Only for Dedicated Pries ts are ma:ture men ...... the price is the coinage of when they are ordained and pain." Msgr. Stanton said: Efh,t)uld realize fun well that tsheUIr lao()l"S in the Vineyard 'Wle life cd' a priest, contrary tD God are only {-or the dedi says Rt. Rev. Robert L. Stanton, rector of St. Mary's Ca ~,
fbedral in Fall River. ~peaking on Cape Cod at the 5th ordinatl9D anniversary mass of thanksgiving for Rev. <liarnes F. Kenney, pastor of Our Lady of the Assumption 'in Os ~vme ,the Fall River prelate asserted claimants "lie" when they say celibacy is impossible • he. emphasized that the "gift of Holy Orders anq the awesome powers which are a consequence Gl its possession have a price which must be paid oil • • (and)
tJo common opinion,' is hard and demanding. Only the dedicated and disciplined man can live it. The highest tribute that can be given 10 Father James Kenney is: tJbat he has lived this life fur 11 quarter century wi.thout ~ltering. Here is a man. All; age 25 he knelt before his bishop and gave himself to God!
ANCHOR Yot. ] 2, No. 25 June 20, 1968 @
1968 The Anchor
'!JlrUGe 1Oc
'$4.00 per Year .:
youngsters. They have had ad e qua te time to consider what the Catholic priesthood involves:-the step to Holy Orders is made with full knowl ed'ge and freedom. Hindsight ill both dishonest and cowardly. No one would be so rash as to claim that the observance of the vow of celibacy is easy. There are some who now claim it is impossible. They lie. The loyal lifelong fideHty to this priestly demand tells the world that love, generosity and cour
Holy See Directs New Prefaces
And Canons Effective Aug. 15
111,. FR. F. It. McMANUS
WThe
and His Churoh. No more seri ous engagement can be made by mortal man. Like the v 0 cat ion of marriage, it carries with it lifelong obligations and re sponsibilities.These ~ ust be met, There is no honor able escape. Men whoenterthe ranks of Christ's priesthood a I' e . Monsignor not i m mat U re stanton
Cathedral Rector Notes Courage, Generosity Are Priesthood Armor
T h r e e new eucharistic prayers, corresponding to the present R()man canon of the Mass, along wi·th a series ()f new prefaces that will be in troduced into the' Mass on Aug. 16, libould serve 10 enrich and enliven the celebration of Mass. Tbis stoep, taken by Pope Pallll VI at the recommendation of the Synod of Bishops last October, will a1so help to relieve the rig idity of the M'3SS text.
Even the fresh English trans lation of the traditional Roman eucharistic prayer, in use since last Fall in the United States, 'has become monotonous to many people. In 1967 Pope Paul re fused· the request of Iriany hundreds of bishops that the . Roman canon. be Father shortened, especiMcManus ally by reducinc
the iisb of saints. Besides this, the daily recitation of the Roman pra~rin English has' revealed the complexities of the Latin orj·ginal-with its peti tions scattered through the long text, with repetition of' certain themes (like the theme of of fering) and the neglect of others (6UO~ as the theme of praise and thanks). The old expression, "canon of the Mass," has deliberately given way to "eucharistic. prayer" for Tum to Page Six
age, reinforced by God's grace are' the shining armor which pr~t
the warrior for Christ. As a very young man, this re markable priest, with whom we rejoice today, was keenly aware of a truth which in this era is too often forgotten or ignored by those who indulge in novel, spectacular or' even bizarre methods of service to God. The exCitement, the glamor of lead ing demonstrations, sitting illl on TV panels or becoming in volved in matters in no way, to their own terminology, rel evant to Christ's mission and ~at of His Church, intrigue3
use
them.
But it is not enough to want the Faith to spill over into the market-place. The priest isJ called upon by His Divine Mas ter to shape the mal'ket-place itself into the image of the Faith. The priest with vision, the man who allows Divine Grace to help him see things as they are remembers well that the Churcll of God does not stoop to conquer; she elevates to save. The magnificent mind of thisJ good man who sits among \IS this morning embarrased for himself but proud for you, his people, pereeived, as all priests should, that the gift of Holy Orders and the atWcsome pow ers which are a consequence of Tum to Page Two
Regional CFM Meets June 28 lin Newton
Newly Ordained Diocesan Priest At Notre Dame
Mr. and Mrs. William. Growley ()f Aittleboro, chwir colJple of the Fall River Diocese Chr.istian Family
Rev. Kevin F. Tripp, among priests ordained last month for this Diocese, is one ()f 100 invited partici~
Movement (CFM) have an QOunced the second bi-annual In'ea convention of the CMF will be held June 28 and 29 at the Newton College of the Sacred &&3rt in Newton. MOI'e than 500 couples from 111 over New England are ex ~ to attend the two day Imleeting which will have as it's eteme "Up, Up, with Persons" and is based around Pope Paul's encyclical "On the development ei peoples." Mother Bessie Chambers, IUl ....oritative Scholar, lecturer ~ counselor in psychology fDom Boston CoI'lege will ad ~ the convention in the dig aity of people as individuals Irileyooting the convention theme -up, Up, with Persons". 'J!'uJrn to Page Eighteen
~u5hallgo .
be vrethe PROCLAIMS THE COMING OF THE LORD: The feast of St.John the Baptist, which will be observed on Monday next, June 24, procl'aims the coming of the Lord. Inspired by John's example and urged on by Christ's love for all, let. us not fear to be· witnesses for Him, making acts of kindness, love and justice an actual daily practice in OUt' lives. Three diocesan parishes are under the patronage of the Pre<::ursor of Ohrist.
pants in the Third Annual Na tional Faith and Order Collo quium, now meeting at the Kel log Center for Continuing Ed ucation at the University of Notre Dame. The Colloquium, spon90red by the National Council of Ohurehes, Depart ment of F-aith and Order, pro vides a forum for the churches of America for Faith and Order issues. The topic for tbe sessions is "Salvation and Man's Hopes." After the editing of this year's papers and discussiollB, an In ter-disc.iplinary colloquium wlU be convened in ll969, wi,th psy chologists, sociologists, anthro pologists and theologians par ticipating. . Father Tripp presented a paper on ''The Liturgical Celc ,Turn to Page Nineteen
Diocese to Host Regional CYO Conclave Catholic School Population Shows Considerable Drop
June 28 Session Includes Young Adult .ProgrCllffi
More than 250 officers of WASHINGTON (NC)-Some 60,000 students were Catholic Youth Orsranizations Wt'lrlOO away from Catholic elementary and high schools dur from a six-state area will ling the past two years because ()f dropped grades and strin gather in Fall River next g'ent new policies on class size. At 1eMt 313 Catholic s(~hools weekend, June 29-30 for the' 16th Annual Congress of the closed completely Bind more through ~e office of Msgr. New England Council of Cath 'l!iha'll1l 300 others have been James C. Donohue, director of olic Youth, (CYO), and 'the 9th merged with othell schools tate department of edl!cation, Annual Congress of Catholic Young Adults, (CYAO). mJllce :1..966. Moroover, there United States Catholic Confer were a:t least 216,000 fewer stu dents En Ca11holic ~hools in the
year just ended than there were only two years ago. '!'hese findings emerged from lrePlies 00 a questionnaire ini tiG'ted by Ne News Service and ~t 00 each 02 the nation's ~1)lic ecllool BU,!}erin:tenden.w
school
ence. The survey was undel"taken because of a flood of reported school clos.ings, dropping of grades and consolidatiolllS. Responses came from HI of the ll56 U. S. dioceses. Had the otIher .~-5 dioceses responded, ~ 'lI'Ulllflm to Page EighteeJlll
The affair will mark the first time in the history of the dio cese that the Fall River Dioc esan CYO has hosted a duat congress. In 1959, prior to the establishment of the . CYAO, F·all River's Diocesan CYO Council was chosen to host n Turn to Page Sixteen
•
Wisconsin' Prelate Scores Critics of Renewal Pat':e CHICAGO (NC)-"The flesh is ever so much easier'
to touch and to work with than the soul," said Bishop Aloysius J. WY'cislo of Green Bay, referring to post-Vatican Council II critics of the U.S. Church who see it being led too hesitantly into the fields Vlleology purports to accom of social reform. Bishop Wy plish." cislo said these critics hold Bishop Wycislo, who spent that "too many bishops re years in social service work as fuse to join the crowd who. af firm the primacy of social ser vice, and these bishops contin ue in their obstinacy to persist in the primacy of the spiritual sanctification of souls: some thing more subtle, less obvious, and certainly less immediately satisfying !:han the new social
a director of American Catholic overseas relief activities, said that instead of failing in leader~ ship, the U. S. bishops have pro vided the kind of dedicated di rection that "were it not for the critical editorializing and writ ing of so many so-called Cath Turn to Page Nineteem
2
.THE ANCHOR~Diocese
.Says
of Fan River-Thurs. June 20, 1968
PrDe(§fi'hood ,Quly
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Ch~~ch0S~~~~~r~.d,. Hosp~t~ls
.Respo!t1d . to' Com~unlty ~eed~.
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PHILADELPHIA (NC) , nOt relevantfor' the People .. "Continued from Parge' One We have Divine a s s i J r C ! n c e - - C h u r c h - s p o n S O r e d health and ~. to question tbei~ i~~~lveIts possession have a price tha·t that this ChurCh of ours' will hospital facilities have a tradi ment in health care facJ1~ti.es. mU&t 'be paid. life does not endure until time ends-but tion of being responsive to She' 'observed 1bat rehgIous differ from ours, whatever hap this is no guarantee that it will community needs, Dr. Cecil G. hospitals arose ~use on~ piness any of us has had came survive in an a,tmosphere of Sheps told .the Catholic Hospital ~y "were ab~e to bnng. to the at a price and the cOlSt so often peace and tranquility. The cat Associa-tion's convention here. IlDYct1l collllJloU.1lity 1he vanety 01 . til e acomb b e nea th u s and be. ral d·_....-" iDg prepared personnel,to~long unstint demanded has been paid In s 'are Dr.. Sheps,. gene. h~r."., commitment and coinage of pain. J'ames Francis hind us, they may also be ahead Beth I~rael. MedIC .. al ~nter. bregular hours of duty, and the Kenney has learned this lesson of us. Would-be thinkel'6 are New York City, Bald· ~ IS par willi to contribute to the well and in 80 doing has tampering with basic caD()DS -of ticu1aI'ly crucla1 at ihe present ?gI1ess brought joy, pea.l:e and solace to· religiop.s practice. It has become . time to make maximum use of. ~)1tal the monetary value ..r those be serves. . . a pet parlor game among the such facilities and specialized 'lbeu. own servie.:e that made the IIt is' a simple fact that we intellectuals (self anointed of personnel "to meet the health =~ ec:on.~~ and fImohave. in this life greater capaci.. course) to confuse and trouble needs ~ ~e community as a The :y ~I ~clal said that ties for pain than for pleasure. the sincere who may mistake .commumty.. . though "times have changed, We can and do enjoy ·perfecr~Y. the game for truth. T·heir 're ,Dr. Sheps Sl!ld ,that,. con~ and local state and federal go.... legitimate pleasures, but if ,we specl for the supernatural is as to what mi~ have ';,been ~~-. ermnent,' t h r 0 ugh Medicare, pursue them abnonn'ally they sauIted and ridiCuled. They feel '.pected, sectarIan hospItals ha:v~ Medicaid' OEQ. and, othei' pro reach a poI'nt where'.' they' ..... inferior in the presence of such bee 1 di th th f 11 ' . U L B . . . n . ea ng ra er . an' 0 ow._ _, are' bringm'.g 'bea'l,th care " .' '-4.- pa'm'-they wound' us. . . . .' self-assured saIeslnen of. change . tb' L . I _ JIll"'" , '.. . '. jng throwmg open. Ti · ckll'ng begm'~ with··:!a"-'. . whether itbe'p~in'~~ ox: nOt, . . in .._ th _ 'Blr, .... ....c~':', to. the., 'poor,'" the need' fOT the ", "'6"~"'" ,. ., . , ' mes'. .. ,¥I., 'Ci'bureh '.'to ,.deliverhealth ~ and ends wi,th pain. ",-,.,:~ Philosophical F~d.;tI:\eologicai ' . , hoi M I " de' communl'oY''' de lop' g asnew d D ;oAI·plm·e Takes·Time ;....,... IPU;rnnasts bel.ong'in iv.ory towBOQriJ,ON ·AUXILJARY·. c.... w e an m' ve In bal'· "',vieestoanapparently'indrepen "'" ....... , ; 'Y. JI.: ". . " . " ~ " programs' to, ·meet·,, new', c ~ .. eDt.. and self-(X)nfident: Americaa
With pain it is quite: d~er:-., ers, preferab}y barred. Unfortu-Msgr:Dan:~elA. C.t:OJhn of the ' "lenges~' . . ,.':.' ' l I U b l i c J s as' great.as ever;?' ", '. ent: in times· of intense~~er;'. nately they. the adulation . S t ' 'f State ing we are certain' we'·.eould of the' crowd' to survive. It iSB VatIcan ecre·· Ia '0' . . Widening' Partlclpatiolll W IK. Ab not bear it, if it wen..• ·on a,roo strange. paradox but a ._. 'Wue one. has bee.n.·.·apnnin.t~. Jc'''' l/ MlJ ...-wJ \"y.Pope . He sal'd the .trend m' '~"e 1"_&_ ment longer. It goes beyond So many of the. non-;-students Paul VI to be titular bIs'hop olic Ohuroh of-de-emphasizmg . TRENTON (NC) ~ By voice that moment and we tap new those· who' barely squeaked of Egnatia and' auxiliary to' the institwtionatl role and Wte the.New Jersey Assembl7 layers of endurability! But through their seminary courses Richard Oardinal 'Cushing, phasizing the role of the people has passed .and sent to the Sen Dever does pain become plea II1ave become cheerleadel'Sin hb' hop of Boston 01 God parallels the... develop- Me a .resolution ~ establish a sure. No toothache ever becomes this· most dangerous .of all arc· IS. ". . . .• mentof Jewish,hospitals.which , '~iallegislative commj.ssion to ·.fun just because it ,lasts a week.· . g~me.lr-Truth or Consequences! have ,been .. supported ".by ~~. lltudy.welfare abuses wit~an eye A .. gOOd priest,the day, he.. . 'Aathority Necessary along ~he ·road. ol'~fe We .JewiSh people, rather.,than an to ievisions which Wi)uld. make ordained, when he. gives his . A. man of Father James Ken are the 'bette!; for it. '..' or~zed churoh. •..JD9re difficult to engage ia ... .' life, not most of it, or some of ney's perCeption with the .~-: Father o!am~' ~ Kenney is. e widening. ~mmunJty trauduIentpracti«;ea. ,0.' It; but all of it to his God', knows toral. instinct so mucha' Part. of man of' gigll11 tic ,i~t¢lle~ eqUal-' ,Pal'ticipaiUon. of ciy1~ I~Jlders on. " what his future is going to be him, is keenly aware "tBit 'when' led onl;y- b~ ·the. magmtude , ar Oatho~c. hosprtal .. ~~, D!r.,. ,. 0, and he understands 'why . he our people are. iiitl~d:.j,O':ile his co~I>aSsion',for. ,others .~. ,,$h~ said, ls. an .~pre.ssiOJl ~ ':.. .... ,.... must I>e. ready to meet ,.the price dlstrusttul of the 'old; 'tliey 'will genius ahdempathy. are .usuallY ,'·wbat. tile. Church ,. ~s,. for-e ~~~Y:of~e~.~ C:,e., ~~ of pain with every .l'esource he n'aturallY.be· susp'I"CW'us 0.1 .the rare acqu'al'ntances' r . . . :...:: h that ..Lo _ _.-d •........ n·. _. 1"""'-". esus, ss. I can muster. Why?-Because his . . . ' , . " :,'. -'.' .,: .' ';lI~ .• " " " ' " ~ ,~-~. "'" 'Proper; Glory; Creed; " 'reason tells him as it does us- new. Restoration of confidence We sli-l'!te :'Yl!th. reverence. ~, ..Il~rVl~ to its own. ~ple. . '.c. Preface' of Sacred Heart. God . once lost does not come easily. man sttlrnl'~t",·.bl.1rujelf~ yet.:so" ,,~nQthel" speaker, Dr.~Paul lJ. SATURDAy· ...... st. ".Paulin. . if we. live ogr lives. as, e . In Something happens to men of patient with weak director. of,the me4!,.. . Bishop,·Confessor. 'III Class. tended 'fie s~ouI~, :v.: . shall" reason when they hear.,certified ering-a. man royal.to hiS blsh",:, .' .cipe ,and. ~ligion d~paf'tmentl,~. White;. I " .' :~~ve pam.behmd·,In thIs,w?rld' publiciheologians, on their own op, to h,IS fellow pnests,.-a.~an the Amencan Medical Assocl~- .. SUNDAY-Third Sunday After WIth on'else's, in w~o has offered an .a~ldmg 1ion, said, there is only o.ne Pentecost. II Class. Green. Mas. d th~ rest of o.ur·posses~lons authority and enJoy endu:lng happIness sil1'llate that the .Holy . Father' 10vEl to his brothers and slster~ cause for the existence of . Proper' Glory. Creed; Preface In the ed next. LastlI~g plea:"u~ is can and should infallibly' de 'nor has h~ forg~tten tht; moth- church,.rela~~spitals,. "and 01. TriItity. ' rese:vg f~r·etermty. Pam 18 a elare ·that his predecessors were erly care gIven hIm by hIS wonthat is OhnstIan serVlce:- MONDAY-Birllh of John the &as:m thmg; we can. exhaust .not infallible. It's an ,old de;fl;ll aunts in past. !he, whether. it be physi<:al.. or Baptist. I Class. White. Mag N;re'masterPiece was ever with a new name. . .. bnlhance of his accomplish- .. itual.healing." Ch-ristIan Proper' . Glory· Creed' COl& e~eated in a day. It takes years
Auth?rity authors; It Orlgl ments. pas. not dimmed the be. said; must combat the mall'"; mon P;eface. ' , ror the artist to discipline his na.tes; It :ult:;s by.law; to deny ·memones of yester4ay. l~e has mg of people into objecls and .TUESDAY-st. William, AbboL mind and harids, then yeanf thIS premise ·IS to ·turn' ?a.ck the returned love for love m full 1hings, rather than human be ,. m Class. White. again· to· chisel away thestu~ clock 450 years· and, 'Jom the measure. ,. "mgs. WEDNESDAY ~ Sts.Johh and boni'marble to' make ·the form'. "death of thought", movement Love Gives. , .,. Need Is 'Great ... ', Paul, Martyrs: m Class. Red. . ';appear' . . ". of: refonnation times! This·ja Here is a man' fulfilled. Hill' Sister Maiy Brlgn,"preSident THURSDAY..,...Mass Of 'l"reced . Ever-Ready'···
. regression not progress: ,"With secret---6imple-be knew from,. of' t!i'e' catholic Hospi.t3I. Asso-' .. " ing" Sunday. IV Class; 'Greea. The greatest masterpiece 'Cd out authority ·there ,is no free the beginning-=-love- gives, .. }t.. ciation and admlniStratOt' of SIt. 'M-ass Proper; Common' PreI 'all-a' priest who loves and'is' dom-the word'·is anarehy. The doesn't take!. He .found :it iii "-'Maloy's Hospi'ta'i, '~ochester, ace. 'loved by God, is fonned only consensus opiniOn' is not ".neces:" home, and has lavished, itOll"'lI!finn:' addreSsed the Ciori-vention" by practice. A rather' strlmge sarily the voice of 'truth. 'I'he others every day of his, prj~-'·on :'Why Ohurch~spOllrorect preparation it i.lr-from the first teaching function Of ChriSt'll . hQOd. . "Hea1Jth Facilities?".. .., FORTY: HOURS
day of his' priesthood to his last, ~~~ ~a:t.:r~e anpa~pa':yIW:~: Why should there. be aDS: . it is. in. ~e spi* ~ '~the, times a real man of God· ~gin6 to wonder I that .Cathohcs'love . to-ask ."why" she said,. and it •. learn how to die-by dying to episcopacy~ ,
their priests, when we find II . . ' ". his own avarice,his 'own self -- Wandering Minstrels
man like James Francis Kenney' , 'JUne 23-Saered. Beart, No. Necrology~" ishness , his pride; his -envy, his '" . No man of c~deny the who could .have climebd any' Attleboro. sensuality, a thousand time$ a' p~sence ~ the Holy . SPirit ,.at. mountain to success, ehoosing' l11NE i8 Francis Xavier;' .. Hy day. He' knows he cannot Va~ican II. Sensible ~?l-temal. to carry the banner of Christ in Rev; Thomas C.Gunning, annis. well unless he practices' dying changes have been made and dignity and in tru1h. Is not hU 1947, :Assistant, St...· Lawrence, St. MaI:Y, New Bedford. by living' well in God's sight. there are more to .come-.but voice that of Christ's for us? .Js . New Bed:ford~ That 'my' dear friends'''is the . tOday is not forever. The ',Nmned not his Personal conduct a con .June. SO-Our Lady of the heart of the' matter. gold Of its effol'ts .will. appear in til11ling source of pride for aD . . reNE 30 AssumptioD, Osterville. A man gives biG' life' to GOd the ll,1ture. However, .. let me of us? Rev. A1pbonse M.: RenJere;' St. Hyacinth, New Bed because he possesses '8 wisdom make it clear, it will co~ ~n;ry W.herever be has been he b88 O.P.. 1961, DominiClUl Pri017, fwd. not given to all-he knows why under' the- . aegis,' . of .:qjvinely left his impress on pri.ests and' rail River. he is here and 'where he wants .gu~ded aut~ority.. ~tropger faith· people alike. The manner may reLY 3.,.., ". . .','" '" .~ ....._ _...~......_ _~ .c. togo. He is ready. in' t:Il~ vi~.?~. '~ill not be tPe beti,tag~., ~fl by .. :be .ordinary but the man,. the·, ,. -, :Rev. Thomas P. Doherty, 19.42, ,'" ' . . of his youth; he"is ready"at w.., o. ~e ,jet set.,exp.~~....~h,o.Joudly .....priest is m<lSt. extraordinary. Pastor,. st. Kilian, New Bedfonl. . " ,', .,\., 'zenith of his "in,telleel'iIlll .:ReSpect tor: Elderly ...... 'f. r and and persistently PX:~ai.W that '.. '.. productive powers, he·e'iS ready impatient zeal f-or. God and the . . ' . . . . . '. . :. . ,JULY f' .":' :.i" . ",,",e '. 1ft when old age has become bill ills ,of society have drawn them. rhe.r~,.1S . "an .el~erly pnest ..,Re ..' y._ J,.~ -A. Goyle,. S.T,L,.. "'., . " t.; ''''Inc.'. '. petulant companion. into a world tha,t has been wait-· ,;.. h e~... to<! _-:.~ with .' Ii·whom ~'f' Father ' . 1955, Pastor, lfoly :tlame, F.an ,<>. , ..•. Seek Adulation . lng breathlessly for their debut.;:·,J~IIl~.·'T·· e~eYte": v· · .', ~r ntme. ~v~~:.' ~,. d": .<,:~ FUNERAL SERVICE' . ! .-. Th ld ld 't I years. 0 en r· thelr·.;rec ory. When the time comes for; the-· e wor cou n care ess. was to walk into a home whose , ... . lBE'ARCIIOI" .• :-.. -,,, ,'1- ", ,!' , , " .'_ ., ., ,""', last stroke o~ life'.s brush, ,on~e .. ' While these :wanderin~ min,., walls . spoke of; a' .relationship " "Seco~d Class Posiag~ Paici .t· Fall River' NEW BEDFORD; "MASS. canvas of his prlesUlood., he 18 strels of confUSIon and dIsorder· between' the old and. the 'young' Mass. -·.Published every Thursday' at 4 1 G " ... ,. \. 8kill~ in it-:- he is not t:a ken by drop thei~ pearls of ~isdC?m .en .' that would make the angels' ~~g~'"bth~~~tire:llofR~:r'DI::~~:f~ , . ·549 COUNTY STREET surprIse - hIS tower WIll have route-let s turn to thIS kmd ¢ . sing!.' .. River. SubscrlptlOll price by' lRall: postpaid .. been completed-wheth.er' ·it· be man for direction. He has toil"d . M' . W'·:lli' 'Do"'1' .:. ...._ ~.OO per year.. .' ."f . sgr I am an-In ..... high or low matters not. It will· quietly through the years -. I te ··ht·' ~h' t ho or ,._..;,. ...;. ~------- __- -... only matter that he has fulfilled stalwartly, unshakeable, lucid ,in t~ ~~'. ~~ as comeh ,0, ~. the task God has given him:to thought, crystal clear in speech,: '/thPr~es.:w gave. f 1m : ... do. He has sent his treaSure·De relentless; in the pursuit of ~ __ :> e a~~~s Ythears,o .a Pfnhalf . - payable m . ' f ull on k nowled ge. . IJVVU exc<=UlDg e span 0 t
fore hIm a cen Ul;'y. • . .
