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The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass. u Thursday, June 22" 1967
Yol. 11, No. 25
@ ]
961 The Anchor
,Mansfield Native Is Editor Of D~vine Word Messenger Rev. William J. Kelley; S.V.D., son of Mr. and :Mrs. J. lIpencer Kelley Sr. of 26 Bella Vista Avenue, Mansfield faas been appointed editor of the Divine Word Messenger and co-vooation director of D i vi neW 0 r d Missionaries, /Southern Province. The mag azine features the work of Divine Word mis'sionaries in the Southern United !!tates and has a circulation of
Cl'Ver 35,000.
The appointments were made
tty Vel'y Rev. John W, Bowman,
~.V.D., provincial superior, at
the seminary in Bay St. Louis"
Mississippi.
Or'dained Jan. 6, 1967, Father
OCelley was assigned to the
Southern Province by Very Rev. ,
<Jfohn Schuette, S.V.D., superior -,
~nel'al of the Divine Word Mis
fi;ional'ies, Rome.
Father Kelley, a member of the
Catholic Press Association, wl'Ote
tor magazines as a semiriarian.
The second son oi Mr. and
Mrs. Kelley to be ordained a
lJ)riest, Father Kelley is on vaca
tion in Mansfield and will be
l>Jl'esent for his pal'ents' 4mh
REV. WILLIAM Jr. KEILLEY 'ill'edding observance Sunday.
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Arrange New Ceremonies For 2'7 Cardinals-Elect VATICAN CITY (NC)-The final ceremony in the aeation of the Church's new cardinals will take place not only publicly-on the steps, of St. Peter's basilica oofore a great throng-but concurrently with the open fng of the Year of Faith Jltroclaimed by Pope Pallll VI. "FhiR open air consistory, \';)arring inclement weather, will be the first in Ii ving mem and perhaps in history. Only 24 of the 27 new cardi r:sals are scheduled to be present GJune 29) at the Mass in fcont m: the basilica. The three cardi I!lals who have been nuncios to Spain, Portugal and Italy win ooceive the regalia of their new @ffice from the heads of state ~ those countries. These are Archbishops Antonio Riberi, Maximilian de Furstenberg and G::arlo Grano. They will get their ~ardinal's rings from the Pope in a later ceremony. All 27, including the three not jplresent, will become cardinalll on the morning of June 26 when the Pope and college of cardinals ooeet in secret consistory in the ~onsistorial Hall to put the for mal seal of election upon new members. Within a qual'ter hour the 24 will be notified in the big <eoncert ,hall on the Via COllcilia 1JIi0ne where they will be waiting ~th their friends and we'U wish ~ll'S and the members of the dip llomatic corps accredited ttl» the :!BIoly See. Amleto Cardinal Cico lJnani, Papal Secretary oil Stlll(&e, will read the names. Turn to Pag0 Sbr ~y
Celibacyr Authority i Varied Posts i
I For Brothers i
Have Needed Roles = =
BALTIMORE (NC)- Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore has upheld the tradition of priestly celibacy in the Church in a pastoral letter calling for a renewal of faith in the "supreme authority" of the Pope Noting a "certain weakenIng or con "much to the harm of those fusion of faith ... particular done who are wont to accept uncrit ly in the fundamental truth ically the printed word," he of the primacy," the,cardimil added. "Even more dangerous urged Catholics to give full as perhaps, has been the confusion resulting from erroneous impres sent to the teaching and govern ing authority of the Pope, par sions left by these discussions ticularly in regard to Holy concerning the relation' of opin Eucharist and Holy Orders. ion in the Church to the proper Speaking of the latter, he exercise of authority. "In any event," he continued, maintained that the Pope has "made clear that he is convinced "it is for the Pope as head of the the traditional law of celibacy universal Church to pronounce has values which far outweigh upon the conditions required for any objections which have been the reception of Holy Orders." raised against it and thel'e is no Discussing the Eucharist, Car well-founded hope' that'it will be dinal Shehan asserted that the Pope's ,primacy "extends not only abrogated." He decried the "loud and often to expounding the nature of this unseemly protest on the part of sacrament but also to its admin some against' the discipline ot' istration--the way iii which' the celibacy," stating' thilt 'it was' Eucharistic sacrifice is I~O be of , "contrary to £he deliberate judg fered; the conditions for partici pating in and partaking of it.'; ment of the Pope and the over whelming, majority of thebish The caxdinal called the Eucha ops of' (Vatican II) Council" 'and rist "the main sign of' the' unity has been the "occasion and'some of, God's people,''' and said 'that times the cause of no little harm ,"the introduction of unauthor": and confusion." '. ized changes only sel'v'es to cause The publicizing of opinion sur divisiOn and disunity ai'nong the vey results on the matter have faithful."
TO ROME: Brother Thom
as Gallagher, C.S.C., pie tured above, for six years principal and superior at Coyle High School, Taunton" has been assigned to the fa culty of Notre Dame Inter national School, Rome. He will be succeeded at Colyle by Brother Richard Kiniry~ C.S.C.
Heart of Ecumenism Must Be Doctrine ST PETERSBURG (NC)-A Catholic archbishop as serted the "heart of the matter is doctl'ine," in a discus sion of the ecumenical movement before a Presbyterian convention here in Florida. Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, bishop of St. Augustine, ac' knowledged the benefits in here, the archbishop said: "I StIch things as celerical and think I have noticed a backing lay associations, common ac- a'way 'from the problem of the tion .in civic fields, but added they "stop short of that veritable union which would be possible if we were to have a consensus of the all-important tl'llths committed to us by OUI' Lord Jesus Christ." Speaking to the United Presbyterian Church, Synod of Florida, at Presbyterian College'
faith among some of our Cath olic promoters of ecurnenism." The archbishop said much progress has been made in es tablishing closer Protestant Catholic ties in recent years, both 'among clergy and laity. He said they mainly have been centered around such problems Turn to Page Seventeen
Holy Name Parishioners Hear Proposals For Adapting Church to New Liturgy
COY L E GRADUATE: Brother Aubert Harriga~ C.S.C., a Coyle High School graduate, is newly appointe4 principal of Holy Cross Hilcl1 School, Flushing, N.Y. Pre. vious assignments have beell1l at Notre Dame High, West Haven, Conn..and St. Ed ward JIigh, Lakewood, O.
"A church should express something of the happiness of a wedding feast, when we are lifted on the wing's of lQve." Thus·Ade Bethune summarized her philosophy of. ec clesiastical design at a special parish council meeting at Holy Name Church, Fall RIver. The internationally known li17urgical artis t presented tentative proposals for adaptation of Holy Name's interior to the new liturgy of Vatican II. All parishioners were in vited to tl1e council meetin&"
I
L.
AIDE DE BETHUNE
and many accepted the oppor tunity. Also in attendance were guests from the council of neigh boring St. Joseph's parish, Miss Bethune was introduced by Dr. John C. Corrigan, parish council president, and brief re marks were also made by Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, pastor, At her right was Msgr, William H. Har rington, pastor emeritus of Holy Name. "For many years," said Miss Bethune, "we went to Mass as individuals; now we are to re gain the spirit of community so evident in the early church. The early basilicas were not so dif ferent from Holy Name Church," she added. She explained that the impor Turn to Page Fifteen
TAUNTON NAT!VE~ Brother Stephen Nunes, C. S.C., a Coyle High School graduate and Taunton na tive, will join the faculty of Colegio Dom' Amando, San tarem, Para, Brazil, in Au gust. He has been on the teaching staff of Mackin High School, Washington"
:Fall Riv~r NQtive New Headmaster ,
THE ANOIOR--:'Diocese :of FaJl River-Thurs. June 22, ,1961' .. '11
Catholic Education Agencies Seek Greater Cooperation WASHINGTON (NC) - Three national agencies in volved in Catholic education have launched a joint effort to explore new ways of cooperating among themselves to upgrade Oatholic education and expand i~ scope. They are the National Catholic Edu eational Association, the ity of 'worJdng out guidelines for National Center of the Con greater involvement of the home in Christian formation. "The fraternity of Christian Doc essential contribution of the
Very Rev. Armand H. DesaDot teJs, AA., provincial, has am nounced that Rev. Vincent . . Dolbec, a native of Fall Rive9w will become the new headmaster of Assumption Preparatoq School, Worcester, on July 1. Father Dolbec received his de gree in Theology from Laval Uni.versity, is a doctoral candio date at Boston Univ.~rsity ami has also pursued graduate studies at Catholic Universit3f. Notre Dame and Boston College.
home to the creation and main tenance of values has been un derlined more clearly than ever in recent studies," they noted. "Catholic education, which has for a long time emphasized the right of parents in the education ot their children, must now take steps 'to .see that right, realized more effectively in practice."
