the' cia1'. activities.
the
17
,
NEW YORK (NC)-Com.. munist '" China has replaced Russia as the main threat to the fI;ee world, Frederick H.
JUNIOR OFFICERS: Junior class officers at Coyle High School, Taunton, are; from left, Earle Cromwell, treasur~r; Kirk Shaw, president; Frank Mooney, vice-pres ident; Bob Bessette, -secretary. The Mount representatives' , , were Janice Couture, Catherine, Flanagan, Ann Marie McMahon, Sandra Thiboutot and Jacque line Moura. Summer Plans Interesting Sum mer s 'are ahead for several girls at Cas sidy High, according toa 'survey made by Paw' Prints, school paper. European t rip s 'are planned by three, one girl will work in Project Headstart, an": other will make an intensive study of journalism, and Andrea Trzcinski; "C'assidy's archaeo-, logically-minded junior," will
travel to Martha's Vineyard to
continue a dig that has already
uncovered one perfect Indian skeleton.· . .Meanwhile at Coyle High, Cassidy's "brother school," three students will participate in a European trip sponsored by, the Holy Cross Brothers. Holland, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Italy, France and Ireland will be on their agenda. French will reign at Prevost High Tuesday, May 10 as the French Club presents a French play, offers a French hootennany and listens to an address in French. Stang High's Stangscript' Staff are rejoicing over a first place award from the Columbia PreSs Association; and the paper is growing so handily that it's had
to add a special circulation de-. 'partment. Also at Stang, the school's champion cheerleaders, led by Cynthia Ward, will rep-. resent the· Diocese on Saturday. in New England competition at Hartford, Conn. . ' And also pn S'aturday, sodalists at Prevost, Jesus-Mary and other Diocesan schoolS will 'journey to Holy Cross College, Worcester; for a Southern New England sod a lit y conclave. Earlier th~s week the saine brave souls celebrated Patriot's Day with a 24 mile bike hike. '
Boland, former United NatioriB General Assembly president, de clared here. Boland told a banquet cele brating Fordham University'e' 125th anniversary year that the war in Vietnam is "a signal and a reminder that civilization hl now being faced by a developing danger far greater from the p0 litical, if' not the military point of view, than any presented to it in the past by the Soviet Union." Boland said it is obvious Red China "has decided to make the underdeveloped countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America what it calls 'the storm center ~ of the world revolution.''' But as far as communism W concerned, Boland said, "I am an incurable optimist." Outside Ilnfluence He said no idelogoy has proven "so misguided and un founded in practice as the teach ing of Marxism-Leninism. ' "I believe that Pandit Nehns was right when he said that ,the real weakness of communism • that it is contrary to human nature," he declared. ' Underdeveloped nations,', be said, "may be. poor and weak and underprivileged; they maY t>e ihexperienced in the' arts .. government and diplomacy; :bOi most of them have already )lad too long and too bitter' an ~ perience of foreign domination 'to want to risk exch<lnging one kind of outside influence 'for.an other." . There is "no' reason to fe. the ultimate result" of the battJia ,with communism, he add'ed, ~ cause '.'man's aspiration _to bie free will in the end confound th,e communist heresy."
K~nsas
Prelate Asks People Heed Message of Vatican Council
WICHITA (NC)-"We must "these changes in our worship
not allow the decrees of the undreamed of only a few y.ean
Second Vatican Council to re- ago---are merely an indication vi
main untouched, unstudied," the council's sweeping contribu-
- Bishop Leo C.Byrne, apostolic tions to the Church and to'the
administrator of the diocese of world.
Wichita, said at a Council Jubilee "A new appreciation of -and
Mass at St. l'lJ:ary's Cathedral. new approach to the Sacred "These are challenging times. Scriptures, a greater aware.nesS These are times when we must and understanding of the role of be both concerned and aware, the layman and a deeper under-- times which for Christian people standing of the Church itself aN must be marked by study and fruits of Vatican n already being prayer," he told those attending seen." . the Wichita deanery· Mass, the Surpasses Hopes final of six jubilee masses to be The council's 16 documentll celebrated throughout the dio- also sh'ow that "Pope John'. cese. hopes for a renovation are OD "~any months and' possibly the 'way to fulfillment," BishoP Sf. . Joseph's years will be necessary to realiie Byrne said. . . what the council has given. us," "The success in ecumeilislli To Honor ecretary' he continued., "But even at this umong both Church leaders and EMMITSBURG (NC) - Miss Mass, we see its effects ... the . members has surpassed the fond-> Genevieve Blatt, Pennsylvania celebrant faces the people; a ]ay- est hopes of everyone. AcroSll Secretary of Internal Affairs, man stands L the sanctuary; the the world steps are being takell has been chosen by St. 'Joseph Holy Sacrifice is offered in the to tear down the high. thick College here to receive its language of the people." walls separating ChristiaD LoUise DeMarillac Award for ,Bishop Byrne emphasized that ,peoples."
' 1 9 6 6 . \
Sister Rosemapy, college pres- _ =_~==_,mmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnllmllllllllllnlllllllWIIIII11111 ident, said presentation will be
made at a convocation Saturday' •STORE HOURS:
by, Bishop George -L: Leech of
Harrisburg on' the Emmitsburg Mon. & Tues. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
campus. Wed. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m:
. . The. award ' & F' 9 a.m. ' to 6. p.m.'
,is given annually . Th urs. rI. to a Catholic laywoman in recog nitionof personal service to her Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Conege·'
0
S
,CI~sed
,=..
all day $unday
MacLe,an',
Foods
eommunityof the Daughtetsof ' 'Charity pay tribute to St. Louise 'g', ,. ~ ' . DeMarillac, . its 11th ~entur7 ,~UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN ler. 997- 0 3$8 Frendlfoundress;, . " .; '~"lIIiHIIIIIIIIUlllllUlUlllllllllllllitIWmiJllIIWIIUIIlWUIIIIIIIIDIUIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllWlilllll,IWll_.1i
...c:.
'18
Vaco"tions !Find
THE ANCHOR-;Diocese of 'Fall 'RivehThurs.'~pr'il21, 19,6.6
Students: Aiding
Chave:E OM~sta~d,~.rD,~ ![F:~gulfe
In' FOf[!WJ
W.Xbr~~f~o~O©ll~~NrV
JEy cM~gr. George G. 'Higgms ,(D.irector" Social .. AdiollU Dept., N.C.W.C,) Holy Week, 1966, will go down as a, turning point in flle history of th:; American farm labor movement, 'for Jlt was in the middle of that week that unions striving to organize California's massive farin labor force scored their
-.'
first major victory. SchenleY'Time concluded in,its round-up Industries, Inc., mlit in t.·U'get story on the SchellIey .stri.ke~ Gf a strike which'began last "this.firstbreaktbrough ,in .t~ september, signed art agree- b!tter fight between..:grower~ and 'ment recognizing the indepentl- <workers * * ~ had . been a<:hleved cnt National Farm Workers As- by the massive .supporLgiVen to .sociation ·as sole .t h·e striker!, ' by Cali~ornia l'Dargaining ,agent , church,es." 'And .~,~v~zh~self for its grape . has sa~d that thiS ..IS the smgle pickers. The 'unmost ,Important <thing that has wnand SchenJtelpedus."
