"Bishop to Ordain Nine on May 1.0
:New Prie·sts ~Will Serve ··Local Se1e Nine deacons will be or dained as priests for service ,in the Fall River Diocese by ,BiRhop Connolly on Satur day, May 20, in st. Mary's Ca ehedral. Wour of the ordinands are eompleting their studies at St. John's Seminary, Brighton. They mclude Rev. Mr. William F. Q'Neill. Hev. Mr. Brian J. Har ll'ington, Rev. Mr. James H. Morse and Rev. Mr. William W. Norton. REV. MR. 1. J. OLIVEIRA
REV. MR. R. SYLVI~
REV. MR, R. L. CHRETIEN , REV. MR. It J. DESCHENES REV. MR. H. S. ARRUDA Completing their studies at New Bedford
South Dartmouth
Fall River Attleb~r(;J Fall River 1m. Mm'Y'S Seminary, Baltimore, are Rev. Mr. Richard L. Chretien
COMPLETING THEOLOGICAL STUDIES AT ST. MARY'S SEMINARY, BALTIMORE mev. MI'. Roland Deschenes, Rev:
Mr. John J; Oliveira Jr., Rev.
Mr. Henry S. Arruda, and Rev. will be deacon and Hev. Alfred is a graduate of B. M. C. Durfee Sacred Heart Church. Rev: Les His diaconate assignment waa
Mr. Ronald Sylvia. High School and Cardinal O' ter L. Hull will be deacon; Rev. Sacred Heart Parish, Taunton.
C. Graves, subdeacon. Francis E. O'Bl'ien.,' subdeacon,; ;Rev. Mr. Chretien is the SOil Rev. James A. O'Donohoe will Connell Minor Scminary, Bos Rev. MI'. O'Neill is the son of Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, preacher, of Mr. and 'Mrs. Charles E.. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. O'Neill, preach and Rev. B. Gerald ton. .•n uncle, Ht. Rev. Thomas F. alld Rev. Thomas G. Lopes, mas- Chretien; 132 Raymond Street, is Elizabeth Lane, Riverside, ,Chabot will serve as master of ,' Fall River. He is a graduate of ,Conn. He made his preliminary ceremonies. Rev. Mr. Harrington Walsh, will be l\ssistant priest 'ter of ceremonies. ' (ttudies ?t st. Mary High School, has three sisters in the Religious at his First Solemn Mass, at , Sister Mary Denisita RSM, Fall' Notre Dame School, Msgr. PreTurn to Page Eighteen ' life. They are Sister Mary Gil 11:30 A.M. Sunday, May 21 in River, is a cousin. Cceenwlch, Conn. and St. Thom patrick, RSM, Pasc~ag, R.I.; Sis ,~ Minor Seminary, Hartford. He will celebrate his First tel" Evelyn Mary RSM, River ,Solemn Mass at 12 Noon S\lnday, side, R.I., and Sister lBrian Mary, May 28 in St. Catherine of Siena Cumberland, R.I. A cousin is ,Church. Riverside, with Rev. Sister Mary Cecile RSM, Fall lFrllncis X. Walsh, assistant pricst; River. !lev. Bartholomew'Laurello, dea His diaconate' assignments ~n and Rev. Francis McKenna were S1. Vincent's Home~ Fall
lJUbdeacon. Rev. David Richo wili River, and Immaculate Concep
pceach.
tion, North Easton. Rev. Mr: Morse is the 'son of His diaconate assignment last Summer was at Immaculate Mr. and Mrs. George H. Morse, 70 Kenton Avenue, Rumford, R.I. ,t!onception, Taunton. Rev. Mr. Harrington is the son He is a graduate of St. Raphael's
Academy, Pawtucket, and, St.
of Mr., and Mrs. Patrick J. Har rington, 290 Mount Pleasant Thomas, Hartford.
Street, New Bedford. He is a He will celebratl~ his Fir'st
graduatc of Holy Name School, Solemn Mass at noon Sunday,
Holy Family High School and St. May 2L in S1. Margaret's, Rum
Thomas Minor Seminary. fOI'd, with Rev. Robert J. Banks
He will celebrate His Fir'st ,as pl'cacher, Solemn Mass III Holy Name His diaconate assignment was
REV. MR. W. W. IIORTO.
REV. MR. 1. R. IMORS£
IREV. MR. B. J., HARRINGTON REV. MR. W. F. O'NEILL Church, New Bedford, at nooill. st. Joseph's, Fall River. , Rumford, I. i. -
Fall River
Riverside, CORn; New Bedford Sunday, May 21, with ,Rt. Rev. Rev. Mr. Norton ,is the son off Iohn J. Hayes as assistant priest. 'M,·, and Mrs. William B. Norton,
BISHOP CONNOLLY TO ORDAIN FOUR BRIGHTON DEACONS
Bev. John F. Cr~nin, ,a cousin, 718 Maple Street, Fall River. He .' .
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Educators to Con'vene In Attleboro, May ,4 , More than 1,000 religious and lay teachers will convene next Thursday and Friday, May 4 and 5, at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, for the 12th annual Convention of the Catholic Teachers' Association of the Diocese of Fall ~ivel" Educational experts on topics touching upon the per :from throughout New En son' and formation of the teacher gland will speak to elemen to non-graced classes,' science, tary and high school teachers religion, reading and use of class
films. In addition, 100 companies which produce textbooks and other educational materials will display thei:: products, with con sultants on hand to give required information. The ke: note address,following The sccond in a series of inter.,. a solemn Mass, will be given faith panels will be sponsored on by Dr. William H. Conley, pres ~e first three Wednesday nights ident of Sacred Heart University, of May by the Dominican Bridgeport, Conn. He will speak irathers of St. Anne's parish, on "The Teacher in the Next J,i'all River. Decade." Most Rev. James L. To be held in the parochial Connolly D.D., D.Sc.Hist., will GChool auditorium, the lectures preside. ,
will! iilclude discussions of the Afternoon sessions will be di lPlooe of the Bible in the lives of rected to priests (The Language Protestant, Jews and Catholics; of Testing - Rev. Patrick J.
toll e ministry r· different O'Neill, Diocesan Superintendent ehui'ches; and the monastic, or of Catholic Schools); teachers of Ileligious orders and kindred as grades 1 to 3 (Essentials of Read .iations in Jewish, Orthodox, ing Instruction - Therese, M. Protestant and catholic commu Bluhm, Senior Editor, Ginn and aions. Co.); teachers of grades 4 to I Each panel' will he followed (Getting the Best from our Sci lie" II question period. ," ence Classes-William Deering, Turn to Page Eighteelll Tum to Paae Eiabteea
Three I'nterfaith Panels Planned 'In Fa II River
WThe
ANCHOR
Vol. 11, No. 17 April 27, 1967 . Fall River, MassachuseHs © 1967 PRICE lOe $4.00 per Ve..f
Charities Appeal Starts Specia~ Gifts Phase More than 3000 Special Gift committeemen are in the midst of the first phase 'of the Silver Anniversary Appeal, while 13,000 parish com Turn to Page Eighteen
,Plan to Discuss Youth 'At,Women's Conclave Youth will be the topic of a panel discussion to be 'featured at the morning session of the annual conventiolll of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women to be held Saturday, May 6 at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River. With :Rev. Walter A. Sullivan as "How the Normal Youth Meas moderator, panelists will be Ul'es Up ~·oday." The former di John M. Clements and Rev. rector of St. Mary's Home, he John F. Hogan, social worker has also served as chaplain to and director, respectively, of the New Bedford Catholic Welfare Bureau; Sister Mary Mercy, R.S.M., principal of Bishop Fee han High School, Attleboro; Brian Pontolilo, Diocesan CYO president; and Henry Gillet, past president of the New England Regional Council of Catholic Youth. Fat her Sullivan, Diocesan Director of Youth, is a curate at St. Mary's Cathedral. Last year, he was appointed director of Cathedral' Camp and Diocesan
Moderator for Our Lady of Good Counsel Retreat League. Mr. Clements will discuss
problemsO,f youtti~ A New Bed ford native, he graduated from
St.. Mary's University, Baltimore, and then attended Boston Col lege School of Social Work. He is intake caseworker for St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, and head social worker for the city's Catholic Welfare Bureau. Father H~gan'ii topic will be
Bristol County House of Correc Turn to Page Two
Reinstatement Calms Catholic University WASHINGTON (NC) Father Charles E. Curran, whose dropping from the Catholic University of Amer ica touched off a general faculty student boycott, has been rein stated in the school of theology an,d promoted to the -rank of as sociate professor. In announcing the reinstate ment, Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle, chancellor of the Uni versity as well as Archbishop of Washington,said the board of trustees reversed itself in re sponse to an' appeal from the Turn to Page Fifteen
PropO$~
THE ANtHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. '17, ~967 , . - .
2
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Continued from Page One tion and the New Bedford juven ile court. Now pastor of St. John the Ba~tist Church, Central Village, he also directs Channel Six's weekly televised Mass, is chaplain of the New Bedford Serra Club and spiritual director of the city's Particular Council of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul Sister Mary Mercy Sister Mary Mercy will speak on guidance. Principal of Bishop Feehan High School, she former-' ly taught and was librarian at Mt. St. Mary AcadE'my, Fall River. She - :lIds a master's de gree in library science from Marywood College, Scranton, Pa. and has done graduate work in counseling and guidance at Rhode Island College. The Sister of Mercy was recip ient of a NDEA grant for work in guidance at the University of l"ew Hampshire last Summer. Her professional memberships include the New England Library Association, the AmerJcan Per sonnel and Guidance A'>sociation and the Ma: sachusetts Secondary School Principals Assodation. A senior at Coyle Hil1,h School, T. ;.mton, Brian Pontolilo is scheduled to discuss "Youth's Reaction to Its Respollsibility." He will enter St. AnseUm's Col lege, Manchester, N. H, in Sep tember, and at Coyle his inter ests include athletics, drama and student government. Henry Gillet's offices in youth organizations have included, in addition to the presidency of the New England Regional Council of Catholic Youth, presidency of th~ !imilar council for you~g
Clergymen, Bishops Attend Prayer lOoy RIDGEFIELD (NC) .- Sixty Roman Catholic and E:piscopal clergymen and their bi~hops at tended a day 'of prayer in a Jesuit retreat house herl~ during which they witnessed each oth er's religious services and had a conference "n the Eucharist. Sponsors of the event-·the Ro man Catholic diocese of Bridge port and the Episcopal diocese of Connecticut-said it was the first time suchan event had bl~en held in New England and pos!'ibly the first time in the country. Episcopal Bishop W~\lter H. Gray of the Connecticut diocese celebrated the Eucharhlt, with Roman Catholic Bishop Walter W. Curtis of Bridgeport and the Catholic priests as observers. Later, Bishop Curtis and 18 of his priests concelebrated Mass as Bishop Gray and the Episcopal clergy observed.
"',ecrology MAY' "
Rev. Thomas P. Elliott, 1905, Founder, St. Mary, Mansfield. .
MAY 9
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Rev. J.,:E. Theociule Giguere, 1~40,Pas.tor, St. Anne, New Bedford. , Rev. John P. Clarke, 1941,' Pastor, St. Mary, Hebron ville.
FORTY HOU ns
DEVOTION
April ,
3~Holy
Ghost,
;boro~.",
...
At.tl~
St. Joseph, New Bedford. }~'1~y
&-St. Vinc~nt Home, 'Fall River. '
THE ANCHOR· Second Class Postage Paid at FilII Rlveri\' Mass. Published every Thursilay at 41 'Highland ·Avenue.. Fall Rive.. Mas~... 02722 by the Catholic I'ress 01 the Diocese 41 Fall Rive•. SUDscriptlOll price 117 ·lII8l1. postpaid
$4.00 per year.
Council DeclTee$ F@tf C@thoI5~s
ac;l.ufts, and leadership of parish, area and Diocesan CYO units. He graduated from Coyle High School, attended Providence Col lege and is now employed by the state division of Employment Security. His topic at the DCCW convention will be "Today De pends on Yesterday." Each panelist will speak fOl' five minutes, followed by ques tions and a discussion period. :!Wass, Luncheolll The morning panel will be fol lowed by Mass at noon and the convention luncheor.. at 12:45. Luncheon reservations e los e Monday, May 1. M(iD$$
©li'«lJ@
~RIDAY-St.
Paul of the Cross, Confessor. III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Pref ace of Easter. SATURDAY-St. Peter of Ver ona, Martyr. III Class. Rea. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Preface of Easter. SUNDAY-V Sunday-After Eas-. ter. II Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed;' Preface of Easter. MONDAY-St. Joseph the Work~ er (also RQgation Monday). i Class. White: Mass Proper; . Glory; Creed; Preface of st. Joseph. One Rogation :Mass permitted provided there is a procession preceding it. Prayers at the Foot of the Altar omitted. Violet vestments. The three Rogation Days of this week may be tra~s:ferred to a more suitable time at the discretion of the Bishop of the Qiocese. T U ~ S DAY - St. Athanasius, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Preface of Easter. OR Rogation Tuesday. II Class.' Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; 2nd Prayer St. Ath anasius, Preface of Easter. WEDNESDAY-Vigil of Ascen sion. II Class. White. Mass 'Proper; Glory; 2nu. PrayerSS. Alexander,' Eventius, .and TheoGulus; Martyrs, and Ju venalis, Bishop and Confes sor; no Cl'eed; Preface of Eas ter. OR Rogation Wednesday. II ·Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory' or Creed; 2nd Prayer SS. AI exan!ler, Eventius, and The odulus, Martyrs, and' Juvenalis, Bishop ana Confessor; Preface of Easter. . THURSDAY-Ascension of our Lord Jesus' Christ. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Preface and Commu nicantes of Ascension. The Paschal Candle is extin _uishedafter the Gospel of. the Principal Mass. Holy Day of Obligation. Votive Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest, flOt Per mitted. Tomorrow is the First FI1day of LeMonth.
Six. Oh . io Dioceses Oppose Bond Board! COLUMBUS (NC)-Ohio Citi zens for Educational Freedom is initiatillg, an intef;l,sive campaign "to inform voters of the dangers threatened by the creation of the. Ohio Bond Commission." .Among, other .organizations which have' anriounced opposi-" tion - to the Ohio' constitutional amendment which would create the"new commission is the Cath olic Conference of Ohio-the' or ganization of the state's six " doeceses.· . The amendment, if passed May 2; will enable a commi'ssion, with the consent of the legislature, to issue u(. to $125,000,000 in bonds each year for eight years. In the past bOLd issues have been sub ject to the vote of the people.
Thr~el
DR. WllLlLlUI:.M
mr.
ROBERT 'Jr.. LINSirONJi ! ": .'
q)ONILlEl'l
I
ro SlP'lEAOC AT mACHERS' CONCLAVE
PubDiSihe!l' HB~h Din) ~'raise of BmpO'oveme~tl' I~ NOItion's.- Catholic WeekBy Press NOTRE DAME (NC)-Catholie journalism since Vatican Council n has distinguished itself by n new "honesty and openness and responsible freedom," the pub lisher of the National Catholic Reporter has told an audience at the University of Notre Dame. The publisher of the Catholic weekly, 'Donald' 'J. Thorman,' said "pre-conciliar religious journalism was deeply infected with. the germs of triurilphalism and cover-up-itis. "The role of the press was then most often conceived of as part of the Church's public rela tions efforts witil emphasis on prese"ving the hnage even at the expense (consciously or uncon sciously) of the truth."
Set CatechllJmenates On' Parish Scale
Do.yof R<etll"ec't: For·ShMfr..lns .
The, second annual day of, Spiritual Renewal for the shut ins and handicapped of the Dio cese will be conducted ·on Satur day, . May' 6 at the La ·Salette Retreat House, Attleboro, from 9 in the morning until 5 in the afternoon. . . . Rev. ·Giles Genest" director - and his retreat staff wlll ,host . this day of worship and retinion. Rev. Paul Chasson, S'.M\,'''wiU serve as retreat master.' .' ,.... Father Chasson will gi'V~ 'two conferences and John AnUiy'a of Attleboro will ll~ad a sociiil dis cussion' at 11 in the' J'etreat house's living room. .. I • . Dinner will be served airloon and a' sPecial speaker will be 'the feature of the after~dinner pro gram. ".' The Papal' Blessing .will" be given at 3 and Mass at 4' 'will close the day's program.
MARSEILLES (NC) - By the end of January there were some 200 catechumens and 49 newly baptized adults in the Archdio cese of Marseilles. - They were the visible result of. a new plan to reach out to converts, a plan making use of the best in mod ern scholarship. I . The diocesan-wide plans calls for the establishment of several catechumenate centers, one in each deanery or subdivision of U.e diocese. These 'centers spe cialize in the organization of the apostolates to students, young workers and Moslems. With experts versed in' the particular problems relating to each 'group, the centers can pre pare individually' tailored 1n structior. programs. They are closely integrated with the cen ters' liturgical life and aim at bringing the neoph)"te step by step into the fullness of Chris , tianity. .
Golden Jubile~
"'Happily," he conti~ued,·."if not· in practice, at least in' the minds 0:£ scores of con~cieritl'ous Catholic editors today this' 'con cept .has been replaced by' 'one which honors truth and 'honesty .for the virtues of the"one;' true Church that they are." :'
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FUNERAL SERVICE
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The building cominittee of Fall River Catholic Woman's' Club will hold a rummage sale from 6, to 8 tomorrow night' and from 9 1 to noon Saturday morn ing -in,the rear of the clUbhouse at 742 Rock Street, Fall River.
·
Michael' C. .Austin . . ,.
of
: 9 CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEN
ST. LO'~IS (NC) ~. Joseph J:' Pro .; .' lESER" ,R Cardinal Ritter has asked . Catb RE~IP~NTlAL.· " 'olics of ·the St. Louis archdiocese , ", .1t.-lDUSl'RIAl ' 1,' til ·,give him a present far. his COMMERCIAL golden .jubilee in ,the priesthood on.· Saturday-their .prayers for", 1 253. Cedar. St., New hdfordl' ."993.3222 . ..;1, . vocations ·to the priesthood"and religious life. .1' . . . :
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Tproe decrees of Vatican Council II aJl'f) a part of every Catholic's pra@-> tical life this week as three world-wide commissions, an swering the call of the Councill, lay the foundations for practicu directives concerning the lait~ Cbristian Unity and Justice aoo Peace. The new commissions--two ~ them meeting together for th<a first time--stem from. the Decree · on the Lay Apostolate, the· De
cree on Ecumenism and the Pas-o
toral Constitution on the Churcli
in the Modern World.
The formulation of plans t:? implement these -council doC1Jlco
·ments wil~ be don'e by the Coun ·cilof the Laity, the Secretari~
·for the Promotion of Christiaro
Unity and the Pontifical Com. mission for Justice and Peace. The first plenary session a2 the ChurcI-.'s new Council fCJ<Jr the Laity; presided over blf. Maurice Cardinal Roy of Quebec.; · brought together the group's Ul
lay members and a panel of con
sultors who are from both tbfJ
· . laity and the clergy. The Vatican Secretariat f . Promoting Christian Unity,gatllP ered more than 30 cardinabl, ·bishops, and Religious superioftl to work toward the. formu)atiOlli of a directory for ecumenica1J action for t~e use of the Catbolk hierarchy. . , . The first full session tbcl Pontifical Commission of.. JustiCCl and Peace brought 23 of the 20 members of the group to Rome · under the p::-esidency of Maurioo Cardinal Roy to begin its, work. Laity Coun'cil The first meeting of this COfflp mission has decided to keep the organization flexible and to work not only for the well-definecll organized forms of the lay apoo.. tolate already in existence b~ to try to be representati~e of all forms of the layman's actiVCl role in the work of the Church. Flexibility would permit tM ·new Curia group to better 'adjUB9 to the problems and situatlom which differ in various partS' ~ · the world. .
Turn to 'Page Six
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THE ANCHORThurs., April 27, 1967
'Two Catholic Institutions In California Affiliate
Advises Laymen Work Together
LOS ANGELES (NC)-The educational affiliation of lIarymount College of Palos Verdes and Loyola University here in Californi'a has been accomplis,hed. Father Charles S. tCasassa, S.J., president of Loyola, and Sister Raymund McKay, head of Marymount, sibility and within the scope of ~escrjbed the new academic powers delegated to it by tl!e ~tity as "a coordinate uni individual boards of regents of :versity," called Loyola-Mary Loyola and Marymount. anount, Los Angeles. Retain Identity . The affiliation will be imple tmented in, the Fall of 1968 when :l'Iarymount students and faculty .will move to the Loyola campus. Marymount is conducted by the zmns of the Sacred Heart of ;Pilary, Loyola by the Jesuits. Each school, the presidents ex llained, will retain its identity iDfl a corporate educational, de pee-gpanting body, so it would 'be incorrect to call the arrange DleDt a merger. Stronger Faculty The presidents noted a cooper lltive interchange of faculty and IItaff and complementary curri euIa will keynote the affiliation. /fbey described this as "a multi tommunity of scholars." It will DOt be correct to call' the new Qntity "co-educatIonal," in 'the 1IBual sense of the term, they pointed out. Sister Raymund said by elim Ination of duplicate facilities, faculties and curricula, Mary mount and Loyola will give added attention to strengthening JIbe areas in which each planned to excel. Father Casassa said joint oper llllfion will be effected by forma Cion of a third corporation to in • ude the presidents of both lIChools, regents from each and also outside members. This group .... operate in areas of respon-
',J
JExpa~ioJl1 Ahead It was announced that as part of a combined master plan look ing to the next 20 years, con struction will begin this Summer on student and faculty resi dences. Marymount's Palos Verdes campus will become Marymount International College and will offer a two-year course leading to an associate in arts degree. First students will be enrolled Dex~ Fall.
