05.23.68

Page 1

The ANCHOR

Appeal Total Passes

$710,000 and Rising

The 1968 Diocesan, CatihoUc Oharities Appeal today climbed ro $710,344.19. There are still many parishes with inoomplete returns. Tomorrow at 12 noon the official closing of the books 9hould see more parishes exceeding their 1967 final totals. The final! total of the Appeal will be published fum oox't week's Anchor. Lay Chairman Roland' A. Lafrance said, "We' hope lIlll

parishes will be over the top by Blessed Sacrament, Holy Cross, ster; St. John the Baptist, Cen­

tomorr<>w evening." Holy Name, Notre Dame, Our tral Village, Holy Redeemer,

Lady of Health, Holy Rosary, St­ Chatham; St. Anthony, East Fal­ The 15 leading p21'ishes are: mouth; St. J<>seph, St. Mary, Sa­ H:<>ly Nallle, Fall River $25,409.00 Anne, st. Anthony of Padua. St. Elizabeth, St. John the ~red Hearts, Fairhaven. Rive;, MOS5., ThursdolV, st. Lawrence, Baptist, St Joseph, St. Mathieu, St: Patrick, Falmouth; Immac­

II New Bedford ~,iIH.OO St. Michael, SS. Peter & Paul, ulate C<>nception, North Eas~on;

@ 1968 .l~3 Anchor $4.00P~~EV: StN'~~\;:~dford 15,624.00 St. William, Santo Christo, Fall Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs, SL

River. Mt. Carmel, Michael, Ocean Grove; St. Joan New Bedford 15,476.55 Holy Name, Mt,. Carmel, Our of Are, Orleans; St. Ann, Rayn­ 15,263.00 Lady of Fatima, Sacred Heart, ham. st.' John, Attleboro I ',- st. Joseph, Fairhavell1 12,567.80 St. Boniface, St. Casimir, St. Mt. Carmel, Seekonk; St. Pius . St. Mary, T~lUnt<>n 101,426.00 James, New Bedford. , I X, Sa. Yarmouth; Our Lady of st. J<>seph, I Our Lady of . Lourdes, St. Fatima, St. Dominic, st. Louis of New Bedford 10,776.50 James, Taunton; Holy Ghost, St. 'France, Swansea; 51. Patrick,

St. Mal'y, Mary, Attleboro. Wareham; Our L.ady of Lourdel3, North Attleboro 10,736.00 Our Lady of the Cape,· Brew- Wellfleet. ' st. Patl'ick, Falm<>uth' 10,732.00

il ., St. Mary, Fall River 10,660.00

St. Pius X,

South Yarmouth 10,339.0,0

I St. Francis Xavier,

Hyannis 10,106.00 St. Mary, South Dartmouth 9,725.50 Holy Name, New Bedford 9,675.00 . In a report of activities of the Senate of Priests of the Diocese of Fall River, Rev. John P. Driscoll, assistant at Sixty-eight parishes have ex­ ceeded their 1967 final totals SS. Peter and Paul Ohurch in Fall River and President of and are enrolled in the Honor the Senate, revi~wed. the accomplishments of that body Roll of parishes. The new mem­ since its election and begin­ bers added since the last publi­ 1. Expansion of the Senate cation are: St. Mary's Cathedral, ning in September of 1966. 00- include members of the New elections are scheduled younger clergy: Bishop ap­ " this Fall with the new Senate proved. / membership sitting the· second 2. Full-time chaplains in hos­ Friday of October. pitals. Bishop did not approve. ,. Father DriscQll p<>inted out 51. Anne's· Hospital in Fall .;' &s~ how this Senate was one of the River-the only Catholic hos­ " first in the country and the pital in the Diocese-is covered , world. The Decree implement­ . by full-time chaplains. The ing the Vatican Council direc':' other hospitals in the Diocese tive that such an adV'is<>ry body have priests assigned to them be established' in every Diocese wh<> also work in parishes. was issued on Aug. 6, 1966, and These visit the hospitals on III the Fall River Senate was es­ regular. basis, s<>me daily. In CHAPEL OF ASCENSION: 1'Jradition has it that here tablished on Sept. 27, 1966. addition, parish priests visit ..the site of the Lord's Ascension on lVJount 00: Olives, a place The following are proposals their hospitalized parishioners. tJMl8d by Moslems, visited by Christians, and now 00 The Bishop felt that pers<>nnel made by the Senate to the Bish­ lBmeli soil. Feast of the Ascension is today. . .DIOCESAN CENTER op and the Bishop's response to shol'tages would not allow chap­ them: ' Turn to Page Fiifteen

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May,23, 1968

'I1ri.. 12, No. 21

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~~nc1te Gives Review O~ ,AccQ)mp~ishments

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Open House.

Clergy Appointm'ents Affect 16' Priests

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Christian Doctrine· 446 Highland Avenue

Fall River

Saturd~y

and Sunday May· 25 .and 26

Fr.· Con'sidine Leaves Latin' America'Post

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father John J. Considine, M.M., , founding director of the Latin America Bureau (LAB) of t}1e U.S. Catholic Conference, has retired, Bishop Bernardin, ,-ht newly ordained priests. Transferred are: Rev. Edward . 2 to 5 P.M. General Secretary, has anounced here. The resigna­ io Mitchell, S.T.L.,J.C.D., from Holy Name Church, Fall Birver, to St. Mary's Cathe' tion of Father Considine is effeCtive on Saturday. Fath­ er Louis M. Colonnese,' ad­ ~hedral, Fall RIver, to St. /I I ~ f" ministrative director of the Latin America Bureau, has been named the' new director, Bishop Bernardin said. Father Considine is a native :. . . of New Bedf<>rd and has two fiiebor<>. . brothers serving as priests in Since it is the first time in the diocese of Fall River that we will wi,tness an ordina­ Rev. Thomas C. Lopes, from f5t. Elizabeth Church, Fall River, tion to the diaconate on June 1, we thought it would be fitting to discuss the office of the Fall River Diocese-Rt. Rev. Raym<>nd T. Considine;Diocesan (;0 St. Anthony Church, East the diaconate. With the 'happening' of Vatican II we have seen many a change in our Propagation of the Faith direc­ l13Imouth. , Rev. Joao C. Martins, from St. Church. The restoration of the office of' the diaconate has been a very significant one. tor and pastor of St. William's Churth in Fall River, and Rev. :tknbhony, East Falmouth, to St. In the past lay people hardly "full of fJhe Spirit and of' wis­ Actually the offIce of the di­ ArthurG. Considine, pastor of ever heard of who and what li§li'llabeth Church, Fall River. st. Mary's Church in So. Dart­ aconate is nothing new in the dom." The disciples were notic­ Rev. Joaquim F. Fernandes a deaCO)I was (it was sort of Church's life. All we need do is ing that the Word <>f God' and mouth. His three other brothers cia Silva, C.M., from Our Lady kept secret to the seminarian turn to the Acts of the Apostles the service at tables (at the are Pr<>bate C<>urt Justice of Mt. Carmel Church, New and his family). Today, how­ 6: 1-7 where we read of the Eucharistic table's) were being Walter Considine, George and 1Bedf<>I'd, to St. John the Baptist ever, deacons are ministering to Ap<>stles electing seven men neglected: These seven men, the Frank, all of New Bedford. ChurCh, New Bedford. God's people in many parishes. first deacons, received the 'lay­ Father Considine has served Bev. Ernest E. Bla1s, from St. Who are they? What can they rH"'N.#~####,,,##,,,,.,,##,,,, •• ,,~ ing on of hands by which they as LAB director since it· W811 ll.ouis de France Church, Swando? Where do they come ftom? Eight semina.rians wiD be· were ordained (ordered) to founded in January, 1960, at oea, to St. Theresa Church, New The deacon is not a 'halfordained to· the 'diacoJll8te make' up for the neglect in the the request· of the Pontifical 'at a public ceremony in st. 1Jedfurd. priest'. He's not just' a regular ministry of the Word and in the Commission for Latin America. Ma.ry's Cathedral. Fall RivRev. Bernard A. Lavoit', from seminarian either, who just distributi<>n of the Eucbarist. In He had been lent to the Latin lWotre Dame de Lourdes Church, happens to be closer to Ordinaell'. on Saturday morning at time the extent of their ministry America Bureau by Maryknoll lFal1ll River, to St. Louis de tion to priesthood. He's not :D.O, June 1, by Most Rev. grew;' besides preaching the at the request of Richard Cal'> llrll:n~e Church, Swansea. "fathel'>' yet; but in a true sense James L. ConnolBy, D.D. Word and distributing the Ell- dinal Cushing of Boston, chair-

, Turn to Page Six Tum to Page Seven 1lle is a minister. Tum to Page Seventeen

The Chancery Office ~ay announced the transfer

ffIi. eight assistant pastors and ,the first appointments of

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THE'ANCHOR..:..Diocese ofFal! River-:-Thurs., May 23, 1968

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Espirito Santo 2,163.00· Mattapoisett-- ., H9l y GI,"OSS . ' 1,332.00 st. Anthony 4,378'Holy Name 25,409.50 NantucketOur Lady- cd the Isle 3,493. N()tre :Dame . 6,738.50 Our Lady of the AngeJs 8,111.25 North Dighton.Our Lady ofHealtb 2,987.40 St. Joseph 4,663.91 Holy Rosary 3,433.00 Jiorth Easton-Immaculate Co~ 5,705.77 Immaculate Ccmeeptlon 8,835.00 Sacred Heart 9,395.00 ltorth WestportSt. Anne . 5,881.00 Our Lady Gf Grace 3,968.58 St. Anthony of the Desert 9i9.00 Rorton-8t. Mary 6,051.. st. Anthony of PadUa 2,600.00 Oak Bluffs­ ASSIGNMENTS St. Elizabeth 1,290.00 Sacred Heart 3,298.81 St. John the Baptist " 3,711.00 Ocean'Grov~ Rev. Edward ,3. Mitchell, S.TL.,J.CD., asSistant~ )Ioly St. Joseph. ""'''''.6,250,00 St. Michael ),711'­ . Jliame' Church, Fall, River.. ~ pur Lady, '¢ t,be ,Assumption ,.St.,Louis'. " H ' ·.·3;512.00' 'orleans- ' . Cathedral, Fall- River" as assistant. ,', ." '1 ,St;., l\fatthew. " ,'2,450\00' st.' JOaD of' Aft ' '2,704.51 "S.t. Matth~W ' , , '. , '2,450~84< OstenriIe-:-AsSumptloil \ 5296.00 Rev James H. M~rse, assistant' at Our Dady of the ASsump­ ",~t."Michael" j ' J: ",,6,457.83 Provinceto~' ",.. ,' 1k)n' Cat~edral, FallIDver, 'f4:I St:James' C!lurch, New: 'Be!iford, lSkP.atrick, .•. ," 'i. .".. , :,7,229.50 ' . 'st.' Pe~er' . I 2,778.50 , as ~8ssistant. , ,', ",'" '.' " ,:." ", ". .. "" '.h' ",' , , .' SS. Pete~ and ~ul : ""'6,646;00' Raynhain'2..-.st:. Ami' '. '4,688.50 .l.'I.:· St. Roch ','" , '"",',3,482:00" Sai:idwic~ ., :. , Rev. Thomas' E. ,. 0'Dea,.. QSSistan~ ,·at: St. James Church, MONSliGNOR ]I)~ER 3,363~00>""CorPus' 'CiiriSti . _ .' ".8,515.50 - St, .Stapislaus,· -. '<' New Bedford, to st 'John the' Evangelist Church,' Attleboro, ,~t., William ,..•.. , 5,125.00 &eekonk~Mt:c8rmeI' 7,752. • as assistant. ... , ". Santo Christo 4,196.05 Somerset~@[7i)li'DfD«:@rn Rev. Thomas C. LOpes, 118sistant at St. Elizabeth Church, 4,989.4G NEW llJEDJ10IW St. J()~ of God .. Fall River, to St. Anthony Church, East Falmouth, as assistant: , ' , St. Patnck 6,491.80 Holy Na~e 9,615.00. st. Thomas More [f@~ M~tgj [j' 8,779.• Rev. Joao C. M'ar'tins,assistant at St. Anthony Church, Assumption, 1,300.00 South DartmouthEast Falmouth, to SLEiizabeth Cl!urc~,Fall River, as assi_s~ant. A solemn pOntifical requiem, Immaculate Conce;ptlon 6,185.40' St. Mary , 9,725.50 Mass was' celebrated T\lesday M~... Carmel ,.. ,.15,476.55 South .Easton"";' , . Rev. Joaquim F. Fernandez·da Silva, ·C.M., assistant at . Holy Cross morning in Sf. Joseph CQurch. ,Ou:r, Lady of Fatima", .3,089.00 ' 2,685.50 Our Lady of Mt. Carmel 'Church, New Bedford; to St.'John Fall River, for Rt: Rev. Msgr. Our Lady of SOuth Yarmouth­ the Baptist Church, New Bedford, as assistant.; .. . ,,' lQ,33S.00 Daniel A. ·Dwyer, 85, pasto,r - :perpetual Help '. ,.2,306.00­ - st. Pius X ' , emeritus of St.. Bartholome~s ,Our Lady of Purgatory. 944.00 Swansea- . The above appointm,ents'are -e#ective We.dnesday, May 29. Church, -'Elmhurs~'"Long Island" S~cred Heart 4,449.30 'Our Lady of hUma '.6 ~?d ~3 .;r . /. A frequent "Visitor to Fall St. Anne .2,746.00 St. Dominic ' 4,698'­ River, Msgr. Dwyer recently ,: St.. Anthony. of Padua· 5,038.00 St. Louis of France 4,8.>ti.33 Rev. Ernest 'E. Blais, assistant at St. Louis de France , celebrated his 60th anniversary S1. Boniface ". ·384.00 'Vineyard Haven. Church, Swansea, to S1. Theresa Church, New Bedford, 'as .' st. Casim;ir ; " ,1,337.40 St. Augu~U.ne ". ' 1,820.00 assistant. . .'. - '.. as priest. , :2,324.25 Wareham-8t. Patrick 9,616.'15 'l'cha'rd and' St. FranCIS. of As9i&I. Son of the late R St. Hedwig. 504.00 WellfleetRev. Be:t:nard A. Lavoie,' assistant lilt Notre Dame, de the'late Mary (Kelly) Dwyer, ·'St. Hyacinth ' , " ' : 1,484.50 Our Lady of Lourdes' 2,29'1. Lourdes Church, Fall River, to St. Louis de" France Church, , he studied' for the priesthood in st. J~mes ,15,624.00 West Harwich' , Swansea, as allsistant. . , the Brooklyn: diocese after St. John the BaptiElt 6,775.35 Holy Trinity 5,199'­ The abo~"e appointments are effective Wednesday, June 12. graduating from B: M. C. Durfee St. J~s~ph 10,776.50 Westport-S1. George 8,880.50 High School, Fall River. St .Kilian 4,059.00 Woods Hole­ " Two other brothers, Rev. Wil­ St. Lawrence 23,191.30' ·St.Joseph 2,362. First Assignments liam K.Dwyer and Rev. Robert St. Mary 7,148.00 V. Dwyer, were also priests in st. Theresa ' '5,358.00 Rev. Edward E. Correia to Our Lady of Victory Church, . New York State. Spec;~1 TAUNTON Centerville, as assistant. . , . Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Holy Family 5,489.00 Bishop of 'Fall River, was the Holy Rosary N~O'ion~1 Rev. 'Edmund J. Fitzgerald to Holy Name Church, FaD 2,530.00 celebrant of the -final funeral Immaculate Concept:Ioo 5,695.00 River, as assistant. ' . $5000 Mass. He was assisted by R1. Our Lady of Lourdes . A Friend 4,143.75 Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Consi­ $500 Rev. George E. Harrison to St. Joseph Church, Taunton, Sacred Heart 7,270.00 dine, arch-priest;, Rev. Edward St. Anthony as assistant. Taunton Greyhound Assn. IDe. 4,638.50 C. Duffy, deacon; Rev, Edmund St~ James $300 4,637.00 J. Fitzgerald, subdeacon. Bishop' st. Joseph Rev. William J. Hurley to ··St. StaniSlaus Ch~lrch,"aD Our Lady's Chapel '1,309.00 James J. Gerrard, together with River, as assistant. $125 st. Mary 11;426.00 with monsignors and priests of St. ,Paul Rev. Walter A. Sullivan 5,652.00 the Fall River and· Brooklyn Rev. Cornelius F. Kiley toSt: Joseph Church, Fall Ri.Yell', $100 as assistant. ' , dioceses also a.ttendecL ' ,. AT'l'LEBOaG.· ,. LaSalette Seminary, A,ttleb-. Holy GhOst ( .1,100.00 $75 Rev. Robert A. McGowan to Corpus Christi Church; Sand­ st: John .15,263.00 ' . Rev.. Clarence J. d'Eritremont' . Mass Ordo . wich, as •assistant. ". $25 ' •

St. 'Joseph . 5,024.00 , FRIDAY .:..- Mass of' Ascens~OIl .' st,. Mark , , ~,284.50· . Mr. & Mrs. James F. Kerr

Rev. Donald E •.'Messier 110 st. John the Baptist Church, Thursday. 'IV Class. White.' , ~t. Mary , i 8,899.00 Fall River, as assistant. . .Mass Proper; Glory; Preface ,st. Stephen 4r574.00 Cape Cod ',' of Ascension. . ' s t . Theresa '1,427.38 Rev. Kevin F. Tripp to Notre Dame University, NOVe $300 Dame, Indiana, for summer school. Atty.. & Mrs., James H. SmiGil" SATURDAY-8t~ Gregory VII, " NORTH ATTLBBORO Pope and CoDfessdr. ill Class. Sacred Heart '6,077.90 78lmouth The above appointments are effective Wednesday, M~ 29. $120 White. . . St. Mary \0,736.00 A Friend in honor of St. PeIieIr OR '!'OWNS' $100 St. Urban I, Pope arid Martyr. AcushnetBlessing of the Fleet Fund­ Red. Glory; PrefaCe of Ascen-.. . S1., F:rancis, Xavie!, 3,965.00 Provincetown \ 'sion. Sts. Marga.ret & Mary' Guild­ Assonet-St. Bemard~,031.00 SUNDAY-8unday after the 'Brewster' . . . Buzzards Bay .Bishop, of. Fall River" .'. Ascemtion. II Class. White. Ou~ Lady of the Cape 2,507.00 St. Margaret Conference, st. Mass, 'Proper; Glory; ,creed; Buzzards Bay~nt de Paul-Buzzards Ba,w Preface of Ascension. ,_ .: 'St. Margaret 6,699.00 'Tum to Page Four . . -- centerville-- ' MONDAY-=--8t. Bede ~e, Vener-'" ,Our Lady of VIctOry ~,413.45 ," able, '. Confessor and Doctor Of~ntral'Villag~' " Church. III Class. White. st. John the BaPt:i8t 2,863.00 Necrology, Or Chatham--.: - , Inc. FORTY HOURS MAY 30 4,686.50 St. John I, Pope and Martyr. .' Holy Redeemer. , . Rev. Jord'an Harpin, O.P., Red. Glory; Preface of Ascen­ ,Dighton-81. ,Peter 1,716.50 FUNERAL SERVICE

DEVOTION. 1929, Dominican Priory, F.aD EaSt Falmout~ sion. ' River. ' St. Anthony '1,353.00 NEW BEDfORD, MASS.

May 23--:Sacred Hearts Con­ . RElv.Edmond J. Potvin, 1937, TUESDAY-St. Augustine of Fairhaven­ vent, Fall River. Pastor, St. John Baptist, FaD • 549 COUNTY STREET 'Canterbury, Bishop, Confes­ St. Joseph, 12,561.80 . Convents of the Sacred River. ,-sor. III Class. White. MasS St. Mary 2,378.50 Hearts, Fairhaven. -Rev. James M. Quinn,' 1950, Proper; - Glory; Preface of .s"acred Hearts 909~50 Mt. St. Mary Convent, Pastor, St. John. the Evangelist, Ascension. Fall River. Attleboro. WEDNESDAY-8t. Mary Mag­ MAY 31 May 26---St. Joseph, Taun­ dalen De Pazzi, Virgin. m DOLAN-SAXON ton. Rev. Vincent A. Wolski, OFM Class. White. Mass Proper; St. Theresa Convent, FaD Conv., 1964, Pastor, Holy CrosS, Pharrma~y Glory; 'Preface of- Ascension. Fall River ' River. Funerra~ Prescriptions called for THURSDAY-Mass of Ascen­ ,.JUNE 4 and delivered sion Thursday. IV Class. filE ANCHOR . Rev. Jose P. d'Alnaral, 1949, 123 ~fl'oadway LOFT White. second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Pastor, Santo Christo, FaU River. CHOCOLATES

Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 OR TA(JJ)~TON Rev. Louis 'J. Terrien, 'O.P., Highland' Avenue.. Fall River, Mass, 02722 600 Cottage St. 994-7439

oy ,the catholic ..ress of the Diocese of Fall 1920, DoJninican Priory, FaD St. Felix I, Pope, Martyr. Red.

VA 4-5000 RIver. Subscription price by mall. postpaid New Bedford

River. $4.00 per year. Glory; Preface of Ascensio~

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.Bro.. Zaccoreni

No. Easton Brother Plans to Establish Latin America Food Training Centers

First Religious Council Head Brother Herman ZaccareDt, a top promoter of food-for-thought-about-food lImlong religious educational

~.S.C.,

mstitutions, is the new presi­ dent of the Institution Food Ed­ lI!Jorial Council-first Religious to hold the No. 1 post in the 13­ lJle8r-old council. 'iI'Ile IFEC,composed of insti­ tutional food and equipment ([»"Oduct manufactures, editors and publishers, channels the flow of product information to IIepresentatives of the trade and iIhe general press. More t·han 80 Publications are represented in "e council. The 'Holy Cross Brother di­ eeets the Food Research Center Iltr Catholic Institutions, which ~ founded in 1956 at Stonehill ~l1ege here. The center con. Clucts courses and workshops on tood purchasing, preparation and .rage, menu planning, diets, IDUtritioil and kindred subjects tIDr persons in charge of food tIe1'vice in seminaries, colleges and similar institutions. . Highly QuaUfied lln re~nt years, representa­ lives of non-Catholic institutions have joined Catholics from va­ dous sections of the U. S. and Canada as students at the cen­ /tier. Brother Zaccarelli also con­ ducts seminars throughout the eountry. As a high school teenager in !II1s native New Castle, Pa., Brother Zaccarelli began his eareer of "quieting beefs about !food." He got an after-school' iJob as bul'! boy in a restaurant ond quickly advanced to salad ~ef. . Deciding on a Religious life eareer,' he joined the Holy Cross Brothers in the late 1940s; attended Cornell Univers'ity'a Ihotel and restaurant adminis­ ib'ation school, then took ad­ vanced courses at George Wash­ I!:ngton University, Washington, D. C., and founded the food re­ erearch cen,ter at the college con­ ducted by the Holy Cross com­ munity here.·

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If Y'OU CMlcimagme a man dying of thirst because he doesn't know enough to put water his Hps, you can imagine how the same kind of ignorance keeps the major popul'ation of nine South American countries at the edge of starvation. "What most North Americans don't know is that south of the border, most Americans are caught in the vicious circle of ignorance and starvation," 0 America with separate, new says Brother Herman E. Zac­ projeCts and idea~istic aims," . earelli,C.S.C., International Brother Herman liaid. "These r Director of the Food Re­ types of programs do not work. j 1;0

searoh Center for ReligioWl In­ stitutions in North Easton. Brother Herman who just re­ turned from visits·to Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Costa Rica, Bra­ zil, Chile, Peru, Bolivia and Venezuela, plans ·to establish ftlning centers for teaching·the native populations methods of processing and preservatWn of tbek local foods. COI"POratlons Cooperate -OVer 50 per cent of the na­

tWe foods rot on and in the ground," emphasized Brother Herman, "because the people lack elementary food knowl­ edge." He noted in some Central and South America countries, vegetables like asparagus and beets grow wild, yet almost none are harvested nor ea,ten locally. The Bay state Holy Cross Brother added that in the birthplace of the potato, most people do not know how to use it, bow to cultivate, or how to harvest and store it, pointing out that the primitiv:e knowl­ edge of foods and their. uses, oospite an abundance of variety, haa limited the dietary staple of much of Latin America to corn and rice. . Pegged at a cost of $10 mil­ lion over the next half dozen years, the immediate objective 9£ Brother Zaccarell:l's visits was to ·find a location for the pilOt training center. It will be

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We are going to add our pro­ grams to current education pro­ grams now in progress under native 'supervision." t) The organization which will handle the pilot training pro­ gram is called FE Y ALEGRIA (Faith and Happiness). It is an eci'uca-tlonal organization staffed and operated by Latin Ameri­ cans in Venezuela, 'Panama, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia.