The new headmaster WmJ named Provincial Director ~ Education for the Americalli Province of the Assumptioo Fathers in 1962. He has hele1 offices on the Commission m! Adult Education of th,e NationoJ Catholic Adult Educational Com ·mission and is currently prem... dent of the Commission.
$~@tr@~
Father Dolbec will represent the Commission at the World 'Congress of the Lay Apostolate in Rome in October.
trine and the education depart ment of the U. S. Catholic Con ference. . New avenues ox mutual c0 operation will be explored by an ad hoc joint working committee, the establishment of Which was announced by officialS of the three agencies. The' officials, who will head the committee,' are Msgr. James C. Donohue, director of the U. S. C. C. edu cation department, Father C. Albert :Koob, O. Praem:, execu tive secretary of NCEA; and Msgr. Russell J. Neighbor, asso ciate director of the CCD. Improve Quality, In a joint statement', they said that they' hope' to fihd 'ways of bringing ChristianforIilation to more Catholics-adults: as wen as children-and improving the quality of such educatidn. , They also said, they hope to design and implement "structural experiments" involving direCt cooperation between the CathCl}ic school system and the CCD. They suggested as an' example, the possibility of using an inn~r city Catholic school and ,its per sonnel as the center for a reli gious education program, focus ing on Catholic childre~ and adults in the area. "The goal would be better use of existing personnel, finances and real estate," they said. Formation cf All They also stressed the possi bility of cooperation with the' public schools in such programs through' shared-time arrangements. , ' II:: The three men said th~ir con eern for ,cooperation" among Cathoii~ education81 groups was ' in line with "the emphasis of Vatican II on the need for Chris ';,' tian formation of 2iI,Ga~holics, ," ,'" as well as'th~ latest.educ,ational ,. 'research." , , They envisioned 'the wssibil
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Necrology:
BJnking
~i([fl'rm
C@nrol With_ Welfare, WASHINGTON ,(NC) Dr. Alan F. Guttmacher; president of the Planned Parenthood Federation 'of
America, has echoed a, statement by the U. S. bishops last N:ovem ber which called for separation of' birth control and welfare aid programs. , I , Dr. Guttmacher said linking the two "infringes on the, inher ent right, of all A,meripans ,to seek or reject family planning services free from government interference." His statement was an echo of the bishops' statement at their 1966 Fall meeting here which called for separation cd birth control services and welfare "to safeguard the freedom of the person and the autonomy of the family." Too Hasty , 'Dr. G~ttmache,r's ~tatement followed the warning by.law en forcement officials in' suburban Prince Georges cOunty, that un.,. , wed mothers must seek birth, 'control advice or face' arrest, ,if the)' apply for w~lfare,paYments. , The Planned Parenthood offi cial said such a move 'is "'utterly wrong-it is coerch7e;n:;dself defeating and caD onl)' result 'in birth' Control being rega~ded as something punitive." , . Even before Dr.. GuttInacher spoke, the county officials ad,,; rnitted they may have ,})een a little too hasty-the three county birth control clinics were ,booked solid for six months even before the policy was aimclUnlled.
TQX,
. WASHINGTON (NC), - The survey and objectives ,~ommittee appointed last April by th;e board of trustees of the Catholic Uni versity of America aft«lr'its tim , . meeting here issued a statemeuli which said it reviewed the "basic needs and problems" of the insti tution. '
Credit
FI@g'Dda ; lill Sets $250 Parentpl· Allowance - FlDB' E~ch, Child! in· Non-Public School
TALLAHASSEE (NC)-A bill if such dependent is between the which would allow tax e,redit to ages of six years and 18 years 'of parents of children attending· age." non-public elementary secondary The bill, which also provides schools has been introduced in that the "credit shall accrue as the Florida Legislature. provided in Florida statutes and The measure provides, a credit shall apply on the tax assessmen~ amounting to "$250 for each per due on Nov. l'of the same year," son dependent upon receiving hi!! has been referred to the House chief'support from the taxpayer Rules Committee.
'i'he committee autho~ized " chairman, Dr. Carroll A. Hocft.. walt of St. Louis, to initiate dis cussion with representatives .. the university's academic senate and the assembly of full-time members of the faculty.
Establishment of a liaison be tween the committee and facult.J was ·one of the main faculty re quests made in the wake of the boycott protesting, the terminlP ,," 'tion of Father' Charle!i 'E; Cu... teaching appointl:nent. .,.: .. The statement' said ih~ co~ 5 mittee considered at the functioning' of' Catholic! Univet'CHICAGO (NC)-Nuns and, of certain Catholic universities 'sity in all its scIiooIS and"8epan priests ,who manage Catholic -his own 'ainong': them:'-and di- 'ments in relation to otlie~ CaUP institutions administered, by Re- videmlmagem'ent of' their in- 'olie colleges arid. linivers(ties. D ligious,communities should have stitutions with'laymen.'· :;", said Dr. Hochwalt wa:;';:iuthOl' special Jrl~magemf,!nt training, '~IIi' years to come, catholi~:' bed to engage professioli~l COD the presid~nt of a Jesuit uni- ,'hospitalS' Will "face 'inc!rel;lsing . lJUltants in academic ~ind mano versitysaid here. '. ' burdens in the area of 'manage-' , 'agement areas." .. ,. , ;'We .can longer canot)ize the' 'ment. "Problems, will' become: Th . mmittee h."h ..... . . ". ' It· ITo' , e co , W IC _ ,ole ,of the ,R~ligJ.Ou.sd~~r;nan~ghet'- ! mfa°rethcomp ~x-nQd easler· , , emirged with long-rallge, goalll ment· there IS no IVlne, rig ce ese crIses an so,lve them.' f th . ' h . in'( d ._ ' " . ' ." 'J! d th b' d e i ' or e umversl",J'J c, u es ..... to govern vested m priests and we WI ' nee e. com m~. - 'following members: Cardinali Religious," said Father Paul C.' forts of, well.-tramed ~hgl.Ous, designate Patrick 'A. O'Boyle eM Reinert, S.J. President of St. and laymen, m the area of ad- Wa hi gt . Card'. al d ' ._ . ' . '. . 'str t· " F a th er Re'ID~rt s n on, In - eSlgna_ LoUIS Umv~rslty. . ~m, a lon, .. _ , 'John P. Cody of Chicago; Cardil= Fa~her Remert, add~essmg ~he s81d. :' . nal-designate John J. Krol cf meeting of the Catholic Hospital Philadelphia, and Archbishop . .Resaid that the hospital op Association said' the greatest erators OOoot !'own" the institu 1 Philip M. Haiman of ':~ew ~ weakness of Religious in man tions they' have built, 'but that ieans. aging"Catholic institutions today these are"a· '1public' trust~, to be is the failure to understand the governed, and managed" byi: II 'difference between the govern board Ol'Uustees for tin! "public , ment of a "Religious ,commun,ity benefit. '" " ".'", , ,~ and a professional institution. " , ," ',' "ltis, patently unfair to thrust., ine~perienced Rel~gious into the' .:' , ' "responsibiliti~s of directing the , ' • 1 destinies ,of large educational 123 Broadway and' health institutions. Piety, , 'Inc. and regularity alone are not enough today," he sai,d. FUNERAL SERVIC::E' VA 4-5000 Demands Skill ,
ran~s Je,s'u', it." Urg'e,s: Speciai Training Fo r" ',Rel. " -9.-0U' ' ,.. , in,·Mana,g'em.e,nt", .' ",'
JUNE 30 , Rev. Alphonse M. Reniere, O.P., , 1961, Dominican Priory, Fall River. .JULY 3 Rev. Thomas P. Doherty, 1942, Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bf,!dford~ . JULY 4 ' Oi'do' Rev. .James A. Coyle, S.T.L., 1955, Pastor, Holy Name, Fall FRIDAY-Vigil, of,St.:John the River. Baptist. n Class; Violet. Mass JULY" 5 Proper; No Glory nor Creed, R,ev. .J. F. La 'Bonte, 1943" . ' Common Preface. " Pastor, Sacred 'Heart, New Bed sATuRDAY - Nativity of St. ford. ' , , John the Baptist.• ,1 ,Class. 'JULY 6 Rev. Edmund Francis, SS.CC., , 'W~te.' ,MaSs 'Proper; . Plory; C,~ed; .CODunOI;!, Prefac~. , 1963, Pastor, St. Mary, fairhaven. SUNDAY-VI Sunday after Pen tecost. It Class. Green:' Mass Proper; Giory; Creed; Prefa~e of Trinity. '.. FORTY HOURS
MONDAY-SS. John and Paul, "Modern management demandS. DEVOTION
Martyrs. III Class. Red, Mass knowledge and skills, in deci Proper; Glory; No Creed; sion making-the ability to act, June 25--St. Mary, Norton. . Common 'Preface.. St. Francis XaVier; Hyan TUESDAY _ MaSs' of previous objectively and direct impartial nis. . ' ly," Father Reinert declared.. . Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass " He 'advised Church-operated St. Mary, New Bedford. , -Proper; No Glory nor Creed; July 2---:-St.:Joan oi"Arc;,Or Common Preface:' hospitals to follow the example , leans. WEDNESDAY- Vigil of SS. Our Lady of the'ASsump Peter and Paul, Apostles. ,n [N]<WlMl® 1L<W}fIJ'i1il<WliiJ [Q)®<WlliJ tion, Osterville. Class. 'Violet. Mass Proper; LAKEWOOD (NC)-The board No Glory nor Creed; CommQn of trustees of Georgian Court Prefilce. ,VIlE ANCHOR , College-lias appointed Vincent ,G. second Class Postage Paid It Fall River, THURSDAY SS. Peter and Tomes to the post of academit; Mas~ Publisheo every Th~rsday' at :410 Paul, Apostles. I' Class. Red. dean-the first layman to, hold,. Highlano Avenue... Fall River Mass.. 02722 by the catholic "ress 0' the Diocese ot FaD Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; , key administrative position iR River. SuoscrlptlOll' price _ _II, lIOstpald Preface of Apostles.: the New Jersey colle8e,'s J?ist017. ~.oo per J81r.