Notre Dame Nun Teaches Religion To Japanese MIAMI (NC)--In Japanese catechetical work "you don't ~ll them about the Church, you introduce them to Jesus
3
lHli(J)I,Y CROSS ALUMNI: Holy Cross Alumni Club of Bristol County meets at Our Lady of Round Hill Retreat House, North Dartmouth. Officers in attendance include, seated, Atty. John A. Tierney, New Bedford, secretary treasurer; standing, from left, Joseph H. Feitelberg, Fall River, past president; Charles R. Guillette, vice-president, Attleboro; F. Hamilton Lane, president, Taunton.
Christ the Person," Sister Thom asine, an American nun who works as a ca~echist in Japan, said here. The Japanese people are reached most effectively through education, the Sister of Notre Dame de Namur explained in an interview. She pointed out that Japanese children concentrate almost constantly on education from the time they enter school Higher Salary Schedule Is Announced
until adulthood. The greatest "punishment" for For Lay Teachers in Camden Diocese
a Japanese child is to be sent CA~DEN (Nc;) -Archbishop starting salary of $5,300 and home from school after classes Celestme J. Damiano of Camden, $5,600 respectively. Their maxi are finished. Sister Thomasine, who is on has announced a new salary mum salaries are set at $8 500 ' her first home visit in six years, schedule for lay teachers in the and $8,800, respectively. The diocese employs 128 full said her order is participating diocesan high schools. Th.e new schedule calls for a time lay teachers, and at least LANGENDORF (NC)-A com in dialogue with missionaries of lIlon bell tower will mark the other faiths in Tokyo. She noted startmg salary of $5,000 for 25 part-time. Approximately 110 priests also teach in the high entrances to new Catholic and that the Japanese have difficulty . teachers with a Bachelor's De Beformed churches being built understanding why both the gree and extends to a maximum schools as well as 125 nuns. bere, although the congregations Catholic and the Protestant of $8,200 for teachers with 17 who share the entrance will en Vermont Churchmen churches teach about Jesus years of service. The new schedule, effective ter into separate churches for Christ. next September, also provides Favor Tax Change aervices. During the day, Sister Thom for yearly increases of $200 and BURLINGTON (NC)-Bishop Two complete churches, rec asine teaches religion to the tories and parish halls will be children of Air Force personnel adjustment increases for teachers Robert F. Joyce of Burlington is built on adjacent lots in this at Taikikawa and Yokata Air already in. service to be awarded among a group of leading Ver mont churchmen who have advo Bases. Her, evenings are spent over the next two years. Swiss watch-making town, fol The previous de facto schedule cated a proposed redrafting of lowing a pastoral ,decision to do conducting English conversation allowed for a starting salary of this State's real property tax law. classes for Japanese college stu illS much as possible for Christian $4,300. While some teachers are The recommendation calls for anity without compromising the dents. already at their proper levels a complete revision of church Tille tuition paid by her stu beliefs of Catholics or Protes dents supports the 22 Japanese on the new scale, an average 15 property tax exemptions and it fnnts. novices in the Sisters of Notre per cent increase in salary will provides that the only tax The architect for the two dlurch project was selected after Dame de Namur's novitiate at be realized hy teachers now in exempt church property will be the school system. a house of worship, hospital or • nationwide competition seek-' Keckijoj i. Teachers with master's degrees educati,onal institution offering CCII) Tmining iDg designs was announced by or doctorates are to receive a at least the same curriculum as CII.e people of the town. As principal of the Catholic the public school system. SChool of Religion, Sister Thom asine also gives CCD teacher Avert Philadelphia
Non-Public Schools training courses for wives of Air Teachers' Strike
Force personnel who teach reli Form Association
gion classes on weekends. PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The LANSING (NC)-Representa Describing the new liturgy in Associatign of Catholic Teachers Distributing Company lives of Michigan's four major Japan, the nun termed it "slow settled its wage dispute with the aon-public systems have an Philadelphia archdiocese here but sure," adding that the Japa JANITORIAL AND
Munced the formation of an as nese find it difficult to accept an hour bef,ore classes were to MAINTENANCE SUPPLIES
8OCiation to promote better un the changes. All the sacraments begin ending a threatened strike _ EDWARD LEARY, Prop._
.rstanding of the purposes and are ~d!'Dinistered in Japanese, at 28 p~rochial high schools. eontributions of non - public' she said, and many Japanesecus.., P. 0.80. 1081 'Fall River, Mass' The' settlement was reached -'ools. Tel•. 674~8826 . tOms have been integrated with after a night of negotiations be At its first meeting, the Mich the liturgy. tween the association, which rep Igan Association of Non-Public' .. ~e priest does not kiss the resents more than 400 of the 613 ~hools (l'tfANS) adopted' a liItIlr, he bows," she explained, lay teachers, and Msgr. Edward White'$ Farm Dairy .eatement ~"principles and n~ting that a kiss means nothing T. Hughes, superintendent of ~als, and elected officers. to the Japanese. Instead of gen schools. "SPECIAL MILK· The association said it intend uflecting. Japanese Catholics In a' joint statement, Msgr. '1 From Our Own ed to present the position of non bow, Sister ,Thom~sjne said. ' ' Hughes and John Murray, asso I*blic schools on educational ciation president, said "agree Tested 'Herd" .
e-estions to the general public ment was reached on a salary Acushnet, Mciiss. 993-4457
Hospital Campaign, schedule acceptable to both par .... public bodies" and to strive • Special Milk "ward the continual improve HOBOKEN (NC) - St. Mary's ties." Terms of the agreement • Homogenized Vito 0 Milk -.ent of. educational services for Hospital here in New Jersey has were not immediately released. IIIl citizens in all age groups. announced that it will conduct The archdiocese had offered a • I Butterm ilk It also pledged cooperation a $1 million campaign to raise $4,800 starting salary but the as • Tropicanci Orange Juice -'th all school systems to up funds for the construction of a sociation asked for $5,000 and an • Coffee and Choc. Milk .-ade the quality of teachers and $5 million, six-story addition increased level of annual in • Eggs - Butter -.rriculum. to the hospitaL crements.
• Pay Boost In
One Entrance Two Churches
WILMINGTON (NC) An men of good will must work to gether to solve the serious social problems of our time and if they do they may realize a few fringe benefits, too, a U. S. Department of Commerce official told a con vocation of laymen here. Dr. William J. Nagle, who works in Commerce-sponsored anti-poverty programs, said one of the fringe benefits will be ec umenical growth. "As the Catho lic becomes involved in the civic and social problems of his com munity, he is likely to experi ence the first stirrings, the first excitement over the need for reunion of separated Christians. "It is not without irony that it is in the temporal order where he is most likely to begin to re alize the tragedy that is dis union." Adolescen~ Stage
The laymen also heard Father
Donald Campion, S.J., a former
editor of America magazine, de
scribe the world as entering its
"adolescent stage ¢ ¢' ¢ character
ized by a growth of self-con
sciousness, increased independ
ence and a desire by people to
participate in the decisions
which effect them."
Bishop Ernest J. Unterkoefler
of Charleston, S.C., the opening
speaker, described the Second
Vatican Council's Constitution
on the Church as the council's
central document, which refined
the notion of the Church as
a society.
The document, however, "nev
er let go of what had previously
been taught," he said, and "the
Church has always been con
scious of the role of the lay
man."
No Stipend CLEVELAND (NC) - The
Cleveland diocese· senate of
priests has recommended that no
stipend or offering be taken for
a funeral or requiem M .. ss.
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Priest Celibacy Great Symbol
THE ANCHOR""::'Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Apr. 27, 1967 i
,.
Canadian. Bishops Cite Problems
Of french-Speaking Citi:zens
MUNICH (NC) Celibac,: must be a symbol of a priestS' heartfelt desire to follow Christ completely, J u 1 ius Cardinal "Here is a people deeply at OTTAWA-The Catholic bish Doepfner wrote in a pastoral ops of Canada have issued a plea tached to their -own identity,
letter to his archdiocese. for greater liarmony between proud to be the inheritors in
Our gr~at love, he said, mus0 North America of one of the
English-speaking and French be "the Church as a brotherhoocll" speaking Canadians based on a great cultures of history.
the community that has beelli mutual ,respect for the rights of 'Unshakable Right'
entrusted to us." Because of OUl' both minority and majority
,"They are also vividly aware· responsibility toward our broth<> groups. that they make up a community ers ."we abstain from marriage The bishops called tension be enjoying a unity, individuality and family," he told his priests. tween the two groups "the chief and spirit of· their own, all of He went on to say that through malady of Canadian socidy" in a which ~Tield them an unshakable that responsibility "there ariSefl letter released at the conclusion right to their own existence and in us that love which is the true of .'lone-week meeting here of development. meaning of celibacy." _the Canadian Catholic Confer "Although this E'renh-Cana-· Current discussions on celi enc"!. dian communtty may represent a It was written on the occasion numerical minority as against bacy, the cardinal said, show of Canada's centennial observ that there is a danger that the the whole of the country, it ance and signed on behalf of the forms not only.a majority, but a . t;:hristian vocation may'be weak country's entire hierarchy by compact and significant body _ MEMO~IAL AT .S'YANSEA COUNCIL:. Principals in ened and also reveal an uneri*, Archbishop Louis Leve:;que of within the vast extent of Quebec. iear.openness to the worm. th~ ceremomes honOring the memory of LOUIS Heffernan, Rimouski, president of the CCC, The cardinal warned ibat _ "The characteristic 'traits just one- .·of the founders of the Bishop Cassidy Council, were: and Father Gordon George, S.J., sometimes a justifiabie spirit of mentioned explain how it is that James B. Murphy, Thomas Heffernan,· son of the late and Father Charles E. Mathieu, resistance to any form of legal the French-Canadian community founder' Ernest Pineault Joseph Arena state warden" gencral secretaries of the CCC. ism leads to a denial of the so easily sees itsclf as a nation, . '. ' , , "There is no conceaUng the and there is need to remark how GIlbert POIsson. Church's legitimate right to make fact," the bishops wrok, "that often the use of this term leads laws governing itself. For man3Jo the chief malady of Canadian the whole question of celibacy to serious misunderstandings be society consists in the c;!E·ep dis seems settled if "a ban against tween the two chief communities content felt by a growing num marriage by priests cannot be of Canada. ber of French Canadians at the round in the Scriptures." . "It is no part of ou I' present difficulties which theil' com Vice Presidelrnt Tens Jewish Wcmenof Papal Cardinal Doepfner stressecll munity must face in its attempt duty to settle a question of vo that it is important for the of Damaging World In~erpretation' Church at growth; and in the unl:asiness cabulary, which is rather deli to train priests properly cate in any case, and becomes which the claims of the French for celibacy and at the same ATLANTA (NC)-Vice Presi Ii black picture of us." speaking group arouse in other more so when moving from one dent Hubert H. Humphrey said language to another. On his recent trip to Europe, time to provide pastoral care for parts of the country.
here that Pope Paul VI, "with during which he met with the thosf" men whose priesthood bJ Social "'act
Proud inheritors shattered on the rocks of celi tears in his eyes," told him that Pope, the Vice President re "This at least must be granted, "It is our desire," they said, bacy. the moral power of the United ported, he found a distorted pic however, namely, that no peace "to help Canadians, as they deal ,States is being damaged "by the ture of this country through can come to Canada without way America is interpreted to with this mutual um:est, to over television accounts of the war in Testament come a weakn~ss which may honest recognition of the social the world." Vietnam and crime at home. fact which is the French-Cana well be shared by both parties; The Vice President disclosed NEW YORK (NC)-The Guilc1l "Every day, bombs dr-opping, that of failing to understand the dian people and effective recog the Papal view in an address to riots taking place, crime, corrup Press has published a new edi rights and ideals of the other nition . of the rights of this the National Convention of Jew t~on - that's what some people tion of the New Testament. The group, and of selfishly walling people. ish Women. He told the 1,000 think is news," the Vice Presi translation does not differ from "It is beyond dispute that the present that "t~e world is getting themselves up in something like
the 1941 edition, but both the dent said. He added: "I've Deen French-speaking group of Que a caste. wanting to get tt.is off my chest." introductions and annotatioJUl bec has a right to existence, to "The French-Canadian com have been brought up to date by all Mi~heg«!llrn' Sees !Back munity is a linguistic and cul- normal development- in The Vice President said the Father Joseph A. Grispino, S.M. spheres of life, to civil and po . tural group with roots three cen U. S. "needs to tell the world The book, available in a paper I?rrojec ll' ~q lJJ(QJ ~ Dty turies old in ·the soil of Canada, litical institutions suited to their of the lives it is saving." He said: back edition, is published undell' LANSING (NC)-Four Cath the soil which has served as the genius and peculiar needs, and to "We p.eed to be known as a the patronage of the Episcopal that alitonomy without which olic dioceses in Michigan have 'cr;vlle of thei I' life, labor, sor nation of peacemakers, not just Committee of the CorIfraternity their existence and prosperity begun mailing merit employ peace-marchers." row and dreams.' of Christian Doctrine. would enjoy no grea.t guarantee. ment analysis forms to more than "But at the same time, ,one 2,000 firms which furnish goods must not forget that the legiti and services to Catholic institu mate 2spirations of Quebec may tions. The analysis is being made be justly fulfilled only when as part of Project Equality to p~rl§h there is full respect for the promote equal employment op greater common good, and for portunities for members of mi ST. JOSE::'H. the inviolable rights of others." nority groups. Fft'~""VEN 7 Perry Firms cooperating in the pro The Sacred Heart's Assodation
gram will be listed in a directory Avenue will hold their final meeting of Minlnl. See AHoll1ges
of diocesan suppliel:S for the the season on Sunday night; May
Lansing, Grand R~pids, Mar Project Equality
7, at 7:::10 in the churc~ basement. Taunton Mass. quette and Saginaw dioceses. All Following the election of officers
ST. PAUL (NC)-Archbishop pastors and administrators of 822-2282 and a talk by Father Perry, Co Leo Binz of St. Paul-Minneapolis chairmen Florence Days. and has announced the initiation of Catholic institutions will be urged to favor those listed in Norma Costa will head a large Project Equality for his St. Paul purchasing and contracting. committee serving refreshments. Minneapolis See. The Detroit archdiocese piloted First Friday adoration will Project Equality is a national the Project Equality program in The True story as compiJeJ take place on May 5. ecumenical action program to the state and has already pub by Father Mauro, C. P. . Members are encouraged to at promote racial justice, particu of Ihe Passionist Fathers lished such a directory of suptend· the. Diocesan Coundl of larly in employment opportuni of Rome Postulator for pliers. Catholic Women's annual con ties. the Beatification and vention in Fall River on May 6 Canonization of Maria - Archbishop Binz said: and the retreat scheduled for Goretti. ' "We are especially pleased that May 19-21 at Our' Lady of Good this program is being initiated Counsel· Retreat House, Lake together. with Protestant. and ville. Paint and WaHpaper Jewish groups in Minnesota .. This , 'Dupont 'Paint ST. JOSEPH. will be the first such program FALL RIVER cor. Middle St. in the country under the spon Daughters of Isabella will at • 422 Acush. Ave. sorship of all religious groups in tend 9:30 Mass Su~day moming, a single state. ~«:.tZB,i New Bedford April 30 a'ld will hold their an "There are a few minor excep -" PARKING nual Communion breakfast in tions in our state," he added, . Rear of Store the parish school. "but we sincerely look forward to a complete union of religious HOLY NAME. groups in thil? affair." FALL RIVER
An art exhibit prepared by
students of the parochial school
Bill Seen Doomed IN THE will be open to the public from AUSTIN (NC)-Texas' abor 7:30 to 9 tonight at the school. tion liberalization bill, approved JOLLY WHALER Th{l annual banquet and in utallation of officers of the by the state Senate Public --AND- Women's Guild will be held at Health Committee March 20, ap pears to be doomed· to failure SPOUTER INN ! Tuesday night, May 2 in the Ichool hall. Reservations will without ever coming to the Sen RESTAURANTS
dose tomorrow and ticket:; are ate floor. That, at least, is the. analysis of the Texas Catholic available from board members. Always Free Parking
RegistraUon for the scnool will Conference in its April news letter. Mail to legislators report be held this S"turday and Sun edl;' ran as high as 20-1 against day afternoon frDJn 2 to 4. the bill, the TCC said.
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ANCHOR5 Council of Laity .Boston . College ProfessOr Recommends Study THE Thurs., April 27, 1967 Has Wide Scope Of Current Problems to DCeW Members Interfaith Press Of Freedom VATICAN CITY (NC) "The medium is the message," we' are told so often lately and Diocesan women were To Collaborate
The first plenary session of 1!he Council of the Laity adjoumed with its 12 lay
members satisfied with the wide lJCope of freedom they were /iCl.ven. At a press conference, Maur tee Cardinal Roy of Quebec, president of the Council of the Laity, said the meeting was '"Illecessarily an exploratory one." While still "a baby," as Card inal Roy expressed it, the Coun cil of the Laity, is the beginning of a program of study and action that is wide open and which will include not only organized forms of the lay apostolate but also will assist Catholic laymen everywhere in taking their proper role in the mission of the Church in the world today. "No limits have been set on our work," Martin Work, execu tive director of the United States' Nati<mal Council of Catholic Men, added after the week-long series of meetings closed at the Vatican's Palazzo Santa Marta. "We have still got a tremendous amount ot work to prepare, but this first meeting has been ex tremely satisfactory to all of 1lS." Stress Dialogue Among matters examined by the council was its relation to bishops on the national and in ternational levels and also its place in terms of the offices of the top-level administration of the ChUl'ch, the Roman curia. Among its principal functions, the .council agreed that it must "'facilitate dialogue between the Holy See, the hierarchy, and the lai ty, between international and national levels of organized lay activity and among the laity in general. Dialogue should lead ~ understanding and under manding to action. hopefully to more effective action than in the past." The council stressed that its discussions helped to clarify what its role will not include. It was agreed that the council is not to act as a directive agency for Catholic organizations of the laity. Nor will its function be to act as a court of appeal for de cisions in the field of the lay apostolate. Not again will the eouncil act as a watchdog on the activities of the laity."
given some sage advice recently on how to choose the media f(}r their message - the message of the Gospels. The advice was given by Sister Therese Anna, S.U.S.C., professor of history at Boston College and re~ident of the Holy Union Provincialate in Fall River. She was speaking to 400 membel's of the Taunton and Attleboro District Councils of Catholic Women on the
occasion of their annual joint Communion Supper at Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton. Sister was introduced by Mrs. Alfred Leonard of Taunton, toastmistress. The religious reminded her audience that it was the women of Jerusalem to whom Christ gave his Easter morning message. The words of the angel guarding the tomb have a meaning for the woman of today: "Come and in spect * * *" * * "Look and see" * * and "Remember what he said to you." . "We must have concerned ac tion, informed action, relevant to the needs of the times," Sister said. "This will invplve much study and reflection. Our mes sage will be more effective if we've studied it well," she told the women. Six Areas Sister offered suggestions to I women planning council pro ········"······,f.··,.··..,, ,..• _J grams for the coming year. She Decw MEETING: Members of Taunton and Attleboro suggested six areas of concern that program chairmen might districts of the Diocesan Council of Catholie Women hear consider wOI'thy of study. Sister Ther'ese Anna, S.U.S.C., professor of history at Boston One of these might be an in College, at their annual joint communion supper. From left, vestigation of the problems of Mrs. George Whalen, Attleboro District president; the authority and liberty in the speaker, and' Mrs. James E. Williams, Taunton District church. She reminded the women
president.
that those in authorit~- in the church have undertaken, for the
good of all, an awesome respon she said, is an area wh<;!re lay credo Hearts Academy and took sibility and !Ire worthy of our women can make a unique and her B.A. at Manhattan College respect and gratitude. invaluable contribution. and· her master's and doctorate The field of education, both in The problem of poverty is one at Boston College. In 1961 she local communities and the na that must concern all Christians was awarded a Coe Foundation tion, might be a fertile one for always, she ::;aid. "The Christ that Fellowship in American Studies, the year's study, the Sister said. we follow never said 'Pull your and she was given a grant to Another subject might be the self up by your bootstraps,' she study English political thought broad one of culture, especially , told her audience. "Instead He at Oxford University in 1964. In the culture of the younger gen told the story of the Good Sa 1965 she was awarded a Ful eration, and study of family life, maritan." bright Scholarship to participate The docume~ts of the Council in a Summer seminar at the In and recent papal encyclicals stitute d'Etudes Politiques in Asserts Vocations offer many possibilities for Paris. study, she said. The complaint Situation Difficult A student of ecumenism, the has often been made that religious is a consultant on the SAN FRANCISCO (N C ) members of the League of Ecumenical Commission for the "The vocation situation in the Women Voters "do their home world is what you might call work" far more thoroughly and Diocesan Synod of Fall River, 'difficult'-more difficult than it zealously than do the women She has served as seminar lead was a· few years ago," said Jan of the Catholic councils. "Why er for a pilot program on ecu menism sponsored by the Na Berbers, president of Serra In cannot the National Council of ternational, on his arrival here Catholic Women do this to bring tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence in Washington, D. C. from Tokyo. For Preachers Christ's message," she asked her Although the aim of the Serra audience. In addition, she has been a par WASHINGTON (NC) - A Clubs is to foster vocations to "We need informed actions for ticipant in Jewish-Christian con Summer workshop on preaching the· priesthood, Serra Clubs also the rights and dignity of every ferences at Harvard University will be held at the Catholic Uni try to give boys a "solid voca human person and every human and Packard Manse. versity of America here, June tional orientation" in general, family. V·, wil: then have the
12 to 23. U. S. Sen. Eugene McCarthy of Berbers reported. He said, "We fullness of unity for all the peo beli-eve that before a boy can ple of God," she concluded.
