:New Charities Appeal Record
Final 1968 Contributions Total $796,549
All-Time' High Exceeds Previous Mark by $23,839'
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ilrOm people of aD fai tins from Mansfield to Provincetown. :I'he record breaking total of 1968 represents approximately $23,839 more than· was con <~ hwugurated in 1942. A . tributed in 1967. ,WOO1'd high total of $796,549 Holy Name Church in Fall ~ I'€ a lized in contributions River, which tops the list of lID.
'Pte dioces'8n Catholic Chal!' Appeal bas gone 'over file top' agwin 1ilils year as it ~ in aU 26 years since N
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parishes in the dio,cese, is the first evel' to exceed $26,000 in the 26 years' of the Appeal. The following parishes were added to the Honor Roll of par ishes exceeding the 1967 final total. These are: Sacred Heart, St. Patrick, Fall River; Assump tion, Immaculate Conception, OUI' Lady of Perpetual Help, St. Lawrence, New Bedford; Holy ~osary, St. Anthony, St. Mary, Taunton; Sacred Heart, North Attleboro; Our Lady ()f Viotory, Centerville; St. Mary, Mansfield, St. Anthony Matta poisett; Corpus Christi, Sand wich; St. Mary, South Dart mouth; Holy Cross, South Easton; Holy Trinity, West Hal'';' wich; St. Joseph, Woods Hole. Holy Name parish, Fall River, led the parish listing with a total of $26,086.50. This is the first time in the 26 years of the Appeal that a parish has con' tributed $26,000.00 or more. St. Lawrence, New· Bedford
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was in Second place with $25,191.30. A total of $16,184.00 placed' St. John the Evangelist, Attleboro, in·. third position.. A convincing. increase in spe cial gift donations from Cath olics and non-Catholics in the '68 Appeal made possible the all time record final·total. New strength in giving was also evi dent on the· paris~ ·level. • Chairman Roland A.Lafrance said today: "My pleasant assign ment as th~ Lay Chairman of the 1968 Catholic .Charities Ap peal is to announce the new high' total in charitable contri butions. This total is the highest in the 26 years ,of the Appeal. All contributors, Catholic and non-Catholic, ·and all committee men in the Special Gift section and in the Parish phase of the Appeal have my personal thanks and gratitude for a job well done. A ge.nuine 'Thank you' from all at the Appeal! HeadquarOOrs."
;1 Vincentians· .Form Panel ",I At" Meeting
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PRICE IOc ~4.00 'per Year
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A delegation of membeft.1 from the F'al! River Diocesarn Council of the St. Vincent de Paul Society 'will conduct a.
'Oak' .~~~~~~. an.d O~te'~vmUe Priest~ AA@rk' Jubil·e'es
panel discussion on Saturday afternoon, June 1 at the Third Northeastern Regional Confer ence of the S()ciety;s meeting scheduled for Garden City Park" Long Island. . . The conference will open FrJ.. day and close on Sunday. Edouard W. Lacroix, president of the Particular Council of FaIn River will serve as chairman andl the duties of the recorder will be handled· by Daniel F. Murphy, ;Jr., secretary of the Particular Council- of FaU River. Rt. Rev. John E. Boyd, Di~ Turn to Page Five
.' Two qiocesan priests are obse~'v,ing their silver jubilees ~ the priesthood. Rev. Donald. A. Oouza, pastor of Sacred
Head Parish, Oak Bluffs, and Rev. James F. Kenney, pastor
~ Our Lady of the Assumption Parish, Osterville were OOda,ined on June 5,1943 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall'River, ~ the late Most Rev. James E. Cassidy, third Bishop of ~ diocese. At 7· Friday ~ h' J F h Co Kenney's relatives and close ":~ t". line 7, at er uz~ friends wiJl honor him at a din ~II 01 fer a Mass of Thanks., ner in Osterville. ~ing in the Star. of the· Most Rev. James J. Gerrard,
tiea Church on the island. Fol/loWing the Mass, a reception will ~ held in the Sacred Heart Hall. At 11 S~nday morning, June 00, Father Kenney will offer a Mass of Thanksgiving in Our ~y o.f the Assumption Church @atervil1e. '
mt. Rev. Robert L. Stantbn, !rector of St. Mary's Cathedral, lbU Rivcr, will be the preacher. WoUowing the Mass, Father
The 15 leading parishes aret
Holy Name,
Fall River $26,086.5@
st. Lawrence, New Bedford 25,191.30 st. John the Evangelist, Attleboro 16,184.00 St. James, New Bedford 16,040.00 Mt. Carmel, New Bedford 15,846.55 st. Mary, North Attleboro 13,425.00 st. Francis Xavier, Hyannis 13,188.5@ st. Joseph, Fairhaven 12,792.80 St. Mary. Taunton 11,593.00 Sacred Heart, Fall River 11,509.00 st. Pius X, So. Yarmouth 11,317.00 St. Joseph, New Bedford 11,109.50 St. Mary, Mansfield 11,039.15 St. Patrick, Falm.outh 11,008.00 st. Mary'S Cathedral, Fall River 10,660.00
Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese and fOI'mer pastor of the jubilar ioan at the Cathedral, will. be the main spea~er at .the d~nner. . The. pa~lsh gUIld will host a receptIOn III the church hall fro.m 3 to 5 so all parishioners .will ha,,:e the opportunity to honor their shepherd. Father Couza, son of Charles and Agnes (Flaherty) Couza was bOrn in New Bedford o~ . Tum to Page Nineteen
Prevost Students
SPIRIT OF LOVE: Pentecost, which will be observed on Sl1l1day next, recalls the return 9f Christ to the Father. IIe now sends .down his spiri,t, the Spirit of Love. We need his help as never before, but, we must ask for it; we must beg the Spirit to come, we must open our hearts to Him.
" Rev. PatrickJ. O'Neill, super intendent of Diocesa,n Schools, has announced that at this mo ment it seems very likely that the pupils of Prevost High School, Fall River, who have been forced to vacate the Chris tian Brothers educational insti tution on Eastern Ave. because of Monday night's fire, will fin ish their year's classes at Bishop Connolly High School. Rev. Charles J. Dunn, S.J.,
rector at Bishop Connolly High,
offered the facilities of the new
boys high school as soon as he was informed of the disaster that struck the Eastern Ave. institution.
Every' Year Better Than Year' Before
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DONALD A. COUZA
lFJI&. JAMES F. 'KENNEY .
1942 ·1943 i944 1945 1946 1947 1948 ·1949 1950
$150,781 162,885 .. 18~,323
186,420 201,709 211,242 ·'·310,498 222,392 331,333
1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
248,920 253,602 279,094 316,915 321,210 336,317 354,477 366,207 502,327
1960 1961 1962 1963 196-' 1965 1966 1967
1968
566,367 627,554 630,103 671,189 680,111 712,083 ~41,117
772,709 796,549
·.'2" .', THE ANCHOR"-Diotese ?f Foil River~Thurs., May 30, 1968 ~.
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:,'" .' WASHINGTON :'('.NC) - '!"lie , catholic Univ~rility of Ameriea .' •..• • ';.:. ~:~'... • ••.• ~"~_;." ";o",.. '~' '.' Will readmlt students taken foJf FALL' .RIVER ;TOWIli§ military service Within ~ St: Mary's Catliedral $10,660.00 Acushnet- . ,,: years' of discharge, and "readot miSsion will not normally be BleSl3ed ,Sacrament 1;964.00 St. Francis Xavier' . $4,263.00 affected by legal difficulti~ Espirito Santo 2,163.00 Assonet-St. Bernard" 2,056.00 arising from 'mora1 convictio. Holy Cross . 1,362.00. Brewster-' concerning S;elective Servial Holy Name 26,086.50 Our Lady of the Cape 2,507.00 .policies."
Notre Dame 6,996.50 Buzzards Bay The university's aoademkt Our Lady of the Angels 8,111.25 St. Margaret 7,183.00
Our Lady of Health 3,000.30 Centerville-' 'senate approved the policy. A: statement on the policy saki Holy Rosary 3,478.00 Our Lady of Victory 4,790.45 "such students· will be readmi'" Immaculate Conception 5,705.77 Central Village ·ted if application is made withlJl ~acredHeart 11,509.00 St. John the Baptist 2,863.00 two years after return to civiJoo St. Anne 5,986.00 Chatham iari status." .
St. Anthony of the Desert 954.00 Holy Rede~mer 4,686.50 "Readmission will not n.-. St. Anthony of Padua 2,605.00 Dighton-8t. Peter " ],886.50 .
mally be affected by legal dim. St. Elizabeth 1,290.00 East Falmouth culties arising from moral con St. John the Baptist 3,886.00 St.Anthoriy . 7,536.00 victions conCerning Selecti~ St.· Joseph 6,460.00. Fairhaven Service policies>,' the statement St. Louis 3,517.00 St. Joseph 12,792.80 .St. Matthew 2,450.84 St. Mary oontiued.
2,378.50 "'The l,Uliverslty will attempll St. Michael 6,483.83 Sacred Hearts 909.50
to awarii to a readIDiUed stude. St. Patrick ~,714.50 Falmouth-8t.· Patrick n;008.09 the same le'vel of 'ffuancial sup. SS. Peter & Paul 6,746.00 Hyannis.. • POrt. previously extended. Tbe St. Roch 3,482.00 st. Francis Xavier' 13,188.50 St. Stanislaus. 3,363.00 Mansfield-8t. Mary 11,039.15 SERlRANS GREET BISHOP: Bishop Con~olly is wel- customary fee for reapplication St. William 5,200.00 Mattapoisettcomedo to the annual Bishop Nigpt at the Fall River Serra will be waived," the statemeua Santo Christo 4,196.05 St. Anthony Club by the president and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Manuel lll8~e policy has been recomNEW BEDFORD Nantucket..;.. H. Camara Jr. mended by the academic sena., Holy N;lme $9,675.00 Our L~dY of the Isle 3;493.00 ' . f ! after a petition vI,~s receive4 Assumption'" '.. 2,175.00 North Dighton-; Immaculate ConcePtion ' 6,470:40 . . St. Joseph . ··· 4,763;00 Mt. Carmel 15,846.55 North, Easton-.- .' .;;' ! Our Lady of Fatima 3,089.00' Immaculate Con~tion 8,845.00 Our Lady of Perp.Help 2,406.50 . Nort~ Westport-,. A t F t f Cth N!(£!Cll'ology , Our Lady: of Purgatory 1061.00'· Our. Lady of .Grace ~;003.50 . sseII' S·· ~ ure ~ .a. 0 IC Ed, ",~a toI o n , · .· Sacred Heart·'· 4'586:30' Norton-8t. Mary' 6,146.00 Program Budget . .lTUNE i, st." Anne. 2:746.00 O.ak BluffsVery Rev. Thomas J. McLeaa" st. Anthony of Padua 5,311.50 Sacred, Heart, ..·.3·,323.50 _ DETROIT (NC)"':"'The' future trators, that "PPBS is objective]954, Pastor, St. Francis Xavier, St. Boniface . 384.00 Ocean ~roveof Catholic education is bound setting, planning, programming, . l!yannis. . St. Casimir 1,373.40 St. MIchael 4,7i9.00 up in the increasingly familiar . analysis of costs, cost-effectiveJI1UNE 8 St. Francis of Assisi 2,503.25 Orleans"PPBS"-policy" programming, 'ness, cost-benefits,. budgeting, Very Rev. John; S. CzerwoaSt Hedwig 96475 St..Joan of Arc 2,704.50 budgeting systems - a Univer- peIiorming, n;ieasuring, apprais- ka, 1961, Assistant, '-St. Stanie-St: Hyacinth 1,488:50 Oste~V'ille-Assumption 5,402.00 sUy of Notre Dame sociologist iilg in the light'of programs and laus, Fall River; . St. James 16,040.00 ProYlncetQwntold a conference of Catholic objectives, followed by more . J1UNE 9 St. John the Baptist 8,870.35 St. Peter 3,108.50 edq,cators here. planning, programming, analyzRev. Timothy J. Calnen, 1941ip St. Joseph 11,109.50 Raynh~m-8t. Ann 4,713.50 Dr. Robert L. Hassenger, who ing, etc. It cannot replace judge- Pastor, St: Joseph, Woods Hole. St. Kilian 4 18500 Sandwlch-· heads the Office of Educational ment, experience and intuition. Rev.' Joseph S. Larue, 1966, St. Lawrence 25:191:30 Corpus Christi 9,179.50 .Research at Notre Dame, ad"But it provides a better base Pastor, Sacred Heart, No. Attl.. St. Mary 7,345.00 Seekonk-Mt. Carmel 8,283.50 dressed the conference here for judgment; a more rational boro. St. Theresa 5859.00 Somers.etsponsored by the Detroit arch- framework to capitalize on exJ1UNE 10 , St. John ot God 5,007.40. diocesan office of education. perience, more information to Rev. William H. Curley, 191~ ATTLEBORO St. Patrick 6,663.80 Dr. Hassenger told the group, fertilize intuition," he' add·ed. Pastor, SS. Peter and Paul, FaEl Holy Ghost $7,100.00 St. Thomas More 8,814.50 which included school board The sociologist _ educator River. St. JOhn 16,184.00 South Dartmouthmembers, dioceSan school em- warned that the cost-effectiveRev. Thomas H .. Taylor, 1961!, · St. Joseph 5,727.00 St. M a r y , .]0,075.50 ployees, teachers and adminis- 'ne'ss 'of Catholic schools must Pastor, Our Lady ·.of the Immae-St.. Mark 8,886.50 :South' Easton- . . inClude 'comparisorls with other ulate Conception; 'riunton. . 8,899.00' .' Holy Cross .,' 3,049.50 . ~ '. .' . activities of the 'Church's' miS:.. . .'. .
.St. Mary St. Stephen 4,574.00 . Sou01 Yarmouth--.:. .\ Says Bia:lliS . Persists sion.. . ." .,'.' ' .;
St. Theresa' . 7,659.38: St. Pius.X 11,317.001 .. , r o' . . ·"If· these otIie:~' acti'vities:" Catholics
'. .TAUNroN Swansea- . un· . olrporGtlons . would . more clearly advance . ·~w ORLEANS'::(NC) - A · Holy Family . . . . . Our Lady.. of Fatima 6,801.33 WASHINGTON' (NC)-A top. : tliis work witli a' 'ci>mmitnient': prOposed ne~" TE{xas intela Holy Rosary . $5,650.00 . St. Dominic, . ' ~74~.OO Pe~t~gon of~ici~ ~.rted th~t Of· the ~atrie'nufub'ers ofpeQple' i(l u r c h . cooperation agenCJl, , " Immaculate' Conception ~:~~:~.'··"V.i~.~y·~.;t.~:;eFnra~ 4,861.33 .reli!?ous. .dlscrIIrun.ab0I?- still'and~'dol1ars," he ~aid, "theh'the:' Which. 'would ada~ '~9r the fird O~r Lady.·of ·Lourdes· 4,4;J4{75.. ~ < St. Augustine . ·pe~lsts In the' selection of. exec-··,:seDOol'S., 'cost-:effectivene~.' 'is, ,~e, ~ the state,'s, ')0 Rom. Sacred Heart. ., 7;.531.00 Wa eham-8t.. Patrick' 1,942.00 utive~ who ~anag~ .largecor-... ~r a,nd ~n~I<;i~~a1:>le r~v:bnpCatholic 'dioceses ,~ tpembe1'f.1, r St. Anthony . ~,478.1.li"Wellflee~. .;' • 9,711;75 trapo!'ctsati.ons Wlth :t;n:llitary con,. mg would be In oI:det." bas been approved 'by the SouUS '.'. St. Jaine~ . . . , 46470 ' .....,... . .. , . . , . , ; . .1 " .. ~" , " ..., . '. (Central ..Conference of . thcl t,';
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6,000.25' Bulletin, published b~ the . De . 895750 fense Department, AsSIstant De- FRIDAY...,...Queenship of Blessed NORTH A'ITLlEBORO ,. fen~ Secretary Albert B.Fitt.. . Virgin Mary.· II Class. White. Sacred Heart ' $ 6,359.90 ~emmded contractors that Pres- SATURDAY -:- Vigil of PenteSt. Mary 13425.00 3,685.00 Ident Johnson's Equal Employ-' cost. I Class. Red. Mass Prop- . , ment Opportunity order of 1965 er; Glory; Preface. ofPente . . L 0 0 .. DO requires "affirmative action" cost. Vincentiaris Meet OUlsaanGJ locese to eliminate discrimination ill SUNDAY-Pentecost Sunday. I . .. ; Members of. FalFRiver Partic- '. Marks.. A.n. n.. iv,.e.,rsa, FJ.. . the offices of contract holders pl~. . Red. Mass Proper; '., . (' .. ' /ular Council' of' the Society. '.-' . . liS well as' in· the government 9-19ry; Sequence;, ·Creed; Fref,;.··' VoL .·.LAFAYEIT,E... (JIlG-> -'-.A.uxil' t s e l f ' ace of Penteco-I 0 e ve...· -· St. Vincent de Paul will 'meet I. "." ,. .. ' '/[" . "" ., ( as· ....f or. B.ened,icti.o.n at.,?·45 Tu'esday . iary r,. Bi:mop. Warren L:. Bou-' , Fin cited research data which ',' day\of.this' week). . ... dreaux of Lafayette'. stresSed the in 'MONDAY P t' - M d '. 9" night June 4 at Our Lady "1' f' th 'Ch" h . - '''to' be' . . dioates.. that' '''members ... ~"'. .,,' ..,.-. e ecos.. ·. on ay.. (. Angeis. Church Dwelly Street: ~he q. he.. .urced~~" his some religious groups are signi..; ... : t;::lass. . Red.· ,MassProper,'" e ne ··,A'meet.big follow at· 8 " '., ,~ e~ St th,1sM· ..., o"~~ ' . • ficantly. under-represented; with' ., ~Glory;. ~equence;!Creed. ., .In sermon a e ass·.commemort· 'I ·t· ·t ·TUESDAY-Pentecost ·Tuesday ' , ,\.. , :." the parish . hall. On the agenda" ti th OOth . . ~ no apparen exp ana IOn' excep.·· ..· " . , .'.' ': will be discussion of pla'ns'for ' ~,ngLaf e tte d·anDlversarY.. ,religious bias." He also said that·"" I·e·Clas!!' . Red. ~ass~r;... . St: Vincent" de Paul Cam' and .. e . aye. ,'. l~.ese. .. mo~ of the ~esearch~data on the'" Glo:ry;Sequence; Cree~;. ..., a report on a regional"conf:rence . The early Chu~cb ~as a· ~ubl~ct has dealt WIth discrim- WEDNESDAY-Ember Wednes ~ V' ti h Id in G d . structured commumty WIth·. of- mation against. Jews. day after Pentecost. I Class. VoL Incen ar en f'IceS an d' responsl'b'liti Cit NY ans e I .' es, '" an d Red.• Mass Proper; Glory; Se y, . . . the function of the Church then, . . .. quence' Creed' ' . 'THURSD~Y-P~riteCoSt 'Tburs . as it is now, to bring men tbe th of the Gospel, the full f~ day: I Class. Red;' Mass PrOp .grace of the sacramen~, tJ:1e full . ~ "ere Glory· Sequence' Creed' light of Christ," the' bis?opsaid, ' , ! ' . "This is what this' anniver~ sary is all about. We celebrate the survival not only of a hisO'ROUR.KE . 1. 0f a th eo1,.. Rev• "0"- P Drl'sc'o·n' ,.'.. Funeral Home' ; .. . June 2 - St. Kilian, New to ry bu t th e survIva ogyi .:a. theology of' ,what the' . ~resident, has called a s~-.. ..... , . . . .Bedfor!l. ., . Church is and does, ~his is. the' elal meeting ofJbe Senate ,,57.1 ·Secon'd·..Street··· .J. St. Joan of Arc--Orleans +J," : ~nniv.ersary of a iPioinise, .as.,' .of Priests of the Fall River· . "'''Fall River . Mass~'" long as there is a niari~ woman . Diocese. 'for ,Friday arter-, ,', ... , ' . ',' . ,,' .•. .,'. ", ;," mE ANCHOR orc~lild'~n-'need,'o{,fqfgi~enes~, n~on, .June .H"at 1:30 in'. the' '. ·679-6072. . '" .:; , SeCORd Class Postage Paid at Fall Rlveii pardon or peace, ~.r:i,:g.race. or·'. " Catholic. Memorial Home. in ,MICHAEL' J:. Mc:M~HON"" " "', .;:'i Mass. Published every Thursday, ..at. 410 . , . Fall iii- :',,:.. . . '·"'·Licelise"d·· Fu'nerai Director' ",-'; Highland Avenue Fall .River: Mass: 02722 life, in short, in need. ot. . God, '. . I,v~r.-:. ...., Dr the Cathol!c Press of the Di~ese of Fall the Church will .:·b~.. there;".·j. ".; .' .., ~ . " .". .... c, ; ·,'RE!gis.~er. eCl... I;.. m ..'.b.',o. ,..j:y,e~ ',., ;C' :4~g~ ~~b;~~~lon.,~rl~ by mall, P~tpald '. Bi&hop ;BoudreauX" said:: ... e·' ~""u;,;;","""==",,,,,,,,,,,,",,,a.-,,,,,,,__,,,,_ _-,, St. J>aul "
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NEW BEDFORDITES FIGHT PORNOGRAPHIC LITERATURE: Rene A. Caron and Mrs. Cezar Miranda of St. Mary's Parish Committee sign 11be petition. Asst. ·Atty. Gen. James J. O'Leary, Sgt. Marguerite Macy and @apt. Gifford L. Durfee of the New Bedfor~ Police Dept. and Asst. .i\tty.
New Federation .Appoints Heads Of Committees CHICAGO (NC) --'" The raewly formed National Fed oration of Priests' Councils has announced its steering , oommittee and the chairmen of five standing commj,ttees for the, coming year.
Gen. Eugene R. Capuano discuss the procedure of tHe project. One section of the picket line. The involved citizens of New Bedford meet in St. Mary's .School Han, New Bedford. As expected, cries of "censorship" and "free dom" are being hear<L
New Bedford Parish: CCD Unit Starts
Campaign to .Stamp Pornography
University ~dopts Speak~rs Policy
The Confratern1ty of Christian Doctrine of the St. Mary's Parish in New Bedford has stirred up a hornet's nest in the city and the shock wa~es are expected to spread. The story began two weeks ago when the CCD sponsored a public meeting of North End par ~nts to discuss pornography'. . . and how to curb it. Capt. Gifford L. Durfee, head of the Police Department's in . Last week's session got the The dealers involved are un vestigative units, and Sgt. stamp-out-pornography . ball derstanqably irate about the Marguerite K. Macey, chief roliing officially. Unofficially, it citizens' crusade. One reported CY.f the policewomen's divi started the day after the first ly has announced he will carry
The univ~rsity also said the administration will deal only with the Associated Students of Marquette University (ASMU) -the formally constituted stu dent government-with respect to student requests. Father Raynor announced these developments in a letter to Daniel W. Coyne, president of ASMU. The new speaker's pol,icy per mi1s student organizations to hear any speaker, provided the students seek faculty adivce on the matter. The students are not required to accept the ad vice, but must explain in writ ing why they do not.
sion, attended the session and meeting that fired those present. hi~ case to the Supreme Court brought along samples of ob File Complaints "if necessary." scene magazines and books 'con The next day, one man and o In the meantime, he could fiscated in raids on several New two young mothers-the latter be in for a most uncomfortable Bedford stores. two dressed in slacks and shirts Summer unless. he cleans One of the, stores is located for their shopping spree--went . house. within a block' of Our Lady of into two of the target "smut One representative told the Perpetual Help Elementary shops.'" They looked,' they full house audience he had been School. The magazine racks on ~ bought magazines, they' went contacted recently' by one of which some of' the so-called immediately to the Police De the dealers whl;) said he was "literature" was. openly dis partment and filed .formal com being "harrassed by police. played was immediately adja plaints. "I -asked him why," the rep cent to a candy counter patron That Saturday, five' persons . reseritative said, "and he told ized by the school children. proprietors and salesmen-were - me for selling dirty books." "You read a short paragraph arrested and charged with a After looking. at the material in a paper abollt a store behig total of. ~.7 counts.. Court. action: display:ed by the Vice Squad, the representative said: "I think raided and obscene material was continued until June. • The policy was approved at . picked up," one moUier said, That was just the beginning these 'things belong in the city Tohe heads. of the fiv~stand- "but I had no ·idea what it of what looks as though. 'might ,incinerator and those who sell a' meeting 'of the university'S tpg. committees are: Father meant. This is beyond ·beiief." be a long and. veri: hot Summer ,them should be in jaiL". trustees earlier in May. Coyne l~hl,1 T.· Fagan of ·Brooklyn,· . That vias the reaction' Qf most ·for a·number of magazine deal-. Not· everyone in New Bed..: has requested the approval in Ja.ead of the personnel commit:;,· 'tile approximately -200 per;' ers-in ·New Bedford. ford is' happy about' the warm a letter to' the trustees. Father William. Burke. of . 9<.lnS who attended that 'first ses Last week, the campaign in.,.. . si·iuation generated by the St. , FaUier "Rl,lyqor said the .pOiicy . Mary's CCo'. . '. '., . .Baltimore, chairman 9f the:' sioo, J)\oderaledby '.the . Rev. tensifred. . . has. the support of all segments ~mmunications com m it tee; Michael P. McPartland, assistant State Rep.· Donald R. Gau Already, cries'of "ceriso~ship" of the. uni-vers,ty·. . J!lather William L. Green of at St. Mary's.' .. .,. dette, a member of-St. Theresa's - and: "·individual freedom'" 'are . "/lton Ro'uge, La., head of the Ministers Attend Parish, suggested formation .of filling the air. . ~ ~ ~
'.. Parents Lead· ·Way eommittee on councils imd the· .' The . gathering included "a a "citizens' committee"· that' !8.ity;· Father Harold P. Arbanas,' .-number of. Protestant ministers . would contact veterans .organi The .·parents, however, 'and ~ ~ QI:eat Falls, Mont.,. chairman of who had announced the meeting zations, fraternal groups' ·and.. many like them intend to 'push ~ tb~ c~mmittee on the priest in .. ·from. their pulpits thepre'irious' women's clubs seeking'. broad' their.. campaign until· youngsters ~ #l~ world today; aild Father Sunday. The. Rev~ ,Arthur.' E. . base -support for·the drive; The can walk into'8 store near a Excavating' COrnelius J. Dohert:r of Hart- Cole of St, Martin's Episcopal parents present thought it W.8S school· to buy candy without . ,.furd, Conn., chai~an .of the .. Church 'announced that· night . a ,.good idea. . . facing 'an llIrray of lurid-cover • Contracton ~ial acti~n' committee. that' he would organize a similar'.' .Gaudette was ~ominated from magazines. ''The covers are ~ niild,'~' ~rie' mothel" 'said, i'bY 4 9 CRO,S5 ST., FAIRHAVEN The committees will work meeting'in the South End of the the floor as chairman. He ac _der the direction of the NFPC" city -~'within three weeks/" cepte d , "as a concerned parent, _. comparison ,with what's inside." • Massachusetts laws are strin- .: WYman· 2-4862 8Kecutive board, and will not ,'Last week, a second .lijlttle not as a politician." speak independently of the" mapping session· was held in St. Then, directaetion devotees Turn "to Page· Four '. ~ •••••• v .. board. The committees will pre Mary's School auditorium. took over. . , . pare work for the consideration The Rev. Richard Clark· of Told by official after official. 9f the house of delegates at Church of the GoOd 'Shepherd ,that law enforcement agencies til . tal' in Fairhaven gave the opening needed supp0!i from "involved elr nex gener tmeetmg. invocation. The final blessing citizens," the audience responded. The Senate of Priests of the . was given by Rabbi Nathan Approximately 90 parents Fall River Diocese was repre-, Wise of' Ahavath AchimSyna "signed up'" for picketing duty Gented at the formation meeting gogue. Father McPartland again in. front of two of the target ef the Federation by Rev. Leo moderated. . shops.. T. SUllivan, pastor of St. Ann's Present at the second meeting Another 40 signed up for "in 'Church in Raynham, and Rev. were nearly 400 parents and an dividual' harrassment" . aSsign,;, peter N. Graziano, assistant at array of state and other offi ments. BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • PARTIES Holy Name Church in Fall cials that included' Mayor Ed The latter will stop in at· sus River. It is expc<:ted that the ward F. Harrington of New pect stores at sporadic intervals. .• COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1rilole issue of the permanent Bedford,' District Attorney Ed If . they see any pornographic ~liation of the Fall River mund Dinis, 'five State .repre· li.terature on display, they will 1343 'PLEASANT STREET FALL RIVER Senate with the National Fed-' . sentatlves, six city 'coUncillors purchase it and trot· to·:.Police 993-7780 eration will be rererredto 'aU' 'and two assistant attorneys gen,;, Headquarters' to file'" 'formal . 'the' priests of the Diocese for" eralrepresenting S~te .Atty: complaints that in mo~t cases tlleir decision.' . General ~liott L•. RichardsOn. will result in coOrt acti~ Father Patrick J. O'Malley, newly eleCted president of the NFPC, is chairman of the steer ing committee. Other steering committee members are: Father Francis Bonnike, Rockford, ,Ill.; Father Raymond G. Decker, San Francisco; Father William P. Doll, Pueblo, Colo. Father William Greene, Baton Rouge, La.; Msgr. John J. Kiley of Newark, N. J.; Msgr. Colin A, M~cDonald of Manchester, N. H.; Father Richard C. Wempe, ,Kan BaS City, Kans. and, Father. David ·H. Zaumeyer, Covington, Ky. .