Mass
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THE YEAR OF FAITH: 'Pro<;laime!l'by Pope,r.aul VI to mark the 19th centen8.ry of martyrdom of Sts., Peter and Paul, begins on June 29, their feastday. NC Photo.
CU Commilttee 'To Meet Fac:ulty
l,~riirth
,.POLAN'-$AXCt)'N
Funera I;. 'Hc)~e ~
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'AtE ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1967
Methodist Theologian Urges .Updating' Church Structure
Fund Campaign POiSses Goal
NOTRE DAME (NC)-"Radical updating" of the 6hurch has been characterized here by a Protestant thea ltDgian as a must if the church is to carry out its mission. Rev. Dr. Colin W. Williams, Methodist clergyman and asso ~ate secretary of the Nation al Council of Ohurches of the week-long conference, Rev. Christian Life and Mission, William, A. Norgren, executive director of the Faith and Order told a gathering of 100 department, National Council of
Boman Catholic, Greek Ortho~ox Md Protestant theologians, that "Iacclesiastical blockages" ob ritruct the mission of the church. Warns oil Sep~rll>tioJm
Addressing the second national Faith and Order Colloquium at 1be last of its five-day study of evangelism in a pluralistic so ciety, the Australian-born evan gelist opined that the church is 'beginning to realize it needs to evangelize on an ecumenical limsis. But, he noted, "strong tension" has developed over how this bI to be accomplished. Dr. Williams, an exponent of ~ial action by the church, feels the tension between those em phasizinhg personal conversion and others favoring the church at work in the world Is the "'heart of the problem." Even 1lhough "personal conversion is the driving power of the Chris tAan, it is not enough," he said. "It must be related to the totBit cosmos. Separating evangelism :f1rom social action can only lead 10 disaster," he warned. The conflict, a serious one, the Methodist clergyman asserted, ean't be glossed over and' needs to be brought out into the open. Two-Camp Danger
Churches, told the colloquium that the church must face the problem of world confessional families as opposed to national churches. ' Father Norgren, an Episcopal priest, said some Protestant lead ers may have to ask themselves some day whether they want to accept the Pope as the chief pas tor of the 'Christian community. "Several are doing so right DOW," he noted, while other/} "may never do so."
Jewish Congress Mourns Cardinal
NEW YORK (NC)-Eulogiz mg the late Joseph Cardinal Rit ter of St: LOuis, the American Jewish Congress said he will be remembered by Jews and all humanitarians as "a true prince among men." Morris B. Abram, congress president, released a statement mourning the cardinal's death which said: I "GentIe'in his manner, he was fhm. in his determination to O'Vercome racial and religious bigotry and to assure human rights for all men.. COlOuring Vatican Council IT He referred to evangelist Billy be gave stalwart leadership in advocating numerous progres,,: Sraham as representing the per sonal conversion school which slve causes, in particular the passage of the Declaration on llilots second place to social ac Non-Christian Religions, which tion. repudiates anti-Semitism and Emphasis on pel'sonal conver lIion tends to cause "immobiU~," opened a new chapter in Jewish he said, citing Mississippi and ,Christian relations." Alabama as examples with more
eonversions per square inch than
Can.adians Help lIIlywhere else.
, Answering several de~egatea Developing Nations
who said there is room in the
OTTAWA (NC)-A new or eburch for both viewpoints, Dr. ~iUiams maintained there is ~ization has been formed here def1ger of the church polarizing to Carry out 1Il Canadian Catho into two camps. He suggested as lie fund-raising ca~paign to provide aid' for developing na II means of overcoming the gap tions. ' . dividing the two that representa 'Addreso\ling the :I1irst 'meeting tives of both be brought together board of governors of the DOt to theorize but to deal with of actual strategy on specific issues. group, called Canadaide, ' Arch bishop ,J:oseph-Aurele Plourde "Then we can reflect theologi .Uy on' these issues," he said. IJf Ottawa described poverty as the "No. i problem" of the mo .Pope Chief Pastor dem world. 8urJWlarizing trends durmc The group' is the result of a J:Il!ICOmmendation by a committee State's Last Negro fA. the Canadian Catholic Con :Ilerence, 'the ~rganization 'of this Parish Close oountry;s bishops. Canadaide NASHV.ILLE (NC)-The last was esta~lished after a year Of .egro Palish - St. Francis in study by the CCCcommittee, ~hattariooga- in the Nashvnie which recommended that rais diocese, which covers ail of Ten ingfunds for aid to developing .esSee, ~8s "phased ou't'" Sunday. countries could best be accom plished . 1>Y. a. team of laymen St. Francis parish was estab lished in 1948 to serve a growing working with the bishops. Can .egro C~thollc population. With ad8.ide jVill Tee indep~ndent'. of' the bishops' conference"although the closing of .the paris~ the, pa -mhioners, automatically become the officla! group sp9n~ored the IIlembers . of the parish in which !lew. org!lniiatiQn's first meeting. they are geographically located.
Bishop Joseph A. Durick, ap
Aid Church-Related ostolic administrator of the dio
cese, noted in the decree deacti
CoUeges in Ontario vating the parish that the people
TORONTO (NC)-The Ontario
:involved "have all the rights, privileges and duties of these provincial government has an
lIIlounced plans to provide finan
~ew) parishes." cial aid to church-related col leges and universities, a practice Adds Consultors it suspended in 1868, a year after Canada's confederation. RICHMOND (NC) - The Ec umenical Affairs Commission of The grants will be made in the Richmond diocese is adding place of direct federal aid to such M Protestant, Orthodox and institutions, which was recently ,Jewish consultors to offer ad dropped in favor of larger edu Yice and viewpoints on inter cational payments ~ the prov iu4:e.i. • laith matters.
to
the
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FEEHAN SENIORS: Among graduates at Feehan High Schoo], Attleboro, are, from left, Ruth Driscoll, St. John's parish, Attleboro; Sharon Pistolese, Holy Ghos~ Attleboro; George Casey, St. Mary's, Seekonk; John War burton, St. Mary:s, North. Attleboro.
Face, Challenge Wiscol1lsin P'relate Sees Difficulties lFor Catholic Colleges MADISON (NC) - ' Catholic colleges have much to gain by rising to the challenge of state universities to reassess their ap proach to human and divine knowledge, Bishop Cletus F. O'Donnell of Madison said. Bishop O'Donnell spoke during graduation ceremonies for 69 women graduates of Edgewood College of the Sacred Heart. The college is conducted by the Do minican Sisters of Sinsinawa. "One hears many voices in our day asking if the Catholic college has any future in these post conciliar days," he said. "It seems axiomatic to say that the Cath'oIic college in the United' States is facing difficulties-including ex tinction. "At a time when so many ques tion the church-related institu tion, we see dramatic changes taking place in the teaching of religion at state universities," he . continued. ' Teach Religion The bi~hop noted that a recent survey showed 45 per cent of state institutions of higher learn ing in the U. S. have religion de partments or chairs, in addition to the many who have other
State Accredits Fairfield School FAIRFIELD (NC)-The Cori .necticut 'Commission 'for higher Education commended the re centIy'Cstablished graduate school ot corporate and political com munication of Fairfield Univer:" sity here :for its "new, unusual
and creative program, both in objectives and philosophy."