Minne;;ota; Father Barnabas make a· truly free choice of vo
}'all River Native Ahern, C.P.; Father Raymond Sister Therese Anna is a native Brown, S.S., the Rev. Edward W. cation he should be aware of all the paths that he might follow of Fall River and the daughter of Bauman, Methodist minister; as a life's work. the late Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts Serra members have tried to W. Donf)van. She attended Sa burgh, and Daniel Callahan, as BOciate editor of Commonweal establish some rapport with the magazine, will lecture on the· high school students before in method and contents of sermons, troducing a formal concept of the priesthood, the 48~year-old 010 a SYSTEMATIC
and on the problems of listen !( year SAVINGS
president said. "We try to set up
sa moathly deposits required
a fI'iendship between the student
In addition to the lectures, the ....orkshop will offer practical and the Ser.rans"" .. Once the
01 c INVESTMENT !lessions in preaching. In small relationship has been established • !Ovear SAVINGS the young' person is more likely It"0UP sessions, preachers will 10 da, R,tice for withdrawal teo be receptive to what is said present sermons before an audi CD ahout vocations, including the ence of their colleagues. As a prestly vocation," he said. lkamatic means of self-analysis, e&ch preacher will present. a Sei' .on over closed circuit televi Study U. S. and then see himself 1ft aD WASHINGTON (NC)-There instant replay. ~e 3&7 Latin Americans study .Bank 6y Mail
i~ i9 72 United States seml Gift to Protestants ilQI'.ies according to a report re
We Pay ThePostag8 leased by Archbishop Joseph T. PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arcb • SOUTlt YARMOUTH- • HYANNIS bishop John J. Krol presented McGi.lcken of San Francisco, eight sets of the New Catholic chairman of the personnel re-. • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PlAZA Encyclopedia for protestant cFuitment committee of the U. S. BishOi'ls' Committee for Latin seminaries to the Greater Phila • DENNIS PORT • OSTERVilLE . America, delphia Council of Churches. M ••
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on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread
NEW YORK (NC)-The major Protestant and Catholic press organizations in the United States and Canada-Associated Church Press and the Catholic Press Association-have agreed to begin a program of active pro fessional collaboration and to hold a joint convention in 1969. It was announced at the close of the Associated Church Press convention here that the joint convention of the two groups will take place in Atlanta, Ga., May 21-24, 1969. The meeting, it is beli~ved, will be the first such joint convention of major U. S. Catholic and Protestant or ganizations. Active cooperation between the two organizations will also be developed by such means as regional meetings and seminars, promotion of the religious press, exchange of information, and other forms of cooperation. Collaboration in these areas will be implemented by the staff executives of the two groups Alfred P. Klausler, executive secretary of the ACP, and James A. Doyle, executive director of the CPA. E ach organization serves newspapers and magazines in its respective field. The Catholic Press Association has 330 mem ber publications, and Associated Church Press 180. The total combined circulation of publi cations in the two groups is over 50 million.
Rabbi to Lecture At Jesuit College JERSEY CITY (NC) - The Jewish Chautauqua Society hao awarded a resident lectureship in Judaism to St. Peter's College, conducted by the Jesuits here. Father Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J., college pl'esident, said Rabbi Samuel A. Berman of Jersey City's Temple Beth El will teach the course in the 1967-68 school year-the first course of its kind in the college history.
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THE'ANCHOR-Diocese Apr. 27, 1967 .. '. ' .of Fall River-Thur'$; . ..
For Retiring Coyle Head
Crisis in Washington There is not much point in discussing at length the
situation at The Catholic University of America. What is
done is done. But since the Catholics of this country do
eontribute their money to the support of the university,
they have a right to do some talking about it and to re
ceive some enlightenment on it, if for no other reason than
that the one who pays the bill has a right if not to
eall the tune thEm at least to listen to the music and· ask aD
explanation of it. . Father Charles Curran was first told that the board of trustees of the university had decided not to renew his teaching contract. Then, upon a strike by faculty and stu dent body that closed the university for five days, the board reconsidered and voted not only to renew the con tract but to promote the professor. There are several issues involved here. First there is an issue of procedure-should a teach ing contr~ct be terminated without the professor involved being given the opportunity to face the board of trustees, to ask reasons for his dismissal, to present some sort of defense of himself.· '. Second, a cloud nas .been thrown on the whole matter by the frequent references to Father Curran as a theolo gian with liberal views on birth control. Has anyone seen , a statement by Father Curran on what his views are? Her~ would be a clarification that would be most welcome. Third no matter what arguments for or against birth
controi m~y ·appeal to Father Curran, as a good Catholic
he like the other six hundred million Catholics in the Church must heed the words of the Pope wh<;> has said
that Church teaching on the matter remains in force and that any position on the matter of the "pill" must wait
until scientists tell the Pope what the "pill" does-so that he may then make a moral judgement on it. '. Fourth, a deeper issue involved is the matter of who runs a university - administration, facu~ty or student body, or what share does each have in the management of the school. This is an issue that is present to every college and university today, and some formula or arrangement 'must be worked out. A college is, by its very nature, an unequal society with students there precisely because they do not know and faculty there presumably because they. do know and administrators there because they are supposed to administer. Perhaps the lines of division are not too clear-cut but they should be talked about. The crux of the crisis would seem to be the matter of procedure for dismissing a professor. It is unfortunate that an extraneous issue was introduced-Father's "liberal" views.
Brother Thomas Gallaghes, C.S.C., who will complete ldII sixth and last year as priD eipal of Monsigner Coy.
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IP'riest: The Lord be with you. All: And with your spirit. lP'll'i~st: Let us pray. Lord we beg Your help for Holy Church, for an civil authorities, and for the salvation of all men. ]LectOli.': That all who call upon the Lord for help in their distress may find in Him a refuge and eternal rest. Alll: We beseech you, hear us. ]Lector:... That just peace and true concord be r~alized among people violentiy afflicted by wars and civil discord. AU: We beseech you, hear us. Lector: That the measure of God's goodness to us may be also the measure of our generosity to others. Ail: We beseech you, hear us. . ]Lector: That those who labor in God's vineyard for the poor oppressed, the retarded, and homeless may receive their reward from the great riches of His grace. Ail: We beseech you, hear us. WfJarellTJ, (/Jrio,re MJq;JJfiJ j])are~ lLector: Tha·t all Catholics of the Diocese and our parish . may heed the Bishop's call to charity and graciously Success i~ any s'11ere often brings with it the envy of . cooperate in support of this effort. others and the resentment of some. Sorrow is a universal We beseech you, hear us. bond that touches the '1earts of most men and causes them All: to feel, at least for the moment, a sympathy with the one lLector: That all workers for our Catholic Charities Appeal may be welcomed with Christlike warmth and love. in trouble. We beseech you, hear us. The Russians have lost one of their astronauts and it All: is only human that the rest of the 'world feel shock at this Priest: 0 God, our refuge and strength, give heed to the pious prayer of Your Church, You who are the incident and sympathy for the man and his.family and his source of devotion; grant that what we ask for in eountry. Stalin was once quoted as making the remark, not· faith we may obtain in deed; through Our Lord original with him, that "When one man dies it is a tragedy; Jesus Christ, Your Son, Who is God, living and when millions die, it is a statistic." reigning with You, in the Unity of the Holy Spirit, One man has died and it is a tragedy-as when any for ever and ever. . man elies. And this RUBsian tragedy may find that nation and other nations of the world coming a little closer together All: Amen. in the bond of sympathy, in the realization of this frail humanity ·that is common to all men. The brotherhood of PropO$e man is never more deeply felt than in sorrow.
Three Council Decrees
@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OIF FALL RIVER 410 Highland Avenue 'a-d,lished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 . PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGI:R
If. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A.
ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. John P. Driscoll
MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden
Plan Testimonial.
Continued from Page Two The structure of the commis sion, it is hoped, will make itself useful not only to the already organized forms of the Catholic apostolate but also to be at the service of. and to encourage smaller and more specialized forms of the apostolate of the laity. Among other matters on the agenda is the determination of the group's relations with the other offices of the Church's top administration, the Roman Curia, and the review.of plans for prep aration of the Third World. Con gress of the Lay Apostolate, meeting in Rome in October 1967.
Among those present were the Undersecretary of the .Council, Australia' ~ Mis s Rosemary Goldie, the first woman to hold
a high post in the Roman Curia, and Mr. Martin Work, executive director of the U. S. National Council of Catholic Men. Christian Unity One of the main points of the meeting of the Christian Unity Secretariat was the exchange of reports on ecumenical situations in various countries and conti nents. Members were to present their own reports and. comment on those of others in the light of their own experiences in their countries. The Secretariat proposes to provide & body of material that will be useful in the drawing up of a directory for ecumenical action by world's bishops. Also on the agenda were re ports on ecumenism in education and a discussion of the meaning of dialogue. It was hoped that a
High School, Taunton will be honored by friends, well-wishea and former students at a testi monial dinner scheduled far Thursday evening, May 25 at White's Restaurant, No. We:$. port. Master of ceremonies for the evening will be Atty. Edmund Brennan of Taunton. Listed among the speakers wUI be Bishop Gerrard, Broth. Michel Miller, a>1ormer Coylli teacher aud presently serving. assistant provincial of the Ea" ern Province of the Holy CrOSB Brothers and Rev; Patrick J. O'Neill, Diocesan superintendeJdl oj; Schools. Among the invited guests 8Q) Sr. John Elizabeth, S.U.S.e." principal at Bishop Cassidy Higb; Harold Galligan, superintenden:fl of Taunton public schools; and William De Stefano, principal m Taunton High School. . . Frederick Martin, 500 Bay stl.. Taunton, and Brother Thomas Mulryan of Coyle are chairm.e:D: of the ticket and banquet cOJlQp mittees, respectively. A native of the Bronx, tfuij honored guest has taught ~ schools in Ohio and Indiana arnl! has also served as assistant VOClba tions director for the order. Brother Thomas was appointed to the Coyle faculty in 1950 and was named principal in '1961. During his career at the Tauna ton Diocesan boys scho~. Brother Thomas has taught Reiioo gion and English and has served. as librarian, freshman football coach and track mentor. discussion of these two subjecliJ would'lead to the formulation ml . directives f'lr practical action !Iii the future. Among U. S. representatives ~ the meeting were Lawrence CaJib dinal Shehan of Baltimore; Bish. op Charles H. Helmsing of Kana sas City-St. Joseph, Mo.; am1l Bishop Ernest J. Primeau GJ:2 Manchester, N. H. .vustice-Peace The first plenary meeting cml the Pontifical Commission Cllil Justice and Peace gladly ae-. cepted the fact that Pope Pauil VI's '''Progressio Populorum_ Development of Peoples" mack! th~ group's task more effectiv=e and its role clearer. Its task would be heavy re marked Cardinal Roy "because we are only a section of the Church and it covers a large part of the world, being concerned not only with the children of the Church but with all our brothea throughout the world." The commission divided iute four working groups. The first, headed by Prof. Amorosa Lima of Rio de Janeiro, will study the means of collaboration with the various bodies within t b4 Church in pursuit of the COJDa mission's aims. Other working groups wiD consider the commission's rela tionships with secular organiZ& tions in tt.e field of poverty, BO ci' justice and development; the order of priorities in the r;roup's work; and concrete pro grams. A noted U. S. member on ~ commission is Mr. James J. NOI' ris, assistant to the executive director of Catholic Relief SeP vices and member of the Catholkl International Migration Commitl tee, who will serve as a "report . er" to present the group's eo... clusions to the plenary commi9'o ·sion and who will also be iii charge of press relations.
.;'Prevost Honor: Society Members Entertain St. ~oseph YoulI1gsters At Special Afterno~n Outing
THE' ANCHORThurs., April 27, 1967
Dioce5e til) Close Fou~ $cDllo@~s
School news is in short supply'this week, although pages ,could be filled with reports of vacation activities of students, which included field trips to Washington, New York and many other points, as well as parties, sports and just plain loafing. Congratulations, to from St. Joseph's Home. Each Sharyn Frechette, top scorer boy took a youngster for an af in the New England roller ternoon of personalized attention, skating figures event, and a and so successful was the project atudent at Cassidy High 'in Taun ton. Another Cassidy Sharop. is rn the news, although she'll opelled slightly differently. She's Sharon McMahon, secretary ox , the Taunton school's student ,council, who's also been na1Jled secretary of the Southeastern Mass. Associated Bodies of ,Stu , dent Councils (how's that for an ...organization name!). She's kept the office in the hand of ~as Didy for a second year, since her 'predecessor in the post was Christine Victoria, senior class president. Miss Mary P. Mc Mahon, moderator of the Taun ton Club, also remains execu tive secretary of the area group. Planned for tomorrow night Is a student council-sponsored dance at Prevost High in Fall River; and the big event tomor row at Feehan High in Attleboro will be distribution of junior class rings by Rev. Joseph Pow <ers, school chaplain. The junior prom will follow on Saturday night in the school cafeteria. And tomorrow at Mt. St. Mary ~cademy in Fall River, ,Mother Mary Martha, assistant general of the Sisters of St. Joan of Arc, will speak and show movies on the work of her community. To day Rev. Bernard Sullivan will !>peak on the purpose and value of retreats, a timely discussion m view of the fact that students will be on retreat next week. Cake S~les Like their elders, teens find cake sales a tasty way of raising money. Girls at Mt. St. Mary had a cake sale to raise money for the junior prom; and Feehan so dalists sold pastries to augment a fund for t;ending next year's officers to the annual New York Summer School of Catholic Ac tion. It was whist that held cen ter stage at Prevost, as seniors sponsored a party that raised $600 for the senior class treas ury. Tomorrow at Cassidy Theodore Cay, editor of the Taunton Gazette, will speak at the induc tion ceremony of the Quill and Scroll International Honor So ciety for high school journalists. Seventeen tudents will be in ducted and special awards will include a creative writing cita tion to Christine Victoria; and honor certificates to Linda Boyd, Virginia Fornal, Judith Keefe, .Janet McCarty and Maryellen
r·····-ay. Nine probationers will aiso be lIldmitted to the society. Call'eer Day Today at Cassidy a career day day will be held from 2 to 4:30 for juniors from Diocesan high schools and area public highs. Among 33 institution to be rep resented will be state, junior and eommunity colleges, nursing and business schools and technical institutes. Pre','-lt members of the Na tional Honor Society are still glowing over their afternoon of cOmpanionship with children
Annapolis Baptisms ANNAPOLIS (NC) - F i v e babies, all daughters of Philippine nationals, were baptized at the U. S. Naval Academy here with water flown from the Phil ippines especially for the service. The girls, ranging in age from one to nine months, are the chil dren' of stewards in the academy ~ g halls.
that it will probably be repeated. Also at Prevost, vacation ac tivities included meetings of the Christian Youth Movement and rehearsals for the upcoming glee Club concert to be held Sunday, May 7 at Sacred Hearts Acad emy,. Fall River. ,. Win {)ontest Feehan winners of an orator ic8I contest sponsored by the Elks are Bernard McKay, first place; Claudette Ouimet, second place; and Marilyn Kearney, honorable mention. Seniors at the Attleboro school have had their last formal meet ing, one more sign of the ap proaching end of high schooll days. The class outing, prom and! graduation were discussed and Elyse Parmentier was named valedictorian, with Richard Mac Adams chosen as salutatorian. A new project at Prevost is the opening of classrooms to fresh men for an hour and a half every Thursday night. Half an hour of study will be followed by an hour of recreation, the combina tion designed to promote class spirit and provide the opportu nity for extra instruction to boys needing it. Congratulations are in order for John Mandeville at Feehan, who was elected delegate to a National Student Council Work shop, to be held this Summer. William Flanagan will represent the Attleboro school at a student council convention in Philadel phia. And also at Feehan: prospec tive cheerleaders are practicing for try-out day, Tuesday, May 2. Those selected will work under Mary Ellen Donnelly, head cheerleader for the coming school year. Feehan students won five out of six awards in a Library Week essay contest sponsored by the Attleboro public library. The Balfour A ward for first place, $25, went to junior Joyce Len nartz; two 'second place prizes of $15 each were awarded to senior Elizabeth Kowalczyk and junior Donna Corbeil; two of the three honorable mention places, with prizes of $5 each, went to seniors Marian Harris and Patricia Touzin. The essays were written on any American author and were limited to not more than 500 wocds.
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PORTLAND (NC)-Koinonia House, a new $320,000 ecumen ical Campus Christian Center at Portland State College, was dedi cated Sunday. (Koinonia is the Greek New Testament term for community.) The center is the product of years of close cooperation among the eight m a j 0 r Christian churches 'represented in the Portland Campus Christian Min istry. They are Baptists, Chris tian (Disciples of Christ), Epis copal, Lutheran, Methodist, Pres byterian, United Church of Christ and Catholic. Dr. Arthur S. Flemming, pres . ident of the National Council of Churches and president of the University of Oregon, addressed , the assembly. The Portland Campus Minis1ry is not a "mer ger" of churches on the campus, but a pooling of skills and re sources to serve the academic community of the urban college.
7
SCRANTON (NC) - F 0 u r Catholic schools in the Scranton diocese will be closed at the end of the current school year be cause of a shortage of teachers, Msgr. William L. Donovan su perintendent of diocesan schools, said here. The schools are St. Francis, Nanticoke, and St. Patrick's W hit e H a v en, elemen tary schools, and St. Agnes, Towanda, and St. Mary Magda lene, Honesdale, high schools. The school in White Haven is staffed by Sisters of the Immac ulate Heart of Mary. The other three schools are staffed by Sis ters of Mercy of Dallas, Pa. Msgr. Donovan said most of the elementary school pupils in v-olved will be absorbed by other Catholic grade chools. The high school pupils affected probably will attend public schools, he said, since there are no other Catholic high shools in their areas. There are 65 students in St. Agnes high school and 120 in St. Mary Magdalene.
SODALITY OFFICERS: Heading the sodality at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are, seated, Janice Bergmeyer, vice-prefect; Joan Kelly, prefect.; standing, Eleanor Dunn, treasurer; Mary Miska, union delegate; Pat Souza, secretary.
Strengthen H«1J~Y Cr@ss C(!l~~~!S'J@ in Wor«:~ster Adds 'YW\tl> N(\)In-C«llU'~@ig€: ~<i:[ft)<l)n~ll'S ;lJ1l l'h~o~og1 WORCESTER (NC) - Holy Cross College has hired two nonCatholic scholars to teach spe cialized courses in biblical studies. Alexander T. Stecker and Rev. Carter H. Lindberg will teach in the t.heolog y department of the JesUit-run Bay State school. Stecker r~cen!ly completed doctoral studies m the depart ment of Near Eastern and Judaic studies at Brandeis University, Waltham, Mass. Specializing in historical and acheological as pects of the Old Testament, he spent six months in Israel as II fellow of the Jacob Hiatt Insti tute in Jerusalem.
Schedule Christian Pavilion Program MONTREAL (NC) - Thirty five thousand Christians will gather at the entrance to the Expo '67 site on Pentecost Sun day, May 14, for an interdenom inational service. The Christian Pavilion Sunday program will consist of prayers, hygmn-singing, Bible readings, and talks. The televjsed program will draw Church leaders from several' denominations. Those present will say a one-minute silent prayer for the reunion of all Christians. Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal and Auxiliary Bishop Norman Gallagher of Montreal are among the religious leaders who will attend the program.
famous for
QUALITY and
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Dr. Lindberg is from Susque hanna University where he has been an assistant professor for the last two years. He pursued divinity studies at the Lutheran School of Religion of the Uni versity of Iowa in 1965. Father William G. Guindon, S.J.. vice president and dean of the college, said the appoint ments were made to add to the academic strl'ngth of the theol ogy faculty .
Scholarship, Statue To Honor Cardinal BALTIMORE (NC)-The Car dinal Gibbons Foundation, an in terfaith group of Baltimore bus inessmen, has started a drive to raise a $1 -million college schol arship fund endowment in honor of James Cardinal Gibbons, the Baltimore archdiocese's ninth Ordinary, who died in 1921. The foundation also revealed that it had commissioned New York sculptor Betti Richard to do a seven-foot bronze statue of the· cardinal to be erected this Fall on the grounds of the down town Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. It will be the city's first memorial to the cardinal. Leonard A. A. Siems, acting chairman of the foundation, said most of the $52,000 cost of the memorial has been raised, and the foundation is now ready to raise the scholarship endowment.
$2.3 Million Grant WASHING'I'ON (NC)-George town University here has re ceived a $2,338,530 grant from the U. S. Office of Education for construction of its proposed $9.8 million law center. The new law center will be built within six blocks of the U. S. Capit{)l, and is scheduled for dedication July 4, 1969.
ANY WALLET SIZE ITEM SEALED IN PLASTIC 35c each - 3 for $1.00 _
Moil Money with Items to _
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OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNlJTS baked by your Sunbeam Baker
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J"HE ANCHOR-DiO,cese of Fan River-Thurs. Apr. 27, 1967
-----------------'Laywoman,' Suggests Vast
T rocher in La. NEW IBERIA (NC) - Sister Katherine Trahan, Eng 1 i S'll teacher at the Mount Carme! High school here in Louisiana has been named outstandiD3 young educator of Louisiana. Nominated by the New Iberia. Junior Chamber of Commerce, she was selected at the state finals. Sister Katherine was graduated in 1962 from st.. Mary's Dominican College, New: Orleans. She has been a member of the high school faculty heSiS for three years. As the state winner, she wfil' enter the national final compeu.. tion and receive an all-expens~ paid trip to Baltimore.