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MILWAUKEE (NC) - Mar quette University here has an nounced an open speaker's pol icy and proposed meetings be tween student councils and Father John P. Raynor, S.J., university president.
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THE
A~CHOR-Dioces~ of Fall River-Thurs:, M,ay 30, 196"8
Por~ography - Continued' from Page Three
Awards to .GraduCIlHng ,. St1'ti.Ddenfl's Continue t(fHeadli-rroe Ncew$ From D~ocesan, Hig~s "',
gent, Asst.. Atty. Gen. James J.l." O'Leary told' the. audience of p~ents last week. :rhey could cover the situation adequate}:v~ he feels, except for one point: "We have the laws. UnfonD lIudely, we don't always have constructive court decisions." 'What law' enforcement agen cies need, he said, is citizen eo operation and' cases. Law offi Cials will take care of the rest. The New Bedford campaip is aimed at seeing law enforce ment officials get the proof tbe:r need. ~ Meanwhile, Gaudette has re o ceived a number' of querie!! from people in other communA tres asking how the stamp-out-, ' llmut campaign ~as organizecll, Meanwhile, Gaudette himself has been carrying a sign in Ill• picket line in front of one o1l the target shops. He was joinecll 'one day by another representa tive, .Joseph D. Saulnier. Stm - Ofthers are expected to join 'the march. "You know," one elated po-, lice official said, sounding sur prised about the reaction «l€ parents, "this, could wO,rk!". "~, .. Tlle pickerel'S and har-rasse.ro iJitend to see 'that ~t does.
Still they come, the' scholarships for seniors gl:aduating from Diocesan highs. At Mount St. Mary, Fall River, Kath leen Forrest received a $1300 schoh~rship from MassachJ,l setts General Hospital; Nancy White received $1200 award from Northeastern Univer sity. The $600 Rhode Island Co. She plans to attend Stonehill College scholarship went to College, majoring in physical . Col science., 'Donna Pires; Emerson At SHA Fall River they're
lege granted' Betty Ann Picar~' still drawing ,breatl'~, ~~ter their $1100. whirlwind weekend, presentaRuth Faris received four schol- tion of "The Boy.Frien'd." 'Di arships: $2400 from Clark Unireeted by Sister. John Alicia; versity, '$800 from the' Elks, S.U.S.C., the cast of 26 included $2250 from Boston University, several boys from area ~igh and $2600 from Emmanuel. Mary schools and colleges. As well as . Harrington was 'given $1550 two public penormances, show from Northeastern, University, ings were given for students of and $2000 from Boston Univer-, Sacred Hearts grammar schools sity. Judi DePaola received a ,and surrounding high schools. $700 grant, and a $700' nursing The ambitious project was the loan from Northeastern Univer- first production of SHA's Pros-./ sity. Firestone awarded $100' pect Players. scholarships to Mary Beth Soares Be Aware and JeaNne Boulay. Cynthia Callaghan received a Last week was Be Aware $1600 scholarship' from both Week at Mt. St. Mary Academy. Stonehill and Bryant, an,d $2100 Sponsored by the, Sodality, the from Rhode Island Collegl!!. getting-to-know-:you. 1>,1' oj e <;. t Northeastern University awarde~ featured' wearing of naIT)e t~gs, special extra-curricular acti,vi It) Reject!': Diane Witkowski a $2100 ,gran~ ties and eady morning', c'offee and a $600 loan; Karen Aguiar received a $350 Rhode Island hours. Bet everyone would like Poor, 'State' Scholarship; and Judith that last-named to be a perma" WASHiNGTON (NC)-;-WaS,h-, CLASS QFFICERS: Class officers at Holy Family High Doolan' was given a $500 labOr nent fixture on the sch,edule:,~ School; New Bedford,' are, seated from left, Claire Sherbino, i'ngton's five 'universities ha~ union scholarship. ' Last weekend was busy, too treasurer; Ann Harrington, secretary;' standing, William torned down a request to' us~ for Jesus-Mary Acaqemy's their classrooms and dormiforicii Cecilian GI~ Club" which pre , To Stonehill G,ushue, vice-president; .Micha~l Haug~ton, pre~ident. . ' , fbr'~ planned Poor People's Uni;.' Sue Anne Machado, of Bisnop sented its Spring concert Satur-' verSity'in conJunction with tlKi' Stang, North Dartmouth, has re day and Sunday. With the ,theme P'6orPe-ople's Campaign. " with a carwash, of all improb ceived 'a ,$500 grant, renewable "Springtime Is Songtime," the Students' prepared and 'con able activities. It'll be held in 'ducted classes and tried their However, they announced annually, from the Thomas A. program included 17 numbers the parking lot of St.' William's, plans to assist the campaigners hand at maintaining discipline. Rodgers Sr. Scholarship Commit and featured senior Joanne Ar Also at Cassidy.. 15 students Church and proceeds will help though a variety of faculty and tee of the Globe Manufacturing ruda as a soloist in "Love Is a visited their sister school, SHA pay the printer for next year. student projects. Many-Splendored Thing." ' Fall River,' at the beginning of Student-Teacher Day was re:.. the month. The visit was re cently 'held at Bishop Cassidy turned a week later when SHA High in Taunton. Mary Berube; girls journeyed to Cassidy. student council president, was Pub~isher' I\lIsgr. McKeon Debating So "principal," while Sharon Mc ciety at Holy Family 'High came COLUMBUS (NC) - 'Racial Herr told the Catholic ne~sMann, senior class president; away with .honors from :the Bay men that they "must shamediy took over as guidance director. View Tournament, with' novice' equality is tHe "doomsday is EMMITSBURG (NC) sue"for the United States and accept" their share of ~he blallle. debaters Marsha Moses and 'the Church, in America" Dan for this fact. "Too often, in, th~ Mount Sf. Mary's College, Maureen Hudson winning first Herr, president of the Thomas weirds of Dr. King from *,he second oldest Catholic col Church Labor place as ilfirmati ve, debaters; More Association, and publish.er Birmingham jail; we have stood, lege in the United States, has D~spute Mediator' ".
and Edward McIntyre and,David of Cri1:ic magazine, ,warned 'on, ~~e sid~line!l arid mouthe!i named a new administrative 'Rochefort . winning first Place Catholic journalists. here in the pious irrelevancies and sapcU. WASHINGTON (NC) - Msgr. board including seven laymen. negative. Edward also won the ,keynQte address at the, 57,th monious trivialities/' he said. The- move by the 160-year-old George G. Higgins, director of 'Negative Speaker ,award., annual. national convention. ,of "-Share' Blame college from an all-priest board the Social Action Department, ',Mother McAuley_Guildat~t. _the Cat~olic, Press_.!\.'ssocial.ion ': ";ot course," he~, contin,iJ«i~, U.S. Catholic Conference, has, follows a national trend among ,St. M1\ry's. has najned Mrll•. (CPA).
"we could say that we were. Catholic higher educational in-. been named by Mayor 'Walter E .. Donald Hinchcliffe as Its ne,w ' .. The VnHed States, he,' said, oC~'uPied by our,',o'wn gheH'O s'titutions· towards a greater Washington to mediate 'a tran8-, preside~t. -Also at Mount .the is "on the' brink of civil w.a.r problems, iliat Catb'oiic Neg~oeB portation labor dispute here sharing of control by' laymen; alumnae association' p'ians ' its lind . . . the Church in America were a small minority,' that :J:';' , , UQder the reorganization, the, which is threatening to halt all anriual breakfast' 'for Sunday, is in the 'throes of a' struggle newing and reforming 'the bus service in the nation's capi new 15-member board of trus June 2. Senior class day is slated that could deshoy it."
Church was a full.,time occtipa tees will be the governing board tal. for Wednesday, June 5; the Dismissing other "much pub tion. of the college with the power junior-senior 'frolic on Thurs The dispute between the D.C. licized internal concerns," Herr "We could argue thus, just as, to elect and remove any officers Transit Company and Local 689 day, the 6th; graduation on Sun said that the issue of racial German Catholics and German necessary for the proper lunc,;; of the Amalgamated Transit day, the 9th; and the senior 'equality is "the issue that di Catholic editors argued that tioning of the college. Union arose because of fears of prom on Tuesday, the 11th. Then vides the 'Church in .America, they could not have acted other For the first time in Mount night bus drivers in the wake of collapse. that has within it the seeds of wise during the slaughter of S·t. Mary's history, the president" a growing wave of bus robberies Junior-senior . day at JMA destructiop." , ,
millions of 'Jews by the nazis. who must be a priest, cannot be and the hold-up slaying of a bus will 'be Tuesday, June 4, fol "In frustration and in desper "I suggest that either we a member of the board of trus dowedthe same night by' a driver.' , ation," he said "the black !)l,an a11, ·of us-have· defaulted, 'on tees. ,junior-senior dance at which 'a r has called out' to us ... But' not our moral obligations or. that Night drivers, s,upported by One \\'oman Member senior will be named queen and only does the white Americqn we are so inept, so ineffectual , the' union, have refused to carry Only the archbishop of Balti refuse to giv~ his black brother "that we have no purpose in money to make change and the' 'four juniors will be chosen' as ,more and his, successors will' her ladies it! waiting. justice. He rejects him, he :existing. , If we" have readers company has 'notallowed them " have the status of a pennanent Tall)nt Show , scorns him, he hates him. And Who sincerely believe that they to drive buses w{thout 'it. trustee. Other clerical members Students from all classes the Catholic 'no less than, per ,can love God and despiSe H,is, Washington named IViayor :of the 'new board, in addi tion to joined to present ~ talent show haps more than, the non-Cath-~ black sons, then we have failed, Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Msgr. Higgins to mediate the at a student council-sponsored olic." 0 no m~tter OUl: other triumphs." Baltimore, are Bishop Thomas dispute when day drivers threat assembly at Holy Family High. ened to walk out also and halt J. Margada of Wilmington, Aux Also on the assembly program 1I11t1illll!1II1111111111111111111111111111111!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIV all bus service. iliary Bishop Edward J. Her was presentation of National Msgr. Higgins has been a reg mann of Washington, and four Honor Society piris to seniors, ular weekly contributing col pastors of parishes in Maryland cards to juniors and probation , mIA\RnlJW,f¥, Q'lrerUlRIERS' umni'st in The Anchor since its , ary membership to sophomores. and Pennsylvania. bL BANK Laymen on the new board of inception in April'1957. An average of 85 or better in trustees represent a variety of all subjects is required' for NHS of BRn§1I'~L COUNTY business, financial' and profes membership. ~"'liIIiI'5..-i sional interests including indus New at Mount is a' student 90-DAY NOTICE trialists, lawyers, physicians, NEW YORK (NC) - A new council .bulletin board on which TIME builders and educators. Included publication called the Bridge a student can place •articles, on the board is its first woman will be launched for English poems, cartoons, pictures" an OPEN member, Catherine Rich, regis speaking Catholics in t.he Mon nouncements and you-name-it. ACCOUNT trar at the Catholic University treal, Que., area, the Gatholic , And va'dedictorian for Mount • • Interest Compounded" ,of America, in ,Washington, D. C. Press Association here has been graduation cere~onies will be Quarterly ,Mount 'St. Mary's Coll<:ge has advised. The new paper will re Ruth Faris, senior class presi . 750 men students. Two-thirds ,place the Challenge, which will 'dent. OHices in: of the faculty and all but one cease publication this month; Wllh the 1968 Mercycrelit NORTH A TTLEBORq MANSFIELD ATTLr:BORO FALLS
. of the department heads ar~ Paul J. Delaha,nty, 'Challenge published, work on the '69 edi laymen~ , , . editor, advised. tion will 'begin Saturday, Jun'e 1 IlillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUllllIIlIlIIlIIlI!llllllllllllllliIIII lIillll II 11I1111IIIUII!Ill
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(c@OO®@es, 1F'<e@/PlOe:sPlan"
RCllcialEqua.lify 'Doomsday Issue" Tells Journcdists
Trustees Include Seven Laymen
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New Newspaper
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THE ANCHORThurs., May 30. 1968
louisville Group Seeks to Avoid Housing Panic
Bisho'p Gerrard To Ordain Four At Stonehill
]LOUISVILLE (NC) - A mixed religious group; CUIl" ·'lI"ently headed by' a Catholic !layman, has been working QUietly' here in Kentucky for
more than a year to prevent
· "'\l»anic" when Negroes move
l'n&o whfte neighborhoods. v Complete Candoll' JIohn M .. Hennessey, president · of Chief Justice Homes, a cOr Il»Oration of some 50 Louisville citizens, heads the- program. He c1etailed the operation this way: When a home is listed for sale en an all-White neighborhood, CIte owner is asked if he. ha's any" opposition to selling to Negroes. if has, another prospective' ooUer is approached. When a !)erson indicates he is willing ~ sell to Negroes, the corpora Cion purchases the house and at f.lempts to find a qualified NegrC) llHayer who can meet the equity lJequirements of financing and \Who has good credit. . . Spokesmen for the group say !lIU. negotiations are handled in . . atmosphere of' "complete eaooor:' Homes are listed at bAr market price because it llVould be "unfair to do it any .<Mher way. We are not Ii @lbarity:' Proper Balance Founded on the theory t~at decent human beings are en titled to be treated as such. <ehief Justice Homes' is attempt btgto educate white residents flhat Negroes make good neigh~ : I!Nrs, Hennessey said.' . So far the corporation's .re 8lOUrces have limited it to one lIQle iil Louisville. There now, are several prospects in subur': ~n locations. Chief Justice Homes does all possible to avoid neighborhood bftbaiance. "We'd rather have one per cent Negroes in eight E:teighborhoods than eight per «ent in one," .Hennessey said. 'Miss Their Chance' . "'We are not interested In cre:' "ng more ghettos," he contin ued. "Ghettos are created by white people who move out of neighborhoods leaving a. void Ulat is often filled by Negroes." The West End of the city ~ a 03SC in point where ."For Sale:" Glgn5 mushroomed in many sec Clons when Negroes began mov ing in several years ago, Hen:. IIlessey observed.' Past president of the Louis - 'rille Real Estate Board, .Hen - ftesliey is "disappointed in the realtors' attitude" against a local open housing .ordinance because they "missed their chanee w m.ake a great community cOn tribution:'
he
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Most Rev. James J. Ger rard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, will ordain four deacons to the priesthood
~IEV.
VICTOR DVORSKY, CSC
REV. LAWRENCE JERGE, CSC
REV. JOSEPH A. SIDERA, CSC
!lEV. JAMES 'W; CHICHETIO, CSC
SATUR])AytS ORDINANDI: Members of the Holy Cross Fathers who will be orclained June :I. by Bishop Gerrard, are: Rev. Victor Dvorsky, C.S.C., Rev. Lawrence Jerge, on C.~.C... Rev. 'Joseph A. Sidera, C.S.C., Rev. James W. Chichetto, C.S.C. .
Fiscal
,Proble~s
Professors WASHINGTON (NC)-Fiscal problems of private colleges and universities may threaten "the ve\'Y existence". ·of many of these schools, the American As soCiation of University Profes sors has warned. The AAUP, in its annual re .port on the economic status of professol'li", also said that salary increases for t.eachers in private institutions of highe'r education feU behind those for faculty in public institutions for the third year. It urged college and univ;er sHy teachers to consider the possibilities of educational tele: vision, teaching machines and . other innovations in order ·to "help increase the productivity of teaching efforts and thereby belp to keep costs down." Threaten JExlsteace The report expressed alarm that financial difficulties could threaten the existence of pri vate colleges and universities. It cited the need for "healthy competition" between p~blic and pl'ivate schools and noted that the absence of such com petition would remove much of thepl'essure for higher teacheli' salaries. . I~ also praise$! nonpublic in stitutions fOI' having been "bas tions of academic freedom 'in
Urges Broad School Lu'nch Program .
NEW YORK (NC)-A paper back book, "Their Daily Bread,It a study of the national school Calif~ Farm Workers lunch program which recom mends widening the proj~t, has Strike Vineyards' been published here by the DELANO (NC) - It's getting . Committee on School Lunch lawfully hot in· the San Joaquin Participation. Valley. And, as the Summer ap The study was compiled undei' Iltroaches, it will get hotter, in the' direction 'of Florence Robin. I!lRO\'e ways than desert heat. . The sponsorin'g committee, head The grapes of wrath are like ed °by Jean Fairfax, includes lly to explode here and in other Church. Women United, the Na areas of rural California. Two tional Board of· the Young key words seem to dominate Women's Christian Association, IllUelga and boicot (strike and the National Council of Catho boycott). They represe.pt action lic Women, the National Coun and hope for their future well cil of Jewish Women and the being, economic and spiritual. National Council ~. Negro The strike is being led by women. eesar Chavez, director of the' The book emphasiies there United Farm. Workers Organiz are six million school age chil ling Committee· here. The boy e>ntt is being conducted by their dren in the country from fami lies at the rock'-bottom levell aupporters throughout the coun of poverty, and fewer than two Cry to keep California table f!fI'apes off Eastern and Middle million receive free or reduced West tables and out of markets price lunches under the national! everywhere. The issue is the school IUl1ch program. The book contains II number of recom right of farm workers to organ how to wideliil AIle for collective bargaining mendations the progl'am. ~itb the growers. ,:7~
on
Beset Private College Educational TV=
the period not ~ long ago when it was so ser.iously threatened:"
raising prqductivity. "It is pos 'sible for our profession, as for The report noted that faculty any profession, to grow conser salal'ies in all institut~ons . of vative in its methods, mistaking higher education increased an tradition to be synonymous with average of 7.4 per cent ~t year. virtue," it cQmmented. . But. it said; salaries of fuli pro AceOl'ding to. the report, the fessors in· private universities country's top five schools in rose 5.6 per cent as compared average faculty salary are: Har with 8.1 per cent in public uni- . vard University,' $19,300; the versities. Professors' salaries in University of Chicago, $18,241; private liberal arts colleges in the California Institute of Tech creased 6.7 per cent,.as against nol~gy, $i7.976; Stanfo}d Uni 8.6 per cent in publicly sup versity, $17,220; and the Clare ported schools. mont Graduate School and Uni Top Five versity Cent~r, $17,065. The study, said one way -of increasing teacher productivity would be to increase class size. Observe Centenary Yet, it noted, the private schools Of First Mission stress perso.ual attention to in DAR ES SALAAM (NC)-The dividual students. It urged teachers to eonsider Church is preparing to celebrate the centenary of the ~irst Cath the use of technological innova tions in teaching as l.l way to olic missionary to arrive on the mainland of Tanzania . The commemoration will be Legislat.ure Limits held July 14-21, marking the 100th' anniversary of Precious Cost of Busing Blood Father Antoine Horner's TRENTON (NC) -The New founding of the first Catholic Jersey State Legislature has JIlission at :Bagamoyo. Climaxing passed a bill limiting the the celebrati()n will be 'an open amount which the state may air religious service attended by spend to bus private school Tarnlania's bishops and special pupils to $150 per year. representatives and guests from Under the sch~l transporta Tanzania and abroad.. tion law, passed· by a Demo The .theme of the centenary cratic -controlled legislature in celebration will be "Mwanga, 1967, local school districts are Upenoo, Amani (Light, Charity, required to provide private Peace)." school pupils up to II limit of 20 miles. The state pays '15 per cent of the cost. This year the Plan Reorganization bill. to the 'state was about $'1 million .. Off Administration NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch The new bill-'-passed by II Republic legislature bent on bishop Phiiip 1d. Hannan of economy-will slash $1.5 mil New Orleans has announced lion from the bill, according to that an extensive study of the its sponsors, without touching administrative structure of the the majority of students. archdiocese will be undertaken with a view to updating and re organizing the archdiocesan ad ministration. The study is being made in compliance with the Continued from Page One
proposals set forth by the Sec cesan Director of Catholic Char ond Vatiean Council. ities will address the plenary
T·o secure the views of all . meeting on "The Adaption of our Catholics, a general committee Society to the Modern World". will be formed which will rep The three panelists will be: resent every segm6\t of ·the William J. Fagan of Taunton, archdiocese. The committee will Henry J. Kitchen of Fall River consist of the .members of the and John E. Kane of Fall River. clergy, Religious and laity, in Mr. Fagan will speak on the cluding· members of various Bishop's Charity Ball for the archdiocesan organization. Underprivehiged Children of the An executive committee will Diocese. Mr. Kitchen's .topic will be appointed from the general be "My Daily Visits with the committee to dr:,ft proposals Guests at the Catholic Memorial which will be submitted to the HQme". Mr. Kane will discuss general committee for consider camping ~ith special emphasis ation. The final draft of the on day camping for exceptional proposals will then be submit ted to A.rchbishop Hannan. children.
Vincentians
for the Holy Cross Fathers in the Chapel of the Holy Cross Seminary, Stonehill College, No. Easton. on Saturday, June 1. The four yQung men COJ;l1 pleted theil' theological studies at 'Holy Cross College, Washing ton. Prior tQ their Washington assif'nment, the quartet gradu ated .' from Stonehill College. The ordinandi and their as signments are: . Rev. James W. Chichetto, 'CSC, of Lenox, Mass., to Notre Dame College, East Pakistan. Rev. Victor Dvorsky, CSC, of Lansford, Pa. to a teaching ca reer in the Eastern Province of the U. S. Rev. Lawrence Jerge, CSC, of Buffalo, to a teaching career in the Eastern Province of the U.S. Rev. Joseph A. Sidera, CSC, of Orange, Conn., to a teaching career in the Eastern Province of the U. S.
Postpone Religious Leaders' Seminar WASHINGTON (NC) - A Summer seminar on world problems for bishops and heads of religious orders of men has been postponed. The seminar "The Year 2000. If 0 0 o"_was scheduled to be held June 17-21 at St. Louis University. Postl>onement was announced here by Msgr~ Marvin Bordelon, director of the U. S. Bishops' Secretariat for World Justice and Peace, co-sponsor with the university of the seminar. Msgr. Bordelon said scheduling con flicts· among the international experts on the faculty and the bishop participants forced the postponement. He said no new date had yet been sele~ted.
New Papal Envoy For Fatima Rites VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI named Percile Cardinal Felici, president of the Pontifi cal Commission for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law, to preside in his name and as his envoy at ceremOnies at Fatima, Portugal, closing the 50th anni ycrsary of the apparitions the!e. Pope Paul himself journeyed to Fatima last year for opening ceremonies of the anni·versary.