J1,ey a r'e sched'Credit ,to'Cbavez
'1lIlied to ',begin ,Maybe ,so.~For::my·'()wJl .part,
'Illegatiations 'onJtowever,Lam,inclined: to ,think
Ii formal c c611ec:that Dick;IMeisteroof1the'Herald tive"bargaining '.Tribune ~cameev;enccloser to\the "eontraet within :tr;uth :when ,he Jgave :,t~ ,lion~s Ilbe near future; ,share 'Jof ;~ Icredit ..~ .. Chavez I'lbe p a e F i s r . e x - h i m s e l f . .0havez,:Jte il.w·r()~t·e, ",peeted ~to ",be ~\g(1asped :the ~esseIi.tiJil(fact '.that 'eonclu~tWitliin--aOday.s.if .llOmethi:J;tg~(Was;to..be!Jdone, it ' 'Schenley':'·is: the:second largest ,would· have'to"be idone"different ef 4he i33 .;grape-:gr.owiilg :'ftrms, ly. CarefullY, he .'put .together, :'~at 'were, struck -by the 'NFWA. not a, union, ,but ,a 'community ~ .largest :firm,:DiGiol'gio >organization;" 'CoI'pOD8tion, ',has .also 'announced. .,Meister ~ repor.ts.~that :'for .·three ,'.at .it Will,anow ',seeret-"ballot years Chavez gathered the <Mex, 1IInion elections ;,at. its California ican-Americansin Delano, a .lit . properties to'!deter:mine Jwhether .tle town in the heart of the -vine ..i ts ,workers ,'want ~to be, .Grgan ..yard .area, into a closely '.knit ',ilzed. group.-He established..a credit .Robert 'DiGiorgio,' presielentaf . uniGn 'from which' his 'farm ,r«be :,fimn, 'said that <any .~gree": workers ..couldborr.ow the ..•nnent reached, by 'oollecti've bar money so often needed ,to tide .'c:ai.ning ,or 'through ,arbitration .them over. -His .members ,alsb ,wouldoontainprovisions. forbid found that by banding together Jd:!lllg 'a .strike, boycott, ,slowdown ,.theycoul~ pool· their 'resources .or lockoutiduring harvest ,season. ,and buy' the' things they needed He also stipulated that issues ,at,discount prices. ..llllOt resolved in negotiations In short, 'Meister 'concludes, 'w-ould ,be subject ·to 'comp.ulsory the Delano workers 'learned .3l['bitration by ,an . ,imIJal'tial, ,what outside union 'lol'ganizers boaI'd. ,had never been <able, to teach .See Victory Elsewhel'e them. :They :learned 'the lesson The reaction ,ofNFWA ,offi ,of unity, aJ,ld' theyl'.pr.acticed it dais to these ".non-negotiable" ,daily in the affairs of their own .stipulations laid down by, the associ{ltion. 'DiGiorgio Corporation as ,a basis Made .Difference l10r any collective ,bargaining After three years, they ,began agreement 'has understandably asking the inevitable: if .unity been rather lukewarm. brought them 'c~aperautomoNevertheless the DiGiorgio of- \ bile tires, ,why not 'better wages fer, in spite of all its limitations;' and 'Working .conditions, as well? .~presents a major' breakthi'oug", . The strike," says Meister, '~soori and would seem to indicate that· became as inevitable ,as the oth~r victories are in ,sight for ,question." ,NFWA. It-would appear, then, that Dick ,Meister, special eorre-' Cesar Chavez is something ,of a ,spondent for the Ney., York Her-genius. This is not to suggest, of aId Tribune, reports' from Cali-course, that he organized Schen fornia that even ·the ,gl'owers, Ie;' alone. Actually he couldn't bitterly ,an~agonistic to NFWA have done 'it without the help president, .cesar Chavez, ,ac- ..of.a .coalition ,of religious, 'civil knowledge'this .prospect .private- ,rights and student ,groups and Iy and concede, too, that ,a, vicwithout the. added he~p of organ tory for the union in California' ized labor. .,will mean event~al victory. ·on ,Nevertheless Jt was Chavez ,:brms 'elsewhere iln '.the .Umted who made the essential differStates. ence. Thanks be .to God, he' is ,·S~cret lof S!Jlccess .still a relativelyy;oung man~ Cesax: Chavez' ,dramati~ ',yic~ ;young enough to' complete the .,tory ,over. SchenM~' and EhGlOr.,. . job which he has .sosuccessfully . giocould .not have been ,pre-, begun in. the vineyards of.Cali ;dicted, Hi ladvance. On the' con- ,fornia. More power to him. We ',trary, there ;was ·every reason to ,haven't seen,anyone'like him in ,lkar, ·whenihe ,took his IMexican- 'the American labor 'movement 'American :w:orkers .out.,on .strike in many a long:day. Jast September, that heiV\loulll
go down in ignominious !def~at.
Why did he succeed, then, ·w.here .so 'many ,other labor lead ers had failed ''during the past TCJl6lS~ell'lltdle[J'Threa.d" half-centurY? What is, the secret MAR ,DEL PIiAT,A (NC)-An of his ,success? Time magazine American motion picture :star attributes his success :in lal'ge 'ring ,Sydney P4>itier .and Anne measure to the ,support he re Bancroft won an awar.d from tire ceived from organized religion. International Catholic Film Of "More than ,anything else;'" fice during ,the worldfilin 'festi 'Val here ·hi, Argentina. ' The Catholic agency said the Re-e~e\l:u- .[?>!i'®.$udell1li!' 'film entitled '''The Slender CHICAGO (NC) - ::Bishop Thread" . contributed to the Ernest J. Primeau ,of Manchester, "progress ,and .spiritual develop ment of human values." The N.H., was :t;,e-elected. president .movieconcerns ,a 'Woman w:ho is general of· the National Catho illie Educat~.pal Association ).lilt :.saved ,from ,suicide "by ;a tele the close of ItS ,63rd annual COB .phone call ,she makes to an ·emer;gency clinic. -.ention' here. Q
film Fes{1'Qv«:d Prnze
Poor A.reas... PITTSBURG (NC)-Res idents of three low income areas of Pittsburgh are hav ing their homes. cleaned and painted by 96 college students from some 20 colleges. The students are working un der Manhattan College's "Ap palachian Project, for 1966," which originated the idea and recruited the students. The volunteers agreed to , j~ '/ spend their Easter vacations FI,t "#,,,'. '"'~ working with the Pittsburgh di , • ' 1>10 fi ocesan Economic Opportunity , \:1 ~; office in a renewal program un ~ "'" ~J 3~ derway for more than a year. Pl!llEJLATJE GREETS LEADJE)R: Urging justice for the 'The students' -project is designed exploited, ,'Bishop Hugh A. Dono'hoe of Stoc-kton; Calif., ·to provide a dramatic boost to the program and"give motivation offered.Massfor-thestriking grape workers on -their march to area residents. 'from Delano'toBacram~ntoas they passed through Stock Supplies to;n, and greeted Denis Chavez, the leader of the marchers. Supplies for the Vfork have .been provided by landlords and NC Photo. by some area companies. The ,students are ,under the supervi :sion of block clubs, made up of area, residents. ,In one .area, the students are 'i[W.O :;~e.w ~~r.k painting ,the outside .of. some '10 :houses. In others. 'they are help ,~Re~pee,t\o:f 'ing "aged and .infirm :residents clean and·paint.their'homes. NEW YORK ,(NC) -, ell-ban ,a .veryminimal "percentage af While here;'.the(,girls are living ,Cubans." 'refugees resettled in"this metro .in ,a :donnitory 'at 1VIount 'Mercy '~It would. seem," Elather·.Babis politan.<areahave been 'pr.a.ised told .the committee, "that ,these College,with some in private by representatives of two' ,Cath olic agencies that helped to re :refugees, ,who have been robbed homes,:and ,the 'boys are living .of ,all. their .worldly ,possesswns, primarily with local Siudents. locate them. The -program, is coordinated by have not· been robbed of .their '!Th~y have, earned the .re
speet, of ,all ,who ,care in contact "dignity, ,and-all they' ask is the the diocese of Pittsburgh with ·with them," ...s~ys 'Father ,Daniel Op'portunityto ,work .sQ',they the assistance of..a number of community 'programs and the maY·ke~p ;their families decent G. Babis, director of resettle ment ·of the .diocese of Rockville 'ly. Th~y have earned the· respect Mayor's 'Commission on Human of all who ,are in. contact with .Relations. Centre, L.L, N.Y. Father .Babis ,and Father ,Jo them." ,seph F.Hammond of the Bro.ok_ .Father..Babisalso .said "the in cidence of crime among Cuban lyn diocese's resettlement com PATERSON .<NC) - ,Ground mittee ,were ,among" witnesses refugees has been practically will be broken Sunday for two -heard ,by a U.S. Senate commit nil." new regional diocesan high tee headed by Senator,Edward schools for the Paterson dio ,M. ,Ketllledy of Mass~chusetts. Ini~luenee cese by 'Msgr. Jos~ph R. BresteI. The committee, which had pre administrator of .the diocese. viously held hearings ,'On the ~for ',W,orking Class The coeducational schools in Cub.an refugee, 'program in MUENSTER (NC) - Sons of Paterson and .Clifton will ac ,Washington, :came here 'for.one ,of ja ;series of '''field'' hearings, working-class famili'es ·,are in commodate 1,000 students. to .leanihow -local resettlement ,effect 'barred from policy-mak ingposts in.industryand nation programs work. Father Hammond .noted the al life 'in 'general,according to Brooklyn diocese has had its, the bishop 'of -Muenste,r. Bishop Joseph Hoeffner in w n resettlement committee dicated that German~T'spresent sincE~ 1948 when it started im plementing the Displaced Per . educational policies tend to per sons Act of that year. He said petuate the system under. which this committee has handled some economic and public life is the 25,000 emergency' immigration domain of the middle and upper classes. cases' ,including 4,500 Cubans're He. asked fo:r a definite ,pro settled under the current pro gram for training children of gram begun in 'December, 1962. "The experience in the Cuban workers' families so that· the Resettlement '~Program has been proletariat 'may have, its own at least as good as any previous influence by assuming policy makin,g posts. 'expetience in the field of 'emer ,gencJT immigration," Fat her 'Hammond 'declared.. "These her- , Che:tlr"ges PC);icy ·oic.families show qualities simi LONDON (NC)-Themonthly lar to 'our earlier immigr.ants , magazine Columba, published by, with a sensitive awareness of Commercial '. Industriat
,human dignity and ,a desire to .theKnights 01 ,St. C<llumba in InStitutional
be on their own, and ,out of Britain ,for,the past 10 years for ,the general Catholic :public, is, gratitude"for the ,atmosphere of 'Painting and Decorating
changing .to .a house ,organ for freedom herebave .adJusted ex members only after .1tbe !April 'Fall 'River OSborne 2-'1911 ceptionally ,well in ,our ,area." issue. A fall-off in ,advertising He added "that a ,sampling' of .revenue :was blamed for the 74 Williamson Street ,the parishes where, Cubans: live step. . in sizable numbers "confirm' the very fine .adjUstment.-There is nothing but praise for them from ,the priests concerned,". he .added. Notii;l.gthatprofessional.people ';' '.among the refugees, ~mable to ,INC. find work in their .own fields, "have uncomplaining}y taken menial ,jobs" in factories and shops,. hotels .and restaurants, all, • maintenance workers, .and the ,like. F:ather Hammond suggested "it. would be ,beneficial if some ·way could be fO.und for them to 'engage in some capacity in their ,own professional specialities." Father Bibis' said Cuban refU gees in the :Brooklyn'-diocese are' , "mainly welfare records whicb 363~SECOND'ST. "at no time indictate, more, thaD ~DOOOO~
I
1 ,\,
ii-i,
;IPraise ,Ref,ugees
_Hle:o.ds (,of cGa,thalie ;Ageneies -Say iCubans-HoveEorneCi All
New High '5choc>ls '
-Ask More
The 'Best
:0
.