.arrival by the one he . has earned the right to call brother. Loyalty My dear fnends cast off your. Benjamin Franklin. once re This finest of priests gives fe~rs .about the Church, She. marked that' when' the sun' is' at the lie to fadism and thesenlia WIll live on; the Son ,of God at .... ". the horizon it is difficult to de tional. He is' here surrounded' . w~l~ ,rem~in .~ith Us. He keeps. termine whether i·t is' rising or by brother priests, his parish-' HIS proml~es and ~ ~ong as ~" setting. A similar uncertainty' ioners, his' family and his . fashion~ t~e y~un~ prIests of ~. presents itself to the C11"'ch of friends. This'-man-an exemplar' morrow s yea~ ~ the. m0ulc,l . /. Christ in our day. The un' ;lown of soundnesS and balance is cel:',' of Jam,es~FranCls..K.enney~I eaza· .. is always frightening, but once ebrating half a lifetime in ihe ' make ·this pr~lSe -.f?r ~~, 1"1.5 WILLIAM 51\ E'xposed to vIew we meet it with· service of his Go<l. Church, of. ~h~~It. ,VI7,lU ~_ firmness and' oonstancy~' . We "meet his like just onCe ways be S~el ,,
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SANTE FE (NC) -ArchBy Patrici'a McGowan Jishop James P. Davis of Literally an apostle <Yf light is Brother William Bedard, LaSalette M1issioner from St. Santa Fe has established a .Anne's parish, Fall River. Late this Summer he'll be on his way to the Philippines, where apecial committee on Colonial his main job will be elootrif,iootion of 15 mission outpos'ts in the Province of Isabela, "the Chwrches to assure maximum poores-t in the I.slands," Brother William explained that the "best" of the miss,ions now ~reservaftion and restoration. of have electricity from 6 a.m. eburches of historical .signifi eance and artistic values to 6 p.m.-none at all in the throughout the .archdiocese. hours &f darkness. "If you're The archbishop announced at the end of the electric !flans for the new committee in
line, though, you'.re lucky to • letter to all pastors ond gov get enough power to light a en.ors of Indi'an pueblos in Ohristmas tree bulb. Ji:verything which he lamented the loss :iB direct current." .rough the yea,rs of early Brother William will seek to spanish and Indian religious remedy this situation in t.be La Irot in the area. Salette houses by installing . "In' order that we may work private generllJtors and 'modern _gether to preserve and show troper respect and reveren~ izing existing wiring. "There was <me house which the con-' tbr such religious art and archi t~wired for electricity 6ecture as remains in our midst," with telephone lines," he said k said, in the future: . with borror. For the electrically , No work of colonial art reignorant, it may be explained .rdless of complexity, size or ~at telephone wires C8llTY far importance shall be sold or less current than bouse lines .,a.ven to private pal'tieS. and Ilhwt this was an extreme Where possible these art -.orks should be "preserved and' example of sending a boy 110 do II/iIed as integral components of a man's job. "The" whole house (lle chapels and chu,rches where couJ.d have gone up in flames," said Brother William. tIley are now." Radio Network ' . Where "economically 'a n d iltru~turally possible" colonial As well as putting the houses ehurches should be restored in iflllJo sh~pshape electrical condi accordance with ~eit'. original tipn, Brother William hopoo to «esign a!1d continue in use for establish a shortwave radio net public worship. work among them. "T'Juire are no phones," he said. Review Plans The Y'Oung missioner acquired Discussing the las~ policy, his electrical experience after kohbishop Davis said: etlitering the La Salette commu "In too many instances colo atal churches of great historical nity from St. Anne's 'grammar ~l. . ' Illignificance and artistic value have been abandoned dootroyed '. I did backs~ge'work· at sem ... modified beyond ~gnition. illQl'Y. prod~bons." '!be work 1ft some' cases they have been ~~ed maJor proporiions last
_laced by new strucluresof C1mst~ when he was large~y inferior artistic wol'th Illt 000:responsible ~or"a psychedelIc liiderable expense. The same "190ft ~ l~mlere ~how.at La _penditure or perhaps even saIefIte s mInor senunary m En less might have suffiCed to i:oe- field, N. H. . r e and preserve in use 11 "I hope eve.ntual~y . to ~ able Wstorical building." to .~ ~me!hIng Sl.nular m the 'lIo'avoid this in future, Phihppmes, ~e. Bald. , Ile said, all plans for abandonB~other ~tlbam develo~ anent, replacement or remodel- his Interest In sh~rtwave..radi~ ing of colonial churolles must be 11hrou~ fontact ~lth a Cllbzens leviewed and approved by the ~d ~dlO group In New Hamp Dew committee before imple- shire. We helped manY.·.I>eOPle mented. . in emergencies," he· recalled, . '''and the contact also brought many to our shrine who would. i . Dever have come ·otherwise." , Yet artother interest Of the. many-talented Brother Is pho-· tography. He has a large collec-' SYDNEY (NC) - Reflecting tion of slides' and is already . e Australian bishops' cUTrent planning pictu.re lectures for deep concern over the que9tion- the Philippines. "Ohildren will ing mood that surrounds Catho- probably like ·to ,see slides of the iKe education, a Sydney prelate U. S., and this :is alsO' a good laas called for continued sup- way of explaining the . Mass,.. pori by the Catholics of Austra- he said. iia toward perfecting rather In line with the current mis than dismantlihg the Catholic soon emphasis on helping. pea .mool system. pIe. help themselves, Brother Auxi.Iiary B ish 0 p , TholJ\as William hopes to organize .11 Muldoon ~id that the' reasons . ~t led to tti'e, rejection by Catholics of secular education , . . A~tralia 80 yeare ago were more valid ~y, and h~ L0N'DON (NC) - john Car ileas5ured members of the teaclU,rig Religious 'that' thbi:r dinal Heenan lit London ·was Work is of great importance.": principal concelebrant ~f a me ! Speaking at rio schoOi dedica modal Mass' at WeStininster Clon here, he said society had oo.thedral here for the late Sen~
become more ·secU1ar~·· more iltor Robert Ji'. Kennedy. Four ;Werlly immoraf degenerate· Airierican priests 'Wh~' live in -.ld the Obristian ideal and 'in the archdiocese were' concele='.
.piration had very , largely brants. eeased to animate society. Cardinal Heenan' ~ld the
more than 2,000 p(.>ople attend T·he gulf between the con
ing that since Kennedy's assas ~Pts of secular and OhrIstian education had become markedly sination all the words of sorrow
possible had been spoken. • ider, he' asserted. The . bishop took each crioti "Now," be said,"it should suf dsm of the Catholic schools fice to speak by action and prayers." . IilYstem and gave detailed re plies to each. Among those attending "",ere Princess Lee RadziwiR, sister He described tJhose who were cuestioning the system as "good of Mrs. John F. Kennedy, and and sincere people" and said Prilli:e stanislaus Radziwill~ the their view merited honest con U. S. Ambassador to England IIideration as they touched is and Mrs. David Bruce; and that were viW to the fonner British AmbassadOl' tG flbul-ch in Australia. '!be U.S., Lord HarlecA.
the
Asks· Australians ' upport Schools S
Cardi"al Celebrates . Mass for SenatOl'
erren
and
-.es
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., June 20, 1968
3
Priests' Senate Fights Racism
LOUISVILLE (NC)-4 socio economic program based 011 pressure, power, fear and self interest has been recommended by the Renewal Action Com mi·lJtee of the Pdest Senate here. ~he three-pronged program is intended to alleviate racial city tensions and is a follow up to proposals made last March by the committee, which were aimed at combating white rac ism and promoting harmonious rela·tions with the Negro com munity. The committee recommended that an information program be established to "counteract white racist a:bUtudes with a more ristian view of our social, onomic, political and religious ·ves." . Among informa'tion programs suggested were: pulpit-exchange and priest teams to speak at all-white parishes; Sunday ser mons on the topic of racism; special courses on Negro his tory and culture in the school system; and a re-examining of . goals and purposes by all Cath olic organizations to see what they can do toward meeting racial-urban problems. , The Renewal Committee also called for programs to build L "communication bridges be ~! . tween white suburbia and the blade inner city." They recom.-
.:..-......;;..~."""'-.""·.. ""~J.L; . ..ol'~...;':.:.··_~ ~ ~~~~ ~p~~~~;;e aur~:~s~o~ TO PHILIPPINES: Mr. and Mrs. Antonin Bedard, wo.rk: with Religious and lay Fall River, and their son, 'Brother William, a La Salette expel'ts in developing new pro Missioner, enjoy a reunion before the Brother departs for grams.
i1ive year assignment in Philippine Islands.'
boys' trainee program for ap prentice electricians. . Right now, however, he's 1;0 be found in Southbridge; Mass., where he's .preparing for his new assignment by. intensive study of the Philippine lim guage a!1d culture. He expects to be in the Islands for five )"ears. . The son of Mr. and- Mrs. An tonin Bedard of 149 Rockland Street, Fall River,Bro~her wil liam is the middle of three children.' A Y'Ounger brother, Paul, is an Ai.rForce sergeant stationed at Homestead, Fla. and a sister, Mrs. Horace Gen.,. dreau, lives in Fall River. All were reunited recently at 1lI large ga,thering of family and friends planned by Brother William's parents. Tbe missioner has a reque~.
,
Urges Black, Green Power Merger ,
He'd like to take with him to the Philippines as many electri cal items and tools as possible. He explains that 'extra tools a·re needed because metal objects such as screwdrivers don't last long in the tropical humidity of the islands: Anything else elec trical, from fuses on up, will be welcomed by Brother William and may· be sent, 110 him' at the Rockland .Street address. Gen el'llltor, anY'One?
Tax:'Free Groups Object of Study NEW YORK (NC)-A plan is ilmder consideration by New York Ci.ty to oharge tax exempt institutions for direct services such as water and ga,r bage collections which now are free. The; disclosure made by Freder.ick Hayes, city budget officer during a radio program iinterview. He' ~timates thwt sucll charges would bring the citY . between $25 million and $50 million additiorial annual
HARRISBURG (NC),.....An, in terracial justice group spokes .man urged. some :200 Catholics '~o here 'to support bla~k pow.er "by developingeconomjc. progralllll
that will. keep' .green .. power
(dollars) Ni. the ''Negro' com~ nities." ..
,,
was
Schedule Florida
Catholic Meeting 'PENSACOLA (NC) - Bishop Paul F. Tanner of St. Augustine told a group of 42 priests on visit here that a statewide Cath olic Conference sOon will be established. The bishop also said a num ber of future Church programs would be set up on a statewide basis by coordinating efforts of the rour dioceses which now form the new Miami ecclesias tical province within Florida. "The idea," he said, "is to du plica,te in the stalte what is found organizationally on the national level." To a«amplish this, he said, a state Catholic welfare confer ence, representing the rour dio ceses in the province, will be located soon in Tallahassee, the sta,te capital. He a'iso' told the priests he plans to relocate the St. Aug~ tine diocesan chancery, now sit uated in St. Augustine.. .After the end of July, 'it will be· 10. oated in Jacksonville, the bisb09 said.'
.
Thomas H. Gibbons; Jr-., Proj
'ect . Equality national. director.
told laity, priests and ReligioUS
at . the first· publi~ .meeting of
the Harrisbul'g diocesan human
relations COImmission: "Before
you can have integration you
really have to have black power.
You have to learn. to respect
all persons before there can be in~gration. ' "I would suggest that you en courage programs that seek to build up black economic power; that you begin to take a hand ,in reve1"sing the trend of white money going into exclusively wMte areas," said GibbonS, whet since 1954 has been active ill the National Catholic Confer elli:e for Inter.raci'al Justice. based .in Chicago.
the merchants national bank pette.r.bankingfor yourfamUy
a
THE ANCI:IOR,.-
Thul1s., June 20, 1968~
Are@ rE:d1.\lIcation
. Th.e.
P amish P aJrade
I£OI;Y NA:ME, PALL RIVER' Boy Scout TrOtlp 59 will spon" 1801' a pancake breakf'ast in the school hall Sunday morning; June 23; after all Masses wiotn tlie' exception' of 6 olcloek. The' parish council will meetl at' 7:30' tonight in !Me rector.y; eonference room. 8'1)., PA'IDIMCKi,
ST.. AN'EHON.Y OF' PADUA"
FALL. R1~ER.
Mrs. Anne· Fleming, R.N. win preside at installation cere monies· for' the Council of Cath olic Women at 6:30 Sunday night, June 23. at Whit:e's res taurant. Members needing. transporta-· tion may contact Mrs. Alice Camara, chaLrman; J\lfiss Mary Medeiros, co-chairman; or Mrs. Mary. Silvia. OUR BA\DYl OF AN GE·LS, Pi\'IIL RT.VER: Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Commu niom at', 8 Sunday morning, June' 231. followed; b~ a breakfasti meeting. it pasttmal ceuneil meeting: ig, slated. for 7, Sunday night;, June
25:
&T:, S'lJAiNISLAUs:, P:NIIE. RIli\lER:
A clambGID pl'epared' and. served by the' president· and membens off the' M'en:s 8lub will featune' :L meeting at or; Sunday< nigh~ J'une 231 in: the school, au.. ditorium. li'resident Joseph, WJi.ipp win be' aided' by .foseph ' Amaral; Fran'l£ Mis' and William Wolewic: 8m.. BAffiRl(i)K,
SOlUoERSE1J The annual parish Lawn . Panty opens· at 6 tonight and w,illJ GOntirlUe from 6 to 11 nightl;» through, Sunday.,. June 23. on; the gr.ounds off St. John Fishen House: In charge of a 1:-. rangements are Edwand J.. Wil;. usz and NOl'mam l\r. Simmons. GJ;and pnizes· will be awanded. au closing time' Sunday. night. 8!ACRED' HEA'RT, NORTH A'TTI1EB'ORO The Confraternity of' Chris.. tian Doctrine will be canonical ly established following a Mass at' 7:30 tomorrow night. Presid ing will be Rev. Joseph Powers, Diocesan CCD director. All, parishi.oners are urged' to, be· present. Members of Duvernay Coun. cil No. 42 will receive corporate' Communion at 7 o'clock Mass, Sunday morning, June 23. Co:[':'· fee and doughnuts will be served following Mass at. St. Jean's Society hall. Forty Hours Devotion ",ill: begin at 11 :30 Mass Sunday morning.
SUPPOllt Ca:mpuip WASHIN(l;,1)<D'N.' (-N<i:.) I - 'Dhe board of directors' of' tlle,' Na tional CounciL of: <i:atfiolic' M~ri' has' adopted a. rellOlunon at. their meeting hert! supporting the Poor People's Compaign and authoriziilg' a: $1V,OOO cona-ibu.. tion for ·its.· use.
AMSTERDAM (NC)-BishGli Edward d. Maginn, apc:;l.oJro adm:i.nist.rator of the Alban;$!, N. Y.. diocese, has announcetll plans. tn centraliZ'e eleme~ oolWatilO7l for pupilS c:f ~. chial ccbOtlls here., Bishop Maginn announ~ that Fa.ther Thomas J. M-alone3\ diocesan superintendent GIl' IlChoolS, bas been directed till ~ fufuTe educationall needS. of' the area" with -.,' lOng,.range proposal of' combin.. fug present schools and elm Bt:ructing a new central elemeDO> iar.y school. '. In a letter read' in ~... "I1IDm. churches, Bishop Magid said~ "I feel tihaf there are iriailit! ·ao.vantages to a centrally' ~ .ministered' elemenJtary edUCa tion, and it will be available fo.1' 'pupilS of all parishes of the Am,.. 'sferdam area.. It will be a muclK. .more economic. operation and! will enable us to provide tsie best catholic educational pJ'Ooo oam, possible for' the lar~ number of students." , Father Maloney 9aid advane tiages 00 be gained include n· wider curriculum,~ deparlmenW instruction, team teacning, abill i'ty grouping of all: pupils, ~ ,use of facul!ty, more ~onomie .operation and replacement ,«l ,olQ buildings. . At present, there are fiV{) parochial elementary schools m· Amsterdam. The combined eill> rollment is more than 1,100 hi kindergarten through eightill gmde.
the.
FA:LL RIMER>. ,Parishioners· will sponsor. n' buffet and dance from 8 to' midnight Saturda~ night, June ~ a1 Firestone Hall. Music will, be: by. J'ohn Sowa. Tickets-· ar~ .available at. the rectory. OUR' LADY OF vrCTORY, CEN·TERiVIDLE Newly elected to the Women's Guild' boand: of' directors are Mrs. Stephen O'Bl'ien Jr., out.. going gum!: president; Mrs. ·Fbancis. McK\enna' and Mrs. Ed' w.ard O'NeilL
C~~traJi%ed'
'Iaft
eON1J1EJREN<l:lJl IDELEGA'UES': First Inte:tluatitinal Conference of' COuncils and Senates of' Women Religious, brGught more than 400' superiors, diocesan vicars of Reli'gious,a;Ild· delega.tes to Pbu1JI~md', Me" Among eaJTly arri vaJs were, left to) right, Sistelr Janet, SJ?.. Joliet, IlL; Sister' Roberta White, B.V.l\f' 0 maiha, Neb.'; and- Sister Joan of Arc, 0~P.. Nashville) Timn:. N<S Photo. l
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Pe:mm:[h, N'uns· LOS' ANGELES; (,Ne) - Re form,.leanning, and: t11adUional:. minded nuns· of the Sisters, of tfie Immaculate Heant. of Many nere' nave' been a utihori zed, to split infu. two gl'OUP5; pending, a· final decision by the, Vatiron· on' the progressive reforffi8 initi ated. by tlhe onden's g4l-nellal: oitapter last OctoOer.. '11.he' split ""as, aulliomzed by,; decree of .' special. Jronotitical1 G::ommissiol1l eetablishedl in· April! to, study. the- ehapten' refOIlDl6;. which, ha.ve' beem a, S6m:{Ie 01 dis! pute· between the' 91~:len' and: James, Fr.aneis. G:anlinab MeI'll; ty,re' oli Los, Pmgele6•. In Mallch\ fue' nUllS, had! v.oted to appeaL to! POpe Paut V]j to, overrule a decree> fuom; tAhe Vatican Congregation for Reli gious which in. effeot ordered~ them to naIf their renewal pro gram. ,'Ehe CongJJegallien. tol'd~ the nuns' to adopt a common habit, reinstitute cemmunity pr.a~rs incIudil1g' dai'ly Mass; recommW themsel ves; to their., ouiginaI purpose' <IS' a' teachiilg' order and. to· collaoora·te tllei'l' wonk with- the local bishop. Final DeCisi'on Fending The special stud,)', commission, , took, no notice of the dispute be tween the nuns :lIld Car.dinaL McIntYI:e in, i·ts decl:ee but said th3Jt "an intenna1 separation.
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exists among: the members ol the' institute: "Fo!! pllactical. pUTPOSeB, and while, a, final decision by the· Holy See is pending, two groups are' recognized;'" it continued: "Ellclids: autlhol'izeru to act sep arately." ,'nhe decr.ee' said\ toha¢ ~ese "who wish tol foUow the decree of the recent gttuera1 elhap4;er, are. gj.veru a, reaoonable time, takllng, acaounu o£ the' points a1 readYi made' known. t.o them,. to. experiment, tol refJect and· to come· to detiniti\(e' decisions concerning, theim rule of life to be 'submitted to the Holy See:I The group wilL be' directed by Sister AJlita Caspary, mother general' of;. ilie order who: l'Jas led'· tlle fig,lit. for refo,"m. 'lJempOr-ar.y. Dir:ectioB "Those Sisters who· intend. 1AJ, follow the: constitution in efi'ect ,previous: to. the' ninVh general ohaptell;. anell tol pooceed 'l\dth l!l. progJJ3m' of' renewal\ are placed' under' the- tempouan)' direction of Sister EiJeem Mia«E>ona1d, re siding in the mo.tlherhouse of Los· Angeles;, who is given f~c ulties for their government and
Seeki:ng New U'rban Education' Mo.de.ls
wor.k and may proceed. t.o· agrne m.en,ts rega'rdiinll tiire diooesan. au1ll10riUes;~' the d'ecJlee said:. Some' 2001 of the' 600, nUDs' j;n, the order teach in archd-i_eflIlR schools' and! the' di",pute' with t!ie' <!:aroinal haell tl'JTeatened tG lead 00' theiIr" withd'nawaI at. ilDe end'. or: t'he> scbool yeaI'". Msgr. James B, <i:L)lne arehdfr.. ocesam eIementa~ S<ltIool supeP iJ:}tendent, bas alread,y aBo nounced that: 13; othe-J; ReloglGus oommunilies; had! agreed ~ pro vide Sisters: next. Fall t.l 9tatil schools fonnellly; staffed \;ly: 1.be Immaculail:e, Heart of MaJ'~r nune.
Bishop! at Shrine, U'rg'es Unifyi N:AMUGON.GQJ (NC)-BiMOI' V,illCleIlt. McCauley, <r:.S-.C.,. GIl For-t Portal, speaking .. Mi'
ecumenical sellVice in honor. fIt'. the· € h ristians
mamyred in
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lJ1!ged, Catholics and Prote6'tci. .,
to adopt. a new, api·rit eI. lo~ and unity. Jowa;-born Bishop Me€ Q u1ll7 Baidl that Protestants and Calli& "liClS~ in~ Uganda are- ~'divided b.Y' Msgr.. Cl\Yne said the new, ·11. hatred: that can. hav.e no b8siII. SiSters would: be reassi goed in. a religion o1i, love," He addedl Ulai, the division is: sc:andaJoue, proportionately f'rom sehools and reminded his audience ~aIIi WIhi'c1i thefr oommunities new the heritage of the Uganda s¢aff' in the archdiocese.. . martyrs is not one· of hatred; suspicion' or- pre;i:ud.icte. Ailglican Bishop Dunstan NsUo buga, of Nairembre, who org~ i%ed the service, U r g e d' Prrobtem EISB0NT (NC)-Tl'Je Catholic ,~ans to have the same faith, the same' 'love' for cnrrml, Uhiversity' League' here has- held' and the s~me courage that t8e a' meeting" with lectures and dis martyrs nad shown. cussions' on' the sensitive issue . Cl)n June 3; 1866; l~ young· of emigration. Two bishops pal1 € h ristians; both ~atholics.anci, ticipated~ JI'rotestan.ts, were- burned .. aemh here for' their faith. The: go¥ernmen,jj, has been taking'stron:g;measures. to redu«e' the~ numberr ooi' emigrants, The numbel!' of 'emignan,b passpoJ1't5 has been sharply limited, but the main effect. of this has been to, increase the' number of iUegal emigrants), who' a,xc' smuggled, across Sparn into F·rance.
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WASRLN.G,'EON. (NC)-Plans, for' de:velopment of a. set of "models" for. prognams. designed to. upgr.ade· the education. of the disad;vantaged ha.ve been an.... AT(l;HISON (NC)-A father nounced, he.ne' in. the nation?s BishOi!' ..Amttonio dos, Rttis ,Rod:. . and his two sons were ordained capital city following a meeting CITIES. SIRVICE' r-iquez; vicar general of the as Benedictine priests at St. of Catholic educational and so DISTRIBUTORS B'enedict's Abbey here Friday militaJlY' vicariate, pnesid'et!· at . cial' action, readers. the: opening, session @t the, by Archbishop Edward J. Hun The. program· caBs fo.r the· les@e's, mee,ting and! Au:xJlia];)'j keler of Kansas City, Kan. idEmtificatron 0 f. ou,tstanding I Fuef and Range JIIatlter Ignatius John Habiger Catholic educati'onal programs, Bishop) ManueL F'rallc@, Ii'alcaQ o1i, Lisbol1l eelebnat-e.d! :Mass fOIl I and! llis two sons-Father Ben:" fOr tlie' d'isad'vantaged. These the participants at t.he clGsing. edict John and Matthew Henry will include' ~l'JooI pwgrams,. Eiabi@r - are all graduates of' adult, ed\Jcatiqn proj.ects and' The meeting; was; nO'li., rel)&l'1ed 01£ BURNERS m. the~ L.isbolJ! pness. St. Benedict's College here. teaching t.r.aining, pJ:Ograms For:' l''r.ClImp,1t Ilteliver-y wliich' wiU' be analyzed,. reported The,. father followed his two sons iilto the seminary because .I>y consultants, published ana It Day !i Nig,f1t. Ser.va .distributed to, educators. he' and his wife had an under standing that tile survivor Father C: AJ.:Oeri Koeb" G. II G..... 1011.1II:, BURNO UNIH woufd' enter religious life, His ,-"mem." National C'ath~lic Ethl~ Paint and Waflpaper, wjfe~ :M;ildiled\ dieG! in Dec4;lmcatiun' As8Ociatioru eJreCutrve luraf Bottled Gcu. I Dupont lPaint. bel', 1 9 6 3 . . . " secr.etary" says the' pl;eparatiOll, Ji'atfiel1' IgJiailiu&< entered the oC' models and. suceessf\JI. llI:O I ~COt'. M'idc;il" 5.( .1: COH'ANNET' ST~ ~ 42'2 A«!rUsh. Ay..: I monasfu~' after 317 years expe-' ~ams . would' be" "a pvactdeal' 1lAUNT.ON. 1 rience as scnool principal, sales Iielp to: educators trying to oome ~Ct., New Redford}' I A1tfebor.o - NO· Aul.boN manager, statistical analyst, 'oil to; griPs withp.noolems this P.-RKING promoteD· andl pnooitcer and critical; arelli of' AmericaA-. ee_ TQu.r:ItCln' . . Rear.' of.- Stor:. federal land appraiser. tion.-'
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Respons5bUity of leadership PORTLAND (NC) - A Can wflllfl bishop criticized both 1ead -..s who refuse to accept the Ie ~nsibilities of leadership and .those who call the idef.l of lead .-ship into dOl':bt. ,speaking at the first Inter . .tional Conference of CouBcils end Senates of Women 1leUgioua ..... the United ,States and Canada taere in Maine, Bishop G.Emme\t eal'ter of London, Ont.. said: "IIlhere is reallY only one kind or! ;fJM- who causes me a PlI7cho 'logical problem. Be is the one .JIlho lIcceptsthe call of leader 4bip, but refuses to aooeptthe aoesponsibiliW to serve and ,f» work." . BiGhop Carter said aqyone <l'laced in a position of authoJ'!ty _ust be willing to listen. "Have you ·ever thought that dialogue protracted can lead 00 iP3lralysis? There comes a time." iBisoop Carter said, "when some one finally :has to make a decis :ion; when someone finally bas -to do something." IJ!Ihe conference brought '00 ,~ther some 400 Sisters and dio Ile3llI1 vicars of Religious ~rom 41 iJCates and seven provinces of
shar':~g in th!! prlesthood of Chrbt"
AUt-ding to the :death and bur
ial al:CfN days be:t:ore of U.S. Sen. Robert F. KennedYl Father Mc Cali 3aid: "'Like his brother, the president, and llkeMartin Lu ther Xing, he oonti.Dued, "we oalLTlot ha~ cOO1Il!I1U1iity without
liWer-roat~rnal,
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but somebody'. .
dt'i~," be ~ared. S1t!Uces ·ell :Strength 1J!.'!he "wellbeing ·of theindi
got 00
vidual is attend.ant (In the com ml.mit:r" llnd ih<e .source of 1;his OOffie:lunity, Father McCall said, is round in the pope and ·,the local ::>ishop, who are th1l source of ·the strength t."latsaves. Thcl'efore, he continued, re ligious communities "should do everything in the:.r p:>wer to jom I!JlOTe fuBy in the liffl of the dio cese and the work of the bish Op5.~
Bishop Carter ·said many in the tJ::tr.:rch ioday "see value only in w~8t is ;:lifierent." They are more concerned "about what kinol of gasoline to put in the ClJ>r: I am concerned 'abo:11 wh<ere ~ada. the ear is going," he said. Although he addressed himself Many of today's crises are the -00 the challenge of leadership, ·result of a "crisis in leadership" Iiluthority and responsibility only 1..".rhich has resulted because ctbo~t one out of sevan of the "many of those in positions of SIsters present was a mother su leadership are hiding xrom the vedor. Many of the others were crowd,". the bishop said. ]0031 convent .superiors. 11 men or women accept .the Port!mDd lF~s~ mantle of leadersID;:J, they must T.he conference had as its prin accept its c{)nsequences, he said. ~~al goal the "sharing <If idella And that includes "the possibil on now Sisters can be 01' gre&ter ity ()f being misunderstood." mrustance in sharing in the pas ,God-Given 'fIorDl ministry of the ·Church." "Those in positions of leader ':Db-e Portland diocese was des shiD must accept t.he responsi ~bed as the first in the nation bility or the multitudes will.fol to establish a formal advisory loW' self-seeking le~ders," he oounoil for R<lligioU5. The coun said. ~ is directed by Sister Mary "Leadership," he said, "is God IDarbara who has e.ct;[uired the given but it is not God-making. 30briquet of "the flying nun" ·be There is no groUlld for authority ~use of her frequent trips ·by eltcapt from God. Authority can ~...:ll plane to the outlying areas not stand without some basic of this large, sparsely IWPulated truths; one of them is that God tJtate. meant man to share his author
Both Bishop Carter and Father Ity, to serve and make the world oVohn McCall, S.J., Weston and !:Jetter. But i! service does not Boston College, W~1) shared @O with honor, authority has ·no the speaker's platform, termed pla<ee in the Church." '&he formation of senates or cQun :::n the matter of religious .~ils of women Religiou3 "essen c{)mmunities, Bishop Cart.er said .tbl" to the development 01 ·the "Il.uthol·ity is vested in the com J)OSt-Va ticanCouncil Church. munity." Offering a definition of a religious community, he said, Senates Necesslllll'Y "a religious order is a group of
1i!'atber McCall said such sen individual persons coming to
ates or councils are not "lult llIries." To the contrary, he said, .getherto acknowledge through thei·r common effort, the partic
-.r~y are necessary for authen uLl1Jr purposes 1>'£ their order in tic participation by women Re !i:;ious in the priesthood 8S totllnd I;he redemptive mission of the Ohl:rch."
in the bishop." '11he aim ~l the priesthood, Fr.