,The ,commission also accredited. the , Jesuit-run· institution to . grant a master of arts degree in communication. The school is' a component of the university's Center for the Advancement of Human Com munication. Its purpose is to
train skilled communication spe cialists for work with business and industrial institutions, pri vate associations, government and the armed services.
forms of academic work in reli gion. "State universities are begin ing t9 teach religion because they have to. They are growing into a monopoly, and this exposes problems and creates new ones that even 20 years ago were un known," Bishop O'Donnell stared. "Young people today are des perately hungry for reIi'gious maturity. They want to learn something more than' skills and information. Their deepest need is to make sense oof human exist ence, to learn how to solve the dilemma of preparing for a ca reer and of becoming them selves." Everything to Gain Bishop O'Donnell noted that "what state universities are re luctantly finding out, and what Catholic colleges dare not forget, is that no significant area of hu man experience may be omitted or .minimized from constructive analysis-including the area of religioils faith. "The hallmark of an educated man these days is that his mind has not ',been confined to' seeing only one religion or one philos op,hy, or only what supports his own convictions," the bishop said.' , "By this star;dard, Catholic colleges are challenged by a prosperous tax-supported system of education to reassess their ap- . .proach to human and divine knowledge; They have nothing' to'lose and everything to gain by .riliing , to ,the demands of this
challenge."
Accompany Prelate
, CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago archdiocese has announced ,that a delegation of priests and lay men from Chicago will 'accom pany Ar~hbishop John 'P. Cody to Rome for his investiture' on June 26 as a cardinal on' two chartered jet planes.
CHICAGO (NC) - Cardinalo designate John P. Cody has an nounced that the fund raising campaign for Project: Renewal has gone over the top. The archbishop of Chicago said at a press conference here that, based on incomplete reports from parishes of the archdiocese, the pledge total has reached $41,240, 000 as of June 7. The target was $40 million. "The success of our fund rais ing campaign is a wonderful tribute to the great generosity of the Catholic people of Chi cago," the cardinal-designate said, "Through their generosity we are now able to provide a broad range of new facilities and services for all of the Catholic people of Cook and Lake Coun ties." "Our purpose in inaugurating Project: Renewal," he continued, "was to modernize the parish and educational facilities of the Chi cago archdiocese so that they would be able to function in accordance with the spirit of aggiornamento instilled in the Church by the Second Vatican Council." "The council called for a spir itual renewal of the Church," Car dinal-designate Cody said. "Proj ect: Renewal, from its very in ception, has been a means toward providing the physical facilities to bring about this spiritual rP newal."
Vote Aid to Pupils In Private Schools HARTFORD (NC)-The sta1lll Legislature has passed and sent to Gov. John Dempsey for hif.J signature a bill extending health and welfare services to children attending non-profit private schools. The measure requires that each city or town which pro vides health and welfare ser vices for children attending pub lic schools also provide the same services for children attending private non-profit schools when a majority of the children are from the municipality concern ed. The services provided WOUl6 include those rendered by school physicians,nurses, dental hy gienists, psychologists, speech and hearing remedial specialists, social workers, and special lan guage teachers for non-English speaking students.
WANTED Church Organist Starting Salary $5,700.
Private teaching possible. Fringe benefits. Unusual 0p portunity for right person. For' further information write Music Committee, Parish Council, Notre Dame Parish 6'1 Marcy St. Southbridge, -MasS. 01550
Visiting !Professor NEW YORK (NC) - Father Hans Kueng, Swiss:"born the ologian at the University of Tuebingen in West Germany, will be the Harry Emerson Fos dick Visiting Professor at Union' The 0 log i cal Seminary next Spring semester.
OPEN DAILY FOR THE ,SEASON AFTERNOON AND NIGHT
-!La'i,ty Roleiri Diocese
A;PIFCmnt,ment of Lecutive Secretary
Swift (C[h-GrrI'g/es M:e:c,essiltat\ed
'3 y R'o:p;id llLu;t:i n fEm:eltl:emce
Anm(!)ng
. 'Edited by \John J. Ccmsiffine,M.M.
.F.rom '~So6ial Jte.volutioD in the 'New :lLa;tin Amwml"
I ·ha:v.e discuesed \Wihat \We must :do 10 ,s:bu.~t1r~..
tion lin :acan1iiJming 'IDBtmJer, writes ;Bis'hop Maik IG.li\!fu
Grath, ie.SiC: kBn't, clearly, iIDuch m;uclV'ana m:reditj;atli(~>n [ha~e
~lreaay tbeen 'done. 'What '(10 they 's'how? iFil:st, ttlhe tr.Hplid
emeJ1genceo'f Latin Amer- same ;pr-oblem Europe !had .and
.ica ml10m ,feu<;lal ,and semi- others ;as -well.
feudal structures,ia ,pnocess llhe jproimw:y misshm lof !the
,oomprunaibleiIo mhat (of .iIDu- Churoh mll,gistedum .at ,ana times
'Dope, .e~cept Ithat what nook cen,tuIiies .there !is toccunring un tou.r 'lifetimes ,in :l;atin &mlenica, :aIong -v.iith -the 'cliltu.:csl .and value <oJJl lU lba It ii 0 m 'S M',r101utglhlt ,boy· 'motier.n soience, 'ledhnology .anti mass media of ·4lommunication; andlthellmemendous ~pl1essure bHought to bear 'by the .fer.vid expalltlion ·df - ,our IPQPulation . ·--mll ,of tthis thas Gomv.er.ted fP0;\,,en~y iinto Imiser~ :'for miJllions.. upon millions, dismembered ,socie~y ..so that there lis .little ..s ense .of..secur.ity .for .these.and mi.llions mone, who ,no ,lOnger ·bdongio ,the r.ecognizable .family .01' IpateI'·nalistic .hacienda ,toy,pe .system of ,the lpast. Jt Ihas cI:eated ,a ,sense ,of Idsing urgency, amidst doubt as to Mlhat to do and how. This has been described by 'other participants in Itnis ;program. lCannot !Be tP.assi:v.e
is !to )proclaim :theiWie:nd ,df (God
to ;aII men. Un :.Latim America 100
day., lPerlIa,ps (our Jgr.ea'testiU!:gen cy is Ito jpllqjeetithat lSame ,diW,i,ne
WOFO :.ano '1'e:vellltion 'upon :a
BISHOp· JOHN W. COMBER ·broad ;social scale.
IT'he .pdnc.\pal ',contriobution -of
'the 'ChurCh:to chaI\ge 'in Latin . P.rie~t AmeIiica us 'the 'claTification -aT
,the !priinci;ples Idf gustiae .and charity which require.lit .and ~"""'JI"" must also guide it. The right .and MARYKNOLL (NC)-The un duty of the Church to teach in usual situation in which a priest these areas has .been .abung.antb'giv.es a !bishop .an assign~ent has illustrated by ,peftineI}lt rtexts 'of 'occurred 'here. . all the recent popes. Bishop John W. Comber, ·M.M. It was iRo,PelPitusXIIT, ho:weiv.er, 'immediate ::past -superJor 'general who most clearly brought ,out of MaI;;yknoll, hilS been given an that the Church ,aoes lnot '1:eadh ;assignment by his successor, social morality as though formuFather John J. McCormack. letted 'from vague, remote prinCiThe new ·superior. general pIes through some long, laborious .assigned the 'bisbop to be P'Jstr)T' casuistic process. . of TransHguration churc'h on Rather ,it .regar-ds JIIlan In.his .. widely known Matt Street in total ,contex.t-lhuman :and ,di:v.ine New YonK's Chinatown. ---.and .&peaksout far :the .deJiense The' appointment, effective o'f .hl·S full ..u "'uman .a~d ,C"'-:stian J u:.y '1 ks,th e :first time a ~ ...w •. , . mar dignity. It jsthis .regard ,w.hich diormer Maryknoll superior 'gen makes .llS lav..or \Ch-;~+:an· .som·al (eral,has been Igiyen .a parJsh ~.,Uk rev.olution in Latin Amenica- .assignment. Bishop Comber to.\v.ara ,a . situation lof fuller .Jbu- ,headed MaryknolJ fl'om }1)55 .man.and ,Christian ·d\gr:li.ty .d:or.a1l' until J.966.
·our ,peQPle.
Assig,n,s
Committee's
Pr@QJ'(l)sals
:SPOKANE ,(NC~-:The Ad Hoc interim board would be a .tem Committeelfor Lay .AUain; has porary lay .assembly until it c:OJllIl submitted formal recommenda pleted arrangemen~ for a pel' tions on the laity"s role in di-' manent lay board. ocesan activities to Bishop Ber The committee reported It did' nard I. 'Topel ,of Spokane bere not feel competent to work cut inihe'State-ofIWashington. the funetion or compositionaf . 'l£1he gI'oup 'called for ,0I'ganiza -parish councils, although it asked tionof:an Interim joint lay board t.h2t 'the interim board should .;is 'soon·as possible, -and 1I'e ·st.udythis matter in depth. affinned. support for 'establiSh Other suggestions included: ment ,of 'a ,pastoral council 'The Appointment of an executive secretary for lay affairs, whose 'salary would range from $10,000 .RequDe,fM fol' Ac tOI" to$l2,COO, to be paid from d.i o()Cesanfunds. . HOLLYWOOD (Nq Be Selection of four delegates t.o
·quiem lMass was ;said 'Ollt iIm .maeu1ateHeari <of Mary -church the ,pastoralcouneil.