DONNELLY
PA'IN'TING
,SERVICE
'FRIGIDAIRE
'REI:RlGERATION
AIPPllANCES
Am:R :CONDITIONING
'FALL RIVER, 'MASS•
Biblical Scholar Hails Document On Revelation YOUNGSTOWN (NC)
The Bible is "God speaking to man-person to person" and must· be viewed as "the history of our salvation rather than some abstract formula dropped from the blue," a scrip tural scholar and Vatican Coun cil II consultant said here. Father Eugene H. Maly, pro fessor at Mt. St. Mary. Seminary, Cincinnati, traced biblical scho larship- in the Church and de scribed the effect of the council's document on revelation, ',' at the Youngstown . diocese's seventh, Council Review Day. He said the council document represented a "completely new approach to divine revelation and man's response to it" and made the Bible "relevant again for modern man." Personal Element In what he described as a "lireak from the static approach to revelation,'" Father Maly said the council took the' "existential and personalist approach" and emphasized that "God is speak-· ing to man as a friend in his tory." The emphasis on the personal element of God's speaking is in keeping with the "~ontemparary concern with personal involv~ ment," he said. Father Maly also declared' that the council affirmed that "the' deeds and words of God... have' an inner unity," and consequent ly Scripture must be viewed as' a "moving, historial process" of man's salvation. New Document· Father Maly traced the the ological development in the Church from the Council of Trent to Vatican Council If. The first draft of the schema on rev el~tion written fer' the Vatican council was "defensive and ab solutist;" and supported the position, diSputed' by modern, theologians, the Scrtpture and' tradition as sources of:' revela tion were distinct~ Father Maly said that when it appeared that -this schema was' te be retained POpe John' in tervened; and named another commission to write a new doc ument. "This was one' of, the' great and dramatic turning' points in the council;" he said. "Pope John' revealed' by his intervention that he' wanted 8i new approach to' theology in· biblical studies; From this point' on there' was no' question that' this was: to be a progl'essive' council."
Councl of Churches Invites. Catholic Members SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The Texas Council of Churches has passed a resolution calling on all members and officers to ac tively seek membership .of Cath olic dioceses in the state. Hailing the action, which won the unanimous support of the membership; Episcopal Canon Gerald McAllister; TCC presi-· dent' stressoo that membership had always ,been open to Catho-
lies but that it is now being ac tively encouraged. The canon said, "The reason for a special invitation to the Roman Catholic dioceses at this time arise from the participation of official observers at the last two assemblies of the Texas Council: In addition, the Ca.th olics played a prominent role in the first statewide faith and order conference held last No-
vember." "As incoming president of the Texas Council," he continued, "I was most amdous to have an expression from the assembly' regarding: the vigorous pursuits of Catholic membership. In spite of the fact that such member ship will mean a radical re structuring of"the present coun cil, the- vote· of·the· assembly was unanimow;;"
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., April
2~,
1966'
19
Co!E®.9Je President ST. LOUIS (NC)-8ister ~ nest Marie Schmidt will become president'of Fontbonne College here- Aug. 1, succeeding Sister Mary Alfred, NOble who is no tiring ~t her own request 141 re turn to college teaching; Sister ETnest·Marie\ 37,' is.chatpnan. (}If: too sociology' department 0#., FontbolUle.
S:t. Mic.h.a.eiJ's Wins;
AU ROTC Awards
NEW YORK- (NC) - With 1% northeastern, colleger competinc. for four awards' at annual ROTC drilL competition at Man hattan Colleg<> here, one' walked off with aU t'1.t" prizes. I'hf~' Ail' Foree' R0T€ unit from· St. M'-chael's' COHege' ill' Winooski, Vt... scored; the unus ual; victory by· winning the' Area .t\l Title fOD New. England and New York; the Manhattan College in:vitationaf overnll;. the' Manhattan J)?sic d·rill competi tion; and tnP.' Manhattan' trick drill title.
Mre' you' fa <Jeer Wlttt~ at temporary money, p-rob1em? Taik it over-· with an experitmcect~personal.Loan'offioer:8t'flaUIRiver-NationaJ"\ Ban k.. He:-c.an help;yoU! paytfor medlcaJ:e*R8flses,..• make:-that: i i'nperta:nt' purcHase:. ... and· meet· ether, needS-- for' cash; The' G05t- is low . . ; termS'> are: arrang-ed to 1jt~ into,ypur budg~L •• the' servie6' is_ fast and"eompleiely confidentiaL You~" make sHort work< of that money. problem ., •• aAd: ~t. the: best in P.ersonal Loans with a visit' to Fall River Na-tionat.
Visits. Parag,Uay QUEBEC' (NC)-Maurice car-' dinal Roy is, back from' his an nual "pastorial visit" to nine priests from the Quebec arch diocese' now in, mission work in. Paraguay. He was received by P a··r a g u a y President Alfredo Strassner and conferred' with several of the country's bishopa;. Work of the Quebec pries*s . . this .area date.- k-om' 1960l
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MEMBBR Fsa.E.RA'\o. EilIi:-P05tT IN8URANC.E" CORPQRA"J'aQN
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Kennedy IFoundation Gives Grant
For Mentell Retardation Study
lHEANCHOR-Diocese cHon River-Thurs. Apri'i 21, 1966
~[f~gram tOA~~8St Und~[f~fl(QHnldir!)g ~n 'SOU~[}n
Offefr$
From "The Church in the New 'Latin America" Edited by John Jr. iC~nsidine, M.M. In view of the critical situation in Latin America and @f the ~eed for the people of the United States to understand not only the current situation but, more important, its historical roots, and in order for the people of the United States to know their neigh , journalism' in presenting these bors to the south, Father articles to the American public. Albert Nevins, M.~., pro We would like 'to see more inter poses a positive program pretive editorials that will bring
the American 'public greater 0n the part of press and class room. It provides 'an .excellEmt understandipg. 2) While NCWC News Service review of the· is doing a, creditable job under factors involved many handicaps, Latin American if widespread coverage is uneven. We would know led g e, like to see the replacement of and under corr'espoI).dents who are not standing are to active and creative. We would be achieved. 1) further like to see a continuing We call 'on the growth in the number and qual press syndicates, ity of L~tin American dispatches the newspapers serviced by NC. and news mag 3)" We would like to see devel azines w h i c h oped a regular and continuing have correspond series articles that will inter ents in Latin pret Latin America to the Ca~h America to s t r eng the n their correspondent corps so olics of the United States. We 'would like to see these that they can give more thor articles written by top writers ough coverage to Latin AIDei' in Latin America. We would lea. further like to see every Cath There is no doubt that these olic newspaper carry' these' ar ~rrespondents are 'one of the ticles. major elements in better under 4) We would encourage Cath standing. olic editors and writers to visit 2) We call upon these same Latin American on vacations pre s s syndicates, newspapers and assignments. By' first-hand and magazines to concentrate visits they will get a greater in mote on depth coverage than on sight into Latin America, its reporting the spectacular. The people, and problems. people of the United States are', 5) We would like to see the expected to make judgments and exchange of journalistic person this can only be done by means nel on short term basis. This has of proper evidence presen~d been done by Cathorlic Press 1hJ:"ough the communications Association in the past. We media. would like to see it renewed and expanded. ,3) We call upon the television Educational Efforts and radio -industry to help re move from the people of the 1) We call upon schools to United States the misunder promote Latin American studies standings and ignorance con through social science, religion, cerning our neighbors, to the' and other classes. We call for the South. Some excellent television organization of 'extra curricular documentaries h av e already activities that will further'devel been produced but they have op and practicalize 'these studies. been too few and far between. 2) There has been' a, trend in We should like to see' a contin recent years oli the university aing series of public affairs );Jro level. to the formation of inter grams which present the full American institutes. 'We 'would story of each of our southern call for the expansion of such neighbors; 3l'ld other programs institutes, for. the teaching and oovering general topics, prob studying of Latin American lems and . successes. The 1964 affairs.. program of the National Council 3) We call on primary and of Catholic Men is an excellent secondary schools to set up cor,.. illustration of an effort in this respondence exchanges with stu direction. dents in Latin America. 4 ) We further call on the com 4) We call on universities in . munications media which are. the United States to offer mu sending dispatches and programs tu~l cooperation to universities mto the countries of Latin in. Latin America. There is a America to realize their respon growing interchange between sibility in reporting the inten sec u I a r universities a n. d tions and actions of the United - secular u n i v e r sit i e sand' States. La tin American universities, It will be these same dis and we would like to see this patches and programs that will developed on the Catholic level. create understanding or mis 5) We would encourage lec understanding of the United ture tours in Latin America by States 'in Latin America. 5)' Finillly, we call upon an: Catholic scholars and artists from the United States, and in file media of mass communica tion which send personnel into the United States by their Latin Latin America to assign their American counterparts. 6) We would. call for an' in top reporters and personnel to the Latin Ameri~an scene, and crease in scholarships to deserv in so doing demonstrate their ing Latin American students on belief in the importance of this the part of foundations and uni area and the need for oustanding versities, with freedom on the . part 'of the students to choose reportage. ~ U. S. Catholic colleges if they Ca.tholic ]Press so desire. , 1) In a very specific way, we '1) We would call.for an ex eall upon the Catholic press to develop a unity between the . panded scholarship program on Catholic people of the United the part of North American businesses that have interests in States and those of Latin ,Amer !ea. There are many theological Latin America. reasons for such interest and 8) We call upon 1\merican participation which· do not need families to give lodging to Latin statement here. American students in'the United We should like to see more ' States, particularly to assist the Initiative in obtaining articles on . NCWC high school program Latin America. more ereaU-ve which each year brings Dlall¥
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Ji;~IEV. tWo M. ABBOTT, S.J.