'McCall said, raminding his aud
l:eglsl1Jf,ure ie:we that all Christians became earers in the priesthood of iDJlI( Christ in their baptism, "is to LANSING (NC)-The MichlMablish unity among men." "All apostolic 'work," .hesaid, . glm Legislature has 'sent a res olution tQ .Congress urging legis
lation be lPassed to grant 'tax adjus!.ments to parents o£non
DubHe school children.
The resolutio.n,approvedby
NEWARK (NC) - AlJnion both the State Senate and House aty ordinance empowering ,the of Representatives, calls on :Oon~
Ci~ Commission to reV6ke .gress ·to permit parents of non pt!bUc school pupils to apply.IOll' ,theater licenses for showing ,00 "a ~redit agains.J; their income
~e films 'W1lS ruled unconsti :ftutional in Federal Court Ihere. ·ta,s: or II deduction. -irom adjuste<ll Judge Anthony T. :AugeUi gl"Oss income .in ~heir computa
«lled 'that the ordinance did 'not tieR of federal income tax for :P1'Ovide "certain procedural and payments made to nonpublie (judicial safeguards that must be schools." A bill WillS introduced in 1he ~rved" in finding material ·Michigan Legislature 'this yea~ to -':>scene. Judge Augelli noted that ·'\the 'P1'Svide state tax credits fM' ,tfnion City ordinance permits ·parents who send their children :llevocation without providing ·for ·to 'i:\ORpublic schools or private judicial review of the guestiQn colleges. lJ!~e bill, which died :in com of obscenity. He also said :that IIbe censor, l'ather than the il\itbee. would have permitted parents who sent their childrelll 6eater, must start judicial ·pro eoodings. He indicated that the ·ro Cion public schools to take the ordinance could be amended" to cost <)f tuition, books and feetlll as (1 cleductionon thair state iD provide the constitutionall,y re ~[le WiLqui'red safeguards."
T
Fede.r,aIJudge Says 'Ordinance Illegal
Education Boa rd, Teachers Agree
ns
autoority." "r.t 1:1111 he over-paternal
Urges Cr.edcut .P·leu!!
5
THE ANCHORThurs., June 20, 1968
Canadian Prelate \EmphasDzes
VISITS SCHOOL: Laurea:n Cardinal RugamDwa, ,accom-' panied by Amwican Holy Ghost Father J~;)seph Kelly, visits 11 school ,operated by the priests and Si-&tersof the :tlo1y Ghost i~ 1Vl00hi, Tanzania. NC Photo.
Priest Directs Team Ministry OMAHA (NC)-Father Peter iF. Dunne,Omaha archdiocesan
TUrnl life director and pastor of Sacred Heart parish here, h":as been named Inner City vicar,' and ",·ill direct .11 new 'team of priests appointed to serve in the city's northeast section. Fether DUlli"'le, a fumier Boys Town staff member, will direct 'the coordinated ef~orts of priests m Holy Angels (mission) par -ish; Holy Family parish; Sacred Hellirt parish; St. Benedict's perish, and the Jesuit-staffed lVIarkoe House here. .The ne:w program wasestab llshed following recommenda~
·:tiOn3 by the archdiocesan priests' senate and .~pproval by Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan of Omaha. Father Dunne also wiH head the archdiocesan social action office, and direct both. urban Qnd rural projects. ~mmenting on the new team nunistry, Father Dunne said: "Olllf team approaoh is indica tive of the increasing interest by the Church in recognizing its obligations and. in fulfilling them. To be effeotive we will need the total cooperation of all the priests in the archdiocese as we pool our resources and work. with a greater unity."
OLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland diocesan board of education and the Catholic Elementary LaY Teachers Asso ciation (CELTA) have signed a contraot oovering 1,300 lay teachers in 198 diocesan elemen .tary schools. The ·OOlt>!.ra<rt provided a uni flOnnsalary s.cale, wicth starting salaries of $5,800 for teachers with boohelor's degrees, and ac ceptance of the .principle of tenure. Starting salaries for teachers with master's degree:!! will De '$6,3.80. The clmtract, scheduled to run from June 16, 1968, to June 15, 1969, is the fi ...s t system-wide agreement reached here affect ing diocesan elementary schools. It is simHnr .to Q contract signed two mOllths agobet.ween the diocesllln board of education and the Cleveland High School and Academy Lay Teachers Association. The sala.·y scale was presented to GIl psstors .in a series of re <ce!"A meetings, and they voted ro adqpt Ia mandatory and uni form salary scale. Previously, salary scales had been issued by the school board, but were regarded merely as recommendations. In the case of a disagreement between :n teacher and the school, the contract provides foll' a sel"ies of four steps of media tion. The final step is arb~trlP ~on.
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THE ANCHOR-,Diocese of-Fall River-:-Thurs. June 20; 1968p
,Time, to Len'd, A ,Hand:
.Ordinary Urges. Help for Poor
More For Thought
ROCKVILLE C E NT Itll (NC)-Bishop Walter P. Kei.. lenherg of Rockville CentJe called on Catholics in NaSSa1l
Dr. Nathan Pusey, the President of Harvard, is a classioist in the very best and strict tradition. His doctorate is in Greek., And so, with -the long view of the humanist, he spoke at Harvard's Commencement last'Thursday of a university as being, in his estimate, a place more for thought than for action. Not that he says there should not be activity or that things that need chang,ing in a university communIty should not be changed. But a university should still be the place ahove all other places where men aJIld women have the place and the encouragement ood the duty, even, to think, to contemplate, to let loose the intellect upon the ideas' and hopes of mankind, to feed the 'mind upon reflection. . The university is not simply the ivory tower where thought lives in splendid isolation. Truth has consequences and so does thought. The enlargement of the mind and the , development of the will and the deepening at the liv~ of , men milst have an impact upon their actions all thN>ughout their lives. And so students are urged to thought not simply to stop them from ha&ty, or injudicious activity n~, but 'to prepare them better for more meaningful activity in the future. The more deePly'committed they are to thought no.w," th~ more prepared for deep commitment to ,the object of their thinking later on when stature and position' and prestige in a community can more -surely. guarantee the l&uccess of the 'undertakings they embark upon. Short-sighted thinking may call for activity now. -A longer view calls fm- better preparation that'the acliyity of a future date might be the more forceful and worthwhile.
and Suffolk Counties to join iii a massive til-fai,th campaign • help the poor. The campaign - called • "Weekend for the Poor"-wa ronducted in churehes and sya.. ago,l§Ue9 on Long Island :f!ocl' three successive days. It Wall sponsored by the Catholic Dio cesan ,Committee for CoJllJJUloo nity Interests, tlbe Nassau-SWloo folk .AssociaJtion of Rabbis, ami the Nassau and Suffulk COUO<o cil of Ohurches. , Bishop Kel1enberg said 1bri goals of the campaign were two-fold: financial ,aid and peso. sonal commitment. ' , Noting that a number of the " poverty programs on Long' ~ , land have sU#~red government al Cutbacks, the bishop sta~
Continued from Page One
at least two reasons. "Canon
Youth-StattY of Mind
old age all seen as a flowing of one into the other, as various stages of the flowering of life. Each period has its charm , This will afford not only tex variety but also richer , and its advantages and its gifts and its burdens. But there tual meaning. Every version of ,II should never be the opposittion at the one to any of the eucharistic prayer has its own others. . ,emphasis; the new texts comple
OFFICIAL NEWSP!'PER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER 410 Highland Avenue
Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151
PUBLISHER .. ' ./oII0st Rev., .James l. Connolly.', D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rt. 'REiv. Daniel F. 'Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscolft MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden
"The financial aid • • • wiD . go directly' to the support eli . these programS., Whatever the . reason for tlhe governmenlta1 Cutback in the funds available to maintain these programs, know ~ it involves, a step b8cII: prefaces of the Roman Mass ,for ooildem and adults wthe . both ,those now employed and want to su~." the many variations now being Twenty-two Centers developed. Although briefer than The second goal, Bishop Ke). the Roman eucharistic prayer, .it develops the theme of 'praise' of lenberg said, "is to encourage • personal involvement with the God's holiness much more clear poorest of the poor in NllB8all ly. Like the other texts it in cludes the elements common to and Suffolk Counties. "God has been good to the all eucharistic prayers: blessing people in Long Islpnd," ¢he of God in praise and thanks, an bishop stated, "but we cann«4 invocation of God's power, the 'narration of the Lord's supper, ignore the existence of povertY. in our midst. Twenty-two po_ the memorial of the 'death and erty centers * * * are a wit resurrection, the expression of the offering of the one sacrifice ness to its reality. "These centers have beell: of Christ, the concluding doxo logy. It has also the intercessory helping more than 48,000 chn dren and. adults, They now prayers or petitions for 1lhe liv need your help-both fin-anciai ing and the dead, but in a much and personal. They need vo},. simpler form than in the Roman unteers to work with children" , eucharistic prayer. pro v,j d e t-ransporta,tion and! Suited to Sundays demonstrate their concern in II Finally, a more developed eu hundred other ways." charistic prayer ,suited to Sun A!; part of the three-da;p: days on occasion, includes 'II campaign, descriptions of the solemn recital of the deeds 'of , work being performed at pov erty centers were IXlsted in the God, from creation to the second coming of Christ (the latter rear of all churches along wiJllh information on how volunrteem mentioned in all the new pray ers). Unlike the Roman usage, could contact them. which has been to name ·the birth of Jesus or the Epiphany or the Ascension, etc,,- as seemed appropriate in the course of the Church year, this text follows the Eastern practice of elaborat SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A ing the several.facets of the mys Christian Brother who is lID tery of Christ in a single prayer. author and screen-writer said This is not done at great length, here he thinks the Ohurch b8llll but with considerable catecl1eti overlooked the audio-visual cal effect. The praise of God, in media television, ' movies, biblical terms, is carefully and books and radio-Uto a ~ movingly expressed, so that _Ii great extent." , clearer perspective can be bad Brother Leo Burkhard, F.S.e., . by those present. The final eu- ' an American now living III cbaristic prayer provides, as do France, ,said u we ha.ve reaD.!' the others, for a possible accla done little in communicaJtiOM mation, by the people after the other than condemn motion Pie . priest's recita~ of, the words of , turesthat were not worthy. I i~l!titution 'of the Eucharist. say.this:is a very bad approaeh,lir This can be done simply by pro Brother Leo stressed ·in . cl!liming the, Christian faith interview here the importaoee which the eucharistic prayer al of the. audio-visual media _ ways acknowledeges: announc-· edlXlationaltools. They lIN ing the death and resurrection of· powerful eduoetional instra the Lord until He comes again. ments,'! he said, which have • "great impact on the war . . Prefaces
poverty, racism and rioting." The few new prefaCes also
Brother Leo, a native of Delli announced in Rome represent Ii , ver, discussed his latest effort. step toward a much richer col
a motion piotUre entitled ''WIle lection of such texts for the Ro
Are My Own." The film is bBBed ~n Mass. The first part of the
on his historical novel, "Master Roman eucharistic prayer was of the Mischief Makers," wbieII: once extremely variable; one d'eals with the life of St. JeGiG collection has nearly 300 texts Baptist de LaSalle, founder . , for different occasions. Since the OhrisUan Brothers. medieval times the number has
The fHm was featured as pad been strictly limited to about a of the international film festiWil dozen. Gradually the number being staged here in conjuncli_ bas increased: one in 1789, two with the 1968 San Antoll6li world's faiI'. Turn to Page Fourteen
New Prefaces a.nd Canons, Aug. 15
bas generally been used to de lIlOte the eucharistic prayer after the preface and Sanctus ("Holy, holy, holy Lord GQd of hosts"); this has only served to minimize It has been said that youth, in and at itself, if! not, a integral and significant elements of the eucharistic prayer: the virtue but merely a period in life. And, as George Bernard. praise of God's deeds (preface), Shaw pointed out, sometimes it is a shame to waste it on the acClamation of the people (Sanctus). children but, in apy event, that is solved by time. "Eucharistic prayer" better ex Youth, of course, has a great appeal, despite what pressed the meaning of the text: Maurice Chevalier says when he' sings "I'm glad I'm not it is a prayer addressed to God young any more." The freshness; the vigor, the optimism, the Father through Christ, pro the energy at youth cannot be denied. But the sen~or United claimed by the priest in the name of the assembled commu States Senator from New York made some _telling points nity. It is fundamentally an act the other day when he said, "Wh~le the younger generation _ of acknowledgment, p r a i s e, has many laudable qualities, one of them is not a great deal thanksgiving, a blessing of God's of tolerance for their elders. Of course, we lrnow, do we not, name-,-and this is the sense of that the young alone did not create music and art and "eucharist," .the Greek tenn for the celebration of the Lord's develop by themselves the precepts.of peace, understanding, Supper, the sacrificial meal in loving kindness and the dignity of man? Is the older genera stituted by Jesus. tion responsible for all the war, prejudice and greed in the The Roman liturgy, the most world? I think not. Will all those evils, be gone forever widespread'of Catholic liturgical usages, has been rather unusual ,when the older generation passes? I think not." in insisting on a single fixed Senator Jacob K. Javits recognized that there shouid form of euchar:istic prayer. While be every effort made to avoid this dangerous polarization other liturgies, especially those of young versus old that is so much a part of the American of the East, have not retained the original usage of improvised scene. He remembers that a' wise man has said that the eucharistic prayers along certain civilization of a country is determined by how people take fixed lines of thought, they have care of their old. And the late Robert Kennedy wrote that at least provided alternative pos yOtIth is not so much a stage in life as a state of mind. sibilities. With the new Roman development, the priest who pre And 'so' it is. sides over the Eucha,rist will Life should be a continuous thing with infancy and have four texts from which 10 eh~ldhood and adolescence and youth and maturity and choose. Variety of Texts
@rhe ANCHOR
Rockville' Center,
ment one another, stressing now one, now another' facet of the' whole 'eucharistic mystery. The ,first and briefest, of the, eucharistic' prayers is partly based on an ancient mOdel, ~ example suggested in the "Apos tolic Tradition" of St. Hippoly tus of Rome, about 215 A.D. Its 'modernized version, suitable to simpler occasions and weekday Masses, has its own preface but may be employed with one or other of the existing prefaces appropriate to the Church season or, feast. The text contains, as do the other new texts, an explicit invocation of the Holy Spirit not found in the Roman canon. Its recital of the events of sal vation, creation and redemption, is short and simple. The second eucharistic pmyer is designed to be used with the
we
Advocates Use Of Audio..¥gsual
,"p"
,
·It
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.,
:,
FIRST IN U.S.: Scouting:'hist9ry was made Sunday M;,~And~w's Episcopal Churoh, New Bedf~ ,when six Cub, Scouts ~~ived medals ~ ' : for religious study, the equivalent of the Parvul\i Dei 8IW'ard for Catholic Oubs. The awards, first of't}ieh;" kind in the 'United St8ltes; were designed by Mrs. Emery Cusson, CQb~t leader a.~, 8t. ,LaWrenoo~ parish, ood
Start Program To A;d Youth SAN FRANCISCO (NC) :Religious leaders of all faibhs have launched a program here 110 find Summer jobs for the ftty's disadvantaged youths. Jrn a letter from the San Fran..; t!isco Conference on Religion, Race and Social Concerns, e1ergymen were asked to join' with the National Alliance of Businessmen to provide addi Clonal employment opportunitie. lor t'he needy youth from 16 to
••
requireme~~l?f' earning' the~ were wm-ked'Ou,t 'by,Mrs. Joseph Duperre of St. KiHan'sparish, both Catholic churehes. Left, with Rev. William Rasch~ paStOr', of St. Andrew's, arid Mrs. Duperre, are Mark Kearley, JonartJhan Gurney, Brian Devaney. Center, Robert Berube and Jay Jason dispI,ay' projects and log books. Right, Bruce Gurney with Mrs. Cusson.
New Bedlor~ ~atholic Cub Scout Leaders Design' Protestant Religi~us Award A young boy's cooked-back tears sevemX months ago resulted in a historic event Sunday at St. Andrew's Episcopal Ohurch in New Bedford. Following the morning ser vice, at which Rev. William E. Rasche, rectOJr, presided, six young Cub Scouts in uniform stepped forward with pride for a most impres'sive event m their lives. The six became the first Cub Scou,ts of the Now Mrs. Cusson and Mrs. '!'he two women discussed the Protestant flaith in the Duperre -are beginning to notify idea with Rev. Mr. Rasche. He United States--as far as Na fuought Cub Scouts they can enroll ia it was fine. tional Boy Scout Headquart the claSses that will be con "Nlen llhe women went to
Signers included Archbishop ,en ,knows--to receive special T. McGucken of San re!ll,gious awards after • long work. Mrs. Cusson designed the J'rancisco; . Rabbi Morton Hoff }!;»eriod of study. medal and the certificate. Mrs. man, president of the Board of '1'be gold medals with raised Duperte worked out the re Babbis of Northern California; crosses and the special certifi quirements the boys would ~n Boyce-Smith, president of the San Francisco Council of cates they recei.ved made it an' have to fulfill. Churehes, and Fred H. Merrill ecumenical event. They were The youngsters of the Sot. Cll the National Alliance of designed by Mrs. Emery J. Cus Andrew's pack started studying. son of New Bt.'<lford, who has Businessmen. Several weeks ago, they were Noting that there are "many been active in Cub Scout work fascinated spectators at cere thousands of disadvantaged at st. Lawrence Churoh. monies at St. Lawrence Churcb fO uths in San Francisco," the Their instructor was a parish at which their Cll'tholic com mtter stated: toner of St. Kilian's Ohurch in panions received the Parvuli "Our request is that your New Bedford, Mrs. Joseph Du Dei awards. eong,regation join us and the perre, who worked out the re Ji'ational Alliance of Business quirements for the award in llteRigiious Scout Ristoli'Y men in the 'Eaoh One Hire One' cooperation with the Rev. Sunday, a number of their Summer program, and alleviate JRas<:he. ' C 8 ' t h o l i c friends were in the Cihis situation by providing one congregation ,as the St. A.rl-' • more jobs. Receiving the wwards were' drew's Cub Scouts received """I. . b "th' 1 tte 'Brian Devaney" Jay Jason,' their own awards. " .L<.es~ JO s, e e r .co~- ,Mark Kearley, Bruce ,Gurney, ' , "hued, can come from busll~~ ,; ,.Jonathan Gurne and, Robert' There wasn't a tear iA, si~t,; , " IlDembers of your congregation. Berube y " but there were six bl'Q8d grins . ' ,, . . from businesses in your local • " " that stretched from ear tlo ear ,', area, or by the church' or' symi- " , Burst b,to Tear!I six very young men: made " "fJOgue hiring' one or' more ,religiQus Scout history. , 'd.1reotly." Row diG it b e g i n ? , Mrs. 'Cusson bas conducted it very simple, liccording Parvuli AWard classes for Cub flO Mrs. Cusson.' , Scouts fur the last five years. .., _' ,,~bolic Cub Scouts were Mrs.. Dupel'l"e bas'assisted, ber. ,JlWorking on the requirements for flhe- last two years. Next award ceremony wiD be WASHINGTON (NC) A . for their Parvuli ,Dei award when'u a Little boy up and AD October. lbemorial window in honor OIl Bfshop John Neumann, C.SS.R.,' asked if he could get it, too.! told him, 'No, because it's for IDurth bishop of Philadelphia, was dedicated at the National Catholic boys.'" Shrine of the Immaculate Con.. Then, she :remembers with ill8Ption here. horror, "he burst out crying." , EDMONTON (NC)-Archbish The window was a gift to the ' To Mrs. Cusson and Mrs. Du op Anthony Jordan, O.M.!., of 1I1iaJtional Shrine from the Phila perre, that was all fIliat waa, Edmonton bas announced that ~phia IIlrchdiocese. necessary. a Priests' Institute will be Auxilia,ry Bishop John Jr. launched at St. Joseph's Semi Jrf a youngster couldn't re Cmham of Philadelphia, repre ceive Parvuli Dei because he nary this Fall for the updating ~ting John Cardinal Krol, wasn't 11 Catholic, he was going of priests' education. presided at the dedication cere to receive a special one denot The institute will be ~ first mony and was principal coru:e1l ing his knowledge oi his own such program run by a diocese ebrant of the lVlass. ibith. An cana~ ;Joseph
as
was
Dedicate Memorial , Window at Shrine
came
Institute to Update Priests' Education
dtroted in preparation for the awards ceremony.
Cub Scouts of the Protestant fai·fu will work for their own
religious medal which may, say Boy Soout headquarters, be come a Iblltionally recognized award, and which was born in the tears of a smalJ New Bed ford boy.
Endorse Campaign MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - The N8Itional Association of Laymen has announced its endorsement <1f. the Poor People's Campaign and has urged ilt8 17 affiliates around the (.'Ountry to support theeampaign's efforts to dram atize the causes of povertY and ~ work to remove those causes.
BEFORE YOU
Praises Nuclear Weapons Treaty UNITED NATIONS (NC) The treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly, represents a first important stage, however in complete, toward nuclear dis armament, said Msgr. Alberto Giovannetti, permanent repre sentative of the Holy See to the UN. In its final form there is • clearer undel'ltaking on the pari of the nuclear powers to begin a gradual reduction of their atomic arsenals, Msgr. Giovan netti noted. "This cannot fnil to be • 9OUl'Ce of satisfaction to all those who, like Pope Paul VI, have repeatedly pointed out the dangers of vertical as well as horizontal proliferation." 'rnle most positive aspect of the treaty, Msgr. GiovannetU said, is the close relationship between the unaertakings of the non-nuclear sta,tes not to manufacture or obtain nuclear weapons and the pledge of as sistance to them in developing the peace-fUll uses of nuclear energy.
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lHE ANCHOR~Diocese of FoJl Rfyer-Thurs. June 20, 1968
Parishes to RUA
Free Day Camps
-:
We'ekend of Family Travel Is Acid Test for Clothes
P.
~
By Marilyn Roderick
r Hawng. just returned :from a very bectJie weekend trip
~h my children, I feel like enough of a'll authority to type
out a few well-chosen wordg on w·hat not tAl pack to look
present81ble; or how' to look like a bunch Of ~wbs without
even trying: Planning this without weight, iIt doeS away
little Jaunt was d<me at the with the need of an extra jecket.
last minute because invari To show thad; it takes ~ the
ably one of my offspring has .water like a duck, 'JasOn
feu.
• rash, the sniffles, or a fever Ole day beroTe our depaItur~
this time Jason
:was the culprit.
So most of our
packing was
done the morn
Ing of oui trip,
with half the
clothes I needed
lin the laundry
and the other
balf in the iron
ing. The results .
were that well
eoordinated was
eertainly not the word to de ecri be lis.
One thing about being disor sanized on a trip, even a short one, is fum you're very con l!Icious of the people around you who seem to be well-put together and you avidly analyse anyone around you who looks as if she didn't sleep in her clothes. Pa'rt of our travel was on a ferry that allowed close scrutiny of the other passengers and the following observations were made: Li~t. colored clothing
does not travel well. Whi.te may be the in color for this Summer, but it's a color that does not take much wear and tea~ and it eertainly isn't clhildproof.
into one of the waves wiolh it
on . and. it didn>t Bhrink a biit.
Of Course, it did get a bit damp
but then my sister-in-law
(whom we were visiting) of..
·fered ber dry~ and before you
. oouid say "carelesS Children"
Jason's suit was as good as new
and l'eady for his next adven ture.· .