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THE ANCt::OR-Diocese of Fall ~iver-Thurs.,·May30, 1968
A Straw' Man ~n easy way to give a talk is to set up some' straw man and then proceed to kn()Ck it down. It is always tempting to put forward some proposition and then to de molish it. The problem comes in when the straw man is seen to be just ,that-straw; the danger comes in when the proposition is seen to be a rigged one. ' A recent speaker at a Catholic college commencement in the Mid-West:said the "day of Sunday tokenism is past. None but the erroneously secure, the inculpably ignorartt, the exclusively, provincial Catholic can base his intensity' scale of Catholicism on the mere ritualistic countdown of Masses attended, rosaries said and mortal sins not com mitted." ;, . ,', This is the, 'example of the 'rigged proposoition. It is easy to make this kind of a statement and then to demolish it and to call upon the"batholic Of today to change and'put his faith into, attion and to beCome involved on a more personal level. _ The fact is, :of 'oourse" that. nQ 0lle ever said that Ca-' tholicism any age could be equated with "a ritualistic countdown of Masses attended, rosari~s said and moral S'ins not committed." This was never the standard of, Ca-o tholicism and is' not now. True, there are men and women of every age who live their faith only in part of their lives,' who perform ,a ~ew so-called pious actions and think - wishfully - that they have done th~ whole thing, who offer GOd the bribe of a Mass attended if He in turn will let them bypass showing lo.ve for neighbor. Just as there are Catholics of every age :who have found. it easier to try to direct someone else's life than to root out a major fault in their own lives, have found it easier to go into a slum and to wash some child's {ace than to put up with the subtle difficulties of rearing their own children in an., affluent' and permisslive society. . Christ told His followers that they must be witnesses to Him, and this means to reproduce Him in their own lives, in every and all aspects of their lives, in their vray 'ing lives and their apostolate lives, in their love of God and love of neighbor, in their serving of' God and "their service to one another.
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Cardinal Cushing Cites Knowledge ,Of GO~d,. E~il
'BOSTON (NC) - Richar.4 Cardinal Cushing told a laY's men's group here "society 'nat s,tatic, and the Christialll is not some kind of religious' fossil that endures like a monu- ment through time. We are ~ the world and we must redeem ,it; this means that we 'must! " know its strengths and weak! nesse,s, its successes and fail , /'-**64 -_ .-/"\ ure; the ele'ments of good and. the elements of evil," he said., , Cardinal Cushing delivered the keynote address ,at the ·32m!, 6 annual congress of 'the ,League.. , of' Catholic Women, meetma, here. New Jersey,'Residents Aid Five Women
.. "We are not now,on ,the edg.
of'"the sea of Galilee,. nor' in ,the,
BUlrned Out of Homes
catacombs, ,nor in, the' Darl~
Ages, nor in the medieval state.
Arthur Gelnaw, both of sU~bur ,NEWARK (NC) - In some' ban Park Ridge in the upper not in the Renaissance, nor in
respects it was like any "kit chen shower" for a prospecti-"e rea~hes of Betgen County, far the age of Victoria," he said.
"We" are in the closing years 01
bride;..... ' from Newark. the 20th century, and we must
The wOll).en have spent every: But the shower was for five make Christ live' gloriously iii
..~omen, not for one. And' "Ilone Tuesday for two months ring of 'the fiv,e were about to be ing doorbells in the apartments this time that is our own geo
to interest people in an adult eration."
married. Further, the, five wom ,,' Faith Constant en were Negroes. And the women education program soon to be :, Discussing ,the long periodGf, who sponsored the shower were launched: They also interested some 40 women ,from Our Lady preparation p,rior to, t}le !?econ~, white. of Mercy parish, Park Ridge, in ,Vatican Council which led' to
The kitchen shower was ar ranged for five women' who the "shower" project for the many of the 'decisions and de
crees' issued by the council,
, had ,been burned out of th,eir fire victims. C~rdinal Cushing said he men...
homes in the disastrous fire in So pots, pans 'Bnd pressure Newark's 'Central ,Ward,' on cookers; kettles, 'can'nisters' ana' tioned "all of thi,s. t9 rel\ssure,
April' 20. They are now living coffee pots were purchased' and th.ose ,among you ;WhQ ,ma;v.
so'metimes allow yours~lves, ~',
in apartments in the Scudder wrapped with care.. b,elieve that the Church ItJ
Homes housing project here. And just 'as 'at any shower, changing "too rapidly, that it b
Arranging the shower were . there were 'te'a-rs' of joy when' in some manner giving way 1>&-'
Mrs. Joseph Duggan and Mrs.' the gifts were unwrapped. 'I fore the demands of the contem
it porary world, that it is, in III
m
'Shower for Victims
Catholic' Charities' Head Advocates se~~eJt~fn;et~~~i~' be further !.;~m b:h~u:~~t~~~eheas~~~~~te:; Council ~f Social. Advisors,
National Federationa
'7
, ,TOLEDO (NC) - Es t abl' ' For the less Catholic practice are changin~ lshment - to the Presjdent. ,The 'National Federation ()f Priest~' Councils, just of ,a Council of Social Advisors tangible but equally important we are doing things a little bI.t formed in a Chicago meeting of representatives of .priests' ,to ,perform in the social field the "social conditions we need a differently than when we weme Senates and associations from all' parts of the country,' fun<:tion p~rformf:.d in the eco- 'Council, of Social Advisors; all younger, and ~e hope that 'both . d f t d . t' al nomics field by the Council of, ", -.., we are doing them better. ' h olds promIse an ,ear---expec e many na 100 Economic Advisors to the Pres-, "ThIS .1Ostrumentahty 'IS. nec-:"But Catholic faith," the ea.. group. .. . . ,. ,ident was advocated here by essary 10 order. to , devIse. a dinal declared, "does not change. The promIse IS that here wIll be a clearmg h()use gIV- . Msgr. ,Lawrence J. Corcoran, means for measurmg our ,so~al The revelation of God to ~ 'mg priests all over the country the opportimity to 'oom- . ,seCretary, of the Natipnal Con- healt~ and to annually p~duce People does not change." I,' "It 'is only right that . . a SOCIal report on the baSIS of . .ThIS . would become ' mu nicate WI·tP.' ,one another, ,to learn from ,one ano'tp,e','r,' ',ference shoulQ expect to face times • , " " of Catholic Oharities..liB analysIs. to search together for newer and, deeper ways' of, ,being, ," Discussing the nation's social Ii highly authoritative focus for ways that are different thaa of greater service to God's people. ,Here ,will be the'appa- :. ills at the a~nual diI.t~er of To- del~ber~tions on public sociai,': those of our fathers;" the, eap. ratus for deeper 'self-study and improvement. Here' will ~ ,.ledo, Catho~lc. ,~harltles, Msgr. pohcy, development of p~o- dinal. cont~nued. "The time. , .... ' ,.' ' . ," , " ' . ' Co-!'coran saId. We lack a com- grams and enactment of' legls- 'have changed, in a' thousand be a means offaclhtatlng ,studIes, ~nd projects. He~ ,:\\Ull, ·mon language' about our prob-' lation" , ' challengin'g 'ways and we be a means.,to recognize needs,more quickly and to'make .. lems" a commonly accepted ,Ms~t' Corcora ot d that be prepared 'to meet them." provision to 'meet those, needs; the means m cooperating ~',measurement of our nee~s ~nd. legislation', to 'c~ea;: esuch'2' ',' "still ~ore Clos~~y ,lViththe,'pi9h()pso( thecounti'y'~}(t'':~~,~f:s~f~~:e :Ci~~t~:~::hti:~ council has be.en introduced iri~' Marquette Hold " with,'the l~y people?f the nation in' ~?ecomm(m ooncer,n-"olir cOuntrY." " ,.c(>ng~~ss ~butrt is ~:rin~. d~)l;';' .,,'. ~;-;, ,of all for the advancement of ,God's Rmgdomon earth ',: ' '.' " . '.'," ~ant. Enactm~nt of It, ~e sa~d,_ 'Theology Institute ,' " , .." . ' " , .. ' . ' . ' "," , .' He saId a mechamsm to ac- 'would be "one of the most im " " , "', ," :" :!here ,ls~~~~.tedly~a:.tear~b'tltthIS s~ou!~ be~;"'··'~om'plish,this".~sneed.edan~ it' - j)ortantthlngs CongresS cOuld M!LW~l!~E (NCh-A .tib,~, ogmzed' and taken, m strlde'and should-not pamc anyone~ .. ,~must be national mseope, do at the present time." . , ,logJcall~ltl,1te ~lnd,. tW? ,wor. There :is always the' fear that'a'few'individuals In 'pOsitions , ': Coinpetent in performance, Per,;,' ' " shops d~alin,g ,~lt~ v~rlOus ~ f'" ';'" , ' . ' , .. '. ..., ' . . . ",';'manently established and "reg.;,'" ". ' ,",,'" pects of education WIll be 0.1 o,prommence m, t?e ,N~tlOnal. FederatIonw.III speak the, ula'r in reponing." . " .' "Stlys Hel "for Poor !ered by' Marquette. University name of 'a,llthe,prlests, o~ t~e. eoun~ry. ,on matters that· do'.,' " '''In the economic field," 'Msgr. ,'''' ,', • p., ','. ,her~, .. the ,.university,. Summer , ,not hav.e that overwhelmmg or maJonty oonsensus. There. Oorcoran noted' "this function' Peace, First Needs ,~SSlons ~fflce bas announced., ,,~s~l~ay:s th~ ~a~,~er that ~he:,fedei'ati?n.wiU~~nt,t:o:enter i,s,;' ?~rformed" -WeI! 'by ..:the MIA¥I (NC~-The"Cath~lic,·'~h:f~~~-~~i~~~:·~~~::~~ mto a;rea.& 'on w)llchJhe~e IS n? ,CO~S~J1S11~:~mongpr~ests:,?,r., ,.:?WICII of· EconomIc, AdVlsors-, 'Church, in t~is nation today' tJi.eology, department, and'~. .where. ,there. are- such ,wldely-.dlfferln~ Q'P~nl~~I)S ,that 8~ver~1-; ,~us,t ~ad.dress .ltse~_ to the pre~s- . Rev. Kenneth 'Hagen, a Luther• . . viewpoints have equal validity. And th~re is' always,th~,: ,City Parish, ,Places. ~g ~edsd?f the poor an~dis-, ",:,ho teaches.the):list6ry,q:CP,~ fear tliatthe pastoral ideas and ideals, of,VaticanCouncil ;'Volunte'er' Tu:t ',,' cia~a~s:~: ~s ;:~~eas,:,~ ~:; es~ailtis~ in. t!I~, ,d~p~~~", ,II cim be distorte~''into.politjcalmaneuveririg.and power-play' ,,', or~ ' ;new Archbishop of Miami.' . , we)Illt·hconRduyt a,'~~Y!7~daJY mstiY/'~u.!! tactics. '' , ",' " , ' .', ',". ,.,NEWARK. (NC~-An mner-, . " ' " , . , n ee~orm ...lOn, une" . ~ . .' . ' , ' , . ,",. -, ,',~ty CatholIc' parish here" has" ,Archblsho~ ,<;oleman ,F. ,Car- 21. , " " .' " , The. newest techmques, an4 , ,The FederatIOn, should be a source ()f great,m,ter~st . 'begun the placement of volun-' roll,' follow1Og , ~he' announce-· as it develops, 'and, ,of g()()d as it measures up to its Own ' teer tutors from'suburban areas ment of the establishment of the de~elopments in' pr,ovidinggeft;. itated' high purpose and g o a l s : ' , .'~ I"~q.the city's; p,ublic schools. -. ecclesiastical.province of Miami er~l' ~uida~c~,.health, and ~. "', and his appointment as its first' chlatrlc faCIlitIes for elementaJ7
~lace~ent of t~tors, .who ~re Archbishop,' stressed' that' 'the ' school children will be the to.
g " " ; ' b e m ,gIven s~ecl~l orIentation, Church must be concerned with of a ..National Catholic Educ&
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,orgatmzatifon the problems of the "time in tionaP"Associati?n ..
s ems ro~ofa, dn.ve which Il ca ors, we exist." be held June 24 toworkshop, '28. fur volunteers for mner-clty "York conducted by Operation "The gre'a'test problems at Understanding, an interracial present are the problems of the Recognize Educator project headquartered at Queen ,disadvantaged, the poor, and NEW YORK (NC)-Father C. , those who are' in need, llI1d, of, Albert Koob, O. Praem" exec& OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER O~ TIofE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER of Angels ,parish. , Volunteers will work on the course, peace," he said. ~~ve secretary of the National 410 Highland Avenue
grammar and junior high school "It is more difficult for us to Catnolic Educational AssocI& Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151
. , " ,level. '.Meanwhile, Operation solve in any real way the prob tion, will be honored by Manoa • PUBLISHER Understanding announced that lerns that are our concern until hattan College here for his CODo' '. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0'.0., PhD. " it is prepared to stage dialogue we have a measure of peace. tributions to Catholic educatiOllio GENERAL MANAGER ASST. ~ENERAl MANAGER programs, for suburban religious And it is the prayer of all of Us He will. r~eive the college" RI. Rev. Danjel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. Joh~ P. Driscoll and civic organizations with an ,that peace will be established ,St. John Baptist de la SaBe MANAGING' EDITOR aim. of interesting people ,Ii the as quickly as ,possible on an Medal at the June 9 commence-o :n~ed,s of the city. honorable basis." ment exercises. "H",ghJ. G.~lcten ", ,
THE ANCHORThurs., May 30, 1968
Mt'w Jersey· State Patrolmell Issue R~port on Newark' ·I(iot Causes NEWARK (NC) - When l\ - *»nes pinpointing reasons for !tllst Summer's riotina qere, llli&e's now l! eooice among IQlree reports. TIle latest - and ate last-is a report by the Riot Study Commission of the New ,Jersey State Patrolmen's Benev fI1,ent Association (PBA). . . According to the PBA, the riot .J lItemmed from 6 oonspimcy..Tbis til in contrast to the findings of ew Govenwr's Commission OIl CivIl D.isonier, which placed the blame on social eauses. Tbe PBA, in its report, advo 1Irbed· a grand jury investigation of· the conspiracy charge. How-· ever,' a special grand jury issued· Ail own report a month' ago ~thout finding evidence of, eon'spiracy, while lashing out at (lriminalelements in society· and· ~ng for strieter law enforce
to
Prelate Praises Scouters' Work
In one' of the strongest see
aons, the 'PBA report ·states: oonhere is a public apathy which,
by its silence, acquieces in the evils corrupting s()Ciety today;
on apathy which can stand aside, secure in its own oomf()rt, ignor mg the distress of others, so long as it doeS not disturb them; an apathy that accepts the dreadful reality of slums fJlI) long as the mts are kept on the ot1ller side of town; an. apathy that permits an attack on III police officer, una ware that such an attaek is an IIIttack on all society." Furthermore. tOO report said: -rhere is an air of permissive ness permeating the fabric of s0 ciety that threatens so to weaken that fabric that the day is not too distant .when we may stand naked, bare even of the funda mentals of decel!lcy. oD • REUNITED: Mr. arid Mri: ';r~sepl1-' V. Kasanicky of "W~ m:e mcu1~g. in oin-. ~t. . The PBA commlssWn was ~upg peop~e the· cOrrupting Bethesda, Mdl., were reunited recently with their children, fnrmed to EJtudy the riots from. promise' that iJn:dlividuals have Carmen, 8, and Ramon, 15, when, after negotiation by the only rights, never responsibili :!he viewpoint of law enforce Immigration Department, U.S. Catholic Conference, the new' Illent and tl'aditional police ties. It is a pathway that ean lead CZechoslovakian regime allowed the chiI!lren to oome to only to national ·cilisaster." duties. Amcng it3 :reeommenda the U.8. NC ~hot(). Hit CommOllliea;Uons Media Gons were these: . Taking n<t..e cf both national Want Investigation lIIIld state· riot reports, the PBA ~gislation be enacted making said that "we reaHydo not need {I; impossible for police offici8J.s rIK. 'give "illegal" orders not to more' repol'lta '" • • What we need Is leadership with the moral for Mtedere with rioting. .(:ollegePresident Recalls' Bonus Army f:itutle and politiccl coUM~ to do The federal government on what is right. What we need is a 4iertake an investigation of the Experience in CapitaU Illityis anti-poverty agency, the ~gnition by w~te men and WAsHINGTON (NC)-A col- posed of World War r veterans black ~en alike that apathy and United Community Corp., be lege president recalled the naand their families who came ~use of UCC activity' prior to violence are twin evils equally tion's capital experienced a long here to petition Congress during lIl0Prehensib!e.'" Qnd during the rioting. . The PBA also laid part of the hot. Summer 36 years ago,' thentbe Depression days for payment The Le~slature increase the dropped a few suggestions con in full of a bonus promised for , blame· for rioting on mass com the 'penalty for looting. eerning .the Poor Peoples March war service.. .The production or distribution munications media. now converging on the city. The veterans were housed at "Black extremists 01' white of 'instructions on the making CIf Brother Daniel .Bernian, government invitation in partial "'Molotov cocktails" be made n raciDts spewing their messages of ly demolished' buildings along . hate on a street comer is one • l!' .s.C., president, La Salle Col mminal offense. lege, Philadelphia, reminisced historic Pennsylvania Avenue Those who. advocate . arson. thing; having thlbt message car a1oting, looting QIId violence' be l£i.ed to millions" via print 01' TV about the Summer of 1932 when and in m shanty town on the . picture is, quite another. Does the Bonus Army converged on banks· ot'the Anaecstia River. n;trosecuted. Washington. He was a student 'their leaders lobbied for sev the !pass 8nd a:Imost instantane Penalties fur arson ba 'm ous circulation of this virulence at st. John's High School here era! m<lnths in a futile effort to @!'eased. at the time. obtain the bonus. The Bonus «lOnstiftute a balanced presenta No Compromise OD Law . The Bonus Arm~ was comArmy ~ length was dispersed At the same time, the PBA tion of news?" the report said. by federal troops led by the late The repOrt called for a mini eaIled on responsible whites and , Gen. Douglas MacArthur, then mum. police salary of ·$10,000, the b1fl<;~s to demand "~ean.ingJ;ul, Ncmonations Anpy chief of staff. on orders mOney:'being partially raised ~ion. Q Q lil to correct gross .in of: "Pn:sident· ,Herbert. Hoover. justices wherever they ex.ist." tbroUghstate and federal sUbsi:' ",T.heevac~ation of the Bonus di~:.'" . . .', , .', :,' N~ting. that the .correction cil .:vORl{ (NC) -,Arch; Army became an issue in the :ft also urged tnat more mem $hese,)njustice:J will. be expe~:" bishop Terence J. 'cooke of New 1932p~esidential election cam:' l!i.vej t~ PBA sai(i: "We caMot ~m ;~. :~.nority iP"O\lPS :1,>e re~ 'York bas 'invited all·the priestll paigD.' when Franklhi D. Roose sne.rely appropriate andtbeJl eruilted J;or police work without in 'tIle archdiocese:to assistm velt'·. ovetwhelmingly defeated· eeremoniously wash 9whands. , iO~~ring stapdanis and callep: on the '''seleCtion' of" archdioceSan ~resjdent, Hoover. PJ;\A,.un~~ ~d n~b~ to in1-ti .:.,~Attitudea ()n a.!l. sides must officials by. subnlitting 'oonli ""'. 'n .' Orderly Gl'~up'· , e'hnnge III oD '" Compromise, will be' ate' programs to reach' young dentiat 'suggestions to him. < '.'" ~ ~very. other oecessary to'resolve so Comple", ~le•. ,,, "." ":in "'/1': letter ' to'" each . priest,. ~l? . in ,~ost' . ' thqse. DeprE$ssion g, crisis. But men of good will, . ,;' Ai'chbIsliopCooke said: '. II/I' days; we were poor," Brother 2:eB.\loQing together, can do what . "Since 'my recent' appointment, Berniaii' said.' "We ha'd lDtegra must be done,".the-reportJstatea~ Church-Government: I' ha%'; Stressed my relianCe' on "However, on the question of 'IFI'o'~rish' you ·to help me fulfill my te:' Mon .jn . those 'days,'l)ut 'no' one bw and order there can De l'tC NAIROBI (NC)-The Catholic . responsibilities.· Without· your paid· any attention to it. Few' compromise '" '" '" Riots are 00t Church in Kenya enjoys favor assistooce, I could not possibly ever had heard of the word and fewer 'still could spell it. &legotiable." accomplisb all thai 'needs to be able relations with· the govern He·recalled·. the Bonus Army Discussing social conditions hll. ment, which has openly recog done. as Ill. large but orderly group. ghetto areas, the PBA placed the D.i.zed the vmlue of contributions "At this time I would appre blame' on politicians who fail to made by the missions to the de..; ciate your judgment on those He reminded that the Poor Peo deliver on their promises, - an velopment of the African coun priests you consider qualified Iples March,. like . the Bonus apathetic public; "unthinking" try. Itf; even solicits this aid and to assume the responsibility of .Army, . has . a constitutional ~ptahce of the charge' 'of po varioU!li diocesan· .offi<;es.. You rig~ttq pE;Hti,on. Congress' .iII) .an ~uppqrts ,tl;1e missions. ~.fa~, as ll.c~·b'rUtality, leaders looking 'for .have. a, knowledge. :of the 'nature orderly manner for redress of it,,~n. . :,; _: . '. of these offices, of their present What they. believe is a Civil Q' 'PerSonal power base ancf- judi:' , When, K,enya ~ame, in!ie 'clar"emphasis on rights- without ~nde.n~ in .;Decemb~r, .196~. ttle areas of. boncern, and. of their wrong, .and is entitled' to· reSpect ' 6\: 'co~responding eniphasil! ~nre- cw!JPtnr's CathQli~ 1?ishops ,.as " possible'fu·tul'e· .developpleI,1t for fo1' their" views. " BJ;'Otber Bernian .spoke before su~ed. ~he . government of'· the . the good of the archdiocese." ~~~il:!mty. . 1,90(l ~rsonsat the 22~d annual Chur~:!l coopeI!ltion.···, Father-Son . Banquet of St.. Topgovernm~nt officials, in John's High School at Which he ,Council of Religious cluding President·· Jomo Ken Lay. teo(:hers:':S'to'ff was . awarded the President's' ya~ have frequentiy ex'pressed Scho.ol . Brothers, Nun~' Medal by 'Brother Colman Coo-' their gratitude for the work 'ac ORLANDO (NC) - The Sis: gan, F.S.C., president of the LOUISVILLE (NC).:.-ACoun oomplished by the missions for ters of· the Precious Blood will nation's largest military high· ell of Religious f()r Brothers and the benefif of the country. . Nuns in the Louisville archdio Kenya has a population of leave· St. AndreW's school here school. cese was formed here. The about 10 million, of whom about in . June, to be replaced by a eouncil will be equivalent to 200,000 are .Asians and 50,000 staff made .up entirely of lay ,. ElECTRICAL the Senate of Priests formed Europeans. Ther~ are over teachers: ~ . . ~~ - . Con.tractors l:lst year, M'Bgr. J. William Mc 1.2 million Catholics in Kenya The Sisters, who have staffed .~~ . Kune, vicar for Religious said. and over 800,000 other Ghris .the' Florida school fur five years, Mans. are returning to their' mother Msgr. McKune oaid the coun house in Dayton,' Ohio. ell will be a liaison between all ·~C £lrChdiocesan Religiolj.s commu The." decision to continue op nities, consisting of some 2,000 ei!.liion Of' the school undez: lay . MANCHESTER (NC) - ~ic~ m.anagement was made with the members, llnd coordinate theil!' Preside~ Hubert H. Humphiey . eOOpeJjtion of the St. An"dre,W's aCt'ivities. This is part of a na ~. will give the address at the 75th tionwide development of organ pari~bionel's. Over 300 persons I. " mati<)Ds formed tt> represent annual commencement ~vercises ;1ttend~d a: March 'meeting to . ~~. ~ii.iious, . as outlined, by .the a:t St. 'Anselm's COllege here in dis<;WI~ school expenses, budgets 944 County St. ~ .second· Vatican Council, Msgr. New 'Ham~shire, June Ii, when and. ,,9tbel;' problems relat~ to New Bedford ~•. MCl{iille said. . . ~ claSS of 244 will be BradiL~te.~ the operation ~f ~scllooL ..
1932 IHot
S~mmer#
Asks.
forSee's P@sts
'.:WEw'.,
Relations
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In hl.)[M)®lr C~~r WASHINGTON' ( NC) Big·hop William G. Connare of Greensburg, P.a., saluted the National Catholic Com mittee on Scouting here for ef forts to develop leadership po tential oflthetto youths through the fonnation of scouting units In inner city parishes. Bishop Connare, °episcopal modesrator for Boy Scouting, told the 20th biennial conference of the committee he "rejoiced in the awareness" shown by the Catholic organization in at tempting to serve the entire community. TOe National Catholic Com mittee on Scouting is a com mittee ad visory to the Boy Scouts of America. Robert Brooks and Archie Richmond of the Urban Rela tionships Service of the Boy Scouts of America answered questions 0lIl how the Catholic Church ca:n help malte scouting available to all boys in the in ner city. . Edwin C. Finney, assistant executive director of the Na tional Catholic' Committee em Scouting, said the Catholic or ganization's emphasis on the inner city has increased dra matically during the past two years. He said the movement has achieved success in training .responsible leaders in the Los Angeles Negro ghetto of Watts where angry residents battled police in the Summer oi 1965. Serve Community In 11 IWleheon address, Bishop Connare defended religious sponsorship of scouting against some who say' such efforts are not ecumenical. . "1 would only hope this mood!. is. prompted not by any desire on the part of Catholics, priests and 13ymen alike, to shirk the work of" promoting scouting units,~ he stated. . Noting that for a long time Catholic . boys depended on non-Catholic groups to provide them with the opportunity to become SCOlnts, 'the oishop said the Church should now return the :!Javor through sponsorshi~ of scouting and other programs to serve the entire cOmmunity, regardless oJ! religion. . "This .is particularly true of the inner city," Bishop Connare said. ''The Catbolic parish plant ~tands . sometimes in solitaJ:Y splendor in these areas. It stands as a beacon of hope to the neighbors, many of whom do not now and possibly never will join the Church. It could well .fu~ll. the hopes of these neighborS by opening faciliti~ , for programs <:. 011 <:. which can elm 'rich thE! lives' of people.