Diirects Vatican
RCJdio' ·Staff
NEW YORK (NC) - Father Walter M. Abbott, S.J., 42, has 'been named director of the Nodh American section of Vat ican Radio. He will assume his new duties in Rome next Sep tember. The native of Boston currently is serving as direct,or of the John LaFarge Institute here and as-, soci~\te editor of America mag azine. Announcement of the appoint ment, part of a reorganization of Vatiean Radio which broadcasts throughout the world in 31 lan guages, was made today by Father Pedro Arrupe, S.J., gen eral of the worldwide Society of Jesus. In his new post, Father Abbott will direct a 15-minute broad cast beamed to the United States and Canada every day. He will also participate in special broad casts to other countries. Announcing the appointment on the final day of his two-week visit to the United States, Father Arrupe said: "The experiences of the: United States and Canada ,in thli!' post-conciliar age are im portant for the rest,of the world. . An iri'lportant part of Father Ab bott's work be to communi';' cate the important !ievelopments in North America, with their significance; to the rest of the Church and the world."
will
Study·Day, WASHINGTON (NC )-:-About 500 Dominican tertiaries from the Di8trict of Columbia, north ern Virginia and Maryland .will meet at the Catholic University of America Sunday to discuss "The :Relevance of the Third Order in 'the Church and the Worl!! TQday." studenls to the United States for one year. 9) We call upon American families to provide hospitality to foreign, students in our midst, and we urge American students to: help their fellow students, from abroad to fit into American collegiate life and know the true hand ,01~ friendship. 10) W:e would encourage American college students· to matricuiate' at 'Latin American universi ties~ 11) I~inally, we' would call upon all Catholic organizations to develop, programs related to the his1~ory, culture,- problems and hop,es of the people of Latin 'America, and to present these programs to their memberships on a continuing basis. This ,column concludes "Tine Church,- iID. the New LatiJm Amer," which has been serian ilze4ll U»:V The Anchor. Ne:x4 week seria,lization Win begin of a new report by Father, Considillle, "Social, RevoluUOD ill ~ l~ew Amedea..
CHICAGO (NC)--Mrs. R. Sar memory Of his son, I:.t. Joseph gent ::;hriver, executive \>ice P. Kennedy, Jr., who was killed president of the 'Joseph P. Ken nedy, Jr., 'Foundation, announc- . in World War IT while flying,an ed the award of a $180,000 grant experimental mission against II German V-2 rocket base. Since to the National Catholic Educa that time the foundation has tional Association for Catholic religious and lay teachers in the distributed more than $40 mil lion to hospitals and research field of mental reta:rdation. She said the three-year grant projects in the field of mental would provide 100 scholarships retardation. Its scholarship program marks a year to permit Catholic teach the first time the foundation has ers. to attend Summer schools decided to fund a program for and institutes for the study of teacher training in men~al re mental retardation. tardation. Speaking to the 133rd annual Mrs. Shriver came to Chicago NCEA convention here, Mrs. from Boston, where she attended Shriver said: ''There is an urgent the Kennedy Award dinner. need for more' teachers of the After addressing the NCEA mentally retarded in the Cath convention here she visited the olic schools." Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., School The grant will be administered tOr Exceptional Children in by the NCEA special education Palos Park, m., with delegates department, 1mder direction of to the NCEA Special Education Msgr. Elmer H. Behrmann, NCEA associate secretary for the Department meeting. s p e c'i a 1 education department
and assistant superintendent of
0 schools in charge'of special edu
cation for the St. Louis archdio
cese.
Introducing Mrs. Shriver to VATICAN CITY (NC) - The convention delegates, M s gr. total.of 'persons who either live Behrmann said she has 'been a in Vatican City or are citizens tireless worker for the mentally . of the State of Vatican City retarded since picking up the amounts only to 890.
torch of her late brother, Presi
The total was ,announced by dent John F. Kennedy. the governorate of Vatican City, Msgr. Behrmann told newsmen the office charged with the civil that although government schol administration of, the tiny city ar:ships are available to ,Catholic state. teachers, the Kennedy Founda Of the 890, only 556 hold the tion grant would be of special ~ citizenship papers of Vatican value. This is because govern City. These include 60 ecclesias ment scholarships are geared to tics or Religious, 22Q members full-time . study, while' most of the various guards corps, such Catholic religious communities as the 'Swiss Guards and the are able to let their members Pontifical Gendarmes who are study only during the Summer. the civil police of the area, and The Joseph P. Kennedy, ,Jr., 124 ecclesiastics and Religious Foundation was established in who represent the Holy See in 1946 by former Ambassador to foreign countries. There are 334 England Joseph P. Kennedy in persons who live in Vatican City but do not have citizen's~p Organiz,ation ESacks papers. An additional 4,200 persons Bus T ransportcltion live in extraterritorial buildings BERGENFIELD (NC)~A bill belonging to Vatican City. These to provide nonpublic, s(~hool stu,;, include 3,250 members of reli dents the same ,bus transporta gious coinmunities and 950 other tion as public school students ecclesiastics and laymen. get was :supported herl~ in New In 1965' the registQ. office of 'Jersey by the Bergeill County Vatican City registered IOl Educational. Asociatioll. marriages, about two-thirds of ][n a statement released by E. 'which were celebrated in- St. ,Pat O'Connell" president of the Peter's basilica and in St. Anne's' organization, .the group said: ehurch, tile parish church of "No one can deny the, genuine Vatican City. Most of the mar to get public ap,d nonpublic riages, however, were not those school children aliIte to their of residents of Vatican City but school in, a manner whieh would of Italian and other foreign na eliminate the dangers ':[ound in tionals, including refugees and crossing heavily trave]ed, un couples living in countries where protected highways; makeshift Catholic marriages' cannot 'be car pools and the o,ft-found performed, such as some Arab
necessity of multple buoS trans states. '
fers."
Vatican City Has 556 Citizens
need,
Newark See. to Hold
Foull' Marian Rallies
6%·
I nferesf: on .Your Savings
I nvesfecl In
NEWARK (NC) - After 18 years, the' Newark archdiocese
w,i II discontinue its central annual May outdoor Marian
Rally, holding rallies :in ,four
separate centers instead.
, Co-sponsored by archdiocesan
organizations, the rallies will be
held in central churches in each
county of the archdiocese Sun day, May 15.
A bishop will preside at each center. Purpose of the rallies win be to honor Mary a,nd ask
her intercession in the cause of peace.
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Vietnam Strife Stirs Criticism Of Tri Quang
THE' ANCHOR-Diocese
WASHINGTON (NC) Recent days have brought the first open criticism in high places here of the role played by some radical Buddhist monks in the affairs of South Vietnam. A State Department official cl\arged that Buddhists led by Thich (Venerable) Tri Quang are trying to take over complete political control of South Viet nam, while unofficial, but in formed, observers said the United States is compelled by diplomatic requirements to put the best face it can on a situa tion which is greatly embarras-' sing to this country.' The break-out' in criticism caine in the wake of wiid dem onstrations in' Hue, Danang and Saigon which reporters said Buddhist monks encouraged and in some cases led. The rioters not only clamored for the downfall of the regime of Premier Ngu yen Cao Ky, which the U.S. is supporting, but they also in dulged in attacks on the U.S. and Americans. Seek to Dominate Statements on a nationwide television program by Assistant Secretary of State William P. Bundy marked the first time, as far as could be recalled here, that any high official of this· government has criticized Tri Quang in any way. Bundy. chief expert o~ Asia in the State Department, said Quang and his followers are seeking to dominate South Viet nam politically, and he left the implication that Quang's follow ers are responsible for the re cent disorders in Vietnam. He said the Buddhists are divided into "moderates" led by Thich Tam Chau and a radical wing led by Quang. . Meanwhile, observers w~re pointing out that the huge U. S. "stake in' South, Vietnam' is based upon our proclaimed' in..,' tention to defend the right of the South Vietnamefie to make their own deCision:)•. Ther~fore, it was noted, theU,S. is ,called. upon to follow a "hands..,off". policy,' while two Buddhist fac tions agree or disagree upon matters that are" of vital. and enormous concern to this coun.., try.