Melissa wasn't ~ fOrtunate
with her :favorite pair of yellow
culottes (it was truly in a mo
ment of weakness that I bought
yellow for a seven-year-older).
They ended up with smashing
looking green staiDB fu'om gob
bly goop.
Nylon Parkas
Most c:hildren's clothes, espe
cially tlhose that aTe going to be
worn and not just hung in 'the
closet, should be bought in
shades of chocolaite ice cream,
strawberries, blueberries, orange
sodas or gobbly gooop. One:very PREAClHIES AT MASS: Wheelchair Priest Father good traveling item I did dis cover were the nylon paa-kas . Philip Liebich, who helps with chapIain duties at St. Joseph's that seem to be so popular this Hospital, Lancaster, Pa., gives the homily at a Mass for season. shut-ins. Almost 40 invalids, many in wheelchairs, attended 0
ar;h~il~eca:i~et ~~
the Mass 'at ~t. Anthony's church, Lancaster. NC Pho~•.
starts to get a bit chilly they
aa-e just warm enou~ and they
all have atltached hoods, there
fore it does away with the nec essity of an exira oot. Apostolic lDe~ega~e Approves Expression
parting words of advi~ Of .... o Dd . O· .
Plain dark colors don't seem forM~ 1l'he packing mOther are preD"4IeW I eas, pinIOns 110 be the answer either; they' pare in advance, even if someone PORTLAND (NC) _ The Appurposes, the spirit of tbe look warm even if they're not does come down' wiIIJh beri-beri, 'ostolic Delegate in the United' Church," he said, "it is necessary and they too show 'every wrin you can' always unpack. Don"t States strongly emphas.ized here ·that such an expt:ession of opin kle and spot. in fact, plain col say uI'll buy '1!hat Item Where' that in the post-Vatican Council iOn, such an active pa,rticipation 0I'll of any hue clearly show the weW of traveling and take I'm going." Many places are not n era it mustbe remembered all - in the prog,ram of apostolic en away from thewell-grooomed as well stocked as your local of the ChurchS activities, "name-. deavors, follow an orderly, co&. sIlOres midusetheU\p quest totyOUI' an ly WOrsh'Ip,'the sacramena t I ac- .... -ienhous and responsl'ble line. look a tourist iB seeking. item may a lot of ~e and enerBY'. tion and the apostolate, are di,"qrder," he said, "is always Traven Problems Prints, plaids and checks rected by the' hierarchy Wihich an i~dispensible factor in progOne of the smartest women Show less tmvel' wear than alone can gave these actions the . ~ss,. particularly so w.hen the en the boat was dressed in a plain shades, and the fabric that mark of authenticity and. unity." . apostola*e of the Church is oon brown and· beige checked suit loves' wrinkles should remain Archbishop Luigi Raimondi·' ce:rJ.led." . ~1ih a plain l,>rown linen bloUse. behind in your cloeet. When we observed that in' the wake of the He said the contribution of the ferry .pulled away travel witti children we Bet ex-' eOuncil it is good that many new ··Religious. in this renewal "m'ust
tram .shore this older woman·. hausied, but there's no use let-· ideas and opinions ~e being ex- - be accordin.g to your particular
. ,st,retched. out full lengJl;h. GIl one Mg'it .m our ~ presse~. " . - 8~a~ul! in the Church, asl\~ligof t}:le wooden benches provided . Preaching at a concelebrated ious; as publicly committed io
-' for t~e passengers. in .the .lo~nge -' .... ..'- _ . ;'., : . ...: . ·:Mass closin'g th~ ,first Internat:- . the profef\Sion of th~ eval!ge~i~al
. and slept· peacefully throughOUlt CommunltyActton,Qroup ~ ronal Conference of.&>uncils and - eoun,sels and especia~ly the prac the sail; ';" Combats D' ' .. ' f ' Senates·· of ··Wo~en .Religious .. tice ~f .perfeCt love and charity,
" When we reached port I ~de·. ' . . - '. - -,' :. 1~lml~O_IO~here, the archbishOp lauded 'the - ~ 311..to',lpanifeSt the. note 'fIII. tt a point to .notice her' and I· ~KRON (~C)--::Neig~.U~.-.nwis for. thei,~ spirit . Of. frank:' - eanclity of the church itself. was amazed' to see that her· limited, .8. new c:ommu~ity aCtion .ness evidenced during 1ile 8eso:- • "My dear Reli~ous,"- he said, . lllUit -looked as fresh as if .gro~p . aJm~ a~. Meaki~g ..dOWD mons. . , . ., ~our public profession places bad just' eme~ged from the, raCIal. barrIers - JD.' ~usm.g - he~, . He said the ;Vatican· council . you ': in the ·limelight·: of the eomfortB of her own home. The bas been form~ }D the city'. Jlequi-res that opinions "be re-. Church. You are anxious to-take checked and rou~-textured- sub?rban. Stow-Hu~son area. quested and the proper mechan- ;your place, both by renewing material appeared to shed SInce Its establishment .last . ism be set up so that the hier- . your spiritual life' and by ren wrinkles or a¢ least keep them· Fall, the group has obtamed archy may find help and coop- dering precious service to the trom being too noticeable. On pled~es fro~ 85.0 adults of Holy eration." mission of the Church.. Yom.' ap the other ha,nd, a young girl in Fam!ly pansh m Stow-repre"According to the nature, the ostolic action will be useful, ap a pale yellow baby corduroy ~entJ~g 70 per ~ent O'f the famipreciated and effective in the skirt ended up with enough lies In the pansh-to welcome measure in which you grow in wrinkles in the back to give it N~gr~ and me~bers of other Ca~holic Wlri~err Gets ~rfection and sanctity and fol the appearance of acc~rdion mInorIty groups Into the area. Awarrd 01'/1 Sweden. low the guidelines and norms pleats, plus smudge marks from Some 250 'persons in the 300established for progress in an tlhe benches. member Stow United Methodist· STOCKHOLM (NC)-A woman orderly coordinated and unified Keeping the children looking Church have signed similar writer, Mrs. Gunnel Vallquist, :manne;."
halfway decent was a chore in pledges. has become the first Catholic to
itself. The outfit that traveled St. Stephen Lutheran ChurcJi receive this country's Artist's
the best in their wardrobe was council in St~w issued a state- Award.
a set of navy danskin slacks ment supporting the goals of The awqrd is given to authors,
eombined with a navy and white Neighbors Unlimited. Other musicians and artists accompan Maintenance Supplies Jersey that Melissa wore. Jason churches are expected to follow ied by a prize of more than also had one good piece of trav- soon. $5,000 annuaHy for life. SWEEPERS - SOAPS
eling apparel-a r~ jumpsuit Father Patrick .1. Bohan, asMrs. Vallquist covered the
DISINFECTANTS piped in navy and white. Made sistant at Holy Family parish and Second Vatican Council as a ·FlRE EXTINGUISHERS of a soFt synthetic knit that president of the Stow. Clergy As- journalist._Her four books on the washes Qeautifully and' d·ries in sociation, which backs Neighbors council have been widely read a dryer equally well, this little UnHmited, said "it is the respon- throughout Europe. She has also suit bas long sleeves and zips sibility of the religious commun- been invited to cover the gene 1886 PURCHASE STREET all the way up the front. ity to correct ratliaf injustices- ral assembly of the World CounNEW BEDfORD It's perfect to put 0n over a not just because we are fearful cil Qf Churches in Uppsala, Swe
bathing suit to ward off a chill of conflict, but because of our den, in July and intends to write
·993-3786 and because of its warmth moral econvictions." a book on that meeting. .
Praises Nuns
PLAINFIELD (HC) ':NdI9 New Jersey community's ~ Catholic parishes will run :free day camp programs - .this StuD mer in conjunction with o4lhel! community agencies as the ~ attemptS to meet the recrea tional needs of the disadvaDo taged. Plaintield was the scene 411! mcial disorders last Summer in Wlhiclt a policeman was killed.; st. MarY's Parish has contri bute~ $5,800 and the use GIll pariSh faciliJties to operate • day camp in conjunction witlli :Nei~borhood. House, a club-. bOii~e sponsored by civic groupS. 'sOme 150 youngsters will use . 1lhe Parish facilities. Counsellon;) ,will be students from. St. Peter's Coliege, New Jersey, who will undergo a week of .oriEmtatioD bMote undertaking the work. ~eiy will be paid under the federal work-study program m college' students. Another 130' youngsters wiD attend a day camp at St. BeJi nard's parish, wi·th St. Bernard!8 working in conjunotion with the COmmunity Action Project, citY. anti-poverty agency, and help": i~g' to fund the project, In addition, St, Bernard's will he host' to a· Head Start program for 'some 40 children. There has been' a Head start program at the parish the last three years.
Maltese Seek to Halt
Il1lcfecent Filming
VALETTA '(NC)-Church and government officials have pr0 tested against the filming here of a movie being produced by British actor Anthony' Newely~ They have charged that the film is studded with indecent epi sodes. Archbishop Michael Gonzi of Malta urged Premier G. Borg Olivier to stop the production and send Newely back to En gland. Government officials, aftet' see~ng rushes of. scenes, agreed with the charges of indecenC3J,. However, Malta's censorship laws do not control movie production. Newely then decided to shor,~ en . bis two-month stay because of a mounting bar:rage of criti ·cism. . .
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THE AW'HOI:!Thurs., June 20, 1968
Auctions Offer Opportunity To .Collect lovely Dishes
Vatican Proises Treaty Move
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick
This has been the week m min c!md it would seem ~ IIeaSOn of mine. A pretty good barometer of bow much -m we have had is the fact that I have only watered my iIIwwn once this season and I try to give it at least an inc1lI. • week, which would fjgure and know they're availlab1e eut to only one week in the them last 10 in which we have not any time our shi;p comes m. 'fiJ' AaetiollB Md at least an inch of rain. Until this week, anell. as I write this it 1s the week.of .lone, .. we h~VIil not.h8d ~rsistentl;r 'Wet weather. Rather we have. Iaad torrential rain !Jtorma and. relatively n~e in be tween. This type Of. rain doesn't • the g:a~en any htlqn because ~bile it,d~nebes 1he ,soU it d.oM IMJt raise. the humid~ty to. aD,J' «reat exteJtt. D is during pro longed Periods o:f driZzle . . problems arise, and we have bad Ioor straight days of it 00 dl3:r ~ week. Fungus Diseases For the rose grower the prob lem. manifests itself as fungwl cl!seases such as blackspot. The IIigns are similar for most vari eties of the diseases: tiny clretll Iar spots begin to appear on the leaves usually those closest to the ground) and as the Summer progresses more and more leaves are infected, t.lMl leaves withe!' and die and the plant suffers ae eordingly. The spores remain on Ibe fallen leaves to be reac tivated the following Spring :-men there is sufficient moisture an the air to break dorm~lC:Y. 'l'he surest b"eatment for fun &us diseases 13 to spray with one of the ~icides which are available in e;bundance today. Black spot and the other fun PB iniections need not be toler ated today and their presence in ~ garden is the result of eegligence or ignorance on the part of the gardener. A prevention program sbouhI. ~ based on the regular use 01. • fungicide for the ~en. There ~ many commercial produc:b _ the IIHIrket which are ..... 9lertised ~ fungidde. and. IDOIIt Iii them eonta1n one of ttwee ItIngicides, ~ of which are effeo • .-e in th~prden: phaltan, cap . . or fel"bam. These are aD ~ater soluble and should be IIPPlied at least once eYerT two ~s Or more hquently in the lain,. se:ason IIlIld less frequen~ til the heat of Summer. In '!'he Kitchell JIood can be. delight to ~ pare and a Jo7 to eat but pari .t the complete process of paoe eenting .a dish well is to offer • in a lovely setting. Often the itUBh that a food is served in has been chosen to serve as a back drop to aec:ent and complement Ihe rec~pe. A gourmet dinner may taste equally good on paper plates as on bone china but Wmially, and aesthetically the _ina leads an the way. This past weekend we visited .,. sister-in-law Betty in South IIlunpton, L.I. The Hamptons are -.oted for their beautiful lIhoPil lhat eater to the moneyed crowda ", Summer' aocialites who reside eocl visit ID this area. Tru1T ~ shops were as 1ove17 .. .agazies artleles had indicated, . . the ones that really impreaa ell me were those carrying deco ..tive acces80ries for the home _d table. Serving pieces were magnifi ~n~ delica~ hand-P3llUed With fragile china decomtions eocrusting the covers af eYeB -.up tureens. Casseroles aDd _uffle dishes were not the mun dane white that most of us ha". r.ut were decorated with beauti lid floral motifs or brilliant -.odern coloza. Of course the ..-wes of t~ items were quite Wgh but it'll Dice to at least vie...
"en
ram
While most of'use would find it .11., ~j,t cJiffieWt to do our shop )JriM. for dinnerware and aooes oor,~ in: such expensive places. there is one spot where We maT 00 able to pick up lovely dishes .and' serving pieces at a fractiOlll of coot ahd that is at an auctiMl. Auctions are Summertime enter tainment,. especlally in the Cape and not only ·do t~y offer a glimpse of this form of Amer fcana, they also may give you an opportunity to pick up a "find.Last Summer I bought 1Il cant
glass pedesllal dish at a 10ezII
auction. I thought it WElS very
lovely for the price and hed
visions of how charming it wound
look filled with fruit, especialJly
trailing grapes. Alas, Jason man
aged to get to it and there r.
one fJriangul1lr chip of qtJLite large
proportions missing from the
back. The moral is, buy sturdier
glass dishes tf )"Ou have at two
year old. .
Setiously though,- nothing mises the spirit of a hostess mOIre or gamers~el' more complimenta than a beautifully set table. Re member this when you're choos ing wedding or anniversary' gifta or even if you're splurging on I:l Mttle something extra for your
VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Holy See has welcomed a joint Soviet-U. S. initiative for im provement of a five-year-old trewty on nudear energy. An edi,torial in the Vatican City newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, speaking of the HoI,. See's satisfaotion at the joint amendments said: "Presen.ta-tion of the new teXt to the United' Nations is to be hailed as an event of· great importance, rekindling the light of hope in a world shaken by deep disturbances." L'Osservatore Romano said the amendments would remove the suspicion that the propo nents of the treaty were at tempting to "assure for them selves a sor¢ of nuclear monop
area;
self.
This recipe' makes a goodly amount of peanut butter flavor ed cookies topped with a candy kiss. The recipe is from Mrs. WUliam Lynch o:f Holy Name 19&'ish in Fall River. Peanut BlossollDS 1 and % eUpfiflowr' , 1 tieaspoon' baking aodlll
!k teaspoon salt •
'cup granulated BugaJ!'
** .
oop brown
o.~
0sUgu
cup' shoneDing .
'k cup' peanut butter
1 egg
Z teaspooD.1l milk . 1 teaspoon· vmulla 48 Hershey CaDdy' KisseS Stft· . together "the flour, aOOa, and· iMlIt rmd set' aside. 3~ In Ii large· bowl' cream the .ld1ol'tening with the granulated. sugar and the brown sugar until 6IIDlooth. 3) Add the peanut buUer, egg. milk and vanilla to the shorten ing mixture and blend well. 4) Gradually add the sifted ingredients to ·~s mixture and stir until wen blended and a ati£f dough fonns. a~ Shape . dough into sman balls and dip in granulated sug ar. Place· on ungreased cookie sheet. (They will 'flatten out a bit) . 8) Place in a preheated 375· OYeR forr 10 to 12 minutes. '1) Remove flrom oven and press (lightly) • kiss into the top ()f the warm cookie.
l'
9
oly....
Czech Bishops Await Return to Dioceses OOCTOR OF LAWS: Senator Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts, greet'ed by Paltrick Cardinal' O'Boyle of Washington, Chancellor of the Catholic University of America, received the honorary Doctor of Laws Degree and gave the commencement address at CUA~s 79th annual oommencement~ NC Photo.
New Organization lEx-Nuns Form !lJ1smute fro Continue APOS~OiiOc Work MILWAUKEE (NC)-Twenty ed by-laws and qualifications for flwo former nuns who left a con- membel'Ship have not been clear Wlent in Louisiana last year have 11' d·rawn. Among those condi fired articles of incorporation tions mentioned in the articles here for a new organization ca11 of incorporation are "optionally ed. the Christian InsUtute for self-rmpos~'an4 volu~tary con People. .ditiOllS of Celibacy and. personal The women-4ormerly p<rofes poverty." ,. ' . ' sed Sisters and novices of the "Membership is .presently re.,. Daughter' of the Cross, an 8'1 stricted to- chartClt'.mempers, but ~ber diocesan order in. p61'9ODS interested in sharing .the Shreveport, La.-wear regular experien~ of the gI'()UP are being . IiJ4ireet clothes and work in areas welCOOl.~ as aSll9ciates," .8ccord such as teaching, religious edu ing to- the. ne',Wly elected presi cation and adult education. dent, NancY' ,E. Brossette,· "1mtf1 Twenty-six nUns were dispen such' time as. ,more, permanent lICd from their vows as the OO"ganizatioo ill cretermined." Misa Daughters of the Cross last year Brossette ,is, 31 years old., . so that they could live a less ... , _...... ' '.', " .. structured life' in the Milwau kee area . 5001 II SYSTEMAnc The 22 who a,greed to form the • 10 rear SAVIN8S institute explained that under MONTHLY DEPOSITS • the charter of the institute they Of. ;.11 INVESTMENT will operate "exclusively for re • 10 year SAVINGS ligious, charitable or educational NOTICE ACa:OUNTS purposes." The institute board of a . REGULAR' directors consists of eight of the year ' SAVINGS 'fornier nuns and three' laymen irom Shreveport. The institute has not 'yet adopt-·
'5
5 ·00
4.50%
Canonization Process For Chilean Cardinal
SANTIAGO (NC)-The Arch diocesan chancery office said here that a move has been made by the Chilean bishops to seek the canonization of the late Jose Cardinal Caro of Santiago. The Chilean Bishops'· Confer forecast Soaring Africa ence gathered documents on the UNITED NATIONS (NC) - ' virtues of the cardinal and ap proved a formal petition to Within the next 20 years Afri .'s rate of population growth Rome at a national meeting in will be the highest iIll 1lhe Chillan. Cardinal Caro, a noted social world, accordIng to Uni~ed Na tions. experts. refonner, died here Dec. 4, 1958, The roreeast on Mrica's pop at the age of 92. More than half mation growth was made by a million mourners took part in a six:-man UN team whiClll bas the funeral procession, and an completed II technical assistan.ce other 300,000 filed by his bier. mission on the development of Born. into a humble peasant national and regional f~ilWes home, he became the apostle of in. the population field. the miners and later carried out an extensive 'program of At ~resent, the Latin Arner flcan i'a'te 0If population growUl priest training and social aotion ill Santiago. mob Dm.
Bass River .Savings Bank
BONN (NC)-The reinstate ment of two Czechoslovak bish ops in their Sees is being delayed on technical grounds. With the return of Bishops Josef Hlouch and Karel Skoupy to their respective Sees, Bude jovice and Brno in May, Bishops Stefan Trochta' of Litomerice and Bishop Karel Otcenasek, apos tolic administrator of Hhradee Kralove have been awaiting clearance by the government for reinstatement to their dioceses. The government office for church affairs in the new Czech olsovak communist regime stat edthat because Bishops Trochta and Otcenasek were sentenced to several years' imprisonment by a regular court, they must be rehabilitated before they can re 'BUme their functions. The church affairs office g~ve ·assurance:. that the. rehabili~ation will be .ceomplished quic~ly.
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10
THE ANCHORThurs., .J~ne
'j
,;~1
20,,:.19.68
Youngstown $ee Has Apostrolate,s In Inner-City::
Prelates Stress ! ' ~ .Needfor Reform .
PARIS (NC)-With the pa!!l-> to be he~ on. ,June 23 ~d, 30, 12 bishcpB ~. southern' FranCe, without e:ll'o pressing support for or oppo6)o tion to the GauWet Party ~ French PresidenJt Charles ~ Gaulle, have urged voters t() consider the need for refoTlXl within France and for attenti~ to the plight of wa1' victims M4ll people in underdeveloped mtro tions. , The 12 bishops of the apos~ k region of tihe Midi (France has been divided. for adminis ¢rative' purposes, :into apostoltc . x:e,pons)" ~eeiipg, (June 5) 2:) ToUlouse, published. (June 6) ~ . oommunique. in' .wpicl:i th<8W, asked Christians to: make ''3 choiCe carefully &tudi~ in conP
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YOUNGSrroWN (NC) ,Inner-city aposiJolates have . been established in; three cities as part of the Y()ungs- '
town diocese's involvement with the work elf the .Urban Task Force of the U. S. Bishops. The apostolates--in Youngs town, Canton and Warren-are aimed at making the Cll.urcll's preSence felt ~ '3" greate.r de gree .than ever, among th~ ~, I: according to Father' 'I'homas E. McCarthy, diocesan 'direcl.~r of 'charities. .. Science." . Father McCar.thy' is the mid , . "Elements of this choice," theJ)' dleman between" 'the Youngs , wrote, "have.. been .Qrought tJi . town diocese 'and' 'the Bishops' tJie fore by the present crisis: m Task Force office in' WaShing is necessary to reform our societ.y ton, D, C. His job is' to report to to render justice to the l~ the office the programs the dio favored and to respond to t~ cese undertakes, and also to get legitima,te aspi'rations of sm.. from the office ideas on pro dents, workers and farmers." grams which have proven' suc "But," they continued, "we cessful elsewhere and which . must know how to go beyomll might be adapted lo~ally. , , the national horizOn .and muSi3; , Involves ADI . • . not forget the permanent cha~ 'I'he Urban Task .Force' . was lenge made to 'our society by established by the National Con .' ;Ute' peoples who are the vietiJn3 ference of, Catholic, Bishops of war and underdevelopmel1'1,,10 '(NCGB) at, itS. meet'ing in ~t..
Louis. las,t Apr~l,. in. order to
draw together all chufchagen-,
cies 'which ·tou.ch or, ~rban and racial' affairs. Jts );.'ifice is part cfthe Social Action DeparUnent CHARLESTON (NC) - Cle!IP of the United states Catholic gymen. of the metropolitan are<n Confel.'ence. " , , of, Charleston have issued @l Fa,ther McCarthy said that while each of the inner~city DISCUSS LATIN AMERICA:, Nineteen prelates ()f the Americas met in Detroit to public statement urging enforce apostolates will have its own diS'Cliss long-range plans for the Church in Latin America. Among them were, stand~ng,' ment of the federal open hous ing aCt and renewed efforts aG priest~coordinator, the plan will integration in virtually eve~ involve ai-l pastorS and their 'left to ri~t, Archbishop Coleman Carroll of Miami and Archbishop Pablo Munoz Vega of Quito, Ecuador; seated are Archbishop Miguel Dario Mirand9 of Mexico City ~nd walk of life. 'parishioners. The statememapopeared as lIITi1l He said several proposals Archbishop Juan Carlos Aramburu of Buenos· Aires, Argentina. NC Photo.' ' :.. . advertisement in 1lhe Charleston have already been made on News and Courier and tml ways in which the diocese can Oharleston Evening Post. Among help solve urban problems. those who signed were Catholic These include· est<iblishment of Bishop Ernest K. UnterkoefleJl' day-care' centers for children W'()'®~~tfe$ of Oharleston and Episcopalia:Jll whose mothers must work out Re©JtlIe~ts Bishop Gray Temple. lSide the home, and possibly low The evangelical nature of tIDe Cost I}ousing projects, federally DETROIT (NC) - A meeting in the Latin American country "We are keenly aware of tbe financed and benefittingspeci- of minds on how to select and where they will ultimately work. Latin American CJiurch. complexities of the situatiolill "The suggested training pro- , The size of Latin American fie groups such as the' aged or train missionaries for Latin confronting us," -the ,South Cal' fumilies. with small incomes. America marked the conference . g,ram was well received by su- .parishes,· the role of the lay olina clergymen said. "We con periors of religious orders not man and the importance of, the More 'program ideas, he add- of Latin America bishops, U.S. fess that we ourselves share .k:J ed, will come from interested bishops and superiors of major large enough to have an iriterna-Bible vigil in the Latin Amer the responsibili-ty fur the ten sions that exist. We have long local groups, the diocesan char- U.S. religious orders' at Sacred tional training program of their' ican's relgious life. Since pa.rish own," according to Auxiliary es. often will oonsist of many been aware of. the race problem. ities office, and the Urban Heart Seminary here.' but we have been fearful of eli Task Force. At the meeting, representatives Bishop Joseph Breitenbeck of towns and be as large, as 8,000 ploring its depths and of facinrg The drive to help the underof the Latin American Bishops DetrQ.it, who is also the chairman square miles, the Latin Amero i1s demand upon our lives. privileged was given impetus Council (C E LAM) presented of a subcommittee - of the U.S.. Jean comes to rely more on' the by. theU. S. Bishops Apr.... 26 three, requests to th.e National Bishops' . Committee for J;.ati.n· .. Bible vigi-l and the lay leader , "Now the needs of the prese~ statement on the national urban Conference' of Catholic' Bishops' America. , . tha.n.on the occasional ,visits of . time call us to an honest ap praisal of the structure of om crisis, emphasizing a "Christian (NCCB) and the major U,S. Reo. ....Those orderstbat' a).ready 1II priest. society and demand of us II duty to we our resources re- ligious superiors, who represent have their own training pro'Assisting nUns to adapt to sponsibly and genNously m 179,000 R~ligious' women and. ·grams· were not as receptive, on communities. of· three or four . courage' and a c:ommilment di view of the urgent n~s of 1he 35,000 ,Religious men. At present the. )Vhole," Bishop Breitenbeck ..after coming from'large .re'igious . .which' our entire' community ill capable," the clergymen sta'!ed poor." there are 5,400 U.S. priests, nuns 8umma,rized. ,communities. The crisis was underscored in and Brothers. working in !.au'Ji AI, now ,~nviBioned,' the lint ' The three-phase progra~, as
a letter trom Archbishop' John America. ' . phase of the suggested plan Presented to the U:S.. bishops
F. Dearden of Detroit; president The Latin Ameoriean bisbope'· WQuid be carried' ,out in t~e and. the superiors of major U,S,'·
of the NCCB, 'to Bishop James requests were: ' . U.s; with phase two,~ki,ng place reli~ous orders· by the Latin ..