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year
SAVINGS
MONTHLY DEPOSITS
OJ. a INVESTMENr
• . 10 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS
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Savings Bank
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• VA!lMlIIlTII SHOPPING ~ .:SliUT~ YARMOUTitl • HYANNIS ." DENNIS PORi
• OSTERVtW
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., ~oy 30, 't968
Says Most Christians ·'live
NIAGARA· iMLLS (NC) ....
na..
in Very Rich' S-ocietwes
FQr the first iime' in' the year history of 'Niagara 1:Jniv~ ,. sity, laymen outnumber 'lleI'Q on . the institution's board' ~ trustees-.
Father Kenneth F. Slatte~ C.1\4., preside!)t, said the ~ and restructured bOard has bee2II expanded from eight to 13 melJll!" bers and will' be composed ~ nine laymen and fout prie'st:s from the Vinceritian communi~ 'The priest ~d the ~ew boa~4 "reflects a competency that ~ 'required for the governance cd) a modern university." He added 1lPat Niaga'rawill remain a Catholic andVincentian instit1t'O tion and will continue to we)., corne students of every race' an~ "
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By Barbara Ward ..
~Qity Outnumber Cle~y on Boord
It was during'the Second Vatican Council that Church
leaders'began to come to g,rips with a completely· new {a~t about th'e Christian community. This foot is, quite simply, that little by little over the last century and at accelerating speed since 1945, the bulk oI.f Christians have c9me to live as "·the more for less"-more in societies which are very' wheat by wa.y of ~achines and .,. -fertiHzers, for less in,put' of rich, are growing ric:her -and labor and investment, more
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promise to continue the 'pr<x;ess power by way of steam and on into any foreseeable future. .electricity and nuclear energy, 'I1he only ex- more research .and invention ception to this through better education and rule is found in better faciIities--which in turn" parts of Latin set off the next round of further ~ligiori. America. , other:" resource-saving innovations~ wise most Chris- ' Lay members of the new boaJ;ij 'lians live in ' -Economies have stopped fluc include Under Secretary c& tuating along' the line where Commerce Howard C. Samue1lJ wealthy, large- harvests and population balan'ce. and Ma"rtin Meyerson, presidem ly white, majnly For well over a century Atlantic North Atlantic . , of the State University of N~ areas of the wealth has grown on the averYork at Buffalo. globe and share • age by between three and foUl' Vincentian members inclucki ,in the wealth per cent a year. Once populliFather James D~ Collins, C.M.; which, in 1967, tion ceased growing rapidly, the provincial. of . the eastern proV'a had surpassed the $1,500,000 surplus has been available for ince of the community, anell - million mark and was growing more investment,· more educa , Father Cyril F. Meyer, C.M., thQ by some 60,000 millions more tion, more research: In 1966, the province's director of education. each year. Wealth on this 'scale United States spent· some $20,000 .Father . Slattery also an-. is about equivalent to 80 per millions on research alone. This nounced the establishment of Q cent of our .planet's income- is one third of Latin Amei"ica's New Institute of Transportation, for less than 20 per cent of its· entire. national income., , Travel' and Tourism at the um.. people. Indeed, their' annual Whenever the new economy versity. rate .of increase alone is larger based on science", and savings than ,the entire rncome of India 'has taken root in its original' MOTHER GENERAL V:D:SITS: En route from Rome or Africa.' horne in Western Europe, in to visitation of Dorothean' convents· in Latin America, . Archbishop. Inspects, This has never happened be- }andS' of European settlement·, .M~ther General Marie De Piro of the Siste'rs of St. Dorothy.. . ' . . ., , . fore. Throughout recorded' his';'. such as the .United, States or visits Villa Fatima, Taunton. From left, Mother Maria Mal- Relief Headquarters .._ . . f t' h Australia" unde,r Communist
IiUry, . the :wealth ,0. ~a .IOns .as, leadership in Russia' or in the, herio, assistant to the mother general; Mother De' Piro; ". ::NEtW. ,YOR,K (NC)........,·i;U:cb-'
fluctuated up and down with, good and. bad harvests, with sUccessful Asian experiment of M ther' Virginia Bento mother provincial of the North bIShop .Terence. J. Cooke VISIted o . . ' ,. ." / the natIonal offIce of the. Catho ehanges in population pressure Japan- the income of the whole AmerClan provInCe of the -commumty. lic Nest East Welfare Assoeia and the vicissitudes of conquest. community and the income' per , tion' here, l}is 'first Official (visit. Tohere were .no very, sharp dif- head of, its inhabitants Ihave. .following his election as prem... ferences in riches between. con- broken' frOm the more or less dent of the Qrganization. tinents, provided they had left static past and entered on a primitive 'agriculture behind steady process of escalation. Msgr. John G. Nolan, CNE'WA national secretary and presidem and started to enter into world The results are most startling of the Pontifical - Mission far trade. North Africa and the an- ,in what one might eall the' Palestine; Bishop Edward Eo. cleot Kingdoms of Guinea "post-Christian" Atlantic world. Swanstrom, executive' directo!f were not light years awaYa'from .Iricomes per ~ead are, in. the of Catholic Relie~ Services" the wealth -of Southern Europe. main, ,above $1,000 a year and, 'overseas and' agency of U. S. Asia even outstripped medieval rising. In the United States, the h' t of the tit I wonder if anyone else feels than any five other dresses in 'Catholics with headquarters Europe in l>OPhisticated riches. ,wealt les group, ey, that clothes have, personalities my wardrobe." . h~re; Msgr., Edward 'O'Meara, and products--spices, silks, pre- will surpass $4,000 in 1968. Half I had my portrait ,painted', in national director' of ,the Society' cious stones and metals _ and the world's peoples live on less all their own; personalities that this was the magnet that pulled than $250. seem to create an atmosphere' it as a wedding gift to Joe and for .the Propagation of tJ:te . 'when they're worn. Perhaps this when I was requested 'by the, Faith; representatives of the western merchants easJtwards. lEduca~iolll Jls Key .is, just a way-out idea that I artist .to bring a few' dr~ses . Uhited Nations Relief and Works . B.ut the ~ass of ~ral:peop~e Admittedly these bare aver- dreamed. up all along with me to my first sit- AgencY,and governmental and ,did n~~ live at ery dIfferent ages do not tell us everything.. by myself, but ting I was sure she'd,choose that .'private agencies -working witl!l level~ of well-bemg and t~e ';l'hey leave out climate and en-. haven't you too one for me to pose in. Finally,
af,terabout 10 years of wearing, C;NEWA met the archbishop.
RenaI~~ance courts. had th;eIr vironment and culture and many felt that some
matchIng'splendors m the East. ,oCler decisive factors. But one clothes well"'e
the silk began to break under ..
Science, Technology " . thing they do underline. Edu- aut 0 m at i ..
the arms and'around the ,wllist-, Nurses' Council Plans line and my heart broke with
It is scIence and teChnology, "~cation i~ the key both to wealth cally made for applied through savi~gs or cap- and to. the full&r. development ~ 0 0 d' t!i m e s
it. When -last seen, the full skirt, Biennial ConventiqU1l
ital to the production of goods, wealth makes pOSSJbl~. w h i I e others
~th the sash ties, was being DENVER (NC)-The 14th that have revolutionized the 1Ihe, education that can be pro- never seemed worn by Melissa as a cape for biennial convention of the Na world scene over the last two vided from an annual 'national to do. anything her Sacred 'Heart costume, so tional Council of Catholic Nui' you can see I haven·t yet been centuries. They increase wealth income of. less than $40,000 mil·, for you, or' the able to get myself to 'part from ses will be held here July W persistently because they allow lions for 500 million people- evening either. it eompletElly. 14. men to produce what Professor India's case - can hardly 'be.. Isn't, there in Theme is a question from the Buckminster Fuller has defined compared with the educational ' your deep dark past some dress Special 'ShoJI) late Dag ·Hammarskjold, 'United .opportunity open to, America . that you loved more than any In reminiscing about those Nations secretary ,general: ":m: ~ith a national income of $650,- other; you know, the one that dresses that' played such an im- our era, the road to holiness ArchdiocesaL"'l ~eligpofl:1l 000 million for 200 million, "pl"acticaHy guaranteed you a portant part in my life from my passes,"through the world of' people. ' ,·.fabulous evening the moment freshman year in· college on, I . action." 1/"eachersform. CouncH 'The United States is not only, yo.u put it on~ Keynote address will be given WASHINGTON .(NC) - J~lm nel;lrly 70 times wealthier than. .. ·Mine was a red silk wi·th a' suddenly realized that each one Cermak, .religi,on te.acher at IQdi? i.n income per head of pop- . fitted bodice, long sleeves, and. had . hboug!it'at ' ha 's,mall t'" spe- by Mary L'IS t on, d ean, sc h 001.JJ \AI. . lt been 'nursing, Catholic University of Regina High School in nearby ulation . today. It has the re.. , a full full skirt but the feature ·CIa y s op I~ m?, ome. ~wn: Both .Jn~.. JUnIor, and, senIor, " Ameri~,Washington, D.C. ,.Be& Hyatts~lle" Md., and religion .sources available for aD investthat I always felt made .this college prom ~resses came from . mons following will treat "The eonstiltant to the' National' Jii~t in .fu~ure education ~at ".dress just 'a little bit different there, the whIte grandmother's .' " ".. .' " . Catholic Educational Associa that I . . fi"M Human Bemg In Jeopardy from WIll perpetuate ,~nd pOSSIbly was a wide Sash thatwrap'ped )m··t I. '. ,wore on my,. ' birth to d th " tion, was elected president of double the· gap again. ' around the wai9tline . like a date ,WIth Joe, my weddmg ea • ' the newiy formed Washington : These, then are the' :new facts • cummerbund and' ended iD D gown and even the' jacket dress , Archdi~esan, Council of ~igh ·wbich Vatican n began to con- big bow in the back. lit was that I'm ~earing in the picture' School Religion Teachers. . front: That they presented an dressy.. and not· dressy depend that beads ,this column - ' aD
Cermak cited the following absolutely unprecedented OOal-. ing on where it was worn, and were purchased over the years'
among the aims of the council: lenge to a Church committed to that dress attended' more frat at this one very tiny shop that
To promote the personal .and the service of the GOO. of justice parties '~d infonnal ,~ces Seemed to 'later to my taste per-'
fectlY;· . .'
professional. growth of the high and Compassion could not be in school religion teacher in order doubt. But how had .the differ-' ,SadlY;i its door olosed for 1l00ct:
. ,Fir'st Laymon to make the religious education ence' come about? And what last week and I truly feel that of,the student more effective;/ Should they mean to the Chris-, <NEW YORK (NC)~Michael a cbapter in my life closed too.. , To promote and assist catechet ti-an eonscience? To theSe ques- J.:Guerra, 30, haslbeell appoint Clothes and' a woman are insep ical renewal in the archdiOcese; tions Pope Paul· addressed' him- e~ headmaster of Loyola Prep 'arable from' the first pair of PRINTED AND MAILED To' fllciHtate discussion of issues 'self 'in 1967 in the encyclical ,Stiliool here. The appointment ruffled plastic pants, therefore affecting the religious fibre of Populoruni Progressio. We shall w~s the first time in this coun the dresses that, she buys and ~rhe or P~one 672-1322 society; To assist the Archdioc follow his lead, taking up next . try ,that a layman has been the· store where she purchaseu esan Religious 'Education Ad week' the question of how the'" mimed to head a Jesuit prep them' beCome a' part of her per- , 234 Second Street _ Fall Rw. visory'Board in the· achIevement world's odd condition came into school, Father Charles T .. Tay- sonal history that is uniquely , . h"@r own. _ of its. goals. lor, S.J., rector of Loyola, said. ., being. 0
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LEARY PRESS MONTHLY: mUROI
BUDGET ENVELOPES
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Portuguese Parishes Honor
THE ANCHORThurs., May 30; 1968
Holy, Spirit with Parades '"
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New Bedfordite Marks Jubilee
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick c
We mentioned a few weeks ago that we were going to try the new systemic approach to keeping our rosebushes
free from insects. Thus :far we have used one five-pound
rIIOntainer for less than two applicatione .'$2.89. We will Deed another container to !&nish the second appliC8Jtion sophisticated proceedings as
and will wait another six parading leave us cold (today'a probably would call weeks or until July fur the £tteenagers camp) but when our own.
Sister Alma Robert, C.S.C..
also known as Sister Valentina,
C.s.c.. a New Bedford native. marked the golden jubilee of hel:' profession in religious life this month at ceremonies in Rochest
er, N.H. Mrs. Ernest W. Viens, New Bedford, a sister, and nieces and nephews from New Bedford, Hyannis and Somerset were a mong guests. The jubilarian attended New Bedford schools and entered re ligion at the Holy Cross mother house, St. Laurent, MontreaL She has tau,ght at st. Hyacinth, sacred Heart and St. Anthony schools in New Bedford, as well as at many scho'ols in New Hampshire. ' She is presently sacristan at Holy Rosary convent in Rochest er, and she will traveJ to Mon treal in July for a second cele bration, sliared with other gold en jubilarians in the community. Later in the Summer she willl visit New Bedford.
'lhird application. ehildren reach parade age the Thus far we have not seen a thrill returns' as we view it rdgn of an aphid or a mite on . through their eyes. That roll of any of the roses. They are grow drums, the marching feet, and· :fng well and are, ,insect free. especially the sound of the band which seems hard flo believe. music still bring a lump to my 'A mockorange, we have which throat. fs the target of aphids every , The parades that all the fam Spring and whioh requires con ily realiy enjoys are those that ~t spraying was not affecte<ll take place during the early days ~~ the syst~mic insecticide ro of June honoring the Feast of we have had to resort to spray the Holy Spirit in the Portu fxIg again. We gave it the pre guese churches in this area. Each ccribed dosage early in the parish has a three day celebra Spring but the aphids a9peared tion that either ends or begins anyway. with a pJ:OCession carrying the IAlSS Danger erown of the Holy Spirit. The Portuguese band music is well 'Jfue systemie insecticide oon tainer clal.ms that the product worth the generally long wait I1is potent for sucking insects and for the parade, and· the tiny for some chewing insects. This children dressed in beautiful JUBIL:ARIAN WITH FAMILY: Sr. Miriam, RSM, who "robably means that it will not costumes are as much of a de be effective against Japanese light to the eyes as the music celebrated her golden jubilee in the Sisters of Mercy on beetles, ,\,!,hich will mean. that bJ to ,the ears. Sunday was joined by her two ,sisters, Miss Katherine O' WASHINGTON (NC) - R0 Queen Isa.b~nIa we will ~ back again with the Neil, left, and Mrs. James Conlin, right, fur thecelebraition , land J. B. GOOdu, director of' heavy spraying schedule by the , The observance of the Feast the master of arts in teaching at Mt. Mary's Academy, Fall River. '. , middle of June. of the. J{oly Spirit has been program at Trinity College here. As it is, we still have to cio brought to these shores from has been named acting dean of ' (lOme spraying with a fungicide the AZOre'an islands where it is tile 'School of Education of the but the weatlier thus far has celebrated with great festivities. Catholic University of America? been dry eoough' so that there Crowning ceremonies were be The joint announcement WQl3 isn't Pluch danger of fungus gun by Queen Isabella in the made by Sister Margaret Clay~' Knig'hts of Columbus Pledge $250,000 13th century when she fed the IfrOwth this early in the season. don, president of Trinity, anei Obviously there is much less poor in the mark~t place and College ReliS;Jious Apostolate , Father John P. Whalen, acting crowned a peasant with her clanger in u&g this sort of pre rector of the Catholic Univer own crown. If you do get lIl1l NEW HAVEN (NC) - The The' K. of C. board of direc 'gentive insecticide than in the sity. Sister Margaret also an opportunity during the next few Knights of Columbus have tors emphasized that it feels the lIPray varieties and we would, weeks to view one of these sim , pledged $250,000 to funding a ~roblem of brin~ing the Chu~ch nounced the appointment of Ed hope that the chemical com ple church parades don't· misa research and planning program mto more effective contact WIth ward R. Ducharme of Columbia panies are spending consider University Teachers' College to it, they're quite a lovely expe able money in coming up with designed to improve the reli- the college population on both succeed Goddu as director of rience. \U\ equally effective systemle gious apostolate to college and the Cat.holi~ and secular campus ,Trinity's master of arts in teach Our home celebration' of the - university students. _ is ()f VItal unportance. lasecticide for chewing inBects. ing program. feast of Pentecost wiH be very The decision to pledge the Part of the CARA study win Although 'I have always been simple. The children will sus Goddu, 31, has been on, the • firm' believer in the use of PE!Dd a white dove (-that we also funds was made at a board of be an assessment of the role of Trinity faculty since June, 1966. chemical insecUcides 1 was use as part of our Christmas directors meeting of the 1.2- 'Knights of Columbus college He will join the Catholic Uni tdtocked recently to' learn that decorations) from our dining million-member' fraternal soci- councils on campus. versity Sept. I, succeeding Fr. . traces, of DDT have been found room' chandelier, I'll bake a ety of Catholic men. Supreme Aubert J. Clarke, O.F.M. Conv.. Knight Jolin W. McDevitt an. The K. of C. has reserved the named acting dean of the uni in lobsters taken off the Atlan plain 'cake'and decorate it with nounced the decision at national ngbt to make an annual reas tic: Coast, a condition which versity's School of Education in whipped cream and seven staw :ressment of !it? program after, February. ilorces even 11 firm believer to berries to symbolize the seven headquarters' here: The funds will be made avail-' Its second year of operation. bave second,thoughts. At that time, Father Whalen gifts of the Holy Spirit. 'rhis year able over a five-year period to also announced the formation of In the KltcheD going to try to have the a committee made up of Cath girls make tiny doves of paper the Center for Applied Research Defeat Bill to Remove With the Combination of Me the Apostolate in Washing olic University faculty and out as favors. Mary Reed Newland in morial Day and Pentecost Sun ton, D. C., for establishment and Religion in Adoption side experts to seek a new per in her book "The Year and Our day in one long weekend It operation of a department of manent dean for the school. mould turn. out to be very full Children" tells of many ways campus planning and research. WINNIPEG (NC)-The Mani Father 'Wlialen said that t'he IMld exciting for most families her family celebrllltes this feast. CARA was established in 1964 toba' legislature defeated a bill search is now underway, with Am the Diocese. A weekend filled Perhaps one or these would fit that would' have removed reli members submitting into your particular family to discover, promote and apply gious 'restrictions from adoption faculty with patriotic celebrations, pa names, and a panel of .promi modern techniques and scienti l!'8des and individual family atmosphere. fic information resources to' the procedures in Manitoba province. nent educators being assembled ways of honoring the Holy Spirit This cake recipe was given to The bill, proposed by T. P. to consider nominees. will lend a festive air to the me by. Mrs. Edward H. Morrow Catholic Church's social and re ligious mission. ." Hillhouse of Selkirk, would have last days of May. Jr. of lfoly Name parish in Fall changed the section of the prov Despite my age 1 still enjoy River. Mrs. Morrow sometimes • parade, perhaps even as much puts cherries in this cake and NCCW Official Receives ince's Child Welfar~ Act which prohibits the placing of a· Cath- , other times chopped walnuts, (IS I did when 1 was a child. We olic child in the care of a Prot go through a stage in our but it is quite, good served plain. Interfaith Citation ' estant "society,· family, home or maturing yeam when' such unRita's Cake W ~HINGTbN (NC) - Mar-, institution" and the placing of a a cups of flour garet Mealey, executive director Protestant child in a Catholic , Z teasp00n9 baldng powd~r of the National Counc;jl of home. It also prohibits placing of toncele~rated Mass 1 teaspoon 'salt Catholic Women, has been cited , chHdren of other faithS in either At Newman' Congress'!'cup shortening , b y Womenin Community 8er- CatbGlic &1" Protestant homes. ' . II P000d eonfectioner's 8~gWr vice, Inc. (WICS) for her "sus 365 NORTH 'FRONT STREET NEW BRUNSWICK (NC) 4 eggS , , ' ' tained and 'outstanding contriHillhouse asked for a free' NEW BEDFORD
A con'~elebra'ted outdoor Mass, 1 Ct.I.P milk buUon to the establishment vote on the bill-one that would with the chief concelebrants the 1 teaspoon almond extract and subsequent development of not be split along party lines.
992-5534 bishops of New Jersey's four 1 cup of cherries (cut up fine) WICS as an actiV'e' interfaith The bill was defeated (May 3)
tlioceses, will be a feature of optional' and i,riterracial force' in the war by a 33-to-16 vote.
ooooooooooooooo . e National Newman Congress 1) Sliit together the' flour, OIl poverty." , laere Aug. 26-30. baking powder salt. set, The 'citatio~, presented ,to , , Th~ theme of the congress wiD aside. Miss Mealey by 'Dr. Benetta be "A: Search for Christian 2) Cream the shortening and Washington, director of Women's "entity,'; with speakers explor- sugar together until fluffy. Centers, Job Corps, during the Ing such issues as Christian 3) Beat i~ four eggs, one at WICS annual board meeting here, bumanjsm, the revolution 10 . a time; 'into the -creamed mix- . was signed QY, t~e presiqent of lIlOa-al Uieology and the genera:. 'ture. ".", , ". ',' " ' , ' , ' 'the four parent, organizationll Hill . n g~P; , " " 4) 'Alternately add" the dry joined'"in''' WICS"to assjst Job Concelebrating Mass on Aug. ingredien'fS and the milk. . 'Corps' 'tr~j'nees: Mrs~ James M. Z8 at the, Douglass ,College field, 5) , Mix' in flavoring. Dolbey', Church"Women United; FOR HOME DELIVERY CALl' 998·5691 will be Archbishop Thomas A. S) POur into a 'well greased Mrs. Jolin 'D. "Shields, NaHonal Boland of Newatk, Bishop Law- and flolired anger cak.e pan, and 0 Council 'ot' 'Catholic' Women; eence B. Casey of Paterson, bake in Ii' 350· oven for 60 to 65 Mrs. Leonard Weiner, National ' Bishop George W. Ahr of Tren- minutes. Council of Jewish Women, and oon and Bishop George Gull7) Top 'with whipped cream Miss Dorothy L Height, National, ' SO. DARTMOUTH, MASS. lIOyle of Camden. and 'strawberries:. Council 'of Negro Women. L. .......... ~""'""""''''''''.._.iJ
Education Schoo; Has Acting Dean
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JOYOUS KINGDOM the' joyous -kingd()m~f God i.a the concern ,m ifue new Diocesa:n CCD Center in Fall 'River, At'open house held last week · end RichardM'armirig, Beil~ict' Harrison, Michael Zajac. all of St. J'ames par:ish', New Be<lford; 'sign:visitors'book, 'aided~by Mrs·;,:EHza,D!'! M:eUQ of o nostess ~nil1littee:Gentei;·.Rev.J,osepll. Powers,' nioe~M~ J}Cn di:i:'OOtor, ,
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.Di~esanCCDpresident.,Serigraph by $i~ter Corita hangs behind desk. ~jght, Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Robitaille"St. Anthony'~, New Bedford; GabJl"i,. ,'~l1e"Steven and Alicia Carvalho,also of. St.· Anthony,'s; and Mr. ,and MJAL
.:- ·Arthur WiIhi, St. Margaoret's, Buzzards Bay, discuss literature in bookstore,
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Religious Prepo~e Jovous Kingdom of Godls Center Work$hopsAgaln, . . J . . . . . 0 . ..' ' ." .' "., 0' u· hi '. d A .' On White Racism. n,. ~V a II ,.'R·'00..', r S." n'g a,n,·.· venue
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New York Tecichers
~t Salary Hike'
ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)..." An increased salary scale _ ~acbers in .Long Island Cathotill . HI think the kingdom &f (;00, is like joy in my neart,'" printed third grader :Janiee elementary schools· will go i,*, · . C,HICf.-GQ (~C) -:;-1'h,..~. y'ear~ b~~.~re: th.e·. rep~r~ HI C'l'OOked purple: crayon. Her' declaration.'j.s part of a bulletin board display at the new; effect next. Fall.. .' .' . ': ~h~. ~atIOna'lc~d."I~~DOI:~ ClO~-:' . Diocesan' Center for tne 'Confraternity of c'hrisian Doctrine,.'446 Highland Avenue, Fall. ' J:ather pavid G. Farley, RocJii-, miSSIOn' on IVI l",on ers "R'" ',' . I .' II' ,. .' .... h . . ",.,:;" h' te' ' r h ' 1.' d f, 1""_;1 . " " ., . , . . ville 'Centre,' .dioees!lIl' 'siiperh.. :1 .. "'t d" h't' ' . ' '" a:; i_ t'ne m'a' Iv.er.' .t. we , sums" up . t , e ~Irit e JOyOUlS ....mg om 0, ,uvu IS, , ""hat it s " ",-'nd''e'nt '"" ~I e w I e raCIsm . ....