Changes in' Procedure "',
By Mary Tinley Daly "Let the great world spin forever down the ringing grooves of change," says Alfred Lord Tennyson in one of his poems. Now, a century later, the "ringil}g grooves of 'ehange," particularly changes in the Church, arrest the. attention, arouse the interest sudden shocked silence, which of nearly every thinking per- she knew full well would be the IOn, of whatever qenomina reaction, she went on, "At least, tion. Indeed, it seems to be the way they're set up now. In
open season for such disl.'ussion. Everyone has an opinion and nobody hesitates to air it. Cath olic magazines have l.ong been pro and con. Now a national slick magazine does a feature on the "thou sands" of nuns who have left their convents this past year. A wire service story hitH front pages about a priest askinj~ elec tion of pope and bishops by laym,en, predicting a widening of,· the "ecclesiastical credibility gap," an increase in departures , from the priesthood and religious life and the onset of a type o! anti-clericalism among nominal Catholics. Scarcely a week goes by that IlUch stories are not part of news paper and newsmagazine report ing. Those of us reared 1m the Church before Vatican Il[ find the changes we have encounter ed not difficult. Matter oj( fact, many of us welcomed them as they came along: greater per IlOnal participation in the Mass when the priest turned to face the people, use of English at Mass, revival of parochial sing -ing, relaxation of rul~s oi' pre Communion fasting, dispen!3ation of Friday abstinence. lFor, Against Responses of readers 0:1' this eolumn reflect both satisfaction and dissatisfaction with the changE¥l. Some find the changes "exciting," "reasonable and ra tional"; others chide us for "go";' ing along without protest" and one termed it "the bunk" when we wrote of a day-long ecumen ical dialogue with Protestant and JewiSh women. Such divergence of opiriion, free and open discussion in this "'the day of the laity," was. brought to our attention recently at a meeting of women Ifrom va rious suburban parishes. "rwas really a three-generation'meet ing. Inevitably came up the mat ter of "changeS in the Church." , 'One quiet little' mother-of three, eatholic school educated :hom kindergarten through col,::, lege, hadn't said a word. More. to. get her into the conversation than anythin'g' else,' somebody . aSked: . '. , "If' you could· make 3 change . in the Church,Betty, what would it be?" "Why, first of all, I'd do away. with parochial schools." At' the
stead of overcrowding in the early grades, I'd concentrate ef forts on Catholic education be ginning with the seventh grade." "Before that time," she ex plained her position, "the chil dren can and should get their religious training at home. From seventh grade on, by conserving resources, children could get a really good Catholic education at a time they need it most, and perhaps in consolidated schools.'" This opinion, seemingly~out of eharacter for Betty, has been ex pressed by others with more ed ucational experience. "What else would )VOU do, Betty?" More lldeaS Her' answer was ready: "I'd split up these huge suburban' parishes with a staff of priests so big you don't get to know any of them personally. I'd have small parish community houses' with just one priest. serving a more localized area, someone who would have the time and attention to be a real spiritual leader to the families living there. Also, I'd have a lay board appointed to attend to financial, legal and other secular problems. Let the priest lead a truly priest ly life, be a real father." 'Way out as her ideas s~emed at the time, we had to admit that Betty had been thinking through possible future changes for strengthening' Catholic family life and Catholic faith. . We dislike the expression, "Keep the Faith," recently fallen into popular disfavor,' but we' couldn't help remembering a poignant story of a strong Ifaith: When the great French scientist Pasteur was chided for having' "the faith of a Breton peasant,'" he responded, "No, you're wrong. I have the faith of a Breton peas- . ant's .wife!" ~
University DfI1l Oregon Under laity Contro~ PORTLAND (NC)-The Um-' versity. of Portland, a 65-ye~r- an enrollment. of nearly 1,900,' an enrollment of nearlyy 1,900, has been officially placed under the ownership .of a layman-dom inated board of regents. The eongregation of. Holy CroSs will transfe~'~20. million in as~ets of .~e ;u~llVt;rslty ~ the' newly form:d. bo~rd, wh,cb. is, made up of 35 laymen and five. priests'. . :
Supreme Court ,Refuses Desegregation Delay
WASHINGTON (NC) - The U. S. Supreme Court has refused Law Drops Sales Tax 1;(; delay the effect of a lower court 'order' ; to . desegregate For ~eligious Gfoups schools in six southern states. ,TRENTON (NC)-Gov. Rich The court rejected a request ard J. Hughes sfgned into law a of six Louisial,l3 school boards measure exempting sale of the who asked for a' delay of integra the sacred writings' of 'any rell-' tion while" they appealed gious group from provision of March 29 order;to integrate their the sales tax, the day after the classes and faculties by next bill was placed on his desk. FaIL . The bill makes it possible for That ruling was handed doWlll parent-teacher groups and simi . by a U. S. CircUit Court in New lar church and fraternal agencies Orleans. It. affected all public to purchase goods and services schools in the circuit, which in without paying the tax: O~her cludes Louisiana, Georgia, Ala church and charitable groups bama, Florida, Mississippi and were already "exempt. TexaS.
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SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE?: When' Cleveland's Giddings public elementary school was damaged recently by fire, apparently the work of arsonists, Bishop' Clarence G. Issenmann offered the use of four v,acant class rooms in nearby St. Agnes school. Here the second grade students are introduced to Sister Frances Clare, St. Agries' principal, by their teacher, Mrs. Odessa Wood. Classes will be operated as part of the public school system. NC Photo.
ARLINGTON (NC)-Mrs. Ab igail Quigley McCarthy, wife of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy o!l Minnesota, has been awarded the Christian Excellence Medal of Marymount College of Virginia. The medal is bestowed annual lyon a person· whose activitielil are rooted in ideals 'of excellence supported by commitment ~, Christianity. The event concluded a week!-, long series of student-planned programs which constitute an, annual "Christian Excellence" Seminar," sponsored by the stu- dent council. The seminar was founded in 1961 to give concrete expression'to the ideals of ex-, c!,!llence proposed in the late President John F. Kennedy's inaugural address.
~fL2f~~f.i~ GOTHAM fASHIONS
On a recent trip to New York, I noticed we were about one week behind that state as far as our Spring growing season is concerned. The New York for sythia and daffodils were in full bloom while our bushes and bulbs were still to flower. But more surprising to me than the realization that they are a bit Ifarther sou t h for gr 0 wi n g things was the leaps and bounds that they are :ihead fashion wise. New York certainly is the fashion barometer for the United
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as if the wearer had been to a little boy's ba'rber but on the youthful faces they really were darling. I noticed on the receptionist at the Vidal Sasson salon one of the shortest curliest cuts in town. This style gives the wearer the' appearance of a very neat little' Grecian youth. These neat little' heads really impressed' me as they seemed the correct topping for the '67 look. Hats, too, s'eemed the correct attire for the chic New York' career girl, ·and I must admit' they do give a completeness to the smart outfits. Tiny berets in polka dot silks were worn with matching ascots. These made a nice finishing touch to some of the bright colored suits and coats.. Large, droopy-brimmed felts were in abundance, both in the colorful hat salons or on the heads of the smart ~hoppers. Worn with the very large sun glasses that are 'now il,l vogue, these Ifelts give the wearer a mysterious and attractive Ga~boish appearance. . All in all, even a short stay in' Manhattan can't, help but make the fashion:'minded worn n aware of what the pages' of the high style magazines are really preaching. Sort of like a ray of light in staid old New En gland! .
St~::~ming that what I did view' was a preview of what we in New England will be wearing in the future, the fashion-conscious here had better start turning their hems up even higher, f~r the mini-skirt seems here to . stay, at least for a while. I have never seen so many knees in as sorted shapes and sizes on view. in city' fashions. These knees,. ,however, are smartly encased in., light, light stockings. .. This emphasis on legs has been a boon to stocking designers and they are turning away from the, brown tones we are used to and concentrating on bright colors' and white. I must admit though, that for every pair of colored stockings I saw, I viewed 10 Catholic Agency Head
white pairs. Receives Merit Award
'Along with these smart light BROOKLYN (NC)-Catherine stockings New York feet are wearing patent leather shoes in ' White, director of the Catholic every l;onceivable color. These Guardian Society, a child-care shoes have very squared toes and agency of the Brooklyn diocesan tiny, tiny heels. Along with the, Catho~c ChaI:ities, ,has been eye-catching stockings, they do given the Ethel H. Wise special merit award by the Columbia seem to give a sense of propor tion to the high riding hemlines. University School of Social Work. Hair Shori, Long Hairdois on the smartest Fi!fth The award was presented by Avenue heads seem to fall into Mi~s Wise, originator of the two categories, either very long awards, at the opening session of or very very short. The short the school's annual alumni con '. . haircuts looked for all the world ferenc..
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THE ANCHORThurs., April 27, 1967
Highway Journey Proves Need for Beautificatoon
9
P~an
Workshop
For Regents
By Joe, 8111«1 Mari1lYIIII Roderick Since Marilyn is writing about our recent trip to New York City I should like to add iny impressions to hers, but 1I want to eoncentrate on our trip to New York'rather than ~ the city itself. Anyone who takes a trip has to be Ilmazed and appalled at the filgliness of our'roadsides. We drove most of the way 00 Routes 195 and 95 and thei\l' drabness 13 overwhelming. Nowhere along the highways did we see flowers of any kind and <>nly rarely a flowering shrub. The children were bored witaa 1llie ride and they had every reaGt)n to be. One cannot convince me that n great deal cannot be done to remedy this situation at IJl minimum of cost and more imJl)Ortantly at 11 minimum of upkeep. We have become so accustomed to gaudy signs and drab highways that they have become l j part of our !Me and we fail to Il'ebel only because we have ftC <mtperienee of anything better. Beautlfal Countries While I was stationed in Germany after World War II, I had the opportunity to do quite a bi~ o{ travelling and I have nev~ forgotten the beauty of European eountries. In Germany there are forests unUke anything we have tn, the United states. Because woodland9 are at a premium, the German government has' done everything possible to protect against their loss by fire and U has also made them available 'OIl a large scale Jlor public use. There are none of the impasooble woods which we see lining American roads; instead German forests are cleared of all underbrush and only select trees are left standing. On a beautiful day in Germany one sees hundreds f1i families picnicking in the woods, enjoying nature as it was meant to be enjoyed. The pride of the nation shows in its countryside. Holland i& IeDowned for its love of flowers, Il»ut one must also include France and Italy in any listing of beautiful lands. Here everything W done to maintain the beauty of the country rather than to oommercialize every available inch of road. I have never experiencecl anyi!hing as breathtaking as a train ride through the Alps into Italy, Aipine flowers growing wild among the mountains and then melds of orange' poppies in nOrthern Italy. We have great natural monuments such as the Grand Canyon and Petrified Forest in this country, but we also have miles and miles of ugliness which somehow must be erased. In the Kitehen During the recent school vacaMon Joe and I took Meryl and Melissa for their first view Olf New York City and we were amazed at bow different a city Can become w hen: viewed tl\rough the eyes of ,the yeung. Certainly what they are, impressed bT ill not what'the «uide book tells as to expect. :As we pointed out the heightaf the buildings and 'the hordes of Pe&p\e, they Ignored us aad look~ lit: what they wanted to see. :
Back Seat
'Meryl is a' people-watcher, I» IIli,e was in her element watchisa the changing faces of the crowds. Usa. on the other hand, eM takeor leave people so her interest _ elsewhere. She fell in love with a toy mouse in a toy store and the New York taxi cabs. The lIatter she wanted to ride iii. conIJtantly, refusing to walk from one block to the next; they mUB! bave appealed to her spirit of adventure. One tbinc loe and I Ud. 4Ie-
Mrs. J. Sheridan Lee, Mass& chusetts State Regent of the Daughters of Isabella will con duct a Regents' Workshop on Monday, May 15, at 11 Robeson .-:- Street, New Bedford. cided on before we left was that Mrs. Mary Foley, regent, and! this was a trip to please the Hyacinth Circle No. 71 are host children and that our own plea ing this affair. !lures must take a back seat. The meetings are for regents Fancy restaurants were not to and vice-regents of all CircleD be included in our itinerary be in order that a mutual under cause I felt that it would be just standing and an exchange of like the girls to walk into La ideas between subordinate cir Fonda del Sol and order, a ham cles and the State Circle migM burger with ketchup. 1:oc developed. Finally though, out of sheer The annual retreat of the Mas gourmet starvation, we broke sachusetts Circle, Daughters of down and took tht;!m to a Danish Isabella, will be held at OUi' restaurant off 58th Street that Lady of the Cenacle Retreat we had fallen in love with the House. Brighton, from Friday, last time we were in New York. This marvelous bit of old Den- , TWIN BROTHER·PRIESTS: Fathers Oscar, left, and May 19 to Sunday, May 21. mark transported to these shore£! Reservations are being taken Arthur Cramer, twin brother priests of the Diocese of La features the most beautiful and by Mrs. Julia Schofield, vice tasteful smorgasbord I have ever Crosse, Wis., marked their 40th priestly anniver~aries re regent and chaimlan of the cently. Born in 1902 in Hewitt, Wis., they now hve at St. retreat. seen: Bountiful dishes are every John;s parish, Edgar, Wis., where Fr. Oscar is pastor and where and a diner is urged to go Fr. Arthur is retired from active ministry. NG Photo. back again and again to taste a Jesuit Coflege Honors· bit of everything displayed. Buf fets are not our forte, because Protestant leader we have always enjoyed our food KANSAS CITY (NC) - Dr. s~rved separately rather than Arthur S. Flemming, educator, Pennsy~vania Diocese Program Effects jumbled all together on one churchman and fonner presiden plate. Here, however, the waiter tial cabinet member, was award 16 ~ndependent Parish, Schools removes a soiled plate immedi ed an honorary doctorate by atelyand your next step up to rently staffed by members of Rockhurst College COnducted by ALTOONT (NC)-A conSoli these lush delights of the palate dation program for elementary religious orders. the Jesuits here in Missouri. starts anew on a fresh plate. Under the new system, a priest Dr. Flemming, president of the schools in the Altoona-J.ohns WeH, much to oul1' amazement, town diocese will go into effect (not yet appointed) will be full University of Oregon since 196n., this wondrous display of unusual next September, Father James time administrative principal for also was the featured speaker dishes didn't faze the girls at' all, F. Schuster, superintendent of all seven consolidated schools. at the 15th annual Rockhurs\l but rather they dived in with schools, said he-reo He will be in charge of budget Day banquet. He was honor~ relish, tasting even the assort ing and salaries. for his years of contributions to The plan will make seven ment of herring dishes (eight illl !i:ach of the seven schools will education, public service and consolidated schools, with shared all) and proclaimed everything have a "building principal," who Christian culture. quite tasty. The fresh fruit really faculties and facilities, out of HI may be either a layman or a Elected president of the Na previously independent parish got to Melissa. though, and she Religious, and who will be tional Council of Churches lam schools. ' smacked her lips with approval charged with the day-to-day December, he is the second lay Father Schuster said the plan operating of the school. as bowl after bowl of plump pur man to hold that post in the pIe blueberries left her with a will provide students with a The faculty of each school council's 16-year history. He charming purple mustache. To "higher quality" Catholic edu will be mixed," that is, composed served as Secretary of Health, top off her "very good" meal she cation because of increased of laymen and members of. each Education and Welfare in Presi strength and greater purchasing downed a large bowl of choco of the re~igious orders currently dent Dwight D. ·Eisenhower's late mousse, literally smotheretll power. serving in the diocesan schools, cabinet from 1958 to 1961 and He said the plan is meeting with whipped crellQ1. Father Schuster said. previously had served in other Meryl had an extra delight in with a generally favorable re top federal government posts. Noting that Catholic elemen sponse from parents and from the restaurant. For some reason, He also was president of Oh~0 tary school enrollment has dou she had made up her mind that members of religious orders who bled in the diocese in the past Wesleyan University from 1948 New York was the place to meet teach in the schools. 20 years, Father Schuster said to 1954. the movie stars, and she was All 16 parish schools are cur that some of the schools involved sure to see them wandering the will "owe their life" to consoli Cape, Islands District streets. As luck would have it. dation in the coming year. 3) Sift the flour gradually over she and Joe were going back to Cape and Islands District Five the sm"rgasbord t&ble for thirds the surface of the batter and fold of the Diocesan Council of Cat~ or fourths at th(~ same time in carefully. Reject Open Housing olic Women will hold a day of 4) Grease a baking sheet and Barry Nelson, who is starring in JACKSON (NC)-Voters here recollection Saturday, April :ro Cactus Flower, was selecting hin eover with wax paper, which has in Michigan have defeated a pro at the Church of the Vi9itati o ra. dinner. Meryl didn't know who also been well greased. Pour the posal which would have estab North Eastham. A Communion batter on this and bake 30 min he was but Joe whispered the in lished an open housing ordinance breakfast is slated for Sunday, fonnation to her and much to utes in a 325 degree oven. This in this city by a vote of 5,826 fA) May 21 at the Nimrod Club, foll her delight Mr. Nelson turned makes a flat spongy, cake. lowing 8:45 Mass. 2,886. and began talking to her. You 5) Let the cake cool in the
can be sure one little girl will pan and then invert it over a .
be looking through the maga- sheet of wax paper and carefully
zines for the name of her now peel off the bottom wax paper.
6) For the custard beat the 4
favorite actor. A' trifle, a lush mixture of egg yolks lightly and stir in the
sponge type cake, light fluffy % cup sugar and a pinch of salt.
custard and fresh fruit makes 1Il Gradually add the cream and
delightful ending for a smorgas- milk that have been scalded to
bord.' ' gether.
7) Cook this mixture in the
'l'riflcz: top of a double boikr over hot
8 eggs separated 10 Tabkspoons sugar (this 100 water, surring constantly until
the mixture coats the spoon. Re
the cake part) move from the heat and add the
1 Teaspoon vanilla remaining Yz teaspoon of vanilla.
1 cup floUf" 8) Invert a casserok dish on
4 egg yolks a piece of paper and trace a pat
1 (lUp light cream
tern. Use the pattern to cut a
1 C\lP milk
piece of the cake and set aside.
3 teaspoons of sherry
Cut or break the remaining cake
1 teaspoon brandy Jf4 cup sugar (t~is !for the cus- into bite size pieces and place in
Plumper, rounder, the casserole. Pour over this the tarcl) fuller muffinsl sherry and'brandy (use enough
strawberry preserve 1) In a large bowl beat the 8 to f1avor'all the cake pieces).
9) Coat the pieces of cake
egg yolks until light and creamy. with the strawberry preserves
Gradually beat in the 10 Table spoons of s'ugar and lh teaspoon and pour the warm custard over
of 'the vanilla. Beat vigorously all. Chill thoroughly.
10) When ready to serve put until thick and smooth. the reserved whole piece of cake
2) Beat the 8 egg whites un Baked by your Sunbeam Baker tii they are very stiff and fold on the top of the trifle. Garnisb
with whipped cream. blto the eel yolk mixture.
Plan Consolidation
Froman Olde English recipe!