According t.o Brother Herman, the success of the program wIll be based on the ability of the local .population to put. the knowle'dge they can acquire at the training centers to produc­ tive use. He stressed that the Food Re!!earch .Center for Reli­ gious Institutions is not a char­ BRO. 1II. lEo ZACCARElLlLI, CoS.C•. ity organization, but acts as the source from which participants in Caracus, Venezuela, and in Ms education programs can take knowledge and build bet­ will begin operation next Sep­ tember. Training centers willl ter futures .for themselves. open in tl:te eight remaining Self-Help Plan . countries during the next five In the past decade, the Food years, based on the success of Research Center has trained the pilot program. over. 5,000 persons in insti-tu­ Better Future tiona! food service skills in the Several North American food United States, Canada, Europe, and food equipment companies Puerto Rico, Australia and have already contributed equip­ Hong Kong. ment and personnel for voca­ With the inception of this tional schools where the local South American Self-Help plan, population' can learn basic can­ the Center undertakes its first ning and food preservation step in helping the poor of un­ methods. der-developed nations to create "We are not going to LatilIl better lives' for themselves. I

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., May 23, 1968

New Jersey Cuts Social Gains TRENTON (NC)-New Jef'oo BeY's .first Republican-co,ntrollecll . legislature in recent years con­ tinues to hack away at social legislation enacted in previoWl sessions. The latest retrenchment came when the State Senate denieOl the protection of the minimum wage law to migrant workers. The bill was sent to the Assem­ bly by a 21-15 margin. Current law, which is a litt'ie more than a year old, calls for a minimum wage of $1.40 aa hour. But one proponent of the bill-which puts migrants back on a piece-work basis-said mi"; grants are "sitting on their hands" and collecting the mini­ mum. The bill is opposed by the ad­ ministration of Gov. Richard J. Hug'hes, organized labor, the Consumer League of New Jersey and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The New Jersey Farm Bureau favors it. So far this year the legislature

has pared unemployment bene­

fits· and school bus transporta­

tion oosts. MeanWhile it has

failed to enact any of the mea­

sures suggested by the Gover­

nor's Commission on Civic Dis­

order, which recommended !l

variety of laws designed to alle­

viate conditions which spawned widespread rioting in the State.

Student Federa,tion In Financial Trouble

WASHINGTON (NC)':- Afteli' 31 years of operations the Na­ tional Federation of Catholie College Students now is in dire financial difficulties and may disband. Msgr.Thomas J. Leonard, di­ , rectQr, Youth Department, U.S• Catholic Conference, confirmed the dismal NFCCS situation, bm said "it is too early now to state "We have found sufficient the­ tian community and the power whether the organization will. of Christian life are centered ological justification in prin­ be disbanded." He said a definite upon the Eucharistic celebration. ciple for some Eucharistic shar­ decision will be made before For both of us the natu're of the ing. Furthermore, we detect that August. . . Church is discernible principally' urgent ·theological, ecumenical Once active in more than 100 in the fellowship of. the Lord's and especially pastoral reasons 'Supper." exist in our cOWltry to make Catholic colleges and universi­ ties, the NFCCS fostered Cath­ some Eucharistic sharing desir­ .olic action work among students. able. institute Releases "We urge our communions to Since the early 1960's, interest explore as rapidly as possible the in NFCCS has waned as students .first Publication circumstances and procedures chose to identify themselves with HOLLISTON (NC)-':rhe first fOl' responsible Eucharistic shar­ other stduent government organ­ publication of the Marsalin 'Press ing." izations. was launched by the Marsalin Institute of Religion and the Psychological Sciences at the first' quarterly meeting of its board of directors here. The initial work, "Psychiat17 and Religion-A Historial' Per­ . spective," was written by Father ,~ James J. Hayden, O.S.B., the in­ stitute's founder and president, Il Ben~ictine monk, physician , and psychiatrist.

Study .Responsible Eucharistic. Sharing .Churchmen Exp~ore Circumstances, Procedure

in'. LOUIS (NC)-Participants in the third consultation. be-' tween the U.S. Bishops' «ommittee for Ecumenical and 'Interreligious Affairs and the Council of Christian Unity of the Christian Churches-also known the Disciples of Christ _ have urged their respective commu­

as

ELIZABETH (NC) - Some ~OOO whites and blacks lwalked hand in hand through the streets of this New Jersey city's decay- nions "to explore as rapidly as ling Elizabethport area in a dis- poSsible the circumstances and play of solidarity co-sponsored . procedures for responsible Eu­ by the city's clergy and other charistic sharing." groups. Unhappy DIl'isioDS The walk was patterned after Representatives of. the two II similar walk held previously ehurches discussed "Responsible in nearby Newark and was de- Theology for Eucharistic Inter­ signed to acquaint people with com m u n ion' in n Divided Qrea conditions and involve Church." After hl~aring papers them in Summer ,and year- from members of both churches lIIOund programs there: and discussions, they agreed on An interfaith prayer service, six points: with Negro and white, Protest"The act given to the Church ibmt, Jewish and Catholic cler- by Our Lord Jesus Christ and aYmen taking part, preceded variously known 'as the EUchar­ the demonstration. Father Ro- ist. Communion and the Lord's hod W. Muenzen, administrator' 'Supper, is the highest expression Qf St. Patrick's Catholic parish, of unity within the church." oold the participants the one Since all have been baptized' I6hing "we don't want is toler- fmto the "community which God rance, which implies inequality. pledges to mankind," we have m ~at we want for all is equal"given unity in the Lord JesWl tty in love, understanding anell Christ which our unhappy m­ knOWledge." visions have not bee1ll able t!C> destroy." "Even when we celebrate the Aids Ex-Convicts Eucharist separately, we NEWARK (NC) - The Mt. aware that we are in communiOlli &rmel. Guild, special welfare with the same Lord, and, there­ Etgency of the Newark archdio­ 1iore, in union with one another.'" lOOse, helped find gainful em­ "We have discovered that our ployment for 57 convicts last understandings of too Lord's (fear. Guild officials made the Supper are more similar than we <disclosure at a seminar' which had expected." . lit sponsored for parole officero • Sharilmg J])esirmbllGl . IfIrom throughout the state. Co­

Both churches gather "around

operating in the program were ilihe Farm Labor Bureau and .fhe TlIJble of our Loid" nt least lUte New Jersey Employment eacll Sunday and "we mutuallv ~vice. . EaCognize that the bond cJf Chr!tl­

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 23, 19~8

,,

M~~G'o [P)G'®~@~U' [f[],o@[k) _~~[k)©@~ $)frMcdl<elroli'

CINCINNATI (NC)-A mon~ 'long program in the "Arts «!fl , Liturgical Leadership" will ~ .b.:..'-"-....J.... I, oonducted jor seminarians abovo :;~, , the high school level by the Na- ­ .,. :l , . ' tional Institute of Ritual 131111 • • Drama, beginning July 1 ~ GmilviUe, national headqU8i\D ters of the Grail movement, ~ Loveland, Ohio. ' The course will be conducW by Father Clarence J. Ri~ priest~mposer of the CiQciD­ nati archdiocese, who laun~ the institute this year. ": Father Rivers said instructoftj) will be drawn from professional

',artists and from semin,ary mlf1I

~'university faculties. They willi

: provide training in the arts, ~

:' .reading, speaking, acting, mng­

'~ing, gesturing, and moving -atl

; these things apply to leading dl"­

: namic celebrations of the JD..

; rirgy," Father Rivers ·stated.

~ ", The priest described, ,the

SUDimer program as a pil~ project "through .which we hop(l to demonstrate iii concrete termo what we mean by adopting ~ skills of the performing arts ~ the need of the liturgy, and ~ ,take the first steps in establish­ "jng a 0 0 0 tradition of effeetivG "performance via TV, we will ~ , Jess and less able to' hold thew ',attention with second rate pel'­ formances in church," FathGli' officers at Coyle "Rivers stated. .

N@rrtiu®<dl $;U'@U'®' ~~~®@@U'® ,U'@, ~®~@~ 'M®~~olJi)~ @~ $~Mc&®[j'i)U' ~@lW[j'i)~O~'$ , Congratulations to David Poisson of Prevost 'High in "

Fall River who's been named national delegate from Mass­

achusetts to the national convention of Student Councils

to be held in Texas at the end of J\lne. He's also been asked

to attend a "Little White tuition for the four high school House" conference in Hawaii years; during the Summer and to Sister Carmela,' who was become an executive board Mount·s 'principal fOl' 15 years,

member of the state association is now English department ",of student councils and be pres­ chairman at St. Xavier 'Acad­ ent at its Summer workshop. emy, Providence., ' ., 'Sounds like busy vacation; At Jesus-Mary Academy,' Fall At Mt. St. Mary Academy, River, sophomores and 'basket­ Fall "River, the 'first annual ball-tearn members joined forces 'scholarship in honor of Sister to spoilsor a "Surfer's' Happ'en­ , Mary Carmela, the school's' first ing" dance featuring the' south principal, has beeil awarded to , of Boston musiC'al group. an eighth grader at Dominican 'Hiking Nun' , Academy. She's Nancy Roman­ We've had fiYi~g n'ims and owicz. The award carries full singing nuns, now it's 'a hiking, nun. Sister Albina Marie of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall. 1?U:@[j'i)~O$«:@[l'i)M@[j'&~ River', organized. 18 sophomores for a seven mile stroll to Lin:" colri Park. Next on the agenda: ~U'17 li$. a trip by foot to' a popul~i: ice cream spot in Assonet: . " , Siste; M"!-ry Furse)T San­ . tos,of. the· Franciscan Mis­ " Mt: St. Mary's 'junior lkom'is , slared for tomorrow' night, with , sionaries .of Mary ha~ just Elizabeth Perry in general celebrated her Golden Jubilee charge of arrangemerits'; while ,of s'ervice to God and mankind parents of SHA Fall River girls COYLE OFFICERS: SeIiior class ',in her vocation. Daughter .'of the had their own "prom," with the , High School,Taunton, are, seated, Mjch~el Mal~)Ile" t~as~i~r, , late John F. and 'Maria Medeiros Sucordium and Fathers', Cl,ubs ,St. Mary's parish, Taunton; Alec Rich, vice~president" 'Santos of 235· Tremont Street in "joining "for a s'emi-formal'affair. $<oiUrillil'@$ ~\}U5(e1m®~atJn, Fall River; Sister,' is pFesently Jesus-Mary gi'rls 'have been '-Mary's, Norton; standing, James Reid, nresident, St. Mary's, '~@v @{F lfelmli' Taunton; Steven Strojny,secretary, Holy Rosary, Tau~~,n. ~ 'stationed in St. ',Francis Hospital piaying' host' to" Mdth,er "'Del in -Roslyn, Long Island, but'ob­ Rosario, R.J.M., pi-esid~i1t' of'the " WASHINGTON (NC) - WD­

i served the occasion with her 'iilternatiqnal unfoi}" of Major SL­

talk by M~' Violet L~na'rd, ']iam, Beigl, 17" ,student evenl will "ease· the sU'aiJi' of family' in' Fall- River-Theresa, 'Superiors: and counselor to the "boredom' on the closing days" Benedict High School, ChicagCll;,

teacher' at Bridgewater State Joseph, Antone and :Q.enis San­ Sacred Congregation of Reli­ Prison; on the need for work has been saluted here by Presi­

of school. Candidates for reliev­ tos' and Mrs. Evangeline Plunkett gious Orders. A special assem­ dent Johnson as the nation's q,

with young inmates at the insti­ ing boredom and performing and Mrs. Hilda Barbosa. bly was held in her honor. ' example of '''juvenile decen,CJ7.'"

other usefill chores are David tution. Sister 'has been no stranger to And last night at JMA the Poisson, Earle Flynn and Alan selected as "Boy of the Year'" Parent-Teachers and Alumnae White. various parts of the world in ' from among 750,000 Boys Club her missionary career. She took Association held its last meeting This is Arts Festi val Month ­ of America members, he was re­ for the year. Officers for next in Fall River and Mt, St. Mary her novitiate in Quebec, pro­ warded with a- trip to the" II&­ $550 year were seated and seniors Academy contributed thereto nounced her' final vows in Mo­ tion's capitllt Reed & Barton Foundation Jnc. received into the group. Fresh­ zambique and spent six years with a Spring Concert, presented Beigl, selected for \'superla­ $250 men entertained with a drama jointly with the 75 piece LaSalle in this mission. Then on' to En­ tive service to his home, Cburei!l" Taunton Daily Gazette and there was also, time on the gland for thirty-one years en­ band of Providence. " school, community and boys" ,$100 '

agenda for pare'nts to confer gaging in various social service Also ,'in 'Spring, a young man's ~Thornas'-E, 'Donelan'

• ~lub,,; presented the Presidem with teachers. activities. The 'war ~years'in- Lon­ , With a scroll pledging theBo)1ll fancy lightly turns to thoughts

$50 Not slowed up by, year-end don saw the convent to which of love. So does a young wom­ ,'Clubs of America to a '"long , T!lunton Printing Co. activities are' The Parables, she was assigned' completely an'S, so to be practical l;)bout, 'Cool Summer"-plu:s an $35 destroyed by bombs-all ex­ , SHA's folk-singing and, guitar­ the matter, Cassidy seniors bird" honorary .life BCA mem­ William Hurley'Jr; playing group.' Members are at heard a discussion by Taunton cept the chapel. " bership for Patrick Lyndon Nu­ , $25

Sister returned to the United -Holy Name Church' in Fall surgeon Dr. David Gouveia on

gent, the President's grandSOll;­ Trocchi Discount Food Storea River each Sunday and other "The Biological Aspect of Love." States to see her 'family after a Eagan's Package Store, Catholic: appearances will be 'for the St. forty-year Japse in 1958 and' has 'He pre'sented an informal illus-,' Mary's Women<;'s Guild and for been in hospital ~ork on Long trated lecture and answered all Association of Foresters" .1.' ,M. Wells, Louison _ & LO\lison a youth group in' Bristol. Other student questions. <> Island ever, since. SHA folk groups are the Con­ And Cassidy juniors joined , Mrs. Joseph McCormick, Para­ And she is, looking !forWard the, seniors recently to hea,r a 'gon Gear Works, William E. eagerly to the wmk that she" stellations and' a junior" high­ freshman unit. Both of, the lat­ Barnes M.D., St. Germaine & Son will continue to do in the fu­ ter units played at the Sucor­ ture--calm, serene, interested in Ed~ard F. St. Pierre, Sheridan oium Club installation banquet God and His 'people., Silver Co., Taunton Co-Opera­ this month. tive Bank, A Friend Also upcoming at SHA: per­ Continued from Page Two ~ to Page Nine

formances 'i'his weekend ei' "The , $50

Boy Friend," presented by' the Hunt Club, Falmouth"

school's new dramatic group, ~ Tommy's Oil-Buzzards Bay

Prospect Place Players. A Friend

And, seniors and dgniors at Bri$to~ Dr. & Mrs. Thonrtls Perry­

the Fall River school have just Provincetown

_ coinpleted a project on the, daQ­ $30

gers involved in the use of' al­ Ferreira's Shoe Store-Prov­

cohol and drugs. Speakers" l AUNlI'ON~ MASS. group 'discilssions and reports incetown

have been scheduled and the $25 ,

Alf~ed Hall, Edgartown

program ended Tu~sday,with a THIl: RANK ON

. CYO, Sacred Heart Oak Bluffs

Day-O-Rama conducted by Rev: 365 NORTH FRONT STREE'lJ' . TAUNTON GREEN

Falmouth Coopepative Bank

Arthur Bourgeois, M,S. of, La NEW BEDFORD

Paul Peters Insurance Agency

Salette Center of Christian Liv­ Member 01 Federal !Deposit ing. FalmQuth "

992-5534

iDsurance CorporaUo6 Dr, & Mrs. George DeMello,

Also on the junior-senior Falmouth

calendar-a Washington week­ Falniouth ~ackage Store

end, with Sister Ann Dolores as A Friend

one of the adults accompanying the group. Noel Shop-Provincetown ,Parents' Nig'ht Buzzard's Bay Garage ON CAPE COD ,Holy Family High in New Wareham Lodge of Elks No. Bedford held its senior prom 1548 last night and, upcoming is a I., • parents" night for senior moms and dads oil Monday,June 3., Class day is set for Tuesday; WASHINGTON (NC)-Direc­ June 4. ' ' 'tors of Catholic charities organ­ At Prevost High' they've an­ '.. izations thrQughout the country nounced that electiqn of the have'endorsed'the Poor People's school president will take place Campaign as "a citizens' effort in June. Why? Because, ~ays the to end the degradation suffered AMPLE PARK~NG Maple Leaf in its usual 'forth-' by millions of Americans as a SISTER MARY "~URSEY right manner, "this intere~iii1g result of poverty and racism."

a

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'St.

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,

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"Complete'

BANKING

SERVICE

Special Gifts

for Bristol County'

County· DEBROSS Oll~: co. "Tru!>t Company Heating Oils lOind Burners

JOHN HINCKLEY & ,SON CO.

,Endorse Ma,rch

BUILDING MATERIALS'

SPring '5-0700

49 YARMOUJH' ROAD

HYANNIS


Neame's Book on Lourdes Differs From AII~ Ofthef~ By

~~

Rev.

MSgT•

Praises Dedication of COB1vention To, M'emory of Martin Luther King

.John S. Kennedy

BALTIMORE (NC) - Law­ rence Cardinal Shehan hailed the decision of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Holy Name Union to dedicate its 57th annual con­ vention to the memory of Dr.' Martin Luther King, and stressed the obligation of Chris­ tians to work for better' rela­ tions between the races. Th~ oommunity can be made worthwhile only if it is united, Cardinal Shehan told several hundred delegates here. H~ said that insofar as 'the community is divided by prejudice,. dis­ crimination and hatred "it· ill impossible- for the Church to fulfill its mission." The cardinal said Catholics have an obligation to tgke the spirit of Christ into the com-' munity. , , . "The obligations of Christians as individuals in this respect are inescapable," he said. The cardinal observed that the Church is INlSsing through difficult times. "We need a laity that is well-· informed, well-educated and completely dedicated to Christ and to Christ's Church." He added that "the mission of ¥'Cnewal within the Church can be accomplished only if there is renewal within individuals." Cardinal Shehan said this must. be' accompanied by a strength­ ening of love for Christ and Christ's Church. .Reject Resolution "Nothing, oan be accom­ plished." he slllid. "unless we

Alan Neame's The Happenings at Lourdes (Simon and !chuster, 630 Fiftili Ave., New York, N.Y. 10020. $6.95) .roncludes with an apocryphal story about Pope John XXm. RiG Holiness, according to the story, had as luncheon guests during the oouneil two 00Jr­ oontingent perspectives of IA dinals desirous of a new doc.­ no golden age to' corne. She is an­ trinal definition of t'he Pl'lV­ eKistentialist, a Madonna for a Oegeg of our Lady, and a the­ .demythologized world, propos-' ologian. To all three he put the llIuestion, ·"Can you tell me why the Church in ~ liturgy, so ofl;en prays the I'!IIrords: Pray for ll!IG, 0 holy Mother of God?''' One car­ dinal answered, ""Because, Boli­ liIle!IS,

Mary

is

powertul IIrith God." The ,.eco n d said, ""Because your IBlGlinesa' illustrious predeces­ 110m have decreed so." The theologian's reply. was, ""So that we may be made worthy of the promlsea of <Christ." The Pope declared the llbeoIOgian's anSW0l1' t.n be the dGht one. _ Mr. Neame is l:l Catholic. He lIIdi ted the Old Testament sec­ lion of The Jerusalem Bible. Svidently he has long been fas­ aoated by Lourdes, has visited «be shrine often. He has gone ~ly .into the backgiound of l!b9t region of France, and of Bernadette's town in particular. Now he has written a b90k: ltifferent from any other of 'the ~ns or scores' which have ~It with Lourdes. Homely Trutll llt is a critical work, but not I1IlnIercritkal. It attempts to illOnsider th~ phenomenon of, It.ourdes objectively. It rejects lientimentality and superstition. Aithougb it is idiosyncratic, its ~l effect 'is to suggest the reality of supernatural interven­ UOn both in the apparitions and ~ the cures. ' Much familiar ground lB, oo:v­ <aed by Mr. Neame. He 'go'es ant.<»' the history ~ Bern'a­ dette's family, and summarizes ~[' own brief history before the ltPParitions (she ,was then 14). An ,trace of pietistic glamor is Illemoved. The homely trinth is .rkly set oul Whell' it comes to the appari­ .ns, Mr. Neame givCfl us a dear account of the location of 8he grotto, its appearance, its connection with the town. In treating the apparitions them­ .,lves, he is succinct, sticlting _ essentials, avoiding exelama­ QIon. ' He cooly states and analyzes ...nat. happened at the grotto, \What happened to the town: e.g., ebe interrogations to which mernadette was subjected. The effect, far from being III clebunking, is conviction that oomething humanly unaccount­ ole did occur. . I Acote l!J>uflfell'ences Mr'. Nearne is well aware that IDtlny alleged Marian appari­ tions have occurred. Indeed, the' oountrr. roundabout Loui-des was dotted with the scenes of !!tAch before Bernadette's time. !aut he well brings out the acute amd deeply significsnt differ­ ~ which mam off the Lwrdes story from all others. The 'words attri-bU'ted to Mary ~ Bernadette ate extremely 1iNI, as against elaborate mes­ ooges said to have been deliv­ tUed elsewhere. They are neither prophetic (in the sense of fore­ Wling dire happenings) nor political. "She makes DO two-edged, fllDbiguous promises. &be ~ IIU. -

ing nothing but repentance and blind faith." Appeal to individual Or, as he puts it in another place, "No word Qf the temporal power from her, of the sover-. eig"ty of the Pope, of the righw ol the Holy See or even of the rights of the Church itself. No word of condemnation for the, modern world or the secu1aJr state. "Only the appeal to the indi­ vidual: 'Go and kiss the ground in penance for sinners $ ~) $ drink: at the spring and wash in It.'­ actions symbolizing two" funda­ mental obligations: to love one'a neighbor and to sanctify one-'

5

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 23,1968

FA'nIER JOYCE. 8; 3.

Name Fr. Joyce Be President

have complete confidence that God is within the Church." The delegates rejected a res­ olution that would have called! for a change in the name of the Holy Name Society. During a banquet in Balti­ more's Civic Center, the dele­ gates heard a leading Canadian Catholic layman call for greater service. to the poor. Rom Maione} executive direc­ tor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace, said that "C.hristians are not allowed to live any longer in solitude" but must in­ stead "pour ourselves out into the world." He said that "we are either going to grow in love for one another or we're going to grow in hate."