. , w. t e ean r. , , ' ~ . o'f' sch'oo'ls " ..• has"'\' Issue d' ... · jor ailinent of~Uritte8 S'tiite~ 80-: ,about. The. e e. n ~ e ~ ,lwookff " I"~ ~lr :~}1 ,~r several,hun'dred' ad~ ciety, ~ team"of Catholic mrils'
tne' increasing . need· ",' Artist,ic expr~sslo~ ?f re~lglOUS, VISitors, s~andIng ?efoxe ,it most tionai,Jay tpacheril fillvaca'" lV,ere "hold,in,g Su.rrimer wo.rk- "'of instru'ction 'f'or adu}'-- a'nd "tl;u,tbs. IS ~ressed In, the. new" 0.£, .. the time d·urIn~ .~~~. open eie8 iII.. Nassau and Suff. . " "', ,,:. , ~ cll'techeticgJand examples of such 'hol,l.se'. In typical: Corita ',fashion ." '. " I '. :~s t~~~:h.a:h~co::~~;;:n r:;'.' ~Q~ 'CathOlic ~~~~d~n'j,!- pu~; ':f;~pression a~.e· ¢v~~i\v~~re .~n . ,it~emanded"wi~aveii~g, and ·i~.· . C9unt~es ... oQeachers civic .ieader and cler' . ,.pc.,.~c~,~l,s. It ~,IIl~~ :to, l!upply dl~., the ~n.ter. Br,lghPy oolor~ on-' , rext, ,w~en, ~lucldated,,~~ ~~ .', m'eTnbtearnye~SCShaoo~alry. ' a~lheerfsor we~ .~ i . . ,~: .. ~",r~t,on ..a,f,ld"D,latenJlls~{)r eel?, . gami buds flyfroJll a"ml)bJle,~jn;." stl!ge for further quest!Ql;lIng:' . '~ a .~ ; ..... ~T~e:'t !t t~~ ~~,JV,I.IJ),~tY"'>f i'tb' teacher~ ~H, OVl;lf Jlle, pl,~l(CSe.,~, t~e:. cent~al _haU, ,. which alSo.... Be' INItient rowa'rd 'aU •.that,;'iIj ~chelor . degrees .~anges fr~~ ,\1, · , e ,'. eaD,l, g~ps,l s;. ou .. ':" w~n, as" t~, -.p.r9pde.;a"meetnlg",boasts' a .. pigh~pi1ed '~isi>~ay' of unsolvediiJ. your heart ' , .' , $~,800to $7;120. For those Wl~ er :mhrr: . Of.~r.~,Ytijpg: rh~,r~ShO~. pl~~~~or~oc,!.t-ers,a.~d~ ,~ite f~r. b,oxe~ pr~par~dby Bill, ·McEnt~·And,trY. to love the .quesuo,ns'" T!1ast~r degrees" the' scale ~ l.man... e ~ IO"S, ,Ill ye~.:,,' tr.a,II:J.Ing.co~rses and, "'4>1=¥shops. of .Immaculate 'CQnceptioh par... .themselves. ' . \, ".' " :" ~rom: $6,200 to ·.$7,8~O. . ~ 'Pa~tlcIPants',~espond, \' .. It's,a.,hapPYP,lace'r~l~Y~ witl,i".ish 'North Easkin," "We' want Do· not DOW seek the., Qnsw~'Ni" ; Teachers .also:' p'artiCipate II> , The fl.ve nuns "w;,ho: ~ndu~t ~ew andi~xciting ,deasiQ:teadj~,'" ,~~iJryori!,!!'; "~old:,M.y',}fand"; ,,::,that ~nnot be:gi-ven you the" dioCesan 'Blue" Cross', BhIe the w~rkshop_.h?ld,doctol~~eslft, mg t~chnlques.·A,boOkshopwas' '"Yes"; and "What Color iti God.?", lBecause you would not be ahle Shield and'pensionplilns.
e~u~ahon, SOCIOlogy,. ,histOry,. the first. room ~o 'g~t· visitors are among legends lettered. ~ '. to live them. - . '.' . '
' AJ1d the point' is to live v r _
· clInlCal. p~YChol~gyand theol-:. .at an open house held l~st Sat-· the boxes. . adapting oommercial ()gy, The workshops are' an ' d S un d ay. "t' ' ti)lng..
. . '. e e y .' . ' .. ' , . \jrd ay,an I s h ard,' " to Posters mtetr-dlscIPlfJnar y .colur,se I,n ,~he get any farther than here," said slogans adorn the' 9iairs Exam': 'Live the questions now.
ana omy '0 racla preJud Ice t '. db' .. ,p h ' I and how it can ,be eradicated. an"wen ,rancte. dl°towsert'h ples:~~Things .. go bt;tte.r with - W~rthaPSt Y°ti~ ~Ill'tgl'a~ua Iy Th ' . 1 d . th eve fie ga er ever,.. GOO'" "Come to where Christ is 1 ou no cmg I , · ey mcdu e gtr~)Up ~trh;tpy sel e'x<tari~ ele,mentary ' 'and high . Com~ to love's country": "Tur~ Live along some distant' day 810ns an mee mgs WI mem 'h 1 CCD 't " ,'". - " ,,",.', I t th ' COMPANY bers' of the local, black commu !?C 00 , eachers ,aid, Sl)1,~ to ChrIst for love that,'s Spnng-: "n 0, e.ans~er. " ' : " ,
nit , Ed~ard McDona.gh, CCD lay co~, .tir,nr fresh:" " ' " T.o ~~IS Rllke quotatl,on, SIS ordmator, who IS at the, center T'he post r ,", d b ter .Conta added her own comy , 'd' t'h' Complete Line Th . e s are m/iplre. e program,' un er e spon- , " . f ll,t· . b ' . ' ., Y t "0 H' . sorship of th N l' al C th li on a u lme aSls. Records, film, . Sister Corita apostle of "mod?' men. . rnery.. Ip-deep m e a IOn a 0 c, strips and poster' 'd' l' " ,. volvement" Building Materials Conference for Interracial Jus.,. . • ddT t s are o~ ISP ay, religious art, and she herself is '. 'Wh't d' 't 11' ? Th tice, is headed, by Sister Mary, m a I IOn 0 a da~zhn~ array represented by an original ,seri . a oes ~ ;' .. mean. " e Peter Traxler, a' School Sister of books an~ magazl,nes: graph 'hanging over the desk in CCD. cen~~ Isn t wterprehng, 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN of Notre Dame and director. of Exceptional Chlldre~ Father Powers' office. but It promises a cup of cO,ffet; the NCCIJ department of edu Across the ha~l from t~e book The serigraph had, puzzled ~o ~nyone who com~s quesb?o 993-2611 cational services, !lhop the cen~e~ s upcommg pro mg. She says that tests show that gram ~or reltgl?US education of the workshops have achieved' exceptional children was fea Aim fro Uli1'lloll'e PlhoBBy 'measurable attitudinal changes . tured, with a striking torn paper N(QJ~ool1'il~~ilty GIJ'Ol1JPS in the participants. .' poster declaring "The exception In one year the workshops al child needs exceptional love in PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More
, reached 3,200 teachers and 'Jay an.excep t'lOna 1 program, " than 60' representatives of na
leaders, 100 clergymen of all Th~ program will begin Sept., tionality groups in the Philadel
faiths, 9,540 religious Sisters, 30 Wit", a five .week. film series, phia area are exchanging views
60 Brothers and 1,100 minority followed by specific trainirig in about their common problems
group members, the' religious ,education' of the and differences.
This Summer the workshops exceptional child. In, October, Msgr. Philip J. Dowling,' ex
will be held .at Rosary College said CCD workers actiy~ in the ecutive secretary of the Cardi-'
in Chicago, .Catheri,ne Spaulding program, registration {or chil..; nal's Commission on Human
College. in ,Louisville, .,Nazareth· dren's, classes .will be' ;held" in Relations, sees the "very signi
Motherhouse, Nazareth,' Ky.; in Fall, River,. ,New Bedfol:d, Cape ficant" exchange at 'the Nation- .
Mount' ,Kisco, N. Y.; Elizabeth, Cod, "Attleboro ,and Taunton.' alities Service Center of phila':" 0 N. J.; Marymanse ,~ol!ege in "We need the help an~ pray'ers~ delphia. as a means "to share
. .. .' :- ! Toleodo, St. Norbert College in of all members of the Diocese," : CONTACT MANAGER ,L II.INCOLN PAR~ . expe,riences and to .ask questions
~est de Pere, Wis" and in Kal- 'said Rev, Joseph ,Powers, Dio-' and 'discuss concerns in' rega'rd
999~6984 '636..;2744 amazoo and. Lansin~. Mich. cesan CCD director. ' ' to ·the present racial' situation."·
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FA'IRHAVEN LUMBER
SPECIAL RATES FOR .School Outings', ' anc:l Picnics
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Directors Stress Adult-Centered. . . CCD Program
Sisters of Mercy Describe Experiences . ..'. . .. .,. At Intensive Training"lfl;stitute
SAN FRANCISCO (NC).A national m~ting of diree-
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By Patricia Francis
tors of the Confraternity oil' Sixty Sisters ()if Mercy of the Providence Province have discovered that U if you know Ohristian Doctrine has called yourself, it's easier to understalld other people." They've all undergone an Ilexperience" on the Church to make adult-' that nroves it. "Experience" is the key word used_by five of the Mercys to describe their . Y • . centered,. rather than child weekend at the In'tensive Training Institute at Daytop Village at SWM Lake, New York, centered, education its chief Whl'ch'l'S boJ,;h a rehab)'J)'tat)'on apostolate, and to give leader-' v ship in the causes of peace, center for drug addicts and ~~~. ~---~, '~r "I poverty and .r·acial harmony.' a uhumanizi,ng ,community." , :t l1n the past, CCD has been . Asked to explain their "in
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.THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., May 30, 1968
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Den'ies Plr~m~~'g~g Salo!rY IrJilcrec,r ~:S
SAN FRANCISCO (Nt} Eighty-four teachers from sin Catholic high schools here have charged the San Francisco arch~ diocesan board' of education failed to fulfill promises of sal d 1 ... ary increases rna east Marc••• Answering the complaint at [j meeting of ·Catholic lay teachers and parents, Father Bernard A" Cummins, archdiocesan super intendent of schools, said th~ he is in sympathy with the teaBcuhtersh'e added "I have" made , , no commitment either verbally or in writing that this (salary scale) was to be update411 yearly." He said he supports the aims of the newly formed Associa tion of Catholic Lay Teachern but said that the problem oi! teacher salaries is linked to thill rising costs of education and the lack of available funds. •
largely identified with religious tensive" weekend, Sister Mary It,' instruction of Catholic children Urban Geddes, secondary super l ; who do not attend parochial visor for the Fall River Diocese; schools. Since the Second Sister Mary Georgine . Wise, :." '.. can Council, however,. 1... Mary elementary supel'visor; spokesmen have placed increas Sister Mary Nathan Doherty, ing importance on the' formation principal of St. 'John's School, and education cd' adult Ca,thoNew Bedford', Sister Carol Mcs. Mary Heffernan, who teaches "We. , •• state that the ~duJt, at St. Mary's School in. New not the child, should be the Bedford, and Sister Thel'esa major area of concern of the Mary Sparrrow, a teacher at St. teaching C'hul'ch," theCCD di J·ames School, New Bedford, all rectors ,said in a statement.·1t figuratively tossed their hands . '''' gave the following' reasons: in the air. ~,. . f" · . ''The parent is the primary Then they came up with the teacher and yet we have not "experience, it's hard to de Seek ilJltllIeJr Positions done anything truly significant scribe." James Monahan, vice presi to sensitize parents to their ob The nuns went to Daytop in dent of the new teachers' groul9b ligation or equip them to play groups of 30. Their weekel'lds asked the archdiocese to pro- effectively an inforrllal teach were spent in "marathons"· 'and vide lay teachers with a regm ing role. . . "encounters" and in just plain larly reviewed salary scale, ~ "The adult and not the child meeting with some of the ad definite retirement plan, and 8 is facing the questions .and dicts who consider Daytop their specific policy ontenUl'e. problems' of the gl'eatest impli home. ' He said if the archdiocese cations and consequences. They., Dee~ens Sensitivity. cannot make these pl'ovision~ are looking for assistilllce' i'n" .. End result, ali five 'say, is .a "lay teachers - in justice tv living the Christian life in this 'greater "sensitivity"" to' tHe themselves, their famiHes an«lJ : I' world and with rare exceptions . needs and the problems of the' their profession-will be force411 we hav'e done little to' help 'people with whom they come in to seekpQsitions elsewhhe." , ,.' them. , .:': I ,,;.: contact.· The, sensiti.v:ity" they. Father Cummins recohmlenCl Most Instrumental feel; will carry over'tO 'the class ed tnat lay teachers join witAn "The adult and not the child room and the offices in which the archdiocese in seeking fund!) is the person who is going to be they spend their days. and in from the state and feder'll goy;.. most instrumental in the inear the communities of which they to help meet th&. ris SISTERS AT SEMINAR: Among the S·lsters Of Mercy' ernments nation of Christ-love and con are mem be rs. ing costs of education. eem in the resulting brother . Because the "experience" gave attending the narcoti~ semina.r, were: Sr. Theresa Mal'f: " Wa!ter S~hoendorf, presidenQ hood." . . them a. greater awareness 1)( Spa.rrow. Sr, ,Nathan 'Doherty, and Sr. Mary HeffernaIJI. fJtf the archdiocesan school' board, The CCD directors said the their flaws and their good said' the board has rccognize<! ....e has come for lal'ge-scale points, the nuns find they are "iOl1S- were broken up .nt4>· 1 ·h . t·Ion .... ..., NUl . . . wi t h w h om th ey work an d with ,. e lay teachers' a SSOCIa .......iscopal sup'IVlort, philosophi-' better flaws"';. smaller groups once '~ey Z!r-' whom they live~ representative .of· the 99 I"';' -......~ h - - vthe l . t ',"", d d' able to' accept eally and financially, for' a an Iscover t e 6""" pom s rived and ·unpacked. _ Many other nuns will.be go_ teachers who are' associatiOl'l broad program of' religious o!. those with 'wh'om th~y come , ing .to Dayiop. Each member 'of . members. He added this !'ecog The'y' a~k"ed' ...... " in contact. . . Talk MarathonS . be·.. giy~~ '.' the op,;.: , nl·tl·on would be valueless I'f ~(.... - J educa' tl·o·'n·. on,.. tn. e .()rde~ WI.n, H'I, bishops·to ."act on th'e"expansion '., omen' don't'" 'stop ·',being'·. In a preli~iJ;~ry ''''m~nith~n;' p6rtunity to take part in one" .b4>ar.d w~s not prepared t'o baJJ .. ' '.. and. growth of 'the 'H$erv~~~., ~o~~n, ,wh~r\ ~~~ .mo~e mto- a. ....s ion Ssiter ex lains " ou oe-'" f' th ... 'k' d' I I ' ,. .'~ .gain"w.ith. the teachers, ," . • . Churcn." . 'rehglous communIt)';"SISt'er Ur... ·', 1"';',5 •• 1 . . . . . ,P "'''3'. 0 e.wee en expe/lences. • , '''' l.'h'.I. 't ' ," , ·t k ' talkJn~ about yourself. Group~" ! EMh' nun who goes will do", ,, ' ,. . We' 'firn'lly . belii!ve th'at ....."', ViOJ1 S resses, . you .. a e your' '1" d' '.' 'th 1 d" . '.' t· . , .' , C','" womariness' with'" you.'." Some' ,ea "ers WI., ..ea I~g ,ques u),?S; 'S(),0ll, a voluntary basis; ..whicb, 'Jersey' Bishops·' ·A.sic Will teach ~ankind by dee,ds.. . riC." .,', " tR "dra~ out feelings' of thOse .I!l" ~l;Ie q,uns feel, is the only waJl :j .. more· than words;!', they stat~~. . ~.~ns-J.e ~me. v.:~m~"'Jn e· the group. '. one can go.' "" ·Ab·o,·t·,·on St'u'"dy, .'.j"'. "W th f· "iJh t t world---can live In a communi·'·" " '. .. ',,, ., , '... , .... . , ' ... , "' ere Ole, .propose· a op.", 1,1 'f' ,.... . .,' ·'·r ," 'f 1 " .. The "marathon" sessions were. . Y6u have to want k> 00 it·~.. e, ':" priority be.given in funds and' 3 or years, appear ,III meas· ";"'. . ";t' '. ' . 'd·'""'" cJ' . "O'th···'" ,'. 'hi ','TRENTON (NC)-NeW JeJP.o " .. " 'I . · , · C '., "" ·and.yet· neverlgive', of·; them-·. J.ust .. tha.·:". Sister.-, ~?tglf~~.s , ... ,~e ;say,~" . '. erwlse,'y,?,u,., mig seY's]O 'Catholic Bishol1~ have personne ~. ena?~ the. hurch selves to thelcommunit: :c,gr04P .s~arted out Its e'f,plon,ng .. n,?t get.. much o~.~ O~It... , ,' .. "asked the state to. hlunch ail "".: to·. ex~r. ess Sign1fl~ant.. ,lead~~- ..;. 'i' \'1 ,work day'. in,andr.oay OMt '. t'd, feelitl~s i ~t .midnigh,.i, 'rriday. . T,he ,D~~opp'crs . w,ho ha~e. ship in the ,'cause of ,pence, Cf. '. .' . and kept on until nearly~ 3 the gone' are sold on the ·p·/'ogram... aH~ck. on the "gr~v.e sodhi ills" 'POverty of race and the other With people and eventually, you, ',.. ..... .', • . ' ' . ' . Th'" f' 11' ., t.' 'th" ,~ . which cause abortIOn til flom . . .. ! : . ., .·01 ", "".' · .."each. a"saturatI'on' nnl'nt.'1 " · ,' .. 1 0 ' , " ". " ". .f'lt6 . ey 'th' u y "t"b' expec who .rls, . 'h ra th er t h very real,.peeds. of man.'" . -:-. ".,.'.' n.eJj:t afternoon.. "'., .. ,',OSe 11 an,' succum b <_ ~ ',;,,·1 .... ,'" .. ',if' '".' " , . ·'R."t .. h'·' E' .( , A.ft~r five hours 00: sleep, . 0 w em 0 e equa y en. t 1 th t toni "We must first andforemo.llt '.,.<:i r~, lD~' xper enee, ' 1llbey' we';'t ~ight back into ~S7~· "tl1usiastic '·whe~ 'they' rehlrn.·.:· .' . press':lre' 0 re ax .' e s a ""'~ be a Church of 'sel'vice, The Their expenence, at Daytop', sion. Wliat 'exactly' did ~hey 'get?
abortIon. laws. ,," . bishops of the world said such' those ",:,ho. have attended,say, is ..:. The '.five nuns, typical' of The nuns gr'in;'''An experi . Th~ Bishops fav~r a compre; at the Vatican council but the emotionally refreshin.!I, even if many of: those who already ence," ·they reply.' "It was, an' hCl~slve and.. un~Iase~ study world is stilt waiting," the di te'!1porarily. s.hattel"ing k> the have participated in a Daytop experien'ce you 'can't really de d~sl~~ed to elimmate the amo-. rectors declared. "How much. ego. . weekend, -admit they 'discovered scribe."
blgult1es of th~ present law ....; longer must it be patient for "You e.xpl9re your own feel many things about themselves
well as prOVIde constructJvfJ the actions that will make In iogs on different matters," 'Sis they didn't like-but, they d i s ' : ' ' .
~nd proper r:n eans to red,uce ~. earnate' the wor'ds?" . tel' ,Nathan says.."MaI'lY. ~eople covered good points, too: Consecrate Florida
number of Illegal abortIOns. ,d,on t accept thel,nselves as. they'" Beciluse {hey met 'thefuselve's" .O·rdinary . J~ne''l,4 . really are-or accept other peo- th f 1 th " ' , , .' as they arc,"'" . : ~y . ee . ey are, mo~e .c~!i-.•..BATON ROUGE (NC)-;-Fifty Propose 0 rt h0 d OXY ':,~' , pie f.our year old Msgr. Willl,'am D. . 'T ft h' " II' SCIOUS of, the nceds' of md/vld 00 0 en, s e says, we ex'1 'th h th . . .'. S . aJor t "th il: h'b't rt·,···t'· 1 ua s WI w om ey come In Borders will be consecrated as 1.1 a po I e nIceness, 0 peop e .. contact . the' fl'I'St BI·shop. of the newly NEW YORK (NC)-The Na that isn't real, maybe because . Over 35 Years
tional Conference of Ohdstians .we're afraid of being hUlt. by Some Skeptical established OrlandO (Fla,) Dio and Jews has propose!l 'giving' saying what we really ·think." of Satisfied Service
"Some Sisters are skeptical," cese at St. Mary's Cathedral here . fo/'mal recognition to Easterri' However, the nuns agl'ee, "vou . Reg. Moster Plumber 7023
-< Sister Urban admits. "They ex:' in this Louisiana city on Juhe Orthodoxy as the fourth> major can take anything from some pect you to be a whole new' 14. The Bishop-designate, a JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. faith in America, agency head one, even if it hurts, if you persol'l when you return and if World War II Army chaplain, 806 NO. MAIN STREET
quartel's here announced. know they arc responsibly con they don't see immediate re has been the Cathedral rector Fail River 675·7497
The NCCJ took steps to in-· cerned about you." suits, they feel it wasn't worth-. since 1965. elude an Orthodox Christian Unfortunately, says. Sister while." layman as its fourth national Theresa Mal'y, "sometimes we The "intensity session" nuns, co-chail'man. Since its found get too busy in our ordinary however, . seem confident they ing 40 years ago, NCCJ's chief lives. We don't take time ·out are better equipped now to be officers have been a Protestant, "more sensitive" to the prob to &it down and listen to other a Catholic and a Jewish layman. people. At Day top, we found lems and the needs of those Dr. Sterling W. Brown, NCCJ everyone always had 'time' for president, said "the· inclusion each other." , d Home Masses .. , of a. fOUl·th co-chairman, of the' Sister Georgine explained the CINCINNATI (NC)-Pe'rmis Eastern Orthodox persuasion, mechanics of the intensive .... sion for weekday Masses 'will only give fOl'mal recogni weekend that had little time de homes and in small g~'oups has tion to what in fact has ,been a voted to sleep and a great deal been' granted by Archbishop' long-time working relationship. of time dedicated to "getting to 653 'Washington Street, Fairhaven Karl J. Alter "in the effort to The National Conference and know yourself." '.. Eastern 'Orthodoxy have' co The nuns-like other profes-' foster. liturgical and Christian 994-5058. renewal" in the Cincinnat~ opel'ated in human relationtJ sional men and women who at . archdiocese. . , endeavors f'Or many years,~ tend the Daytop weekend ses
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The Parish Parade
NU,n ,M@kes 'Federal Case" Out
Q~ ~solated
ST. MARY'S CATBEDR~, FALL RIVEIl , , The Women's Guild win hold. its, annual banquet and installa tion of officers,on Tuesday eve ning at 6:30, June 4 at the Stone Bridge Inn. Featured will be the' presen"; tation of' the Re,v: Francis A. McCarthy Scholarship. ST. STANISLAUS,
FALL RIVER
'Joseph Whipp win be in stalled as president of the Men's Club during an instal~ation din ner sCheduled for Saturday night at 7 in the school audito rium. Dancing will follow the" dinner. MT. Whipp succeeds Joseph Amaral as president.