. Planginga lay conferenee at
.here :for :Speneer 'Tracy, .aeamJU: 4ilm :aetor, whn died .alter· Cl :the end of the year to review
~'aU jlhases ·of the diocesan alnK
1lnem1t .attack..Burial was :at :iF-or -tllAlS."
,est Lawn 'Cemetery:.
f.o:tme.:rr\a:':J.Jrner'io'r.
Nv.hat tis ;ob:vious lis Ithat !the
,ChURch (lannot lnemain :passi.ve 'OOlTect 'OonoePt
.in face .of .. suc~ a .'situllltion .of cOnce ;again \we mUTn rtJo lthe lCon ,mOlml .and ,soOlal idoubt <of ~so . ,cQpt (of ·"me.volutiom." 'mbe tenm Te~as. ImaSIlh\Y'ld al h t itself has been preopted 'im rflills • ,ways • R.ve l O t b th d t L:A'REJ])(I) (NC)-'Brot'her Ray , e wou cen U1:y ..y e.a· Iveca ·es ,of class d ""1 'k C'S C . t an d th e mone,so warfare; spea k an d ac, of hate aud .of violence . 'mon 'r' eo " . ~ ., 'preSIdent 'Of ' . . ,that the . .great bulk of the IPer'Th t" . h ··f· . Edward's University, said -here ... . an d su b verSIon. a.lS;W y .l.~ ,IS 'sons caught upm .thls turmOil b ·'-'1 b·t f 't' k 'that the ifmqure 'of the Texas . "f' G 'T'h .pro au Y es or us I) spea . "I . -t '1 'f l't' 'governor and s'tate offiCials to . are 'mem'bers 0 the. hurch...... e ··t.· . t 'd th ... ways no mere.y 0 revo U len magIs emum mus ,gm e . e 'b t of 'Ch . l' . )l l' f·meet ·8tfilkiing Rio 'Grande val:. faithful ·in the man~new .moral . u.... nS ..lan re:vo u 1011, ,0 lJey !farm -workers last 'Summer • Nn t t .\.a tl 'f "h SOCIal TevolutIon or ·of ,peaceful.: .Ju...gmen. s o.=:ma e; '. le . ale - Tevdlution·. 'was a 'lbreaCh ·of 'courtesy and :':lul .must .consclOusly lI1carnate . .. . .hospitality that. we don't ·expect ~hese v.alues. E!y so domg :we £fr.ee oUJ:-selv.es of Texans:" 'The 'Church 'in .Eurqpe--mqgis- of the mor~ obvious .cr.ue1ties teI'ium ana Iaethflil--had to 'face ,of .the maI:x'lst metbod, bt,!t 'also (Brother Raymond .addI1essed . ' . . btl :993 :glnaooaltingseniors of Maru.P to such a crisis. The history ..... 1'. om ..'8.orne. mOl:e ..-su e o.Mer . ·tin ·ffiHghScbool. .df 'moral 'theology 'i'l'lustrates 'the slm.l~hflcatlOns w.hLCb .sometLmes !:fact 'that '~he 'newer 'problems df can .mfect o.ur .o:w,n ltalk. Referring lto ·the faTm workers' 'social'monili'by----'for example 'that . 'VIle .cannot Iconcehve .of Jre.V!t'ilu ....mar.ch to the 'state capital .of. . >'\:ustin, 'the !FI01y 'Gross Brother· .df 'usury 'or 'the just ·wage·......:weJle ,tlOn ms ..a comple t e ,cbange, <in .sometimcs ,too 'slowly -recngniZ'ea, the absolute sense. To be e1ifiec- said: "Many· of these people had . 'sometimes 'l'eso~vea 'late. 'The .bil\le" lit Imust Ibe ,nadiellll, partticu- walked ,htrndr.eds of miles ftl'Om same \hcldffor'.~hc'action of'Cath- Jar>l~ 'in ,tbe lnew ,stmuatUllles tit the Rio Grande valley in the olics cOllsequerlt 'upor. 'a Clearer .seeks, ·but ,must ,lIllse.lca'nJ:ty '0"1& . heat of rtbe '';]]e:xasSummer in view of their social obligations. mal1Y linstitutions...and wa;lues order to demonstrate .to ,their ' . .. th t ...i.~ h 1 fe'lJow ci.tizens ana .govern.n:;:ent 'Th us we had, in the words o'f ",rom . e .lPas 'W>JUC Imust il ·officials the harash'ips under ,Pope IF'ius "XII, tthe scandal.d£ the .sente. ·whic'h they 1ive and labor.."
minetaertth fcen'tuI\Yin· EJurope, Nor 'Sh~llmw.e !fa~1 lin'to 'vhe
He ,noted ',that Gov..John.Con ·the loss of the\working·class; ..ana 1f acile manner, ffavonab1e :to illhe 'thus \we ihawe ihad. in ·th,~,words advocates of violence; ,wnidh·' Da1l~ was .mot ,at ihe capitol .0111 .of Pewe Paul VI, the tragedy in would promise· "pie-in:-the-sky" .<Labor D<\y moLning when thou ·this 'century 'df'a 'Europe that has tomorrow - as tthough 1by ,some .sands 'of .citizens walked the .achieved 'a 'great new economic guick ,political· (blow iWoe :could final leg ,0'£ .the400 .mile .march, . the new .s t ructur.es .our Jrom 'the St. Edward's Univer-·· bt · -eXlpans'ion 'after 'two 'tragic wars, dam :but 'weth too 'little reference to soCiety needs without .the JOrtg . 'sHy campus in· Austin to the tthe 'spiTitual 'values of man and patient .labor of ,human tfoI;ma- .. grounds of the capitol build'ing, ~soCiel1y. ti on ana economic' deMelopment to te11 the governor of their which must ,provide ,the ,under- .. problems and needs.' structures. "Fortunately, as .you know.," This is- pantiClrla~\y dangerol'ls . BrotherR<\ymond said, "Sen. The Church in 'Latin America in the top heavy power structure ..Ralph Yarborough w.as there ffaces 'up 'to 'll 'more Tll~ii'o 'ana .acute cdsis of .social morality. .of Latin .Amedea wheI:e .the ',alad Sen. Y,ai.borougb heard what 'temptation to immeQiate polilii- ·w.as said by his fellow 'Fex;ans, '\Where 'for 'four cer'ituties mora1 ;Jty, lthe ver:y ICOnCtlpt of ,human .cal.action :so 'often tends itO short- .and he rt:J}1ied .and promised to melanjons,. 'w.as limitea ·to :the 'ein:euit ~this '.Work ,0'Lbuilding t~ help:" ffami!.t<y :t')lpe "\me ,and 'thee" !gi\ve ,undersbr.tJdtures. :lll1d ttalile, ·.\\Ie 'must mo.w ,project :Nor, ltheolog.ica.]~y, <can 'We filll lour Imvl'lil ,sense lout 'over, a \broad irlto 'the 'perennial 'errorJof the'.
'RHfL!A'DEL'PHIA. (NC)-Upon
mew :social Icorrulilex. lTe.volutionaI:iY \Who 'speaks .of 'll The levo1\!ing social ,doctI'ine ,pedect ",",olad' \wnich wi'll nev:er· ,his .l1eturn here from Rome .after 'of 1lhe <Church, .e.vdhving 'Since .Gome .about 'OI, 'this cearth, ·whel1e, .l:ecei v.ingthe .Red Hat, .Jo.hIIl JPope iLea .xmII, :~gainst :the lback (due .to 'human IHmi-tali-on .and the ICar-dinal Krol :will ,offer 'Mass ;ground .Iof ~the 'ffi]uropean ,cq-pital 'reality-,of ,si'n, 'mati~s !1i'f!e upon .on .J.uly 2 in the catbedr.al -of :llnd 'labor .strife, ..for mal!y.;years .earth, .sin·glY alld collectively,. Sts. Peter .aind· Raul..A civ,ic ~e Isounded rfoneign Ito Catiholics ,in will 'al,w,uys lbew.hat .:Job de ,oGPtion hOt,Ol,i,ng the ·car.dinal !ill JLatin Ame!'ica. This lis JIJO longer -scni'bed lit Ito be: a never-ending :scheduled.in .the .Civic-Center ,om. July' 6. ISO. W.e .now see ,that .we .have .the "struggle" (Job ,7;1..).