BOSTON (NC) -Father W. Seavey Joyce, S.J., 54, has been named president of Boston, College to succeed Father Mich­ New York Teachers ael P.' Walsh, S.J. , To Study Judaism Father Joyce has served atil NEW YORK (NC)-Teachem chairman 00: the college's de­ self." in the New York Arahdiocesaan partment of economics, dean 'o:f Obvio'usly, Mr. Neame seen the college of businesS adminis­ schools will take 11 five-pan Lourdes as very pertinent to tration, and since 1966 as vice­ course on Judaism and Jews !mI the contempor~ry Church and president of community affairs. literature next Fall. " the contemporary world. Its , Acti ve in Boston civic affairs, The course will consist of five meaning he finds expounded Father Joyce began in 1953 the one-hour programs for' closed and concretely applied by Vat­ Booton Citizens Seminars at the circuit television prepared by ioan n. This interpretation is, 1I college, served from 1963 to 1968 Jewish scholars and theologituW think, unprecedented, and 'should as president of the Boston Metro­ and taped by the television stu­ make us see Lourdes in a new Jiolitan Area Planning Council. dios of the New York Archdio­ way, not eclipsed, but ,Ilhining· and 'from 1963 to 1967 as chair­ cese. The course is sponsored by out with fresh force. man of the Boston Citizens Ad­ the New York archdiocese and MatWr of ~ visory Committee on Community the Anti-Defamation League <ri B'Nai B'rith. . That it should have swviVed Development. unimpaired, he believes' to be astounding. He details the con­ troversies and the· vicissitudeu which have beset it. There waS Now available 10 members of , , a kind of feud between the local clergy and the religious es~ , cially assigned to the shrin~ ll§. this ~eveloped. .Also, there Ww;'l ID()re 'than one effort to involve Lourdes in politics. Mr. Neame goes into the mat­ ~r, of cures, thlHr number.. tM standards (progressively tough­ er') ror judging their authen­ ticity. Curiously, ·he regrets the exclusion of neurotics from con­ 8ide~ation as genuinely curedl. "The crYing need of our day," VIA TRANS INTERNATIONAL AIAlINES~. corl,l,cotbd ........""'...... D.... ~

be says, "is ·the miracle that TIIree daylin .

heals the disordered mind. the unreconciled personality, the ~otionally disturbed, the tem-' • 3 nights at Ihe fabulous Flamingo Hotel. Aeservea tables for big name

pennentally unstable.. These are dinner shows. Throughout your enlire IIlay in Las Vegas, reu will enjoy

the very cures' to claim, not the Ilfoakfaat, lunch and dinner at rour hot.I. In addition, you will enjoy

ones to set aside." unllmltod !leverages and cock_Is of , _ choice 81 I~ Flamingo - jus(

siun DIe c:Itedlo.

Help sought, GivcllIl This jolting book contains. a S...napln plethora of incidental infonna­ tion about Lourdes; the local • Flower lei greeting on arrlva! • 1 nights at world·lamous Hillon Hawaitan

people's attitude toward the Village, Waikiki Biltmore or Hikai Hotel. Breaklasts daily at holel

'grotto (they are aware of it all : • Exolic dinners nightly al lop restauranls 'rom lisllo be supplied. AloN

Parisians are of the Eiffel Tow­ Cocktail Party. Free Sightseeinglrip

er); the origins of the dialect TIl,.. ctaye In which Bernadette spoke; the number of visitors (about three 'million a year), and the • 3 nights in the beautiful San Francisco Hilton, Del Webb's Towne Hous~

ber of postcards sent by them or Jack Tar Hotel. Breakfasts daily at holel • Luxurious dinners nighlly

(about ~ven' and. a half million Irom list of lOp reslauranls 10 be supplied. Jelllighis all the way ,wilb

a year); the peculiar story .of lood and beverages aloft.

the Cagot people, throug~ Hawallllll Carnival Represenlalives ill each cily 10 IOtve you and a HawDiillft

whose segregated quarter Bel1'­ Carnival tour escort with you Ihroughoul-,however Ihere is NEVER ANY ?

REGIMENTATION - your limo is your own 10 do wilh 8S you please. tn addillon

nadette ran on one. occasion; to all 11110 - transportation 10 and Irom each airport in Las Vegas,. San Francicc~

even Bemadette's diet. This and HOIlOlulu, along with alllu9911ge ('ncluding bellhop graluities) up 10 44

Qften astonishing miscellany iD pound. PM person 10 lRcIudod,

.well woven into the text. The story' with which thill not-ice began and the boOKcloses. makes the point that Mary'g help is sought and given, DEPART AAY t3 & SWTEMIIER 1 I fR~ BOSTON •• __ a._oao • whether ordinarily or, 'as lilt fOUATH DlGQft ASSOClATlES 1lC. of C, fOUATH DEGAEE ASSOCIA~ • 419 Ioyiliton St•• Suile 317 Lourdes, extraordinarily, that hSlon, ~ ••, 01116 ; 16171 536-1492 ·we may so live as to be worth,.· Enclosed please find $ _ a 5 deposit • as full payment . $100' minimum deposil per of the 'promises of Christ. A qerson - final payment due 30 days before departure. Make check or money order payable to: critical point. '

.

KNIGHTS of COLUMBUS of MASSACHUSETTS ,

H4"'4114I,

t~AI~II\'41~

115 VEEI5!

HOnOWLU!

SAR FRIIII15ID!

num­

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p.~

Accepts Invitaft'ion Y'J[ENl'jA (NC) - FranziskUllJ

Cardinal Koenig of Vienna hlllSl

accepted an invi,tation by P&­

triarch Vasgen I of the Armeni­

an-Gregorian Church in the So-­

viet Union to visJlt tIl!at, Church'.

oocters

ther~

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1'0UftH DIGIEI ASSOCIATES NAME STAEET~~

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CfTY STATE ZIP. Return this reservation promptly to ,"sure space, Aeservallons limited. AIrs reserves Ihe right wherever necessary 10 subslilule compar~le hotel accommodalions (single' rales $100 addi· lional). P!Glloo send brochuro.

&-----_--_ooe_m

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~" River-TJiu'rs:, May 23, 196&

Oversleeping

Ordination

Continued from Page One eharist,' they alSo .ordereal to evangelize and baptize. ~ this sense they were minist~ who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop. The word 'diaconate' comEQ from the greek word "diaxonilllJ:l" which etymologically meaoo SERVICE. The deacon's office means service to the Church, 4) ministerial service to Go~ people. The deacon was ordered to minister to the' sick, the pooa and the afflicted. Since by ordi­ nation he is 'fUled with ~ Spirit',he is ordered 'to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians), By ()Iloo • dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell' of the Word of God, He shares embryonically maybe, but. stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders . (the power to baptize, to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)..

were

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are striv­

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience

~ch day, to check their spiritual condition of soul, to

measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd,ments and counsels. Some wag called this period-You can't

be right.

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way., .

He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese a/?king their

lIreCOmmendations fo.r diocesan offices. And immediately one

reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he

h,ad' gone outside the established, advisory groups, namely;

apparently, the Senate. '

, And if the Archbishop h~d ask"ed the Senate for J;'eC0In­

mendations, some' individuals .would have ,. stood up and

proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a

matter to an organization and bypassing the individual.,

.

The ans~er, of course, in this post-conciliar age is

to consult all, to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely,

Minister

as possible. And then the Archbishop must fulfill his respon­

8ibiJity and make decisions and' choose men who will ea.rry'

on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way. .

Even then there will be criticism. But the ri,ame of the

.ame~,does seem to be-You oan't be r.ight ,

{

Here is another i~stance af. where there must always'

be a posi-tive attitude toward what .is being done. Critieism

. surely has its place-:.-but only in the context of praise for

w'hat is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the

forward thrust that is taking place. Then it is positive and

~. ueative.' . ,

.- . € th ·m' '.0.'0.','Q I n G .

Wider Vision "£Q""

Rev • John F.f Moore,. St.. Jo,seph's; Taunton

C .. rime

'

the

"A'la'r'med

·.·t.·...e·.·nry·., ,a'

,,'F,' ,arf.. ' ,At Home' cis on C'·.ty 5 tr,et,

.

to holyofpeople., dea­ conGOd's is a man prayer,The since he

has . already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate). thO Church's delegation to pray ,the lA, MA, 'M.Ed. daily the 'Divine Office, to, be ai' Pray,,:eJ;. The, .d~acon, is .~ and Indiyiilut:r.: just a glorified Mass server; iii '\ the tniest sense of this ex,pree.. sion,: he is a 'minis.ter 'of Jesu. , It i~' unfortunate, howe:ver ; that' in ·sOme ,Publie]ty, ". "C., S e, iI:.:: Christ" .th.eSpeonlele·d,:lliough. r'rlest.', . t 'eomingout of Chicago one speaker ,in Particular uSed the ' ," tired 'old ,pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of ,the'" ' ' • The - ConstUidfon' on - ' Church has spelled out veq pa.storal language, Of this m.odem ·age.H,e spoke ,.of "'the,, . ' . ' c l e a r l y the office of' the diao; federation as a manifestation of·uderi1<>craey· entering into During the pas-t,four months, over 2,000 more c:iti~ns~onate': "It is 'tbe duty ,of' fi.e the life of the church." , ,'. '..' : ',,'; - 6 ~h' Co' alth l..~' "ht, from the'r 1 1 nn n....,deacon, to the extent that he h8lll . , , .. ' ., " ' , 9.1 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve .80u~ , ~ ,JVCoiW -"""'••....., 'been authotized' 'by eompet'eDi If there is anything that the Counefl'pointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~'''"authority;to administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping. and 8hould.~ volvers. ,Thousands more have made the sale of ri.flefl a'"~ 8Olemnly, to be custodian' and be seen in the :forms and languag.e ()f poliiics. ,To d9:thiB' is' very profitalble business. The . ~ , ','dispenser of the -Eucharist" .. . ', . for the loss of 'pr,ivate ,prOperty . bring Viaticwn 'to the dying, • to take a narrow nationalisti~ viewpoint.and to in;ssenti:rely questionoow must be asked:, ' ValUed at:more than two binioD: . read' thesacr,ed.~r!pture to'uMi the fact that the Church 'is eatholi~madelip oot Why are private citizens dollars. ' , " . '. . 'faithful, to inlfiruct and' exhod of fifty million Americans b'ut some several hundredmiUiorts 'seeking to protect them-' With this, rapid increase' m" the people, to 'preside 'at '~ of other nationalities. ' . ,.' aelves in such a manner? the crime rate, there has' also' wo}"Ship' and p'rayer 'Of ,~ Why must'homes ~ protected . been a'Tapid decrease in effec-' faithful, to ,administer sacr&­ tive· public oontrol of crime.' mental, and to officiate atf. . What this. national organization will do is to bring by priwte weapons? about among priests more of a sense of national and, indeed, . The, answer of, Course is fear! This is due 10 many factors. n~rals and burial services" (art. Private citizens of this and, Perhaps the most insidious fact 29). In the ordination rite one III world-wi"e awareness and responsibility toward the Church every state in the Union certain­ rests in' the extreme liberaliza­ ' made a deacon by' the Bishop'. whose servants they are, toward all peoples all over the ly are well aware of the rising tion of the law. laying on ot' hands: through thJ8 world whose salvation they' are pledged to seek. . tide of, crime. In the last two imposition of hands the deacoA It seems under present juris­ years'in this country there were prudence the law favors the receives a share in the Bishop'll . Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought two victims of serious crime per' criminal factor and fails to pro­ mission which is. this ministr!p; to God's people. The deacoa and accepted by the National Conference of' Bishops who 100 Persons, an -increase of more teet the true innocent. Hand-in-hand with this great takes 'on the duty of the, minis­ are pledged, with, if anything, even 'more pointedness and than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960. tr~nd to protect the so-called try, which was described a~ove. responsibility, to the saJ.11e high:~urPoses. And, during the same period rights of the criminal goes the. because he is. co-missioned . . the Bishop' to do so. But the national federation will'be ill-served if. Speakers over 80,000 armed robberies rather ineffective police meth­ were reported; , ods that have been imWsed ". On June first Bishop' Conn. talk about it it) the language of a Political ,party or Polit­ Robberies, burglaries, lar­ upon our local protectors of the ly will ordain eight men o{ the ical.system. The, vision must be a wider- arid ~a'deeper One cenies and auto thefts accounted \ public. . ,diocese .to this office. MC!y . . than this. . ' . " . . remember these deacons in'_ prayers, that they might be­ Imbalance of Scales, of Justice, , came men full of faith, ,filled :" 'The modem policeman soon munities; his home is nOW-tIM! wi~ th~'breath of. God's .spi''''' ,becoJl1ell discouraged, and irus- target of financial Security !bat generoUs servants. Qf tbii U'ate9 ,by the, intrigues and' the dope 'addict'mustJ)OSSeS.!lj. Church' and faithfu('witIi~ subtle maneuvers .of the law. his very life· now dePends 011­ 'of god's' beat Love for l:Iisholy ,He ends -up by Saying '~wbat's his own skill and abilities. ' . peOple iIi' the loCal ChurcD '" " the use"? As a result, the quali-.' .Indeed,' this is a tragic. utua-, F,all,.~River. . , .. :.. 0.", . "• . , ' fied person now is no longer . tion. '' , ,The formation' of a private. unless society as 'a whole' begu. interested in police work.' ""lI:l:'C1~L NEWSPA'PEROF' THE DIOCESE OF FALL This, rapfd iricrease in crime .. vigilante ariny' in thiseOUDtry. to wake up and act as a colleoo together with the corresponding' defeats the total concept' of this­ tive unit. Published weekly by The Catholic 'Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er factor of ineffectual public ac':" union. In a way it is more iJe­ ,'Liberty is nOt license mil • 410 Highland Avenu~ " '"

tion' has now underminded the strpctive than any'. force of justice is not self righteousneMo' Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151

trust and confidence of the pri­ criminal, element to the Amer­ .·As this criminal elEfment be­ ,vate ind,ividual. I , ican ideal. If we are to have any· 'comes organized so, too, the'eI­ PUBLISHER

He now fears that the state solution to this problem the re-, ,fective' control of crime ..... Most Rev. James L. Conno"y~ D.D./,PhD•.

, can no longer give him the pro-' sponsible. forces of' law,' and. ' becoine a community effort. JIIi teetion he needs as a citizerr. order must begin to completely, single person can effect tile GENERAL MANAGER ASST.. GENERAL , '. MANAGER . , The results can be seen in the, reevaluate their role' in CIW'. changes that must be undse taken but each man, bound ... increased sale of weapons, to. society., It. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A., Rev. john· P. Driscoll· . pr,ivate.·persons. The citizen. can, The cancer of crim~ together gether in a common effort, ... .,MANAGING' E D I T O R " .., .no',;longer ..walk after. dark in with the disease of individuality' yet save tbi.I '8hip ol' natkmll H~gh 'J. Golden',· ", , .. , ' .. man)' sectors of OW' III'ban.com­ will destroi· our" Dational 'b0d7 ..p~ "

,A significant meeting -took ..place' in Chi~ago the fi1'8t of, this' week, representatives from pries'ts'.· groups and 'f II th t to form a •natI'o'n~1 fed'........Se·na tes rom a over e counry, . <U 'tion Of pries'tiS organization. T.he'Di0ce8e'O!,:fall~RiVe:rwas', l'epresented. ., , ' " " , ~

,

Since Vatican II the impoJlioo • tance of the diaconate has bee!li , restored. We hear 'even of t:b:e possible restoration of a pe... manent married diaconate. FOI' a long time, the diaconate W8!1 ,just another step, a vital OM yes, b'ut merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood. TOO diaconate was always considered to 'be a 'major order; 'howev~ history made it to be sort ad! unimportant and unhea~d of blv. God's people. The deacon Is a minister e!I the Church. His role in the local. Church .is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in service

only

a

@rheANCIIOR.

piVER

~


Clergy

Ap~ntments. AHect

16

eontinued from Page One . Aft$, Portugal, on Jan. 29, 1933.

newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio .F. l.lJld Blandina

tfu'st assigned are: (Ferreira) da Sllvn.· -

Rev. Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

@ur Lady o:f Vic1lol")7 Church, the Seminario de S. Jose' Fel­

Centerville. /1Ueiras, Portugal" Father da

Rev. Edmund JJ. mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ

lJoly Name Church, Fall River. 'c::2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev. George E. Harrison to 81. Imd studied at the Seminario de

~seph Church,' Taunton: _ S. V~cento de Paulo, Limpiaf,

Rev. William J. Hurley w ~'( san·tander, and the Seminario

Stanislaus Church, Fall Rive1? ~ 818, Teresinha, Felgueiras,

Rev. Comelius l? Kiley ta Si. JPIortugal. ,%seph Church, J:i'aU River. Ord,ained a priest' OD. July 19,

Rev. Robert A. McGowan w Jl.959, he returned to the seml­

Cnrpus Christl Church, sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

· ~ch. : m 1964 as seminary rector. On

Rev. Donald 11:. Messier to St. Nov. 1, 1966, he was appointed

8@hn the Baptist Church, Fall sssistant at Mt. Cannel Church,

niver. New Bedf~rd.

Rev. Kevin F. Tripp to Nqtro Jli'l!.tllneli" l\llitellneTIll "

Dame University fur Swp.,r,ner Rev. Edward Joseph Mitchell,

· c1I.udie&.· ron· of William and Anne

17o@n~1i" lLo~eg. (Grace) Mitchell, was born iml

One of six children" Rev. Wall River,· Jan. 21, 1932. Edu­

'IDhomas C. Lopes, assistant. Bit ~ated in Fall River publie

St. Elizabeth Church, Fall River, schools, Father Mitchell, attend­

nras born at Oak Bluffs, on Aug. ed Prevost High SChool, F'all

14, 1938, the son of Constantine River, before stu~Ying at St.

ood Viola (Authier) Lopes. Charles Se~inary,- CatonsYille,

After elementary and second- Md.; St.Mary ~eminary, . Balti.­

cry schooling on Martha's Vinemore, Md" and NOiIth Americal'i ;yoard, he studied &t ,St.~ ThoIIias College, Rome. ' &minary, Bloomfield, . Conn. Ordained a priest (lID Dec:,la, crn.d 51't. .Tohn Seminary, Blrighton. lQ5~, the Fall River priest Ordained /) priem, on Feb.·lS, served as assistant pastor . aJt 1:965, Father ·Lopes has_ serv.ed Sacred. Heart Church, Taunton, , ,Gl!' assistant EitI; .St.· EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church, Fall {Ohurch, Fall ·River,· since ord!- lRiver, before returning to ~e

mB~

.I

" ' JBITSlHIO]?S CONGlRAT1UlLA'Il'E ;U1UJBilLARJrAN: Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ.. bilee of Rt. Rev. Felix S. Cltilds,pastoremeritus, three Bishops congratulate the jubil2la rian. Bishop Gerrard, Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8, Te~as, preacher; Msgr. Childs, Bishop Connolly, who celebra-ted th~ .lVlase..

::~ to/u~~'for~ S~~di~a:: Atm~OU~~~.' ~ ~te.rf(llm.th·"The@~@.gy

~ rnJ S ~ 0t((l[jj ~h~

rultion. , l7atbeli" mev. Ernest E. Blais, assistant Law. . . .' " . .' . . .. crt st. Louis de France,' SWanSince his return from Rome, ~ . rL. l1f. IJ. ~ ...J1I 0 .JI II!. fC. A--. , c::2a, was born May' 26, 1918 Am! lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]@@lli/ tr@[(\.8@ 1m(Qj ~QW @;Ii!! <eS5 @lJ §l\1ro1f ~@Dlflm · Pawtucket, . R. r., thei s SOllll' } of1 assistant BALTI"MORE (NC) '._ 1.·La'-_ ''''''_ n Hi at Holy Name Churclilp ~ r:l L. Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theolog.a ~ry (Bouchard) Bla .anell'the Q , ver. . . rence Cardinal Shehan··0f.-i3i1lti- J'ointly an'nounced the openl'ng' lea . I. an d d · I d eveIopment. '. : ~e Edgar Blais. . . ' i:' lFatllner Moll'~ . octnna After. schooling in Pawtucket, I Ordained May 20, '1i}6'f, Rev. more ati~ E'pis~opal:Bis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening l¥JIe~t Great NeOO ·n. 1., Father B8'ls prepared fur' ,.lJ~mes Harold Morse, son of School of Theology for ,all qualThe institute represents a new ifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerri:ming"':"'to' mention ified candiates of any faith in idea in ,theological education. ~ the Oblates 0".. Mary Imm·acu- ""orse ~as bom '-, Rumford, M os, t senunanes ,. h ave .. b eeiil Ul: -~ An only a few of the Coalition's .. ' ThBaltimore . t't t' area. h' h '.. ; , ~e. Orda.ined .,to flhe priesth--" m. I. on April ~, 1939. After founding fathers-strikes me as,· S• t e IDS I U"U e, wbe' IC opens ill planning moves to secu'lar uni­ uvu b' ted t .. on June 25, 19'4 A , he .served·M studving at St. Mary School, " ep em er, Wl AOca a "t' d 11 . t th '. '" missionary in .,"'__ Cayes, Hal':;, 1t1f1,,':rs"ide, R. I. ~d St. Ra~ael, . being 'rather, sophomoric and St. 'Mary's Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges mo· e U> ....,.... J<Wv~..... strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d '11 t seminary environment. " . • "''lIDtil appointed 00 ·St. Lou"~Pawtucket,' R. I., he' oontmued paper which professes and. genere an d WI J:i'ather John Thl'rkell, !:i.S., >U ,­ ... ""'" t nary,,_.... doc' gran" France, Swansea, on 'Sept,' '''''. lllt St .•, Tho.mas. Seminary.,.Bloo.m_ erally lldher.es to reasonably mas er h0 d 11 an . E ..or ,0... dean of the in'stitute and ~ ­ :: .t>.. hil lIm t . ......52.· ,. • ""e'd, Conn. and St., &I'"ohn Semi- hig.h standards of editorial . ,fair-' ,p ',1.' osop y egrees. nro . ' en, R everen. d C S tep h an M ann; an £J JU A Iso' be . . PIlther .ll:Dvuoe ... _........ ....,..,., Brighton. He"Lad has served :Wlu a open to..... students not An g rIcan pnes . t f rom E ng1an.... ~