ST. JOIIIiN TillIE BAPTIST,
Strike
By Msgr. George G. Higgins
The~ May 17 issue ,'I'he Commonweal featu~ a curious article on the lay ~achers' strike a: ,Seto~. J:!lgh School in South Holland, a suburb, of ChIcago. ( SIster Scabs in the'Suburbs," by Sister Myra Stratton, B.V.M.). I use the. word "curious" &dvisedly for Sister Myra, in that the Sisters could vote, I freely:" my opinion, has premature y I am sure there is something made a federal case out of a to be said for the unipn's point local crisis arid, by means of of, view _ under the circum selective reporting, has unfor- stances _ but, the issue really tunately caricaisn't as simple as all that. tured the posiAs Sister Myra undoubtedly (t i 0 np'f ' the 'knows, this issue keeps cropping ChicagQ', Arch:up all over the' country in a IFAlLllJ JanVIER
diocesah· school variety of different settings. It The Council of Catholic Women office with re": will take a long time 00 resolve will sponsor a ham and bean gards to teachit, and it will not be disposed supper on Saturday night, June , ers' u n ion s . I of, I am certain, by any' one 1 from 6 to 7:30 in the church have no quarsimple formula applicable to all hall. ' , :l:'21 with what possible-situations. Mrs. Eugene Hebert, chair she says about Meanwhile, in the (:ase of the man has also announced that the Sisters in ' Seton strike, why not, put it to charge of Seton arbitration? • dan~ing will foilow the supper. H i g h School. Acknowledge Right SACRED HEART, They have a mess on their FALL RIVER hands, but I am afraid they I must also disagree with Men's Club members heard . asked for it, the only way they Sister Myra's tendency through Rev.. J. Joseph Ryan, S.J.' at . out Commonweal article 00 in:" can get' out·of it is to recogruze volve the entire" American their annual Communion break that their lay teachers have a fast. A ,former alcoholic, Father right to organize and bargain Caltholic. education system in Ryan discussed the problem of the Seton dispute. alcoholism, drawin,g' on 'his ex oolleetjvely. 'I can't speak for, all of the perience in counseling hundreds False Impression superintendents of all, of the of victims and in lecturing Frankly, however, I find it religio:us supervisors o.f- schools throughout the, Uni-ted States, difficult to understand why but I ,did -have. the pleasUre of' and' Canada. Sister Myra felt it necessary to meeting with more than 70 of PHYSICAL FITNESS AWARDS: S. Sgt. William G. ST. PATRICK, ereate the impression that the them a few months ago at • , Chicagp Archdiocese school of.:. two-day seminar on" teachers', . Brady is preparing-to award' the many trophies on display FALL RIVER The installation banquet for fice is' in cahoots with the' unions sponsored,' not by the to the winners of the"physica1 fitness contest'scheduled for authorities at setop. American Federation of Teach- Kennedy Park on Friday, June 7 at 1 o'clock. Nine parochial the Women's Guild will be held at 7 WedneSday night, June 5 at She must be aware of the fact ers or any other teachers' schools participated in a weekly physic~l fitness p~gra~ 'Holiday Inn, Fall River. 'Tickets Utat it was this office which union, but by the Education sponsored by the Marine Corps 'and these schools WIll VIe are available from guild officera asked Father Robert Reicher Department of the U.S. Catholic ,and reservation deadline is Sun- , ~ the Catholic Council ~ Conference. for the awards. day, June 2. Working Life to attempt to These' 70-odd superintendents ST. JOSEPH, llI1ediate the strike. and religious supervisors unan-' FALL ,RIVER She also knows, I am sure, imously acknowAedged the right The 5 o'clock Mass on Sunday Chat Father Reicher-a recog- of teachers to organize and bar evenings has been suspended Illized expert on the subject of gain collectively .in bona fide Discussion Girl 'Christian Community 1968; for the: Summer. It will be re teachers' unions--wholehearted- ,unions of their own choosing. Listening to 'the, World' , sumed 'in September. Ily supports the right of teachers This information was widely The' CCD program. has ended' 1n Catholic schools, as well as ,publicized in the Catholic press. "We think we are beyond the BOSTON (NC) - A week public' SChools, to organize and' Strangely enough, however, long institute on "Christian point in the Church of telling for this academic year., Classes will reopen ,in late September. bargain collective!!. Sister Myra' doesn't even advert Community, 1968: Listening to people what to think about com" She knows, too, I must assume 'to it in her Commonweal arti the World" (June 15 to 19) win munity and how to relate to one ST. PATRICK,' that 'Father Reicher, having cleo ~ , explore the role of the Negro another in, community. There is FALMOUTH failed in his mediation efforts, "That's very unfortunate, I in a Christian society, the peace a ' pressing, need, for firm' per- , , New Women's Guild officers are Mrs. Armand Ortins, presi-, finally recommended that the think,for,- 'again, if she had issue and ,authority in the sonal convictions." , dent; Mrs. Lorett1l Doucette, issues involvoo in the strike be done "SO, her Commonweal Church. A series of 12 discussions Vice-president; ,Mrs. Richard submitted 00 binding arbitra- readers would have been in a The institute will be held at headed' by'panelists will be held Pratt and Mrs. John A. Cobb, tion. ' ' . bette.r' positiontb judge for Boston College here and is de throughout the week. "secretaries; Mrs. George De Unfair to Superintendent themselves whether the seton signed)o ,offer participants an Topics include: Education and , Sister Myra reports the fact strike, as she herself seems to opportunity to develop their own the Process 'of Alienation, Spir ,Mello, treasurer. The unit announces a luncheon that the union was willing to think, represents "a crisis which convictions by ·presenting diver itual 'and Material Djmensions and fashion show for Tuesday, accept arbitration, whereas the could affect the luture of Cath gent, views on the various topiCs. of Poverty, The Negro SeH'-lm July 9 at Terrace Gables Hotel; authorities at Seton were not, olic education in the United Father William Connolly, S.J., age in a Christian Society, Spir 'and a bazaar from 10 to 4 on but she failed to indicate that States" or, as I happen to think, director of the.' institute sUd: itual Theology of Obedience, Dy Saturday, July 20 at the church arbitration was recommended a local crisis in a particular namics of' Change in Religious grounds. Among items to be by a pro-union priest who, had school in an archdiocese which, Community. oHered at the bazaar will be an been brought into the picture to the best of my knowledge, ities in, the Archdiocese of 1\:'fso Communication and afghan. Work days in prepara by the Superintendet ,0fCatho- has not only not opposed Chicago were as blindly opposed lie Schools in, the Archdiocese. teachers' unions but has pro- to teachers' unions as Sister Change in the Church, Theology tion for the event will be held from 10 to 2 on Tuesdays. As a matter of fact, she doesvided Father Reicher jl number Myra seems '00 indicate, Father of Involvement, Y9uth and Al The guild ,will present a D't even mention .Father Reich- of forums in which to support' Reicher and I would be among ienation, T h' e Experimentai Church, and: Changing sexual Catholic Bible to the Falmouth er's name in the article. Why, them. ' the' first to know about, it. ! library in honor of Mrs. John 'Resents Lampoon can assure Sister, however, that Norms: Implications for Chrjs I don't know. tian COmmUnity. ' A. Cobb, Senior library trustee; 10.... we have not been so advised I do know, however, that ~3 Sister Myra will have to for Four to five hundred persons and marked the 10200 birthday , !'eason 0 f h er f al'1' ure to repo rt 'mve me for taking issue so and that, we ,do not expect te oi aU faiths' expected to at ,of Mrs. Thomas P!ice, its oldest
t A _.... di h i ' " illhat he .cu=l ocesan sc 00 pointedly with' ,her Common , ,be hi the future. ~d. " , , ' , " . member; and visits.;'
'. . with: . cards . office liSked ~,avowedly pro... ' weal artic~, but," as a Chicago' 'MoreOver, if tbe top officials union priest to try to settle the, ; priest who, under four Arch- lof the ,Catholic';'education sys-' 1/' IItrike and that the union was bishops, has :made literally tem in the United States were willing 'to go along with his hundreds of statements in favor' opposed to teachers' unions- proposed solution to the strike, • of trade. unionism in general again, 'as Sister Myra seems to lIhe was being unfair to the and, more recently, has spoken imply-I' think it is fair to WITHOUT TRAFRC & PARKING PRO~MS
'Superintendent of Schools and out emphatically on a number assume that Eather Reicher anell
at the bis associates. of occasions in favor of teachers' I would be On their black list.
Complicated Question unions in Catholic schools, I The fact is, however, tbat we
secondly, it seems to me that don't, particularly enjoy seeing were both invited ,by the usec
Sister Myra too lightly dis- my own Archdiocese lampooned Department" of Ed1,lcati~)D to.
SOMERSET,' ~S. , misses the extremely compti- as II blindly, reactionary force , address the seminllr referred to cared question as' to whether in .the field" of labor-manage above-not in spite of, but pre \ The' most ;,ienClly," ~ocratic,' BANK offerin~""
... not the striking lay teachers ment' relations. cisely becaus~ 6f the fact, that'" [I. at Seton should have permitted.Ne~,ther, I: suspect, does Fa the direH6r of the' del>artnient ' '.,
O~e;Stop"B~~lcin'g,' flhe teaching Sisters at the ther~ Reicher who, in my judg 'knew iti adv'~nce tl1atwe would liChool to join their organization, ment, has' done more than any come out· in favor of teachers" " 'Club Accounts Auto loanS _ She says that the lay teachers other 'Catholic in .... the United unions~' Checki,ng' Acco~nts, Bu~i1~e5!S ,LOans" " were willing to do so at first, States to, p,repare the way for Let "me"":repeat; then, .that I, Sa~ings AccountS , Real Estcite Loans, but changed their mind after teacher's unions in ,Church- don't see any reason to make a' AI' So~e'rset 'Shopping'Area-Bright":,an St. Bridge the strike was under way, on related instHutions. ~ federal' 'case' out Of ali isolated 4:he grounds that "under the I think it's fair to assume, teachers' strike hi South 'Hol M~mber Federal Deposif,lnsurance Corporation' circumstances .. it was unlikely incidentally, 'that if the author": "land, Ill.
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WEEKEND PROGRAM: 'Grey Nuns at Mt. St. Joseph School, Fall River, entertain Diocesan girls at weekend designed to acquaint them 'with religious life. Left, Lynette Girard, St. Joseph's parish, New Bedford; and Mary Kelley, St. John's, Attleboro, relax in dormitory. Center, Sister Gilbert M~rie, superior, discusses life of Sisters with; from left, Deborah
The Pari$h Pc!alJraae
Ro'chester' Cath'ol~c'Schoo,IWins ReprieVE Hcs Op~oriun~t}f t(!) O~ferr Que:dity Education
OUR LADY OF ANGEILS, FAlLL RIVER
ROCHESTER (NC)-A small May services wHl be held SIt parish that had been told by 7 tonight and tomorrow night. Catholic school officials to close Celebraiion of the feast of its school has won a reprieve E!;pirito Santo will begin ~ through a vigorous, month-long night, Thursday and Friday demonstration, of dissent. nights with a program of en Most Presious Blood School tertainment in the parish hall. not only will operate next year, A procession wHl be held at4 but will become a vehicle for Saturday afternoon, fOllowed by experiments with team teal;bing, band music, an auction o.and re ungraded instruction and other freshments in the hall. modern devices. . First Holy Communion will Richard Triano, school board be given at 8 o'clock Mass Sun president, foresees a "model day morning and ·a crowning ceremony will take place at the school which will benefit not noon Mass, followed at 1:30 by . only Catholic schools but any a procession of all parish soci who should want to observe." Msgr. William M. Roche, eties, food, music and booths. Raffle winners will be an Rochester diocesan school su perintendent, had declared the nounced at 10 Sunday night. school c"sub-standard" because CORPUS CllfIRllS'll'II, SANDWllClH[
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St. Teresa's Guild will spoll sor its annual Spring fashion show at 7:30 Thursday night, June 13 in K of C Hall, Buz zards Bay.
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TORONTO (NC) - Laymen speaking from the pulpits of 160 Catholic parishes here have urged political action to win tax ST. MllClHIAlElL, support for Ontario 'Catholic' high schools. Similar pulpit OCEAN GROVE talks were made by laymen in Mrs. Gilbert Stansfield, chair Ottawa earlier this year. ' man, ,Ii!nd Mrs. Leon Wotowicz, At present. non-denomina co-chairman, have announced that the Catholic Woman's Club tional public schools bave tax kindergarten will conduct a rummage, sale support fro m through grade 13. Catholie in the chu.rch hall' on Saturday, June 1 from 10 in the morning schools get support only for grades one through 10. Ca,tholie to 4 in the afternoon. high schools are operated as pri 'Ovate, fee-eharging schools. A province-wide campaign Jerseyites Vote
for tax support for Catholic On ~'arade Dispute
bigh school systems has been NEWARK (NC)-After a year advocated by some Church edUl of controversy, members of eational .leaders. parish ,Holy Name Societies Uiroughout the Newark Archdi ocese are going to vote on wheth er they want to continue the ,MIAMI (NC) - Arohbishop , annual Holy Neme parades. ' ' Coleman F. Carroll will be in For more than 60 years, the stalled as first archbishop and parades have been held in cen metropolitan of tIDe new eccle tral locations in each of the four siastical province of Miami O!ll ClOunties comprising the arch Thursday, June 13 in St. Mary's diocese. But n year ago, the cathedral here. Archbishop Luigi Senate of PriesteJ wged their Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate in discontinuance. the Uni,ted States will officiate.
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Andrews, Sacred Heart, N'ew Bedford; Rosemary ,Couture, St. Lawrencep New Bedford; Rita Lachapelle, Sacred Heart, New Bedford. Right, Moniq'ue Cormier, St. Joseph, New Bedford; Theresa Ff?urnier, Sacred Heart, New Bedford; Kathy Dorey, St. Joseph, New Bedford, make chapel visit. Tho theme of the program was "Love God 'f.hrough Service."
Cologne Ordains Nine D®a~~!ro$
COLOGNE (NC)-The reviv:nll of the permanent diacqnate m it had eight grades in fou'r Earlier, Msgr. Roche had pro Germany became a reality when J;'ooms, with five teachers. posed that the 167 pupils be five married men were ordaine~ At ,a long::delayed meeting accommodated in two other deacons in the cathedral here with ,Triano and other board parochial schools in, the area. by Auxiliary Bishop Augustilll members, he concluded that J . A year of grace has been Frotz of Cologne. they were "determined to pro 'granted for "intensive reevalu The five ne'!V deacons are be vide quaJi.ty education for their ation" before any ultimate tween the ages of 35 'and 47 anll! children" and should be •given decision. are all employed. They. will re the opportunity. tain th~ir jobs while performing He said he was "edified by their new pastoral duties. Transfel't' the deaication" of the Precious Discuss The new deacons' were pre Blood people and that such ded With Archbishop pared for ordination in what w ication was essential to the SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - A called a "diaconate circle" of tht<! survival of Catholic education. delegation of two women and 'Cologne archdiocese, set up eight two mEm from St. Frances Ca-' y~ars ago., brini parish here met with In his sel'mon at the ordinatioil ~[P)[p)Ii'@w<e$ rc:IJ$$~@® Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken Joseph Cardinal Frings of Co @~ 'lfa@(Il)SilJll@ !L@W' of San Francisco to protest ihe logne said· that deacbns are rep MILWAUKEE (NC)-Passage 'impending tr-ansfer of one of resentatives of Christ, the ser vant of mankind. The deacons, of a strong open hoqsing law their parish priests. by the Milwaukee Common The parishioners had sent he said, are a shining example Council was termed "a signifi for today's world. petitions to Archbishop McGuc ~nt victory for the Milwaukee ken after hearing that Father In his sermon Cardinal Frings NAACP Youth Council" by Thomas S. McMahon-who ar cited the following as tasks the Father James E. Groppi. The rived in the parish last October new deacons will undertake: white Catholic priest is advisor 'as assistant pastor-was being Assist in the sanctuary at tho to the group which staged the transferred in May. The San celebration of Mass;, . demonstrations in support of the Francisco chancery office has Administer baptisin; ordinance for 200 consecutive stated that no decision has been 'Visit the sick; nights. made on Father McMahon's as .Officiate' at burials; , signment because the office is In exceptional cases, officiate Father 'Groppi warned the or dinance, which became effective ,awaiting knowledge of the final 'at marriages;
wishes of the parties involved.
Preach" se:t;mons and teach ca on adoption, should not be con techetics; sidered a' "pa.nacea 'for black 'No details of the meeting be "Perform",charitable works; people living in poverty." tween the archbishop and the - Perform in church social ac "There are a lot of other parish delegation were avail tivities. things to be done," Father able. Groppi noted, and said the NAACP Youth Council will ~HJI"'J1J1"''''J1'''III'''J1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11II11II11I1I1I11I11I11I1I11II11I11"IIII11J1l11l11l11ll11l1l1l1l1l11l11l1l1l11l11l11I11J1~ turn its attention to gaining public action on other needs.
C~mmittee to.
View Community Tension , LONG BEACH (NC)-A Tri Faith Committee has been form ed' ,on Long Island to deal with communfty tensions and prob lems which concern the'total re ligious oommunity. . The committee,' composed of lay'and clergy represEmtatives of the: Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faith's, will also work "in a eonsu,tative manner" with 10 ea.), communities. .
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SISTER-S'l'UIDENT: Sister Janet Gallup, S.G.M. has just completed a year of in-service work as a' student of n?rsing service administration at Union Hospital, Fall River. Left, she aIds Rev. Peter Mullen as he administers Holy Communion to Wilfred Joseph' Price; center, she
Catholic, [f»@!l'etrmts
Endorse Co..Ed High School
CLEVELAND (NC)-Al most 70 per cent of Catholic parents in the Summit County area of the Cleveland
works at desk; right, she enjoys record session in nurses' home with (front) Barbara 'SanMs, ,St; J:ohn of God parish, Somerset, and (rear) Cheryl Miranda, Holy Ghost, Tiverton. Sister paid warm tribute to Mis8 Eleanor Presbrey, director of Nursing.
Grey Nun First §ister in Nursing Service 'Course aft Fall River'7s Union Hospital
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Ca~iMJd~Gn C@f/'holic C©~~<eges
By Patricia McGowan,
Except for the silver crucifix around her neck and her short white veil, Sister Janet Gallup" S.G.M., looked li~e any other. nurse' as she hurried t?rou~h the. Ealls .of Fall River's Union Hospital this past school year. But she was makmg hIstory m a qUlet way. She was the first Sister to study nursing service admini~tration in the hospital, as part of a course leading to a master's degree in the sub-' gave me a camera at the end volved in administration of Sh d th . of the year," she reported. n'll _ medication; and did some in ject. e was un erp e bwmg be put to good use in her new struction of students on legal of Miss ,Eleanor res rey, job. She is going to be director medical aspects of nursing.
TORONTO (NC) - A study of some 40 Catholic church-re lated colleges and. universities in Canada-including pr'1~ly - all English-speaking and French-' speaking' institutions outside of Quebec-is currently being con ducted, it was announced here. The study is authorized,' fi nanced and undertaken 'by the participating institutions them.. selves. Purpose is to make a thorough evaluation of the quality and extent of the academic work being done, and to see where these institutions fit in the total picture of higher education iB , Canada. The study is expected to be completed, and a report pubHshed, by September, 1969. Father'John M. Kelly, C.S.B.. president of St. Michael's Col lege, Toronto, is chairman of the 'committee of seven univer 'sity presidents supervising the study. :
diocese prefer co-educational high schools, a survey conducted here disclosed. The survey, conducted by a research consultant firm sampled a representative group of the 107,153 Catholics' in, the. R.N., Union's director of nurs of a school of practical nursing Before taking up her duties as oounty. The firm was hired bying. Miss Presbrey, a graduate attached to Holy Ghost Hospi- _ school' director, Sister Janet Bishop Clarence G. Isse~ann of Boston, University, acts each tal for the Chronically TIl in _ will claim hermastElr's degree of Cleveland. year as preceptor to 8 student Cambridge, "and of course we'll at Boston University, then will The survey showed that three . fulfilling 'the requirement of f!. - have a school yearbook, and attend, the American Nursing out of five parents-including, year's 'hospital experience in the we'll want snapshots for it.", Association annual convention, those with children' in public nursing service 'field. , -Sister Janet, from Defiance, to be held' this year in Texas. schools - favor Catholic high '''I enjoyed my ;nay at the Ohio, is a 'membe,r Of the Grey She also"hopes for a visit t6 her schools in prefereJ;lce to Con hospital a,nd working with Miss Nuns of "Montreal, and when family'in Defiance. Not only her fraternity of Christian Doctrine Presbrey," said blue-eyed Sister you wonder hoW ,a girl from, colleagues at the Union Hospital, centers near or adjacent to :pu}).:' Janet., She'said that she' en Ohio connected, with a Carladian but her s~ulients' and' fellow- lic schools. ' cOuntered ·no problems as a Sis.,. community,' 'she explains that: teachers at Holy Name parish Co-ed schools ,were most fer "out on her own," -but, that her' own 'nurses' training was " will' miSs' the trim and smiling' strongly prefer~ by, parents, she, would bring back to- her done at·" an Ohio ,hospital staffed Sister who, gave' a lot to, her ~f children now in grade scbool ~nvent ' a 'renewed ,awareness by the' Grey Nuns. ," adopted' ,community during the ,Off~rs The most frequently mentioned of'. the· difference between, lay, At ,the Union Hospital Sister year she lived in it. reaSon was that' parentS felt it and religious"life. HI had ,to get.Janet worked with an in-service .,VICTORIA (NC) - BishOJj ,·Remi,De Roo o£ Victoria has O'f to be "more natural". situation ~Iled to ,getting out to Mails ,in instructor on formul~tion of the for both boys and. girls. . . snow' and, rain,". she chuckled" philosophy' and', objectives -of a Jered to' resign if proof were . submitted that his decision te "'aDd:.to budgeting my "Gwntraining·program reaching some CUe Expense .' 'c1<>Se a 104,;,year-old'school here Parents with children in pub lIIIlol\ey... · , 4 5 0 ine<iical,personnel. She also . . " At :Hanes' Rome .-: lie schools gave, expense as the . worked',with a committee study :' CAMDEN (NC)-TheCamden, ;,in Britisll ,Columbia was incor in'g, methods a~d proCedures in:.:.'·' dioCese. 'has., ~auntbed ' /it' pr07': rect. most frequent reason for.:p,ot . ..Sister Ja~et stayed at the hOB ", , .' " graniilimed at establishment of. sending their children to Cath-. pital's ,nu~' home during her olic schools. Forty per ceJ1t cl~. Fall River stay and her aftei' : Ap'poin, parish co~~ils in every parish. this as; the reason, while othen hours activities included.' vol;' by ,January, 1969. ' mention¢ transpo~tion p~ob- unteer work as a high ,school Of Bishap George H. Guilfoyle, !NSLJR~NCE AGENCY" IN~,
lems and "crowded claSsrooms." - CCD. ,teaCher. lilt nearby, Boly . BATON ROUGE (NC)':-Bish-, called for the establishment of' Three out of five parents ex,-,' Name p~rish. OP' Robert, E.'. Tracy of Baton the councils shortly' after his 96 WILLIAM STREET
pressed a preference for Catho "The CCD aecutive board Rouge has, appqinted Fathe,r EI-, instailatio~ on March 4. Teams NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
lic 'high schools, but the survey mer S. Powell, S.V.D,.,as hhf 'fOf i>rtihests, Rheligious' ~nd laity Mowed that only 40 per cent of, C" II ~_ 'd speCial assistant social re rom roug out the'dlOcese are 998-5153 997-9167 the Catholic high sebool age. 0, spOnsibility and direCtor of the' meeting in workshops to set up PERSONAL SERVICE students in the county attend new Office of Social Action. guidelines to aid parishes in es Catholic s c h o o l s . ' Father Powell's office will tablishing their own councils. WASHINGTON (NC)-A'four-' coordinate the Catholic effort to . The Catholic high schools 1ft :l!III111I1I1111I11I11IHIIIIIIIIII"IIII1I1I1I1I1I1I1111I1111111I11I1111"IIII11111111111111111111111111I11I11I11111111111111I11I11IIlIIIIIJe week institute iB Christian ed ',. the county bave 2 caPacity of aid the poor with that of other 4,200 and an actual enrollment ucation will be conducted at community and rel~gious groups, § ~~ Dunbarton College of Holy Cross to promote th e' cause 0 fSOCIa ' 1 ~ , SE of 3,298. . t'Ice In . th e Lo" The survey also showed that here, July 1 to 26. JUS UlSlana d'IOcese ""households with children,: in Its purpose is to provide op and to attract grants from gov Catholic high schools differ por,tunity for In-depth assistance ernment and private sources for Chic:/«~ns from those with children attend to elementary lllnd secondary alleviation of pOverty. ing public schools. The bead of school teachers, guidance per His office will operate under the household with II child in a sonnel, and those engaged in a Social Responsibility Board' Catholic high school is .older, Sister formation programs who composed of priests, Sisters, more likely to be a white 001 are seeking to update their un.,. Brothers, and laity. Ten per lar worker with a higher in ' derstanding of certain important cent' of the developmental re eome and bas lived longer both areas of Christian education. sources of the diocese will be in the county and at tile II8JDe Laity, Religious EUld clergy are devoted to the' program of the Ilddress." eligible. a t i e n d , m . e w office. ~1I1111",IIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIUIIlIIIIIII11111111111111111111I11';115
to Resign
P'lan' ,'E'st'a' b'I."shment Of Parish Councils
tsD,irector SoCic:i1 Action
DONA"BOISVERT
for
ege· to '\ofVn uct Education Dl1lstitl'ute
CLO D = MEMORIAL DAY
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16
Speci~1
THE'ANCHC:';-Diocl!se of Fall R,iver-Thurs., May 30,. 1968
·!Two lri1cll"ggnant Cler~WITuD2n' Forese~' ~oce Re'volu~~~n By Rt. "lI~~v. Msgr, Joh~ S. Kennedy Two new books have ;imiiar jacket d~signs. Each features a high chain ,fence. Imprisoned behind one of the' j(ences is a group of Negro children.' Shut 'away 'by the ~ther is a single Negro child. In the first instance' the book fa called In Richard's World ' (Houghton Mifflin, 2 Park which Negroes are mangled and St., Boston, Mass. 02107. pulped. ' . $4.95); it is by William H. Score Church«:s
"
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Barnwell, . an Episcopal semi~, , IIl1lrian when he wrote' it, an~l. cow the rector of 'two small C 0 u n try churches. In the oecond instance, tile book is Ghetto Fever (Bruce, 400 N. Broadway, Mil,waukee, Wis. 53201'. $3.95); it III by Thomas V. Miliea, a priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago. Mr. Barnwell's book is drawn /lrom. a 1966 diary which he kept while working, during vacatiOl'i, fit a mission church in one ,of -' lite worst' ghetto areas of Charleston, South Carolina, the ceity in" which he and generations of' his ancestors had beim ~rn. He came' from the upper' reaches of white Charleston' oociety, gentlefolk who took the Negro's subordination as natu-' wl and unchangeable and had' co idea of how the Negro'really , laves and what he really feels. Sees True Conditioo Father Millea's book summark..es, his experience during five 7ears_ of ministry' in the Negl'O «hettos of Chicago, especiall~ flhe 'three years he spent in the Lawndale section. He is a native of Chicago and, tin a parallel to Mr. Barnwell's CliaSeis appalled and incensed by his fellow white Chicagoans' i!f~orance 'of, and antipathy flow ar.d, the Negro. ; Mt\ Barnwell's days at the' eenter opened his eyes to the wue condition of the Negro. Almost everything he tried to do flo help met with frustration, Ifcom black or whites. -
Att'leboro
Fall River
$125 First Federal Savings & l~an Assoc. . $25 Daughters of Isabella-Alcazaba Circle
$500 , "DeSoto Foundation-Artcrd Fixtures ,. J & J Corrugated Box Corp. International Ladies Germent Workers Union Loc91 1'78 $400 . Cherry & Webb Company $300 . Union Savings'Bank '$200 A Friend $175 A.nn Dale Products $150 New England Poultry Co. . $125 ,Edgar's Department Store $100 Slade' Laundry Zayre Department Store , ' $50 A Friend Building Materials Co. Mitchell Heating Co. Ashworth Brothers Inc. Fall River Emblem Club $25 Auerbach Bathrobe, Atty. Richard K. Hawes, Atty. Jame. Se.ligman, Dr. Arthur K. Smith, Dr. Alexander F. Rootler Dr. George J. Bounakes, lr ven F. Goodman, Archt., Dr. Ie Mrs. James E. Fell Arrow Neon Sign Co. Inc., General Paper &: Supply, Na tional Contracting Co., Ralph Keyes, Dr. Elmer Leigh Jr., Daughters of Isabella, Assump tion Circle No. 74
North Attleboro
The churches are not, spared any.. wallops. They are chastised fo~ cooperation with the ,organ ized injustice, for ,lending pres tige' to hypocritical "solutions" ar~'d, agreements," for failing to discern theodimensioDs of Negro need and tQ devise programs commensurMe with this. Both Mr. B'arnwell and Father Millea give examples of buSPEAKER: ,Rt. Rev.. Fran- , reaucl'acy's unconcern about, ,dlfSpera,te cases. The former tells ~is J. Lally, edi,tor. of the of a destitute Negro woman Boston Pilot, will address' whose children were literally' 280 Stonehilf seniors, at . a starving, and the flat impossi bility of getting any help at aU Baccalaureate Mass to be offrom the public authorities. Be , fered on Sunday morning at fore a mor~el of food could be the No. Easton college. , supplied, months would have to be spent going through a i1ight~ mar'e of red tilpe· Father Millea has a !lQmpar SACRED HEART able account of the endless and maddening complications stand . $250 ing in the way of getting sh~ter Atty. &: Mrs. George T. Bol~r for a family evicted in the bit $100 ' terest reaches of Winter. Women's <;tuiid of Sacred Heart Parish ' Slum Theology' Men's Club of Sacred Hean' Both men foresee revolution' _"Our only' hope for the preven~ Parish $75' tion of a major revolution In Rev. John R. Foister' my lifetime," says Mr. BarnMr. &_Mrs. J.effrey E., SlWv well, "is the success of a minor James P. Murphy revolution now.'~1 $50 And Father Millea concludes George F.' Driscoll by quoting ,John F. Kennedy, Michael F. Sullivan "Those who make peaceful rev $30 o~ution impossible, will m'ake Mr. &: Mrs. Charles F. BUfflnil Violent revolution inevitable... · Raymond C. Gellagber Father Millea has some sin . $26' gularly interesting ohapters OIl "Slu.m .Theology." In them, he Andrew L. Lyons (In meMOl7 ~ outlines what he 'believeS the of Mary A, Lyons &: staff 8fJL Ch~-rch should, do. He is strong- W~lIiam F. Lyons) Timothy Shea ly,1O favor of experimental min-" istrie~ of various kinds, strongly , $25 opposed to outside financial Charles E. Morris, Edward l. support, He advocates black, Healy, Ruth Brown, Mr. &: Mn. power in the parishes and in- Thoma,S Burke, Mr. &: l/lra. Jobs deed black power P~iiShes. ' l'. Coyle No one will find either Olt He sought to get his peers' to th boO ST. JOSEPH l!'ealize 'what was going on in esc . ks boring. They are by their own city, oniy to be earnest, generous, and indignant '55 b men; who have 'been where the Harry SeQrs landly disregarded by most. action is and tell it like it Ja.' But not by all: he did succeed, We'd better listen. ' Frank Silvia , in inducing some of his people $3. 00 come and see for themselve:i st. Joseph'i Mens Club and to do something construc, $25 'tive. Dani~l ~'ConneJll Indicts Whites HOLY CROSS A weakness of Father Millea'lI ST. MICHAEL $25 book is its jumbled' chronology. Mr. &; Mrs.. Michael Reagaa ·llt moves back and fo'rth over A Parishloner events in 1965, 1966. arid 1967 HOLY NAME in a confusing way. This is dis ST. PATRICK: $300 concerting, since he is attempt . $100 - Dr. Daniel F. Gallery ing to show cause and effect st. Vincent de PaUll. , $125 and trace history ot' actions and , $25 Dr. Francis J. D'Errico reactions. . $100 The reason for this is that Mr. &: Mrs. Stanley Sincosld In memory of George J. Rioult Father Millea has been im Mr.&: Mrs. Joseph Paquin In memory of Catherine mersed in a punishing situation. Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas Harlda O'Haire He has lived in .the heart of the SS. PETER IS PAUlo Dr. & Mrs. Robert S. Hackett ghetto, has marched in demon strations to which whites have . $25 NOTRE DAME made violent'response has bee~ Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas 1IL Bootlla $75 jailed. He may' be said to have & William D. ' Rev. Roger P. Poirier shared more fully than Mr. Mr, &: Mrs. William Patten Barnwelloin the plight of which, $25 . Mr. &: Mrs; Nicholas Tyrrell both are writing. U,S.J.l}., .No. 231 Father Millea' sets out 'a ST. JOHN THE' BAPTIST scorching indictment of white ST. PETER. $100 Chicago, especially the politi';' ... Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey cians, beginning with the top $59 man. The s~um lords, the police, $50 A Friend the courts are bitterly assailed. , Catholic Women's Council, St.. • $25 Urban renewal is' seen as' a Jean Baptiste Parish ' . cynical game which benefits' the' ST. WILLIIAM In memory 'of AugustWl Re&J ' . Tips & Tops Restaurant whites and penalizes' the N~ . $100 Mr. c& ~rs. William ,White groes. A whole system of. en !n memory of Stephen'S. M&o r; William H. Young In8W'lUWllil tr~nched injustice 'is sketched, a ,Agency el'a5S and cruel machine ,in ·detroi
Fall River
'$I
Fall River
'"
Socie.