Sunbeam English Muffins
10
Stomp Sale Aids'
THE ANCHORThurs., -April 27,1967 "
Prroe55ft' ScoreS) ~@9'ilk$
Ao<dHfJ"C@
SOMU'h A~I1'Q~a NEW YORK (NC)--Cath olics were urged to join movements against U. S. banks aiding th~ government
Re~igious
Order
ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS (N~ -Stamp dealer Sam Pinchot hoo oS rare stamp to add to his pri vate collection and the Society of the Divine Word in Techni . 111., is due to receive a check for $6,750. The stamp was bought at Il stamp auction in New York. Pinchot, a stamp dealer here illil New Jersey for 30 years, paid $6,750 for it, even though it is only a one-cent Benjamin Franklin stamp issued in the 1820s. What makes it valuable is tha~ it was apparently made out of printer's waste and its perfora tions and dimensions vary fmm others of its kind. Experts say there are only four or five ]i"lAMILY REUNION: Maj. Matthew Dang Sy, South Vietnamese Catholic officer, has copies of the stamp. According to auction officials, been reunited with his family after three years and four months imprisonment. He was' given a life sentence after a "trial" recognized as rigged in June 1964 for alleged "murder" proceeds from the stamp's sale are being sent to the Catholic of eight' persons killed in' an unexplained explosion during the' controversial Buddhist led religious order at the request agitation at Hue radio station, May 8, 1963. Major Sy is greeted by his wife and six of his of the original owner. He found nine children; three wei'e in: school when the photo was made. One of his ancestors was it in a mixture of several thou Blessed Michael Hy, a Vietnamese court official martyred about 100 years ago. NC Photo . sand stamps he bought from the Society of the Divine Word 3f) yeal's ago.
of South Africa by Father C. J. McNaspy, S.J., associate editor of America magazine. Speaking at Holy Family church, a parish established to serve the United NationB com munity, Father McNasp:y also urged greater cooperation, be tween civil rights movements in the United States and anti-apar theid leaders in Africa. "If we do not act again'st rac ism at its worst," he asked, "how can we trust our motives for combatting it in its milder and subtler manifestations'?" He' praised the efforts of the Committee of Conscience Against Apartheid in calling. boycotts against 10 American banks which lend money to the South A.frican govcl'Ilment and urged participation in the effort by, free Access Seen
the Catholic Interracial Council. "On the Development of Peo-' panding foreign aid programs." it, since our assistance must be The encyclical shows'the need in keep,ing with our belief in "The" pernicious notion --long, ' ples"-Pope 'Paul VI's most re To Cenacle
ago cOI~demned by' the Church-,- cent encyelical is not communism for "wealthy citizens of poor the dignity of the human person JERUSALEM (NC) - Quiet and the value of individual free . countries to put their capital to that 'business is business' l:an be nor an approval of birth control discussions and diplomatic moves dom of eOnscience"''''' It must no ex~;;se 'whatever," he said, "to '"methods but rather Christian work at home instead of export may have res'ulted in the TeVel' a person who believes in God ""compassion for hUl)lankind .. .' ing it to havens in Europe and be' based' on real-love, Christian sal of Iraelic closing of the Ce~ love. North America"; it speaks of the and Go'd-given rights ,and re~ an'urgent appeal to all men of acle, traditional site of the De Cothmunism ' 8ponsi~!lities." good will to apply the social "right of governments to expro scent of the Holy Spirit upon the priate' large land estates that are Commenting on two aspects 'teachings of the Church in' cur Apostles. ' being poodY cultivated." ! IGrowing Prot~st ing the, ills of a sick world." which the world press empha 'The Mt. Zion Committee, nom This is nothing new. There is sized, Bishop Connolly mention Father McNaspy characterized, These were some of the, com the racial, situation 'in South ments made by Bishop Connolly no new Christian duty outlined ed that some cal.led the eneyclical inally headed by 'the Director General of the Israel Religious here. It is only made more ur Africa 'today as worse than ever arid Rev. Gerald Boisvert, assist a "Christian Marxism." Affairs Ministry, announced that before. Too many people, he ant ,at St: Anthony oi Padua gent, more specific. It is a con . "It must be rememebered," ex said, are concerned only with Church, New Bedford, as the tinuation of the social doctrine plained Bishop Connolly, "that all institutions on Mt. Zion local t:ice problems and are priests of the Diocese of Fall of the ChUl'ch as preached by Karl Marx took Christian', social would be closed on Saturdays "closing our eyes to it (racism) ]liver met to discuss the Holy Pope Leo XIII. teachings that were not being and Jewish holidays. An irritat ing exception was the tomb of There is a difference between applied by Christians 'but he took in its mo'st flagrant form." , 'Father's most recent pronounceKing David, a Jewish sanctuary. ' the rich owning property-which them to extremes." An important feature of a true ment. which would remain open. He did not ask the rich to help, Christian response to a problem, The Pope really had no new of course they cqn do-and their Because of the legal status of he said; is universality--an es- social doctrines to teach but, in doing as they like with their he simply put the rich out of sential element of .Christianity. the face of the dire need of many property - which does have existence and communized the the Cenacle, the Catholic pmtestll ' were quiet. Technically, a Mos large farmers. Here, Pope Paul's Consequently, he cO'lcluded, the nations today, he simply restated moral limitations. "He (the rich) lem mosque when Israel became urgent appeal is "Christian con civil l;ights movem,crit, should the social doctrines of the is under positive obligation, science calling to the consciences an independent nation, the Is reach '6ut to Africa; where the ,Church as they were taught 'by binding under sin, to give away of Chrstians.'.' We are reminded raeli government took it under Africans suffering from race dis- Leo XIII, Pius XI, Pius XII, and his superfluity. 'A most strict ac crimin'atifin ";'re our 'In'others, Jo.hn XXIII. It is the urgency count must be made to the Su , that we are' all stewar'ds of no,.. protecti{:>n. preme Judge for all we possess," matte'r-how-great worldly pos Permission was granted, how and we"are our brothers' keep- and the dire need that are stress Pope Leo reminded us. . sessions, that our rights and joys " ever, to make the Cenacle avail ers." '" ' . cd' by .Pope Paul VI. So, because of the desperate must take into account that there ,able for visits, prayers and ser- ' One way of doing this, he said, Neighborly Love need of t~day, Pope Paul can are others as dignified as us but vices by ChristianS. iis to join the "growing protest Since "Christianity is not only' ask the rich to take on gl'eater who are in desperate need. This being made by responsible peo- the religion of God but the reli M:ost of. the existing Ccnac}e ta~es if it will lead to alleviating has always been the teaching of building dates from thc 14th pIe against the unholy allianee gion of God-made-man," Christ's . the dite' need of their brothers. Christianity. between certain A~erican banks Incarn;:ltion bids us "in mo'ments Century when the Franciscans }<'oreign Aid Birth Control and business inter~sts and the of deepest disillusion and most ,were given custody of the What is true of individuals is Republic of South Africa." bitter weariness with our fellow "Refer'ences to birth controL shrines. Because the building i8 human:"beings" that "these 'they also true of nations. "The soli infol'mation' dissemination by linked with JewiSh and MosIe.. are for whom the Omnipotent darity which binds all men to religions, the Franciscans were governments", stressed the Bish Deplores Publication Creator did 'not disdain to die." gether as members of a c'ommon op, "are in no' way the yielding l e:ieved of it during the 16t1l family," Pope John told us, Centul·y. If Christ then valued our fel of a besieged Pope nor an open Secret Re ports low humans 30 highly-=-using the "makes it impossible for wealthy ing in the dike. Some have rash DETROIT (NC)-Bishop Wal words of Pius XII-"the Church nations to look with indifference ly made all kinds Of claims sim ter W. Curtis of Bridgeport, cannot lock herself out, inert in upon hunger, misery and poverty ply because they did not read Conn., deplored the publication the secrecy of her temples and of other nations whose citizens the' encyclical. by the National Catholic Report thus desert the mission that are unable to enjoy even elemen The Pope recognizes the duty er of the final advisory reports Divine Providence has entrusted tary human 'rights." 3 Savings Pla~s, of governments in demography of the m<ljority and minority to her - t9 form the complete So, referring to world trade of "WITHIN THE LIMITS OF Home Financing groups of theologians on 'the man and cooperate unceasingly t~day-and 'the helpless condi THEIR COMPETENCE and' papal bi rth control commisHion. in establishing the solid founda tion of,many developing nations, PROVIDED that these (appro Bishop Curtis, episcopal mod':' tion of society," the New Bedford Pope Paul can ask for "an, ex priate information and suitable pansion of foreign aid * " * high erator of the Family Life Bureau, priest explained'. measures) BE IN CONFORMITY er prices for the exports of de U. S. Catholic Conference, criti It is looking at the whole ~an WITH THE MORAL LAW AND cized the publicizing of the secret -and that whole man's many veloping nations as well as pro THAT THEY RESPECT THE reports in the, opening address desperate needs-that, prompted tection-guaranteesand protec RIGHTFUL FREEDOM OF tion of infant industries." He can MARRIED COUPLES." This is 261 Main S1.. Wareham. Mass.
at the biennial meeting he I'll of Pope Paul to issue his momen demand "a revision 'of interest the directors of diocesan family Telephone 295-2400
tous encyclical. "Development," not the birth control that many rates and systems of loan repay life bureaus. Bank·By·Mall ServIce Avallabl.
says Pope Paul, "cannot be lim intend and envision. In the closed session, he urged ited to mer economic growth. ments so that the, burden of a the directors to concentrate in In order to be authentic, it must debt won't press too heavily on their discussiollS on other iSllues be complete, integral; that is, it developing nations," Fat her, RESIDENTIAL than birth control, saying that has to promote the good of every Boisvert explained. Neocolonialism any change in the Church's posi man and of the whole man." SCHOOLS. CHURCHES tion on the matter is reserved to . Here, religio,l has an important "To avoid the dangers of neo Pope Paul VI. role. colonialism - which Pope John INDUSTRIAL. BUNKER Rich and P,oor called a temptation to'rich na Pope Paul "insists OIi the duty tions ljlroviding foreign aid-his D ADSON OIL BURNERS I Curate-Sharing of the rich to help the poor, on successor, Pope Paul repeats the SOUTHWARK (NC)-Bec<luse Complete Heating' Installations the social aspect of oWllership, appeal madc in Bombay in De of a shorta.;e of ;>riests, curates on th,e evils of 'liberal' eapital 24 Hour Oil Burner Service cember 1964, for' the creation of may be appointed b do part ism (also called 'laissez-faire a 'great world fund to be made time work in more than one capitalism' or, as Father C,onin up in part by the money spent parish, said Archbishop Cyril says, 'selfish individualism'), on 'on arms'. A concerted effort of Conrad Cowderay of thL English the need of subjecting market 'this kind, he says, would help see in a pastoral letter which forces to rational, controls, on prevent wasteful rivalries." gave no details on the possible the pressing need-if the world Foreign aid cannot be a hand 640 Pleasant Street Tel. 996-8271 New Bedford curate-Sharing. peace' is to u' preserved-of ex out nor given ina "soulless spir-
Priests of Di'ocese Study Encyclical
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I
Project Equality Wins Approval ~n Minnes@ta
THE ANCHORThurs., April 27, 1967
leg Esfiat@rSi Archbi$~@p
MINNEAPOLIS (NC) Twenty-six Minnesota c'hurch leaders, representing an esti mated 70 per cent of the state's religious communities, tlave the "go-ahead" signal here to Project Equality, a national ecumenical action program to promote racial justice, particu larly in employment opportuni ties. Among the church groups en dorsing Project Equality were the archdiocese of St. Paul Minneapolis and the five Cath olice dioceses of Crookston, Du luth, New Ulm, St. Cloud and Winona. The Catholic bishops of the state tssued a joint statement announcing their support and naming Auxiliary Bishop Leon ard P. Cowley of St. Paul Minneapolis to speak for them in coordinating the program. Acceptance of the interfaith project, originated nationally by the National Catholic Conference . for IntelTacial Justice, was ini tiated in the state by the Minne sota Council on Religion and Race. Analyze Practices
At <I, press conference an nouncing the project's endorse ment by. the religious leaders, Father Eichard J. Thurner, pres ident of, thc board of dit'ectors of the Council on Rcligion and Race, said that "our commitment to this program is i"n recognition of our responsibility. to use our financial resources in accord with OUI' moral teachings." In endorsing Project Equality, he said, thc state's religious com munities have committed them selves to analyzc their own em ploymcnt practices and the de grec to which they promotc op portunities for members of mi nority groups at all job levels. Likewise, hc continued, the 26 endorsers of the progl'am will immedia.tcly begin procedures to require fair employment prac tices on the part of their sup pliers o,~ good. and services as well as those with. whorr they dcal in 'thc arcas of cO;lstruction, banking, insurance and real est:lte.
Notional Agenc'ies Unite in Relief "
BRl1SSELS (NC) - Scven in tematiol).j] aid agcncies of Na tional Agencies of national con fel'ences of Catholic bishops, in cluding that of the United States, have fOl'med an intcmational wOI'king group to coordinate and plan rclief pl'Ograms throughout the world. Founding members of the In temational "'orking Group for Socio-Economic Dcvelopment are the intemational aid agencics of the Catholic bishops of the U. S.C) (Catholic Rei i e f Services), France, Belgium, the Nether hmds, Germany, Switzerland and Austria. It is expected that in the fu ture other bishops conferences' agencies will join the new working group. The group has been sct up to act as a clearing house of information and ideas in the field of aid and relief. It will also be a cool'di nating and programming office for projects which have hitherto often been carried by single agencies without reference to the activities of othcrs. The working gl'Oup will also be in a position to cooperate ecu menically in the broad field of relief and aid and will work to gether with the World Council of Chul'ches, which has already formed a coordinated program of intl'rnational aid sponsored by ml'mber churches.
11
DENVER (NC) - Most Rev. Urban J. Vehr, who has retired as Archbishop of Denver, was honored in a resolution approved by the Colorado Senate. The resolution stated: "Under the guidance of Archbishop Ur ban J. Vehr, the Catholic arch diocese has become a great and creative' force within the state of Colorado and he has provided active and resourceful leader ship for the religious faith for which he is a representative, which in turn has made him iii great leader in the community. "His'deep personal concern for God and hi.> country has left its mark upon this state and has enriched all of our citizC'ns." Archbishop Vehr's successor, Most Rev. James V. Casey, Bish op of Lincoln, Neb., will be in stalled in the cathedral of the Immaculate Conception here Oil May 17.
STU])ENT COUNCIL: Student council officers at St. Anthony High SGhool, New Bedford, are, seated, Paul Fredette, president; standing, from left, Louise Machnik, vice president; Diane Schwartz, treasurer; Diane Normandin, secretary; Rene Jette, chaplain, : Susan Savoie,. parliament-arain.
Study Iidentity of American Jew' Follow Bishops' Guidelines for Dialogue NEW ROCHELLE (NC)-Fac ulty members of nine Catholic colleges and seminaries held a seminar which opened a three day conference at the College of New Rochelle on "The Making and Identity of the American Jew." It was the first such conference since last month's release of the U. S. bishops' guidelines for Catholic-Jewish dialogue, which urged "diocesan and parochial organizations, schools, colleges, universities and especially sem fnaries (to) 'organize programs to implement the statement (on the Jews') of Vatican II." And while no conclusions were reached - none were sought - . both Catholics and Jews came to the realizatio.n that both have their Own vroblems concerning' American Jewish "identity," Difficult Problem "Identity is a difficult prob lem for the Jew of today," ad':' mitted Dore Schary, national chairman of the Anti-Defama tion League of B'nai lB'rith. It is
Close Catholic High School in· Atlanta
the same, problem faced by all Judeao-Christian relations on minority groups in a new envir the soil of Palestine-and there onment, he said. But he ex it ends. pressed the hope that Amerca's "Jews appear thereafter only religious plurarity would lead to sporadically, resulting in a loss a "healthy, vibrant legion of re of the knowledge of what a Jew ligions," with each one concerned and Christian, through their for the welfare of the others. common Odyssey, to~:ether have Jewish identity was also spot contributed to Western European lighted as a problem for Cath civilization. olics by Sister Mary Robert Falls, "We hope to increase that president of New Rochelle Col knowledge;" leie. "Very little of the history of the Jewish people in the post Biblic'al era has bee'n available to Christians," she said. "Texts used in both public and parochial ST. PAUL (NC) ·-A Jewish schools begin their treatment of . liturgical service will take place at the College of St. Catherine here when Jews and Catholics join in the college chapel to hear "Love Songs for Sabbath." This composition by Jewish ·MANCHESTER (NC) - In a letter sent to all New Hampshire composer Jack Gottlieb has been parishes, Bishop Ernest J. Pri commissioned by the Park Ave meau of Manchester has stressed nue Synagogue of New Yo'rk the importance of continued ed City. Sister Lucina, associate pro u.cation among adults to reach the goal of responsible leader fessor of music at the college, will eonduct the perfol'mance. ship and Christian maturity. She said it will mark the first "It is becoming <!bundantly clear that a principal goal of our time, as far as she knows, that priestly work must be the edu a Jewish ser.vice has been sung cation of adults," he said. "It is u!lder Catholic auspices. precisely because of the supreme importance of the education of :!IIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!::' t.he children in the faith that this ~ II>RY CLEANING ~ is true. For, if they are to form their consciences according to ~ and ~ the teachings of our Divine § FUR STORAGE § Saviour, they must first find these values in the lives of their pal·ents." Bishop Primeau's letter also announced that the 1967 New En:;land Congress of Religious Education will be held at the University of New Hampshire, "iilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliC Aug. 25 to 27. While this con gl'ess is traditionally sponsored by the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, it will 'be open to all Christian adults, the bishop said. Maintenance ~upplies
Plan· Jewish Service At Catholic College
Prelate Stresses Adult Education
ATLANTA (NC)~A final de cision to close Drexel Catholic high school, which has 156 Negro pupils, has been announced by Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta. Ninth, 10th and 11th gl'ade Drexel students who apply at SL Pius or St. Joseph's, the other two diocesan high schools, at the appropriate time, will be guaran teed admission. Archbishop Hallinan said: "It is impossible to continue to provide full quality education for boys and girls at Drexel, but it is possible at St. Pius and St. Joseph's. The general standards of good high ·school~ require an enrollment much larger than prexel's. "At least onc community of Sisters will be withdrawn from OSNABRUECK (NC)-Bishop Drexel in 1968 because of needs Helmut Hermann Wittler of Os elscwhere." n:.;)rueck, Gel'many, pointed out He noted "the financial reasons iil a pastoral letter that in the for closing Dl'exel have been of 961 Catholic parishes in com importance, but if improved munist East Germany, 2,500 quality education had been pos . Sunday Masses must be cele sible, wc would have made every brated outside churches-in pri effort to find the money." vate homes dnd other buildings.
Churchless Mosses
Newark Plans Pilot Program for Blind NEWARK (NC) - A center to test the job potential of blind persons who also have other' han d,icaps . will be opened here Jill New Jersey by the Mount Car mel GUild, social welfal'e agency il'or' the Newark archdiocese. The one-year plIot pl'ogram will be financed through a $30,OOG federal grant and $10,000 in guild funds. It will be conducted m cooperation with the New Jersey Commission for the Blind. Multiple handicapped people will be put through 12-week tem to determine mobility, manual! dexterity. interest span, muscu lar cool'dination and ability if; care for themselves. Almost half of the perSOJl!l with whom the state commissiOil works have another handic:ll' than blindness. A decision willI be made in each case as UJ whether individuals clln be placed in regular employment or in the more controlled settingfJ. of .a sheltered workshop for the blind.
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'2
Methodist Clergyma~ Criticizes Catholic Pressure for, Schools
THE ANCIiOR-Diocalle of. Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 27, 1967
Pr~ss
GJnd Foreign 'Policy
Theme of Reston's Book
"A leaky roof of a, parochial WASHINGTON (NC)-A lead ing Methodist clergyman has school can be fixed at public ex criticized Catholic "pressure" to pense to benefit the cbildreill, ,"open the door of the publie teachers can be hired, buildings treasury" for support of paro built as wen as children busad By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy under the child-benefit umbrel chial schools. James Reston, of the New York Times, is one of the
"The Catholic Church persists la," he stated. ' in its purpose to educate alll most incisive and pungent of our commentators on current
Damage System Catholic children in parochial affairs. Last year he gave thE; Elihu Root lectures under
Bishop Raines said that gov 'schools," said Bishop Ri~hard C. the auspices of the Council on Foreign Relations. These are
Raines of Indianapolis, president ernment assistance to parochial of the Bishops' Conference of schools would damage the pubUe now published as a book, Tl'!-e of this is, in ~r. Reston's view,
sChool system, claiming that fa Methodist Churches. "But mod Artillery of the Press: Us very high. ''The people want to
ern education is very expensive." 'the Netherlands public school at Influence on American For- understand and believe in the
tendance dropped from 69 per "Instead of cutting their gar eign Policy (Harper and actions of their government, but
cent in 1960 to 28 per cent fum ment according to the cloth they Rowe $3.95; 2500 Crawford Ave- do not really believe." 1966 after state funds were made can afford or are. willing to pay Due, Evanston, TIlinois 60201). Mr. Reston, discerns wide available to confessional schoom. for, they search out a wide va "'My theme," he spread inattention to the largest,
Later, Bishop Raines said th~
riety of arguments intended to aays, "is that the most fateful question of the day,
'persuade the community at large his stand was not based on "any'"
rising power of the questions which cut across
that they are unfairly treated," animosity to the Catholic Churcnn
the United States the realms of the specialists and
or my Catholic friends. the bishop charged. in world affairs, go to the roots of our future and
EDITOR: Terry F. Erock, Bishop Raines addressed 500 In the long run, he said, "state and particularly our fate. promotion director of the delegates to the biennial conven support of Church schools is just ef the American We are dazzled or drowned by rrhomas More Association of tion of the national Women's as bad and dangerous for Cath P r '.; s i d'e nt, facts, statistics, events, asserrequires, not a tions, but not given the bigger, Chicago, has been named ed Division of the American Jewish olics as it is for all other rell-gions." more compliant deeper picture. We may there itor'of the Pittsburgh Catho Congress. Catholic arguments, .he said, B.ress,' but a re- fore go helplessly along with Msgr. James C. Donohue, di lic, succeeding John J. Deedy are accompanied by the "strong '- lentless barrage decisions which are unwise and rector of the department of edu who is to become managing' est pressure on both a state and eation of. the United ~ta~ tIJf facts and possibly fatal.
editor of Commonweal. NC national level." C I' i tic ism, Still Optimlstl., Catholic Conference, declined. Bishop Raines also criticized comment 0Ii. Bishop Raines' lIe as noisy but also as accurate as But Mr. Reston is, nonetheless, Photo.
a statement which he attributed marks. artillery fire." . rather optimistic. He is impressed
to Citizens for Educational Free Because of America·s vastly by the advance of education,
dom, a group which supports pa «:hanged position in the world.' both in quality 'and quantity.