Pope Paul Honors Alaska Teacher FAIRBANKS (NC) - J 0 h n Roche, who hop..scotched about the world as a teacher before settling down here in 1965, was honored by Pope Paul VI with the Knighthood of St. Sylvester for his services ·to Catholic stu dents. Roche, now associate professor of business administration at the University of Alaska, attended college in England, then taught for 10 years in Africa; where he founded several. Newman clubs, including one at the University of Nairobi. He also was a leader in other activities for Catholic students. Roche was invested with the papal honor here by Bishop Francis D. Gleeson, S.J., of Fairbanks.
CYO Oratory WASHINGTON (NC) - Top winners in the 12th annual ora torical contest of the National Catholic Youth Organization (CYO) Federation, held here were 18-year-old Colm Thad deus Gage, of Cathedral parish, Baltimore, and Mary Katherine Connor, 16, of St. Bernard's parish, Omaha. '
of Fan :Rrv~r- Thurs. April 21, 1'966
21
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LIFE-LONG FRIENDS: Rt. Rev. Msgr. Augusto L. Furtado, right, pastor of St. John of God Church, Somer set, who formerly served as assistant in St. Michael's Par ish,' Fall River, the parish of the new Bishop's youth, expresses his .happiness on the occasion of the elevation of Bishop Medeiros to the Episcopacy.
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Educator Suggests Guidance Programs
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Urges Parishioners Offer. SlI!ggestions TOLEDO ~NC) - The Holy Name Society of St. Patrick Heatherdowns parish here has launched a program to obtaill parishioners' suggestions f 0 i" improving parish life. ' The Holy Name Society mailed "parish prog!"p.ss questionnaires" to parishion~rs, asking their comments on the liturgy, the parisll school, organizations, and other parish activities.
"The ambivalence of adult be havior patterns and the constant reminder that today's skills will be useless for tomorrow's world make a stronger case for better guidance to all elementary stu-' dents, and particularly those in the seventh and eighth grades," Father Moreau said. The instructional phase of 'the cl~ssroom must not be under'-' esthnated, but n'either' can:' the role of the counselor as he as-' sists classroom teachers and par, eots in a better understanding" of 'the pre-adolescent's way of life, he stated . '
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SALINA (NC)-An academic council has been formed as a major development of an insti tutional analysis conducted at MarymountCollege here' in Kansas. The council' includes' 12 elected and appointed faculty members, with the president and academic dean as ex-officio members.
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APACHE JUNCTION (NC) Bishop Francis J. Green of Tuc son called the first· management seminar for diocesan pastors a "rousing success" and added it "well could be the beginning of a whole new approach to the handling of parish affairs in the diocese." The two-and-a-half-day sem inar was sponsored' by the Tuc son Diocesan Council of Cath olic Men -and conducted by a team of six Arizona State Uni versity management professors. Bishop Green urged the pas tors' to put into effect what they had learned. "We must begin to more ac tively recognize the laity," be said. "We have been exposed to methods and ideas which will help us to point the way for the role of the layman in the Church of the future."
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Need ImpU'ovem,ent CHICAGO (NC)-A Catholic educator has recommended es tablishment of a national com mission to investigate' incorpo ration of professional guidanCe and counseling programs 'as an integral feature of Catholic .ele Jl1e.J:ltary schools: , , ''The commitmeptto the young people in o~r Cat~olic elemep.t-, ary schools must be - extended through guidance and' counsel,.. ing programs on a, ,professional' level," Father George H.'Moreilu,.. O,M.I., said here. "Thi~, ShOlp,d be, done not only in the int~re~t of a stronger and better' America, but also in the fulfiilmfmt,of the Church's mission' to prRmQ~ the cause of .Christ among D?an kind." Father Moreau, consultant for guidance services to the Nation al Catholic Educational Associa tion told the association's 63rd amiual convention here: ''The needs of our students as express ed in their environmental, psy chological, social and spiritual mode of living interact not only in the home but especially in tl)e schools." Present Necessity ''The impact of modern day living is evidenced every day by children in the elementary schools to the effect that they not only demand assistance in a learning situation, but manifest. signs that counseling on a per sonal level is now a necessity," he said.
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State' Legislator ~ To Address CCD Leadership Day
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall! River-Thuf's: April '21, 1966
First lJ'J[!'otonotaries ': Apostolic
holl ,H i$th~IfY of Dio«:<ese
Continued from Page One }l)astor of st. James Church, New Bedford, dean of the New Bed lZord area. Rt. Rev. Albert Berube. pastor 0f St. Anthony of Padua Church, New Bedford, and, a diocesan'
oorisultor. ,
·Rt. Rev. Raymond T. C()ns~dine
pastor of St. William's Church,' Fall River, diocesan director of the Propagation of the Faith, and, a diocesan consultor. Protonotaries Apostolic a I' e maembers of the College of Pro tonotaries of the Roman Curia, , and also those honorary prelates 1I.lIpon .whom the Pope 'has con ferred this title with its special privileges.. It is the duty of a Protonotary Apostolic to coun flersign important pontifical doc 1I.lIIDents, thereby giving proof of ~eir authenticity. There are three colleges or· , groups of Protonotary Apostol
&:s:
.
1. Protonotaries Apostolic de
o
to be said or sung at the altar
and not at the bench. However,
tne new rubrics for the celebra ,tion of Mass seem to abrogate this provIsion. He washes his hands at Mass only during the recitation of the Psalm Lavabo.
MOD,signor Berube
Monsignor Berube, son of the late Ernest and the late Georgina Paradis Berube, was born Nov. 23, 1892 in Au Sable, Michigan. He made his studies for the priesthood in Quebec seminaries and completed his study of the ology 'at the Grand Seminary. He was ordained in' Quebec June 1, 1919, by His' Eminence, . Cardinal L. N. Begin. After serv",: ing as assistant at St. Stephen, Attleboro; Notre, Dame, Fall River and St. Anthony, New Bedford, he was named pastor of Holy Rosary, New ~edford, in April, 1945, where he served two years. In February, 1~47, he became pastor of St. Hyacinth, New'
Bedford and returned to St. An
thony as pastor in July, 1949.
Monsignor Berube has served the Diocese as a pro-synodal
judge, e~aminero£ the clergy,
officialis, Diocesan consultor,.
and member of the Commission on Sacred Liturgy. He' was named a Domestic Prelate .in 1952. The French Go'vernment hon. ored Monsignor Beri.lbe with the title of Chevalier. .des Balmes Acadeiniques in December, 1963 for furthering cultural relations between France and the United' ·States.
He holds life membership 'arid a medal of· honor in l'Union St. Jean' ·Baptiste d'Amerique and is Diocesan chaplain and director of its scholarship fund.
twmero participantium. These seven prelates form a very old oollege or body of officials hold kg one of the principal places fn the Roman Curia. They are . flhe first notaries of the Church, whose duty it is'to sign the most . important acts of the Roman Pontiff, such as the acts of con lristories or canonizations and the Signatures of these notaries serve :·fIo give proof of the authenticity -~ the documents that beal' them. Protonotaries Apostolic Su ~rnumerery. The College of !lupernumerary Apostolic Proto aotaries include the canons of •. Peter's Basilica, the Basilica iIif St. John Lateran and the Ba~ idUca of St. Mary Major in :Rome, lJiI well as the Can'ons of certain ~rincipal churches outside of the City of Rome. While they are. Iiot members of the Papal hous'ebold they enjoy many of the pl'ivMonsignor Considine lieges of the College of Apostolic '.' Monsignor Considine, pastor' Protonotaries. of .St. .William's Church, Fall 3. Apostolic Protonotaries ad River, the son of the late John W. llftstar participantium. This group Considine and the late Alice M. members of the Papal house- MurphY,was born on March 25, 'bold enjoyihg many 'of the hon- 1902, in New Bedford. A gradu 0rs and responsibilities. of the ate of Holy Family High School College of Apostolic Protono- in New Bedford and St. Charles ~ries Apostolic. 'College, Catonsville, Maryland, . The four monsignori of the Di- Monsignor Considine' attended @cese named by Pope Paul VI St. Bernard's Seminary,in Roch wear the violet cassock and.cinc- . ester arid was ordained in St. ture, rochet, mantiletta, and Patrick's Cathedral, Rochester, black beretum. N. Y., by the late' Most Rev. Em- When they celebrate Solemn met M. Walsh, Bishop of Mass, they use Pontifical vest- . Charleston, on June 9, 1928. ments such as the ring, the pec- . Monsignor Considine served as toral cross and the white mitre. assistant at Sacred Heart Church, The liturgical privileges of Oak Bluffs, St. Patrick's Church, Protonotarie~ Apostolic are: Wareham, St. Mary's Church,. With - the permission of the Tau n tori, 'and St. Patrick's OrdiJ:lary and the consent of a Church. Fall River. In 1934 he Superior of· an exempt reli~:ious· was sent by the late Bishop ehurch, outside the City of Cassidy to study in' Rome, and Rome, the Apostolic Protonotary on his return _in 1935 was ap Iillay celebrate Mass, not, how- pointed Diocesan Director of the ever, a Mass of Requiem, in the Propagation of the Faith Society, Pontifical Rite and with Ponti- . a post he still holQs. On Jlllle 12, fical vestments, as does the Ap- 1951, Monsignor Considine was ostolic Protonotary Supernum- appointed pastor of St. William's «ary, with these exceptions: Church in Fall River. He does- not use the faldstool Monsignor Considine is also eM' the gremiale, but he sits at Director of the Catholic Chari the bench together with the min- ties Appeal, Director' of PavIa, isters. The bench may be cov- a member of the Diocesan Ad ered with a cloth of the color of ministrative Council, Assistant the day.) He w~ars stockings and Treasurer and Administrator of sandals. of silk and silk blouse the Diocesan Homes for the wit h 0 Ii t ornamentation. He Aged, Diocesan /Director of the. wears a simple mitre of damask Holy Childhood Association, silk withou~ ornamentation, and Diocesan Consultor, and a mem'. with red fringes on the fanoas. bel' of the Massachusetts State
Outside the Cathedral he may Commission on Aging.