Provincetown
'Gifts
$101 · Thomas P. McDimough Coun cil No. 330 K of C. $50 Diamond FU.[1eral Home ,Brook Manor Inc. Manu'facturers National Bank of Bristol County $40' Benedict Circle No. 61 D of [ , $35 ~apadanno's " Sacre,d Heart School Sodallties . $30 A. Lacasse & Sons $25 Fetzer's Garage, Dr. Robert ,Bedard, Dr. Henry Bedard, Mr. &: Mrs. Milton Cash '
-New Bedford
0
$600 Paul G. Cleary &: Co. $501 , Loranger Construction Corp. $400 Cherry &: Webb Co. $250 Harriet Transportation Co. $150 Guisti Baking Co. '191 A Friend $100 Mar.geson Plumbing 00. $75 . $200 , ,,A Friend Chamberlain Hardware &;' Tile '$73 00., West Dennis · Residents of Our Lady's H~v_ $25 $50 Carron's Inc'., So. Yannouth Exchange Club of N. B.
J. B. Lunlber Co.
· The Keystone Inc. , DUll LADY OF ·VlCTOB.Y $35 $50 Oliver Sportswear Co. Dr. &: Mrs. John L. McVey $25 $30 ,Manhattan 'Bottling Co., 01selll Mr. &; Mrs: Joseph Terry &: Appleby, Reca Phsl'DUle)", , U. . $25 S. Ring Binder, Priscilla Cam Mr, &: Mrs. John F. Sweeney eron, Mrs..Bertha Rosa Babbitt's Steam Specialty e. 1:. Beckman &:' Co., , Colonial Restaurant &: Store Equipmeat ST. PETER Co., Guy's Pharmacy . ' $32 Atty. Foster R. Hermaa, Dc.. Mr. &; Mrs. John Cassidy Clarl Persons ST. ANTHONY $100 Mr. &: Mrs. Richard J. Fish . $100 , $85 Rennie Mfg. Co. Manuel W. Rose , ' , $75 First Machinists, Bank Bristol County Trust ST. PATIUCK. Dr. Theodore R. Too,... $25 $50 Mr. 31; Mrs. Saul Strein Emeo Electric SupplJ' e.. Mr. Ie Mm. Lawrence H. Titte Abreau's Oil Service, more Allan M. Walker &; Co. 1M. Eureka Mfg. Co. Dighton Industries-Tithe ....... Dr. Henry_A. Alves 3r. W. H. Riley ~.,SoIl Inc. Where A $••" Aleixo Insurance Co. GOOD NAME $26 T1lunton Stove Co. $25 Means A '. Silva Funeral Home, ArmoIr Bronze & Silver Co. Inc., Pober'., GREAT DEAL Daughters of Isabella, Bristol County Radio ' Boyden Plastics Co., WiWlUDllI Lumber Co. Inc. Frank R. PeN Insurance Agency.
Cape Cod
. Centerville
eo...
Dighton
Taunton
Somerset
GEO. O'HARA
Building Contractor
Masonry
CHEVROlEl
VICTOR
.fLEURENT
., JEANmE STREEI' FAIRHAVEN
WY 4-7321
HEW BEDFORD
lOOl Kings Hwy• Open· Evenings
Tens Catholic Press to Create
Climate for Social Reform
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COLUMBUS (NC)-Thll! quesion before the Catholic press is lot whether it "must turn its at.ention to the ghetto, but how," \I1sgr. John J. Egan, director of ,he Chicago arcdiocesan office of nban affairs, told Catholic jourlalists here. Speaking at the annual conIcntion banquet of the Catholic )ress Asociatlon, Msgr. Egan mggested that the Catholic press five its attention to the job of ,:reating among its readers a elinate favorable to social reform.
I
It can do this, he said, by sus-
~ining "the momentum of the
egitlmacy of the protest movenent which Martin Luther King -epresents" and by clearing "the IiI' of some of the residual ef-
fects of prejudice in the way we hink." He maintained that many peo)l~the very important middle troup of the population-neither Jtrongly pro nor strongly con, will follow the ·leader. They will 10 what is acceptable, they will 10 what Is necessary. And they ~ke their cues from institutions' >f leadership-from the Presi_ hmt and Congress, from the pul.,i1 and from the press. Be Zealots "So sustaining the protest t\ovemen t hasth e effect , 0 f pro \/idlng a reference point of legi-
the kind of distinctions thaa their heritage of prejudice thus far has preve~ed them from making." Of prime importance in this regard, he said, is to help white readers to stop thinking of Negroes as, "one homogenous group, with virtually identical opinions." , "I stand· here tonight," he said, "as the pastor of a Roman ,Catholic parish' in the heart of probably the poorest and larg est Negro ghetto in Chicago. Our church stands in almost the geographical center of the 'area iliat was devastated by fire on the night of April 5. ")Tet 1 would not presume t.o tell you what the people of my parish ,think .-: about me, or about you, about law and 01' del', or about fair housing la""s. 1 could only tell you what some of those people think-and they think many different things..
Cites Distinction "Your task, then, is to con tinue to illuminate the rich va riety of human differences that are common to all people; to insist the Negro community' is not a monolith." Catholic papers, he c'oritin'iJ&d, should also illustrate the dis tinction between the race prob lem and the poverty problem. "Most Negroes are, in fact, dmacy !for the middle group of very poor, both in. the cities of "he American .populatlon, t~e the North and in the rural a'reas ,~roup that in every time and in of the South,'" he noted. "But !very place ultimately marks the most poor .Americans ate 'not luccess or failure. of. 'a movement. .Negroes. There are almost twice . "In order to do tpis, you must as many poor whites in this Itay ahead of the, crOWd. ,Yo~· country as there are poor nust at all costs avoid making Negroes. he inference thqt the middle of· The problem of poverty, even :he road is the respectable posi- of urban poverty, is really two don. You cannot after April 4· problems-that of the poor who ~ell your readers, as at least one who are so because of the econ well-meaning priest told his con": omy, and that of the poor who I~regation, that they need not be are so because of both the econ (calots in this cause, but that omy 8!1d the social strudure. lhey must be just and charita"You must, then, help your ole." readers to understand that "It is exactly to be zealots that poverty has these two faces; \TOU must urge your readers-not that the poor Negro is .doubly >DIy because that is what the cursed-'-he must o'vercome not :;Ospel calls for, but because that only the economy, but society. ,s the only way most readers For both of these forces keep will shift at all-by being pro- him poor." \Tided with a· reference point in which they can see themselves ,is moderates when they openly University Dill'ec,tor IIld publicly accept the practical Stops ·BDshop's Talk ~esults that must come." FORTALEZA, (NC)-The di Not One Group rector of the state Univcrsity' of Ms/tr. Egan said that the sec ond task before the Catholic Ceara here in Brazil broke up press "is equally important, but a meeting' of students mid less challenging. It is to help workers at the universify' who )'our readers to begin to make were being addressed by a bishop. During a talk on t.he Church's Bishop Corson Plans social, doctrines by Bishop An tonio Fragoso of Crateus, the Ecumenicity Work university's director stormed PHI LAD E L P Ii: I A (NC) into the Students' Club and --Methodist Bishop Fred Pierce grabbed the' microphone out .of Corson, former president of the the bish'op's 'hands', saying, "I Methodist World Council who~ ask you in the name of God will retire in August as resident and of discipline that you stop bishop of Philadelphia says he your conference immediately." will remain' active in ecumen The bishop complied; saying ical matters and in higher edu-' simply: "I hope that tomorrow cation. we can meet again to. express The Bishop, a close friend of freely our thought and opin':" Philadelphia's John Cardinal ions." Krol, plans to pat·ticipate in ec Speaking on ""'ages and So umencal conferenc~s in August cial Justice," the bishop had and September in London, told the students and workers Rome and San. Antonio, Tex. that efforts workers are· making At the Philadelphia annual to improve wages were "as conference of the Methodist sacred as Holy Week is sacred." Church, Bis):wp' Corson said: "I shall be active in promoting ecumenicity in the Methodist Plan Parish Church. We have had ecumen ical contacts and understanding School Boards ROCKVILLE CENTHE (NC) at the top level. Now, ecumen icity must be moved fOrward at Two sets of official diocesan the broad base of the pyramid." guidelines have bcen sent to Bishop Corson, a Methodist every pastor in the 124 par:ishes observer at the Second Vatican of the Rockville Centre diocese Council, hopes to meet Popeo here on Long Island. Paul in Rome in September and The documents are guidelines
he also expects conversations for parish councils, lllld a con
with officials of the Secretariat stitution and guidelines for par
for Christian Unity. ish school boards.
Council,
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...:
THE
ANCF.~ ~-
17
Thurs., May 30, 1968
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CLEVELAND (NC) The f.irst Negro elected mayor of 0 major U.S. cit'y advised young Negroes to study about this nation and realize they can rise as high as their abilities wi]] carry them.
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Cleveland's Mayor Carl B. Stokes said the United States, despite grave racial problems, remains the greatest land of op portunity for blacks and whitetJ the world has ever seen.
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L"~'~==-~-:'0_-.·'~'.A. _ ':;.~~ AIDS BiAFRA: Father Dermot Doran, C.S.Sp., :who has organized shipments of medicine to Biafra and arranged for transportation of missiomi'ry-refugees out Of the WaI' torn country, is greated by Biafra's head of state and c9mmander-in-chief, 33-year-old Lt. Col. Odum,egwu Ojukwa, a Catholic. NQ Photo.
eel) Texas. Prelall'e Appr@ves lP'rogrolJti1 itOII' ~ nstfl'll.!Jcll'ion· of' All
"Don't knock it and don't bum it," he counseled a meeting cil the Interracial ScholarshiJl) FoundatIon, which helps boYD. and girls in ·this area to prepare for college scholarships through study . at non-tax supported schools, most of them Catholi~ and other church-related insti tutions. The mayor named a numbCll' of Negroes who. have risen l@ top positions in America. He said more opportunities con stantly are opening. He note«1l the presence of a Negro, JustiC!! Thurgood'Marshall, on the' U.s.. Supreme Court bench now is taken for granted, so "you'Gll think there had always been 't!' Negro: there."
Mayot Stokes "said the. 'splj.D~ alld· influence of assassinated' ~artin Luthe'r King ar~ program evolved from the find- ' more alive than ever before' ,.$i\NANTONIO (NC)-Arch bishop Robert E .. Lucy has ap: ings of a four-member special because many things which hI!' proved !ltructural renewal for service team working in the could not accomplish In his life-' the San' Antonio' Archdiocesan,. archdiocese . Quring the past t.i~e are now being dohe in bb. Confraternity of Christian boc:" nine 'months,' consulting ~jth memory. trin program, designed to meel pastors and teachers of rel'igion the demands and need for qual on the needs in their areas. ity reIlgious instruction for all Father Elizondo said the Catholics in the archdiocese. special services and atHlio-visual Father Virgil Elizondo, arch assistance provided by the diocesan CCD director, described team will also be stepped-up as the step as a move to help al part of the new Christian edu leviate a major deficiency in cation program. religious instruction programs here, .as well as in other dio Interfaith Effort . 273 CENTRAL AVE.
ceses-lack of properly trained . SAN FRANCISCO (NC) teachers. Catholic, Protestant and Jewish 992-6216
A staff of eight paid" profes directors of radio an4 TV pro sionally qualified teachers of gramming are collaborating in religion to serv.e 'as a'rea direc- . NEW BEDFORD
the organization. of an interfaith tors provides the core of the broadcasting office in San Fran-' new' program, he said. 'A staff of Religious and lay-' cisco. men, expert in religious instruc tion on high school, junior high, elementary and special educa tion levels, will carry out studies and research· aQ,d serve as resource personn:el to help the eight area catechists form ulate specific programs.' Father Elizondo said the new ;'
Dr.
BLUE. RIBBON
LAUNDRY"
JEREMIAH COHOLAN
PLUMBING (; HEATING
Contradovs !linC!e 1913
Chicagoans Protest Assignment 'RuleD CHICAGO (NC)-The Catho lic Interracial Council and the Black Priests in the archdiocese of Chicago have· protested what they call "an unwritten rule re garding the assignment of new- ~ Iy ordained priests which directs that they are not to be assigned to :rnner city parishes." The two gorups have made their protest in identical letters to John Cardinal Cody of Chicago and to members of the archdiocesan personnel board. "We do not understand the thinking behind such a rule and we urge that it be reviewed and put aside," the letters said. "It seems to us that the inner city parishes with all of their special needs are precisely those which could best benefit from the zeal and energy of our new priests. Further, we think the priests, themselves, would bene fit from the direct confronta tioh with the problems of' in Justice and poverty. which, in our judgment, are the primary chal lenge to Christians of our time and place."
"
WYman 3-0911
699 Bellville Avenue New Bedford
JUST OFF ROUTE 117
Special School Outings, GrollpOffer, $3. per Student Offer includes: Special luncheon and $3. worth of Ride Tickets. For additional :details or reservations call Mr. Conrad feria at (401) RE 7-8000, col!ect~
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese·of. Fall River..,...Thurs., May 30,1968.;' .
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SACRED HEART . $25 Dr. ,Charles T. Claydon. 0."
MT. CARMEL $25 Read's Dairy Inc.
Os·te'rv.ille
LADY OF ASSUMPTION
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Mr. & Mrs. GeQrge Fredette· $25' " . Mr. & Mrs. John MCcarte Mr. &: Mrs. John .1:. Reardon
Oak Blliffs"
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ST.JOHN THE BAPTIST. , Vineyard Have.. $150 ST. AUGUSTINE
,In memory of Charles F. Var $25
gas Oliver:s Paper Store
$100 In memory bf·Manuel J .. Soares Falmouth St. John's Sb Vincent. de Paul ST. PATRICK
Society $100
$75 Gilbert Arruda
Rev. Agostinho S. Pacheco $50
$51 ' Joseph Corey
St. John Couples Club $25
$50 Mrs. John DeMello
Mr. & Mrs. William McGraw Hon. Edmund Dinis A«:Vl$lhinefi' _~ACULATE CONqEPTKON Dr. Marcio M. Bueno ST. lFlItANCllS XAVIEII& $105' , .' $100 .
$40
. Armand Fernandes Mr. & Mrs. John Fernandes
White's Farm Dairy",
$75 $35
$35
The Rosary Ladies The Flores Family Mr. & Mrs. Gerard MeCra
$30 $30
$31
Andre Tanguay John F. Gracia
Anonymous
$25' $25
. $25
Ernest Pereira . SUCCESSOR: Father Louis Helen Aubertine Brough, Wil Acushnet Saw Mills
liam J. Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs. M. Colonnese, until now ad
MT. CARMEL Lewis McDonald, Mr & Mrs Paul ministrative direct9r, suc
Buzzards Bay $100 Rezendes, Mr. &. Mrs. Antone ceeds Father John J. Consi Mt. Carmel Conference of St. · Silva ST. MARGARET. , dine, M.M., as director of th,e
;Wincerit de' Paul'· $75· St. .1:ohn's Holy Name Society Bishop Daniel Feehan Council Latin America- Bureau· of
Mr. & Mrs.' Harry Duham SACRED HEART 2911 the Catholic Conference,
$26 $30 West Harwich . Washington, D.C. NC Photo. Mr. & Mrs.. Paul Soucy Mr. & Mrs. James Fernandes $25 HOLY TRINITY ST. ANNE Tucy Bros" Mr. & Mrs. Earl V. Taunton $25 . $100
Barnes, Mr. & Mrs. William Has Lemlin Hardware William F. Jones
South Yarmouth lHlOLY FAMILY kell Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Herbert $25
ST. PIUS X Zweig ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA $51 Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. Edwards, ~200 a Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Sullivan $30 . Mr. & Mrs. Thomas White Mr. & Mrs. Leslie F. St. George, St. Pius X Holy Name Society' Mr. & Mrs. Henry Guillette Germaine D. Chadwick _ $25 Catherine liane, Mrs. R. E. Cav.. . $100 Bourne Mill . Mr. & Mrs. Bruno Mozzone erly, Mr & Mrs Thomas Peterson Rev. -Philip A. Davignon ST. HEDWiG OUR lLADY OF LOURDES Mr. & Mrs. Paul McLaughlin, $30 $150 , Fail!'hcwen $201 Beatrice M. Mollica Franciscan Fathers, OFM, Conv Mr$. Gertrude Gibbs, ¥r. & MrS. itt. Rev. E. S. de Mello ST. JOSEPH
D. Leo Daley; Robert· J. Chase, $25
$30 $25 $30
The Lanigan Family
·Mr. & ·Mrs. Walter Twarog & Mr. & Mrs. Edward McCann Jr. Mr. &·Mrs. George Applewhite Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Francis
Mr. & Mrs. Rayinond Lyons, Henry J. Healey
!!on Stanley Mr. & Mrs. Julio Motta $26
Mr. & Mrs. Julio Barrows, Mrs. $25 Ilda Garcia
Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Drummond S«DlI'u:lwBch Mr. & Mrs. Frank Kuluza & Charles Geoghegan, Mr. & Mrs. $25
SACRED HEART CORPUS CHRISTI
Edward Boyle, Mr. & Mrs George .~n Edward $30 , Mr. & Mrs. Charles Pittle
Xenakis ).\[1'. &. Mrs: Joseph Correira $75
ST. LAWRENCE .Bishop Feehan Council ~ of C Recolllnize $25 Prelate's Wledport . $200 ~ $50
Mrs. Mr. &- Mrs. Philip F. Tripp Joseph Hayes Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Morin Hedp to Retarded Dorothy McManus ! ST. GEORGE $100 . ........ .
Mr. & Mrs. George Murray $25 . . ST. ANTHONY
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Ochad BATON ROUGE (NC)-Bish Mr. & Mrs. Edward Harririgton Mr. & Mrs. DennisWorig $250.
Mr.. & Mrs. Ernest Olsen op Charles P. Greco of Alexan Dr. '& Mrs. Joseph Buckley dria, La., was awarded the Pres .' $55 . $30 ' R~v. M~~rice$2,s50uza ident's Cup at the 15th annual Woods Hole' Anne & Helen Meade 'Mr. & Mrs. Peter Fernandes Sr.
Joseph R. Amaral, Arthur Hen . $25 . \ convention of the Louisiana. " $50 ", ST: JOSEPH .. L awrence . C·.'1'eare, M'1': "" "" 'M rs. Association for Retarded Chil r'l'q"u'e,' Alfred Sl"lv'a . Mr. & Mrs. HEmry Perri.' . . dren' here. The President's Cup , ". $26 . . S T. J'OSEPH $59 .. Robert Gianferante, Mr. & Mrs. is the highe.~. t honor. given. by $100 The Meggiso~ Family' .' Mr. &·Mrs. Norman Ferreira . 'James McDermott, Mr. '&. Mrs . . ... '$35' . ,.,. . Mr. & :(\irs. Joseph H. Martin George Monte . . ' . the Presid~mt's ."Gommission on Mrs~ Edith Thatcher . $60 . . . - Mental Re~ardation., . 'Mr. & Mrs. William Simmons Rita Limerick ..• Mr~. Alfred .oliver, :(\ir. & Mrs. . 'Bishop Greco, accepting t~e , . $30 .. $~5.". . .' Rita Kervic~30 . ~ . ~thony; San~on~.· ". . award from Robert Leiwe, pres Mr. & Mrs. El,lgene. Young . .Ag·nes Driscoll, M~... & .1VIrs. .Mr. . 8i M .. rs. ',Ralph Coutillo M.ansf.·e·Id. '. . ident of' the group, said "the Dr. & Mrs. William Smith ,-ul LaForest, .J.ohn N.Q'Br!e11 work I have done in-this'field Ja · ~ri! ..RIchard M;lYo .. d • . '. Mr: & Mrs.' James E. Ml1rphy : ",', ." '.$25.:, . " '" '." : ST. MARY· .' .... the' result, of an inspiration to Mr. & Mrs: H\1gh.~~ney;· . Mr. '&~rs; ·Wi~liam:Reed:., .... . Mr. ·&:Mrs'. Francis T. Coughlin . ··$50'. . , . . .. ",help those known:as God's fot Dr.&"Mrs.Wiiliam . . .' gotten children."'" .. , Mr.. & Mrs. Charles TouheY' · : .$2~ , ":-". ., .. . ' , ..Donahue'. , . . . . . ,,:Q.r. &:Mrs.. Anthony Gassoli " __ '. '" .:,' .. ST. )~IAitY . '. Mr;&: ~" J .. ~., L~re;' . ~. A Friend (2) · Mr. ~. Mrs.. ).\fanueLMeqe~ros" Mr. & Mrs. Edward Lynch . ' . . . . ,$30";: " $50., .. ·.pl'. & Mrs.. E, Arthur .RQbinson,· . . Ron. lit' Md.' frllnk Smitli· , .':l\... Foriend !,,'. J(lr..& Mrs.' Sylvester ,M;lloney · Mr,: & :Mrs. Joseph. Goulding, Frances Goffin •. ' ,.' ., .. $35, .,,'!\fay Kenny Mr. & ,Mrs. Joseph' Boldiga· . '. Jackson'
'. $25 , . . SACRED .HEART Frank Signoriello, Elea'nor Ken;. " ..