INDIA~
AMISSIDDN GROWS THB ~gLY FATHER'S MiSBBON ADD TO THIO @~llE~ll'AL CHURe •
26 PRIESTS FOR .28 MILUON ""EOPLE:NOW fOU ·CAN ,HELP'
iEd'u.cator Scores Gow,eir,no,r
P'lan Homecoming
The area, ~alled Chanda, is twice the size of Massachusetts.;ft has ·28·million people, only 8 hand(uJof whom are Chris~ians. This week the, / temperature i~·114degrees•••. Still, Carmelite. su,per,iorfather Januarius reports from central India thmthis 26 priests are bringing the FaIth for the 'first time tolow<aste people who never heard·Of 'Christ. He writes: "Prayfor us, please. I ·,Nish·y.ou -(;ouldbe here to share our joyl" ••• Some '01 the priests were helped as semlnarla", ·($8.50.fl month)by'readers of this co)u.mn. NoW they ~ .bicycles ($47 each), motorcyclee ($738 .-fJocl1, in India), a 4·wheel·drive Jeep ($2l~50),to quadruple their time and save their st~eflgt1l.lIddsf.atherJanuarius: "Can you lmo agine 00w ~rat8ul .the 'slck will be It our .Sister. can <drive to the villages regularly in 8 mobile . clinic ('hospitakm.whee!s')l We can get one, fully·equlpped. for-only $4,900." •• , Our prl88t1 'in 'Clumda ~the mission was started by Pope John) need everyone'. gifts ($1,000. $500. . $250, ~100,'$50, $25, $10, $5, $1) this ~ to help ·the hungry and diseased. Walk to the .. corner .l1lClilbox. .Monslgnor Nolan will thad you "In ;father Januarius'flsme.
.... ~I4ANDA:
!MORE QErAILS
-The ~-te(m ,prcnpects are excellent." tap Father .•hmuarius, ·~but how can we work If w• have inoplace' tollv&, to instruct ·children, to 'offer ~ly MassJ"ln 15 villages, where new ,converts .are -being made, he needs a ohureh ($1.,7-85), .e school ($2,150), 8 rectory ($676), end a ilOnvent ($1.225). (lbe costs are low fOr ·ithe :I8OOr Is ·free·ot·charge.) And you may nam. the ·-chureb ,or school for your favorite sat nt, In.' your ~oved {l1'\e$' memory••• , $160 win IU~ port a ;parish for a month•••• Mass' Btlpendti lire -the .enlY Income Father Januarius and IQ priests 'Veceive. They' are free to offer Mas8• . promptly, __
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'TNI 'l:ATHaUCNIA'1Il IIAe, .ELFAtil ASSOCIAflO.
NEAREAS'T .MISSIDNS FRANCIS CARDINAL'SPnLMAN, President
,MSGR.JOHN Q.NOlAN, National Seer...,
Write: CATHOLIC NIlAREAsT WELFARl! Aatoo. . '330 :Madlson Avenue· New York, N.Y. 1001' T.phone: 212/yUkon 6·5840
closing date on blackboard in school. Right, Sister Laure,o C.S.C., loads pupils arms with extra school books no longer needed. The building will now become a CCD Center.
SADNESS FELLS 'fHIE A[~: Left, Sister Mary Matthew, C.S.C., principal, 12ft, leaves school during Olle of "last day" lunch periods with lliler staff. Center, St. Hyacinth pupils, boy at left looking sad, note
Says ClfoM[]'~he$ Neglect? [f@ith for W©~Lt$ SOUTH BEND (NC) - A New York psychoanalyst and professor of social philosophy: told 100 of the country's
(jJ)j §@If'vice to Clllildren Lillgeli'J As St. Hyacinth School Closes Its Doors,
MrB1l!fMDnricetJ
A school that opened in 1894, to answer the needs of French-speaking parishioners, closes its doors tomorrow for the last time. St. Hyacinth School, with classrooms on Ute first floor of.' the church building at Rivet and County Streets in New Bedfo'l'd, gll.'adllated its\ last 8th Grade class a week ago. Next September; the 70 odd pupils wm move: into· new class rooms and get~ acquainted them. so well," one said this. Sister Laure of Dartmouth with new teadrers and new week, watching the youngsters and Sister AIda of Nashua, N. H., hmch on 1ilie grass of the will resume student status at da.<;:'lmates. "Most of them," eatingrectory lawn~, the order's Notre Dame College
leading theological thinkers here that contemporary religion is neglecting good faith. in stress ing good works. Dr. Ernest Van Den· Haag, 8' 9aJtS-Sisten Mal'Y Matthew;C.s.C., layman and lecturer at the NeW' las~ principal o1r st. Ryasinth, School for Social Research, con "will go to St. Anne School. tended that churches: are con Some will transfer' fo Sacred cealing their lack of true "reti.gi ~Ity" with emphasis: on social . Hearl: School." llCtion. He· acknowledged that the Sacred Heart Church is "'par churches do have lJI role- in social . eat church" of St:,.Hy,acinth's. It action, but said tmre is a CUl"ren~ was tl'ie· first Frenc&'-speaking ~cy to overemphasize this. parish- in the city and as- the population moved; soutli', St. Ry feet. lie told the second National ilCinth was established' as a: mis"' r(lith and Order colloquium-a' lIioo cl'lUrch:. body oil Christian theologians Gradually through, the years, JaDging :C'FOm conservative- evan the city spread farther south-tG' lelicals to, Roman catholics . the 30-cam~d Point Road section tbat contemporary religion' often -and 8 new' church was· opened· "tends to make the· message con ltM· French- flilmili'eS'. The· new IMm to the world and: to make ci\u-rcl'l was St.. .Anne'S- which Its acceptability to, the world> the oot:inally was: CJIIl' the- second 1cKm· fOll the crontents to be gi-veR. flOOT oil' tl\e- pari'sn sel\oell build .. it." ERg'. Speakers ReBPQ4 Today, St. JiDne's is, a- Knew" Dt>. Van Den Has'g'g: comments. coorch· and! the parisl't dool base iRk'l'ed questiOning fro.m theo!o ~ OVeT· tlie JlbnBeF cliuTch. staRs- orientedl toward ehure& ac ftOOr. . tion m. civil rigllts, flIip. ~ Closing: o!; St; ~th.'!l" aA~ -.d etheI' social' issues~ Amon~ apealteTS respomKnlt DOUnced' last YalT ~. tAe- ReT'. .l?'M'l'iclt J., O'Neill',. di'ooesan. su _;lIS Dr. Langdon ~ ef the perintendent.. .0£: sdleoIs, ~ au: Vni-versity of Cl'Jicagpo DiviDit1C ··econOfDy"· DletilU1'e' both. ie 8cJaoo.l~ wfio said' tl!at DF. Vaf/lo Den Haag had over simplil"Jed. tei'ms of JnOll1ey ad'l)eJ:llOnflel. The· st. Hyacmb. :faculty- ot; tfriRgoS. Dr; Gilkey is lit ~st fWe- Sisters of'the CongregatiOfb. elergymaa. A Rmnan Ciltho1ie- speake", aI- HolY· Cross hm! been lrandlinlt »'ather Josepl't P. Fitzpa:t'riek, S.J., ,.~ aboRt 75> eI~ during eRe- l:d few ye~ .ooialUgy professor at FOFtRlam tJRiV'et"sity, New Yorlt, asserted ClOsing tilesdlool - where iftGt Christian social aetion caa classi'-ooms now will' be' used fQl' be dFf·ferentiated from humanio-· C&Rfratemity of' ClU'isti'an· D'oc &8Fian concern only in- judgiRf:. liFiRe' ciasses-will' enable' better the motivations of tbe per/f0ftS. uWization of the teac~sisters' Inwived. time',. it is felt~ llIowever" saying; "Goodhy" to ere familiar is, not easy; Sister Matthew, whol was as INDIANAPOLIS (NC) Po. signed to St. Hyacinth's six teaching principal and a fourth years ago, admits to regrets lilt (lJrade lay teacher were elected sean~ the old. schooil Cl'lOse. flo head the new Indianapolis She, Sister AIda, who· has· beetlll archdiocesan Teachers Council!: there nine year~"It. is her first. .. the group's first meeting here. mission,. she's never· known any lUster Carol Ann AngermeieJr, other," Sister Matthews says O.&.F., principal of St.. Mary·a.· Sis~er Laure, Sister Floma and .chool, North Vernon. was. elect Siatar Adele all will' find it- dif _ council chairman. and MaK'i. ficult to say "Goodby" to their Jlyn Wiwi, a teacher at St. Mi ~ g charges. SO will Sister dtael's school, Indianapolis. Willi Louise, the convent cook. elected secretary. "J!.£l a small' scfllOoI; :JQU mow
Heo·d Councit
For the- last. two~ weeks, mms 8>1dpupils alike have been clean ing house in preparation foil.' the closing. Some textbooks were trans ferred to' Sti. Anne School, which will enroll the> bulk of the' St. Hyacinth student body ifto Sep~ tem.oer. The- school library, collected book by book over the last st-x years, will' remain at St. Hya cinth's for the childl'efr of: the parish. For the last::few days, the- si'JIE Sisters have been· "camping: out" irtJ the' convent. on· County.> Stheet· -from which: most. of the- fUt' niture was moved out a.few· daY's agpl It. was, slHpped. to- the PI'O~ viftcia], house. CIt. ~ Moor _ li"ittsfield, N..H.. SundaY'; the
nul1SJ
themsei'Ve8>
wiil lea'l.le: Sister Moral a,native
00 Taunton,
will,s~the-S\lm
met' at: st:. A:n.t:1n»1y ConWft~ i ... N1M' Bedford. Sisttm Matthew; OW' New' Bedfi'Jr.d1 native;, will; cen tmue- her lilira'PJ> studiei' at ~s- Collegm.