have the use of an assistant Monsignor ·C 0 n sid i n e was
priest vested in cope, provided made a Domestic Prelate Oct. 3, that the BishopOrclinal'Y does 1959. He holds an honorary de,.
:. IllOt assist at the Mass 1101' anoth- gree of Doctor of Laws that was
M' greater Prelate (Greater pj'elbestowed upon him by Stonehill ~ mie": He, wears a gold pectoral College Gn June 5; 1960. M-osswithout precious. 'stones, . . He has two brothers "who are suspended from a violet silk cord priests: Rev.' J.ohn J. Considine," ;: without· any gold thread inter- M:M.,. of 'Mar~lmoH; New. :York, woven .in' .it:. Whatever he sin'gg a-'wodd recognized authority on ,': ",says in lbe lllaa.w walt·,formerly tbemissions and Rev. Arthur G.
'. a.
Representative Charies L. Flannery of Taunton will ad dress a Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Leader
are
REIGNING PONTIFF AND BISHOP-ELECT HE NAMED: The newly.appointed Ordinary of Brownsville, Texas, 'meets Pope Paul VI in audience on one of his many visits to Vatican City~ . . Considine, pastor of St. Mary's Church in South Dartmouth. Monsignor Dolan Monsignor. Dolan, son of the late Martin. and -the late Hannah Campion Dolan, was born Aug. 9, 1880 in Ta·unton. Educated at St.' Laurent College, MOl)treal and St. Mary's Seminary; Balti more, he was .ordained June 22; 1912:· by' the, ·late 'Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, D,D., secOJid Bishqp of Fall Rive~. A;Eter serving as assistant .at Sacred Heart, Fall River,he' entered the Army as .chaplain .arid served in' France from 1917 to 1919, when.' he returned to Sacred Heart.' He was assigned as chaplain of Bethlehem Home, . chaplain of Tal,inton State Hos pital and head of Diocesan char ities in Taunton, and in IH26 was named pastor 'of Holy Fam .ily, .East Taunton. His appoint ment as pastor of St. Mary's, his native parish, came on' Oct. 1, 1955. Monsigno'r Dolan was accorded the~rank of Domestic Prelate in 1952, with the rank of Monsignor. He has spent many years as a distinguished m"~ T__ .. r' r t"e Taunton, Library Board: Bisholll Connolly appointed him.a Dioc esan Consultor. He is a member of the Veter ans of Foreign Wars and served for sEiveral years as chaplain of the American Legion.' He has also been chaplain of the paughtel's of Isabella .and the' Queen's Daughters. _ M:ollsignor Dolan is a brother of 'Monsignor William H. Dol~ln, . pastor of Holy Family, Taunton. Monsignor Gallagher Monsignor Hugh A: Gallagher, son the the late William H. and the late Bridget Goodwin Galla":' gher, was born Feb. 17, 1890 in Taunton. He was graduated from Holy Cross College in 1912 and entered St. MarY's'Seminary for Theological studies. The late' BishoI:l Feehan ordained him on
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May 27, 1916 in St. Mary's Ca thedral. . During the Summer or' .HU6, Monsignor Gallagher was cur-ate at Our La~y of the Isle. Parish, .Nantucket, and -then' was as . signed as assistant at- St. JalJ}cs' Qhurch,. New' Bedford;_ for the following_ 16 years. In ,1932 he became administr.ator of St. JQseph's,. Woods Hole. The fol lowing 12- pastoral .·years were
spent in st. Mary's Parish, 'Mans-' field,. a'nd .St..:Kilian's, New Bed ford. At' the death' of Monsignor Henry' J: Nooj;; V.G".he was ap-' pointed to his present pastorate, St. James' Parish, New Bedford. M 0 n s ig nor' Gallagher was named a Domestic Prelate Feb, 3, 1958. He organized the Cath olic Welfare F'ederation of New Bedford and was director of the Catholic Welfarei'n New Bed . ford for six years, 19~:6-1932. He directed the very successful campaign for Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth. He is Dean of the New Bedford area' and a Diocesan Consultor. He also served many years as' mod erator of the New Bedford area Council of Catholic WI)men.
GermCll~s t~ Pwoy
For Reconciliation 'BONN (NC) - The Catholic bishops of Germany pave order ed a day' of prayer and penitence under the motto of "Peace be tween Poland and Germany" for May'l, the main workers' festi val in the conununis{ c.ountries. May Day falls on a Sunday this year, and the bishops have ordered priests to mark· it with sermons on reeonciliati.on, espe cially in light of the current celebration of the 1,000th anni versary of Polarid as a Christian . nation. . Labor Day was "canonized'" by Pope Pius XII in 19,55 by the institution of the feast of St Joseph the Worker to make it ~ Christian eelehrlltion.
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· ship Conference to be held Olli Saturday, April 30 at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton. The conference will be at tended by public high school students enrolled in CCD classes throughout the Diocese of Fall River. Sponsored by the Teach ing Sisters and' Brothers Com mittee of the CCD, the Confer ence is designed to show students how to assert Christian leader ship in their own environment. Representative Flannery has been a member of the Massaehu · setts General Court since 1962. He represents' the Fourth Bristol District in Taunton. Prior to · election to the legislature, Rep resentative Flannery servecll three terms on the Taunton City Council, including one term an President of that body. Major Role At the CCD Conference, Rep · resentative Flannery will discuss '~Moral Leadership in Youth." Commenting on the need for such leadership in CCD high .school students, he noted that over . i2,OOO .Catholic students' attend public high schools in the Diocese. "These students," he said, "will playa major role in .our com munity in the immediate future. They will be called upon to show leadership in business, the .pro '. fessions, in government and Church affairs. It is my belief that. this leadership can be ef fective only if it is based on Christian morality and ethics." : Other .' Conference Leaders ~eduledto attend the CCD Leadership Program are Patricia Makin, ·principal ()f Padanarum .School, Dartmouth, and Mr. Francis O'Boy, Taunton ·.attor-· ney. Miss Makin will speak on "The Role of the CCD Student ''In a Secular School." !WI'. O'Boy .will discuss "Leadership in the Professions." Chairman of the event, which will include conferences, discus sions and a Bible' service, is Brother Thomas MulrY-an, C.S.C. faculty member at Coyle High .School, Taunton. Brother Mul ryan said that the program would conclude with a student dance in the auditorium of Cassidy High School. The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, with Diocesan head quarters in Attleboro, is the agency charged with the Chris tian education of all Catholics' not attending parochial schools.