rochial school aid, that "unless new complexities face both the' 'The truly educated will always the public pays the bill,· parents '
governiDent and the' press,:A be a minority, but he beUeves are not free to choose what edu
qw'cker pace and a greater dan- that this minority will be able catio~ they want fOJ:: th~ir chil- , gel' are' involved in curnmt 'to make itself felt, even deciFAIRFIELD (NC)-The presi BELFAST (NC) - Acts that events. Yet old attitudes, rela-" sively f e l t . ' dent of Fairfield University here dren." suggest "heathen practice and llions, and techniques persist This minority will require called for a major emotional and The Methodist leader declared: cannibal ritual" performed by where the. press is concerned. more both of newspapers 'and of intellectual updating among cler.,. 'Child Benefit'" members of a militant Protestant especially in its deaUngs wlUi broadcasting. It will want not '\ gymen if they are to fulfill their "Freedom means the removal group were assailed by a Church IOvernment and vice versa.. more news, but more thoughtful role as citizens in today's urb8lll of' arbitrary' restrictions, Bot the of Ireland clergyman in 'a sermon. Presit'ent AU-pov.rerIaR analysis of the news.' It will in- community. furnishig of. funds to do what I in Grosvenor Hall here. sist on having what Mr. Reston 'Father William C. McInnes. desire beyond what the general It is a gross mistake, Mr. Reoc?" "news' of the mind." S.J., at a citizen-clergy confer The clergyman, the Rev. J. A. public thinks essential and for ton holds, to suppose that the "Ideas," be writes, "are news: ence at the Jesuit-conducted uni Fair, told members of the group, which it ta!Xes itself." press is all-powerful !In foreign see-what John Maynard Keyes versity, criticized the clergy for the Order of. Orange, that the Bishop Raines said he rejected policy. Actually it is the Presi- ,has done to our society with his trying to reach the communit1 "insane banging of drums as the "child benefit" theory whiclt dent who is all-powerful. "Al- ideas," Such news of the 'mind through old methods and ap Orangemen pass Roman Catholic: holds that government assistance most all scientific anell political can be provided both by the proaches. He said this is about chapels, the dancing of bannel"ll may be' given to school children, trends are enhancing the power press and by broadcasting, and "as effective as driving a ,Model that bear the pictures of. if not to the schools. of the President more than they Mr. Reston believes that these T Ford on a superhighway." churches, holy Bibles, and othel' "The child benefit ~laim seems are increasing the power of the media will assume the responsiFather McInnes said that if emblems of our faith,·by Orange Congress or the press." Mr. Res- bility. ", the clergyman is to, be "a sign to me to be but a subterfuge men who have imbibed too much which excuses us for doing indi ton does not hesitate to assert' In the course of the book, Mr. of the in,ner meaniilg 'of life at! strong drink, smacks of heathen that "no sovereign ill history Reston gives us a number of well as man's future, he will rectly what the law forbids' .. practice and cannibal ritual.'" to do 'directly. ever had such power or respon- glimpses of bac:\!:stage Washing- have to take bigger. steps to up The Order of Orange is a lIO sibility." ton, a few anecdotes, reflections date religious institutions and ciety named after William of. President- Johnson, l.lccordtnl% on matters cognate to his theme. himself." ' Orange and formed in 1795 "to to Mr. Reston, has intr.oduced II But, in the main, he sticks with Churches and synagogues are maintain the laws and peace of new doctrine which would den,- the problem which, at the outset, too involved with buildings and the country and the Protestant the press the right to BPECulate he 'proposes, and he treats it not enough with, programs, constitution." It has had a major , WASHINGTON (NC) - A na GO courses of action be?ore ,they not only with knowledge but Father McInnes declared. tional Catholic group has rec influence in Northern Ireland'lI are announced. also with vision. His is a trench' ommended to agencies interested! political life. "Paradoxically, the clergyma!lll. The President, he says, watcbes apt essay on a subject of first is among the comm':lnlty's most The clergyman, who is a mem-' in low.: income housing projects the press very closely, but re- importance. schooled members," the educatol:' a series af five seminars to be bel' of the society, said: "Too gards it as a problem to be manNo Eighth Wonder said, "but his education ,has not held in various sections of the many Orangemen pooh-pooh country between May' and Sep ecumenism as a dirty word. The aged, rather than as an ~ortu. Thornton Willder's lengthy proven pertinent t9 today's only thing they can shout ilJ tember. Illity to be used. new novel, The Eighth 'Day problems." 'Romeward trend.' This is noth The National Catholic Coordi , PresS Manipulatei (Harper and Row, $6.i}5; 49 E. Father McInnes said the clergy He has worked out a'largely 33rd St., New York, N. Y. 10016), have a prophetic role to play iUD. nating CO!'JlIDittee on Economic ing short of an ignorant attempt to stir up strife and bitterness. Opportunity here said the sem IlUccessful technique of llllanlpu- is a mystery story in more senses modern times. inars would afford expert advice It has no foundation illl fact." lation of the press, but the price than one. To begin ,with, there for diocesan and parish agencies is the mystery of the mtirder af and other organizationS inter Breckenridge Lansing in his own .. ua ested in projects under the Na 'backyard on a Summer day illl, b·1 P 1902. Then, there is the mystery U I ti~na1 Housing Act. of heredity and, personal develWASHINGTON '(NC)-A naBOGOTA (NC)"":" Gr<J>upg of opment. There is also the muchtional program. celebrating the " See Us Row-income, workers in, this city larger: mystery of, the meaning 50th anniversary' of the appari , About, have voiced fears that foreign of'th,e universe, of human life, of tions of Our Lady of :Fatima, willi eardinals visiting Bogota's ,&u-" human history. ' b e conducted by the Blue Arm, eharistic ~ongress in AugUst,', , For some readers, there, may of Our' Lady which has head . ONE $TO;
:1968, will, be "kidnapP(ld~ by .SHOPPING CENTEI· : ,.
be, asweU, the mystery ,all to 'quarters' here. members of Colombia's wealthy why' Mr. Wilder goes oft so " The Blue Army bas been' dEs • Televisioa • Grocery dass, long (435 pages) to so little ef- ignated to carry out the United • AppfioMes • FUrnituN TlJ counteraet the pos;JibiUty fect.' There are pasages in the States program by Bishop JoaO that the visiting cardinais wtii book which are entertaining or Pereira Venancio of Leiria, Pw 104 Allen St., New IedforcI Wareham Falmouth be hGsted, wined and dined, By enlightening or both. But in the tugal. The Fatima shrine is ia lei 8-3000. ':Y 5-3'00 997-9354 Ute wealthy and then sent back main it is tedious and exiguous. ,his diocese. ._._._. _"...~-.o-.o-.-.! borne without ever coming iftt,o Mr. Wilder provides loads and )(sgr. Harold Y. Colgan, foun oontact With the poor, many loads of period d,etail.His suc- der and international director 'iiIt ..erkel's ! have invited the cession of settings is abundantly the Blue Army, said: ehurchmen to live ita their supplied, with local color. He, " "The year-Iorlg' jubilee pre-' homes. , strikes an authentic and po,ignant gram will be a two-probe A worker interviewed in. La human note now an" again, as in launching of action and prayer, Rora, officlal bulletin of Caritas, ' his evocation of the dread, 60 or through whic~ we will seek . , Catholic Charities orgarii1l3tiOn,.' more years ago, of the poorhouse. - reach the 'highest goals of' His 'in Bogota: said: "u a cardinal He coins wry definitions and Holiness Pope 'Paul VI and OWl' wishes to see our poverty, to see aphorisms. His observations as to own coun~il: Of, Catholic bishops. "Like a two-stage rocket that '" the life of the unprotected, let the human aspiration and folly Special Rates, to School and Parish Groupe ;. lllim come 'and have a breakfast can, when he is concise, be' pene-, would probe outer space, 'we illll trating. the Blue Army would pro~ the 01f salt broth with us, and eat For BEm Dates, F,~ ,Yow Picnic, Outi"ill or Clombab rice and b~nanas and yucca with But what he hands us is not 'highest meaning of Our LadJr's IllS. Let him come in a public bus a novel ,so much as a heap ,of message at ,Fatima, and harnea CONTACT MANAGB at lincoln Pcut
amid all' the discomforts WE scraps. It is a distinct disappoint- its great power for true Christiasa Phone '-199-6984 _ 636-2744
CDdure." ment. unity and renewaL"
Tells Clergymen Update Methods
D'enounces Acts, Of .Orangern~n, ','
Suggests Low-Cost Housing Seminars
Fear Kidnapping Of Cardinals
Fatima. Apparitions' eerog ra m
,rpi~·~·-f~-·iuild?
J
(ORREIA &.SONS'
low Cost Financing
,WAREHAM ,SAVINGS BANK
LINC,OLN PAR,K
PLA'H'Y-OUR PICH'le -O.UTING NOW!
ltaRan Catholic' Daily Predicts Anticlerical Political Battle BOLOGNA (NC) - A major .forces, inspired by the worst Italian Catholic daily has warned kind of Free Masonry which has been reduced to silence in the of the danger of a new anti elerical political battle against past few decades by the matur the Church in Italy in 1967. ing of religious and civil aware I,'Avvenire d'Italia, Bologna's ness in the country, of forces which now may believe that the Catholic daily, points to an "in moment has come for a resump eredible slogan for an absurd de cision" taken by Italy's tiny tion of their destructive prac tices." Radical party-"1967: Anticler ical Year." ReDigicUis 'iNa!" The Radical party is a leftist The editorial said that, seen party which has no members in from this aspect the Radical pro parliament and whose member gram for reviving anticlericalism ship is probably less than one as a political weapon is "terrify per cent of the electorate in ing," adding that "it is an at Italy. Despite its small size, it tempt to make Italy regress to can be vociferous and is re the anticlericalism of the end of garded in Italian politics as a 19th century, except that the party of opinion rather than of present brand has even less cul mrect political action. tural dignity and fewer historical lEvin 1lIIlfnuenncIil reasons." Charging that the Uadical It is precisely this opinion fac tor which worries the editors of party intends to conduct a cam paign "on a national scale for the L'Avvenire d'Italia. purpose of reopening in Italy e The paper notes that the Radi religious war," L'Avvenire d'Ita cals are "too small to play a politically important role but lia noted that the first scheduled large enough to exercise an evil event in this campaign was to be a gathering Feb. 12 in a Roman influence in the life of the coun try and in certain sectors of 'lay' theater. public opinion. One of the main speakers. was "The matter seems all the Socialist Deputy LOrill For more worrying if we interpret it tuna, who is the deputy who in as the symptom of the reawaken troduced . the bill to permit iDe CIIf those obtuse anticlerical divorce in Italy.
r··"",~,......,.,."..r-·'·--~·I
-iii
THE ANCHOR-
13
I
Thurs., April 27, 1967
Ii
New York Plans
!
fam~ly
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EAST AND WEST: Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople during an interview at his headquarters in Istanbul with NC News staffer, Father John P. Donnelly of the NC Rome Bureau. Father Doimelly's tie is not the "new look" for post-conciliar priests; Turkish law forbids wearing the Roman collar. NC fhoto.
Survey
NEW· YORK (NC) - Msgr. George A. Kelly, Secretary for Education for the archdiocese of New York, has announced that Ii survey of the family back~ grounds of archdiocesan high school students will be inaugu- dated here. . In the first study of its kind! in the United States, some 300,000 Catholic families will be asked to supply economic, racial! and ethnic data. No school board. public or private, has attempted! to research its school populatioQ so thoroughly. "Many people iIi New York who have never set foot in &I Catholic school and even many of our faithful .who send theili' children to Cathoilic schools. know little of the true story of Catholic education," Msgr. Kelly said. "To help tell this story and! to increase the awareness of the contribution that Catholic schoow make to the community, we must have accurate information. "The present survey of 300,000 New York families will begin to supply the needed information,," the priest stated. Louis Gary and Dr. E. Belvia Williams of Teachers College. Columbia University, are iIi!. eharge of the project. .
II the hungry mthe world lined UP outside your door,
<
Iheline.Mstrelch around the world 25 timesl
Dear ~ 1_bI••• ell...." fO-lbl thiS· lit of $....' ....
A D D J 1 & 1 u s . _ . . , . . . _ ~
""'lO help a missiOnary feed the starving. ~
_
THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP!
. . . . . ~.,.0"III60"1M,
~ IMRSC'JOR,'" tIOOl£TY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF'I'HE FAITH, 36e FWTH AVENUE, N. Y. lcoot
14
THE ANCHOR....:Di&lese .~l
•
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fJf·foJl R"wer-TIMII$.Apr. 21.
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1967. '
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. .Stresses Little ,Importance' ·In ftconomic Sys,tem N@me ,
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By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Dllrector,' SocnaH Adi@n J])ey»t., NeWC) What should the American economic system be called? In response to this"question-which takes on special significance in view of Pope Paul's recent encyclical-many, if not most Americans· would probably answer: Capitalism. But such an answer really the National Planning Associa 'Wouldn't be very helpful to tion in Washington, a non-politi the mythical man from Mars, ,cal organization where leaders of because, if he had stopped, off agriculture, business, labor and in other parts /If the world be 'd'ore comirig to the United States, ~e would have
,observed th at
there are many
,definitions
,cif capitalism so
radically differ
~t one from
the other as to
be almost con
tradictory. The
problem, then,
is to qualify the
word capitalism
In such a way tIS to enable the man from Mars to distinguish between the American econonlic system and that of Country :x, or between the American 'ecDnomic system of 1967 and that of 1900. The difficulty in choosing the right adjective to go along with ~e word capitalism was high Righted some years ago in an editorial in The $tatist, a British weekly devoted to commerce and mdustry. The StBtist said that the Americsan economic system ,ll3 a kind of "socialist capitalism." Sees J!>amdox ' The coupling of 'these two ap parently contradictory words may at first Sight seem paradox !cal, The statist 2.dmitted. The paradox, we are told, lies in the widely, accepted vIew that the United States pro~ides the set ting for the world's most unin hibited free-for-all capitalism. This, says The Statist, is a false 'Ylew of the Ameriean economy, for the fact of the :matter is that -m many respects t!lle American .. one of the m03t regulated <economies of the free world. "In few other capitalist coun tries are the blUlkin(J and insur ance companies and 1be capital market so hemmed lin and often restricted by regulDtions as in the United States· ¢ . . . Good Diseus:doa This would seem to be a fairly accurate statement us far as' it goes, but does it foll/lw logically that the American economic sys tem should be described as a kind of "socialist capitalism'!'" Is "socialist" the pIloper adjee Uve, or is it burden:ed witkl so many varied, not to Gay contra dictory connotations as to be a oource of even further confusion to the inquiring reporter from Mars? There is a good di!lcussion of ilbis whole problem in the new and revised edition of a book en 'titled "The Economy of the American People" published Qy
Chl!AlI'cihl~s SpOrtlSOr
EClllm~U1lgCal SclhocR
,FRANKLIN LAKES (NC) - , Four. Protestant and Catholic churches here in New Jersey' have announced the formation of an ecumenical adulrt scllool which will offer four courses in eontemporary religion th ia Spring. .
The classes will be held in
l!Iost Blessed Sacrament Catho
llic school. Cooperating with
Blessed Sacrament in the ven
ture are the Methodist, Presby
~ian and Episcopal churches.
the professions join in programs . to maintain and strengthen pri vate .initiative and enterprise. No Agreement The authors of this book, Ger hard Colm and Theodore Geiger -in reply to tlieir own question, "What should the American eco nomic system be called?",point out, in summary, that our system "is neither capitalism nor social . ism in the. historical meanings of the terms. . "It cannot be classified under these headings because it is dom inated neither by the State nor by private business nor by any , other single group. All the insti tutions':- public and private play their roles with a great deal of self-determination and self responsibility." What Colm and Geiger are saying, in effect, ~ that their ,question - What should the American economic system be called?-{:annot be answered in one or two words, that there is, in other words, no single agreed upon name for the system. But what's in a name? The important thing to note is that under the American system "an the institutions-public and pri vate-play their roles with a great deal of seM-determination and self-responsibility." The big question today w whether or not the several insti tutions are doing well enough in this regard or, to put it another way, whether or not they are playing their respective roles with enough self-responsibility and with enough concern for the public interest.
'$83,987 in Grants For Broadcasting ST. LOUIS (NC) - The Na tional CARTA Foundation pre sen~ $83,987 in financial grants to radio and TV producerS and to offices of radio and TV on a ma~ funds princip~ U ~ second annual Carta Grants din ner in Chicago. Archbishop John J. Krol of Philadelphia, president of CAR TA's board of directors, pre sented the awards. Approved by the U. S. bishops during the third session of the Second Vatican Council, the pur pose of the CARTA Foundation is to provide financial grants to agencies' and dioceses operating in the field of religious broad casting. The funds for the.. foun dation, whieh has its headquar ters here, are made available through Catholic fraternal soci eties Gf the U. S.
IELECiRUCAB.
ContractorS
Rave you ever
bought a leDion
la a tray' 01 tORlatoes!
..
That over-ripe tomato that squlshed when-you took It OtIt @1 iltte tray. Made you ma~ didn't it? Let's face it, that was's ICl smoo". And you get one of these Orily too often when you thull'4k itlhe prica is right - but the produce isn't!. fi4j f~t National we get rid of the "lemons" so you don't hav~ ro. We try to handle OUIl' fruits .and vegetables so care ffllll~lf t1ha~ W0 seldom have to discard any. This is important to YOI!!llbscaus~.Bt means we can always offer you quality with realistic vahJe. Mind you, we aren't perfect. So, if you should ev~l1' get a oO.lemon" in your First National fruits or vegetable~, , jll.!J~tel~ o~r produce manager. He'll make it right in any way yoo pleue.
/'
Tou"colDe lirst
:at First National 944 CQunty St. New Bedford
.,
-
~thor.c
U
Continued from Page One school of theology and m the light of "further lnfonnation surrounding the non-renewal" of the priest's services. The statement brought to an end the four-day boycott be gun when Father Walter J. Schmitz, 5.5., dean of the school of theology, declared that the theology faculty "cannot and will not function unless and until Father Curran is reinstated." Father Schmitz appealed to the rest of the university faculty for support and obtained it. The 6,600 students and 600 faculty members returned to classes April 25. Archbishop O'Boyle comment ed: "Since in this case no charges have been preferred by the board of trustees, I would emphasize that their present action must not be interpreted as in any way af fecting the theological issues in jected by the news media. In particular, this decision in no way derogates from the teaching of the Church and statements by the popes and bishops on birth control. "As with every appointment to a teaching position in Catholic schools, statements in the field of doctrine are subject finally, to the teaching authority of the Church," the prelate said. Resisting reporters' attempts to draw him into a discussion of birth control or other theological issues, Father Curran said, "This is not a theological debate. All of us recognize the authority of the Church." The priest said the is sue was academic freedom and the right of a scholar to defend himself against specific charges at a hearing. It was also announced that, at the request of the faculty of the school of theology, a meeting will be held between representatives of the school and those of the board of trustees to clarify issues involving renewal of appoint ments and procedures. The issues in the university's academic community as a whole will be studied by a new com mittee on survey and objectives. The committee was recently ap pointed by the board of trustees "jt!l Dr. Carroll Hochwalt of St.Louis as chairman. Othel!" IDemands
"The immediate battle is won," a faculty leader said in an inter ... view, "but the war is still far from over. What we must do now is prevent a recurrence of this." It was reported that the faculty will request four major changes in the university's by-laws. They are: 1. Add six faculty members to the board of trustees; 2. Repeal a highly criticized regulation that limits rectorship to priests and provide some fac ulty participation in the choice of a new president; 3. Overhaul the makeup of the University Senate so as to insure that each school be allowed to elect one representative for ev ery 25 or fewer faculty members; 4. Ensure that there is faculty representation on the newly es tablished committee to study the university's needs and goals.
P'riest Acting Head
Of State Program
SANTA FE (NC)-Gov. David F. Cargo of New Mexico said he
will "pay no attention" to criti cism over his appointment of a Catholic priest as acting director of this state's anti-poverty pro gram. At a press conference Cargo highly praised the work of Father Robert Garcia, who was granted a leave of absence by Archbishop James Peter Davis of Santa Fe from diocesan work last October to serve as deputy director of the proa:;ram.