in Manchester, N. H. Sister Adele,. a native of' Manchester, will go to Catholic University and, Sister Louise, a native of Westport, will go to the Pro..,jn-. cial House. Not until August will the six "St. Hyacinth: nunsl' know· their assignments. ~r. the' coming' year. Meanwhile, 74 years of history. have· been stacked in storage booc:es or piled in the arms of eager pupils moreo than- willing to bring "souvenirs" home. The-' small school cafeteria where thousands of youngsters ate lunch during the cool months over the years, has been scoured and left in shipshape> condition. Teachers' desks are: empty..- and classroom decorations have' been taken· down from the walls. TOmOITow, an. era will end- a& .. school closes. itII-. dOors. Obl~' memories, win· remain- lao the empty, heIr and>classroomlh
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First" layman; NEW YORK' (;N€ ) MsgF. Christopher. GO' Kane aad" Lay- maft Thomas, McLoughlin hQVe-· been, appointelt co-directol'll-' of t~ health ancC hospitals depart ment of' Catholic Cnarities. for the New YOrlC archdiocese; Mc Loughlin's appointment. marks the first time a layman wilt share- in· the directorship' of a' Catholic Charities department.
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Opposc~ ~1l:~~~ A~orti~r) ~W COLUMBUS, (NC)-A Planned Parenthood official opposed the effort to relax Ohio's abortion law at a hearing of the Ohio House's Education and Welfare Committee. Robert Titko, executive dIrec tor of the Columbus Planned Parenthood, Association, said: "As a Methodist, a Christian, I am against the taking of life." At present, abortion· is per mitted in Ohio only, when there is serious· danger to tHe mother's life. The proposed bill would ex tend this to: 1) grave danger to the mother's physical or mental health;. 2) a likelihood that the child will be' physically or men tally defective; and 3) pregnancy resulting from rape or incest. Titko was the onlY. non-Cath olic who testified at the third hearing on' the bili, one of two sessions. resellVed for opponents of the bill. The first two, heal'ings were for proponents.
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'THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil ,River:Thurs. J.uil~ ~2, .19.~7
Needed
New Caramals,
Attitude
Some place or other in every g:raduatiori talk the stu dents are reminded of the knowledge they have acquired .-intentionally or not-in the course of their school years and the ability that this gives them to unravel the prob lems of the present and to face the challenges: of the future. . There is presented to them the satisfaction that they should feel in this accomplishment. For people are alway·s looking for answ~rs. From the efforts of the V'ariety store owner to make penny candy more attracti~e to his little customers to the millions of dollars poured into research by every great corporation in the world, this search for answers goes on. The mind of 'man has an unquenchable thirst for knowledge. The man Who can examine a problem or situ ation, reduce it to its simplest components, and then come up with an answer to it, is the man who'is highly prized and sought after in every field of human endeavor. And the more that men push back the frontiers of knowledge, so much the more do they realize the vast ness of the unchartered areas beyond. There is always the consideration that man's legi timate boldness in seeking knowledge will make him lose the sense of wonde:r th~t any true seeker after wisdom must poss~ss. . The late inventor and industrialist, Thomas E. Mur . ray, while a member of the Atomic Energy Commission put it this way: "'With each new discovery, our sense .' of mystery and our need for God grow more profound; $ ~ inS~tfM<e~B@n1 and our wonder is e.xtended to wider areas in which we 'ean get lost. How can the idea of an omnipotent God For Befrtell" Use ~~ seem foreign to a civili~ation which holds a kind of in Pope Paul VI's Instruction on vate prayer so that the faithful grown infinity in the head of a pin; or who beholds in the Wor:ship of the Eucharistic may easily and fruitfully, b,v the Milky Way a mere outpost of far-flung space?" Mystery, dated May 25 and ef- private devotion also, continue The temptation of' the seeker is to tie up his knowl fective Aug. 15, 1967" ha's com to honor Our Lord in' this sacedge in a neat little package with a' tag saying that this bined' doctrinal teacping and rament. "It is theref9re recommended has been thoroughly examined and researched and an practical directives for a better and more fruitful use of the that, as far as possible, the tabswered. But this is not the fact. Any bit of knowledge Blessed Sacrament. ernacle. be placed in a chapel is not an ending but a beginning, an invitation to s,eek even distinct .from the middle or The papal instruction is di further and ,deeper. The true approach to sE!eking, then, rected to the laity, though its central part. of the church, above is one of wonder before God Who choses ,to reveal Him implementation 'must begin with all in .those churches where' the clergy. Besides speaking of marriag~, 'and funerals take self to His creatures in so many and varied ways. o
on Eucharist Sacrrament
Pop'e'
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the Blessed Sacrament in gen eral terms, it, especially recom': mends Communion under Both Species for the laity in many occasions and Concelebration for the Clergy. A definition of the Mass is given: "the Lord's Supper is . . . a sacrifice in which the sacrifice of the cross is perpetu ate.d, a memorial of the death and resurrection of the Lord .•• a sacred banquet in which . • • the people of God share the benefits of the pascal' sacrifice, renew the new covenant . . . and foreshadow in faith and hope the' eschatalogical banquet ... proclaiming the Lord's death until He comes." Facing the question of the worship of the Blessed Sacra ment apart from the celebration of the Mass, the instruction states that: "It would be well to recall that the primary and original purpose of the reserving of the" sa,cred species' in the Church outside Mass is the administra tion of 'Viaticum. Secondary ends are the distribution of com munion outside Mass and the adoration' of :Our Lotd Jesus Christ coriceil1e'd beneath these' same 'species." .' "This practice of adoration has a valid and firm foundation especially since belief in the real presence of the Lord has as its natural consequence the extern al 'arid public manifestation of' that belief."
Forward
Already in' cities across the 'land there' have' been incidents of racial violence which make one wonder' if this is going to be another "long, hot Summer" in the field of civil rights. 'It is unfortunate that all too many of these occasions -triggered off in many instances by some legitimate complaint or over-strained patience-nave so' very quick ly degenerated into looting sprees and mob violence. . This is not civil rights but a wanton exercise- of law lessness. . At the same time, individuals and groups, eivic, so cial, cultural and religious, must not take-the civil rights laws on the' books as accomplished facts, and abandon efforts for complete integration at the stage when these are inching forward after having ridden with them through the giant steps. Much remains to be done. The Negro still needs to be strengthened by moral support as ,well as by monetary . and cultural and~ducational aid to take his rightful plaCe in American society as a first-class c~tizen in fact as well as by right. . Authorities in one large city have founp much' good eoming from encouraging discontented pe()ple to gather together in forums, airing their problems and complaints, hearing these spoken and 'hearing "others comment on them. The emotional level of these, problems is drained ~hile .the problems themselves are then approached with ealm 'and deliberation and in concrete fashion. This kind of approach substitutes dialogue for destruction and com munication for chaos. '
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@rhe- ANCHOR
Where Reserved
"'r.:Il:'~It\L NEWSPAPlER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL "'VER
o
P\lblished wee~ly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue
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The Blessed Sacrament "may' be reserved permanently or reg- ull!rly on one altar or in one. place in the Church. Therefore, as a rule, each church should have only one' tabernacle, and this tabernacle must be safe and inviolable. " "The place in the church or oratory where the Blessed Sacrament is reserved in the taber- . nacle should be truly prominent. !tought to be suitable for pri0
Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 PUBLISHER , Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGE'R: I RD' h t. ev. aOlel F~ 5 01100, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll, MANAGING EDITOR. Hu'gh' J. Golden o
place frequently, and in places which are much visited for their artistic or, historical treasures.-· Theolol:ical Reasons Mter repeating the past in-' structions on' the placing of ihe tabe;rnacle in the middle of the
main altar or in some other altar or place in the church, the instruction continues: "In the celebration of Mass the principal modes of worship by which Christ is present to His Church are gradually revealed. First of an, Christ is .seen to be present among the faithful gathered in His name; then in His Word, as the Scriptures are' read and explained; in the person of the minister; finally and in a unique way under the species of the Eucharist. "Consequently, ,because of the sign, it is more in keeping with the nature of the celebration that the. eucharistic presence of' Christ, which is the fruit. of the consecration and should be as such" should not be on the altar from : the very beginning of Mass through the reservation . of the sacred species in the tabernacle," , ,Presence KnoWn' "Care should be taken that the 'presence of the Blessed Sac-' rament ' in ,the tabe,rnacle is indicated to the faithful by a tabernacle veil or some other suit able means prescribed by the' Competent authority. "According to the traditional practice, a lamp should tum continually near the tabernacle as a ',sign of honor paid to' the Lord."