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THE ANCHOR-:-Oiocese of Fall.Ri~:-,"Thuj.,.Apri.121, 1966
BeL 'Le<rdersltip Deadlock:
23
Swansea's C?ase Se"i~g P~ce Brown Hoopster's Roots in FaU River In Narry Diamond CircUit Jersey Mike . Fahey Summers i~ Di()eese . By Fred Bartek By Joe Miranda There are only two undefeated clubs in the Bristol County League-Durfee of Fan River and Taunton High Michael Fahey of East --after only three games in the Bristol County league. And, Jack McCarthy's Case nine of Swansea is the only Orange, N.J., carne to Brown unbeaten Narry loop outfit Universit~ three years ago after three games in the head on. Koska of Taunton will to study and play basketball. 't A two- Kace Paul Gillis of Stang. He has done well in both major smaller schoo1 cireul. Taunton took Attleboro with areas of concentration. pitcher, ~hit performance little trouble in the onener and Coming to Providence did not
gave the Fall River Hilltoppers 'then, in what was to be a close present any problem of geo a 5-0 triumph over Attleboro. contest, bombed Coyle High 9-0. graphical adjustment for the 6-1 J8 0 b Santene The Spartans bowed to Coyle in slender junior. Southern New and Jim Raposa their opener but then bounced England, and more particularly, lIepfl Coach Joe back with a strong 12-0 win the Fall River Diocese, is in <ef (S kip) Lewis' over North. Attleboro. feet, Fahey's second home. D u r fee club North Attleboro will host Eccnomics MajOi' perched. atop New Bedford Vocational today. His father, an electrical en the top'. B C L, North, still seeking its first vic gineer, was born and educated rung with Coach, tory, will go with its top hurler, in Fall River. He was baptized G e 0 r g e . HeDave' Stack. Voke. is 1 and 2 and confirmed at St. Patrick's, mond's Herringin league p l a y . . and has two sisters livtng in St. towners who Next Monday's games will find Louis Parish. Miss Alice E. .t urned in. their Taunton at Feehan, North At Fahey, taught English at James t h i r d victory, Ueboro at Durfee, Stang at Voke Madison Morton Junior High 4-0 at the e)[and Coyle at Attleboro. Wednes School and Miss Marion E. pense of North Attleboro High. day Attleboro will be at North Fahey, is prIncipal of the Meanwhile, Case moved to un- Attleboro. Also on Wednesday Coughlin School. disputed leadership in ilhe Narry in the Hockomock League Mans Michael Fahey, 20, is an eco loop by chalking up its fourth· field will be at Oliver Ames' in nomics major at Brown, and straight win, 4-1, over the cir- North Easton. highly regarded by Coach Stan cuit's newest entry, Seekonk Undefeated Case faces an Ward as a dependable, yeoman '1<7:.... backcourt member of the varsity .. .lW'6U' lilbie opponents t omorrow w h en 'Prevost High of .Fall River, the Cardinals. travel to Westport hoop squad. ~ng' 5-% to Dighton-Rehoboth, and Prevost visits Somerset. W'a r d is impressed with . dropped back into a second place Case, in all likelihood, will Fahey's leadership. qualities. So NallTY league deadlock with its oond' Larry Abbruzzi to the is the university staff. They ap eross-town rival, Diman, ~. of moUnd in quest of his fifth pointed hiril proctor at Harkness .. FaIl River, who gained the nm-. tory in as .many starts. A con . bcluse, a dormitory for freshmen. .ner-up tie by edging Holy Fam- verted third baseman, Abruzzi Weight Problem lly of New. Bedford, 4-3. has become the ace of the SwanFahey played' high school Old Rochester of Mattapoisett Sea pitching staff. Mike Connors .basketball at Clifford Scott in East Orange and was named' to and' Somerset High turned in of Westport, who downed last the All-County third team. New victories earlier this week, the 'yeal's champs Dighton-Rehoboth York and New Jersey have the former belting Apponequet of last week, will twirl for the Vil Lakeville, 7-1, and the latter lagers. reputation of developing some squeezing by Westport, 1-0. . Paul' Blais, with two victories of the country's top hoop talent. . h hill So a regional third' team rating Art Kostka keeps his cTaunfor Prevost, will take to t e ism't dismissed lightly by col ton Jlligh diamond aggregation against Somerset. The Parochiabl . lege coaches.
· .....e· BCL .....nnant race with nosed out Seekonk last week by m .....~. Posting ",.~ his third straight Like most athletes, Fahey has ......_.... scoring a run with two out in ..·..,;;....oPU·in 'HU.........
_ a. weight problem. With him, as m"'.... starts, Kost.- the last inning. seekonk, new to vo... " - " -" h' th however, it isn't a case of shed ka huried Taunton to its third the league, has failed to It e ding plumpness but more of ae: . shutoat, bestill1g North Attle- \ll7in column. quiring it. . ..- - 'U<...... "'0, as he allowed In other games tomorrow Ap ....,.... " " " " " " "Jr" • The Brown coaching staff At four scattered hits. ponequet is at Holy Family In would like to see him broaden New Bedford, Dighton is at An-winning Durfee faces II Diman. in Fall River and See his frame a bit. Ivy League major opponent today in Msgr. konk is at Old Rochester. Next basketball is no picnic. Brawn" James Coyle High of Taunton at Tuesday finds Old' Rochester at helps in the battle for rebounds. ~e latteris Father Woodley Brown's overall rating this -old. The Warrl'ors opened their Digl:ton, Holy Family at Somer st 't . . ..,.. ... ~ set, Diman at Westport, Case at pa season wasn ImpressIve. cmnpaign by defeating their di- Prevost and Seekonk at West You can't brag much about a ~ rivals, Bishop Stang High ' fl>-1'1 record. But the Bruins lost d North Dartmouth, but then JIIO~~e Bristol County track sea a lot of close ones. They had they dropped flheir next en-' son has officially opened and, some satisfying moments, up gagement to their Herring City from an indications. there aN setting the University of Rhode rivals. Tauntolll High. going to be several assaults upon Island one night and pressing 'll'h2 Lewismen of Fall River, existing records. Two records al Providence College to the wire on the otOOI' hand, coasted to most sure to fall are, the mile in a game at Marvel Gym. . victory in lm easy season's open- and the shot put. D'ahey's backcourt work, partie:er over New Bedford Vocational Mike I;>onnelly of Feehan but then had to capitalize Olll an .opened his Spring competition 11th inning error to squeeze schedule with a fine 5:35 mile in out a 2-1 nod over a tough Bish- leading his club to a46-3~ vic op Feehan High team of AttIe- tory over Coyle. Attleboro's VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope boro. Durfee then r~gistered its Dave Hardt has been tossing third season's win over Affie- the' shot close to 58 feet. and, no Paul VI has received in audience boro. doubt, will be hitting' the 60- Pastor Marc Boegner, honorary Bob Hinton will toe the rubber foot mark by the time of the president of theProte'stantFed eration of France; who was ae: for Coyle today, in all proba- County Meet on May 25. bility, with Raposa as his mound Two old rivals and veterans oompanied by Msgi'. Gianfran opponent. are up to their old tricks. Paul cesco Arrighi, undersecretary of the Vatican Secretariat for Pro Two other llop-flight games Medeiros of· North Attleboro moting Christian Unity. on tap" today are Attleboro at continues to mow down the op Pope Paul also received Al Feehan and ·Stang at Taunton. position in the 100 and 220 yard fredo Cardinal Ottaviani, pro In a home town rivalry, the dashes as he has don<a for the prefect. of the Doctrinal Con Feehan Shamrocks have to be past three years. gregation and· head of the papal. irate das favorites over winless Joe Bartek of Stang also has !COmmission on birth control and Attleboro ,but, there is no tell- picked up where he left off and, population problems. ing in such a game as this. after scoring a triple hi his The Feehanites have been opening meet against. Taunton, getting eJIeenenfl 'pitching and then chalked up' first places in one of the league's best. How thDs combined with a' fairly the 100 and P440 yard das.hes ever, the 1966 season seems to solid defensive club has been against N. B. Voke. Both North be lacking any six-foot Jumpers. making up the lack of hitting. and Stang are in the. running In the 'Narry League track The mound staff is. made up of for team honors this season. schedule, next Wednesday win Mike Walsh, JOM Shea and Karl . Coyle b~d the strong man in find Seekonk at Dighton-Reho VandenBergh. The top pitcher the 440 last year and it appears both. Case of Swansea at Ap on the Attleboro Staff, Dave to· have a real contender in ·that ponequet in Lakeville and Old Charest, will be on. the mound eVeI)t ~s SElason ~ Jim Tweedy Rochester of Mattapoisett $It . today. : who pened-the current 'campaign Somerset.' It will be a real pitching duel with'a 51.9 second quarter mile The ,Narry.. teams compete m at Taunton as two of the areas JrWl~'hI. the 'high jump, Co-c~p 12.events.. The BCl- "-"'- eam .." finest hip school ·arms meet tain John Violette of Durfee; is ~te in Dine.
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Pope Paul Receiyes .Protestant Leader
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coaches look for. He is a goocll student as well as a good atb lete. Eugene is a letterman in basketball and track at Clifford Scott. But he is not going to Brown. His choices have nar rowed to Providence College, St. Michael's, and St. Bonaventure in Olean, N. Y.
Ottawa Fotcng
MICHAEL FAHEY
ularly his playmaking effort, were factors in the two tilts. Scouts Eye Brother 'He spent his summers at the 'family cottage .at Horseneck Beach in Westport. When Massa chusetts decided to develop the area as a state beach, the Faheys switched their vacation hide away to Portsmouth, R. I. Brown was a logical choice for Michael Fahey. His father is a 1927 graduate of the school, and a sister, Elizabeth, has a degree from Pembroke, including z master of arts in teaching. . Brown would like to have an other Fahey in the incoming Freshman cIa s s - Michael's younger brother, Eugene Jr. Like Michael, he combines that important combination. t hat
Encephaliti~
Victim Bound for Lou rdes
LITTLETON (NC) - Jimmy Schlegel, 7, encephalitis victim, . who has been ·in a coma for 100 days, is on his way to the shrine of Lourdes in France, in the company of his parents and two nuns. "We have done everything medicine can do,", said John Schlegel, his father. "Now it ill up to God." Accompanying the Schlegels on the plane trip from Colorado are Sister Mary Asella of St. ·Joseph's Hospital, Denver, and Sister Mary Rosaleen, obstetri cal department supervisor at ProvidenCe Hospital, K an s a s . City, Kan., laden with medical supplies, including ingredients for intravenous feeding for .the boy.