.' . -".., t h . ne,as anq. courtesy. . iree.King'''a degr'ee·.' ',.. ,"•.. Rev'. """" "D."'"m'tuU .:-.a. A,"'. ,La'.·-· 'i'e' ' , ,' :.'.-., as asSistant· at OW' y of e '0 f ,associate dean. . v.,........ C ' on use Issu~ ,.", The 'facwtyof 18 is compOsed' "Ief 'Herineneoil6e'" 'and 'Dena Assumption ,atbedral, Fan . T?lrdly, whether W:lttingly or: .ofprofessors "from St.' ':Mar:y's, In announcing the .institute's " ,~. (Ouelette) Lavoie,'was m ;>,·,.v~r"since otdiXl'ati9 J ; 1 , . .1, oot; NCR was: playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y ," opening, 'Cardinal Shehall ':····ftIl River' On·'Jj,m. i930:' ~.l,!i!,u,.!·4.Fa~~~ :,.:; ...,' ,w\th,,':i,l\y,!Dbers . when, f:or.",th~ Goucher College, Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to now:there ::." "A gradua~' of~t. Ma~ea;, .;ll!e..v. ~~~as ... :Ill'4W;~ O'~~ I~!1<\:w:e~k ,in a,rqw,.i~,.s.u.sPi-"brew .. College, Loyola College, has been no institution in the · ,r8choo1, Fall 'Diver, Fll'tber La- .lll\S~t ~ ~ James Church,. eiously contrasted the' interim Mount·St. A...... Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped · 'vole studied at .~~PttOIll· ·:N'~w\Beiiford,·wasbom."Oct.·'30,· ,sumof'$25 'thousand 'granted to1 '" the unlversii;':: pe~::r~a:a to .give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd 'COllege, WoI'eeSter,. 1934 in Taunton, Ute son of··· the·· SoCial· Action ·Depar.tment·' '.'" ." , ' ." .... . field of religious education. · where he obtained a B.A: Siun_"""Mlilirice "O'J?eii .~ the :1a~', of the U.S.,Catholic·Conference.'· ~~y wi:ll teac.h:.co~ses in. the He said -that he thought the · ,,"m:i cum 13ude. Afterattetidfn!i1:'''Marguerite '(Dineen)'O'J)ea:" '.... for a~istra~ionexp~nses with .~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet' a very ,'Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi' MonHis elementary and secondary the sum of·$2.2 million allocated . era! pomts' of, VIew and will angreat need in preparing college :"ibeaI, Oanada,he was ordatned':" education was pUrSued'at Im-"by tbe'blshops, oil. an eme'rgency·" aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan"'" gr-aduates to work in various "Ia priest at the Cathedral ~'Fan' 'D}8culate ConceptionSChool"lmd basis, to the Catholic Uni,versity ~ll;::liCI fhUrch, ~e.Protestant types ~ religious education..and • , B1ver oil April 25, 1959. ' . . . : Magr. Coyle High School;' Taun- . "of America. . 1 . 81. .' s am. .Jud8lsm, snd the in other apostolic work. , i'ather Lavoie haa served as ·ton.. His seminary fonnation was These two figures' are com-.:· ~~ons. o~ the Far East. . . · I!lSlfistant at st. Miehael Church, obtained at Our Lady of Provi- . p1etely unrelated to one another. and ~:~studY, the onglns OCean Grove; st. fosepb. dence Seminary, Warwick Neck, The editors of NCR must 'know . rl ~eyelopment. C?f Church, Attleboro; and sinee R.][., Stonehill College, North -and, in fact, explicitly'stated' the· ~arl~:i reli~on8 and win .hn. 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton, and st. John Seminary, in the course of their May 8 ed- ,examme e r SOCial and ethical 'Paint and Wallpaper lLourdes, Fall River. Brighton. itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of . Dupont Paint . Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be I"rotestant Chaplain cor. Middlo St. Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan. 30, 1960, Father allocated to inner city .projects 'DETROIT (NC)-Dr. Gene B. 422 Acush. Ave. 'E'Ferreira) Martins, Rev. Jooo O'Dea has served as assistant at ,throughout United' states Montague, an Episcopalian' cler­ lO.iprilKlo Martins, was bom ~ .. st. J:ames Church, New Bedford, will und<lubtedly far exceed the . 'gyman, has been named first C&.&t New Bedford S. Sebastiao, Ten:elra, Azores, since ordination. figure of $2.2 million. Protestant chaplain of the PARKING" on .Aug. 1'1, ' 1 9 9 1 . ' l!f they wanted to argue that, Jesuit~perated University o:f Rear of Store Edltcmte<l in public schoohl t .. . even at l1hat; the Church win.. ,Detroit, Father Malcolm Carron, ehe~ he entered the Seminario' , ·res Y erOGJnS . an not· be meetings 'its obligatIons, S.J'... president, .bas announced. ,<!Ie Angnn, 'li'erceita, Azores," I, ~ ·t·,.. they were perfectly free 'to de .'. . . . . · '" where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISO:il cion . liO, . but, in' my' opinion, they' "e!lIl"IWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~. " on April 10, 1955. . . CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby.. shouldn't have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El " i Dec. 13, 1955; 'Father Mal1'- - terians of this' area p~dged'~ SUe .' by dragging Catholic Uni- § d § " "Ilhs came' to serve as assistant,. _m~t the racial !'risi,s. with m...:versity's stepped-up budget into El an . - El '.' ' .at St. :Antbony Of Padua Churcln r,llrograrrt of education and ,action, the discussion as ~ rect herring: § fUR STORAGE. § : . 'm Fall River, I1n~ .ten .years I !n,cl';ld~ng the est~li~~en~.f1f fa . . Touch of ~greement' § § .' Qilter at .St. Anthony ChUrch, n~w. k1[~~ of cong.r~ga~lpn focus.][n conclusion, I must lillY that -El ' , El " lElast Falmouth.' , eli SP.f;'Cif!~lIl~Y! on ~acIa~ ~c<m- .. X full~ agree with. the final parFather da Silva .. ,<#~iat~on.. . ' , ..., , , agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf. the El . " , . , El . ~ Vinc;entian Priest; Rev. JoaLeaders of the Uni·~ed P,J;'e~by- bishop~' progr?m: "The trouble §.' 34-441 CohannetStreet ' § CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella". ~rians of the ..Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that .§. TaUfl~on m .822-616 n. § Silva, was. bom. i.n . Vila dft9' said, the new coDg·rega~lonwould. all . the attackers themselvoes. == . . ",. ,- . == . " .. ~X:~ for "perhaps three Qr .four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii: .~ellrs" and WOUld. Ckaw,U?gethand that alltheirpro-·";';·;""·..........- - _ . _....".;".,-"""'''''''''--'11

".' ant Sta~,p~ . <in' ,.~. nucl!,!':lS of. com:ernedper-graIIlli "could be better... · ,.,. B1EFORE YOU ~orrw,~Ho Tr~pp " .Ffhe Siste~, ,of .St. Francis of . ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~.on~re~,q¥()ns. . ~9W. true-not .0nlY of. ptpmBUY -1l'!l"{.

. ~egany, ;j.'l. Y. express thankD I ,~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics, .but ,presum­ ,..tn Ancho!, readers. for sending ,.ti~, wJU,ch will hl;\ven~ b.uild- ,ably, of .l!ll,the ,rest of.us as well, .Jl. 1l'ESER, Prop. "them ca~celled ,~!lffiPS .f9r, for- .mg.:Qt its own, will .t?e. ~~~ to incl\J.di.o.g, I must l!ss\.\me,;-,the fftESIDENTIAl , ., eign missiol!$ an4 ask th~t sup.., . ,~,~ . a .~covenant" ,inQica'Png editors ,.of ,even our most "libiNDUSTRIAl. I : ·~ft continu~ dl,U'ing tqe .~tmi-" .the,\r "fuU com~itmel)t .to.r.acial .. er.al" .C!itholic p~riodicals., .'., .:' , COMME~pAU. . D\er months. T~e,i~ add~ss. is St. reconciliation" and pledging",. We.. arel!ll in., this,thjng to'.. OLDSMOBilE )i'lichael'~,Stamp, ~ureat!.,\. st... ,~~lf. t4m e and ~urces.f()r one"gether, and we"a11 ~ave"oUii.' OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit .253 e~all' St., New i&ldf@1'd ., 993-3222 .• . ~~I~~be~h's, ...iMo~pf:!'h9,~,4llc-.' ,',!f?Jij,ye!ir odQ(r the "ex9¢c~,'we". ~rlt cut QUt, ~ llil.: That'13: fo!' 67 Middle Street, F'alrhaven·· . ." PRY, N.1l:, ," .' .. ,.~ h.~ ~ .co~r~gati(}!\lo. t'::' ',j,,' '.'~'''' . :". _ .' ". ".' ,., ,..,

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'."'-; , ~ANCHOR:"'l)iocese'of'Fa"

RiYer-JIlh~.,Moy 23, 'l9cS8

New Bedfordilea' Elect Officer.s

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lffiiY JBa]:baJl'a 'Ward. l. 'i'he &tarting point Pol' judging our-role in the world Us ro lrn.ow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy '''!West, a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the ;world's peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the world's ~me. But this is only a with' bigher' earnings, One can ~nning, a; raw statement find it hard "to make both ends @If fact. And, as we know, meet" and be resentful of taxes Ilhwts rarely, present them­ at $6,000 a year, $12,000 a year,

o

relves without a oontext. They $24,000 a year, $48,000 0 year (ilODle to us in a dense package '~d 'so on up - in fact, since IO:f assumptions ' taxes rise with income, COlIl­ plairits can be higher as wealth ond e~periences. increases, even though expendi­ 1l'ake such a tures now. oover two houses and ~t as that Mr., Brown, worth a three .cars. Christian teaching, in stark IlDillion dollars, gives nothing to contrast, reminds us that the iltirs. Smith, This higher the income, the greater SJl8TER MJIJRlAM, R.S.M.' the responsibility. The final Is a fact, JIlul-' o counsel of perfection was given iliPlied a thou­ to the dcb young man: "sell sand times over by all the . all you' have and give to the poor."- Short of this evengelical BroWns who do IiWthing for all extreme, the wealthy must not former DiocesoD'1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years satisfy their oWllJlising super­ ~ Smiths. But suppose Mrs. As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy Smith is his widowed older sis­ fluities at the expense of the ter "\\Iho rovingly brought him· basic needs of others. 11 they do, they will enter eternity as eas­ Fifty years in religious life , Katherine -O'Neil, retired prin­ 1ilP as a boy. Then, the' fact of cipal of the Aldrich School in ily as a ca~el through the eye will be marked Sunday by Sis­ ibis indifference becomes a com­ Fall River. Both' are members of a needle-not a wholly reas­ ter Miriam, R.S,M.; former ele­ pletely different fact because suring analogy for our Western mentary school supervisor in of Holy Name .parish, Fall Riv:er. ~ eoJ1'text has changed. societies who bave "never had the Fall River Diocesan system. I' St. Louis J!>arish S'ense e(1 <Domtext Rev. P a tri ck O 'Nel' I it so good;" , supenn­ NQ lLfimfits tendent of schools, will celeSister Miriam is a native of Most of the facts' of our oon­ A sec{Hid pre-supposition.·~ 'brate a Mass, of Thanksgiving St, Louis ,parish, Fall River. She' temporary scene require this at 10:45 'Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher be­ oonse of context. They do not eontempol'ary ..z Mount St. Mary Confor en termg ' ' ' dsociety' is that . chapel ...... reli glon an d was n eome to us neat and bare. And' t IOns obli ga t' an responsibilities, ',vent and a dI'nn'er f~r C"sters .... fr ti A . , ~ 031 teacher and principal at many ~e first thing that has to be ",.op a on ers. man of'dif­ and the J'ubI'lan'an's' ;~~edI'ate t ' ~m.. Diocesan schools before being lJ8id, about us as Christians is, .f erent na ti onal' fam'l al I y or citizenship. appointed a supervisor in 1941, f . I Y WI'11 f ()IIow. presumably, that our context of , 18 no' arm ooncern. of ours. A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicita, presuppositions and oommit­ ,The Gospel approach IS wholly di f ' 't' S' .. ' , e nner or' V1S~ mg Is.ers R.S,M, The two Mercy Sisters ment;; is somewhat different different. All must)be fed, even-­ the least of, the little ones. All ~d a seoond recepti~n f?r served as supervisors' under il!rom that of anyone else. must be clothed and sheltered. ,fnends and former p~pl1s WIll ,the late Rev. Edward J. Gorman The Gospels are full of the Even if th ' . th d'tch is take place from 2 to 5 m Mt. Sl ana under Father O'Neill, pres'lldea, that the Christian angle of e ~an In e 1 , Mary Academy library. ent superintendent of schools, Jew and his rescuer a Samar­ .. a vision cannot be simply inter­ i'llan, their traditional enmity B:ec~~ving, guests wi.t~, the 'until their retirement in 1966. ehangeable with the secular or ,"worldly" point of view. Leaven must make no diHerence~ The jubllanan ,WIll be ,her Sls~ers, Since that, time they have makes bread rise because it is centurion's son is cured even if M~., James Conlin, retIred tutored and aided students with he is, in modern terms, a "hated prmcIpal of the ,Mason Barn,ey reading problems at Mt. Sl differenj. Salt gives a taste be­ eause it is not identical with the imperialist." There is neither . School, Swansea; and, l\Ifiss Mary COnvent. ' ~ :2ood. Light shines in d,arkness Jew nor Gentile, bond nor free because light and dark a~e dis­ in. the a).l-enoompassing gener~ ~ iWlguishable. r

Personal !Fortune Let us look at two widely occepted reactions to modern :facts and see how they square with the Christian vision. The first concerns' personal fortune. On balance, in the landli where the bulk of Christians live, the' White, wealthy "post-Christian" .oocieties of the North' AtIantic~ North America, Bribin, West­ ern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate *to . 'In general, a family's stand­ IIll'ds of living, its ciaims on re­ lIOurces ,and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up. in step

, Institute Participant"' ¥iss Marjorie A. Morin,Nortb \Westport, a, faculty member ,at ~cred Hearts Academy, :Ri~er, bas been named as one ¢ 44 ~igh, ~ool bi~19gy teach­ ~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College; Aurora, N. Y. The institute will be in session from June 30 through Jul¥ S.

Fan

New Bedford, are: Mn;. Thomas P. Barry, president; Miss Jean ,A. McGinnis, first vice-p~ ,dent; Mrs. Raymond M. Atw~ second vice-presisient; Mrs. ViiDo cent L. Hughes, recording s~ retary; Mrs, Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary,; l.Vi!M., Charles D. Phelan, treasureJl. 'Registrars named for ~ coming year, are: Mrs. Ricbam A Parsons, Mrs. Norman &. 'Sylvia, Mrs. Albert J. LamolZ>' reux, Mrs. William A. Horai!!\, Mrs. Robert A, Vermette, l.\Ih'e., Henry J. Fanning Jr. , Mrs. Joseph N. Joseph, Ml&3 Dorothy A. Curry, and l\Ilra. Roland F. Mathieu will $er.ve mJ mrectors. .

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO;.. seph A. Durick, apostolic adJ., ministrator of the NashVille dl,., ocese, ,has. confirmed the ap­ pointment' of William G. Ho~ as administrative, assistant tIlll Msgr. John A Elliott, dioce~ superintendent' of schools. In his new Post, Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and! federal aid to private schoolBp :in .addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJl>o 'visors. ,"' , ' There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5,892 students, ancll 53 ,elementary schools with 15,... , 405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese, which comprises the , entire state of "Tennessee.

; Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr'

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jO\llDD nalists will serve on the edito­ rial staff of a new German na­ tional Catholic weekly aimed at readers 'on a high intellectual! level, which will begin publ\b­ ,-ction in. September. -, Most of the 20 editors wh@ ,will be selected fqr the weekly's staff 'will be drawn from the of our prayer: Thy Kingdom ranks of the secular daily press., ,The editor-in-chief will 1ro eolumn will, therefO:e," Alois Schardt, a Bavarian tele-. try over the coming' months' to rm afraid I'm overworking the early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor. Dr. HeE'-o give not.. only the facts about word "romantic" in describing object, Mirra has designed a', mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank our strange new world round the fashions this season, but' gown with a bodice' and sleeo.res has been elected director of the which the astronaut, strolls in with such-an' abundance of frills of broadtail cuffed around the paper's board of trustees., 90 minutes. It will, try to'sug':' and 'tiny waists it seems the wrist and neckline with white A total of $4,000,000 has been gest the oontext without which only fitting adjective. Nowhere mink, The price-a mere $800, raised from among the 'Well0 Christian ,judgment and re-' does' the word the price of a good living room Ge~an dioceses to finance 'the sponse are hardly possible. For crop up with ,­ oouch, but then you could al­ establishment of the paper W> m 0 r e meaning if we judge only as secular cit­ ways sit on old orange crates be named Publik. Stock'will ~ izens, will the "salt keep .its than when one and admire your stunning wed':' issued. ' taste"? May it not be fit only is trying to ding pictures, ' to be thrown down the drain? convey the im­ Even the bridal hairdo is as pression given hearts, and flowers as Elizabeth ,~fiDD@Y Dining ~ L ~' by the fashions Barrett Browiling. Curls fall IIrencn lIovor, Priests' ,iQr the '68 bride. over shoulders, peek out from IN Y!HE Bridal gowns under mantillas and veils and Holding O~her Jobs for late Sum­ are even caught back in ker­ JOILR.Y WHAlLER PARIS (NC)-A ,recent' sur­ mer and early chief headpieces. If your own -ANID-vey indicates that Frenchmen Fall weddings ,hair refuses to' wave, never are in favor of priests working are now being mind curl, order some, stick-on SPOUTER INN

at n~n-priestly jobs and being shown and snapped up by curls ahead of.time to keep the marned. _ dewy-eyed brides-to-be. :romantic air. RESTAURANTS

~ a survey ~nducted by the,., 'Gone are the' outlandish 1ent By BOme unexplained miracle Always Free Parking

SocIety FrancaJse d'Enquetes' eire th . .,. all brides are b~autiful, but this par ~ndage (SOFRES), 00 Per sses, e weIrd IDllll des~gns year the designers are giving cent,CIf those questioned, both .:~ h~v~:~ ~ere d:SlgnS the miracle, workers a boost in Catholics and non-Catholics, reIg wIg. ts e P"ia~" f~W J'OWDS that spell romance. garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s. als are as n :l~ : 1Q :praclice a lleCUiar profession, ,wedding g~wns ~ tor so many ther ....fUlootfitBk· ~lS. slelas0ben, but, ./ and 51, per cent said that' work °th by priests in a f~ri, 011& " ey 1ft> , . especlay auti­ construction J' Ob "is. 'ood,.' ~ ,in thl.S dre~ of dresses. One very g 'lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange ' b" - .. ' ." .. rio 1-1-...;...' ~" " .~ ..., tb ' Ch as nerrow "'..."...s '.... pear... be •ween e Ul'ch and the ' 'dli"" - fi·· . workers." nIng ...., gure-10rIDIng ." seven .out,~ 10 persons 81lIr- '. Bi~h~uette. ~C?the~ by .Fr:m.k ,'7 Perry veyed favored -marriage, for' ~zzo for. Pand.ora ~as an Ehza­ priests '~because that would per- ' bethan aJr to ,it 'WIth ,its lov~ly ,Avenue mit them, to better understand ' !1;Jff .of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h, around the neckline and ties." And 25 per cent of those ' _spIlling d~wn the sleeves. Taunton Mass. Warm Frien'Js' surveyed ,are convinced that, Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm . 822-2282 , soon~r or l~ter, women will be If you're planning an elegant ordaIned prleSt&. ' : w e d d i n g m the late Fall ~

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All these images of the Chris­ (gan community imply being "other," different, set apart but at the same time guiding, in­ GPiring, 'changing al!d entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence. We are different; but our aim is communion. We are <eall~ to a vocation; ,but the vocation is unity. How, is this fundameintal context of Chris­ 'i.ian living to' be interpreted in rtbe modern age?' ,

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to serve for 'the 1968-69 year d the, Catholic Woman's Club clil

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Daily· Aittention .Necessary

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., May 23, 1968

To ~[f@~Dceate We~~~

AJumna Tdn~ty

1B1y .1J~JlDill alii wnJ!!illYJil ~~

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are on their way and 11 lreems that half spent digging them out ~. the garden. No' matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of rea.ppearing within Q :few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OU!'attention they ean take ove:r a garden ·in lW attitudes t2lat :vtll shape their time. Beginning gardene:m future. are beginning now and • IllS theU' friends and relatives WOO approaeh gardemng cas­ wish them well they pray that

.r our time i1l

aally or em. weekends are often each couple will enjoy the these unwelgraces and happiness that come CIOme pests ond soon give up the from a good Christian marriage Ilbip. Our suggestion is that M) with Christ in the home. minutes II day !B sufficient to Ad~ Atmosphere keep even big gardens weeded Often a wedding gift can add fi.the gardener will get out into to the atmosphere of a Christian Illie garden every day. This maw home. One such gift is a plaque mean no· mOIre than a short trip that hangs in our den. On it are BIound the garden to look mt these words: Ole plants and to pull out a few Sacrifice ~ds encountered on the weJr. !s usually difficult and irksome Few llilmt:Jtes Dadlly only We usually keep a small wam­ Love m's hoeohandy by the back door can make ~ easy and perfect and as we PlVPare to go to worlx love can make .it a take a short walk in the garden, Joy. :hoe in hand, to see what is new. . I couldn't think of. a better The result is that we spend flw motto with which to begin 0 minutes or so in the garden be­ marriage or one that becomes tore setting out for work in the 'more significant through sleep­ morning 10 minutes at lunch less nights with sick babies, and ap~roximately 10 minutea frustrating job problems, or the before dinner after the working everpresent money worries Qlat day is over which incidentally asually plague young couples. i.'!l a good time to ioosen up ~ A handsome cross, a richlY' . !t1ore tearing the kids' heads oIi'f llIustrated b~ble, a handsome l'lDr all the misdeeds of the day. religious Gtatue or plaque are The point that weeding u e:ccellent gifts to begin a Chris­ 11 th h ' t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores, mus . gful C th li lif Let ~ done on n day-to,.day buis meanm a 0 c e. cmd cannot be left for weekendll someone else buy the sheets a~d because there are so many other and ~asters, ma~e your !pft tmportant things that have to be one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g. <ilone then. If !ou re 1hinking of givmg The grass has to be cut, a new ~ bridal shower in the n~ar !!l.Inge put on a door, there is a future, perbaP!" you w0l;lld hke ball game to watch, a ride 00 to serve a Bndal Puddmg. take, a tree to be pruned, etc.. Bridal Pudding C!ll of which ore time-eonsuming 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm _... % cup cold water lIIllU necessary. With the weather % b ili t llff wa er we have been exPeriencing a'l. If! cup °h'te "-te th e. d~n~ .. '" egg W I ~_ S ...., ~ weedmg gives l'l3 · . 7'4 """aspoon ..-. rtuni Il!n oPp? ty to g~t a hWe % cup suglllr ~h lUI', 11 commodity whiclill q h eavy cream (ilDrget · '" cups D3ems t 0 be. gettmg scarcer fa th diet)

001' industrial live~, and!! 1 tea:poon v&lilla

e:hance to commune' With Nature. 1 cup flaked coconu t

:een at the wrong end of n 1) Soften the gelatin in the 'k . cup cold water· and then pour . lim tl!!e Kltcbellll· the 1f.J cup of'boiling water over Did you know that during a the gelatin mixture and stir wedding ceremony the groom unntil dissolved. Cool. places the ring on the finger of 2) Beat the egg whites until :Ule bride because the circle· of foam, slowly add the salt and gold symbolizes the love and sugar and continue beating un­ devotion that from 'this moment til stiff peaks are formed. on will have no end. This is but 3) Fold the gelatin into the <i)ne of the many traditions that stiff whites. l'J:l.ave come down through the 4) Beat the heavy cream until!. years and now are an accepted stiff and add the vanilla. Fold ~rt of the Cana celebration. the cream into the whites and Another must for a wedding gelatin mixture. d!J the wedding cake that fur 5) Rub the bottom and sides eenturies has signified "break­ cf an eight-inch spring form mg of bread in kinship" as it Is pan with butter and sprinkle ll1anded out to friends and rela­ the bottom with lh cup of the ,"ves; Even the veil that graces coconut. Pour in the cream mix­ tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride ture. Sprinkle with the remain­ b a custom that has come into ing coconut -<!!ld chill at least llU'es~nt time from the days four hours or overnight. Up­ when the brides stood under mold. and serve with s1raw­ eanopies to show that they were berries. ,and the following rum IIDlder the protection of the sauce: . gl"OOrp. ., .lltum Sauce All these ancient> traditions 6 egg yolks (see, we didn't give, a Uttle added meaning to want them to go to waste) lYle Cana feast and the sacred 1 cup sugar· acrainent of matrimony; but 0/4 cup dark 111m, cognac or <\Wen more significant are the kirsch. rostoms and traditions that the 1) Beat the yolks until lemon 1l1Jride and groom will carry into colored and slightly thickened. rife ,as a f~ly. Many of the 2) Gradually beat in the :: Dugar. Stir .in 'half the rum and cook n ill ~ilI in tOp of a double boiler over CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies boiling water, stirring constant­ of the Polish vernacular altar 131' until the sauce coats 'a. wood­ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn. Do' not boil. Remove <i:hurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir 'in the country have been received ~y: remaining rum. .John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago, In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far ,Mrs. Mogardo of Falmouth, the Cbe implementation of the Conamount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Ol!l the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares cIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil. is one pint. ~helmed by

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. lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE: Mother Pierre Marie of St. Anne's Hospital, Fan River, left, meets Mrs. Joseph Giblin, Mrs. Richard Donovan and Mrs. Eugene Dionne, all members of "The Friends of St. Anne's", on bhe occasion of the group's honoring the sister in reCognition of her re­ ception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul. .

Rece~ves

Award

WASHINGTON (NC)-Doro­ thea F. Sullivan, social worker and alumna of Trinity College here, was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the school's Spring honors convoca­ tion. The annual award, established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, who conduct the col­ lege, honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiart's educational objectives -the formation of "strong wom­ en of faith, devoted to God and neighbor, living dedicated and fruitful lives." Miss Sullivan, a member of the Trinity class of 1926, had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of America's School of Social Ser­ vice since 1941. She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps, in Miami since 1966. She has been active in a num­ ber of youth and welfare organ­ iza'tions, has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books.

/Form Sisterrs' Coull1ld~ 0

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil

leads New )errsey !Periodic White Walkerrs Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes

ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by a Sister from St. Cecilia's High School, a group of white residents have been making periodic informal walking toW'fl through the predominantly Negro Fourth Ward to meet the. people living there. The walks, inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean, are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer.

"We are trying to ,find out what the needs are," she said. "We realized that we would look like'tourists going through but you have to begin some­ where." One result of the ·walks was II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the pos­ sibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community.