W .. Malone QIf Youngstown. That '.any priest., nun or Broth-' either in the U.S. or in Latin" American'bishops,'wiil-i>e adopt-: . ',:
"In the present crisis' of r a c e . ..' ed 'in, the near .future.' ." ". "
d . ·t· it· .d t that er belpg sent to L,atm AmerIca Ame'rica. The third 'Phase, ,be.BRID}(L PORTRAITS' an povel y, J6 e'[J en receive 'preliminary training in cause of i'tS· emphasili "0Ji direct· we must do more in our diOc~ses ~ the I" culture,' Jiving" 'pastoral'training, would be ear-' through traditional institutions, d"t?nguagne, , Siiei1t Meclitati~~', and through newly desigped con 1 Ions a d spirjj,u~ life' (1£' ried out in Latin America: • 'TRENTON, (NC)-A' biil' 'u! ' . 'Sizeof Parisbefi programs both QIf our own, and,. t?e ~untry to ~ ;~eryed; .... in . cooperationwi't'h other reli.That those Reh?l<?~S .who ~~8S , . Typical considerations of til4! circumvent the Supreme Court ' decision outlaWing p'rayer gious and civic efforts," ArlCh- !hrough the p"el~mmary tr~m7 three-step prograll).-would be: ~. ·public· schools' passed theNeow 'bishop Dearden wrote' : mg phase successfully' be gIv~
JeT6ey Senate and was' sent' to
'. . an inten~ve language course, Richard J. Hughes.. It had
which .will give them complete Diocese Seeks Gov. passed the Assembly earlier. If
fluency in the language of the Discuss Problems f M R.ad HO . License signed into law, it would permit
CQuntry in which tltey will teachers in public schools to
Of Race, Poverty serve; ERIE (NC)-Acting through Pastoral Training St. Mark's Seminary her e , start the day with a minute of
LOUISVILLE (NC) The All priests, nuns and Brothers Bishop John F. Whealon of silent meditation multi-faith Louisville Area Erie here in Pennsylvania has who have completed the first Council on Religon and Race filed formal application. with two phases of the preparation sponsored 'a "Week of Confron .J.. should receive pastoral training 'the Federal Communications tatio'n" here which focused on CREATIVE CANDIDS Commission in Washington for the problems of race, racism and a permit to build and operate EXQUISITE FORMALS
p'overty. ONE STOP
Minosterool Troi~;nSJ an educational FM radio station Thirteen public sessions at SHOPPING CENTER
By t!:le area's leading studio.
here. HAMILTON (NC) - Repre various churches, including fi",e RESERVE YOUR DATE EARL'"
The Bishop's long-range plans sentatives of eight denomina • Television 0 Grocell17' Catholic churches, were "not de call for satelite FM stations at tions from across Canada are signed for instant, specific pro • .Appliances • Furniture EVANS STUDIOS strategic points throughout· grams but to get people talking participating in a National Con 104 Allen St., New BedlforCl liB MAIN ST.-TAUNTON northwestern Pennsylvania to sultation on Theological Educa and thinking about race and pov bring programs tID· the whole Tel. 822.1181' tion at McMaster University erty," a coordinator of the coun 997.9354 . diocese. here. cil said.
'.' Clergymen Urge Open.. Housi~ng
Bishops Confer
011- Tr~ining
!L@\finl Amerg(C@
Missioners
[f>!r<e$emlt
,living .Colour
'" ,
in .
Penn.
(O~REIA It'SONlS
I'
I.
tHE ANCHOR-
Detroit Ordinary Stresses Unique ,Role of laity
Thurs" June 20, 1968
Pope Paul Visits Seas~de Resort
':aOUSTON (N;C) - 'l'he consecration of a Bishop nOt only makes bim 2 successor to the Apostles but binds
OSTIA (NC) - Pope P.-lUI VI! l'llme here 00 Rome's seasidEl resort town of Ostia to celebrate af,ternoon Mass for thousands gathered in the square of tM town's largest parish church. Since Corpus Christi was both a national holiday and a church holy day, the Pope's congrega t.~on numbered in the thollsandv, the fact that it was the fir~ pleaSant sunny day in June after weeks of cold and unsea sonlll rain probably !:Ontribut~ W the very large crowd. Simplicity marked t'he aftei" noon ceremonies. Instead of the traditional procession with t.he Eucharist carried by the Pope, the Pontiff walked' from the doors of the parish church oil Our Lady Queen of Peace ro an outdoor altar attended only by a few altar boys and assist ants. Attending bishops an,,1ll clergy were already in place Ol'll tme side, as the Pope chose tG focus emphasis on the MaS,') itsell. The Pope celebrated Mass iBll :M.alian and distributed Commu nion to about 100 chosen parislln members of Ostia's churchealo 'including a boy in a wheelchaii·. At· the end of Mass he deliverecll 'm brief talk on the significanoo 'CJIf the Eucharist.
him to priests w~1lh 2 new title :md with III hi,gher degree of identification, Arohbis'hop J'~ F. Dea'rden of Detroit stressed -.. ~ be noted the relationship' of . a Bi8hop to priestS and to the 13ity in a homily a'1 the con secratiQll of Auxiliary Bishop John J. Cassata of Dallas.. Fort Worth here in Tex~: . "That whicl1' <iiaereniiates Bishop from priest is valid and undeniable; but" ·t.!hat lI\'lhich binds together and' unites _i3 no less striking and compel ling." ArehbishopPea'rden :sa!t:ll. "And iJt is this principle off uni1.y and sharingtlhat neec';s to be stressed much .more than that of dist:inction and separa-. , tion." SJj)eci2!.D FtDlI1dioiD "CABINE'!" MEETlfNG: POpe Paul VI presided over the first of the 'Cabinet' meet "While the role of the Bish ings of top administrators of the Roman Curia. Amleto Cardinal Oicognani, Papal Secretary op is sacramentally fuUer than f1f State, who is speaking, is empowered to call such meetings under legislation resulting that of the priest,. b.o'th share from the Second Vatican Council and implemented by Pope Paul in his apog,tolic oonsti in the priesthood of Christ," the tution, Aug. l5, 1967, "On the Roman Curia." Phl()to. ~ , Michigan prelate ,a~erted.. . "In unique delitr~e, every priest is united with, the Bish <JP in his priestly o~'fice" And the most important exercis~ of!' tbis . is f'Ound in the offering of the Eucharistic Sacrifice." Through ordination 'and NEW ORLEANS (NC)-AJrch Hannan had not given l'l formal in mind that Teddy is the final. through episcopal consecration, Arohbishop Dearden said, Ilhere bishop Philip M. Hannan of New interview to the newsmen but legatee of a great American po.... is imposed upon the priest )Ind Orleans, a close fJriend of the was questioned by them ·while Utical tradition." attending a celebration for el The story did say that Arch the . Bishop a' specl~l' function Kennedy famil,)', has denied re bishop Hanmm, who delivered for the benefit of 'the' Christian ports that 'he said the f1!mily is derly married couples. VATICAN CITY (NC) - £,. urging Senator Edward M. Ken the eulogy for the late President community, adding: Has Sense of :MissioiD Vatican spokesman has said tha~ .John F. Kennedy in 1963, had "This comes w them through nedy to withdraw from active The Associated Press story said said "he could not predict what the regulatioIl6 fur the elect.ioD a sharing in the mission and in political life. of ;;J pope will almost cel"tainly authority that comes directly The denial was in response to ,the archibhsop had said that the last Kennedy brotheIT's de "close friends of the Kennedy cjsion will be." . ~ revised. from Christ. l<t is this character a news service story which re "It seems clear that this haD istic that so uniquely identifies ported that the archbishop had family are urging the last Jiving Archbishop Hannan was quot to be done for logistical J'ea the role of the priest and in a said "the natural reaction of t'he brother, Sen. Edward M. Ken ed as saying: "Teddy now has an rons," Msgr. Fausto Vallainc relalted manner that of the bish :family and friends has been to nedy, to withdraw hom active assuredness and a sense of mis said at a press conference. op in the Church. And through sion that he could not have had discourage Ted Kennedy ~rom political life." The story also said the prelate before the tnlgedies." When asked for an example, h~ it, we come to understand that pursuing his career." pointed to the increased nUffi had stated that it must "i>€ con the sel'vice of the priest in the Archbishop Hannan, who of be!" of cardinals-the electors oR Church is directly Oound Uti> ficiated at the burial rites for the sidered" that the "Massachusetts a pope - which would rendel1' Form~r Seevteth:!Jll!'~ with and related to that of the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy, Senator is now the only adult son' in a large family which now :bhe Sistine Chapel too small 00 bishop." said: hQuse papal elections. has many fatherless children." Geves flVO((O]ti@fJ1) lHligher ILeveD "I did not say that the Ken The director of the Vaticam It also quoted Archbishop Han-' WASHINGTON (NC) - A "In the carrying out of 0 nedy family was discouraging nan as stating "We must all bear Jrol'lJller Congressional secretary press office emphasized that he Senator Edward Kennedy 'from common task, tlhe priest ,be was speaking from a pure1v recently ordained to the priest comes the extension of the· a political career. Nor did I personal viewpoint; h4)O() delivered the invocation at Bishop in the multiple services 'voice my own predictions in the Catho~ic He said no commission Jio:? a session of the House of Repre that he renders to the Christian matter. Senator Edward Ken-' t!he revision of the election sentatives. romffiunity wherever, it·· is nedy has well expressed his at Fatller Walter W. Flaherty, 42, regulations - known as "sede found," Archbishop Dearden titude toward public service in WASHINGTON (NC) - The is assistant pastor of Our Lady vacante"-had been formed. said. "Lt is through t.he p.t'iest his eulogy of his brother. It was National Catholic Social Action "It is still too eal"1y to state of the Assumption church, Green 1,'1lat the bishOP as the repro... these thoughts as well' as those Conference (NCSAC)" wit h Harbor, Mass. - ~hat such a commission is fore sentative of C~rist is pre,serit Of news commentztors' which I headquarters' here, will hold its· F.ather Flaherty was secretary ~n or how it would be consti in a unique degree w an his reflected in my comments Sun:" 12th annual conven<toion at St. w Speaker of the House John tuted," he said. people." _ day." Xavier College, ·Chicago, Aug. W. McCormack of Massachusetts The, spokes,!\an for the arch This should never be inter 22 to 25., preted, Archbishop. Dearden bishop noted that _Archbishop Speakers will include Msgr. until i964 when he entered t.he Pope john XXIII Seminary ill ooid, to mean that the laity are John Egan of the Chicago arch fixed in a oondition of. inferi:" diocesan ,office of urban affairs; Weston, Mass. He was ordained ority or of passivity. ,Msgr. George Higgins,' direclor, in May. soCial action department, U. S. "On the oontrary, 'i¢ is the OIL function of the BishOp 341d the Ity· CQO, . I r.en. ~tholic .Conference; Father, priest to encourage. and to b~~r;g '; V,ERONA. (NC) ........ Subject to 'Rooert' Reicher,' CRUioH~ Coun- . STEUBEN\LILLE: (:N C) llbout a free and well-ordered···, ag~eement. ,<m ~ oontract with -. cil 6n Working 'Lile; Rabbi rooperation of all the m~bers the Newark Board of Education :A,rthur Hertzberg,·' T'e m pIe'" Father- Ralph' Di .Pasquale; of flhe ChUrch,". he pointed om~ Verona Board of Education' Emanu.,.el, Englewood; ~"J.;' O.F.M.,' of Irrimacula-te Concep "On their P3l'-t, the laity have _has voted to open il!.s four ele -Matthew Ahmann, direCtor,' Na-' tionSeminary, Troy,' 'N. Y.,' is the Fran 11 role to play in helping to mentary schoolstO' up to 40 tional. Catholic Conference for the new president Sea Streets
bring those who serve' them in children from Newark's inner . Interracial Justice; WilHam' ciscan EdUCiltional Con,ferenl:e·. He succeeds Father Ernest Lat:.. . the Ch'l"istian community to· '11 city. '. ' '. : "Clark, director of informati'oil;' Tel. 49-81 ko, O.F.M., c)f Christ the King Hyannis bigher level of sanctity. In' the ' Some' 500 people ail.Jtended the International Bank -for Recon Seminary, West Chicago, m. mind of ChriBt, there is a strQllg special board meeting &t which struction and Development can for collabol"ation and mut- two votes .were taken, one on (World Bank); Congressman' ual understanding among thOse the concept of the plan, and the Henry B. Gonzales, San An Who, in every degree, share ot'her on the stipulations Ver tonio, Tex., and Jerome Wurf, in His priesthood, whether as ona would' reC!uire during con president of the State, County Bishops, priests, or, in their ti"act negotiations with Newark. and Municipal Employes-AFL unique way, the lai,ty." Both resolutions were adopt CIO. Dicsussion topics will include ed, 4 ro 1. They had the backing
of all the clergymen and a num
"The Future of Church-Related Social Action Organizations"; 'bel' of church groups in the area,
including some f,rom Our Lady Clergy Activism: Are There Any BILBAO (NC) - Father Al Limits?"; Unions in Public and of the Lake parish. berto Gabicagogeascoa, pastor Religious Institutions"; "Vio m the neighboring rural parish lerce, t'he Tel'minal Decay in of Ajuria, has begun his siJI ROQtl's the United States"; "Spanishmonths confinement sentence in Speaking Americans' C i v i I VATICAN CITY (Ne) - A the Cistercian abbey at Duenas. He was sentenced two years papal letter to I!he l~th intema- Rights"; '''I'he Urban -White Poor"; "The Urban Crisis, ·s tional Colloquium on Alcohol ago by :l Spansh court cd pub lic order (for political affaire) iBm in Milan has urgoo tl Gtrng . Political Imperative" and "Eco nomic Progress and World gle against '~)e deepelllt J"04)ts" lor "spread'ing iHegGll propa Peace." ganda." m this evil. "1.._.
Ne
Archb,ishop Denies Making Prediction
Gnvolves Senator KennedyDs Decision
Sees New PapoU Election Rules
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Schedules Meeting)
Vote to A,id Inner C· 'S 'h 'I Ch·ld
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SAIGON (NC)-The De' La the 'lay teachers in ~ school Ii6tugea'" ~ over aD: sponsor S'alle 3rothers' Duc Minh school The committee mee¢s evell'J' ts the Na4ion&1 catho1iCEduea evening to .discuss t'he needs of tloo Association; 1:t also geta in the heart of Saigon is tempo By Msgr. George G. Higgins rary home to 142 families evac the refugees. There are 1,500 belp from CatihoHc Relief ser- "The American labor movement, one has been repeat uated from their .own homes in people housed in the school, ar vices, (CBS), the' overseas He eighth district following the ranged in families. liief agency of U. s. Catholics. edly told in recent years, is either dead or dying.' In fact, the Viet Cong attack on that part Vletoam Cari4;a, and German Soone rooms have five fam it may well be, stirring to new life . . . The unions have . of the city. ilies depending on the size ol O¥itas. Catholic reli~ o~. indeed organiood a decreasing persentage of the labor force.
The Brothers haq a school for the family and the room. Each ization and the VietnameGe Poor children in that area in ~ lias a leader who is re Ministry of Social WeHare. Yet, in terms of numbers,'
A U. S. Ca1:ho1ic ehaplaiD., fltey are, and will remain, the as eonservative by comparison whkm free primary and second:" sponsible for the occupan:t.&' be 'education was given to havior and for keepiilg Ule Jlatber (Maj.) .Joseph Man»Jf mgest institution' in' the wi4:hthat of Harrington and ary01. tbe J'oliet,m.,-,dioeese, head 1,248, boys: When', the building. iIOuntry committed to domeS::'· Rustin.. . ' ," . ' '.. was destroyed iii the:' rec~nt room. neat and cleaa. A sec:wi-tJ' gwlnicirawJi- from amOng the quarters ',area· 00mmand"ebap-, '. ) ",,' 'ldealiStk, Leadershi...· " tic social reform.": ThUs w,rites ,..ib:e' COn1lDoriW~ 'm . a May , fighting, children" of" the'free youth· . of' the families k~ lain in 1Ille city, ,supplies clothes" Michael HarringtoD ill his new 3l- editorialoD'Walter' Reuthei's school and their parents moved guard over t'he gate and around soap and" sebool ,jtems, to ,the the perimeter waW., , . "-,, book, "Toward 'threat to disaffiliate from the to a safer spot. Money .for ,Ike. is supplied .by Due Minh is one of the better fA Democratic AFL-:CIO,.says, . ),11 ,SWIlIl\af'Y. There is 6 daily' "sick,.caUIf : at managed re,fugeecenters which SaigonUmversity medi Uhe Natio,nal Catbolic, Education Left" (Maethat the House of Labor has be Association,. '!'he, money .. 001 cal studeDitB attend to treat the millan, New come ~cmerely 'an, adjunct of the In charge is Brother Wences laUB Phan' Ngoc. Thuan, direct York, $5.95). The 'State,' its leaders' having SllC leoted 4wt, ~ parents· , and minor aiunents of, the 'Peop1el ing a comlnitte:e comPosed crt A number of different 'or~ ilamilies "of f;'tudenlta ill the lJi late Dr. Maron . ceeded in their·. quest. to breilk ilbe heads of 1!he families and izations help feed and clothe the filiated ~la in ,Saigon area. Lllll:her King, Jr.. ,fast with ·Presidents·'and con had made the vene in the Fontainbleau.If same point on more than one Reuther, we are told, "is prob ably the, last, best hope". of ' a ~ion - and, labOr' movement· which is said' in f-act, had gone to ,be sUffering-perhaps fataUy eve n further than Harrington -ilrom the daY rot of conse.rva -starting away back in 1961.· tlsm and ,racial .discrimination. "The two most dynamic and.' -The edito:r .of U. S. Ga1ihollc
'cohesive liberal forces in tIhe goes The Commonweal one bet
CIlOuntry," he told the 1961 AFL- ter. "8Qme.peop~e won't admit
, . it," he writes, "but there was a . CIO convenrtion, "are the labor time when' there was much movement and the, Neg,ro free- idealism' in . the American labor dom movement." . . Rostin AgNes movement.. ,;There is undoubt edly idealism in labor .unions Civil Rights leader Bayard . today. bUt ~renrtly' very .lit lRiustin has also repeatedly' ~......
voiced the same opinion during tle"of it in hi·gh places. .
, "As the arteries of the Amer ~ past two years. Ecl10ing Dr. ican' labor Chiefs' harden 90 do King, he has called f01' • their social attittudes. And iron Negro-labor coalition... ' This coalition, "whatever dif- icaUy the most creative, even ferences now exist within and . idealistic leadership for social among its constitutent 'forces," renewal in the United Staltes is ~e wrote, for example, shortly . today coming from industry imd commerce." ' . after King's assassination in Memphis, "must resolve to unite Industry, Commerce tlhis Fall in order to defeaJt ~is would be very "ironic", racism and reaction at the polls. ,indeed, . if, it happened to be Unless we do resolve,. we may true-but, with all due respect find ourselves in a d'ecade Olf . to, my, good friend R.E.B., t'he vindictive and ~an" oonsecva- editor of U. S. Catholic, I won Rve domination." . der if it is really as true as' he thi~ks i.ns~ndsO dogmatically New Left Di.ilagftes Citalt.es it. t9 be.'.. . . I, Harrington and Rustin have I .have, great. admiration for
been pilloried by the New Left : the "c~tive, even idealisUe
Resident. and Day Camp for Boys lf ~r voicing such a "reactiooatT 1eaOer9hip~ Of many, iiKtustrial
,! point of view wi4:h regard flO the . lB4B,.but of.f~ Iean't think
.' : . ' 'liberal or progressive' poten¢iai 'el-any major piecie.~ social leg
." American labor inOvement. iSl.ation that ~ry and com-
. .1 AS Ronald BenDan: of tbr! ~roe". have put' 1tiroufrhin l"e " , "Day I Girls: . -. University of California; Sen, cent·~~rs, whe~I Can think Diego, points out lin ,his recent .01. 'many "8i~eentrefoi'ins-. Sponsored by the Roman Catholic, Di~se of F~lt Ri~... , :'.. ,
book entitled "Americaln ttIl! including seVeral. the' field .(,f Sixties: An Intellectual Hi&- ~ rela:tiOns-whiohthe-iabor ',', i! il'~ 'EAsri,IUETOWN, tory,"the New Left' 'feels' that: tit· lnovementhas vigorouSly.Sup has been betrayed by ,those iD- ported and. wbidl Dever 'WOOIci tellectuals "who undel'take pro- 'have been ed.opted if the leadeN grammattic rather than idea- Of .~so-caned. House of Labor logical action," .. w~:as ,conservative' as . The Diocesan'Seminarians - College Students & Teachers Under direction At the present 'time, he 'said, ,; Commonweal and U.S;· C8tho
"Ule leading candidates for the lies have so bli'thely made t.tlem
cl a Diocesan Priest. ' rote of Judas are Bayard Rustin Gotto be.
Sailing. swimming. water skiing. horsebadc: riding. riflery•. ,archery. and Michael Hardn~lt. A year ~eep R~ord Straight
J'liking.overnight ~ping trips,. a~ ~ crafts. Indian ,Crafts, ~amp" ago this would have seemed inI. say this not to praise the
conceivable, but the relatioo- labor movement-which, God
aafts. athletic (team & individual) ;competition ancf' inter-camp ship of idea and policy makes it knows, has more 1ihan its share
competition,. professional tutorial serviCe available. , , seem in :fuct natural." (The,' of faults and imperfectioll&--but
Private beach.. large luxurious comphouse. dining han. modern Free Press, New Xork.. $7.95). simply to keep the 'record
washrooms. arts and aafts buildings. camp store and office; first aid Write Obituaries straight. 'nle New Le1lt is not alone. ~d if I am wrong about U:ae
and infirmary. beautiful chapel, overnight and weekend accorrioda tions for p a r e n t s . ' , . , however, in thinki!lg. thalt t1he record I t.rusrt that R~.B. and
American labor movement is tbe editors of the The Common
• WEEK PERIOD $325 - .. WEEK PERIOD $165 - 2 WEEK PERIOD $85 -either dead or dying" and 'that weal will put me straight-witdl
talk on the part of labor leaders a minimum, preferably of dis
about a Negro-labor coalition is gruntled liberal rhetoric and a
D.ot~ing short of hypoc;ritieal ita maximum of eold hard facts, in
1 ' view of labor's record in the eluding some voerifiable infor
Camp Fee 35.00 for 2 wk. periocI. JUly 1 - AUGUST III field of labor relations. matlon as to precisely which or-
Camp Fee $125.00 for 8 wk. season period. All 80m of ~bera1s W\bo 9tand, ~izations in our society are
FEES INCLUDE: Transportation. Insurance. Arts & Craft.. Canteen. Horseback Riding. In varying degreeS, to the right doing more than organized
. Weekly Cook-Outs & Milk Daily without Added Cost. .t even Hanington and Rustin labor to enact tbe "unfulfilled
'-to say nothing of the tatter's New Deal programs" referred. to venomous critics on the New in The Commonweal MaT 31 Left-are busy writing uncom- edUorial. plimentary obituaries of GrganRank-ami File ' Camp Fee 35.00 for 2 wk. period. ized labor. I also havoe ~t adininltion ,JULY 1 ~ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $125.00 for 8 wk. season per;~ The most recent examples for many l'a·Dk-and-file union . FEES INCLUDE: Transportation" Dnsurance. Arts & Crafts. Canteen. "orseback Riding. that have come to my 8ItJtention members, but, I have yet to Weekly Cook-Outls. Milk Daily without Added Cost. appeared within the past month come across any reliable evi two C3Ithotic periodi~1s dence that union mnk=-and-filers, BOYS' CAMP For further enformot~ write or telephone to: 'I1be Commonweal and U. S. OIl the avera3e,- are more pro IItU' CAMP Catholic-whose economic phil- gressive than the allegedly VeL 763-8814 REV• WALTER A. SUlLIVAN.. Director w"763-555I osophy, thoup "liberal" enough sclerotH: officials who prest. P.O. Box 63 - E~st Freetown. Mass. 02717 by conventional' standams, over the House of Labor. ~ have to be charaoterlzecl Tuna to Page Fourteea
......
lo.Ii:U&U.U~
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~athedr~ICalDp
0 .... I.ady 'ofth~ Lake',
ee..np Jor,
LPCA'tBJON'IONCfPOND;Roun MAsL.. ,':"
RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season-June 30 thru August 24-8 Week' Season
'Staff:
Program:
facilities:
Cathedral Day Camp For Boys
Our Lady of the' Lake, 'Day Camp For Girls
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,
1"
THE ANCHOR-Dlo~ese of fall River-Thurs. June 20, 1968
Prefaces, Canons
Continued from Page Six In 1919, one in 1925, one in 1928, four recently introdtreed in the United states. The new texts DOW issued are the first part of· D collection of more than 70 bE> ing prepared by the ConsiliUDll for Implementing the .Consititu-. ilion on the Liturgy, a commis sion set up at the mandate af the Second Vatican CouncU. Believes Monotony
. . pIcnIC.
~
"IIhese new prefaces----two for' Advent, two for Lent, two If01' weekdays, etc,-have the obvious . purpose of relieving the monot ony: of ·texts now repeated d~· after day. The most important tex:ts are those for Sunday Mas ses, with a direct reference to the Easter mystery of the wi-d'e death and resurrection. Since the 18th century the ordinary Sunday preface has been the "of the Trinity"-a profession of faith in the mystery of the Trin- . ity, properly expressed at Ma~ in the creed, rather than a pray er of thanks and praise to God. The new Sunday prefaces should· reestablish Sunday a little more· clearly as the day when the Church celebrates the resurree-· tion. These partial revisions wiD inevitably give rise to complaint!! becaUse of piecemeal changes.· Again, it is a case of changes' which cause no inconvenience whatever to congregations; the latter will sim.ply hear fresh prayers and, learning from them, be moved to a deeper part if! the eucharistic celebartion. For priests the inconvenience is small, simply a matter of new and better texts to be used, but the responsibility of searching and communicating the depths of meaning is great. Effective Date The Aug. 16 effective date for the new eucharistic prayers and' prefaces is not realistic, although the Latin texts should be readily avaUable before that time.. The English translation, already close to completion by the Interna tional Committee on English in the Liturgy, must go through /lIl full process of approval by the conference of bishops and must then be published and distrib uted. . In the ease of the present En glish version of the Ronian eu charistic prayer, announced for temporary and provisional use last Fall, the transla·tion waS flubmitted to all the bishops of the United .States with extensive introductory and explanatoJ7 notes after the work of vans:': lators and con 8 u It o·r II iroin throughout' the English:speaklne world had. been completed. OIl two separate occasions, the bish ops formally approved the p~ ent Roman canon by overwbebD ing margins.
for you
mayb~ •••
but ina Brazilian town caUed Fatima d()
SultfuCll"e are 8,000 destitute residents.