1HO$p~hd
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OTTAWA (NC) -The large private hospital in Ottawa; 'the 620;"bedGeneral Hospital ruh' 'by the Grey Nuns, might have to close due to financial woes. . Cause of the crisis, hospital officials state, is a defect in the provincial h e a I t h legislation• Heart of the difficulty is that capital debt charges cannot be' included among costs for which the hospital can claim payments from the public health sch(!mt;.. Chief of the medical staff .of( the 121-year-old hospital, Dr. . Conway Don, says that since 1959, when the provincial he~lth plan. was impleptented, the fi nancial provisions have al\ but eliminated expansion of facili ties. . Because the Ontario Hospital! . Services Commission does no~ ·.consider debt servicing part- o!l hospital costs, the nuns' hospital , has been forced to use 'all ~xtrc'l funds in payment of a $6 ni.i~lic;)Jll capital debt incurred during it!! last expansion program in 1945. Also, the 1959 legislation res;ulted in decreased private donations to the hospital.
Camaldolese Generafi Planning U. S. Visit
McCONNELSVILLE (N~): Father James Del Rio will make! the first official visitation of I.l superior general of the Carnal dolese Fathers to the Holy Fam ily Hermitage, the community'!! only foundation in Amedcm here in Ohio.
The Spanish-born head of the ·strict community of hermits willl come here in the immediate fu tmre from his Rome headquali' ten, according to the only 'ad vice received by Father Maurice . Levy...Duplat, local superior.
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THE ANCHOR-
liSih«:Tl[})$
Thurs., April 21, 1966
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LAKE CHARLES (NC) -The first 1966 shipment of rice purchased by Catho lic Relief Services-National
[P>!i'@®ff©lM
fOD' ~®OVilOIJ'i)@rOGn:s NEW YORK (NC) - An mterreligious study program lot· seminarians to study the process of government. as
Catholic Welfare Conference has left this Louisiana City enroute to Bombay, India. , The 800-ton shipment is being sent in response to the plea of Pope Paul VI to the nations of the world to help relieve the current famine crisis in India. The rice is valued at $100,000. Although this was the first rice shipment in 1966, numerous rice cargoes have been shipped from Lake Charles in previous yearo under the sponsorship of CRS NC,WC. Auxiliary Bishop. Edward E. Swanstrom of New York, CRS NCWC executive director, said: "It is our hope that as a result of our annual bishop's fund appeal, presently in process, this will be but the first of a series of ship ments of the most urgently needed foods destined for free distribution in the drought~ affected areas of India."
related to religion will be con ducted from July 4 to 29 by the divinity school of Harvard Uni versity and the Union of Amer ican Hebrew Cqngregalion.s:. Twenty-one stu den t s from Protestant, Catholic and Jewish seminaries will attend the ses sions at the UAHC's Religious Action Center in Washington, D. C, The program was made possible by a grant of $18,000 yom the Stern Family Fund, Students will hear a cross section of views from prominent authorities in governmeqt and from non-governmental groups -labor, religious, business and the mass media. Many govern ment officials will address the group, including members of the Supreme Court, members of Congress and representa\.ives of Jrederal agencies. Dr, Herbert Long, Peabody lecturer and dean of the s~udents of the Harvard divinity school, and Rabbi Richard G. Hirsch, · Washington, director of the \ UAHC'sReligion Action Center, will serve as' full-time· ad visors' · for the' seminar. Proni~nent theo- - . . 'I AM THE logians and religious spokesmen t~on, has asked also participate.
Protestant Outlines Ideal' Seminary Plan
CHICAGO (NC)-A Protes tant has presented a picture of ,. 'an "ideal" Catholic seminary GOOD' SHEPHEllD'-Pope :!?au] VI, seen heJ;.e with the. younger genera ?ere: ,one removed from. relative prayers for Telig.ious vOCations and has set, Good Shepherd Sunday as the", ~S:~ga~li~ng ~~: or;ergge~ tmto tlhe . . . '~ . university. a lea secu ar · NC Ph0 t o. .. ' ' .World. Day 0 f P rayer for Voca t IOns.' Walter D.·Wagoner also coined Ihe (II a name for 'his hoped-for semi nary-St. Optimus. He said his .Move ' C©mp~et'icn proposal is neither unrealistic CHICAGO (NC)-A Christian rior utopian. ' Brother. believes the' catechetieal Wagoner, associated with the . Pope Paul VI has composed the following' Special Prayer. for movement in the 'U.S. is half Fuad for Theological Education way toward a revolution. Unless Vocations for \0/orId Vocation Day, wh.ch will be celebrated Sunday, a1 Princeton, spoke on "Prob M goes all the way, it will die lems in Catholic Theological the Second Sunday after Easter. 0f self-strangulation. Education," at the 63rd annual The movement is in urgent, National Catholic Educational llIeed of more, not less, theology, '''0 Jesus, Divine Sl~epherd of, Souls, .Who catIed the' Apostles' to be Association convention. occording to Brother Gabriel come fishers of :men, now call the ardel}t and generous hearts of our St. Optimus would be a re Moran, F.S.C., of Manhattan gional diocesan seminary, in College, New York. He spoke to youth to ...make them :Your followers and mini~teJ;s. Le~ them share Wagoner's plan, and the project elementary school teachers at Y(mr 1;hirst for that ulliversal redemption for' which' qu daily renew of four bishops "responding af Ilhe National Catholic ·Edu<~ation . firmatively" to the Vatican Association convention he're. Your Sacrifice '!Jpq~ the Alt~r. " ," '. , . council's Decree on Priestly He said that the catecnetical Training. The bishops have movement needs an. internal "0 Lord Jesus, always living to' make' intercession for' us, extend out closed f 0 u l' existing 4iocesan principle of self-criticism. That seminaries and established St. ho;izons to thecentireworld, where so ~any brethren make silent,sup principle must be theological. 9·'s.~nlarged to accommodate ."'ithout it ,there will be "newer plitati~.ri foithe light 'of truth 'and the warmth of love; ~ that answer~' some 400 seminarians-immedi_ 3Ild more attractive textbooks, .ately adjacent to the campus of more and more mysterious ClI ing Your call, ma~y yo~ng men may prolong here Your mission" edif~, one of t~e maio\' universities~ · ~chetical language, bigger and Yo~r, ¥y~ticaIBody .the Ch~rch, ,arid' become 'the salt of the earth. better national conferences:' but Yale University in New Haven, and the light of the world. . , . the opportunity for a major by way of example, might make breakthrough in religious ed . a happy home for St. O's, Wa Ucation will have passed. «Extend, Lord, Your loving call to many pure and generous lteartecl goner said, because it is private, "There is nothing so stale,_ non-sectarian, and also has a young women, that they may grow in their desire for evange~ical' Ctothing that weighs so heavily Protestant. seminary. Il4pon human life and progress, perfection' and may dedicate themselves to' the'S:ervice of the Church ~ as a half-perfected revolution," and theirrieighbors who so desperately need such a:ssisiaric'eand charity:. be stated.
will
... Urges C({JJ tee
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, IPriestslI Mgll'llisters
Amen,"
Where A '
JOan ill1l Re«:cllectoon'
GOOD NAME
SHREWSBURY (NC)-Clergy of the Catholic, Orthodox and'
Protestant churches of the Worcester area joined in two days of recollection here at the Passionist Fathers' monastery. During the ecumenical gather ing, "The Biblical Basis of the Paschal Mystery" was explored ,in formal Papers and informal discussions. Activities were con eluded each day with a Bible holy hour cO!1ductedby clergy of t.he denominations present.
Mass ·Commentator FRIARS POINT (NC)-They're litarting them young with the' new liturgy;here. Stephen Mor ganti, 10, was "tlie commentator at a Mass in St, Cecilia's Church here. He's a fourth gradei' at St. Elizabeth' :' school in nearby Clarksdale, Miss. The pastor and parishioners' commended. hi/,;' ef forts.
Means A
Parishes to. MClrk ·.Vocations· Sunda"
GREA'T DEAL
GEO' O'HARA
r:~~~~riEiri~~~;is:~~hii;~- r£:~:f;;:!t;::;t~:a;;~s~;~~~!~~'. ~:r~~~EZ2.:e~~~~.;;::~~; C'H'·EVR·OLET -Masses,Sermonls in AU Major Churches'
ROME (NC) - It is expected
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f f ice, American -Passionist
in ·the total number of vocations
; tions which will be observed - cent- olE the world's parishes as pal mcrease. 'Yet, of course, It'S April 24. compared with approximately 33' still far below the needs of the' The day calls for Mas'ses and·' per cerit last'year: He'said: Church today and even more o f · sermons in all major churches', "Our problems has been one of the Church of the future' '. and holy hours in: all .houses of communications w h i c h has According to statistics just re Religious throughout the world.' steadil3' improved over the past leased iIi the "Activitieil of the The day 'is sponsored by the years. The response this year Holy' See 'in 1965," a Vl:!tican Pontifical Office for Vocations in shows ~In increase in interest and publication .which annually re Rome under the direction 'of the contact in lill parts of the world." ports on the work of the various Congregation for Seminaries and' Despite many new elements in.' offices of the Roman curia and Universities and the Congrega- the vo<cationai picture, Father .on the pope's activities, there is . tiono'for Religious. . Poage llaid"there has not been, - much,to back up Father Poage's The director of the vocational as somEl have predicted,a drop : statement.
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