--------,----

~Dil

HawOJii Diocese

HONOLULU (NC)-A Sis­ ters' council ill being formed here with the approval of Bish­ ou John J. Scanlan of Hono­ lulu. The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organization's objec­ tives. The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chan­ nei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop, the priests' senate.­ lay senate, other religious groups; to serve as' a source of unity, and strength among Re­ ligious; to foster a closer c0­ operation among clergy, Re­ ligious and laity, and to be [1 means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious, educational, soci­ al, economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese.

Universal Roofing & Sheet " Metal Co. . Alden Corrugated Container Contfnued from Page Four Corp. Mass Trucking Corp. lNJ@lf~ihl·AuBehCJH)'@ New Bedford. Hotel Macedo Pharmacy $750 $51' Jeweled Cross Co. Inc. $225 Building Materials Inc. P~Mmbnrwg Attleboro Particular Council, $5@ St. Vincent de Paul Sacred Heart Home HealltDOI~ (Oe

$200, Daughters of Isabella,. Hyacinth Over 35 Years

. Society of St. Vincent de PaW. Circle No. 71 of Satisfied Service

St. Mary Conference A Friend Reg. Master Plumber 702:i1

$150 Damien Council K of C JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Wright Harbor Beach Club & Lounge $06 ~O. MAUIN! $1'ltlEfE'ii'

• $75 Laurans-Standard Grocery Co. 675a74~

Inc. . . lraaD !rlovell' No. Attleboro Catholic Wom­ 0n's Club $35 $50 Glemi-on Roofing Co. ' Dr. Eugene Leco $30 St. Anne Sodality, Sacred Browne Pharmacy Inc. Heart Church $25 Maontei"lCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$40 Browne Pharmacy Edward N. Cook Plate Co. Inc. A Friend $WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

. $35· Local No. 168 UAW AFL-CIO IOlISUINJIr~C'ij"ANI'!I'§

Albert Morawski Cape Cod Fabrics, Philip J. , $30 IrU~1E !E){'Il'iINGUUSIHIEI:l.$

Kane Inc., Lions Club of New CYD-Sacred 'Heart Church Bedford $25 Duplicating Equipment & Sup­ , Frank M. Miller & Son Inc. ply, Atty. Jack London, New nS86 IP'UlRCHIASE S'Il'RIEIETI' No. Attleboro· Coal Co. Bedford Catholic Guild for the y. H. Blackington & Co. Inc. Blind, Sharkey's Tire & Rubber NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol Co.· . ~9:lJ-:lJ7~6 Tum oto Page Ten .

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10

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indiana Prelate ~ Heads NCEA

of Foil ,River-Thurs., May 23, 1968 •

-..

Crawford Electrical Co., Dr. Morris Feresten, Dr. Frank, L. mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) :­ ,Bish()p' Raymorid J. GellagMr Collins, Mr. & Mrs.· John P. Continued from Page Nine .' Dwyer . of, ,;Lafayette, Ind.. was .~le~ted president general Of the Na­ Hub Clothing, Bristol ~it-' Attleboro· tionlll1 Catholic Educational .As­ ting Mills Inc., Dixon Burial $150 sociation at the final meeting of Barry J. Boardman Ins. Agency Vauit, Shelburne Shirt Co. Inc., the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat Elmer C. Slater , $125

convention here.' Almeida Electric Co., August :»Ilr. & Mrs. James G. Heagney' He succeeds Bishop Ernest Badwey &: Sons, Joseph' A. Parks $100 Primeau of Manchester, N. H., Mrs. Mar-y Courtis, Dr. & Mrs. L. G. Balfour Co. who rervOO as president general , Norm,an ' ,p Sadler Brothers Inc. for three years. Bedford House Convalescent Shields Inc. A native of Cleveland, Bishop Home"Inc., Dr. Sanfo.rd I Udis, $60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939 l\lI. Joseph Madowsky, Harvey Atherton Furniture Co~ . and served as a Navy chaplain Probber Inc. . $50 during World War n. He w~s Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette in. M S Company 1965 following service as secre­ [P@[(D$Iro®$ , $40 tary. of the National Conference Attleboro Printing & Embos­ of Catholic Charities. ~'W<WI7il$~<W . oln'g Co. Inc. Speaker at the election ses­ $35 sion was U. S. Commissioner of IOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFA'll'DMIA Reynolds & Markman In~. . $25 Education Harold Howe',' who $27 said that Catholic schools will Mr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Guerriero' Leedham Hardware be especially guilty if they ,do Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Hoss . lFlIt. lFAJlUAN, O.JF.M. lFlIt. ADlIt][AN, O.JF.M. $25 not act to solve the crisis of Attleboro Sun Publishing Co. ST. IDOMIllN][C ghetto education. ·l!nc., Connelly Gold Stamping $25 "Christianity is supposed to @t[ Co., MacDonald Moving & Stor­ Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Paiva offer '.something more," the age Co., Marathon .Company Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Murphy commissioner told the 6,000 Plastic Craft Novelty Co. delegates at the final session. ST.LOUIS OF FRANCE ~'Let us be fools for Christ's On May 26th, the 9 A.M. Retreat House, Pittsfield, N. 1;1. $50 MlIss . will be, conceleprated where _ he served 'as Retreat sake,' said St. Paul * * ·We Fall Ri~er , Ladies of St. Ailne ' badly need highminded vision­ »y the Franciscan Friars at O,ur. Director and Master.~ . Holy Name Society . $1200 Lady's Chapel, New Bedford, ", Four years later, _1964, Fr. aries who can help the poorest ",st. Vincent de Paul Sooi.~, Fan River Electric, Light Co. 'eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju.:. Fabian was transfe~red, to Our of our children see a new dream $26 , . , $1000. . , ',' , bilee of the ordination of) Fr. ,Lady's ,Ohapel, New ~d~'()rd and faShion a better reality. FOO' Mr. & Mrs. Herman L&poin4e , Fabian F. Joyce, O.F.M. and Fr. where he has served .to the pres" FirestoneRubbe~ &' Latex ~ our'nation's sake, Catholic edu­ , $600 ....,,,, ,'I:,'"~ .. , k. Adrian F., Donachie, O.F:M. ent time. He is ViCar of the cation:'must join'the rest of ed­ '. ':~all R~~e'r GasCQ/llpanY"j Fr. Fabian' is a native. of Franciscan CommuIl;ity. Father ucation ,to give them a neW .' ' . '. $,500:.' ' , ' " Vineyard, 'i.ave',nc . Wa,tertown. He is an alumll'~s, of is' well known thr~ughout the botizon.'" ,,,lVlr & Mrs, Henry ~. Feite,lberl Boston College High SChool' and area as 'a preacher 'for the St. ·UT. AUGUSTINE . Mooney & Co. Inc,' " ',' ;' '. '0' Boston College. He entered ,t.he Jude Novena. devotions on ' $ 3 0 0 , ; . '. FIRST COMMUNION .-".,,, " ,.$46L50'",:" ,,,. Franciscans of, Holy - "'Nilme' T'hursdayat the chapel "and".tbe Rev. Joseph',F. O'Donnell , ResidentSof.Ca.tholic MemoJill/J Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate. ; ~o~e .. . I ' ' ' ' . ',,',,'!'; , " , ' $50 ;"~': .; ;New 'Yo~k City in 1937~ -' '. Fr. Addlln F. Donachie, O.:f,.,~. Mrs. James Boyle $300 He' was, ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow, Scotland . IN LIVING COLOUR St. Augustine's Guild, ,Citizens Savings Bank iion'al Shrine of the Immaculat.e and' was brought up in New St. Augustine's Holy Name, F.R. Five Cent Savings ,Bank Conception" W'ashington, D. C. York, Oi.ty. H~ ente.red ~t. . . $200 St. Augustine's St. Vincent de May 29, 1943. His first" assignJoseph s SeraphIc. Seminary Jtl

lPaul Society Anderson-Little Co. inc.

ment was ,to St. EI'izabeth's 1932 in preparatIon for the $30 A -Friend - T)enver, ·Colo. from Franciscan Priesthood. Mr. & Mrs: William Figueiredo $150 1944 to Hi58. He was received into the Mr. & Mrs. Francis Metell P.R. People's' Cooperative Bank . ,_..: Pastor' and SupeOrder in 1937 and was ordained $25 $135 rior of the Church and Monassix years later on May 29, 1943 Cmdr. & Mrs. Daniel Burgo, Herve Lagasse' tery in ,Denver in 1951, and at the National Shrine of the Frank Coutinho, Mr. & Mrs. $125 .'*1 served / in this capacity .for Immaculate Conception, Wash­ Michael Fonte!), Mr.- & Mr~. Eu­ ; j Cliff Nursing Homes seven years. '. i,ngton, D. C. His priestly Hfe $120 . gene Frieh, Mrs.' John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed' at has been in New York, Colo­ " Martha's. Vineyard National J. O. Neill Supply Co. St. Bonaventure Retreat ,House, rado, Connecticut, New.'Hamp­ Bank, Rep. & Mrs. Benjamin C. , Paterson, N. J. for a' period 'of. shire and finally- stationed: in , $101 " ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr., Mr. & Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymen's reOur Lady's Chapel since 1956. 'Associates Nickowal, Mrs. Dean Swift :1'1"., treats and days of recollection Fr. Adrian ,came with the origi­ ,," $100 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Thifault _""-_;;;000.... ;..e' to the clergy. He was . then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff 'Norbut 'Mfg. Co.. 'Inc. transferred to St. Anthony's- Our Lady's Chapel. THE FINEST QU~LITY Sullivan's of 'Fall River dk Wareham IS .WORTH THE PLEASANT Hyannis ST. PATRICK H. P. Hood '& Sons Inc. Famed 'Church ,-,Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE $50 Borden & Remington Co. 'AREA'S LEADING STUDIO To Mission Societ,Y ·Mr., & Mrs. Thomas Choate "r Louis' Hand ,'Inc'.' , ',",'; :Mr. & Mrs. ·William McLaugb­ . BOS'J,'O~' (NC) :....:... B~ston's ., ',William T. Mannin'g' Co';",lnt. "j , OPEN SUNDAYS famed St. Stephen's church has lin ", Radio Station WALE 'I . " • D,:,ring Communion Season ,been turned over by Richard

Walter A. Fur-man Co.' . " $45.:, Cardinal Cushing to the Mis­

~.' W. Hurley Co. " .'Dr. & Mrs. Americo ,Almeida 8io~ary 'society ot' St. James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS .. $30'

, $75 the Apostle.,. . Albert- Guerzoni 311d. Deluxe Quality Candicts, Beetle· Plastics - The edifice, _a short distance

F,all River Lodge No. 118 BPO $2'1 " 'RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY from the home of 'Paul Revere .

E~~' . Mrs. Am~lia JJaptiste _ and other Revolutionary War,

. $25 ,St.-..vincent de Paul Salvage'" shri.nes, will ~rve as head-, ,J Bureau Nlr; &, I\([rs. Franci~Mu,rp~y MAIN TAUNTON quarters fo'r" the society, which , .St. Patrick's, 'Wofuen's' Guild, M;i.& Mrs. Julius ]~abbitt -I the ~ardinal founded to do mis. 'Tet, 822-1181, ·:Call River,· '" . ., Mr. & ~rs: J,?sephNorris .§(6n "w,ork , in' Latin Ame'rica:" Providence' Pile Fabric Corp.

St. Stephen's church was de­

$50 ".',

o o siglled by' Charles, BlJlfltJch,' Robert 'L: Germaine Inc.

whose' works also include t.ne

OUR LADY OF LOURDF.8 Atty. & Mrs. Johri,.J. Harring­ Massachusetts· State' House. It

ton . $:!5 was first used as a Con grega­

,Massasoit' Hills Trailer I'ark Simon's Supply Co. Inc. '. tienal church but with the influx

Inc. The J. L. & R. Cohen Founda­ . of Catholics during the inlm'i­

~ion JUST Of'F. ROUTE 117 gration of the early 1800s it was

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc. West Harwich

purchased by the Boston arch-.

$45

HOLY TRINITY diocese. Drobyski Wallpaper Co.

$60 In 1964, Cardinal Cushing $40

Mr. & Mrs. Theodore F. Berg.:. spent more than $1,000,000 W Dr. Harry Cooperstein .

haus restore the building. $30

Ashton Funeral Home $50

Magoni's Ferry Landing :Mr. & Mrs. Manley E. Boyce P'riests COll1ference

$25 ' $26 .STEUBENVILLE (NC)' ~ A

Atty Kenneth Sullivan, Mr. 'Captain William House group of prie,sts here has fOJmed

'- Mrs. Le,wis Morley; Hathaway" .. -, " .:, $25 --, " "a. ,CQnfer,enc.e of Steubenville'

" ' '~nel'al 'Service, ',Cook:, Bord(!l1' , . ,~oh,a Gi'\llahan, .Mr. ," & ,:Mrs: Priest's to "create *. * * a general ~. .... ~-' '.' .. "

; Co., Dr:' Harry Levine Joseph <;tiltpe,tte"Mr &::MrsJohn ;~pirii of priestly' fr'aterJ~iiy and"

. : 0;:"

".l)r.,Da~id P~Iill;' Ty.rell's Mar-" E. Ke~ly'. ;~r.""" M,r.s. ¥~j~ C;or- '" -* * * professionalism." Msgr. , 'Special:School Outinils; Gjoup'Offer; $3. per Stuitent.,·, :: ':." . t 'Casca<le Drug Co.Profes- ra~o, H;.arQJd;~R.·..McK~n,na "" ',~.Tolin 'A. Cymbor, pastor '()f"St> Qff~r;incllid~,:SP,eciaII;Li'n\::,lie9n'~n~ $3. 'w~rf~ .0(', ::. '.. "'.~ ;:' , , I~al' ph~:i-'rnacy' hr.' havill's:', 'Mrs. 'R:'. 'R,.~, S'malI," Anth"onYThete~e;§ . Church; Piney: "F6rk, Ride Tickets.F.or additional details or reservatic5'ns·, ,:: ", , "'-'. '",' ,':·e~r:',Hol;vitZ&,Horvitz,'., . Ryan, Mr,:'.&'Mr~_,-;'JQn':l;,j':;',Mul- 'was'named'tempot'ary chairman .' call Mr.· at' (4Ql)_ RE.14k>OO, " :.'High, Point Fording Box Corp. \' llns;Mr,-:&·'Mrs.:All>e'rf .Daven- 'and chosen to repi'esimt' the' .. Con'rad .. ' . ' 'Feria'· . .... . collectl.','.: ..... . . , . '.; ,, , ,:.

, A. Ross,Evetett Motors,. port, Mr;,.& ,Mrs., Frank Ball group the initial'· meeting in" ,.-uline Te~tile' Co:, Eagle' ,Mr. & Mrs. John W-. Ande'rson, Chicago May 21 of the National "

Mr. & Mrs,' Paul Carney . Federation' of, ,Priests' c:oun(:i.MI

. ine Co.

Special Gifts

~[j'@1Jil~O$<C@[(il$

Our tLC1~}ls ~hau»ceti Ob$erv,e '$i!ver Priestiy' Jubilees

"

PORTRAI,TS

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Britista Cot1toIicI, Suppolt New Bilt

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To Ovtlow Bios~' LONDON (NO)

~

father

Are

0aitJh0..

BeneFally appearr to be ~V'ing strong BUPPOO't to the ~.

govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial d.ls-.

crimination in Britain. . Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its 'blessing, with some 'quBll­ . iDeations. Several Catholic anti­ aovermnent politicKms, how­ weI', have voiced opposition­ not em principle, they eblim, but oocause they :fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather &an mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority. The Race Relations Biil, Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can rea­ sunably be expected to become law this Summer, fs intended to i strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian, Pakistani, and West Indian) immigrants in the past few years.

Fell.l's Takeover.

..'

May 23, 1968

@O'W©)

Sons

OE'd~glfD®d

BELMONT (NC) Three members of the Habi'ger .family -two sons and their father­ are completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June

I

I.

M.

FATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED: A father and his two sons will be m-d~ined June 14 to the p'riesthood at St. Benedic,t's Abbey Church, Artchi8on, Kansas.

FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago, John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the BenedIctines, joining his sons in the seminary. Their nam~8 im religion are: Father J~hJ)

Igrlatius Habiger, O.S.B. (center); Father MatthewH~ri;y Habiger~ O.S.B. (left) and F~thet Benedict John Ha:bigeJr'p O.S.W., NC Photo. . : . .

Nearly' 2,000 dock 'workers quit work to delllonstrate WJainst the bill and to sboW support for the view, o~ •Con~ 2\ervative party me~be.r Eno~b PPwell that Britain . has .. too . , l(Ilany el>lQred immigranUi.. '. , Powell had called. for 8 .vir,... . ' . tual halt to the entry of depend­ ST. GEORGE ~nts of colored immigrants and $25 i for measures to encourage the ,.' Mr. &: Mrs.·· Leo'na,rd" Langlois li'epatriation of the immigrants. Eveline Magnant" Claire Mag­ OtherWise, he said, black people n'j\llt, Mr. & Mrs. Roland McGee, will 'take over "whole areas" Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Perry Dnd I'3cial violence will follow. Mr.. & Mrs. Donald Pittman. Powell was later 'ousted from Mr. & Mrs. Jacob Strunk his position in the shadow cab- . inet---'the leadership that would assume power if the Conserva­ tiVe6 won control of the govern­ l!lT. JOSI~I?H ment - by Conservative party $300 leader Edward Heath, who Paul McCusker termed Powell's speech racist. $150 Abstain From Voting Friends of Megansett The House of Commons ap­ $100 proved the bill in principal, , lOr. & Mrs. George Christman 313-209, and sent it to commit­ $75 tee for additional study before Mrs. Claudia Pendergast it is presented for fi nal. passage. $50 Twenty-five Consen'atives ab­ . Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Hickey stained from the voting rather Mr. & Mrs. John McCue' than fullow the pal'ty line and Mr. & Mrs. Emil Tietje vote against the bill. $35 Although the British in the St. Joseph's Womens Guild past two centuries have' gov­ . $30 • erned a large proportion of. the Mr. &··Mrs. Elmei"'Hallett world's black and colored $25 . . !:':., , peoples, . it is a new. thing for 'Mrs.. Margaret· Harris, Mr. & •. this country to have such peopie equal in law moving in by the Mrs. Paul. La .Prade, Thomas , thousands and competing com,! Rooney, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Sef­ mereially and socially with ton, Mr. & Mrs. JG$eph Sylvia '.' whites. The new bill is aimed at out­ . lawing racial discrimination in SACR.. I!IEAlltT jobs, housing, hotels, insurance $125 and similar fields. The most .. radical anti - discriminatioJ1\... Mr. & Mrs. H~l1ry .~orey , $100 .' , measure ever Pl:oposed for Brit­ aIn, 'it was introduced by the . ' Reliable Market-In memory . govel'llment of Prime Miliister of deceased loved ones. $50 Harold Wilson not so much to Mrs. Corinne' Fournier deal with present circuinstances $30 as with the future, when the ,A Friend problem could become more $25 acute. A Friend, In memory of Mr'. & Mrs. Antone G. Camacho, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas DeMont, Mrs. Rose

M. Peardon, A Friend A Friend BATON ROUGE (NC)"":'The first lay congress of the Baton Mr. & Mrs. James L. Kenney Rouge diocese convened at the Catholic Lifc Center herc. More than 600 lay people rep­ OUR LADY 0 .., THE r.esellting the 12 civil paJ'ishes ASSUMPTION (~ounties) comprising the Lou­ $50· isiana diocese had the opportuThe .McKeon Family . nity ·to . participate in matters .,$25 affecting diocesan finances; the . Mr;. ~ Mrs.: WiUiam.:Herron .' feasibility of. continu.ing·.Cath_. C?!iq education apart from the " .: :, Ray... ham pu~>licschool .' systein; ...' the" ." ':S'J,'.·,ANN· Church:s il')VOlvcmcnt in social' . $90 action; admiriistrative ·strlle:..· . tures of the·. Church, and the, Rev. Thomas F. Neilan !nyman's place in diocesan 00­

$75. ministratioa. Cirino, Dominic P ..& Family

WestpolI't

Woods Hole

.Oak Bluffs.

:»'

Diocese Convenes First Lay Congress

Ostell'ville

\

~

;

," $50 Almon L. Turner Thomas M. Ross $45 RobertE. Eastman $25 Dr. Frederick G. Doran, ~ Landgraf, Felix P. Kaladin Thomas W. Whalen, Thepnaa Calisto, Raymond P. Paine

$50 Holy Name Society ST. PATRICK

$250

Re~ .. .Tames F.' McDermott

:$200' ..•.. lDr. & Mrs. Roger E. Cadieux . $125 ' . Mrs. David M. Kilroy $40 Richard J. McNally '$30 Fernand C. E. Auclair CORPUS CHRISTI Dr. Thomas Clark $350 John T. ~mith Rev. William F. Morris $26 $100 . William Moran Mr. & Mrs. William Carr $25 $50 .. Leo A. Bond, Mrs. Leonard N. Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Perrault Bilooeau, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Jr. Dr. & Mrs. J. Minihan lK:ilgrew, Mrs. James E. Sullivan , Mr. & Mrs. Peter Becker Jr. Mrs. Frank Souza, Joseph TinMi. & Mrs. Robert Kennedy. . sl.ey . Mother Cabrini Circle, D of j S'll'. 'll'~OMAS MORE Norman McEnaney $50 $40 Atty & Mrs Richard N. LaSalle Mr. & Mrs. Francis Carpenger , $2~ $35 In memory of Mr. Y. J. Arch­ Mr. & Mrs. Raymo,nd Doucette 11mbeault $26 .Mrs. Charles Russell '. . . , . ~25 . . Dart~outh ·C. H. Berube M.D., Mr. &' :Mrs. ST. MARY .Joseph Silvia, William ;J. Dalton, $125 James W: 'Blunt, John Hart Dr. & Mrs. Paul E. Corley G. Stanley Johnson, Mr. & Mrs $50 Dr. &·Mrs. Victor Almeida . Fred Comings, Mrs. Helen Clarke Mr. & Mrs. George Pereira,MYIl. $30 :Mr. 1/;. Mrs..William Hines Harry Walker ]25 ' The' Percy F'amily, Mrs. Kay , Mi': & Mrs. Armand. Borges· ,~iggins .~ ¥rs...Ralph Emerson, Mr.' &, Mrs: Charles' Nunes . ¥rll. Edith .chamberlin, Mr. I/; . Mr'; & 'Mrs. joseph MOlliz Jr.. Mrs.. MIchael Cornick, Mr.. & ¥rs The Johnson Family Ernest. Forni Jr.

Dr. & Mr~. Archibald Senesac MI'. & Mrs. Shurtleff, Mry;.

Ralph Jameson, Mr. & Mrs Clem­

mey. Mr. & Mrs. James Hamlen,

Mr. & lVII's, Charles McHugh . S'll'. MARY

Mr. & Mrs. William Ward, Mr.

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE,

& Mrs. Charles Pizzotti,· Mr. .&

$36

Mrs Charles Parks, Frances Silva

James E. Worth

.$:15

Grace Henry"

Sandwich

J:South

Nantucket

Seekonk

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here. They will be Qr­ dained by Abbot Thomas Hal·t­ man at St. Benedict's Abbey in Atchinson, Kans. John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife, Mildred, in December 1963. He said he did this because "my wife and" I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord." Before deciding to enter' the priest.hood, Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl: a deep freeze home locker distl'ibutor and as a labor pool manager for the United States Air Force.

MethodlidsAdopt

Project E~uaiity ''DALLAS (NC)-The' ll-mil­ United Methodist Church-formed by a merger of the Methodist Church and the . Evangelical United Breth­ ren-has, ill effect,. adopted Project Equality throughout· ~he United States. ' '. , The 1,400 delegates to Wle QU:ldrennial General Confer­ ence adopted a resolution in which the new church "endorses Project Equality and recom­ mends cooperation both throup participation and financial su~ pori on the part of all United Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional) Con'ferences, local churches, 10­ eal or national institutioml, agencies or organizations." The resolution, presen ted to the Conference by the Method­ ist '~neral Board of Christian Social Concerns, called Project Equality a "responsible, consist­ ent, et.hical, practical, effective and positive means whereby the United Methodist Church 'and other churches can SUppOI·t fail1' employment practices in'.tbe .United States." li~,)Il-member

0

Oppose Cuts . SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ The beads of Catholic charitable agencies throughout CaliforniD have joined in opposing. 00-' 1~mpts'of government to reduce public spending at the expense of ihe needy and poor.