Daughter of Diocesan ,Employee Is Named Thurs'., April 27, 1967 District 3 Student Nurse of Year Ukrainians Seek TtfE ANCHOR-
Kathleen Marie MUllTay, 20, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William X. C. Murray of 808 Slade Street, Fall River, is a giant-size portion of energy, enthusiasm and good humor wrapped in a 5 feet % inch package. A senior at St. Luke's Hospital School of Nursing in New Bedford, Kathleen has just been selected Student Nurse of the Year in District 3, a widespread geographical area encompassing seven schools of nursing in South eastern Massachusetts. She
Mass in English DETROIT (NC) - Some 700 members of three Ukrainian Byzantine Rite Catholic parishes in this area are seeking to have a Sunday Mass in English be cause they do not understand the old Slavonic tongue now used in the liturgy. A spokesman for the group said the petition signed by the parishioners has been forwarded to Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate. Attorncy Timothy F. StQck. spokesman, said the petition was sent to the Apostolic Delegate "because our own bishop can take no action in this matter". "Many of our people, PHtiCU larly our youth, understan I little Ukrainian and no Slavonic~ They have a need and a right to wor ship in their own tongue, En glish," the petition said. The group which prepared the petition is the Layman's Com mittee of three parishes in De troit and Dearborn Heights. They are under the jurisdictiolll of Bishop Jaroslav Gabro of th0 Ukrainian Byzantine Rite Dio cese of Chicago.
now is in competition for the title of Massachusetts Student Nurse of the Year. Winner will be announced the middle of May. "I've always wanted to be a nurse," says the exuberant title holder, a graduate of Dominican Academy, Fall River, where her sister Elizabeth, 16, also a pros ~~,' pective nurse, now is a junior. "Once," she admits, "I thought I'd like to be a doctor, but nurs ing today offers 50 many oppor tunities, I'm content." Her selection as Student Nurse of the Year of District 3 was a thrill for Kathleen. But her ex citement was mild by comparison with that exhibited by her father, William Murray, who has worked in the Diocesan Chancery Office for the last six years. "It's my prerogative as a par ent," Mr. Murray announces. "If I can't be proud, who can?" lP'rou411 JFamfiny Enjoying the thrill of the mo 1i,@'t7Wil®U'U U'@ 1flU'@@~h ment along with her father and , ~U'U «:[}u@U'G(cY A[9l[9l®@~ mother are Kathleen's sister Ruth, 21, employed at Bristol PORTLAND (NC) - Laymetil Knitting Mills in Fall River; her will be available to speak from brother William Jr., a senior at KATJH[LEEN MAJlnE MUElRA1l pulpits of parish churches in thio Durfee High; Elizabeth; her year's appeal for Catholic Chari brother Thomas, 13, a seventh ties funds in the Portland (Ore.) grader at St. Patrick's S~hool; - enrolled in the Army Nurse based on a number of things that archdiocese. Corps' Student Nurse Program made her school nominate her as her sister Eileen, 11, a fifth Archbishop Robert J. Dwyei' grader at St. Patri<:k's; her will go on active duty as an its choice. The nominee must be in the granted permission for the u~ brother Tim, 9, a fourth grader Army nurse. While in the Army, she hopes upper third of her class. She of laymen as speakers ,.,if parish at St. Patrick's; and "Patricia, 3, must perform well in her ward priests ask for them. A speakers" who's creating a rumpus at to work for her degree in nurs ing. Currently, she says she "en bureau, made up of people ac duty, be active in extra-curricu home." joys general nursing, but I'm lar activities and know how to quainted with the charities w· On Crapo Ward at 51.' Luke's, most interested in surgical nurs being organized, according t@ where Kathleen now ill on duty, ing or working in the operating get along with people. Al Carrado, chairman of Catho "You're supposed to be a well awaiting her June graduation, room. lic Charities advisory board. The rounded person," she says. she is a stiffly-starched "If ever I specialize, though I Amusement creeps back into appeal is schedulec from Aprffi uniformed and efficient student think it will be in psychiatric 30 to May 7. her voice. nurse. Her tiny st. Luke's cap nursing." perched on the back of her head Her 'father, she admits, is fly Battne 011' BUlng~ - "When my hair is teased I can ing high as, a result of 'her selec Once a blonde, Kathleen's hair tion as District 3 titleholder. pin it on, otherwise I have to ~nJ)DMDIriI~ (C(l)ll'ilfrlr«lJ«:fr©i7 is darkening now - "It's on anchor it with bobby pins under "He has me President of the neath"-Kathleen moves quietly change status," she says - and United States or General of the M«lJS@[j'W'lf and competently through her she's fighting the battle of the Anny now,". she says, flashing a bulge to pare down her trim 134 br~d grin. duty hours. "Years ago, training was pounds. "I'm on a diet," she ad Then Kathleen Murray looks V~~TO~
good," she says, "but student mits, adding that the only way at her watch. It is time to get she expects weight "really" to nurses also were used !for service back to duty. Selection as State on the wards. Today training is come off "is by starving myself." Student Nurse of the Year would Looking at her, one wonders why be nice, but more important are more educational." In July, Kathleen and her she bothers. the chores of the moment. Getting back to her once-being classmates will take their State Attention to her responsibili FAIIUIAVIEN WY 4-1321 Nursing Board exams, climax of a-doctor dream, Kathleen says ties is one reason why Kathleen their three years of study. Then when she graduated from Do Murray is a good nurse. in "about September," Kathleen minican Academy, "the idea of 12 more years of study was too much. Appoint lJJniverrsmty "Besides, today, so many fields ON CAPE COD are open in nursing that you can Apostolate Darecft'or do practically anything you want NEW YORK (NC) - Father to do. I'm completely satisfied." Thomas J. Connellan, C.S.P., has Nominatfion Requfirements been named to the newly created Her selection as Student Nurse position of director of the New 00: the Year in District 3 was SPring 5-0700 York archdiocesan Office. for the University Apostolate, which Translation Day will coordinate Cat.holic efforts on the campuses of non-Catholic WASHINGTON (NC) - A universities and colleges located jointly U. S. Senate approved AMPLE PARKING within the archdiocese. resolution calls upon President This new seL'tion of the Office Lyndon B. Johnson to designate of Education of the New York Sept. 30 as Bible Translation Day. archdiocese will be responsible St. Jerome, first translator of ~for assisting Catholic centers at the Old and New Testaments, the various campuses, helping died on Sept. 30. l their chaplains am: staffs, as well I as recruiting and training new I chaplains, Sisters and lay lead ers for campus work. Father Connellan, a Paulist with considerable experience in Contractors sinee lfDi.3 Reg. Master Plumber 2930
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 27, 1967
Prelate Urges Catholic Schools Lead in Eliminating. Segregation
Observat~on
on Revolution Bears on Social Cha~ge Ji'rom "Social Revolution in the New Latin America" { Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. ,
We must recognize that the term "revolution" is terribly ambiguous, writes Most Rev. Mark G. McGrath, C.S.C. We speak of industrial revolution; we may even speak of intel Ilectual, scientific or religious revolutions. Politically the ~rm "revolution" can be of fixity regarding all the aspects eed to describe anything of our Christian belief and prac rlI'Om a military coup d'etat, tice that would freeze forever which in effect changes in equal permanency what is es Illothing except the' man in
marge; to a revolution of inde
n-endence, such as all the Ameri
ean nations have
experienced, by
which they sev
ered their alle
giance to for
eign powers
while continu
Ing to develop
,~ In their familiar
Ideological and
lIOCial patterns;
.. to a commu
IIlist revolution,
wch as Cuba
IlIlOW suffers, which violently breaks a people from its ancient ideals and thrusts it into new molds, ideological, economic and . political. The 'term "revolution" hali been so used and abused in Latin America that to a Catholic in Mexico it may be repulsive; to • Catnolic in Brazil meaningless; and to a Catholic in Chile neces lJ8ry. For the one it connotes reli fIlous persecution and political oppression; to the llecond it is merely a political phrase, the ceommon.. currency of every poli tician; to the third it is a descrip tion, however general, of the llonging for fundamental social <llhtmges which the great mass of 1lhe population ardently and tustly desires. Can the term "revolution" be lmSed in a Christian sense? It de pends who uses it and where. '!'be directors of this CICOP meeting have chosen to use the ~ific term "social xevoluti@n" 90 describe a proceSIl which is IlIlOt only desirable but urgently IIlecessary. Previous speakers Olll this pro Ifram have graphically described' the changes that are taking place lin Latin America. We would'like to point out why we' cannot sim ply fear and oppose these dlanges; but must stri ve to lIis G:Over their meaning and gi ve llhem their direction. without r:a violence, without hate,for the benefit of all. The changes we are experienc ling are both quantitative and qualitative. They augment consid erably our daily task as Chris tians; and they diversify it more and more. Not to see this and yet to plunge ahead in a generous effort to save Latin America for God or for democracy as might bave been done fifty years ago is to forget that there are' now three times as many people in Latin America, most of whom live, think and react quite differ ently from the customary pattern el fifty years ago. Charell and Chanc;e When we speak of the "C1MtFcll -« Social Revolution in LaUn · America" we must divide' OUI' · eonsideratlons into two aspects: .' "ant, the Church and secial ohange, somewhat in the ab lItract; atld secondly, the Churcll amidst the profound and rapid · ehange that now affects Latin American society. Many have remarked that ·we Catolics must develop a theolegy of. progressive change. We have in late centuries often allewed eurselves to fall, into a mE'Rta!iq
sential and what is transitory in our teaching anc;! in our worship. Take the liturgy for instance. How difficult it was for us to "get over the hump" of resist ance to the use of the vernacular in the Mass. Latin in the liturgy. in the minds of most of us, had taken on a 'permanency and nec essity almost equal to the dogma of transubstantiation. Almost up to the eve of the Council those who spoke or wrote in favor of introducing the vernacular into the celebration of the Mass were widely consid ered thoughtless rebels who were toying with the very de posit of the faith. Yet now, post factum, after the publication of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, we rec ognize that not only the use of Latin but also the employment of many other elements of cult in the Mass (vestments, gestures, Gregorian chant, etc.) are histor ical accretions, which in their time represented improvements in the manner of dramatizing the divine sacrifice and which may and must be subje.ct to change in our time and in the future, under the'-careful guidance of Church. authority, so that this sacI'ifice will be more intelligible and meaningful and more fruit fully shared in by the peoples of new centuries' and different cul tures. Prog'ress in Doctrine Even in matters of doctrine we have'been taught by the Council to recognize, to expect and even to encourage progressive change. Revealed doctrine, the word of God, the deposit of faith - this does not change. "Though heaven and earth should pass away," said ~he Lord, "My word will stand" (Mark 13:.31). But there has been through. the centuries, there is now and there will be until the end of time progress in our increased understanding of . that Word. Theology is not a closed sci e,nce, of which we have only to learn and repeat the 'well-pol ished conClusions It is a contin ual quest for a better under standing of Scripture, through the controlled application of the many linguistic; archaeological and historical sciences developed since the 19th century which are like so many tools with which to delve ever more profoundly into the" fuller and more accurate meaning of the revealed Word and the, life of the Apostolic Church, where this Word re ceived its first and most signifi cant external form. It is perfectly reasonable that in our progressive appreciation of the fuller meaning of revela tion, in its~lf and in its applica tion to the ever new circum stances of human life, that there be varying opinions and inter pretations. But only the infalli ble ChurCh, through its papal or conciliar .authority, or its URiver sal teaching and belief, can im pose upon us any single lflter pretation of a revealed doctrine. Until this occurs no school of theGlogical opinion, however numerous·its exponents, is tanta mount to doctrine. Furthermore, even when a doctrinal interpre-
RECEIVES GRANT: Sis tel' :Maria Linda, S.U.S.C., principal of St. Jean-Baptiste School, Pawtucket, is among 54 French teachers who will study this Summer at Arca chon, France in an advanced level Nationa:I Defense Edu cation Act Institute. The in ,stitute program will include field trips and a week in Par·is.
Stresses Public
Aid for Schools
WATERBURY (NC) - Unless parochial schools receive some public aid soon, "the Church wiH soon find -itself with a school sFt.em it can no longer finance," Auxiliary Bishop Joseph F. Donnelly of Hartford said as he broke ground for a new Cath@lic high school here. "So serious. has been the change in our schools at the ele mentary level that today we _must take a hard look at our school finances and make some hard decisio,ns." he said. Bishop Donnelly said the same problem exists on the secondary level, and noted that plans for two Catholic-high schools in the Hartford diocese had recently been dropped. "We have about reached the' limit of the burden we can put on the families· of the children we have in our elementary schools. The Church will soon find itself with a school system . it can no longer finance unless the fathers of our school chU dren can share 'in their educa tional tax dollars." The week before state Sen. T. Clark Hull proposed a com mission t" "study pu15lic assist ance to non-public education." tation becomes for us an inte gral part of the doctrine itself, through the infallible teaching of the Church, this does not close down that doctrine nor end our intellectual search and progress in its regard. but generally opens up a whole series of new vistas to be explored for a further and richer understanding. In March of last year, when I enjoyed the privilege of a pri vate audience with the Holy Father, he referred to one not able progress in our understand ing of revealed doctrine simply and feelingly. "Is it not marvel ous," he said, "that after twenty centuries the Church now cornea to define herself!" Truly the progress obtalfled iI& oor own lifetimes in a thealog ical penetration of the Church'. inner life and her meaning for the world isa living testimony of the Holy Spirit active ill the progressive enrichment 8£ our Catholic faith. These observa tions on a dynamic and progres sive approach to an understand ing of revelation have a bearing, too, on our approach to· social change.
BERLIN (NC)-A proposal to bus Negro students from city parochial schools to nearby suburban ali-white schools was made here in New Jersey by the executive editor of the Catholic Star Herald, Camden, N.J. dioc'esan newspaper. Msgr. Salvatore J. Adamo, who is also rector of Immaculate Conception cathedral -in Camden, urged Catholic schools to "pledge themselves to lead the way in crushing segregated education." Addressing the annual Camden regional PTA conference, held in Our Lady..o·f Mou'nt Carmel parish here, Msgr. Adamo called for the "opening up of our elementary and high schools to a minimal 15 per,cent Negro enrollment, even if it means inviting non-Catholics to attend." He told participants of the conference that criticism of the
degree of racial integration ill private and parochial schools op erated by Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faiths was "justi fled." "These schools were pictured as havens for suburban middle and upper class white familiea who fled racial integration in city public schools," Msgr. Ad amo said. "We must admit this criticism is justirfied," he continued. "It won't prevent passage of the Fair Bus Bill-now awaiting action by the state Senate-and for that we can rejoice. Yet the com plaint should trouble us. "For the complaint is accurate and well-founded. Not only has it been borne out by a recent shocking report of the U. S. Commission on Civil Rights, but it has been fortified by sociological studies of Catholic schools in specific areas of the nation."
HELP PEOPLE HE,LP THEMSELVES THE HDLY FATHER'S MISSIDN A!~ TO fHE ORIIlNTAL C~URCH
IN Want to help somebody, reafly help himP Help SYRIA, him help himself. Here are 'two examples•••'. DOCTOR Italian-born physician Fanny Tornago, who de· FANNY livers hundr.eds of babies yearly In Syria's deso· TORNAGO late Hauran, Is now training Illiterate girls to be good wives. ''The girl who knows how to keep house, sew, and raise healthy children can al· most select tha man she'll marry," Dr. Tomago says. "A sewing-machine we can teach her with (needed: six machines at $125 each)' Is her key to fll happy marriage, healthy children and a FROM better Syria." ••• From India Helen Breen reo INDIA, ports that the monks In Kurlsumala through a HELEN neWly-formed cooperative are showing their BREEN farmer-neighbors how to get more milk for their children by up-to·date anlmel husbandry. To visit these farmers and to get their own milk to market the monks must have a Jeep ($3,60Q In India) and trailer ($645). All things consld· ered;lt's a vital Investment. For years to come, like the monks of old, these priests and Brothers can teach thousands how 110 help themselves. ••• Give them a handl Monsignor Nolan will send your gifts, large and small, overseas 1m· mediately. .
n
THEY $975 gives a parish priest In India a two·acre DO 'model farm' for his own food and his parish/on. THE ers' Instruction. -$35 buys .. plow, $1.25 .. hoe, WORK $2.36 II shovel. Help people help themselves'
c•
CHILD For only $10 a month you canslve I!l home and OF II future to an abandoned cl1lld In India. We'll YOUR send you his photo (or hers), channel your OWN letters, keep you Informed. Would you prefer II boy or g/r11 ••• For $1 !II month be a member of our ORPHANS BRfAD CLUB, keeping food on the table In over 500 orphanages. C~
PHONE Don't walt too long to revise your will. Our legal YOUR title: CATHOLIO NeAR EAST WELFAR! ASSOCIATION. LAWYER We uso your gifts 8S you direct, In the Hoi)' Father's name.
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PIWICII CARDINAL IPIt.LMAN, .....1dInt MIGR. JQttN CL NOLAN, NaUonallecrttarr Write: OATHOLIO NIAIt IMT WILPAlti AIiOO.
aao Mad110ft Avenu. "New York, N.Y. 10017
Ttleplton.. 111/YUkOft .lS84O
_~.'anRiver-Thurs.Apr.27.l_
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CATHOLIC CHARITIES APPEAL
SILVER JUBILEE YEAR
MAY 7-17
What does :t mean to you?
Co
tfI
The opportunifly to raise your sights to the leveE of a $25.00 .Jubilee Gift An act of gratitude for 25 years of Charitable SelTYice
.Happiness is
0
0
0
•
Boys with their pet at Sf Vincent de Paul
Campo an agency of the Catholic Charities Appeal.
. Tltis Message Sponsored by The following Individuals and Business Cence,ns In The Diocese 01 fall River FaD River BRADY ELECTRIC SUPPlY CO. CASCADE DRUG CO. EDGAR'S FAll RIVER - BROCKTON GLOBE MANUfACTURING CO.
INtERNATIONAL LADIES' GARMENT WORKERS UNION lOUIS HAND,' INC. MacKENZIE AND WINSLOW, INC. MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS GERAlD E McNALLY, CONTRACTOR GILBERT ·c. OLIVEIRA INSURANCE AGENCY
It A. McWHIRR COMPANY SOBILOFF BROTHERS STERLING BEVERAGES, INC. SUU.IVAN'S TEXTILE WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA AFL-CIO
North
Attle~ oro
JEWELED CROSS COMPANY,
INC.
Taunton MOONEY AND COMPANY, INC.
-
I
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 27,.1967-
PREVOST HIGH EXPANDS: The Fall River High School staffed by
tile Brothers of Christian Instruction will expand its facilities and thus
double its enrollment from 300 to 600 students. A special act must be
r ..·
Nine New
rP~Bests
passed by the State legislature in order to allow the asquisition of the land fr-om Lafayette Park in order that the northward expansion of the building may be erected.
Interfaith Panels
Diocesan Teachers. to Meet in Attleboro
Continued from Page One ~ost High School and Our Lady of Providence Seminary.
His diaconate ass"gnment was
Continued from Page One topher, R.S.M., Salve Regina St. Joseph's, New Bedford. Editor of Science Program; Scott, College, Newport, R.I." "Teen Rev. Mr. DeschenlCs will' cele Foresman and ·Co. agers in the Community." brate his First Solemn Mass at Dr. William H. Conley High school teachers,on Thurs 11:30 'A.M. Sunday, May 21 in day afternoon will hear Sister The keynote speaker for the Sacred Heart Church, North At M. Lumena O'~uJlivan, S.S.J., teachers' convention was born tleboro. He will be assisted by High School Supervisor, Arch in Sharon, Wis. and has gathered Rev. Orner Lussiel' as arch diocese of Boston, speak on wide experience in educational priest; Rev. Gerard Chabot, dea "Freedom and Discipline in Re-· matters in various institutions 'eon, and Rev. Rertrnnd Chabot, ligious Education." and educational organizations ~bdeacon. ' Later in the afternoon'elemen throughout the Mid-west and He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. tary school teachers will have east coast. ' AdenaI'd Deschenes, 878 Mount the opportunity to hear Mrs. The father of four children Hope Street, North Attleboro. Rhea Barney, Director of Head and veteran of World War II Rev. Mr. Deschene:, graduated start, Fall River, "Teaching the has received degrees from Loy from St. Francis Hi gh School, Disadvantaged Child" and Ther ola ,U., Chicago; Northwestern Biddeford, Me. and attended St. ese Bluhm who will repeat her Francis College in that city for previous lecture for a new two years. His diaconate assign audience. ment was Holy Name, Fall River. Continued from Page Six The high school teachers will . Rev. Mr. Oliveira is the son of be divided into the departments mittee members are completing preparations for a house to house Mr. and Mrs. John Oliveira, 85 each already specializes in: Re Scott Street, New BI~dford. He ligion: Sister Joseph Adele, campaign that constitutes the Is a graduate of Holy Family O.L.V.M., CCD Coordinator in second part of the Appeal. The first stages of the Special High Schoo: and Ou[" Lady of the Diocese of Fall River, "Film Gifts aspect show a strength that Providence Seminary. His Sum ence: William Deering, "Coor surely act as an agent to
mer diaconate assignment was Study 'in Religion Classes"; Sci Immaculate Concepti:on, New dinating Our Science Programs"; raise the sights of our parish Bedford. a English: Brother Joseph Zutelis, committee members. , In the parishes, 13,000 commit He will celebrate his First C.S.C., Chairman, English De Solemn Mass at 5 P.M. Sunday, partment, Notre Dame High teemen are processing 100,000 May 21 in Our Lady of Mount School of West Haven, Conn.,' contact cards for mailing on April 29. Carn: 1 Church, New Bedford. "The Role of Structure in Teach Chairman Raymond U. Kelliher Bev. ! ·· ... uel Ferreira will preach. ' ing Literature and Composition." On Friday, the speaker of the issued this statement to the press Re\", :. :1'. Arruda will celebrate
bis First Solemn Mass in St. general session will be William this morning. "A friendly honed organization is at work in every Michael's Church, Fall River at Reedy, Editor, William H. Sad 11:15 A.M.' Sunday, May 21. lier, Inc., who will speak on phase of the .,Appeal. Naturally, Archpries(will be Rev. Louis G. "Religious Education in an Age our present emphasis is on doing an exceptional job in that the Mendonca and concelebrants will of Renewal."
The day's activities for the members of this committee are be Rev. John Andrews, Rev. Louis Cardoso, Rev, Lows Diogo, . elementary teachers will include hard at work to complete their talks by Mary Griffin, Ph.D., contacts with a new high in Bev. Joseph Ferreira, Rev. Man uel Rego, Rev. Evaristo Tavares Assistant Professor of Education, generosity. ."Our very early returns indi and Rev. Donald Vclozo. The Boston College, "Educational preacher will be Rev. James M. Revolution in the Classroom" cate an iticreased generosity and appreciation of the twenty-five Burns, S.S. of St. Mary's Sem- and Robert T. Linstone, Prin cipal of the Roaring Brook years of charitable service to the inary. . School in Avon, Conn., "Non He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. graded: An Educational Expel'':' community. There is a degree of realization, too, that costs have Clement Arruda, 3'4' Malvey iment." increased for the construction atreet, Fall River. Speakers for the high school Rev. Mr. Sylvia is the son of teachers will be Francis' G. and capital improvement of in stitutions. The zest with which Mr. and Mrs. . Sylvia, Driscoll, Superintendent of this message is being brought to 333 Dartmouth Street, South Schools in Avon, Conn., "The 'the business community by'the Dartmouth. ' High School and the Nongraded ,'committee members is admir He will celebrate his Fi I'st Sol Concept" ·and Sister Mary Chris-- ., able. ' '
emn Mass at 11 Sunday, May 21
"A Chairman has to be, many in Our Lady of Mount Carmel' Crucifixes to Stay things, the most disagreeable is Church, New Bedford, with Rev. .being the one who must con-' ,Bavcir~cin. Courts Terrence F. Keenan: ..and'Rev. Paul E. Canuel concelebrants. MUNICH. (NC) - A Bavarilin , stantly remind 'the Solicitors to Bev.. Manuel Andrade will be state court 'here has refused to make returns qUickly and often, , , preacher. , invalidate ';1 1958 decree by the to Area Headquarters. . ':'fhe' SPeciil1Gift section Bavarian ministry of Justice that 'there .must be crucifixes 'in tinue~' throllgb May 6th." $undQy, Closing;,l\.aw. .courtrooms of the state. ' . AUSTIN·, ('NC) - ' Gov • .John The demand to throw out 'the eonnally of Texas signed a bill ,ruling was made by.the.Human- , here tightening .the Sunday· ·ist Union,. a ,federation, which closing. la~ . by repealing the says it opposes "the intolerance present ' "emergency "purchase" and privileges"of church in' pub Pres~rilPtions,called· for provisions. -The law will prohibit lic life." Tha .view of the union, and delivered stores from operating on ..the headquartered here, is that the LOFT
consecutive days of Saturday and cruc,ifixes deprive the court,. CIHOCOLAYES
Sunday, and some 40 categories rooms of the. character of a 600 Cottage St. 994-7439
of merchandise are speciRically state institution and the judg~s' New Bedford
prohibited from sale. of their independence. .