Nearly all are sick of either malnutrition,. worms,!,nemia' or malaria. Over half of the children here die before they are S•.This ~~ Ii not unIque., It l~ typical for South.
.Amerlea.·
Shan IODle ",ieDle DloDey" to
'help thelD
Dlgnlf,y _d Solemnlf,y
With similar approval for En glish versions of these new pray;.. ers ,they can go into ordinary use in the celebration of Mass, Some will find them too m'ti ficial or too biblical, some win find them too Uttle concerned wjth being relevant; others, peE-> ihaps the majority, will humblY, learn !from them and will 00 moved by their dignity and evem oolemnity in manifesting praise and acknowledgment to God the ereator and redeemer.
Managing Editor BROOKLYN (NC)-Don ZiJI kel has been named QCting maD-> aging editor of the Tablet. Brooklyn diocesan newspapeJ:. Zirkel has been news editor. He replaces Patrick F. (Pat) SCao 18n who has been mBmlging ed itor of the paper since 19l'1 mel. 'has now ~tireli.
·THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP
IN THE SUMMER TOO!
..liiUi:lllifi:iJii8i:l----.. .
SALVATION AND SERVICE ARE THE WOR1( Of
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·t8_E· SOCIETY FQ~ 'fHE PROPAGATION OF THE FAIr" $END YOUR ~ ~1"'1Ner61l4Edward T•.O'Meora. -._. '- ,... N¢lolMI9 Director . J66 Film Avenue _ _ tf~ f~l~! ('!~ r~~~fl!!l
GIFT TO·
The RighI Reverend RaymQ1!4 T. C(IIlSldlrw OR Diocesan Director .
tllllDRESS
368 North Main $t",1 f,!J1.R..tv~•. Mal~f~~et(I~7J9
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and Canada searched for iden-' pletely and Jive it iIlItensely.'" tity here, they wmed for 1m' . ' , Advisol7 CounncU" . example. of. community. arid" 'l'he meeting here w~ called commwuty lMe· to the fanuly of' 00t to diBC'USS renewal Of indiJoseph P. and Rose Fitzgerald vidual oommunities, but rather Kennedy. 'lio discuss how individuai com The Sisters, priests and a few munitiE!IS should relate to one' bis~ps, .including Arc~bishop anof.'her and how combined they LWgl Raimondi, Aipostolic Del-· should rel&te to the dioceses irnl ega'te -in the. United sta~, came which they function. . here ~ Mame for the first 111 Discussing work of the ad te ~tional Conference of Coun .rn visory council for Religious i::nl Is , d S __ "~n f W me Rec! . an e,.......,., 0 0 n . ,. the Portland diocese, Msgr. Vin
Behind the recent falling off in support for economic assistance programs lie a number of misunderstandings. They are widespread. They come up in all aid-giving ooun tries. And they are undoubtedly part of the reason for the present s·bagnation. in the transfer of resources' from beadbaskets and buckets, on :riCh to poor nations. This, as sa$gs wrung from 'incomes of the last column pointed out, le68 tlban $100 a year. Las remal'ned at about $6,000 million since the early, 1960&
.
But, of course, it is possible to
turn. the criticism round and
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and suppol'lt. 'I1hrough co'mmu
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'By Barbara Ward
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Portland diacese. . ; Qoote Senator..·
Said: '''!It is ~not enough that In-
GOVERNOR: Dr. Hilda ' diVidual communitieS are re":', " .::mar.n~o' .rut5frorptoemrclesseon·7t:.·., . · • . , ' . ' : · ; . , : ' ; < ~ : . ' ; , ·to @O onWi~ extelnal a,gs~st-' B h f' t' In. light of the subject. ,of-the." casting their concept' of 8postol:: " ~.- WhY'll!',ve~lie high.rstelg· yn<>e is-' t e·, Irs' woman coD.feren~"The establl8h~entl··"iC'mission·and reexamining'their 'llliis year.- Let ,Jt: . of inves,tffienf not brought .the ,governorC'f' a British Oom~ of:~ls or Senates of ~iste~ "areas of liernce or ~ our . poor nations;ro'tl1e point where 'monwealth: Country. A.~ ~,Norilh A,II1ericail ~oceses-,." "SiSters' are"grad~Ybeing re ~ftlhOOekcr~t~csol'smsme ·they·,need 63"speeial. helpr' And, tiel'ng ph'y,sic'ian and.mo.-4ih""" .:Ptwas expected., spell.,ke.rs ~ould'.i lie'ired 'of ·1lhe·'time: oorlsWning "" . Wihy is a·' mere 2if per cent· of """ ba \IU1d disappoint . . of two teen'age ""'-n·s·, she. vw',""'. ',' v.e sought msp~at lOn' from ·mechanical chores, .which had · en',ts and see capital coming in from outside ~...,. . d()oCumeilts of the 'Second Vat- little reference' to the spiritual m so important? . sworn in as governor 0Jf th,e' . whether the y . . lean Co ' ~Cl'L ,'·and corporal 'works to which
t 11 Time NeeclIed island of Grenada In the They we~ quo~ed: :aut their ·insti,t'utes were 'dedicated."
. Qdd ~p Q rea y " . ~he~ answer to the ·:I!i·rst ohjec.. British West Indies," jUM ",:ore often thespeaJe: rs , and. the Today, Msgr. Tata'rczuk said,
"17 a 11 ~ reaso~s " .. . non is; of: course, to underllDe· Sisters,.· $. emselv~ m. co, ... rn.dor. !""'-ere 18' ·a despero'te need - a
lor domg less m :th~ fieldd'of aid.t " t h e. ~H.......' d eyel NC'Pho.oo..,
~ dioceses ,I ' , '. 1lh' first" ... 4.~:I1;,.eeded fo r full . -::, JilQrthof .'. ' TIill,~d.~. .',' .. . _. 'and ~ial, hour; di.SC1:'-SSlOns .l need, ·sha.!OO'. by most investment, it 'is' Still necessarY
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I . ~ppose ~. ,'. \,\Ul , ~9S .. , opment. "Hi:'g~ ':rates :<d ~ l«'ovVtla ",', ','.. .<;~": '., .'., .. ,,', . . . ,-- quoted· 'irom, the·"medit'ation,",.... "'-"'r. ,a common,ro~~ossmo~t of 'WIdespread disIllusIOn. spnngs '. . '.' fb.:A U ~ ~v ~ ...... "''''''~tn the belief'that 'economic h-ave only lasted so far for about Itfl$glf$ n~ggniDS ,given by U. S. Sen. Edward M:·,.i lour. communities·' as they re1aJte . . •.. 1" ·...;i.t· . _... .15 flQ 20 years among the )Ae~~" , . ; ·;K':ennedy of Massacilusebts· at to the eeds of 4.... Ch -'-1 ,," ' .assistance· is ,sunp Y' nv PlVUUC-'" oPin" """'pl- At a oomn:""bIe Continued from Page One " ......e funeral of hIS' broth~ er U' S'....., ... ' t' n ' ",~ety u-r.... - ';'r ' .. ' "mg .results'. Stories"'of failure,;, ."." "-""-::'1' ...... ~ .. '-:~';"; .,'.... " ,.... ' . . ,'!II.· . ,. ,," •. ,'. an ,m er-<:omiIl~lIl1 census lllll .", ... waSte and graft.'· are qUickly. ~e in the Bn;tiSb.. ~~ry ,of . O n .th.e. O?~rary, ev~ry avaB;" ~n.;aobe.rt F. KennedY.f!!\ Ne~," tile establishment of new prlor ,. ,. ted b . 1lh' . , ·tt···' and' "d" development-at,' say, me end . able SCientific. study of raDk York, slain by an assass~n 1lll .. lties in, the 8IS5ignment of our '", <ll~ y. e ,.cn (!IS ". VlVl';'" of ttbe Napoleonic wars"..:.Lud.-.,·' and-file attitudes on' cUrrent· , Los' Angeles.' " ' , ,. . ,.., S~ " . c plotures of gOOd mon~.y ~l1ow~ .,.dite ri9ters were b~eaking .~. ~-al issues-and notably'm " One speaker summed it ari " , rs.,. .' mg bad money ,down mhum.er the machines and Britain had ~ . £1,eld of race rela'tions·..,... ,hen .h 'd lig' , _'" . Widen ApostOlate ' :" Iab.le ratholes decorate the'rhet. gold :hom Fr&ric~;to 'cieailY Indicates that this. Jii' .=~es ~Bh~di~~toOO:e'" '''The 'traditional involvement $rlC of attack. meet ita comm1tmentl3. . definitely not the ease. ' World they' were founded to· .': ~ our women Religious," he H these polls are aocura~ serve, what members of the' ~id, "in.the ~ng aJ?OSoolate, Surprising Grollrib Rate At . a comparable ti?1e m . But consider the· facts. Be-"' Amencan developmen~in, say, and I have no reason 110 think Keml~ iiamiJy have been to in hosP1tal serw.-ce, m' child ~een' 1918 and 1939--the last the 1840s - nine out of 25 of t~ ,they are not-it would ap eacll otbe-r-"SOU1'Ces of strength' care, prog,rams and the like, are I1mcontested years of colonial America's state governments pear that The Commonweal and in time of trouble, wisdom in not to be, ]j~Uy considered. control in mo!>t of what we now were in default on their loans U. S. Catholic may be oversim time of uncertainty and sharing 'I1~ey. certamly should not be .eall the developing lands-there from British bankers who talked plifying a complicated problem m time of unhappiness." diSmIssed, as .some have SlIg . , was virtually no growth at all. about "ha~ . Americans" by aiming so much of their crit }t should be' said of religious ?est.ed, . as archai~, impersonaI. ,Whatever gains were made in ra~r as Amencans now. tant . ieal fi're at the labor movement's communilties, 'the speaker con Insti,tutlOnal servI,ces unrelated the 1920s were wipe.d out by the: abowt "defaulJting Africans" top brass. , tinued, "what was said by the to "present day n~. .. Great Depression of the 19309. (only they do not, in:fact, Surely the .labor movement is ,New York Senator of his father ~t the same time, however, S'ince the late 19403 when, not de~uJt). \ too conservative in many re and by the Massachusetts Sen-' Msgr. Tata~uk a~ded, "we enti-rely coincidentally, econom:' IIII short, development takes spects, but if the rank-and-file 8ltor of his slain brofuer: that have become IDcreasmgly aware icassistance programs began time. M<Jet nations have mod are, on the average, more con we are always at the side of of the need for widening the ~ ga,ther momentum, the aver ernized their economies in servative than their elected of those WIho need us. Any genuine apostolate of Sisters, if we are \Age rate of growth among about ~ years. The nat~ils fi.cers (in the. U.A.W., ineiden community must be' ch-al'acterto. r.espond ~ today's. needs, .in pOOrer countries has been 4.8 modemtzmg today are not like taJly, as well as in some of the spIritual 8el'Vlces conSIstent WlJllh per cent a year and this rate is ly llo make critical c~ges in old-line crafts) where do ' " Religious life and structure. higher than the average schiev onq 15 years, least of all against go from here? "We also have come to real ect. by modernizing nations.. ia. • rising tide of population-a
Peevish Litue Cracks MA:ITLAND (NC)-The third ize tba;t no one communi,ty, no the 19th century. point to be examined later.
I really don't know, but I haw diocesan publication in Australia Jnllitter how well endowed, DOl" Self-Help GroWllDevel~nt,.li~ genius , ~. • hunch that doctrina1re anti 10 fail within • year, the 37 ~ nu~~r of communi'ties work Since savings are the gre8ltest ~ong ~tlenee. beBudt the job, M~y :hetor~, spiced with )"E!ar-old Sentinel' of the Mait otmghe mdependuldenU~d onthe of the . f w:1lh look me, c,an one. peeVish little cracks about labor land, New South Wales, diocese,
r, 00 proVl e e varied en;~e 0 te~ , ,w~ ~ Outside Money Impor1aDt leaders w.ho like to forega.tiherhas published Us final issue. training and experiences neces ~h IS ra 0 d expan:o~ :: : : As for the question why the at the Fontainbleau. isn't going This leaves seven diocesan sary to cover the voids in the ~trt wa~ a~ say.a the ze per cent of capital oontrib to take us very far. (Some of' monthlies still ill operation ia' Church's reaction to 'tIhe 'ohal wo thee d es, lag~n on uted by aid programs J8 90 im the most "liberal" conVentions tIrls oountri. lenge of today." evemge, e eve opmg natiOIlS portant, the 1. • 1 f __ 4 h . bave pushed up their level reason ~ sun~ e. ? rec......years ave been held . ta f ThIS 20 per cent is 1lll foreIgn in hostelries every bit as faney ~Vlnlgs. as a pefrorcen °tranadi- exchange-in dollars and francs as the Fontainbleau) .....ona mcome m...., , and sterling It be sed M h'l . tional five or six per cent of . ,can u. eanw I e, as I try 1lo figure 'zed --_.... ..- buy the tools and supplies out, to my own satisfaction pre-mo d ernl """-lewes... Wihi..... d '. .. . ed -..., bo t 15 nt A _ suIt, ""-' eV,e1opmg coun.nes poe what the labor movement ought Gl u per ce . .na a re for growth but cannot produce to be d . d h ... they are now providing some 8 0 . omgan ow.... ought per cent of all the investment ~~llleacklv~: SdimPIY ~dause they to go about doing it, I keep ask . . t d l' t ' the "",I m ustry an modem iug myself why such represen~lllg III 0 eve opmen m . 1ture. A d ' democratic "leftists" 81' agncu n it cannot be tative poorer coun tri es. red 'th t tside h l' 11".. .These facts secu .WI OU ou e ~,. 'Yllch.ael Harrington and Bayard .t·· b t th" . th fact· winch we need to examIne Rustin seem to be more opt! ~,n iC~Smst u they Wr~..: ~ ~~. more 'closely next. week. , m i s t i c about the future of. fR JJ! or Ins ance, e ,=,,,,,m uu . . Ph ANNUM" 1ll0rS must be far more cautioUs .' . gamzed labor than SOI1l;e of our about thtHr accUsations of. C&fail ,,~re , conse:vative- 'comrnenta-, ' QUARTE~i. O~. PA'II)~(JP' ure," It is hardly failure to grow . ' , , , ~ includmg the,'edit'Ors cd, more quickly than did the At ;.The ~nunonW:eaI.!.. and .U.S;." lantic nat~ons last centwy. WASHINGTON (Ne) .~; ~ ,,~tholic. .. ..• ,. ," , Again, donorS can hardly claim' TranSCeridenee of God In tbe Needl~.. to ~Y" l,don't':haW,·, ;, .: 'DePGsi~ Welcom8cl,.n. 'Multiples ~ ttlat they are handing over and World 01. Man" .was the theme. Cbe .~wer to. that ~ elth~, " . $200.00 up to $30,000-0.. Single and Jeint Accounts investing all the capital in the 01. the 23rd Annual Convention but its ~methin.g to thi~k aBo~. recipient nations while' they of. tile Cattbol;ic Theologi,*- So OR a ~ny day Hi. W-ashlD~ll-:7 Up to $60,000-,.... Corporations "'sit on their hands." They can ciety of America here 1ms week. ~ ramy days III WastllngtoD DIVIDENDS PAID:4 TIMES A YEAR DOt, in conscience,' mo' on' mut 'Principal speakers were Dr. seem to have become tberuJe tering about the developers' Paul S. Minear of Yale Dlvirut7 this ~ar rather than the excep.._ -February, M~y, Augu.st ~nd November idleness and incompetence and School, Father Edward N. Mae- *'on.. ., All Deposits Insured in full waste when, in many countries, Kinnon, S.J., Qf Boston College,. Church~s
rates of grow-th are being Father William J. Riebardson, achieved by back':"breaking la S.J., of Fordham University l'oor, wiJth wheelbarrows and and Prof. John RMte of ~ , , , MONTREAT (NC) TbO herst College. General Assembly of ·the PreS A panel discussion on Aca bY'terian Church in the U. S .. demic Freedom and, the· Theo (Southern) voted 406 to 36 for logian w-as open to the public. WASHINGTON (NC) -Cor Speakers were Fa,ther Robert union with the Reformed Ohurch pus Instrumentorum, new Cath olic publishing firm here, has' Hum of Catholic University and , bn America. Meeting copcur released 15 volumes in a 32 .Fat:her Augustine Rock, ,O.P.. ~n.tIy in Ann Arbor, Miob,., the Main Office: 4 Winthr~p Street, Taunton
title publishing schedule for, Blackfriars, Chicago, with Philip . gimeraJ. synod of the Reformed 1968 as its first venture in the Schal'per of Sheed and Ward as Church approved the proposed Branch Office,:. 1400 Fall River Ave., Seekonk
mer-ger by a vote of 183 to 103. moderator. ~k world.
borrow
the,
Final .Issue
"vert ..
of'-
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3%NEW HIGHER
to'
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oounter some
Theol.ogic:al· Society Holds Convention.· .
PAID
y
.,', SHA·R.E· CERTIFICATES'
Southern Move Toward Union
New P'ublishers
UTE OF
INTEREST
Taunton
co-operativ~.
bank
Sees Opportunity For Personnel In Hospitals
THE ANCHORThurs., June 20, 1968
15
Prelate Pra ises Council's Goals
PHILADELPHIA (NC) Modern eastholic hospital })er sonnel have a unique oppor tunity to k e e p "the
NEW YORK (NC) - Arch,. bishop Terence J. Cooke of New York hailed the National Coun cil of Churches for giving pri ori.ty in its work to achieving "peace in the world and peace in our cities." Addressing the annual lunch~ eon of the Council's general board, the Catholic archbishop said: "Thank God, we all see fairly clearly that 'the world ie my parish' 0 0 0 'The world seW the churches' agenda:"
apostolate of service meaning lful and related to our times," John Cardinal Krol of Phila delphia has told delegates to the 53rd annual convention of the Catholic Hospital Association here in Pennsylvania. Answering the oft-made in quiry, 'Why a Catholic hospi tal?'" the Philadelphia Ordinary said: "It would be a welcome relief "As a pastor in New York to eliminate the housekeeping City," he said, "I feel my need to learn from others and I urge and financial chores. But how people to stress the human, hu could we exert the influence that mane family values which needs to be exerted, the influence Asians and Africans seem tell that people want when they go, possess in grea.ter measure thoo to a Catholic hospital. We could we Western city people do. visit 'the sick personally; \;Iut bow could. we give example of "In any case the word f4lll' the reverence for ~e dignity of peace is now development and a person if we have no control I pray again as 'a-t my installa or influence over policy?" tion that our vision will be Personal Fulfillment 'genuinely missionary, reachi,ng Speaking of the apostolic op out to the needs of the people portunities in administrative po of the world.''' sitIons, Cardinal Krol contInued: Dr. Artlhur S. Flemming, "The Religious involved in the president of the National Coun ANCHOR CLUB AWARDS: Aid to mentally ill brought together these public figures management of a hospital may 61, thanked Archbishop Cooke lack direct contact with the 88 Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle, Archbishop of Washington, seco)'ld from right, presented for "associa1tlng yourself witJD. sIck but certainly do not lack awards on behalf of the Anchor Club to Victor Borge, right, Dan1s'h pianist and humorist. our two priori,ties in such {) control and influence over how Co-recipients, from left, included Senator Everett McKinley. Dirksen of Illinois and Wilbur manner as to give us encourage the sick are treated in the hos J. Cohen, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. The Anchor Club is a volunteer ment and increase our determio pital. The captain of a ship is organization, comprising members of many creeds, aIIld &ponsored by the archdiocese, to nartion to work under the guid~ not less a sailor nor the general ance of the Holy Spirit." of an army less a soldier because aid the mentally ill. NC Photo. . they have command over the en Plan Delegation ti<re operation." "There is a great deal of talk GENEVA (NC) -The Greek \ about personal fulfillment," the Orthodox Church, reversing to Cardinal stated. "Fulfillment, serious decision to boycott the bowever, does not mean the bliss fourth general assembly of the of uninterrupted satisfaction in WASHINGTON (NC) -Pat 8IIld courage in tine face of the believe the Lord will take care World Council of Churches (WCC) at Uppsala, Sweden, in our apostolic endeavors. If ours rick Cardinal O'Boyle of Wash rain" that the marchers have of us," and that this belief had is a genuine service to others, ington paid a visit to the tent MOWlll. helped them to carry on their July, will send a delegation of we cannot expect to receive the city built by the Poor People's Williams told Car din a :i campaign despirte the min and lay theologians to the meeting. the WCC announced here. highest degree of personal satis Campaign here ll!lld. praised the O'Boy.Ie that the people "firmly mud. ilaction in our ministry at every group's courage aI11d determina moment of our existence. ~on. Salvation Crucifix Card·inal O'Boyle toured the
"We seek our vocation and our camp wirth a group of clergy
happiness not in serving self men, including Auxiliary Bish
op John S. Spence of Washing
but in serving others. ThIs en ton. Bishop Spenc,e said the
tails self-sacrifice and self-de nial. It entails the carrying of vds1t was made "to show our
a cross of a true disciple of concern and so 'we could see the
Christ--a cross which we hope oonditions for ourselves."
to exchange for the orucifix of He also said that the visi·t salvation." would help clergymen to "gain "For centuries," the Cardinal new insights into. the human conclUded, "our physicians and needs to which we are 1Irying our nurses, our Religious and our to render assistance." During the tour, Cardinal laymen ,all our hospital person nel have been in the business to O'Boyle spoke briefly wiJth va rious residents of Resurrection serve Christ in suffering human Gr~ne ity, to minister to the aristocracy City and met with Hosea Wil of the poor and suffering, to liams, a top official of the South
keep the apostolate Of service ern Christian Leadership Con
for more convenient meaningful and related to its ference which is sponsoring the
campaign.
times. cookoillt~ He told Williams that he was
"Wherever the patient finds impressed by the "great stamina us-at his bedside ,in an emer gency room, in thil personnel of;' Without charcoal messl Special bri flee, in the accountIng office 01' Urges Joint Bible in the office of an administrator quets form bed of self-cleaning coals. -may he find there the charity Study ~y Laymen Ws a sturdy grille, too-heavy guage of Christ. May we also increase steel, with porcela'in enamel inside SYDNEY (NC)-Catholie and Model eur realization and apprecIation Prorestant laYmen should come and out for weather-proof, long-last ll1N of the fact that, in servinl the , together for Joint Bible readings ing, dependable 'service.. See all the !lick, we serve ChrIst." , .00 studies, it was emphasized handsome, convenient Caloric Gos Reg. $109.95 by participants ill a eonference Grilles - now D at Mt. Alverna Retreat BoUlle the Catholic-Aootralian Coun Introduction Bureau of dI. of Churches Joint Working KNOCK (NC)- The bishops Group. .r Connacht, a province of five Archbishop G1lliMord Young of eoUDties in western Ireland, Bobart, eo-ohainnan cd the have established a marriage in .essiODS wi.th Anglican Arch Voduction bureau here III bishop Frank Woods of Mel County Mayo. INCLUDES NOFlMAL INSTALLATION bourne, said at a press briefing Archbishop Jo.setph Walsb elf lleSSion afterward: Tuam said: "I have a feeling that this '"The idea is thalt there are 110 many elderly bachelors and thing called ecumenism should unmarried ladles who are more not be looked at !IS a nice, soft or less afraid of one another, 'llell • • • It is n eballenge, II cross that bites deep into our inafraid 110 make any advance, Company and the result is tiley don't get herited prejudices, into 'n Whole
pattern of historical memories,
married and we have this tel' 155 NORTH MAIN STREET - PHONE OS 5-7811 into attitudes that quite BUb
rible depopulation. We are tI7 mg 110 make it easier 101" 1hem consciously ahape oW' lives and
z:elations."
~ meet."
Cardinal O'Boyle Visits. Resurrection City Praises Courage, Determination .
NEW from
Po rfht11b> ge Gas !
Establish Marriage
EASY BUDGET
TERMS AVAILABLE
FALL-·RIVER GAS
Regional
THE ANCHOR-Diocese.of !FoUl River-Thurs. June 20, 1968
Books Portray Difficu~ties Of Father-Son Relationship ,
.. By Rt. Rev. MSg'It". John S. Kennedy new books, one fic~ion, vhe other non-fiction, deal with the father-son relationship and the difficulties which a involves. The first is 'l'he Horsemen by Joseph Kessel '(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 19Uoion Sq.; West, New York, If.Y. 10003$6.95), Mr. Kes eel is the author of the novel Knightley work for the Sunday Times 'of London. They and a ,,~ Lion, which was made oonsiderable research tea m Into a popular motion picture. spent many months digging into
Two
'!1he second is The Philby 000 the background of the. cele 'lIPiracy by Bruce Page, David brated Philby affair. Leitch, and . Kim Philby,' it will be re Phillip Knight membered, was a British intel iey (Doubleday, ligeoce ,agent who defected to 101 Franklin Soviet Russia in 1963, after A~., Garden years of acting a$ a double Ctty, N.Y. 11531 ag~nt. Ostensibly serving his $5.95). Izf Mr. own country, he was in fact Kessel's The serving the U.S.S.R. . Li<J.n had an ex Two other Englishmen who Clttic setting, his acted in the same trai·torous JOINS DELEGATfON: '!'he Horsemen w'ay were Guy Burgess and bas one even Msgr. Ubaldo Cala.bresi, 43, Donald Maclean. They and more exotic Phil by had been at Cambridge joined the staff of the Afghanistan. On together, and when, in 1951, Apostolic ,Delegation i 11 the endless steppe bordering lIilaclean was about to be ex':' Russia i6 the elaborate estab~ posed. with the same fate likely Washington, D. C. He had llishment of Osman Bey. Among for Burgess, it was Philby who 'previously served in papal biB many possessions, perhaps nunciatures LaVin America, tipped them off and made pos the most prized is his stable of sible their escape to Russia. Africa and Europe. NC Photo ~lendid horses. In charge of Major Factor &he horses ,is 70-year~ld Tur
Why did these three act as lien, a proud giant.