9ffering You

;~.. SavingsPIQns·.

'lHlome Financing:·

WARFJI.~~

(O-OP~RATIVE

BANK

261 Main St.. Wareham. Mass.

Telephone 0 295-2400

flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

MT. CARMEL·

$100 St. Vincent de Paul Society $50 Knights of Columbus Mr. & Mrs. Edwnrd McCrystal . $25 \\T o I11en'S Guild,' ,Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Blanchette, ·Mr.•& Mrs. Edwar.d. Chal)~ler, . Mr. ,,& Mrs. Manu~IJlendricks Jr, HOly'Name ~9ci~ty,. Mr: &. Mrs.E .. McPhillips

, Somerset . ST." JOHN OF GOD

$150

Dr. Americo B. Al!Uehbl

Check These Banking Services

•• .,

life

Savings Bank Insurance lleaDhtate Loans . . . Chri~tmas and

Vacation Clube ,

• ., Savings Accou·....· - : , . . • :• 5 CO~Y.l1lient.- Locaiio..s -' ·t.

·NEW BEDFORD

INSTI.TUTI·ON· tor SAVINGS·


12

-;tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~':"'Th'urs.; May 23, 1968' ~,

IJ=1J

l

$30

y<ID Uilli'il 0$

l\llr. &: Mrs..Edward McCarthJ7. $2S

S'lr. FRANCIS XA\ VlrEllt

$©l!DfrTht ~@$fr@ml

OUIlt LADY OlF GIltA\CIE

JIl[OlLY CROSS

$101 Mr. & Mrs Donald L. ,BergerOlll $100 Joseph P. Kairys '$50

Jennie E. Overton

Mr. & Mrs. James R. Jones

Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Berry Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. John Pilz Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Dray John J. Smith Dr. & Mrs. R. Earl McLoud $40 1IL F. Bergeron

, $35 Frank Ready

W ®$U'!9>@[J'1'

1NJ©1i'U'0il

$50 Rev. Rene R. Levesque

$25' Mr. & Mrs. Orner

pros

, ·ST.

X

$150

John F. Martin

$100

Anonymous

COO

:

.Charles H. McGrath, Joan Capitell, Mr. &; Mrs. Richard Sproul, l\llr.' &: Mrs. Thomas ~ Loughlin, Mr. &: Mrs. William Mr. &; Mm. George:M~ E. Donovan Mr. &: lVlm. Joseph FalDt!oo Mr. & Mrs. Harry Sylvester,

$25

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Flynn, lltlr. A Friend, Mrs. Rockina CaftDo &: Mrs~ Marshall Field, Mr. & Mrs. Robert· Ryan, Vetorlno & Family, :Mr. &; Mrs. JOQD, Km& Mr. &: 'MrS. Victor Narciso, Mr. II Bros. Ipc., Fruitland Mrs. John Kinsley

CarreiM Florist Ilflr. &: Moo. Wllliam ~ Mr. lie Mrs. John Currivan, Mrs. Alfred Kuplast, Mrs. ~ garet Jordan, Mrs. Grace Duma 8'l'. MARY.. ' Mr. &: Mrs. Fred Taylor, Josepla E. Donovan J·r., Mr. &: Mr&. W.... $150 tel' Alfieri . . st. VinceJntt de Paul Society

$50

Mr."

McznsfieRdl

.

Charles J. Ardito $<&0 Catholic Youth' Organization

$25

st:

Mr: &: :RlIra. Lee Kingsb~ Mr. &; lVlro. Leo Parente Dr. & Mrs. ~p Sibill::l

$25

Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Dolan Mr. &: Mrs. Irving Morrissey J. R. ~eyburn' Mr. & Mrs. John Hart Scudder ,& 'Taylor Oil Inc. Dr. & Mrs. Francis O'Neil

Captain's Table Bishop Tyler General Assem-

My

$54l Philip J. Hart

Ano~ymous (2)

$30

'$450 St. Vincent de Paul Society $300 Mr. & Mrs. Larry Newman $100 Doane, Beale & Ames

Duqu~tte

SOWltrlm Y@Ii'Uil'ilOuii'1m

Holy Name Society

< $leo l!'ie'v•.~ :17. ~ ~o Women'o CI.~

Dr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Evereti' Edward P. Hayes, John J. Car­ Louis Lyne & Theodore Lari­ roll, Thomas P. McDonough, mere' Doroth,y Schoonmaker' . Denis. d. Brophy Mary Geist, Douglas Eo ~ $25 'V&Jl, John Crawford Mr. & Mrs. David' Gomes, M!'. &;.Mrs. Leo R. Schleicher, Mr. & 1f<ID01i'!Jil@~@~ Mrs. M.. J. Hegarty, Thomas F. Gentile, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardlllL S'lr. JJOSEIPIHI Loveday , ~150 Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Coffey A Friend li$r., Francis Welch, Mr. & Mrs. $40 Leo F. Sullivan,. Mr. & Mrs. Rob­ Mr. & Mrs. John Aiello <Ut Downey, Mr. & Mrs. John E. Mr. &; Mrs. Gerald Tache

I3ehleicher $35

Mr. & M~. Arthur Leclair

East FaBmoutlh $30 " ST. ANTHONY Victor·L. Brunette Mrs. Simonne Fisher $275 Mr. & Mrs. Edwin J. Marmk St. Vincelllt de. Paul ConferMr. & Mrs. William A. Oli­ ace , voeira, Mr. & Mrs. Enos Days

$21) William Bartlett Mr. & .Mrs. Gerard Benoit Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas F. Tang­ ~y

,

$25 Mrs. Margaret Virgin, Alice Bourassa, Alexander Perri, llIIllll . ll!lli Braley Jr., Dr. & Mrs. Jell­ orne Brault Cecile A. Daley, Mr. & Mra. John I;)ias Jr., Mrs. .Mary P. Gage, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest R.La­ §esse, Edward McGrath Mr. & Mrs. Leonard de'Me­ deiros, ,Mr. &; Mrs. Roland L Despres, Mrs. Irene FitzGeralcll. Mr. & Mrs. Edward Fitzsim­ mons, Mary Gogghi Edmond Goulet, Margaret Manghan, Joseph C. Mello, Mrs. Carmen Muldoon., Mr. & Mrs. Paul Murray Margaret Nickerson, Mra. Edythe Rankin, Mr. &_Mra. Frank J. Rezendes, George Vi­ veiros, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sevigny . S'li'. MA.Ilty

$81 St. Vincent de Paul Society $25 Sacred Heart's. Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Allua & Nancy ; Mr. & Mrs. Antone Costa J1l:. Mr. & Mrs. John A. Wojcik

SACRED IHIEAR'lr $25 St. Vincent, de Paul

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ST., IPATRRCK . '$iOO Mr. & Mrs. William BrennlUll $75 Anonymous $50 .

Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. Flynn Atty. & Mrs. Edward Farrell

$30 Mr. & Mrs. Albert W. Lawrence •. ,'Major &M:rs. Lawrence Uch-­

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KANSAS CJI!.II.'Y (NC~-"':A five-palt'ish cooperative illl", ner city ministry, guided by a Negro lay board, has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the ,gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri. A six-person committee, head­ ed by Mrs..Thelma Work, will identify the nee~ of the lCom­ munity-Catholic or not:-and to propose a structure fur meet­ I, " ing those needs.' \ /~ '" The action came as the result " , V of a meeting of the Catholie Clergy Conference on Inner Oity needs. Father James Lock, chairman, cited charges of the Black Cath­ olic Clergy'Caucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate. The Black Caucus' statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s ';>rimarily a w,hite, racist insti­ tution" which is "rapidly dying in the black community". and to which the black community "no longer looks to with hope." On~ Out @f li5 E~GJHl'll.' O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE: Bishop Q>nnolly Harrison, the Bishop, Rev. William J. Hurley, Rev. DonaiiIll The Caucus recommended f;'ha~ white priests become "support­ the priesthood for service in the E. Messier. Rear: Rev. Cornel}u8 F. Kiley, Rey. Robert, A, m-dained eight deacons ers . and learners," listening tc Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St. Mary's Cathedral, McGowan, Rev. Edmund J. Fitzgerald, Rev. Kevin F. Tripp.. Negroes to find out what tbeir Fall River. Front: Rev. Edward E. Correia, Rev. George Eo l'heir ass:ignment~ are .Olll page two. needs are. The Kansas City-St. Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests. "We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of ~umlp~@}JrlMeFrot Nlee®~~@rJ 'OW~iff1'y church structure through which the black people of our diocese WASHINGTON (l\TC)-SPokes­ ment of public policy, ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv can voice opinions and partici­ pate in decision making," said men for Protestant, Catholic and 'in the Full Employment Act' (l(f to meet Human and community country," they said, "are sucl!l Jewish organizations h a V' e 1946, which provides for 'use­ needs. Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by Father Lock. backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a person's worth 'tn Father Dan Howe declared~ judged. A job not only tends ie "We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able, willing and programs." i10r the nation's unemployed. seeking to work.' n geared to Ca,tholics in our par­ While they acknowledged that determine an individual's ac­ ceptance by 'society, but it als@ ish whom we have formed rn. Their support was given in The Act's emphasis o:n education passage of this legislation would the white mentality. Since, cl testimony before the House Se­ and training. "Training s1M>uld be no wre-all for the ills c!i affects one's attitude abolll~ oneself. best, we are having contact lect Subcommittee on I:.abor, be 'open-ended so that the pos­ poverty in America, the, spokes­ with only about 2,000 people out whi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time. men said that any attempt to "Studies have shown' that un­ of the 50,000 in our area, we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe pres­ combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~ can presume that the activities Act of 1968. low level of self-esteem anell ' ent situation is a reality. Train­ meaningful jobs. we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-' ing programs of this ~ Testifying were Father John Christian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophes:;r McCarthy, assistant director of should include basic, education, since it then becomes more dif~ not reflect or reach black think­ MO~~U@[ij] ~@@lW@] ~O~S counseling, and opportunities to the Social Action Department ing. ficult to find or hold a job." learn about appearance, man­ OrJi1 AA@~@jj'o@ !Fo®[}uG' "We need a board of black of the U. S. Catholic Confer­ agement of income, health IImd ence; Dr. Grover Bagby of the laymen to tell us what the pe0­ NEW YORK (NC)-Answer­ other factors affecting personal ple want, to help change the Department of Social Justice of well-being and development." fog an appeal from the Ceylon the National Council of tone, to establish priorities." government, now fighting a ma­ Father Howe noted there are Churches, and Rabbi Richard G. lWven @fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16 «)INIIE $'ii'O[P> approximately 9,000 Negro Hirsch, director of the Religious, million persons, the catholic Involvement of private, non­ Action Center of the Union of $OOIPiP'DN~ ~1E1NI'ii'1E~ Catholics "on the books," but Medical Mission Board nere sent not necessarily active in Kansas Amencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations. Such Oll'­ by air Ifreight 364,000 anti-ma­ () 'ii'eDevDsicll'i 0 ~voltell17 tions. ganizations, they said, "will c0­ City out of a total Negro popu-' laria tablets to Colombo, Cey­ ~ iJlI.lFpUDillIi'iCeS 0 lF1Uvi1l~1LP1i'O lation of about 130,000. They 'specifically suppoit4!d operate with the' development ~ lon's seaport-capital. The ship­ He said that although the three provisions in the bill: ~~ ~DDel1D $9., lNIew ~edl~@1i'€!I ment, valued at $10,746" con­ structure of the lay board is yet sisted of tablets for both ooults (c@@ll@)f AdldJre!ll$@$ Creation of an Office of Guar­ ~i'-~354 ro be determined, it is the con­ ",anteed Employnient Opportu­ and ~hildren. sensus of 20 priests and laity. at nity, "l!8 a eontinued develop.. 1r~@@~@®y Meefroli\l® \ Earlier the CMMB, responding the meeting that at least half SAN FRANCISCO (NC)....,-The­ oro a plea for help from Indone­ the lay members would be unology must "revolutionize it­ der 25, since the young people ~1J'@{J'lhJ®~ WOD'il$ [Q)@~@}f sian authorities, shipped 220,­ self," John Cogley, former are the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets, ~alued ligion editor of the' New 'York black community. ' ~!i'al ~@fit1h@v@ll'sW at $7,306. Times, told the' national conven­ C~L COM~A~Y NeCeSS31l'Y ApPll'03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) ­ The Catholic Medical Mission 'A Negro lawyer, Leonara Brother:Harold Woods, a teacher tion of the College Theology so-:. Hughes, told the meeting: at Union Catholic High School ciety IN the University m- Sain Board for 40 years has been· oonducting a worldwide mercy , "One thlng is clear. The clos- here in New Jersey, has won a If·rancisco. Ing o,f any Catholic institution month's delay to 'contest lim Cogley, DOW a staff member cl program, shipping medicines, or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m De­ drugs, bandages and various says one thing to Negroes: 'We draft board for induction 'into mocratic Institutions, Santa Bar­ other hospital supplies and South • Sea Streets don't want you to be CathoUcs.''' ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1,000 mis­ bara, Cal., and editor of the Cen­ sion hospitals. 4,000 dispensaries ter magazine, tl>ld delegates that Father Vince~t, Lovett, 'dir~., 'BrOther B8rold, la' member of. in developing tor of the new Diocesan Social! Hyannis' Tel. 49-81' theology "must lead- rather than and 'clinics Action office, .said:· ·the Marist BrotheJ!'S, had been follow; use·its treasureS ratheT eoUJlltries. , "It seems to me we a- 4o_1k..recJ.assified ll-A and ,Cllldered to than hoard' them; Liberate· it­ .... WI :report for Induction em April :M ing about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0n­ like II couotywith II state goy- . April 19 as a' protem agaiDst the formity, fear imd *be dead Db­ ernment - a regional ministry . 'U.'...4o-. *actionism of th~ past." within tile diocese." Be said the war VB"allam. S~aking on "The image off approach seems ''not so much lim The 22-year-old teacher's ease . ideal 'as lh necessity.·' bas been taken up by the .Amer-o Man as Citizen,· Cogley said iean CDvil Uberties Union, that "'the change in the religlO1Ul ''Which ealled ·tbeboard'll action man's self-image and the change in :reclassifying him ~ "new , in the image of politleal man are TRENJ;'ON ~NC)-A bID pr0­ height of .wegality." Tbe ACLU not unrealated." The image of a viding for a period of silent said Brother Harold's religious free man, redeemed from every , meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was 'WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation, he said, :b triumph­ introduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccle­ 'NEW BEDFORD, MASSo 5 WILLIAM ST. State Legislature by Assembly with . the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature, Speaker Albert B. Smitlll. #3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem. ' eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero.

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HEATING OILS

"Save With, ,Safety":

Silent Meditation

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET

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THE At~~"C'~_

15

World Communication Day

Th urs., M ~y 231968: . ,

Ob§eWGR1CCe on S~'ndl~w

CtmMG'(f:~ A~V@[J'\K~@$ O[fi)

WASHING'I'ON (NC)-In :response to an appeal' by Pope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch, the Church in the United States will observe the second World Communica­ tions Da.y on Sunday, May 26. The Na.tional Conference of . Catholic Bishops awroved last November the observ­ for Motion Pictures, and Bishop Clarence J. Issenmann of Cleve­ nnc of World Communica.­ land, episcopal chairman. of the tions Da.y in this country on USCC Press ,Department.

~©~o@~ A~{fD©[jf)

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch­ bishop PhHip M. Hannan as­ serted here: "As far as I am concerned, segregation in the Church is dead. We are past the . time for statements. Now is the time for action." Tile archQishop of New Or­ leans told delegates at an archdiocesan conference on st)­ cial action: "I assure you we are going forward.': He outlined programs fe!? beMer education, for adequate housing, and for recognition of the inherent digni ty of all men. "The Church is exerting itl:l influence in every way to assist the poorest," he said. "If we follow Christ, we must begillil with the pOor, even if this means asking others to wait 0 little longer." "Anyone can live poor," the ..... archbishop. said. "The key thing is dignity. This does not mean that this dignity is recognized by a dole or a handout or eveD preferential treatment. We are confusing issues when we talk of dignity as if it can be bought or paid for," he said. - "I am totally for equal oppoll'a tunity in jobs and for adequate housing, not just open housinc, In human dignity everyone has an equal right to education anell to culture," he declared.

diocesan and parish levels, &nd members of the U. S. Bishops' Committee for Social Communications have sent to individ-' ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One country a cOpy of the. Prayer lains to be assigned on a fun· of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs and a ooP1 of' the Holy ~ather's of the sick were being adequate­ message issued earlier this ly met under the present ar­ month. ran~ement. It is recommended that the 3. Recommendations on sal­ observance . in this country ary adjustments. Taken into ae­ have both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direc­ religious aspects. The former' tives for Aug. I, 1967.. would highlight a Mass with 4. Meetings open to all clergy. appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved. thedral or some convenient 5. Extension of Synod prep­ church, to which executives aration time. Bishop approved. Wld employes of communica6. Secretary to be T'reasurer tions media would be specially and Senate budget. Bishop ap­ invited. proved. The non-religious asp e c t 7. ChO'ice of other Prayers of would feature news' conferences, the Faithful. Bishop approved: AWARDS CEREMONIES: At the annual Awards Day articles in the press, and radio 8. Referral of matters' to Pas­ for hospital personnel at St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, and TV interviews and pro­ grams. toral Council. Bishop approved. Manuel Benevides, 38 years of service, receives his award, In his message to the Church, 9. Creation of Clergy Person- while Bertha Janson, 42 years of service, awaits her pres­ Pope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board. Bishop approved. entation from trustees Harold K. Hudner, left, and Arthui' "consider the significance of 1(). Clergy retirement policy Guimond, ,right. the changes that are taking with Bishop accepting or· not place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed. tions) under our very eyes, and Bishop approved.

to ponder the serious responsi11. In-service training tor

bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained' priests: Bishop

and all." approved.

8 break':~ Clamor forAttentlo~ 12. Various diocesan di.redors. "Until recently," the Holy to recommend men for ·part­ Father pointed' out, '''many did. time or full-time further study. not have anything more to Btim- Bishoj>· approved. 1IIate their inflection than vague 13. Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics' .'in ·YMC.A/yWCA ot school or in the family .and' . programs.' Bishop aPl>rov~: What they beard in' their envi. 14.: Rotation among religious ronment. .. " . eomniunities of their .represen- . "Now, however, with, the echo Uitives on Senate. Bishop ap- " .r the press, motion' pictures, proved. .

radio and television clamoring 15. Clergy to recommend men

lor attention, new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy. Bishop appll'oved.

wide before them llInd· they are 16... Lay Personnel pension

.ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study. Bishop approved. . the ~niverse. .: "Who will not rejoic,:e at this 17. Adjustment'in diocesan' progress? Do" we not 1111 see in assessments. Bishop approved. ". :It a road·.destined by Providence 18. Clergy retirement study. for the advance of the· whole. Bishop approved.' . of mankind? There is .room for 19. Bishop announced through" all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate .exchange of facultieS' ter these techniques; but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence. :responsibilities." Various commfttees have made Members of the bishops' com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the lett.er to the. these considerations. Ordinaries included Auxiliary· Senate representatives have Bishop' Gerald V. McDevitt, of participated on a regional and Philadelphia, episcopal moder- national basis regarding a na­ ator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests

olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity.

for,mation; Bishop John A. Don­ ovan of Toledo, episcopal chair­

man of the National Catholic

Office for Radio 'and Television;

Bishop Christopher J. Weldon

of Springfield, episcopai chair­ A men's . ~ursillo win ~gin' man of the Bishops' qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Living,· At~leboro. Di­ rectors will be William Barnes of Marion, and Rev. Giles Genest, ·M.S. of the center.' . . HONOLULU (NC) ~ Arch­ . All· eursillistas are invited to trlc range ••• with Iln ingenious oven that Why spend. ~ours stooping, scrubbing and bishop Luigi Raimondi,.Apostolic·· the first· anniversary of ultl'eya scouring to clean your oven? Why not. grad- . cleans Itself. Make 8 clean break with the Delegate in the Unikld States, ·meetings·in the Fall River area past ••• and graduate to another appliance uate to a modern flarve1ess range •• : with baS received an honorary de­ . at 7:45 Wednesday night, May an.oven that cleans itself electrically? It's so . .that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng.. «ree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts .Academy, "... easy to use'. Set the controls and-zingo. The here, the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street, Fall River. A oven cleans Itself. (And drip pans.) All you lID the state of Hawaii. concelebrated Mass will be fol­ do.is whisk away'a IIttie pOwder. " . . In an !Dterview with the Ha­ lowed by a song session, social YOU'll notice, too,'that a flameless· range waU·Catholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments. keeps y'our kitchen clean, cool .a~d ~om­ Ul1reya .meetings are sched­ Baimondi ~pressed tolerance fortable. And because electric cookmg IS so lor student activism in the Uni­ uled. .in Attleboro oat Jette's automatic, YOU'll cook with pleasure. So see ted States, ·Iltating: "Students Funeral Home Friday, May 1'1; " yOur appliance dealer about aflame less elec­ Monday, May 27; Monday, June 8ft adive everywhere. Youth ill U'yiDg .. find' its WBY aoc1 2; Friday, June" 14; and Friday; o~r e.cJar. patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21. eetioD. ..e DOt lIS set as.in pre.. A eursillo for W4)men is scbed­ ..... paerationfl. Cbolees 1IIed for August and further in­ .....-e fiSH.then; tbin.. ~ tit . formation is obtainable .inla! "-.e LeSalleUe Center• ~ .

Senate .Rev1<ews

Make clean

with the past"4

G'raduate to a' ,~fiam:eless electric ra'nge that·.cl.eansits own :oven.·

Cursillo for Men Starts Tonight­

Delegate Rec,ives Honorary Degree

You Live Better Electrically

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FAll .RIVER ~l~CTRIC .LIGHT COMPANY o


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. mos&ry Altar Society

$66 ' iusan A.' McGowan William Keane

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• • Clayton King $~

.James Downey" Romeo Bedarq'l hnes H. Gifford, Mary M. Chad'::' Wick, George Smith Jr.. Antone -...es, Edmund Perry , ,

$25

:Mark' H. McIntyre, Teree Blossom, Joseph Farley, Robert GIngras, Real Breton Jobn Tarvis, Francis O'Dri9­ .u., Holy Nam~ Society, Paull Glennon, Joseph Zychowicz , 'IIaomas Renahan, Richard SmiUll

North Dighton ST. ,JOSEPH $156

, IlR. Vincent de Paul

$50 &11' Name Society, St. Joseph's Women's. Guild . $35 ' • . & Mrs. Joseph MWTaJ"

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Iohn W. Perreira

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ST. PAUL $150 St. Vincent de, Paul, Taunton.. 0 ,

Mr.' & Mrs. Edwin Payton & Mrs. John Karl Mr. & Mrs. Edwin N. Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044 . Mr. & Mrs. David Fannon Mr. & Mrs. John O'COnnell William Delaney Mr. &. Mrs. James Lopes Mr. & Mrs. Louis Fougere­ Mr. & Mrs. Armand Bedard Mr, & Mrs. Michael DelIs J'emina' Mr.. & Mrs., William Bennett Mr. & Mrs.. Louis Eacobaoct

$25 ' . Mr. ,& Mrs. Frank Padykula , ' Mr. & Mrs. Russell J. Sumner

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Central -VUlage

Ch(ltham '

$101 . Assqc. of the Sacred,Hea~ $lOet Mr. & Mrs. Robert Han Col. & Mrs. John, McCa~

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st. Pauh

$100 Rev.