'Schedule Two D@y Conventnon ,Next Week
Specia~
G;fts
will
as
U., Evanston, Ill.; Seton Hall U., Sout!?- Orange, N.J.; St. Ambrose College, Davenport, Iowa; Fair field U., Fairfield, Conn.; Man ha,ttan College, N.Y.~ 'and Mary crest College, Iowa. The 60-year-old educator has held high posts at St. Scholas tica High School; School of Com merce, Loyola U.; Wright Jun ior College, Chicago; ,So Office of Education; Universi College, Loyola; Seton Hall .; Mar quette U.; University of Notre D:tme; Carnegie Foundation and Sacred Heart University, Bridge port, Coim. In the literary field, Dr. Con'; ley is editor of the Catholic School Journal and the Official Guide to Catholic Educational Institutions. He is also the auth or of "Introductory Business Mathematics" and "Evaluation of Terminal General Education." Robert T. Linstone The speaker on "Nongraded:
An Educational Experiment"
was born in New York City. He
is a doctoral candidate at the
, U. of Mass. and holds a B.A. from
the U. of Hartford; a Certificate
in Psychiatry from the .U. of
Copenhagen, Denmark, and a Masters in Education. The principal of the Avon, Conn. school, was the director of
Nongraded Research' Project
from 1961 to 1964. He also is a
member of educational societies
in the State of Connecticut and
has contributed to many educa tional works and projects.
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CQ.ntinued from Page One "The purpose of these panels is' informative, not controver sial," stated Rev. Pierre E. La chance, O.P. of St. Anne's Priory. "The more we know of one another's'religious beliefs, ideals and way of living, the more shall we overcome prejudice and grow in lJlutual respect and esteem. In many instances, we shall experi ence the pleasant surprise of dis covering that we have more in common spiritually with mem bers of other faiths than we had thought. As a consequence, we may also ieel more inclined to join force' together in the area of 'Social and charitable works, thereby increasing the efficacy of our separate programs, and giving a joint witness to the re ligious values we hold in com u.on." The sessions will be open to the public, added Father La chance, and there will be no admission charge.
..: .
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Pacheco Pleased With BAA Ma,athorn:
Duarte of Martha's Vineyard Top Capemlsland TIrGckm@ffi3
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 27, 1967
19
Ron Berube 01 F(l!JDI !R?nwe,
By PETER BARTEK
Norton HUgin Coach
'I'hey're off and running in all four track leagues within the confines of the diocese. And most excitement has been created by Lawrence High of Falmouth which has steam rollered all Capeway Conferenc~ opponents, and, appears headed for another State Seven meets are league encoun championship. It may sur ters conducted on a home-away prise many on the mainland basis and the league meet sched that the Gape and Vineyard uled for Thursday, May 16 at League, which held its first meet Tuesday, may produce the best distance man in the State. The s m ~ II - school C ape league has only four teams formally engaged in track. It hopes to ex pand to a six team league in basketball, base ball and track i the near fuPeter ture. The four Bartek schools participating in the track program are Chatham, Nauset, Provincetown and Mar tha's Vineyard. senior Leo Duarte, who placed in the B,A.A. marathon on Me morial Day, is expected to le2d Martha's Vineyard to its share of victories in the league, as well as against non-league foes.
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Falmouth Shares Limelight The 18-year old' youngster, who astonished many by finish ing within the first 100 of the better than 600 starters in the marathon, is - a triplCil threat in any meet in which he competes. Coach FraJ:)cis Pacheco will use Duarte in either the mile or two mile, the discus, and, pos sibly the relay. Duarte, a mem ber of Fr. Joseph O'Donnell's St. Augustine parish' on the Island, may steal the limelight from Geoff Cahoon, Don McLane, Don . "mpus, Pete Bingham and the other Falmouth High track stal'tJ !Defore this season is over. Coach Pacheco ns optimistic about his club's chances in the first year of the league but he ill quick to point out that there are many unknowns. The race for the championship eould be .. " tight in track as it was in bas ketball. Leading the way for the Vine yard in addition to Duarte willl be high jumper Al Fischer, shot putter Paul DeBettencourt, dash man Tony Alleyne and freshman Miler Ray Hyde. Southwiek Chatham Au Among the other outstanding performers in the league are Bill Southwick of Chatham, Kim Rilleau and Mike Enos of Provincetown.' I Southwick, one of the most versatile athletes on the cape, is threat to capture first place in ioo yard dash, shot put and long jump. A three-letter JIlaD at Chatham, Southwick led tbe Cape and 'VineYf!rd league III scoring in both soccer and bas ketball. He already has a "triple" to "Is credit in the young track l'Jeason and may be on his way to another individual scoring crown. Swansea Club Impressive At Provincetown, Coach Paul Borie also' has a boy capable of amassing 15, points· in n <given: meet. Kim Rilleau, speedster with good spring in his legs,
eould run off with a first in tile
100 and then proceed to jump
his way to, 10 more points with victories in the hig" jump and long jump. Mike tnos will give thf' Cape-enders a strong con tender in the pole vault. The four league teams bl"'e bdweeL 12-14 meeta Kbeduled.
BY
~ -~
MIRANDA
Ronald Russell Berube of Fall River started his final season of baseball for St. Francis College in Biddeford, Maine, last Tues day. A former Prevost High athlete, Ron has been elected co-captain of the St. Francis team this sea son and will divide his time be tween first base and center field. A member of St. Anne's Par ish, Ron is the oldest son of Postmaster and Mrs, Edward C. Berube of 69 Grinnea Street. He has two brothe~, Edward, Jr., a senior at Colby College and Richard, a sophomore at St. An selm's College. A 1961 graduate of Msgr. Pre vost High, Ron is an American History major and has a minor in Education. The 23-year old student intends to enter the Navy upon graduation from St. Fran cis in June. . The Fall Riverite is undecided about his plans following a two year stint with the Navy, but hopes to pursue a career in either teaching or asa social worker. Berube was recently presented with a varsity club blazer py James A. Beaudry, direc;tor of athletics at S1. Franci!i, for. bis athletic achievements. When Ron opened his fourth varsity basebaJl campaign lit stonehill College last he was batting second and playing een ter field for the third coach of bis college career. A!; a freshman at the Bidde ford school, Berube was the starting left fielder for coach Ed Fleurant and finished bis yearling season with a .280 bat ting average, commendable for a Frosh performer. The five-foot, nine-inch senior played for coach Bruce Young during his sophomore and jUllior lleasons and· this year, Ron Rill took over the helm:· and will di recl St. Francis' baseball' folt' tunes. Ronnie divided his time be
Orleans. The remaining duel meets will be run against the small Cape schools such as Sand wich, Harwich and Nantucket on an open meet basis. The teams will also, compete in the Dennis-Yarmouth Invitational on 'May 13 and the 'State champion ships on June 3. The Narry track league debut, postponed by rain and poor field conditions, now has four coaches still waiting for their first tastes of league competition. Coach Bob LaFazia of Case High in Swansea has to be im pressed with his club's perform ance thus far against larger non league schools and, if the team continues to improve as it has ir the past few meets, the Car dinals could run off with league hO:lors. Most noteworthy of individual performances by a Case track man has been the running of Steve Cross in the 220 and 440 yard dashes and his throwing of the discus. Steve has been heaving the discus between 130 140 feet continuously and is a serious threat to break the league record of 139' 5"h" set by Dighton-Rehoboth's Phil Grima in 1965. Threaten 'lI'wo Marks Among other top returnees in in the league are Bruce Fletcher of Somerset and Steve Drain ville of Seekonk. Both held league records at one timf! last year with Drainville's javelin toss of 167' .,.' still on the books. Fletcher's pole vault record was broken last season by Jeff. Swindells of Dighton-Rehoboth hut the Somerset ace has his eye on regaining t~ title by better ing the existing 12'3". mark be fore the season concJ udes. Coach Jim White of Somerset and Harold Hatch of Seekonk Form Interreligious hope to couple their proven per formers with newcomers anell Commission on Sex eome up with the formula fQr <l NEW YORK (MC)-A Jewish winning season. LaFazia anell nbbi, a Catholic layman,' and a Coach Jack Stewart of1 Dighton Protestant minister have heeD Rehoboth have some veteran tal chosen as the first officers of a ent back from last year's squads new interreligious commission and they are optimistiC: about the on sex, marriage and family Hfe. improvement of their respeetive The commission was organized teams. to formulate and promulgate Q Addin~ Events common Catholic-Jewish-Protes The league bas added the two- tant policy on "*be complex mile run to its Sllhedune of even1:lJ probl~ms bound up in sexuality, for all meets, bringing the ~ marriage and family life;" 1ItlJ to 13. 16 members were ~ppointed.. by League officials plan to' mcor- the Synagogue Council of ADler porate both tile ,high and low lea, the Family Life B~rel\l~ of burdles to the list in 1968. It wiln The U. S. Catholic Conference then become the second .league and' the National COuncil ctZ in the diOcese to conduct·a lIS Churches. . -, ' '" ,_ event program.' Tbis year: only.. .Named cl1airman of the eom the Capeway Conference nins 115 mission was Rapbi Mordecai L. events. . ' ,. . . Brill, _cpairman of the Synagogue The :larger BristOl County .. Council of Amerielll's C9Dwuttee League ill in the process .o!J. ex-' 0111 the family. Vice chairman u panding its program also with William Maughan, Cat.holic lay the addition of the discus. this .,~ai1,_,apd secretary.. iBthe Rev. year 2nd possibly the j2velin or . William, H. Genne, ~oordlp'ator' pole' vault next seaBon. If: aD! of the National Council of· leagues continue' to add events, Churches' commission on maB'
year after yelllr, us they are 'do-l riag~ and family. mg, by 1970 all in the area Willi
be eonducting full-scale bon2Kide Lamego Bishop tnck meets. VA'l"ICAN CITY (NC)-AWII
LavaU' Library Wary Bishop Ainerieo Henriques
QUEBEC (NC) - Laval Un! of Lamego, Portugal, has been
vell'sity. bere willl build III $7,900, JDamed Coadjutor with right of 000 library 1)0. Iliouse booktl {/If succession to Bishop Joao do 8il vroious faculties DOW in a JilUDl f t Dampos NeVUl, n, GIl the aame diocese. be! of builclinp.
infield and coach Rill has no doubt that the Fall Riverite will adjust from game to game. lBerube was most anxious to ' begin his senior season. St, Francis, scheduled for three contests before its visit to Stone hiU, ,":as postponed on all occa sions because of rain. Berube starred in baseball ond basketball at Prevost Hi/{h, be ing given an Honorable Mention on the All-Narry League team~ in both sports. Ronnie played left field and batted number three for coach At Tremblay in baseball and wa~ a 'guard on the basketball team. under coach Angelo Stavros. When a senior at Prevost, ]lon... led his team with a ,305 average coJJecting 16 safeties and led Prevost in triples with three, His speed on the base paths and aU around play gained him mention on the League's .All-Star team and helped his teammates com pile a 9-4 record. Berube has also played wjth St. Anne's in the CYO Inter mediate League and the' past . few seasons has turned his warm .weather hobby to softbaJI :md competed in the G"eater Fall River Softball League.
RONALD R. BERUBE
tween left and centu field as 2 sophomore and finished the cam paign with a .310 average,. which ~arned him the leadoff berth as a junior. In 1966, Berube 'was an :out standing member of the St. FTan cis baseball team. His all around performance at first base was the key to the success of his team. Berube swung at a .395' clip as a junior, collectinr 19 hits and being credited with 12 runs batted-in.' Among his bingles, three were triples and 10 doubles alInd he supplied St. Francis with 2n outstanding hitter in th~ leadoff berth. This season, ROil wiU again move between the outfield' and
.Two Clerg~men:', mn Me rath«»rro
Prelate. Requests Priests' Opinions CAMDEN (NC) - ArchbisbolJ)' Celestine J. Damiano, bishop of Camden, has put the issue l:lC)uarely up to his priests-seek ling their frank opinions of their own all8ignments IllS well as pas toral needs of the diocese. To the mOle than 300 diOCesan clergy, the archbishop sent Xl questionnaire seeking- the' irifor mation. He told the priests their replies' would be held in confi denc..:, and askec for candid an swers and the "spirit of fraternal pr~estly eooperation and 'coordi nation." Out of the project, the arch bishop said, he hopes to establish III diocesan personnel board to assist ·bim' in appointments' and various' assignments of priests.
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BOSTON (NC)-He was No. ) in the 71st running of the world bmous Boston marathon, even though Father James McKarnf of Boardman, Ohio, was the 33rd to cross the finish line. It's not as str2nge as it sounds, Father McKarns, is the first Catholic priest ever to run in· tM lllvent which dates back to 189'Z. He completed the 26-mile, 385 ~'ard run in a shade under three hours, the 33rd of 600 star~i'll to iinish. Father McKenzie wasn't the OJllly clergy :an in the race-,--,the Rev. Ernest McDonald, a Meth odist minister from Battle Cree~ Mich., and father of six childreD, finished 254th. Father McKams said he wasn't TUnning to beat the clock-rather 10 make it. He said; "They clocl! off. the finishers only for about four hours and my only hope was to finish within that time. I was curious to see, if J oould do it." ."..
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_AlMCIIOI ~ of FaIIltiver-ThuN. Apr. 27, 1967
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FIRST CURSILLO STUDY DAY IN· DIOCESE: Among the 400 at tending the study day on .the meanin"g of the intense three-day course in
Christian living that was conducted at Feehan High, Attleboro, were rep
rese,ntatives from many states. Left: Rev. John Matuseicius, Brooklyn;·
M.S., WOrcester;,
, William Sweeney., Lansing" Mich. ; Rev. ArmandProulx, . . : \ .' .
Rev. Gjles Genest, M.S., La Salette viani, St. Mary's of MansfIeld; Miss 'boro; Mr. and Mrs. John Fien, St. Guertin, St. Luke's of Middleboro; ,Bedford.
director., Right: Miss Eleanor Otto Julie- Turcotte, St. Joseph's of Attle Margaret's of Rumford; Mrs. Mary Edward Angelo, St. Mary's of New
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Religious Press OppO$es' Posta ~ late Increase
,'to Aid. ,Poor Families
Vincentians to Meet
Fall River Particular Council of the Society of St. Vincent de . Paul will meet at. Notre Dame Church at 7:45 Tuesday night, May 2 for Benediction. A busi Calling for a "realistic evalua tiOl",' of resources, the bishop ness session will follow in the hall of Prevost High School, said "a program calling for con tributions which cannot realisti , Eastern' Avenue. Applications cally be made * * * does not pre'; for the 1967 'seaso'n at St. Vincent de Paul Ci'lmp will be distrib sent a satisfactory solution," uted.
. . 'Seek '·I.nc,re~se In 'Public Welfare' Grants
Sees - at' -the pr~ss, conference was Bishop' John J. Cal'berry of' Columbus,: :who is chairman of . the, U. S, ~lshops' Committee for 'Ecum:enism' an<~ Inte'rreligious ; Affairs. . ' , . ,Other leaders present iilCluded strongest ' 9J)p'~~ents .~f. 't.he ad, the three faiths proclaimed' 'Bishop' ~tephen Gill Spottswood,' ininistratlon!s·tecently:inh·oclt,lCed statewide Pub I i c Conscience ,A.'M,E.' ,--:~ortchurch; BishOp Paul .legislation .. to.~ j.ncr.ea~e-::P6stal Sabbath for April '29 and 30. '" M. Herric~, ~vangelical 'United. What a Joy To Own a SELF-CLEANING , On these days petitions, seeking . Bret~ren ,¢~utch; Epi!!copal 'Co..; Eates. " , ,,', , Flame/ess Elec,tric' R.ange .an.)ncrease. of public, .welfare" , a'djutor'Bisnop John Harris Burt· An!l not -far'J?~h1nd .tli~lit, be religious Org1lIiizations~most grants to families with depend- 'of Ohio,' ahd Dr. Richard E; In the new flameless ~Iectric ranges with self-cleaning ovens, Illotabiy missfon'aries ~,wfio ,de~· 'eht children will be Circulated in' Plummer,' synod- executive 'for, ,cQ~kirig 'element~, drip pan,S and~ven~' clean themselves pend on third,:-:class ~irect-m;i!l Ohio's churches 'and synago~rues, the United ,Presbyterian Church. elec:t~icaily. ' IIOlicitations f~f their sU)Jport. - ' The petitions, to be seilt to' 'Realistic Evaluation For both groups, thc, postal 'Gov. James Rhddes and'rriembel's' Rabbi Nathan Zeli'zer of the- ntc i~creases woul,d' me;ln' SiJ~:--:; o( ohio 'GEmeral :.AssemObly;Rill)bihi'cal Association of Colum-- ~antial inc~e~s~s in l:?st~, R;e}l:- ~.ilrexpre·ss the signed wmtt:lg_: bus spoke' for 'the' JewiSh com .,ous or?amzahons Ul?mg~lJlr~-" Iless to pay ,the 'one 'cent per day munity;' and Frank, Celeste" elass mall could:be'fa('ed.~l~h as ill'. adcliiioQ!i1- taxes necessa'ry to presiaerit, and Dr. 'John Wilson,; much, as a 52 per, cent :ll\CI'ea~e' inc~ease welfare grants to 100 executive director, for the Ohio' ' in postal bills., ' per ceht of.:the minimum' stand- ,Council of Churches. Religious magazines and news--ard for health and decency set by ' . Bishop Carberry took issue papers who use" second-class: the state., ' with state adoministration's plan: mail would nO,t get hit. quitc so, ' ,Families on Aid to Dependent tq raise welfare grants through hard, but. f9r some the 1I.1creases ,Children (ADFC) are' now, re state and _....·,ty matching funds.' would shll. be substantIal. For , ceiving only 73 cents a person a, A program which would pro-' flhe largest, "t could ~oSJt as much day for food, clothing and other vide grants in amounts' equal to' as $15,000 more the fust year and personal expenses-62, per cent minimum standards in some, $37,000 more annually by 1970. of the minimum standard.' counties * * * * and substantially 'Tickets, to Disaster' Joint Statem~nt less than those standards in other counties is not an acceptable While repre~entatives of ~e.wsPublic Conscience Sabbath is solution' to this unfortu'nate imd' paper~, ~agazmes and religIOUS an outgrowth of the joint state tragic problem," he said. org~l1Iza .' 'are expected to ment issued last month by the tesh~y agm.nst the b~IH whe.n Ohio Council of Churches and pUblI~ .hearmgs are held, thel r the Catholic Confereilce of Ohio. ' Congressmen Hear
oPPosItion has already l?~en ex 'The statement called on all citi 'pI'essed to postal authOritIes. zens of the state. to inform the Tribute to Priest
William Holub, president of government of the need for ade WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep.
flle Catholic Press Association quate AFDC grants. Lester L. Wolff of New York told
and ge~eral manager of Am~rica Representing the Catholic the House of Representatives
Pre.ss m New york, e'Cplall1ed Conference d Ohio-the official here'that in the recent death of
th~lr concern thIS way to Fr~d- 'organization of the state's six Msgr. Richard H. J. Hanley "the
erick C. Belen of the Po~;t OffIce state of New York and the na
lDepartment's Bureau of Opera tion suffered a great loss."
tions: ' Jesuits, to Paddle The legisiator said,the founder "Rate increases are Been as' I and editor of the L~lg Island. tickets to disaster for many small" ' artyrs' oute Catholic, Rockville Centre, N; Y., publications," he wrote last De.. OTTAWA (NC)-Twenty-four diocesan' 'newspaper ~'was known , cembe,r. "The principals' will .; young Jesuits,_ mostly' semina- and -beloved bY'all"with whom he' have to ,reassesss their need for 'rians, will paddle -the route of, , came in contact." 'He added: "He existence and' the likelihood is· the Canadian', Marty-,rs 'It'om 'l\-iid..; was, a dynamic man and yet his: that they will choose the line of iand, Ont., -to Montreal as their humility "was a constant remin economy and ,kill the publica- part in, Canada's centennial der to us all that he was first, _ , See tflem On Displa, At Y_ tions,' rather than increase their v.oyageur ,canoe pageant. last and always a priest of God;" Electrical Appliance Dealer ., The lIUbsidies. ' ·The ,event will start Aug; 13 , Wolff reminded that in addi "This would 'not be good for from Midland, site of theCana tion to his work in journalism,' promoting the ideals of the ,dian Martyrs shrine, dedicated Msgr; Hanley was a leader in: dwrches in a 'critical time in to·the honor of St. Jeande Bre ecu'menical, charitable and mis h.istort " , beuf and his seven companions. sionary endeavors. COLUMBUS
(NC)' i- ',0 h i
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. ,WASHINGTON (NC) ,Catholics, Protestants ·and Jews Religious publications - in- have joined forces for sfa'tew-ide eluding a 'number of editors actfon'iri support of aid-.to 'indi. " . -' gent families;· ' ' . '~f dioce:;;an," newspapers-, -. ~ -At a press conference -at the, are expcct~tl:to;,be';lmong the . Catholic Center here leaders of' 1
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