Tursen has, in younger days, they did? The authors main:tain 'excelled in a fierce game called that in each instance a father's influence was a major factor. ebe ,buzkashi, which calls' fur extraordinary strength' a n'd Their most plausible, "and also TEZPUR (NC)-A demon~tra agility, as well as superb most detailed, case has to do tion was held here in India to protest a government move 'to horsemanship. Tursen has won with Philby. -His father, St. John Philby. ,expel two Catholic missionaries ~ry competHion he has ever "spent a lifetime renouncing his 'of this diocese and of the neigh entered, but never during his native land, railing against her 'boring diocese of Shillong. active years was there such a perfidy, deceit, and moral de o:lOntest under royal patronage The demonstrators marched cline. He abandoned Ohristian to the site m a meeting which est the capital, Kabul. ity to become Mu~lim. He took Antipathy lExists demanded withdrawal of expul Now his son is to have the a Saudi slave-girl as a second sion notices served on Salesian Brother Michael Cahoj' and 0pportunity which Tursen has wife. He lived in Mecca, dressed an Arab, ate camel meat, and Salesian Father Dominic CUf\~. been denied. This son, Uraz. is A former secretary to Bishop 45, much less heavily built than had a 'bodyguard' of four huge Orestes Marengo of Tel.pur, lllls. fathe.r:, and much less SlOber Abyssinian baboons." Kim was attracted to Marx Czechoslovakian-born' Brother and dignified. Between the two l>ecame Cabo; was ordered not to remain tlhere is antipathy. It dates fcom ism at Cambridge, in any area in Assam state des ,Uraz's "childhood, when. his deeply involved with Commu father showed less solici·tude for nists as a young man in Vienna, ignat~ as "restricted, protected Ilnir:n than he did for a sick colt. but thereafter, on his return to or tribal." A native of I,taly, Father Cur In the royal competition, Uroz England, worked carefully at to was given three mon·1Jhs m perf-orms brilliantly and seems establishing a reputation fur conservatism and even fascist whioh to leave "sen.sative areas" sure of success. But at a climac of the state. tic moment, while ex~cuting an sympathies. The authors believe that he No specific charges were made esPecially acrobatic maneuver. be breaks a leg. A teammate was already a Soviet agent, and by the government against goes on to win, and Ural. is sent was under instruction to fashion 'either missionarY. Meanwhile, Q reactionary image for himself. ~e daily Times of India ,said Ii'lo a hospital. Not victory but Stupidity in High Places the expulsion orders have caused ignominy is his lot. In 1940, Philby got into the "widespread resentment" among The hospital bewilders and ,disgusts him, and before he can British intelligence service, and Christians in Assam. In. ~arch, the Assam state ~ properly treated he slips his rise was rapid. He seemed away, mounts his stallion, and destined to head the service Blt government informed the BU periors of all missionary organ Gtarts on the very long journey a fairly ear;ly age. His positions enabled him to izations in the state that an home. It is to be a succession of fOreign missionaries would have trials and even horrors. in supply the Russians wi,th inval which he seeks to redeem his uable information and to abort to leave the state within 18 months. l!l<Jnor, lost or compromised, by important undertakings of Brit Mizo tribesmen in Assam his failure in the sports event. ish and American intelligence Spectacular Development (he had security clearance ia state ha ve been agitating for independence fur I9O!De timel. The journey, during which Washington which none but a and fureign missionaries have the injured leg has to be bru handful of. Americans ' been accused of supporlinl tally amputated, takes up the granted). , . 'gl'cater part of the lengthy book, There are, of course, big gaps them. 'and abounds in dramatic and in the story and American offi ,.ymbolic occurrences. cial sources, not to men4Jolll Uraz has not worked out aU those'of the Soviet Union. bis pJ'oblems by the time he But the authors, and....their as reaches homes, and understand- , sistants, have dug up and pieced LOUISVILLE (NC)-.A!ll ex 6ng and acceptance between toget'her a large amount of in father and son, each icily formation. and ·have interpreted tensive program of Summer proud, have still to be worked it with sharp but sober 'wits. , activities is planned by Cattle. out. But these are achieved in The products of their labors is lic churches in this city's raeial • final spectacular development. fascinating, often exciting, and 11' troubled West End where re cent riots have occurred. Philby Conspiracy sometimes infuriating in its ev A coordinator of priests illl the Fabher and son each muses, idence of stupidity and crimin&1 West End said that the programa from time to time, on his rela cal'clessness in high places. are more widespread and mean ,tionship to the other. Tursen Ingful than anything attempted never conveyed any love to 'before. They' are designed, he 1lJraz in the latter's ~irst years, said, to enrich the people of the and he wonders now' whether PHILADELPHIA (NC)--Sis ~ had ever felt any love for tel' Aloysia Dugan was elected area cultu'rally as wen as provide the boy. Certainly, as Uraz ma (June 11) chairman of the Con-' recreation fur youth. tured, the 'father' saw him as a ference of Catholic Schools of , "Projects include spor.ts, eda rival, and even came to expel'i Nursing at "the annual meeting 'eational and remedial programs. ence enVy of him. For his atll of the organization here. She health services, a summer camp Clude, he finds himself shrewdly is chairman of the depailtineI!A; and pre-school program, a teeD punished. of nursing at· st. Joseph' Col club and Montessori-t7Pe e:la.. The Messrs. Page, Leitch and lege, Emmitsburg, Md. fur pre-schooler.l.
has
Protest Remnoval Of Mis$oonerrs
as
was
Churches Planning' Summer Program
CYO
Each attending diocese win present « report of develop ments in their area, limiting their address to 'three minutes. A report on national develop ments in the organization wiD also be made. Highlight of the business ses sion will be the nomination and e1«:tion of &f.ficers. "!be candi dates will campaign following Saturday's noonination until elections ue held Suday D'lOl!lIng. ' Social Activity Six workshops arescbeduled 'beginning at 4 oIi 'Saturday: "Mission V4etnam"-Burlington, VIt. • • • "Mission-Brother'hood" -':'Providen<re, R. I. • • • "Mission ...:..New' Morality" • • • Man eliester, N. M. • • • "Poverty U.S.A."-Archdiocese of Bostan •• • "Mission-Christian Matur Ity"-Arehdiocese . Of Hartford, Corin. and Portland, "Mabie·· • and "Mission-POssible"·· • CYAO. . But the dual Congress will DOt be without social activity, emphasizing the CYO':s aim of development of the whole being. It will be a ,traditional Saturday night for the young adults, as Mley join i0rces fortheeoD,gress ,banquet and cotillion. Thomas O'Connor, President ,of the New . England Young Adult Councll wiU act as toastmaster at the banquet. Rev. Charles W. Mc Connell of Providence, Assist ant N. E. -Youth Director, will deliver the invocation and Msgr. Carroll ,the main address. Vote Sunday Sunday's schedule will find the yOWlg leaders casting their bal lots for New England posts. The two-day affair will be climaxed with a CongreS5 Mass and in stallation of officers. The Mass will be concele . brated by clergymen who are diocesan directors. Rt. Rev. . Msgr. Robert Stanton, of St. Mary's Ca·thedral, will be the principal celebrant. 'The homily will be delivered by Father Guissani. , Delegates,spiritual directol"!l, and adult advisors, will join for o IWlcheon before depailting. '
Continued from Page One New England Convention of the CYO. Both conventions will be held at the Holiday Inn on Milliken Blvd. with individual schedules set for each organization. Both organizations, dedicated to pro viding a stimulus 1;0 youth and young adults to develop spiritu ally, mentally, physically, and socially, will share the theme • • • "Mission-Involvement." In the light of the recent tragic assassinations 01. three of the country's'leaders, the evo en; have dedicated. their dual congress to the ideals of Sen ator Robert F. Kennedy, Doetor -Martin Luther. King Jr. and President John F. Kennedy··· "that their examples may light the way to our ambUions." Each Diocese in New Englana will be allowed to send 10 dele !:ates from the CYO, the young eraged group, and 10 elder CYOers membe1"6 of the CYAO. Four representatives 01. each group will hold voting privileges for the businesa sessi<ms.
Guest Speaker Keynote address to the youth will be delivered by David L. McKenzie, 17, P.hiladelphia Boy of the Year of 1968. McKenzie, a member of the Big Brothers' Boy's Club, received the honor recelltly for his outstanding humanitarian traits. A nominee for this year's Junior Citizen shi.p Award of the Boy's Club of America, McKenzie is the first president of. the West Philadel phia School Council. The council was formed last yea! to ease interraciai prob lems among students of five area high schools. several state and city offi cials will attend the conference including Mayor Nicho'las W. Mitchell of Fall River and Lt. Gov. Francis ·sergent. Numer ous CYO spiritual direetorsare ex,pected. Among them will be Rev. Gustan H. Guissani, ~ew England Director fbI' the -eyO WM is expected to addresS'tlhe gathering. Report Developments Also attending will be the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, B,ishop of the Fall River Die. oese, Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Diocesan Director of Youth Ac tivities, and the Rt. Rev.Msgr. JohnP. Carroll, funnel' New England eyO director. Presiding at the business .ses sion. set for Saturday aftemooo. at !, will be Brian Pontolilo, New England Youth Councll President and n parishioner of St. Mary's Church in Norton.
Nuns to Partidpate In Summer Pro,gram
Re~stablish
Church In Czechoslovakia
o
BONN (NC) The newIT cOnstituted Czechoslovakian eommunist government bail 3ranted permission for the re establishment of tbe Eastem rite CatholiC Church ill tbaC
DAYTON (NC)-Nearly 1,000 nuns are expected to partici pate 1Ihis Summer in a special inner city apostolate here. The program is headed by Dr. Johnf!'. Britt, a University of Dayton faculty member. Hun dreds ,of nuns enrolled 'inunl V'e1"6ity Summer classeswiU join those from local conv~ntB in the ~project. ' ' Sister Joan Patrice, of 'Corpus Christi school, programcoordi n.aJtor,said nuns will gain at !east as much from the program as those ·they will assist. "lI:t win acquaint them with ·the realities of the inner ·eity arid with the ,problems facing allal tIl>," the Sister of ,Charioty said.
0CHIRtry.
LARIVIERE'S :Pharmacy
.'The ·/fO.ernlMftt's actklil' ill
~ step in 1be serieS ol £ROVes M ease 1lhe disabilities 01.
the eburehes ia. Czechoslovakia 8Dd to relax the OhUMh-stMe eonflieils of previous years. • ~wed the l'etUmof' foul' CathoJ:iebishoPs to thek SeeI 116 YeIlN or more after 1heT Were ousted by iDe eomm~ Oif. tAle Stalinist em.
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Jil'ASTBBTllat all clrUlr COUlltID
Gathering Makes Little Impres$ion On leSJm$~ofruwe
lHE ANCHORlhurs., June 20, 1968
History ofPairpoiTJl]t Glass Related in Book ..By Member (/JJ! Matt([)][[lxwi8cettl IP+IJrish
------------~
lNle®rr© [Q)®Q~9)ateSJ
TRENTON (Ne) - Some 2,000 people 1J&there~ m A member 0'£ St. Anthony's parish in Mattapoisett is stirring up interest in a once front of the War Memoria] famous name in New J8edford-PaiJrPoint Glass. The "stirrer" is the just published- book, Building here in an effort "The Pairpoint Glass Story," written by George' C. Avila, 56, who lives at 42 PeaJl'l to nudge the New Jersey State Street, Mattapoisett. }[It covers the history of the world famous glass from the earliest l;.cglslatw-c to act on edminifl trotion proposals to CO}!)e with days of the New Bedford the urban crisis. Glass Works through the The Legisll1ture, bowevev, J'e f.inal days of Pairpoint (Bry fused to be shoved, and in the woke of the Majority :ResponsE den's) in 1958 in a small
Rally went nboUit the business of advancing a legislative progrom which would limit urban spend ing while funneling m4»'e money into transportation pro grnms nnd the suburbtm re~ooll distrlct:3. Auxiliory Bishop Johfl 3. J;>ougherty of Newark was one of the sponsors of the rally, con ceived as n demonstration by middle-class suburbanites in support of legisJ.atiofl reeOffi mended by the Crl>vernor's Com mission on Civil Disorder, on which Bishop Dougherty sevved. Prelates' Statement
At the rally, :: statement signed by the bishops of all New Jersey dioceses was read by John Q. Adams of Montclair, 1:1 business executive. "Deeply conscious of oar yeo sponsibility to the disastrous consequences of a renewal of civil disorders in our state," the bishops announced their sup port of the rally held on a leg islative working day. The statement was signefi by Archbishop Toomas A. lBolnrull of Newark, Bishop Lawrence B. Casey of Paterson, :mi~hop George' W. Abr of Tventen, Bishop George GuHfGyle o! Camden and Bishop Stephen Kociako, ndministr::tor e~ the Byzantine-rite epal'chy 0: p~ lillie. 'No Time
tOF
study'
"We would urge oUJr peeple as far as pOflSible w associate themselves with this endeavoll' and thus to demonstrate their concern for the deveI(}pment in the state of such proper educa tion, housing, welfare and anti poverty programs as wm attaek the causes thnt eontribute to such disorders while safegm!lnl ing the personttl dignity ~ nll our fellow citizens," the bishops said. Legislative leaders, who b::lve shown their dislike for the pl"() posals suggested by Gov. Rich ard J. Hughes, addressed the rally but received II cool re~ep tion. Senate President Edwir-' B. Forsythe was greeted with booo when he indicated that the leg islature could not enact sueh 1\ massive program with haste. When he promised to give the matter further study, he beanll' participants shout: "Theye's no time for study.-
Supports Inner City Educational Program BUFFALO (NC)-The BU~ falo diocesan school dep:l-rtmeBt has announced it has decided to proceed with plans for an inner ci,ty education prog1"am this Summer, despite the fact that the federal goveunflUl'ot Fe jected its applica,tion for fmld ing the project. The diocese had applied loll' $130,000 ,to :fund a program for BOme 700 youngstfi'S at loCI iAner oity parochial sehoois. 'nJe p _ pasal was aimed primarily II&. pre-first graders, but irleluded older ehildI'en as: well." U.S. Office ClIt Eeonomi~ 0p portunity officials .bj~ .. the diocese's proposal ~U8e K would have included ehild nn aU: yean ef a:e and ~.
plant in East Wareham. The book actually was born aim<lst a half ce;ntury ago when the young George Avila, a mem ber of st. John the Baptist parish in New Bedford, clutch ing 50 cen'ts given him by hilS motller, frequently grumbled his way from his home on Or chard Street to the Pairpoint plant witlh instructionlS from Mrs. Avila to "pick up some thing pretty at the seconds table." Those "seconds" ended up in his sister's hope chests and now grace their own homes. Mr. Avila and his wife, the former Diolinda Mendes of Mattapoi sett, also have a large collection of Pairpoint pieces that belonged to 1:lleir families or were col lected over the years. Quarter Centtlli"Y Thai, says Gcorge Avila today "is really when it began." But geWng the Pairpoint book out Qf his mind and between covers was to extend over a quarter of a· century. "Actually, I decided approx imately 15 years ago to do the book," he says. "I had thought of ii before, but courting Dee and getting married and setting up housekeeping and eaming a pvmg took me away from it," In the earlier daylS of their marriage, the Avilas combined Jlctive W()rk at St. Anthony's with b:ringing up their daughter Susan, now Mrs. Gary R. Hoyt. ~," Mr. Avila reports proud)y, "is from Pembroke. He's a direct descendent of John Alden. He and - Susan are both redheads-so is my grand daughter Christina." (Ohristina was born last Nov ember in Germany where her father ilS stationed with the U.S. Anny.) MIT'. Avila, who was active in music and drama circles in New Bedford as a young man, was a member of the cboiJ" at St. An thony's "for 11 or 12 years. My wife had a parish Cub scout troop and taugh,t Confraternity classes there." However, his work as a fore man at Morse Twist Drill, where he has been employed :i5 years, and the long and" often tedious work on "the book" gradually occupied Mr. Avila's full time -and tha,t of his wife. They both found it necessary to with draw from outside activities. "I had to have somebody do the typing lind editing," he saylS. Mml. Avila was chosen. Even "the kids" got in on tlhe act to make the book real family affair. Susan and Gary both were g,Faduated from Swain School. She previously had a4.tended Northeastern University for a year, "before she decided she didn't want to be a teacher." 'JiIhe two redheads-"now wit~ Ohristina there are thFee of t.hem" W'Ould "dr0jl their homework lMId jt.!JDil ~ 00 things. for me when I askefi tbea!," Mr. Avila says. 1.011&' Distanlee Desi:r_ 'Ji"be :rounl eouple )lOeote graphed all the original pieeee IDustrratin« the book and de ligned the book jacket 1&n.c Itis ta.nce. "I sent them t:be apea I1eations and they ~nt baek ~ water color jneke<t It ..,gs C2 actly rillht,- :Hr. AvilQ -...ys.
a
17.
lLeGJw@
M@~ti~g
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)_ Some 400 Negro delegates wan"", 'ed out on a meeting of the N~ tiona! Conference on Sociali Welfare (NCSW) in Civic Audi\.o torium here. 'They returned • the general assembly later aftel' a t"aucus in the auditorium ~Jlo> ridors. Earlier, a conference dinn~ was picketed by fann laborere lI"arr-y,ing signs in Spanish ~ JJ:llglish. A speech by U. S., ,wJ"!ley General Ramsey Clarl; was interrupted by field work,.. ,~l"S' Wiho wanted to know wh~ the Justice Department is dfi>-> :iong about enforcing the la~ £~ainst strike breakers. The 95th annual NCSW gat... ~ring was one of the most vocl-o femus in the history of tbfJ organization. In an informal! straw vote, delegates v(}ted 3~ to 255 to tell their new presn., dent, Dr. Wilbur Cohen, Secre-o tary of Health, Education ami Wl"lfare, to get lost fr<»n t.'l!.f) ,orgal)ization. , ]n his speech, Dr. Cohen ac!= VtJe2,ted more government p~ grams for impoverished chilo ttilYelll in addition to what h3!!J already been done for oldstem through such programs as MedJc, icare and Medicaid. "At the start, I would pusli for Kiddie-Care at an age whe£l most of our problems begin.'" Dr. Cohen stated. i'It would IIIfJ ,~ time and ml)ney saver."
*
,
-j
f
j
_ GEORGE AVILA ADMIRES VASE Research for the long-t,hought from the bindery early this of Joook was a long drawn ou1 month, Mr. Avila had appeared process, Mr. Avila admits. on two national educational tel HI had access to old neigh evision shows, talking aboU¢ hoI'S who had some knowledge Pairpoint glass and his book. of Fairpoint. Then when Pair Tremendous UeSPODS4! point workers or their children As a result, he says, sounding discovered I wasn't just fool relieved, "there has been a tre ing around, they began t.o help. mendous response. I'd almost "It was hard though. Re«lrds venture to guess we've had were hard to C()me by. I've beg orders from 45 of the 50 states." ged and borrowed thinz;s 1I Among orders recei "ed u, needed-I haven't stolen yet. A date for copies are those from water color we used I foun~ Corning Glass Museum in New in a barn in Mattapoisett. D York, the Sandwich Glass Mus was six feet by three. eum and the Toledo Museum ''Tbrough a kindness W 11 family once, I acquired several of Art. Mr. A vila now that his old catalogues. I borrowed! years-long self-imposed c,hore photographs born people. I ~1 looted reams of papers - and is ended-admits to relief. "I wanted to do it, I had to do i<1," then bad to sift through, sep arating "the wheat f-rom ~ ,he says, "but I had reached <l saturation point." chaff. His greatest satisfaction, says "It all took time." the author, who styles himself The Avila family discovered "an ordinary working man," is "secrets" excavating M the old "the pride of my family and the Pairpoint site, now covered backing given me by all the by six feet of gravel as parl wonderful people I work with of New Bedford's new South, at Morse. They make me feel Terminal project. I've accomplished something." He talked to former Fair He pauses for a moment. ::1 point employes, like H. Gmy always remember what ,my Gulb"ranson, 89, who is the old father used w tell us: 'If you're ,est living glassblower and Oly humble, the Lord leads you in mpio Cayton who was a cutter the right direction all the time.' " and engraver. Also Ciro 'Gerry' Mr. Avila feels the Lord has ' Angelini, the last glass blowe-r led him. to ply his trade at PairpoinS here and John Souza, the ]as¢ cutter to ply his trade in the factory. OSLO (NC)-A new intenla The facts he acquired through tional Protestanlt broadcasting painstaking work have beef1 organization is expected t.o be woven into what has been term f4>rmed at the assembly here in ed the "only definiotive worit" Norway .June 22-27 of the World on Pairpoint glass. Association for Christian Broad Jaefore tine book oome baek easting (WACB).
New Organization
Bishop's Installation COLUMBUS (NC) - Jmhop Clarence E. Elwell, rormer »WIl iliary bishop of Cleveland, will. be in&taUed llIl eilfhth IJ»BOoJ> of Columbus OD .Aug. 22 a¢ _ in St. Joseph's eathedral heft. The eeJremODY ~ iDStaUQDIie "win ~ e a eoneelebF»~ Ma:Js. Details have not yet Deft! rompleted jlor the MafiB. BitliMIF ElwelJ will preseot *be ___ mentB at bif) appoinimeoDt .. the diocesan eonSwtors the ... Wous day.
Senate Committee To Study Abortion LANSING (NC)-The Michll J!lln Senate, ill the closing mo ments of the 1968 legislative session, adopted a resolutiOlll ('aIling for creation of II special! ('ommittee" to conduct a compr&> hellsive investigation andstud~ on problems connected witil abortions," and to report jill findings to the 1969 legislature. The resolution called on th4l committee to study problems in <eluding "mental, medical ani! psychiatric effects" of abortion~ tAl evaluate present abortion lawli of' Michigan, and to study re visions of the abortion laws iLl other states and foreign coun tries, and their effect upon the prevalence of illegal abortionv. Five me'mbers of the abortion study committee are expected tc ~ named before the end e(l ..June.
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'18
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Th'urs. June 20, 1968
,Explains Reports
Decline in School Enrollment Continued from Page One figures representing an overall decrease in the Catholic school '90pula,tion would have gone much higher. 10 RepOrt Gain . Each superintendent was asked' • compare the number of stu dents in Catholic schools in the diocese in 1968 wi<th the number ~o years earlier. All bwt 11 of the 111 superintendents reported {J decreased number of students. , Of 100' superintendents who reported fewer students in the lJOhools, only one ,said the loss' Involved fewer than 100, pupils. , And 62 superintendents report.; ed a decrease of 1,000 or more:' lItudents in scho~ls in ,tihe dio"
.-ese. 'In all, 100 superintendents,' IIIlid 'Catholic, schools in theit" clioceses enrolled a total of Zl!~,941 fewer students in 1968 than in 1966. One superintend ent, said the student population 4id not change. , These, losses were not offset by the fact that 10 superintend ents reported a total gain of Only 3,566 students, especially, llince only one of the reported, , , ca!Os appeared to involve a sig Ilificant number of, pupils. SchoolS in ihe' diocese of, Raleigh, N. C., 'reported a'n in <l:rease of 2,362 students. In \lreases in' nine other dioceses IIWlged froin'10 to 400. Fa~l River Decrease "In the list of dioceses report ling a decrease of 1,000 or mOt;'e IJtudentS' in the two years un, der, ,considerati'on, Fall River's Jo&s is given as 1.071. Each superintendent was asked., bow many Ca,tholic school9tu dents had" been foi-ced to enter , . P'¥blic . schools during the past years because of dropped. grades and 'limited, enrollment, Po1icie,~ in CaUlolic schools. The ootal rewrted was 59,708 stu l'ients. " , . Catholic schools reported to , have" closed completely during tile 'past two years numbered 113. This number would appear Clo be c6nserva~ive; 45 dioceses did not respond to the question naire, Of the 313 reported clos-' mgs, 211 we're' elementary Qchoofs ,and 102 were high
.0
~hOols.
Few Closed 'Almost all 'dioceses reported '!lome closings but the" IiUmber in each' diocese was compara:" tively small,' averagingaboiIf two to three per diocese. ,Exceptions , to this general lillIe were the a~hdiocese of
San Antonio, which reporied 17 closings, 14 of which were ele mentary schools; and the arch diocese of Dubuque, which had seven elementary and six high schools closed. The survey found evidence fur repeated assertions that con solidations-merging of one or more schools into a single unit ~are becoming a predominant feature of the Catholic cshool scene, particularly on the grade school level. Respondents reported the merger 'of 318 Catholic schools -251. elementary and 67 high schools. But only seven dioceses took anything like a command ing lead in this innovation. The archdiocese of Dubuque was' m,r ahead of all dioceses, reporting 10 or more school mec$ers were:, Altoona-Johns town, 22; Detroit, 18; Buffalo, 14; Owensboro, 10; Davenport, 10; Allentown, 10. ' Average TultloD SuperintendentS were asked. what is the current average' an nual tuition in elementary and hig.h schools in the di~se. The answers varied so widely that it was d,ifficult to draw a compos ite picture. . It seems safe to assert, how ever, that a Catholic parent can ,consider himself fortunate if he is not paying over $75 in' "fees" for a youngster in a Catholic g,radeschool and, close to $300 tuition for a teenager in a Cath olic high school. , Only one' diocese responding to the questionnaire said its high schools are not allowed. to ottarge tuitioJ). by, order, of ~e bishop. Father. William R. Cor; nelius, superintendent, of schOols in tile Steubenville diocese, said BishoP JohD King Mussio has maintained ,this pOlicy since 1945. 'According, 10 Father' Cor 'rieiius, Bishop Mussio recently agreed 10 a, request from' pas:' tol\9 to permit a minimal charge in Catholic 'grade schoolS in the Steubenville diocese. ' ' Lack of adequate financial support is perhaps the most fre quently cited 'reason for' the re.;. cet1lt--'and ' continuing....:..cutbacks in the Catholic 'school system. "We have come to an erid of the ~d," Richard Cardinal Cush ing of Boston said recently itt disc;lUSsing Catholic' schools. "We can no longer SUPP9rtthesem 'stitutions." , ,
,Regional CFM
Priest Sees Black Market in Danang .