Cornelius~<YNem

, $50 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Roster

$50 $24

Mr. &: Mrs. Donald Boardman Mr. & Mrs. John Medas .Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. George LeBeau $25

$30 Mrs.' Catherine ,Campbell, Mr. William Cauley & Family &: Mrs. Chester Jackman, Mr. c1i: Mr. & Mrs. George Boyd Mrs. Richard Silva, Mr. &: Mrs. $25 Mr. & Mrs. RobeI:t Generenl , Leo Leroux, Mr. " Mrs. John Mr. & Mrs.\.Robert St. mlaiN Steen Mr, & Mrs. Donald Emond. Mr. Be Mrs. Gordon Seekel, Mr. Taun'ton &: Mrs. Charles Welch, Mr" Ml'lIl Paul Silva HOLY ROSAILY ST. THERESA

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr. Aloysius J. Welsh of Newark. N. J., a recognized authority in' race relations and social aclion: work. has been named to head the Urban, Task Force estab­ lished by the U. S. bishops. Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin; ST. .JOHN THE BAPTIB'Jl' general secretary of the U. S. , ~50 • Catholic Conference, who an­ Mr. & Mrs. John DeNadal nounced the monsignor's ap­ nolt pointment, said the task force Rev. John P. Hogan was calh:d for by the U. S. blsb­ $75 , ops at their· April meeting in SL Dr. Peter F. Piccinini Louis in their statement on the $25 mational racial crisis. The bish­ , Florence I. Bessette, Mr. . . ,ops directed the task foree' be Mrs. John J. Ardagh Jr.. llim established. by the USCC Social[ Raymond Williams Action Department. Me. & Mrs. Daniel Tebr:eiN. In this work he will cooperaW! Mr. & Mrs: Robert Alban,ese with MsgI:. George G. Higgins, director, and Father John Me­ Cart!ty;' assistal'lt. director, of the ,Social Ac.tion 'Department, HOLY ~EJI)EIEME& the bish.op said:

$50

$~O

& Mrs: Henry E. Woodcome

st. Mary's Women'o Guild

$25

$35 $3'0

Friend

$%6 !lIlr.' & Mrs.. Thomas Pina

G. Perry

,

I

$SO­

A

$40

'lI'nmothy Manning Jfudge E. C. Horrocks

B~y

ST. MAJ!uiAR]&T

$55

~h

$50 Raymond L. W. ,Benoit $%5 .Jos~ph A. Tully, William .J. O'LearY, Mr. &'Mrs. Alfred Baty, Mr. & Mrs. Fred Harney Mr. '& Mrs. Michael C. O'Don­ nell, Mr. & Mrs. ThomaS P. Per~ kins, Mr. & Mrs. John Kozlowski

Buzzard$ .

.llohn P. Delaney

.

Mrs. James McMorrow, Franeb , Mulholland $25

Mary Mulholland, Ma~ . Counseil Jeanne D'Are No. 263

Neenan, Joseph O'Donnell, Eve­ ST.' MARK

lyn Rice, Agnes & .Joseph Rose $50 ~

Mrs. Joseph Rowley, Robert Edward J. Connors Jr.

Sullivan, J. Roger Torme1'. $25

Charles H. '.fripp, Rita Baker William' J. Roche Jr.. Joseph

Mrs. James Bennett, William Dias, Mrs. Michael J. Croke

Carney, John Gonzals, James Holmes, Mary E. McNamara , ST. MARY Dr: Thomas~O'Brien. Cbarleo $50 Holy Name Society of St. ,Mary O'Connell. Mr. & Mrs. Edwarcll O'Gara, Mr. / & Mrs. John 00 ,_ Knights of Columbus, Seekonk Ilfea,rne, .MlJI. & Mrs. Edward Council O'Keefe . Mrs. Leland B. Smith 1'he Ralph Reckard Famil:1. $35 . Cecelia F. lfi Mary' C. Sheerin Mr. & Mrs. Donald Blake ST. JOSEPH

mE ANC,HOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 23, 1968

,16

0

$30 Mr. & Mrs, Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld $25 Children, of ,Mary Sodality ,Richard Januse

New Bedford HOLY NAME $Z5

Mr. &: Mrs. John Hallonm Mr. & Mrs. Jacob Teser

SACRED' HEAR'i' $50 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. l!los& Mr. & Mrs. Vincent BrimleF

ST. CASIMIR $150 Be<r. cutnir Kwiatkowski

$109 Ferdinand Sowa " $25. _ S2i Mr. &: Mrs. .Joseph FoUrnier. Walter Waltman, Mr. &: Mm.' 'The Poczatek Family, Mr.&: M .... at.ephen Crosby, ' The ~ . Antbony Rijo Jr.. Mr. " Mrs. Mr.' &; MrtI; William Vaillan- \ Stanle,. Scbk:k, Eve White

$35 Mr. & MnJ. Robert MeClellaml

.

OOurt

$30 'Mr: & Mrs. Frederick ThOI'pG ·Mr. & Mrs. Clement Sbarolll $26'

I

North

..

...

! (l,

ST. BY ACINTB $100 'Mr. ,'" Mrs. George Vigeallltl

Mr'. &; Mrs. Michael' Barber Mrs. Margaret Rose, llrtr~ • !II. Frederick Reams '

.

.

o

8'1'. JAMES $U

.

Mr. & 'Mrs. Andte'w Boisvert Mrs. James Bell Jr.

Gertrude Cassi~y , St. Vincent de Paul Sodeq. . Elizabeth Sheals . $25 Mr. & Mrs. John J; Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBP'JI.'l[ON' $30 Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Cava-' ,A- ,Friend naugh, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond $D.OO Bl~hard, Mr~ & Mrs. Robert Ambonymous $2-5 ,": , Chatham Trust Co., Mr. "af Brunelli, A 'Friend ... $a@ ", MrS. E. Joseph Geller, Dr~ & MIlII Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gilmore" Anonymous Robert Harned, A Friend (~) Mrs. James P .. Reynolds, Mr. & $75 Mr. & Mrs. William Kent. Mr Mrs. John Donley,· Mr. & Mm. Anonymous &: Mrs. Paul r.eF~vre, Mr. lIi .James Battersby, Mr. " Mn. $:it - Mrs~ Richard Sylva, 'Mr. '& :Mm. Jl'ohn • Collins

Helen P. Derby Patrick Sullivan Virginia G. Robinson

Mr. &: Mn. Aibert. Giordano

Mr. &' Mrs. Frank Dresseli' A Friend "

Mr. & Mrs. Philip S1iel]o, AttRehoro A Friend Mr. & Mrs. James Griffin ­ Anonymous BOLY GHOST Mr. & Mrs. Frank Wing _' ImmaCU;1ate Conception Men'liI

$150 Club'

Dr. &; Mm. LoneJglUl Attleboro $4G ~110, , Mr. & Mrs. Raymond ~rgerotl Mr. &: :Mm. John CapoW.glo SACRED HEART' $35 $50 Mr. & Mrs. William Condoo. $200 Holy Ghost St. Vi'neellllt cl!e Pail $%5 Rev. J.Outer Lussier $35,' Mr. & Mrs.' William Buchtman $30 Mr. &: Mra. Joseph BJ:'Odeur . Caesar Cardoza, Mr & Mrs RoT Mr. & Mrs.J}eorge Merewe $25 Howard, Immaculate Conception $~ Mr. &: .Mrs. Malcolm ~ Women's Guild Mr. & Mrs, Joseph A. Jette Mr~ &: Mrs. Harry Dowdall, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. Co George Knapp, $25 &: ' Mrs. RObert Geddes, Mr~ I: McCarthy Coal Co., Mrs. Fred­ Mr. & Mrs. Paul Dion. Mr. • Mrs. Frank Pistolese el:ick H. Murphy, A Friend Mrs. Frederick Fortin, LionelL ,ST. JOlIN Martineau, Mr. & Mrs~ Philippe Rainville & Florence $200 In" memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI Mr. & Mrs. George Beaulieu S'l!'. lWA\llUf . JIoseph F:. O'Donn~ A Friend ST.MA-ElY" $100 $50 ' Mr. & Mrs. Raym9nd ENmlI:lilll $150 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Murphy Anonymous Donor Nelson Gulski Mr. & Mrs. Jose Fernandes'SIl'. In'memory of GabriGll lYaBltlllo­ $75 $30 . Rev. Armando A.- Annunziab alone, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Bryan& $50, • $75. Eva Morowski Rev. Edwarcl A. Ra~' $Z5 Mr. & Mrs. John Haug Mr; & Mrs. John P. I4e Mr. & Mrs. Roland Roberge Mr. & Mrs. John Stanford $50 David & Martha Rocha M. Veronica Reilly . MaryL. Wilhelm Mary Cronin, George Yefh Mildred Leary . Mr. & Mrs. J. G. WaJEll J'lr. A ~riend Mr. & Mrs. Francll:l Bo.... BreWSlfreli' $4G Mr. Joseph O'Donnell1 Dr. & Mrs.. Domenie BalJiIe ~. & Mrs. Ernest ~ OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $30 ' $35 'm=teanor Robinq· Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth AtwiIl o $100 'Alice,~ jnr. & Mm. JosepiL Dona lllisBionaries of La saleUe

Atto~,.,

$50 '

st. Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Armand Desautels

Tremblay Moving Iii' 8t.onlge

00mpany

Tum' to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN'

BODY COMPANY

ST.MABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt!

" ' $60

GeOrge Dion Jr.

or

Aluminum Steel 944 'County S"eet

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

$51 '

WY 2-6618

Mr~ & Mrs. Kenneth . . . .

..

$50

'

Mm. A. Hoffman .

Dr. Norm'and ~

Mr. & M1'lil. J. McNilmaN Dr. John Fenton

Mr. &: Mrs. Kicban! sm.....

, $36

~ B. Grant

.ar.

~O

Dr:" EdmWlld Fitzgerald

D4niel A. J. Doyle '

.

w.

H. RILEY & SON, Inc.

$U

Richard Barrington, BIizabeCIa dI't Margaret, Brady, Mr. -. Mm. kmea Bumtl, Dr. CarsiDbr.e e:--. Il'UOCi -

Robert J. mn, James'D. hcige Mr. & Mra. Ll.ocel I..aI'mDee. 'ftlomas Hoye. Merrill lliaynard, Jmelen & Catherine Mc:CariIll7

Alice McKenna, Ruth :Me­ JUona,' Susan McKenna; . . II

-' 0

CITIES SERVICE

IDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline

Fuel and Ra~ge

OIL.S

Plan To -

OIL BURNERS

B~ild?

for Prompt !Delivery'

& hoy & Night ~ice

See Us About

. '

~,

!

lotyCost Financing ,

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI J-3800

cr

falmouth II 1-3000

8. IE. BOIlER

BURNER

UNITS

. . . :80tItecI G48 Service 61 OOItANNET Sf. TAUNTON AJdeb Df'O - No- Attleboro TountoI&


SUM!@}Y

A",ifrMdl~$o trMture D~[f®~U'D@rru~ .

pons Nuns

Re$@M~~e~o

WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto <ereased number of Sisters leav­ of a survey of all United States mg religious life is an increased nuns reveals a high ooceptance ~penness to the idea within the of post-Vatican II changes anell lfcligious community. She said that the increased an eagerness ro, become morrc involved in the inner city and fucus on personal development poverty apostolates. has caused many Sisters to see The B1UVey, conducted by.the that they are not suited to the Conference of Major Superiors religious life and, that t.hey will of Women dlJring 1966, was the find areater personal fulfi,llment first extensive attempt to assess elsewhere. resources and attitudes of reli­ Statistics on !be division of gious communi¢ies c!1 women labor among U. S. Sisters show and their memberll in the United '72 per cent are teachers, eight States. per cent are involved in health The !JPecific coal of the sur­ work, five per' cent in catechet­ vey was "to assess the resources' ill~ and missionary work, lmd and determine 1&Ie responses tbr~ per cen·t in welfare work. that Religious are making and Seventy per cent of the teach­ ean make to the invitation 13­ em ore in elementary school sued in Vatican U's Decree on work. 19.5 per cent in high the Renewal of Religious ~e.'" school' education and 6.8 per More than 135,000 Sisters par­ . eent ,teach at the college 'level. ticipated in the survey, respond­ Of those involved in health ing to 649 questionnaire items care, 1.8 per cent in health covering religious beliefs, atti­ administration and 6.2 per cent tudes toward change, edu~­ in direct care jobs. tional background, present oc­ lEnter New lFienlll1s cupation and future plans, com­ The survey showed Sisters munity life and proposals for have a strong desire to become future ohange. involved in adult education, in­ Results were processed by ner city work, pre-school teach­ 00 Sister-sociologists across the ing and other s~ial work, and country with the use of. com­ to have greater contact with puters. .. their local community. Nuns llleason for lIAlavnng expressed eagnerness to enter The survey showed 1,827 oil fieldc where few Sisters are now the 175,000 U. S. Sisters-1.07 working. . per cent-left religious life dur­ . In 1966, .13 per cent ot U. S. ing 1966. Of those Sisters, only Sisters were engaged in adult 869 had taken final vows. In an education, .82 pel' cent in spe­ interview with' the N.C. News cial education, .31 per cent in Service,·a spokesman 'for the poverty work and .06 per cent Confe'rence of Major Superiors in migrant education. The sur­ of Women (CMSW) said most vey indicafes that there will Sisters who have remained feel be a dramatic change in these that a major reason for the .in­ figures in the' next few years..

Continued .f!C0m Page One man of the U. S. Bishops' Com­ mittee for Latin America. Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau, noting. "iota. ,progress under his 'direction since its inauguration in 1960. ....It has been a labor of love for Father Considine," he saici, "whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America, and of other developing areaa, is well known. Maryknon Father Considine will return to his writing and' teaching as­ mgnments at Maryknoll, Ossin­ 'lng, N. Y., where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IA:iltin . America Bureau. He holds editorial and advi­ lOry posts with several interna­ tional organizations, and servell DS a member of the Council OIl Foreign Relations. He was &' member of the National Advi­ sory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966. He also founded and directed Fides In,­ ternational Service in Rome, an Information and research unit of , the Holy See. He was born Oct. 9, 1897; C1!'­

1-. .

da1ned in 1923, and received II licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic 'University of America in 1924. He has re­ ceived honorary degrees from Fordham University, Manhat­ tsnville, St. J:ohn University, St. Benedict's, Atchison, and is the author of 10 books on Latin America, Asia and Africa, and hall edited several ot.hers.

Oa1l ~M@OO~ [}{]@M~Orru@ NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l{( apparent ~'racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing" here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U. S. Commission em CiWl Rights. :It said the Newark Housing Authority !follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in' public housin~ projects to choose. the project tm whieh they want to live. lit said this policy "has ~ llributed to the segregation' Cl1I public housing" and recom­ mended that t1he' policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come, first-serVed basis.

.

.

The report noted 'that Q01l1li' vast housing projects nre locate\!ll in Newark's Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and t'll~ they, are more thanSO% Negf~ ~ccupied.

S'JJ.'REET SCENE: This was a busy street scene in the ;nation's capital at the encampment of the Poor P.eople's Campaign near the Washington monument. More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day. NC Photo. SAClllI&D'lHlJEAlltT $25 ' OUlll lLAIDY OlF 'll'1HI1& ASS 1lJMJ!>'Jl'JlON

'c.

. $26

$55

$50 G~

M'i'. CARMEL

$100 In memory of Mr. & Mrs. J~ ilino Simoes Rev. Antonio P. Pinto, ·C.M.

." $75

S'11" JAMES

. rulll'• .& lVIrs. Francis O. Quinn

$25 Mr. &-Mrs. Jose F. Cruz St. Martin de Porres

Alexander Caruso

Rev. Azitonio P. Pinto, em. $60 Mary 'i'. Ltuiz $50 Mr. &: lVIrs. Albino daSilv8 , 1\IIt.. Carmel Woman's' Club $30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth llt:inu ,John Rodrigues

It further charged that 'them a di'sparity in maintenance.;o between the predominantly N~ gro and the r>redominantly whi~ projects," a complaint lIiTegN> leadership has frequently medea.

Js

U

It t.ermed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects "'op­ pressive" and .that the proj~cto are "JIOor)y designed." llt recom­ me'ld~d 'that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~G!l meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided.

lil'red Kelley $40

William O'Malley

Higher

~1

A Friend

~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS

$3~

Mr. & Mrs. Jr. Hugh Barry $25 :Mr. & Mrs.' Andrew O'Neil Mr. 8; Mrs. Robert Arnett

ST. .JOSEPH $450

Per Annum

I

W Ask

abow

INVESTMEI'« . SAVINGS

,L9ng-Range sa. Joseph's Church Societies CERTIFICATES $'70 Father Considine Sllid that he $IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Dansereau IlIaW the ,Latin America Bureau ClEern:y of the U.S. Government " '1,130 "as set for the prose.:ution ~ tl II Mr. & Mrs. Luigi Fiano lk vigorous nation-wide program IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VC'llIirf£. Your funds available when ooedea Fmni!y 10 . serve our Latin American $26 1;25 eonfreres for the next- genera­ Sll'lil by MAtL - We .pr~e5S pt'~ Olivia M. Luiz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Weaver tion, through the year 2000 -and ood pay postage both ways. $25 MI'. & Mm. Maurice Lamon­ into ~ 21st century." He felt Assets over $41,ooo.0llC Cecelia Bettencourt, CbildYeli\ tagne l!Illlch 11 long-range view was of Mary, Mt. Carmel ~ouft Mr. • Mrs. Raymond Rondel,\1! necessarJ' because "at stake are Units, James Perry, Mr. & l\:!nl. important socio-religious ad­ Manuel G. Souza Jr. ST. TBERIESA VDnces among hundreds of mil­ SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll Mr. &: Mrs. Arthur Caetano $100 Hons cd people; Latin' America's Mr. &: Mrs. Charles Frate.!:! . Eugene Lemieux of F~L~' leaders need time for these Mr.&: Mrs. Lauran Silva advances." ~---_._-------------~~~ ~ First Federal saYIngs • Loan At.. ~ Be pointed out that"some of OUR LADY OF : 1 Borth Main St.. Fall llliTe1. Ibu. ~ the best Church leadership PERPETUAL HE]"P ~ Ii!': 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ tbroughout the Catholic world ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl. ~ , ~26 today is found in Latin Amer­ o ~ Mrs. Amelia E. Bariteau o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jo!nt Ac4:cwot f) lEst. 1897 ICD. "In turn," he noted, "our : PIl!llse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt. blce«l' $25 U. S. bi~hops are quietly' accept­ Bu;/de~s Dr. & Mrs. Francis Green o eAomel&) = ing international responsibiliti~s ~ 0 as never before." 2343 Purchase Street ~ Address 0 OUR'LADY OFPU~GATOB~ Father Considine said that the ~ !:l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ New ~dforc!J l)1I.00 ~ .' 0 program of the U. S. Bishops' 996-5661 In memory of Alex J. :Ka1He ~ ,_~_,_,_,,~~,~_~uuJ Committee for Latin Americn 'from C<:\pe Coo Sportswear ~ ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day . work of the Latin America lnc.. Fairhaven Lumber Co. Bureau. $30 J!>ersonnel . Atty. George R. Morad J€ .' Father Considine said that Atty. ~e E. Morad. . llIODle 60 per cent of all U. S. $25 apOstolic personnel overseas Josephine David, 1bl mlE1lllllOllY throughout the world works in of George A. EI-Hillow, Mr. &> Latin America, with more Ulan Mra. ~rge J.Thomas, Mr. & 600 Latin American parishes III:lm. Hykel G. Simon . ,.,"

served by U. S. priests. Major ST. KIll.dAN

Superiors of women ha~e 2,500 nSO

Sisters in Latin America; Rev. 'WilMeT J. Boekley

PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year 'U~~ . & 'Wmeentde PaW ~ terms, and U. S. bishops hnv~ Schoo~ more than. 300 priests working ~ amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK .iWa1 1kntley .in Latin America. Annual fund­ .$2!S ing .for Latin Amerietl by U. S. 999-6984' 636-2744 AlmgeAo OH1feira . Catholics ~ ~ $1f) millioll\,

FIRST fEDERAL RIVER

Sturtevant 6'

Hook

Supplies

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Outings and Picnics

~ATIlGR

CO,NSIDINE

7

~®® [%©~G@~ ~O@~

Clara Rose &: Family

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr

~

THE ANCHORlfhu.vs., May 23, 1968

(l)ffi)

­

....


, ,8

The Parish Parade

OUR LADY OF ANGELS, SACRED HEART,

WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

'Altar bOys will'sponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday, May 26, following canonically established Friday, Iill1 Masses. June 21, the feast of the Sacred Masses today, the feast, of the Heart. The program will include 'Asceri'sion, will be at 7 and 9 a 7:30 evening 'Mass, followed A.M. and -12:15, 4, 5 and 7 P.M. by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a' social ~re each Mass. hour. The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday, June 2, with 12 will attend folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon, on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour. Monday night, May 27. Tnose Monday, May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy, May 31 there will 'be church school yard at 6:45 and will be services at 7 'each evening. The returned at 9:30. living rosary, will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will ,by the' Holy, Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 7:30 Sunday night,

Monday. night, the Council of', 'May 26.

Catholic Women on Tuesday,

.t'her societies on Wednesday,

and, Thlu:sday and the Children.

~ M~~ on lfrIday. ST. MARY: HOLY NAME, $25 i'ALL RIVER, , Mr. & Mrs. Roger Goyette, :Contemporary music will ac­ The Shea Family

company the '11:15 Mass Sunday Mrs. Vivian Wegrzyniak

morning, May 26. '

ST. LAWRENCE New CYO officers are Robert $200 &lois, president;' Paul, Durin, Dr. & Mrs. Stanley Koczera 'rice-president;' Polly Rockett, A Friend eecretary-treasurer.

$125

Dr. & Mrs. Robert Srnan

$106

William E. King $100 Dr; & Mrs. William Walsh , $75 . Rev. William F. O'Connell Dr. & Mrs. James Bolton

, $60

A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CON''ClEP'lI'ION, Tere·sa, Ruth & John Harney :NEW BEDFORD ,Victor T. Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate

John L. Powell

rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre

Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 "

served from noon to 2 with Mrs. Mary B. Wheatoil

,tickets available at the door. $40

lRefreshments and entertainment ,Mr.' & Mrs. John Connor

will be on the afternoon and Mr. & Mrs,. Thomas J. Long

evening' program. $35

'A procession and auction will Mr: & Mrs. James M. Kearney

follow the' dinner, with various

Mr.· & Mrs. Leo St. Aubin Holy Name Society units parti­ $30 cipating in the procession. Mr. & Mrs. Albert Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Griffin . OUR, LADY OF V!()T(}RY, Mr. & Mrs. Walter L9veridge eENTERVILLE Mr. c& Mrs. Myron Tripp New officers of the Women's $28 &tiild are Mrs. John J. Pender­ Patricia Connor ~st, pre~ident; MrS., James Mur­ ,. " ,$26 phy and Mrs. John McBarron, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Sullivan Voice-president; Mrs. 'George 'Mr. & Mrs. Charles Berry, Reale, recording secretary; Mrs. , $25 ' Richard Griffith, treasurer. ' Mr. & Mrs. Robert' Bedard A Communion dinner , at Mr: & Mrs; Albert McMullen eummaquid Inn will follow Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Calnan, lB:30 Mass Monday night, June Mr: & Mrs. Alfred Couto, Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Noonan of Fal­ Mrs. Manuel Guerreira, Joseph mouth' will' speak. Reservations ,P. Mullen . should be made with Mrs. Ed­ . Agnes Proctor" Mr. & Mi's. ward' Welch or. Mrs:- Stephen Joseph Porter, Mr. & Mrs., O'Brien Jr. by Thursday, June 6. James Ryan, Mr. & Mrs! Paul saunders ' ST. THERESA, ' Mr. & Mrs. Merton Walker SOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr. & Mrs. Joh,n F. Sulli,van Miss, Patricia Makin, of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke "at

the annual Communion break­ fast, of the Confraternity of

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL Christian Mothers. Fourteen $50 ' new members were received at .Gertrude O'Loughlin ,the monthly meeting arid new $26 , officers were installed by Rev. In memory of Caroline Casella Gerard J. Chabot, moderator. '$25 They include Mrs. Patricia Helen Burns, Mr. & Mrs.' Biziak, president; Mrs. Geor­ gette Vachon.. vice-president; George Johnston, Corky Row Mrs. Kathy Lamarre, treasurer; Club, Rits O'Laughlin, Francis Mrs. Dolores Leedham and Mrs. & Lena Moran Mr. & Mrs. 'Carlton' Gastall Beverly Sousa, secretaries. Mrs. Raymond Reynolds

<

'Fall River '

~CULATE CONC~ON.