~r:&¥rs:; Thomas ·.McKenna .Wareha~ ' ... ' $ 4 0 · h e d Y , Mr. & Mrs. Bernard·O'Mal·· Anonymous. ·Jos.eph· ,Bressette ley, Mr.' & Mrs. Arthur Carroll;"" ST. ~ATRICK '~ . . $ 2 5 . " Mr. & Mcs. Brian Emmett . ,.'. ST.. JOSEPJ![ , $40. . 'Mr.·& Mrs. Wilfred Bourgault " Mr. & Mrs... Paul' Dunpliy, tMr;' " ' . : ' ·WYmaa ',' . ,$25., Mr. & Mrs. Andrew' McGraw .' . " . ST. M.i\RY , . & Mrs;.Anlhony 'C::ucciriello, Mrs.' , ..'... 3-6592 '. IIi". ,& Mrs. ;Adrien.Lemire · .. ,'. "$25 '. >." . . • . > . . . 1'$100 . Elm:er'-Kilroy, Mrs. John "Hen-' . . . .Wareham Lodge. of, ElkS 1541 ' . ' ~ ~Mr.·'& Mrs,Bernard Byrnes' "Bessey;' A Friehd'~2) ... , ." " . ". - . CHARLES F. VA,RGAS' :ST.'KlLIAN .. \. '.'. '.' ,.'. . ·A F r i e n d · ' . Mrs,' AliceSrriith, Mr. & ':Mrs.'" " '254 ROCKDALE AV~~U.E " " , .. $39... ,. ·:·Attleboro' " .". ,. ': . $50' '.. '" ,':.Edward Kane, Mr.'&'Mrs. Jos-e'pli .' .);timli!ntal. Family .. . ".' ,. ·iMI'.~&,Mrs. J6hnStapletoD . ,Mahoney;' . . , .'. NEW BEDFORD,f4'ASS.· ST.JOHN. '.~. , $30 . , .'. \,
Nort.h; Qightoll" . $ 7 5 " M r . & Mrs. 'Hugh Donnelly ," 'Mat.tapoisett
ST. JOSEPH JamesF.McCarthy , '$25 ST: ANTHONY
. $25 r . &MMr!;l. JOJhn GoMrma&n; MM rs. , $35 'GlVIH I $io~
Mr. & Mrs. ·Richard Flood . Baptiste LaNirifa .. :' orse 1'., r. rS'Mr: & Mrs. Dayid Haley
Dr. & Mrs. George C.Schloe '. $30 . George' Bankert, Mr:' & Mrs. Paui $26' .
u.s.
.i
~.
. ST; lFRANCiSXAVIER . $100, . . Rev. Bernard:R. Kelly Guertin Bros. Jeweiers St. Francis 'Xavier Women'. Guild $90 'Rev. Terance F. Keenan, . $75 Mr. & Mrs. John Curley $51 Lieut, '& Mrs. Charles M. Ha.r rington $50 Barnstable County National Bank . Ferdensi Electrical Inc. .Hyannis Pharmacy Inc.
Benjamin Kepnes, D.D.S. ,
Richard W. Peckham
$30
Ann K. Dillon
$26 Mary A..McGarry Edward J. Souza Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Golenski $25 . Mr.. & Mrs. Antonio L. Dias, Ffrst Federal Savings & Loan Assn .of Cape Cod, Hyannis Charlie's Variety Store, R. B. Corcoran, Emerson Cleaners, Mr~ & Mrs. James Michael Murray Sears Package Store Inc., Mr. & Mrs. William Mather, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Doucette,'Arthur Poirier, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Gel inas, The Looking Glass .
OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION $50
Abramson,. Titus & .Levenson
$30
Mr. & Mrs. Severo G. Alf.ama $26 Dist. Chief .& Mrs.. Joseph P. Silva $25 Joseph M. Ramos . Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rogers ·Antonio Decruz Bernard Kestenbaum
..
,.
".
" ~
ST.. JOSEP~ . ,$25 Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Boisse .. ,'Sodality' of St. An"n'.' " . ST. MARK: · . .. .$25 ' . ' ' ." Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J: Kile~. Jr. Dester S'ilva" . . . ,... • Mr. &.Mrs. Vincent ,McGee · iohn·E. ~iou:,,<;' ,Mr.. &~r,;.Tho~·J.RUBIa:..
Q
. Hinski, A Friend ':Mr. &: Mrs: Walter Szewczy- kowski, Mr. & Mrs. Johri:Staple-
. ton Jr:, Mr: & Mrs. Fred Wright·,
G: "
Mr. ,& .Mrs. Norman Iceihiy. $"5 '" . "
CORREIA' & SONS SOuth' E a s t o n · ' . . .
H .. Morse·
. .' HOLY CROSS . . ' ..... ::.$30 " David y. Br~n $25 JoSeph M.Hurley, B~rbaraE....
ONE STO'P'
~~
.~
SH?PPING . CENT~R .• 'Grocery ..', F 't .., pp lancel,~urnl. ur.e... DoIJoff,·Mr.. &.· ·Mrs.·· Leo . M.:.,'· ~-104 Allen . Sf., Hew Be.dford Brophy Sr., Vose & SQn ~upply; : "997-9354 ' "
Able Air: Equipment
~,'. A· Television r
&f Service,' , .':
. '.
8' ,1..1.. . . . . . . . ._
:. , .. .~ ~ , ...-'
'. ,I.·S.sO.
~.
.' .
·HE·A·T·'......-'G' '. '0. IL [:"Ill
' ........
._._.,_'_ _'"_'_"_ _
Battle StiR On for Tourney' Berths:" •
i'
,1
"
~·O'·_""-'"'''-'''''
,-
..',
...- . -
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+:
'Bish@[9) '~Bs~grrees With (6@QUfetrence On S~[}u@«J1 Asd' PHILADELPHIA (NC)-->
By PETER BARTEK
Methodist Bishop F red
Norton High Coach
Pierce Corson has split with the Philadelphia Annual
What a difference a ye~ makes! The SeeKonk W MTiors, bs~ place finisheni a year ago, will represent the Narragan sett BaBeoall League in the Eastern Massachus~tts cham pions'hip baseball tou111ament. Co-chamrpions Seekonk and Somerset completed the cam parallels that of the rign with identical 10-4 directly 1967 Boston. Red Sox. ,records, both earning the Prognosticators thought See right to participate in the konk lacked adequate pitching
The Warriors, playing in only their second season in the loop, completely reversed their ree .ord of a year ago to gain a share o:f the crown. The story
19 •
Seekon,k's '~ags.to~R'Dch~s", C'imb . ~est Area Showing
tourney whiCh gets underway
next Saturday. Coach Jim Sul
livan's Raidern,'
a perennial con
tender, are fre
quent winners
of the Natty
champion
ship. The Raid
ers finished sec
ond last Spring.
It is DO surprise
to find the vet
eran 'mentor's
,c 1 u b perched Peter
atop the league. Bartek
But" Seekonk's 'showing is one
of' the major schoolboy sports
stories, of the year in this area.
THE ANCHORThurs., May 30, 1968
and bench strength to be a se rious title contender. But, under the guidance of Coach George Bowers, the Warriors ,proved early in the campaign that they were a team to be reckoned with when -they defeated defending champion Case HiglJ of Swa~; sea. From that point on, the first year coach had his charges moving. Entering the last week of the season, the W:arriol\ll h~ to match wins with Somerset if 'they were to gain a'share of the 'crown. And, match Wins they did. Thus, in its second year in the league, Seekonk under a new head coach, with a few re turning veterans, gained the pinnacle of the area schoolboy sports by winning 1:1 berth in the Class B championship tour namtmt.
NEW COACH ADDRESSES CLUB: Members of the Boston College Alumni 'Club heard Joe Yukica, new foot ball coach at BC, describe next year's prospects by means of films of the spring scrimmage. Left to right: Dr. Robert F. Mealy of Taunton, Tony Abraham of Somerset, Coach Yukica, Jack Kineavy of Somerset, and aBsistant coach Bill Bowes.
30-Year Break 52-Yea!!' Old Californian Persevered Three DecClldes ~o Accomplish His Vocation
Conference of the United Methodist Church on the issue of state aid to non-public schools. Bishop Corson, retiring resi dent bishop for the Philadelphia area, said he did not agree witln a statement issued by the con ference opposing House Bill 217() which would create a state non public school authority to un derwrite the co~t, of teachinl1l secular subjects in non-publie schools. The conference statement saiell that passage of the bill, which has been endorsed by Catholic educational leaders, would r~ suIt "in the prollieration of private schools and further reli gious and cultural segregatiora subsidized by tax monies." For Good Ed'ucatioD Bishop Corson said he dif fered with the statement "pri marily because of its ambiguJ,c. ties." He claimed it opposed all aicll to n1>n-public education anc! said he endorses .iaid to those schools and colleges where the funds are used for providing the secular necessities for secular education, such as school trans J)(>rtation, library supplies, tex~ books, laboratory equipment and such needs for the provision of good education."
LOS ANGELES (NC)-Father scoutmaster, retreat captain and Antlwny Gussin, a newly ordain Confraternity o:f Christian Doc ed priest at 52, perservered 30 trine teacher at Los Angel1s years to attain his vocation. And, County Juvenile Hall. in those 30 years he's be'en a ,In 1965, after 27 years, he re C!C!l!l$ C P~ay round - in prisons, migrant turned to the seminary, Mount camps, aerial combat, business Angel (Ore.) Seminary's school 'rnle Narraganseltt co-cham standings going into the final and in the slums. of theology. There, despite an pions will face the co-champions week of league action. . Father Gussin spent most of accelerated program, he found' of the Old Colony League in At this writing Mansfield of time to teach religion to migrant first round action. Official the Hockomock League and the last three decades as a lay man here in Los Angeles. He left worker's children, teach theo Sl!!c~ee«1J$5 pairings have not as yet been Norton of the Tri-Valley Con announced but the Narry rep-' ference are. engaged, in a battle the seminary in 1938 because, of logy and Scripture at Oregon State Prison and work in two Arr<e!hJ~o$~OP resentatives will meet Whitman for their "tournament lives." A illness in his family. A B-17 gunner) in World War boys' homes. OTTAWA (NC)-Bishop Pa~ Hanson Regional and Middle defeat for either club means He was ordained, May 18, in Gregoire, 56, a strong supporteli' boro. The Old Colony duo end elimination from any possibility II, he was shot doW'!\. over Ger many and became a prisoner of Immaculate Conception Cathe .of the ecumenical movement, ed the campaign with 13-5 of a tourney berth.' has been named by Pope Paull league marks. If both Somerset Coach Jack Dunn's Mansfield war. After the wat: he becam'e dral ,Portland, 'Ore., for the Port an' auditor and accountant in Los land Archdiocese. The new priest VI to be archbishop of Montreal and Seekonk are victorious in GrElen Hornets are, locked in a returned here to offer a Mass of "to succeed Paul Emile Cardinall their initial contests they second place tie with Foxboro ,Angeles. Later, he assumed"the presi thanksgiving, at his old parish ~eger, who left l\fontreal la~ . face each other in the second 41 the" Hockc;>mQc~ ,loop. Both elimination round. ' ' ar l all' but mathematically out dency., of, a St. Vincent de Paul church, Immaculate Conception,'" Dec. 11. and is now doing mis- Society Particular Council in the, in doWntown Los ¥geles. Two , sionarj work among lepers ~ of the running f,or, the cham Dennis-Yarmouth hi anxio~ poor, central ,city', became 'a "of' his l1isters are nuns, one 8ta 'Africa.' ' 'ly awaiting the completion of pionship as Canton holds a, two tioned in "or'" , , " , " Chintbote, .: "Peru. he appointment was aJlc> play in the 'CaPe, and Island gam,e edge with only'three con- ' tests re~ai,ning., Henc~ the sec League' to asce~in its oppo .KOf 'C nounced here by the apostoUe , nent in the state toumey, Class ond place battle takes' on added delegation. " signif!cance ,as both ·the league, <:- ~ince Cardinal' J;.eger's deC qu~rte.r fi~a1. ' ehll:MPion 'and second-place fin SOUTH-BEND (NC)-The 67th Continued from Page One, ',' par:tJlre, Bishop Gregoire h3ll Coach M~rin Wilson's club isher qualify for Class B" tour anriual lndia~a, Krijghts".of Co-' :Sept. 23, 1917. He attended Holy," beep serving as'administrator of anJilexed the pennant this sea ney competition. "- , son' after sharing the title with 'Norton, ti~d 'with Millis'f~r 1umbus meeting' he~e endorsed a Family High School, Providence ,,tI~eMontreal archdiocese, larg est ,in Canada. A close friend of Dartmouth last Spring. The Dol DiV'.ision ,B laurels, must survive four-point program backing' the," College and St, Bernard's Sem establishment of the Indiana mary, Rochester. the cardinal, the archbishop phins ,will undoubtedly meet a playoff contest and then de Newinan Foundation. ' H e served as an assistant in' designate was born in Verdun, Sandwich of the smaller Cape feat Division A champion, the Sacred Heart Church, Taun Que" and was ord~ned to the I ~chool league. Sandwich leads Hopedale, if it is to advance to A .resolution 'passed endorsed ton and the Holy Name Church, priesthood on March 22. 19~ Harwich by two· games in the the tourney. . t e d on D ec. 1,' e stablishment of the Indiana Fall River, until his assignment He was co n se era, , , Newman Foundation: to assist pnMarch 6, 1966, as administra-' 1961 to serve as ,an auxiliary Gu~ss the Indiana bishops in meeting ,tor of St. John the Baptist bishop of Montreal. , , ' I. responsibilities for Catholic edu~ Church,' Central Village. Father ,I, Bish~p F.eehan Higb of Attle- Iw~e.ver, has' been able to build" ..cation and formation, of Catholic COIlZa' ,was named pastor of the ", , boro' appears to be ~eadec;l.for n, cushion, upon which' to rest. young ,Mople; 'encourage local 'i Sacred Heart Parish; Oak Bluffs, a repeat Bristol County League ,Entering the final week of th counciIs. to develop programs in November 1966. c:h~p~onsh~p and another' Posi-,' season" Bishop Feehan climOO:" ~~ed at alerting ~~e Chur~b, in Father Kenney,' sOn' of the late i 'SLAB BRIDGE ROAD season tourney bid. ,But, then back into first place, thanks to IndIana to the urgent needs, of' ,James F. and late Harriei A. agalri, '. it' appeared as though depa,rtin,g North, 'Attleboro. Ca.tholic,' students on non-Cath 'ASSONET, MASS. 02702 N'' l i (Korzeneski) Kenney, was bom ' ,Tel. 644·5556' Bis h,op Sta f ,. hngd'. ,High ortb The Red Rocketeers,' who W1'U 4) c,', cam,puse!!. , th all b '0 Jan. 19, 1918 in Fall River. He b ar't'mou a ut won the be participating in Hockomock Also ,enc,ourage Ideal councils atteQded Durfee High School, BOILERS RETUBED
k ago. Anything League beainning in September, to sponsor activities,designed to , ccro:wn, h a wee . BCL t· d ... Providence College and St. Ber- TUBIES 'REPLACED
, an' ,appen In ac lon, an, upended front-runner Stang to raise fund,S for the benefit of ... i 11 h!fn . tho S . nard's Seminary, Rochestl;!f. 24 HOUR SERVICE
•• s ,a w ...~Dlng IS pnng. give ,the Shamrocks another such stqd~nts' and ,to channel FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE
DQrf~ ,High of Fall River, life. Coach Tom Maccrone's the funds through the state counOrdained by the late Bishop Feehan, Stang and Taunton Feehanites took ad'vantage of cil to the Newman, Foundation; Cassidy on June 5, 1943 in ,St. . 'Higl:1, all' have - held the lead the upset by turning back the and urge establishment within Mary's Cathe~ral, Fall River, the }>Qst at one time or another dur Spartans to move into undis- the state council of a committee Osterville jubilarian served as \ng the pr~sen:t campaign. None, puted first place. to help' the bishops of Indiana an assistant at St. Mary's Cath With Stang and Taunton to meet the Church's responsi edral and St. Louis parish, both trailing by only one ga'm~ bility on thesecular campus; '-" in Fall River, and the Holy Fam nothing is positive about the ily Parish, East Taunton. C II P"d From 1945 to 1951, Father Ken . 'BQSTON (NC)-The Natio~all . senior' circuit's tourney repre a '0 ney was CYO director and Boy : F i' re' 'Protection ' Association sentatives. Whoever-wins the title. wi,ll LADySMITH (NC)-Dr. Wal Scout chaplain for the Fall River (NF.P4,) with headquarters here , reported' that major fir~s, cost be called upon to meet either ,ter H. Thomson, of, ,Detroit has • Ai-ea; and from 1951 to 1957 he U"S.;::,~h?ols and colleges Nati~k or Walpole, ,'the two been named president of Mount, was diocesan CYO director and ' $23,065,000 'in 1967. This was ,the . clubs fighting fO,r :the, runner- Senario' College here in Wiscon:"Diocesan Scout' chaplain. , the Bay 'State 1>in; operated by 'tlie Servants of While an assistant'in the East value ,of'iiestruction caused by up spot 33 large.,.loss fires,...those "with' League. The geL rU'lUl;er-up will Mary. Dr. Thomson is' currerttiy' f Taunton parish,' he' "earned an individual losses of $250;000 C'l batt~e .. DedMm, proba):)le cham- a prOfessor of' SdClology at M. Ed. degree from"Bi.-idgewater pion of the Bay State League. Mercy, College, Detroit. "".' 'State' College ilil~4; '/:" ."; I-""""======..... ~ ,more. 0,
,
Dell1nis-Yarmouth in
<Cardiuud
As
will
State,,' Backs" New."aan' Program '
J,u,bilarians"
.,',
,: ,:
Outcome, in BCt, AnybodY'$'
t'l
:TRI CITY
BOILER R'EPAIR CO.
. Fire Losses '
ege
"
,
'res. ent
In
_-=.. . .
.
.
20
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., May 30, 1968
. '
0,
I '.'
•
'.
Un,iversity ReQffirms Policies on lace
~
i.J'
I.
'.
P~ej~dice R~pugnant
Judge Sentences
Josephite Priest
To'Six Years
:BALTIMORE (NC)-Father
!Philip Berrigan, S.S.J., 44 y~ar-old Catholic priest, ·,and.
Thomas P. Lewis, 28-year
old artist and Catholic 'peace
reader, have bOOn seritencedto
six years eaeh in federal prison
for muUiliiiirig government
'JPe<:ords in an October anti-draft
demonstration. ' ,
Father, Berrigan ,and Lewis
along, with two other 'demon
f!trat~rs ~ere convicted ,by, a
federal' jury and sentenced by
Federal Judge Edward S. North
JI'Op on charges stemming, from
an incident on Oct. 27 in which
the four men poured six bottles
of blood into the file at the
Maryland Selective Service 'of-'
,fice in the Baltimore Custom
.;p House,
The other two convicted were
the Rev. James Mengel a United
Church of Christ minister, and
David Eberhardt, secretary of
the Baltimore Interfaith Peace
Mission.
Mr. Mengel was given a "t~h lllicaI" full term of 18 yeat'S RE-ELECTED: Msgr. Ter':' '- which amounted to a postpon..;. ment of sentencing. Judge renee P.McMahon, executive Northrup requested a 9O-day editor of The Catholic Trail· . study including psychiatl'ic tests of the defendant and to script, Ha,rlforq, has been re obtain it was required to impose elected president of the Cath ilhe maximum 'sentence. Eber- ~ otic Press Association. for ~ '. bar'dt was sentenced to three soo~)Dd one-year term. ;veal's.
Appea.l Convictions
Court appointed defense at
~~~~$e$· torney Fred E. Weisgal said all four convictions will be ap MM~Ote pealed, Mr. Mengel was released on NEW ORLEANS (NC) In personal recognizance and '$7,500 an ecclesiastical sort of v.:ay,· !bail was set for Eberhardt. Archbishop PhiHp M. Hannan is· .Judge Northr.up refused baH a swinger-he ·digs jazz. pending appeal on Father Bet· Preaching to a standing-room- . Rigan and Lewis, who were only congregation in 81. Louis' acheduled to be. 'arraigned later cathedral at·a Mass for deceased in the day on sfmilar charges jazz musicians, the New Orleans, resulting from "another anti archbishop asserted: ,"Jazz .:was ' Cl!raft demonstration in May., the gift of the Negro' to 'suffer Father Berrigan and Lew-is. ing humani~y and its value, I' IlDad been free' ,ori personal, re- " thi.nk, has been greatly: under-, <rognizance awaiting conviction' estimated." fot· the October incident when' It's a ~· ....ehicle for the expres they participated in the Mav sion of the hopes, the sorrows, demonstration.' Neither M~. the trials, the joy, the frustation Mengel nor Eberhardt was in of, many peoples, though the vol ved in the iater demonstra language was that of. Negro , tion, , ,
ot'igi.n," ,Archbish()p Hannan:' Burned Files " Father Berrigan and' Lewis said. Culture were among nine 'demonstrators arrested May 17 after storm ing . The archb~s'hop said it was into a Selective. Service office fitting that "in this Mass we in Catonsville, Md., and burn pray for the musicians who have ing some 600 draft files. contributed to the formation of ~ Following the second demon jazz," II form of culture which ,stration, Father Berrigan was has . benefited "our whole relieved of his duties as assist country." ant pastor at St. Peter ClaveI' On the observa'nc~ of the birth" 0hurch in Baltimore. ,The action of jazz, Archb'ishop Hannan was announced by Father said "Let us pledge to use its . George O'Dea, S.S.J., super'ior potential f9r the development general of the Josephite Fathers. of the human spirit." He added:· The Society of Jesus, however "May it give voice to the trials, 'planped no action against of suffering and the depriv,ed,' Father Berrigan's brother - ' but let it al~ ring out with the, Father 'Daniel Berrigan, S.J. aspiratiorts of .man toward GOO, for his participaticm in the May, realizing that there is no full demonstration. Neither will the: joy in any song unless the last -.Jesuits post the $2,500 bail Wl ~ote reaches toward Him." det' which Father Daniel Ber The· Mass was ,held in con-' ngan is. being held. junction with the celebration of', the 250th anniversary' of the ~sk PaD'tidpation city and th~ 175th anniversary of the archdiocese. ~n PONCE (NC) -A group of Puerto Rican lay persons asked ({ol' increased dialogue between irst laity and the hierarchy and , WHEELiNG (NC), ' - The greater lay participation in the Wheeling 'diocesan" CoUncil of administrative affairs of the - Sisters held its initIal meeting Church at tlle conclusion of it at St. Joseph's Seminary, Vien., ~wo-day meeting here. ,na, W:Ya., 'recently. The counSome 50 men 'and. women par-, cil is composed of 36 :deanery' ticipated in the meeting S1>00- representatives chosen by direct sored by the Interdiocesan Team election, and 24 community del for AwareneSs at' the Larrain' egates appointed to represen~ eeuter. ' each.. community in the diocese.
1)AYTON (NC)---The Univer sity of ' Dayton'administration has 'rea#irmed its policy on racial discrimination with two statements released through Brother Elmer C. Lackner, S.M., vice-president for public relatio~., , The two statements, entitled "The University of Dayton's Policy on· Discrimination and Prejudice," imd the "The Uni-' ,versity of Dayton's Policy OR, Discrimination in Housing," were a joint,effort of the school's public relations' 'council, ~,
which Brother Elmer is chair man, and the" administrative' council, the university;g top ad, ministrative body under Father Raymond A.' Roesch, S.M., 'pres ident.' .
to' Christ~n ' Principles Wy ,is lntorerable;that the'lmi versitty has the responsibility 1:0 provide adequate housing for aD i1s students; and that the university wUl take effective measures to investigate and re !folve all instances of ·dlBcrimi· nation,"
• The. fi,rat statement reads: "The university reaffirms' its policy 'that discrimination and prejudice again~t any person or group because of race, color" creed, national origin. or an cestry are repugnant w the principles of Christianity and b our American tradition' of equal- . ity and opportunity for all; that the university has the respon lIibility to insure equality and opportunity to all persons and g':'Oups re~ated to the university.'; Akeady in' Operat~D)
'Brother Elmer salth "These policies have been inoperatioo at the university for ~ long time. We feel, however, that it is appropriate in these troubled times to state our position pub licly," ()
On, housing the councilssai~ "The' :Uri v~rsity of Dayton' up holds, as policy that discrim ination in: housing against any pers~n because of race, color, creed" .na tional origin or ances-
He said the university is :ccm
ducting an intensive review of
the functions of its human rela
tions office which wa's estab lished on a tentative basis last Winter.
Preiate
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Administration
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Cathedral Ca·...p
Resident and 10ay Camp fen· Boys '
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I
Lady" of the Lake D~y Ca:mp,
.
for Girls
Sponsored by the Ro~an: Catholic Dioc~se of.' Fall ~iver ; 'LOCATED ON LONG POND, ROUTE 18; EAst 'FRE~OWN, MAS'S. 0"
,
•
RESI DENT CAMP
'.
49th Season ~-dune 30 thru 'August 24....;... 8 Week Season
Dioces~n 'Seminarians - College Students 8. Teachers Under direction Staff: o~
q Diocesan Priest.,
Program:
Sailing;, swimming, water skiing, horseback' riding, rifiery, archery., hiking, overnight ca",!ping trips, 'arts & crafts, Indian 'crafts, camp crafts, athletic (team ,& individual) competition and inter-camp 'competition, professional tutorial service available.
facilities:
Private beach, large: luxurious camphouse, dining hall, modern washrooms, arts and crafts buildings, camp store and office, first aid and 'infirmary, beautiful chapel, overnight and weekend accomoda ,tions ,for parents.' ' ,
I
8 WEEK PERIOD "$325 -
' .
4 WEEK PERIOD $165 .... 2,)VEEK PERIOD $85
Cathedral Day Camp'
~()r..
Boys
Camp, Fee 35.0'Q :'f~ 2 wk. peri'od. .' Camp Fee' $125.00for 8 wk. season period. fEES INC~UD~: Transportation,' Insura,nce, Ar!s & Crafts, €a'lit~en, Hor~eback Riding. Weekly Cook-Outs & Milk Daily without Added Cost.· 0" • _JULY 1
~,
•
AUGUST
., <;)ur 'Lady of
23
.th~·
lake Deiy Camp For Girls
JULY 1 :... AUGUST 23, Camp'F~ 35.0~Hor,2 wk. period. CaJ11p Fee $1,25..00 .for 8 wk. season period. , fEES INCLUDE:' Transpo.r!ation, Insurance,·Arts & Crafts, Canteen, Horseback Riding, Weekly Cook'9uts, Milk Daily without Added Cost. " . ; , ,For further in/ormation
~i"ite" toi
., ,REV. WALtER' A.: SULLIVAN,' O'irector Box: 63 - East Freetown, M~ss; 027.17
P.O.