'Not Serious' Situation
'SISTER MARY ADELE, R.s.M.
'Mercy Nun 'Plans Lisbon' Study' Sister Mary Adele Thomas, Chairman of the modern lan guage department a,t Mount 'St. Mary Academy, Fall River, and of the Diocesan Modern. Lan guage 'CurricUlum <;:ommittee, has been awarded a Gulbenkian Grant to stUdy Portuguese this Summer at the University of Lisbon, Portugal. . Mount St. Mary' Academy will initiate a course in Portuguese in September and will be the' first private secondary schools .in Southeastern MaSsachusetts to introduce the lauguage into its ourriculum. Study in France 'Sister Mary, Adele' holds de grees from Emmanuel College, Boston, and the Ca,tholic Uni versity of America. She h~ done postgraduate study at Bos ton College, the College of St. Mary,Winona, Minn., and at Tout's, France, under the spon sorship of the Unive':'S~ty of Oregon. , - The religious holds 'member , ship in Kappa Gamma Pi, ana,';' tional' scholastic society for graduates of Ca,tholic women's colleges, The Modern Languag~ , , AsSociation, American Associa~ tion of Teachers of French, As sociations de Professeurs Franco . Americalns, The MassachusettS, Foreign Language Association, ana the American CouncH for .the ,Teaching of Foreign' Lan- , guages.
,'Holy' Father Plans Trip to Bogota
,VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Continued from Page One Boston City C,ounciior Thomas Paul VI will fly to South Amer I. ,Atkins will talk about the ica, on Thursday Aug. 22 00:' city's influence on persons. ~r.' , his sixth trip outside' Italy since he was elected Pope five years Atkins is a practiciI:tg:att()rney, , former head of the NAACP in ago. , He will stay in Colombia 'three BoSton and is said ~,ha~e be~n, 4ays an,d, will !,eturJ), (iirec:tly ~ , the most important single, force in cooling Boston tempers, while Rome ,from the, IntermitiOl)al , ,violence ,flared in oth,er>,~ities" EUCharistic cOMress in' Bogota, ~~ 'capital of Colomb~a. ' fo~lo'wiilg th~ death of, Dr: Mar tin Luther King. ' the, Pope's visit , ' Details Rom~ Maione, ,head' 'of the trip, announced in broad out Canadian Catholic Organization line May ~were'given ;by the ' for, DeveloPment and peace,will Vatican press offiCe.: A spokes: be , the speaker Saturday after man emphasized,that,not all par ~n. Mr.Maio~e's address' laSt' ti~,~~s had been ',settled;' , .' '~6ctober in Rome' 'waS",one,of ,'Pope ,Paul is 10 ,fly Out of _,,'t; 'bighligh~:Of the World Lay, Rome in, the: very, early hours ::.~, oOOgress. ' . ~' " " ., ' of, Aug: 22. The 'airlineshas not "Christian, Fami'ly' . Movement. yet been chQsen, nor is it known !san irtternationally iay. :organ':' whether, the 'journey will'be izaUon consistin'g of couples who non-stop, the spokesman ex are 'reSponsive Christilins'aware plaiqed. of their role hi todaY-'s world ¥1d ready to fill it. . They meet' twice monthly pur , First in 101 Year$ DEGREE: Mother Louis suing a study' action program to BALTIMORE (NC)-Lawrence Levesque, R.J.M.,' daughter explore together their Christian Shehan of Baltimore of Mrs. Jeanne ,Levesque of commitments and to promote Cardinal has been awarded an honorary 22ft Dawson St., New Bed ,family ,happiness in the horne, doctora,ie 'of laWs by the Johns rord, has been granted a M. the' neighborhood, the parish, Hopkins University 'at its an:' Ed. degree from URI under ~he community ,and 'finally in the nual commencement exercises.: At present in the Fall 'He is the first Catholic church an ESEA graI):t to further world. River Diocese there are 18' par man to receive such an, honor reading for the disadvant ish CFM. groupS with more, ~, ,from the 101-year-01d univer ing fOrmed. ' , aged. sity:
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NEW YORK (NC) - Com mentmg on reports that clothIng from U. S. Catholic Relief Ser vices (CRS) was found on the black market in Danang, South Vietnam, Father Robert L. Charlebois of Gary, Ind., CRS director in Vietnam, said here "I do not tilink the situation is serious at all." Father Charlebois said that only three bales witlh CRS, markings had been seen on the black market. Although a pre liminary inves,tigation by CRS, indicated that as many as 100 bales may have been 'sold for money to buy rice for' refugees;' this is a small number in com;' pansOn with the total of. 4,000
bales of clpthing distributed. by :flhe CRS office in Danang, tile priest said. CRS bas stopped. distributing clothing to those priests and Sisters who had admi,tted seIl ing some of the dona,ted. cloth ing given 10 them, F'ather Oharlebois said. He added that Bishop Peter PhaIn of Danang had called the priests and Sisters involved. to, a meeting at which he stressed their responsibility for obeying the Law. The bishop, however, took no punitive action. After all, Father Charlebois said, the money was, used. to bU7 food • feed hungry people. '
-calve 'VD,URSELP
ANUN
M,lSllaN AID TD THI DRIINTAL Dti~RD~
1;HI HaLY 'ATHBR"
YOU, 'CAN'T
GO YOURSELF, 10 TRAIN ,A
SISTER
Have you ever wished your famlfyhad,a nun! Now you, oan have a 'nun of 'your own'-and share forever In all the good she does•••• Whet II she? A healthy wholesome, pennlfessglrl In her teens or .arly twentIes, sh. dreams of the day sh. can brlnl God's love to ,I.pera, or phans, the agln,. ••• Help her become a 81.. ter? To pay all her eKpanses this year and next she needs only $12.50 a month ($150 a year, $300 altogether). She'll wrIte yO\! to 'Kpresl her thanks" and ,she'" pray for ~ou I~, dally Mails. In jUllt two years YOU'll have a 'Sister of your own'•• ~ ~ We'll send you her name on receipt of your, first Sift. As long al she JIves, )'Gu'll know you are helping the ,p,ltlable people ahe' cares for•••• Please write us today 10 sh. can begin her ttlln!ng. She prays someone will help.
"WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT INDIAr",
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HOW
TO ,HELP THEM HELP THEMSELVES
The parishIoners gather the stones and det the construction free-of·charge, under their pa... Ish prIest's direction. That's how In In,dla a church school, rectory and convent c;an be bUill'f~ronIY $10,000••• ~' Nain!'l t~'e parish for,your favorite salrit"we'll erect Ii, permanent 'plaque asking prayers for your"Iove1 ones, If 'you build., a ,parish In '68 as ,y.our once-In·a lifetime mission gift. • • • Wrate Monsignor Nolan for details. 'D-Archbishop Mar Oregorlos will write person ally to say where he'll locate It It you enabl. 'him to buy_($975) two aCre,s of land as a model farm for ,a parish priest. :Raising his own food, ,the priest can teach his parishioners ~o~ to In crease their crop' production. (A hoe cost. $1.215, a shovel'.$2.35.) ~ : ' , IJ In th~ hand,S of a thrifty native Sister your Sift In any 'amount ($I,OOO~ $750, $500, $250. , $iOo, '$7!S, $50, $25, $15, $10,$5; $2), will -flit eiripty stomachl with :milk; ,rice, flsh and veliet~ble.; '.... :If you {~'! nobody: ntea ~ help feed tf.1e.. hunliry tioys andalrl.a ,',
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: I'HII ,CATHDLlD ~.AR .AIi' WIL.ARI AIIDIIATID.
NEAR" BAST MISSIONS MSGR. JOHN G. NOlAN, National secratalY Write: CATHOLIO NEAR EAST WELFARE Aaaog. ·330 MadIson Avenue 'New York, N.Y. 1001' Teleph~ne: 212/YUkon 6·5840
Scores Renewal Pace •
1
CfrDt~cs
i
THE ANCHOR
',;
Thurs:, June 20, 196B
19
Continued from Page One' olle wriflam, ~ m. the American Oburch would, have been much fuI"lJher 8dva:nA:led than It JB today." He spoke at • double conseeTtlltkm ceremony • Quigley Prepai'1ory Seminary here for Amdlbry Bishops Alfred L. Abrilmowiez and lilic:lhael B. De!qlr;ey of Chicago. 'Worship eI 1Iau' '!he Wisconsin prelate, Ml auxiliary bishop of Chicago !rom 1960 to Mllftlh of this year, served 1~ years with Catholic: Relief Services eventually be-
Dewal mN1 reform in American," :
Catholicism." , "
The prelate respnnded: ; .
'Suppo~~~ [?fj'e~ch "Now if Mr. Thorman had'
ata.ted that what we need is t<l
Genera~ §O'~fl~~e give bishops more cooperation PARIS (NC)-The CathoIic and opportunity for shepherd oriented Democratic Federation mg, and lessel1 their burdens of Labor joined other unions in of administering, then American supporting the general strike Catholicism could be made more held at the order of the C()mmu :ready for renewal and refonn nist-controlled General Federa at Vatican II." tion of Labor to protest whai Bishop Wyeisl0 said that m it called the government's pol today's cillam8ing Church pat icy of "bloody repression." terns "what is really happen The communist group's re ing and W!hat 00 many modern quest to all French workers to writers miss is that there is a goo on strike for an hour was com.ing its ~ executive growing awareness of the prompted by the death of a director. He was also a director ,Church as a people of bJsh0Pos, striker in clash between police of 1lhe Chieago archdiocesan. priests, laity .as a famIly, m , 'and' W(1rkers at the Peugot· auto Cat'bolic: Charities office. " which othe relationshi,ps.of love .'plant at Sochaux in' eastern He . said ,to the congregation and· ~1'9therhood .are; gradually ." .. (. France. .... in ,the seminary chapel: !', .,' ~um.ipg more. ~mportance ~an . During- the. one-hour strike ,', . "Tlhere, is DO denying" ,M ~ . 1Jl)ose of 2UJt}}(~r,1ty, and, .I\UbJec,., . electric power was cut, "trains, read 1lhe DeW. '".It}lo1'B/ that rell,.". tion.". . ,,', Subways and buses" stopped 'gion <today Is identical, not with, ;" S~cll AJJone , , , running and protest dei'n~hstra the worship of God, but wi+th But, he eontinued, the bishops 'tions were held in factories and file worship of man, aDd it seems "!strangely and tragically" seem other places of work through that the Second Commandment to "stand alone" in ~ing w out the country. No street dem has been isolated from the First. bring the. strength that exists OFFERS PRAYER: Father Walter Flaherty, formerly onstrations, however, took place Pope Pius XII once said that within the Church into being.
'social amelioration is eondi"Tihey' all'e' forced so. very on the staff of Speaker of the House John McCormack, during the work stoppage, ~
the government's new ban on tioDed upon spiritual regenera- often," be emphwnzeo, ''to re.,.. :returned to the House to open the day's deliberations with tkm,' and that was, I believe, mind those whoon they want ~. prayer. Fr. Flaherty was ordained in Mayas a member of meetings was not violated. ·,The violence at Sochaux'· came tile whole thrust of Vatican D." l<ead and love that· she suffers the first graduating ·class of. Cardin'al Cushing's seminary' after the month-long dispute He then defended. bishops leSs from· hunger and misunder for late vocations, the John XXIII Seminary in Boston.. between the governme'nt and -Who seem to want to be old- standfug' thlln froon the dread 'French workers had appeared NC Photo. ." , fashioned enough to seek, first of living witlll. her o~, whose " 110 be ending. Many Workers and serve first the Deeds of the JneapabilMies, whose' lack of wbo h:ld participated iil the eoul, knowing that social ameli- understanding and :. so often. I haitionwide work stoppa'ge had · GIlIlaticm must also ~ thei.r.~ I tragic l~ of knowled:ge of th~ ... gone back w work. eem." He commented that "to leal mean.mg of love dISrupt t!be, .At Sochaux, most of the ,be, poor is J11't • disgrace,. ~., famil>: of Christ. . ,.. , plant's 25,000 workers had ,..1lo' be EPiptually depriVed' ~ , '"It HI here. ~at the~e may ~ voted to go back to work. Some the means. to grace is tragedy." ,the root elf dIffIculty In the l'eli1,. To' of .:God, . .. strikers, however, continued tel . Tidlure of BIShops' .' '. failure of renewal and reform . . occupy' the factory ,after the BlshcSp WycislO bad mentioned' ·in:America. Forgive me if I say NJj:W ' IBERIA. (NC)-Rece~, NA4CP. PI1lOtiees .it. IOla~ fal~:: .vote. but the unions. did not · Specific 'criticlsm,' by DOnald" . facetiously, 'Try to tell a teen incidents . of violence in ~e .in 'our country and I know yoUI' support them. But theFi the 'ThOm1an ., pUbHshei' of, the' :Na- ' ager what to do.' Bishops today United .states empha,Size ~at organization will con.tinue to management called in the police tional C~tholic Reporter, quot- ba~e difficulty tE;.llin g their "we have to change, to. be ~ cha.llenge the American .people to oust the strikers, and in the lng it: "The failure of our bisb- pnests whalt to do. GOO wantS us to ~, to' ~ve al:l to fulfill their ideals. ensuing clash one man was ops. as m group, to provide dyGOO wants us to love," Auxil"More and more white clti- killed.
. namic, loving leadership is the 11 . iary Bishop Warren Bou~ are joining hands with yo,u. .
most important single ,reason I~ 0 Illl dreau of. Lafayette told ~ rally to do what is right," Bishop for the continuing crisis in·-.e, here in Louisiana of the Na- 'BoudreaUx pointed out. '.'If we . Honors .Am~can Churdl today, and Continued ~rom Page One ." tioJ111l Association for the Ad,,:, love wgether, there is hope for the widespread fallure of Ie- bration: a Foretaste of vancement of Colored People. this country, in spite of our past tion" at 11 session on "The' Ex:", Bishop BoudreauX, 'pastor of' sins. JAMAICA (NC) - Archbish
.; perience of Salvlbtion," ohaired '. st. Peter's Parish here and, ~ ,"We, are' the. last hope of Ute . ,()J),Luigi. Raimondi~ Apostolic
by.Rev. Bernard Cooke, S.J., Of' 'past chairman of the city's hU~. . w9dd. We must work together, ,.Delegate m. the . UnIted States.
Marquette University, Milwau'- man relatio{lS council, 'was pri.n- in a spirit of determination with . :w.~ awarded an honorar,y. doc
kee. . " ,,', eiPaI speaker ata ially' obsery-. ju~tice. and ,charity,. using all .tP~.()f laws here at the .an
A native of· New Bedford aria' big the 25th anniversarY' of the m.eans that are good and.. just to J))lal . co.mmencemen<t exercISes
PARIS (NC)·-A group, eI. . an a1UD1JlWl of St. John's 5em:", New Iberia chapter of the obtain the ..rights for which our: . ,01. ~t. John's University, largest ~eneh students interrupted inary, Brighton, Father Tripp is NAACP." ' . , ,country was. founded. Together. ~th~lic .institution. of, ,higheT ·Sunday Mass:a-t the chu~, qI., • eandidate for the degree cd" ReferJ,'ing briefly to the ~- ,we shall overcome," he said. learmng 1n ~e UnIted sta~s. st. Honore d Eylau ~re and", Master of Arts in Liturgical He:" 'sination of Senator Robert ~. . The. archbIshop also preSIded we~ ~reefully ~.},)y, ~ . seard1 lit 1he' University Of 'Kennedy, Bishop' ':BoUdreau~ at . ceremonies at which diplo panshioners. ' . . :Notre Dame. He 1Nls had wide said he believedtilatas 1be . mas .were awarded to 2,954 After the 8e~, three ~ experienee in ecumenical activ.;. thOusands' paid their last ~uates. The university ~ .fo~r. demonst~ Al)P~ Jties. speeta they were alsO ind!eatin, ~ucled by the Vinc~n:tiaJA lIbe altar earrymg r~ ~gns _ First Caeholle their resolution that sucl1 .. MILAN (NC) - OMi~ials of .:r.~er.s. bearing a quo~ation '~ ~ He is. the immediate past' senseless violence must stop. tAM! Catholic University of the. bi-shop FrancoIs Mal'ty Of Paris: president of the National Inter"We must return to GocPIl saered Heart here and rebelling ""God • not • ~rvative!" Seminary Movement, having prineiples, to the spirit of love,," students have reached an annisA Young man seIzed 1lhe JDibeen ~e first Roman Catholic Bishop Boudreaux said. "The tice after almost four months ertlpbOne to say, "I have a ~ to bold iDe office of President war in Vietnam, the coofliet be- . fd eonl.liet over demands for sage 'for you from . the B1ble in the movement's 88 year his- tween Israel and heT Arab updating the only Catholic lay and Revolution movement." tory. He is also Secretary of 1he neiehbors _ these are taking university in Italy. . He had hardly. finished.t:bt8 Commission on Theological Ed- place because we dO n:ot love University authorities and Per Annu1tl .' eentence. when several parish.,.. ueation of t1:l1e De,partment of enough. We must sbo'r. • ....:.. student leaders agre e4 ,w use Ask a,bout . ione~ grabbed him. ,Tbe.. ~ Ministry of the National Coun- there must be deeds to. back uP. the Summer vacation months to fihen appeared, askedtbat 1be~, dl of Churcl1es, and a fonner . words. ParentS, ~. Diust teada dZaw up new statutes ··'after. a " INVi:SlME':fT ... ,.be .no -'"!olence, ~. tbe. ,:PtI~,,:, me~ber of the General Corii-"yoUr children to love.";'" frank consilltation and exchange . ., SAVlNG$ • . _~~~~eu. -d~' . , .', .' mittee, the governing body Of·, . '~Reeo~' . " o f ·-Views. " .. : . 'I, . AneTWar .. ....,,~ were; ,a,rfrQ-., the ·University Christian Move' . , . The· agr.eement reached after , . :' .. CERliF.I~ATES . the. ,. , ment in ti!e U. S. A. Praising the reCord· of the tWo d. ays of ends .. SA'fETY _ SaY'In'gs Ins.u.:..... In> • . tween parishioners ind'mebitien .' , :NAACP B·i s hop,. Boudreaux be' t " ~ th I ,""u "lI '! of' 1he Bible and' Re'VolutioD·, ,: .,. . .. ' -,Id ..:..."historians will,' .:prove 1lhe tiJ,lle ",ng.a +~"'.. e o~g '<agency of the U. S. Gcv~rnmen. , .,... ,.... and sometimes viol~nt..dispute ' .. . group~- 'J C " . ' . ••.• • I • 'DO, group ,has done more· -lasting m' whIch Student& l1av~ d~ "V~ILABllITY·~ ~o .. oQtlce lequirecl. The, Bible and· Revolution good for the .Negro race than' mandeda s8yin'~e Wliv,ersit;r.s Yl!U! funds aYall~le w,hen nl/eded. JDOVement is • student group the NAACP. Other organiza- .adlni~istrat,ion, adjusWIe.nt o£' SAVIE'-b, ,NiAll:":': We. 'process promptl, that maintains a s£and .'at· , tbe ,. tions . talk, of non-violence, b fees and a gen~ral renewal of and:. pay postage b\lth ways.. Sorbonne where it distributes the program of Studies. In recent ' Assets oyer $41,000,000 tracts upholding its viewpoints. . 'months students have oCeupted .• _ . ' , I It asks that churches be opened : ol~e university buildings, police have · fur popular meetings apart been called iJ;l' by authoritieS £rem the hours of worship, ~ and expulsions and civil 'pros~ Savings and Loan Asso~iation it calls' into question the decrees . KEARNY (NC)-A resolutipn.' of the Second Vatican CourteD,' asking tha.t the priests' of the . 'cutions have been resQrted to. of FALL ,which it says was held without Newark archdiocese be consult-. __ popular' representation ed on nominations for auxiliary bishops was adopted by the , First Federal SQvln~s & Loan Assn. , Archdiocesan Senate of Priests . , 8 Martti Malo S'l., Fall Olver, Mass. : meeting here. ' . "
.: Zip: 02722 P<leno 674-46&t , STOCKHOLM (NC) - The ,. Make applicaticm by phone It vo~ wish.' The resolution, reported out , Katolsk Kyrkotdning .(Catholic
J. lESER, Prop. . by the commi,ttee on pel'6Onn~1, News), the Stockholm diocesan , 0 Individual Account 0 Joint Account,
RESIDENTIAL asks that Archbishop Thomas A.
pUblic~tion, will job\ three, , : Please open 3 savings account EnClOSed:
BNDUSlRIAL Boland' poll in the' ,
, Namels) other Christian weeklies 'in
COMMERCIAL priests of the archdiocese for. ' .~weQtm in six joint editions : .Addr!!ss· ' : Dominations. The al-ehdiocese
during the general assembly ~ 253 Cedar St., New Bedford , Is n check In the amount of $_._ _ , 'bas three auxiliary bishops m the World Council of Ohurcbea
'. . 993-3222 .Ii'ATHi~ ~: TILIPP .... tiM! .present time. ' ". in:U~ July 4-21. ~~~~~""'~,~",.~~, ~
' onge.. 'We H.ave,."'to.'Ch Lo.
uisiana. Pw:e.. late, 'Urges' Conformity
wu'm
At .... IIolil'e Da me'
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University Apostolic Delegate
Salw-
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Officials, St"dents R h A eac" greement.
Higher Earnings
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20
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River.-Thurs.June 20, 1968
1961(YO·(YAO [ONVENTION
The' Diocese of Fall River
Welcomes
c
The 16th Annua! (ongress
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I
New England Council of.· Catholic Youth
and
The 9th AnnualCongress New EnglandCouncil of Catholic Young Adults
]UNE.29th-30th Holiday. Inn Milliken Blvd~ Fall River
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BRUAN;IPONTOLlLO,
New Eng~ancl CYO President
St. MearYs lPai'ish, Nortoa'
IT. REV. JOHN CAR~OLlL'
Past New Engla,nd CYO~CYAO
Pireetor'
DAVID L McKENZIE
Keynote Speaker
Philadelphia, . Pa.
St. John the Evangelisf\church
Swampscott, Mass.
have ohe of it's own members Brian rontolilo serving as President of the New England CYO Council. We are alsa honored to have David L' Mc l4lCenzie from Philadelphia as our key a.ote speaker. David has been desig llIated as the Boy of the Year and the recipient of the Wanamaker and Boys Clubs Awards. Chosen by the officers of the New England CYO to be the OCeynote Speaker, his message will be directed to Youth. Their Responsibility Ilo themselves and their, community. We are grateful to the distinguished Monsignor Carroll for his acceptance 110 be our Banquet Speaker.
REGISTRATION:
Me$s~(j~
Saturday, June'29
OPENING PLENARY SESSION:
Holiday ...
12 M.-1:30 P.M.
2 P.M.-3:30 P;M.
WORt(SHOP and PANEl DISCUSSIONS '
Holiday ....
From the Ordinary of the Diocese' of Fall River:
Most Rev. James L Connolly from the Commonwealth: I :eutenant Governor Francis W. Sargent. From the City of Fall River: Mayor NichoUas W. Mikhell.
GREETINGS:
,PRESIDING OFFICER:
David 0.. McKenzie
BUSINESS SIESSDON:
CYO
NominCll~iolJ1l
BASS
I
on
AnawlllIn
St.,
3:30-4:00
of New Officers, New IEngland! CCIIJlIJ1Icil of
'iTihle Islands
SAYUNGS BANK
'il'1HI1E
1E){1TIE~MDIi\'IATOR
IFAILIL
I1tDVIE~
CO.
IEILIECTRIC LIGHT CO.
Spons({J)lled !by the
GILOBIE MAINIIlJJIFACTURING CO.
lFollowan9 Undivni'dJMais
Fan ~DVSIf.
MASOIJ\'I
and BM$OrmeS$ ,C({J)lfi}ccerns
ALLIEN'5 C(IJ)'il'
Dt1lJ The
ANN IDAILIE PRODUCTS, INC.
Dioces@
.'
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frrmDO
J~a'lfe,
P.M.
.. Catholic Youth. '
(b@<d] ~17\l<d]
ClD"E~
lHeadquarien
~1l'IE
DURO IFDNISIHIING CORP.
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A.
IFQJJ~IJ\'IU'il'URE
McWIHIUR~
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CYAO Theme: Panel- Mission Pc»
sible.
U.
COMPANY
1P'1E1lt~Oft\i
COD1lgli'ess Social: Following Banquet at
White's Restaurant, Westport.
$ll'lE~Il.DINIG
BEVERAGES, INC.
'It'IE1L1L@W CAB COMPANY
--
SHOWROOMS
MClId<:IEINIIUIE AINlIOl WI.NSLOW; INC. IFMi\II~
_.1
CYO .Theme, Mission Involvement 5 Workshops .:. Mi~sion Vietnam-Po. erty U.S.A. - New ,Morality - Broth,.. hood-Christian Maturity.
Gold n~ket Banquet:'6:30 P.M. White" Restaurant-Banquet Speaker. MsgJ'. John _Carroll.
Brian 1P0nto1il0, President.
KEYNOTE ADDRESS:
4:~5:30 P.M. Holiday " Officers" Of the CYAO Presidi"90 •
INVOCATION:'BY. Diocesan CYO-CYAO Director, lev. Walter A. Sunivan.
Caps
This
',',
'Program Schedule
'nte Diocese of Fall River is proud to
New Bedford IP'AllJ)1\. G.ClEARY .. CO., INC. 'iGIEO~GIE
O'HARA CHEVROLET, INC.
10M IED.lLi50N
QUAlLmr MIEN'S APPAREL
SOlBilL01F1F ImL'tOll'IHIIERS
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STORIE