'l'AUNT.ON . A Spring Social and D~nce, for the benefit of the church, sponsored by the Women's Guild and the St. Vincent de Paul So­ ciety will be held Friday, May 24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge, Winthrop Street, Route 44, Taunton. Refreshments will be

served. Tickets are $2..00 per person and wiU be available at the door.

BLESSED SACRAMENT

$200 Rev. Herve Jalbert $50

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Felix , $36 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Hamel, $30 A. W. Root Beer Stand, lI:IIOLY' CROSS

$50

Holy. Rosary Sodality

leapt. & Mrs. Joseph J.. O'CoD­

The Gauthier Family , $25, Mr. & Mrs. Reginald Bel­ lerive' A Friend ST. ANTH()NY OF THE DESERT

$100 Chor Bishop Joseph Eid Dr. & Mrs. James J. Sabra $25 Rev. Kenneth A. Michael Mrs. August Badway

PATRIARCH: His, Holi­ ness Vazken I of the .A.rme­ 'nian, '(Monophysite) Chu~h, whic.h comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union, Near and Far East and the Americas, is visiting in the U.S. He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the , Immaculate Conception while in the nation's capital. NC Photo.:

OUR LADY OF FATIMA. /sWANSEA The Women's Guild will ,hold , !Its annual penny sale at 7:30 Monday night, May 27 in the ehurch hall on Gardners Neck lRoad. 'A Penny Sale will be held MondaY,May 27 at 7:30 in ,the dlurch hall.

roo

at: Vincent de'101 Paul Conference

$26,

a

New Bedford

ft. JI08ZI'II

ST. ANNE $30, ',' Mrs. Rhea Saurette Irene Theroux

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs., May 23,196~

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA $125 Rev. Joseph· M. Ferreira $100 ,Atty. & Mrs. Milton R. Silva $50 Franco 'Family Singers'· ' $25 ' Mrs, ,Sofia Pacheco Antonio ,T. Cabral

nell

$50,

,

' ,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J.. O'Co. . nell k. , $30 St. .roseph's Men's Club $25

Mr. & Mrs. John L. Mercer Mr. & Mrs. Daniel W. O'CoDo­ nell ' SANTO CHRiSTO $50

St., Vincent de Paul Society $30 Rev. Ernesto R. Borges , $26 Mr. & Mrs. Alfred 1.. Cam~ $25 ' ,Mary & Beatrice Costa~' SilD. CnristO 'Credit Union; :Manuel Medeiros, Laureano Silva 'AFriend,Frank B: Olivei...

YDUR SON.

THE ,','" 'PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

NOTRE DAME

$40 The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35 Conrad' N. Desmarais $25 Norman J. A. Belanger Rose D. Perron

A FUTURE , PRIEST NEEDS • SOMEONE'S HELP

,

'

HOLY ROSARY

$30

The DePaola Family

, $25

Mrs. Philomena Ge,rmane

~CULATE

,

CONCEPTION

$50

'

A Frie~d

$40 Mrs; Diolinda Wilson, $26 In memory of Charlotte DJicholson \ $25 Holy Name Society, Knights of the Altar, A Friend, MlU7 Whitehead; John R. Burgess ,In memory of Daniel' R. Be' Manuel R. Pimental Joseph Francoeur ,: SACRED HEART $l!)O

, TRAiN

A SfSTER,

Tau

n

HUNGER , CAN'T

WAIT

()

~

Katherine D. Adams $75' Mr. & Mrs. William J. Sullivan , $5~' , Margaret Morriss , ,M~ry V. & Alice C. HarrlngtoD Frederick B. McD9nald $31 Frances M.· Cummings Mary C. Cummings $30 Mr. & Mrs. John J. ;HarrlngtOil $28 ,Florence M. Sullivan $25 ' Vincent D'Andrea" Edward Leary, Mr. ~ ,Mrs.N. J. Meyer, Mary Louise O'Sullivan, John J. Sulli,van, ·Margaret F. Lowney ST. MICHAEL $25 Manuel Rogers & Sons, At~. Manuel M. Rezendes, Henry Le­ tendre, ~,eonardo Cabeceiras Gerald Mulrooney, A Friend edf Catholic Charities

Have you, ever wished you had a son a priest' Now you can hlilve a 'priest of your own'-and ahare forever In all the good he does.'. _ _ Throughout the Near East this month, grateful bishops ara ordain.lng new priests trained by people like you•••• Their own families are toe poor to, support them, In training, but good catholics In America 'adopted' these semI­ narians, encouraged them all the way to ordina­ tion•••• In,some Inspiring cases, this support was given at personal sacrifice..... How can youbegln7 ,Write to us now. We'll ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you, and he will write to you. Make the 'payments for his training to suit your convenl,ence ($8:50 a month, or $100 a year, or the total $600 all at once). Join your sacrifices to his, 'and at every Sacrifice of the Mass, he will always remember who made It possible. 4} Native Sisters In our 18 developing'countries are ,teaching ,children of the poor, preparing them for ,First Communion, giving "medical care to lep!lrs, cal)cer sufferers, the aging. A Sister'S training Ia!lts two years, costs $12.50 a month, $150 a year, or $300 altogether•••• We'll send you the name of a Sister you can train, as soon as we receive your first payment. She will pray for you and write to'you.

Deai' MonBr~orNolam Please

return coupon' with your offering

An9 day now you may receive a letter contaln;n. the Holy Father's appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l.4 million people without a 'country ••• most of them destitute ••• more thari half of them children•••• By trelnlng these children foi' ·future self.sufflc;el]cy,' we can help brln. peace and new self·help to the Holy Land, atlll divided by war•••• But why wa,lt for your mal" Hunger can't walt. Neither can peace. Send your,' &lIft now in any amount ($500, $200, $100, $75. $50, $25, $20, $15, $10, $5, $2, $1) and the Holy Father'can put It to work right away. Qril1 $10 wlllleed'. family for a monthl

.

-----~-~---~~---~'

IlNCL08ID PLl'l'AIl PIND $_'

rFOR NAMI

_ ~

8TRIU OlT't

c_O~.__ ___

~~= ~_eTATIl_lrIp

..

OODII- '

CATHaLiD NIAll lAST WIILFAAI 'ASSaDIATtOr«

NEAR EAST MISSIONS

J

MSGR. JOHN ClI. NOLAN, Natlonal5ecretary Write: CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo. ~30 Mad/son Avenue' New York, N.Y. !OOU' telephonel 212/vtJkon 6·5840


Ere State r ourlite!i:. SCh'oelbOY leag~'~Wmrn~®r~"

DiJ",oridrrien

'!THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1968

Stii~'Pretty Mu~h s&u [j)(Q)Mbt

SS. lPlE'1rIEllt /& J!> A.IDlj.,

$103

By PETIm BAR'JrEK

Women's Club

Rose E. Sullivan

Nmon BitIh ~h The gehoo!boy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near-' In« the climax of. , another spirited seasoo. With approxi­

$50 Joseph P. Conaty $35 Belen M. & William J. De!7 $33 . Mr. & Mrs. James F. McMahcm

mately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams stmggling to keep their penna.n;f; oopes alive 'while. Wtling for the right to repJIe8eDt 'their ll' e s pee t i v e Tech lxlsketban competition. lllll. leagues,in the nn..and-eomi,n..' order to qualify':for the Tech Me

-y-

Bta,te

tournament. The East­

em Massachusetts ehampionahip

a team

$25

tine of the

Mrs. Margaret Daly & Mary ;John Dolan ' ~illiam Daley & Mary Esther Mr. & Mrs. Stanley M;. ',-laniek

mt1BSt

win 70 per cent cd its games, but only'the leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~' eligible ~r ;play·i!I.'·basebalL

'tournamen+' ..ftl, -~ .. ClIffiM : ,'". wurney; is In both Class A and,Class B, .' '.' 'tiPo:DOOred by'the ii'tOtalof i6 teams' qualify.,., II a II sac h u~ _ for the . diamond elimination , <. Iietts Secondary event~ 'E~~ Will' pai1.i~ipate in"" SChool Princi­ the nortlH!l'n division 'and eight' ' pals' Association. • in the southern bracll:et. T'he' Par tie i p 8 t _ winners in each bracket will. ing schools have meet in the .Massaci:lu­ bElen divided . llletts fi~. Preliminary games i II:l t o t h r e e will be played on June 1, 4 and d3s.!:es - A, B, 6. The finals are scheduloo' and C---l:l.ccordPeter .June 8. iDg to leagues Bl!.rtek r Class' C competition will coIiand comparable independent BiEt of eight clubs in: only one' teams. Action .tn all three division. Titlists in seven small­ clas&e3 starts Saturday, June L: DChooI. le!1gues . and 'one inde­ In addition to the three divi­ pendent selected by the tourna­ idon3, the baseball tourney &1­ : ment coJiunittee' Will comprise :!'.:em radically JIrom the popular the field fur this tliil-d group. . "baseball

will

,

1'/<7''''·'/·",·.J;iY

'.'

$26 ,

Lancers in' Need! cf Help

Narragansett, league, Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the

....... . its Iud Old Colony champ ft. NaITlIl­ v .... er area Clrcu ,conc es gansett runner-up league play today. First place . Narragansett champ ~. Olcll · Somerset travels to New Bedford to meet Holy Family High, Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell'-·· South Shore champ VB. Hock­ tains Dighton-Rehoboth, Westomock runner-up port hos!s Msgr. Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs. South · of Fall River and Dima]l VoceShQre runner-up . .tional, nlso be t Se k of Fall River, will . . '0'I'Iver Am es 0 f N 0 rth E a ston , .a e o~k. and Mansfield' 1m. the Hocko­ Entering the final week of ac-· mock circuit appear to be out · tion Somerset and seekonk are, of the running this season. in ,the top two spots in tbe Fo~ Class C schools It's Win· 8tanding. They. loom the" m,ore . likely to corral Class B tourney or you're out. Only the league berths. But, DightOn-Rehoboth, champions will play in the Case and Westwrt trail the sec,:, championships. The winner of ODd place club by oIl1yone the Capeway Conference will game. If the race ends in II tie, meet the Cape and Vineyard ]league officials wlll have ample champ in opening' round play. time to schedule play-off games Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sand­ wich are the likely opponents. before the tourney deadline. Pairings for Class Bare: The only other school located' within the confines of the dioc­ esan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twenty­ for the tournament is Norton five maintenance workers at of the Tri-Valley Conference. Duquesne University here in The Lancers, however, will need Pennsylvania have left their jobs some outside help if they are to . pending a detel'l1llnation as to overcome league leading Millis which union will. represent the The Tri-Valley champs will workers. The remaining 1'15 take on the Dual County League. members of the maintenance champions. Defending Class C erew lIlre not involved in the champ Ashland, again leading atrike which was called by the the Dual Co~nty, is heavily 2li who are represented by the favored to repeat both in league tJmted Electrical Workers' Union. ond state competition.

Selecting Union

..;

$25

Edward Healey Mr. & Mrs. Michael McCartbiY Mr. & Mrs. James Crosson Mrs. Gertrude Lomas . Mr, & Mrs. Norman. GagnOOl ST. JOHN TEE BA.PTlIS'11' $30

St. Vincent de Paul &t. Jean Baptiste

Soci~

$25 Mr. & Mrs. Ovila Caron Henri Demers .In, memory of Mr. & lVlrm. •William Sheehan

teams

.No~ton's

In memory 'of Mrs.' Marga~ W. Pow:~rs .. RodneY S. DeCecco

Mr. & Mrs. John Sou;l;a

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams, Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney p l a y . . ebampionship event. At this writing, Coach Jerry .' Although it occurs infrequent­ Hickey's Bishop Stang Spal'tamJ ly, a team does not have to win of :Qartmouth, who hold a lllim Its league to represent its league ene-game edge over their rivals in tourney eompetition. are a solid choice to annex one The Bristol County league of the two berths to be filled bi champion is slated to play the BCL teams. The second spot 18 • Bay State League runner-up .in .un literally up for grabs. first round action, with the Bay Bishop Feehan High of Attie­ State champs taking on the boro, which led the circuit untll County runner-up. The winners last week, Durfee High of Fan would then meet in second River, Attleboro and Taunton round play. lire in close pursuit ·of Stang. Pairings for Class A are: hoping to· overcome the Spar­ Class A - Southem tans or, at least, lInish in the Suburban champ w. Middle­ league runner-up berth. Both 8llX runnerup the first and second place. fin­ Middlesex champ ft. Subur­ ishers will'8utomatically qualify. ban 'runner-up If either fim OX' second place , Bay state ehamp VB. Bristol II decided by Monday, May 2'1 runner-up league officials w~ have to Bristol champ 'V8. Bay sta~ DOUty the tournament Director runnerup

'.

~50

Eastern-

'I' h e

19

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The see­ ond annual Catholic youth con­ NOT A BALL-IT'S GUM: Yem might get the idea vention of the Portland Diocese that a pitched is lodged in the mask of this young has opened the convention "to Vancouver, B.C. catcher but it isn't a ball. This young ma all Catholic students of the dio­ is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate cese in order to spread the a}>Ol>o tolate of youth to youth." Thll as he is at blowing bubble gum. NC ~·hoto. .. ),faine convention has comprised only students who have takes the· youth leadership trainlJnl1

ban

Stresses Inter~cicd·· Partnership As ,Solution to, Racial .Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Na­ ,.world would be better off !lr tional ASsociation for Advance­ iou hadn't gotten involved Jm . ment of Colored People official ' the first place." asserted here interracial part.­ Informed PariDership nership is the key to oolution Dr. Morsell said a mere sPirit of the racial problem, but it , of commitment is not enough to ' cannot. be a partnership dom;;. survive over the hard going.' inated by either race. Work must be based on a' part.­ Dr. John A. Morrell, NAACP nership that is informed. intel­ assistant nat ion a 1 director.: ligent, understanding and resil­ .speaking at the Cleveland Cath­ ient, he said. <nlic Interracial Council's annual The interracial awards were Interracial Justice Awards ban­ presented to Father Edwan! quet, said the nation today is aj Camille, assistant Catholic Char­ an unprecedented crossroads, ities director here; and Thom811 but the interracial way is the' C. Westropp, president of Wom­ democratic part to justice. en's Federal Savings and Loan He spoke in place of Roy Wi!­ Association. . !dns, NAACP national~ director, Westropp was cited for his who was with the U. S. delega-: tion at the United Nations' con:" . efforts towards opening the "doors of banking and credit 1m vocation on human rights lin the Cleveland area to all ciU­ Tehran, Iran. '..zens regardless of race, creed 011' Angry Voices . color," while Father" CarniDe There are angry Negro voiees' was cited for his "leadership as . raised in, protest because devel­ director of Project Peace (~ opment of opportunity in recent ,ir.ner-city diocesan organizati~ years does not apply' to two­ working with the poor, mostly thirds of the Negro population, Negroes) and for his work as he said.· The kind of jobs they co-chairman of the first tri-faith are 'capable of filling are van­ G:reater Cleveland Conference ishing from the economy, he on Religion and Race." added. "But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white ELECTRICAl and Negro, the burden of know- , -Contractors ing the truth about Negro his­ tory must be borne. by white as well as Negro," Dr. Morsell said. "Vie are ,all fighting a bitter legacy of generations.' White people have to know where they stand and why. Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice, you ,assume the responsibilities," be continued. 944 County St. "If you are not going to ~ New Bedford .sume them, then you and fhe

courses.

.

Don't Neglect Slipping

,FALSE TEETH DO faJse teeth drop, slip' or wobblo

when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze? Don't be annoyed and embarr1l.Esetll :l'k:ll;h hanl11caps. FASTEETH, B& e (non-acid) powder to. SPr1n~I' kle on your plates, keeps false teetb more firmly set. Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort. No gummy, gooey taste or' feellncr., Dentures that 6t are essential to' health. see your dentist regulorly.! oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

SAVE MONEY 0

,OUROILHEATI •

eatt

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

IfII f'Jltk del1W"M

S

H~~uO~@

o

Oil

.


20

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., May 23, 1968

National CYOP,lans Leadership'Training ­

Impa~t

Iritai~ If@

S)crap

SuPPIT®~~5@n Acts

Of R'e~@(j'[jml@t~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks,

as if Britain is' at long last

glOing to stop suppressing the

monas teries-officially, that

0;.

'

,

,

Legal experts sifting through'

l!enturies of forgotten laws clut­

ool"ing the records have found

(hat the Suppression of Reli­

gious Houses Acts of 1535 and '

0039 have never been repealed.

They are among 155 statutes

weeded out from the statute

IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705·

lmd now to be definitively l"e­

~aled by a special act of Par-

Iliament. '

These two acts enforced the e!osure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries, friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS Chaplain ""eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J. Liteky, VIII's break with Rome in 1534. assigned to the 199th, Infan­ 'J'.hey brought vast fortunes On goods" property and, mog! of try Brigade in Vietnam, has ell, land to the king's favorites, been awarded the Distin­ oome of whose families have re­ guished Service Cross for Wned their wealth to this day. extraordinary heroism. Sev­ Ignored in Practice erely wounded when Viet Of course the laws against '\me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a U,S. infan­ Ihave long ago been shelved and try company, Ohaplain Lit­ !Ignored in practice. The reli­ eky braved flying bullets to @ous houses are back, probably and minister to more numerous' than before. rescue WQunded and dying meR

iIome have even reoccupied the 0ld sites they had· before the

lReformation. '

Another notable measure' ~ew@lfk ~@[p)®ID'

Gingled out for' repeal is the

1l.'oleration Act of 1688. This act, ~W@If<dl

although in itself it did not 'help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Ad­ ~he Catholics, marked the end of vocate, weekly newspaper of 1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese, won / t1he beginning of religious toler­ the first-place Silver Medal ation in Britain. , It allowed freedom of worship Awarti for weekly newspapers in the annual public service Cl> Protestant Trinitarian Non­ oonformists provided theiT' competition sponsored by the New York chapter of the Pubiic meetings, were open.to the pub­ , Relations Society of America. Ilk. The award was for a five-part it did not relieve the existing fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics, other breakaway Newark public, school system. 'lhc:nestants or Jews, 'but it was )'he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning. It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant; <Jese.ribed as "the Great Oharter and was an. examination into one of the areas of dissatisfac­ ~ religious freedom and the tion which led to. widespread ~umph of,.c9mmon' ~ense," rioting in Newark last Summer. , ' ,The series ran lri the news­ lJays Help for Poor, paper last september and Octo­ :lPeCice ,First ~eeds ber: The Public' Rellitlons Soci­ ,MIA,MI (NC)-The Catholic . ety award - silver: medals are awarded in each of five cate­ (lihurch in this nation today gories:-are, given .for the "most 'auast address itself to the pres­ iloing needs of the poor and dis- , noteworthy contributions •• 0 to better public ~derstanding ,of . ~v.antaged .as, well as the <JnICial issue of peace, says the _ community problems in the New York metropolitan area." 4\Tchbishop of Miami. New s p 'a per 8 , magazines, . Archbishop Coleman F. Cal"­ television '0011, ,following announcement of broadcasting, an d media in the New York-New ·Gte establishment of the .eccles­ iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment' as its first area are eligible for the awards. l)rehbishop, stressed that the

(f:hurch must be concerned with

Retired ArttlhJboshop

i\be problems of the "time in S)Vhich we' exist." "The g~eatest problems at Gets College lHlonor DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired ,present are the problems of ,the disadvantaged, the poor, and Archbishop Edward' D. Howard 'Utase who are in need, and, of of Portland Ore., has been named for Loras College's 1968 John' oourse, peace," he s·aid. "It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award. The LiOlve in any :r:eal way the prob-' ',prelate i,s a former president of iems that are our concern until the college. we have a measure of peace. The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us' annual award, 'honoring "an out.., Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian," will be pre­ iluickly as possible on an honor­ , sen ted to the archbishop ,at the able basis." o college commencement cere­ monies June 2. Camp Directory Archbishop Howard; 90, a na'­ ti ve of Cresco, Iowa, and a Loras N<lw available from the Na­ lItonal Catholic' Camping Assn. alumnus, was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave .. priesthood in 1906.· He became lM- W., Washington, D. C. 20005 president of the college in 1921. I!s the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924, he was consecrated to serve as auxiliary bishop of Dav­ ~mps,. which lists all known enport. He became archbishop of earriPs in the U. S., giving ac­ Civi,ties, charges, dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in 1966. lIbai.ling addresses.

to Aid Priests, Adult' Ad·visors .

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe National Catholic Youth Organ­ ization Federation will launch a training program in June called Impaot be help priests and adults 00 work effectively with teenagers in a leisure time pro­ g,ram. The program was designed in cooperation with Leadership Resources, Inc., a firm _of be­ havior scientists. Msgr. Thomas J. Leonard, di­ rector of the Youth. Department, United, States ,Catholic Confer­ ence, in announcing ttie new program said: ''The goal 01 Impa'ct is 00 help the priests who' are moderators of CYO, the ad~lt advisors and youth participa,ting in CYO to­ ,ward maximum, personal growth:

through the introduction of leadership methodology which facilitates maximum involve­ ment 00. the local level and hence maximum commitment." The National CYO Federation will .sponsor six sessiOns this summer to train diocesan CYO staffs m 1lhe 'use of the new· program. . 'l'hey win })e held m.

Address' Graduates ' SOUTH

BEND (HC) -Mel-,

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo V Kakimof Antioch and Dr, James A. Perkins of Cornell University, will be speakers at the 123rd annual cOnW~ncement exerci~ Sund'.ly, J'une 2 at Notr<e Dame' University.

BaWmore. June 23-28; ehicago, .July 1-5; Boston, July 14-19; Sen Antonio, July 28-Aug. 3; Denver, Aug. ,11-16 and San JF'.aoancisoo, Aug, 25-30. , Donald Ebalt, a profes­ lIlional . trainbig eonsul1lant of Washington, D. c. win diiecl ead11ab. A pilot !Jtudy of the effective­ DeBS of Impact on a group of -rolulbteers from the Newarlk archdiocese was ,held at the Benedictine Retreat House ill jNewton, N. J.

, ''Ilhirty· persons; representa­

tives of youth, adult advisors and priest moderators met with representattives ,of the' CYO . Federation staff and a member Of Leadership rResources. Inc.. 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpa<:'L

.Dr"

nsc:

W51f\)$

(Cathedral Camp'Resident and Day Camp' for

O~'

Boys

:Lady of the', .L_ke.

Day Camp

.

fOr 'Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON '/LONG POND, ROUTE 18, EAST FREETOWN, MAS~.

RESIDENT CAMP

49th Season"';' June 30 thru August 24 ~

,

a ,Week Season

, Diocesan' seminar-ians - ,College Students & 'Teachers Under di.rection of a Diocesan Priest. '

StaH:, Prograni;

Saili~g, swimming, water skiing, horseback riding, riflery, archery, hiking, overnight camping 'trips, ~rts & crafts, Indian crafts, camp crafts, athletic (team & individual), competition and inter-camp cO,mpetition, professional tutor.ial service available. ,

facilities~

Private beach, large luxurious camphouse, dining hall, modern washrooms, arts and crafts build,ings, camp store and office, first aid and infirmary, beautiful chapel, overnight and weekend accomoda­ tions for parents.

'

S 'WEEK PIERIOD $325 -

4 W~K PERIOD $165 -

'Cathedra~

2 weEK PERIOD $85

Day Camp t:=or Boys

Camp Fee 35,00 for 2 wk. period. Camp Fee. $125.00 for 8 wk. season period. fEES INCLUDIE: Transportation, Insurance, Arts & Crafts, Canteen, Horseback 'Riding, Weekly ,Cook~Outs & Milk Daily without Added Cost. ' JULY W -

AUGUST 23

"'-"""-~""'-,-"-"'--------,-----------------------------

Our' Lady of the Lake, bay .Camp For Girls ,

,

JULY l _ AUGUST 23

Camp Fee 35.00 for 2 wk. period. , Camp Fee $125.00 for 8 wk. season period. FEES INCLUD~:Transportation, .Insurance, Arts & Crafts, Canteen, I:lo,rseback Riding, , Weekly Cook-Outs,· Milk Daily without' Added Cost. o

For further, information write to:,

REV. WALlER A. 5ULLlVAN,Diredor

P.O. Box 63 - East Freetown, Mass. 02717


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