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ica. Immediately after the semio public consistory in the Sistine chapel, the Pope and all the cardinals, old and new, will go to St. Peter's where a monument to Pope John XXIIi will be in augurated. The' monument, the work of Italian sculptor Emilio Greco, was commissioned by UIe cardinals' Pope 'John created. At the final public ceremoD7 'before St. Peter's all. the new cardinals will concelebrate Mass with the Pope. This concelebra tion was introduced by Pope Paul at the consistory of 1965: The Pope will remind .the new cardinals then that they have become "cooperators and co~ sellors of the Pope in ruling and governing the Catholic Church.... The new cardinals will recite an Act of Faith and the Apostles" Creed. They will then vow to the Pope their eternal fidelity, sub jection, obedience and collabo- ration. Year of Faith The Pope is expected to give a homily on the Year of Faith beginning that day, the feast of SS. Peter and Paul. He is expected to give the cardinals their rings after the prayer of the faithful. He wm also distribute Communiofi to the children of some Rome parishes, Although the Pope has Ie stored the ,semipublic audience, he has abolished the two attend ants every cardinal had been reo quired to maintain-the sl;>-called gentleman and trainbearer. He has also simplified tpe cardinal's 'dress, reducing the number of required costumes to one of wool in cardinal red. Formerly two woolen. and two silken costumes were required, one of each m~ terial in red and ODe of each iD purple for penitential season. and in the. period between the death of a pope and the electicm: of a new pop~.
'Record Enrollments Foil' NewmailLeaders
Apostleship
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JERSEY CITY (NC)-Father Emmet J. Norton, S.J., rector of the Jesuit community at St. Peter's parish where he is also pastor, has been named national' director of the Apostleship of Prayer by Father Robert A.lIint-' chell, S.J.,head of the New York' ~esuit :province.
Continued from Page One "J!bis again Yepresents an i n " . vation, since pYeviously the c.... dinals-elect waited in vario. parts of Rome lIor formal notifi.. cation of their election. Pope ro Speak Meanwhile, Pope Paul remaillS with the college of cardinals and delivers a eonsistorial address. In the past this address has beeD , an explanation of the Pope's rea sons for naming new cardinals, and has sometimes contained im,. portant announcements. It m thought that this time the Pope may speak on the d~lDgerous m,.. . ternational situation. Through June 26 and 27 1Ihe new cardinals receive traditional visits of congratulations. Although Pope Paul suppressed the semipublic consistory when he created cardinals in 1965, he has revived it this time. It takefl place at 6:30 on WednesdaJi" June 28, in the Sistine chapel. IIll that ceremony he will give the , new cardinals their red birettas and assign Jhem their titles. It hl expected that he will name ~ cardinal priests and five cardi 'nal deacons. Shorter Ceremony It is believed the Pope revived this semipublic consistory ,to. shorten the final ceremony 0.11, . June 29 before st. Peter's basil
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Recorc1 enrollments are reported for the two training schools for chap. lains sponsored by the National Newman Chaplains' Association. At Harvard University, the second training school opened this year, 41 priests and 9 sa. ters were enrolled, At the ,University of Colorado, Boulder, Father Charles Forsytll. O.S.B., Newman chaplain at the university and director of tile training school, said 33 priest. and 10,.nu08 were enrolled. Boa
lffE ANCHOR .ThUl:s., June 22, 1967
Survey Shows. Trend Towa,rd Lay
C~ntrol of ,Cotholic Colleges, I
,CHICAGO (NC) - Mor.e 'than half of the board members of Catholic colleges may in the near future be laymen according ,to a completed study on the future governance of Catholic higher education in the United States. The study shows that of 168 four-year colleges surveyed, 45 ver cent now have or have had, hymen on their controlling boards. Of the institutions whicln at present have no lay represen tation on the board, two-thirds plan to add laymen in the future, mtd two-thirds of the institutionlJ with laymen on their boards plan to expand the number. Released by the National Newspaper Syndicate here, the study was made by Dr. Earl J. McGrath, former U. S. Commis sioner of Education and now di rector of the Institute of Higher Education at Columbia Univer sity, and Father Gerald E. Du pont, S.S,E., president of St. Ml dlael's College, Winooski, Vt. The authors pointed out that although the trend toward lay control was greatly accelerated during 1966 and the first half of 1967, the idea of lay participation is not new. They noted that even prior to (be beginning of the 20th cen tury, laymen had gained mem bership on the boards of at least 8ix institutions, including Ford- . ham and Villanova in 1846, Seton Hall in 1856, Manhattan College, 1863, College of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn., 1885, and St.
.Francis College in Brooklyn, 1889. ' .. ' , uIt is true, however," they alld, ""that this policy spread slowly,' for by 1928 only 14 institutions,' and by 1940 only 18, had ap-' pointed laymen." Between' 1941
Prelate ,Receives ' Kennedy Award
and 1965 laymen had! been added . to 34 boards and during 1966 and the early months of 1967, 24 in
stitutions for the first time ad mitted at least one layman to membership on thei!!' boards--an increase of 46 per cent in only 18 months. Cite llleasollllS Studying the reasons ,for the growing trend, the authors found that "expertise, broadening of the board's outlook, and financial support are the most important considerations pro m p tin g increases in the proportion of lay trustees on the boards of control of the institutions studied." "There is every reason to be lieve," they state, ''that as the problems of educational adminis tration and policy-making be come increasingly complex, in stitutions will be increasingly compelled to engagll the services at the policy-making level of lay persons possessing knowledge and experience seldom possessed!. by Religious persons whose prin"" cipal orientation is, and, properly should be, toward their religious vocations." This need ilor expertise, they maintained, was fa!!' more influ ential on colleges' adding lay members to their boards than the Maryland court decision deny ing state aid to religiously con trolled institutions.
TWO OF A KIND: Mrs. Francis J. Manning, Jr.. kindergarten teacher at St. James School, New Bedford, and her daughter, Patricia, share singular honor. Mrs. Manning, the former Grace Lardner, was valedictorian of Holy Family High School Class of 1943. Patsy, who will en ter the College of St. Elizabeth, was valediotorian of Class of 1967 at Stang.
Aid Mexican Poor
Epascopali«laril Dl!<ll11nl 9* Catholic C@~~l!g<e
GRYMES . HILLS (NC) .Notre Dame. College of Staten Island has appointed Dr. Carson 'lJ'{. Veach,' inn Episcopalian, as academic dean. . Dr.. Veach, 36, is the first lay , ,man to hold an administrative position at .the four-year liberal Board of Educatmon school for women, and also Asks Books for AU the first man to be placed in' such a capacity. The college is LANSING (NC)-The Michi gan state Board of Education has run by Sisters of the Congrega
adopted a policy statement ti~m of Notre Dame.
The new dean comes to Notre
which, if implemented by the Legislature, would guarantee Dame from Colgate University, state-purchased textbooks for where he was assistant pro-· children in private and parochial fessor of American literature.' He has also taught at his alma schools. Tbe vote came just before New mater, St. Anselm's College in York State's highest court up- . New Hampshire, and at Indiana held the constitutionality of 11 University, where he received law which provides state aid for his doctorate. He took his mas local school districts to purchase' ter of arts degree in literature books which are loaned to .pri at Harvard University, where he vate school pupils. was a Woodrow Wilson fellow.
arts
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Massachus~th CoUege
Students Plan
Summer Among' Dmpoverished
MEDFORD (NC)-A group of ; ,so' with the belief that the best college studentS from TUfts, which they have to give is them selves," Father Fitzgerald' ex Northeastern and Merrimack led by the Newman chaplain at plained. "They do not anticipate Tufts - will spend the Summer 'bringing or leaving behind any working among impoverished technology or material monu ments. villa'gers in Mexico. "We are anxious to say to the The students, who will par for
their own transportation, will Mexicans, 'We want to learn ,arr.ive in Mexico City tomorrow from yo'u, come to know· you, . for a brief training sess'ion. They talk with you, eat with you and will then be assigned to rural de- ' share your life and culture:"
velopment projects in the com
munities of Apaseo, Morelia,
HeMp Launch Open Sayula and others.
They will work without pay H(lussing Discussions
assisting with household chores,
CHICAGO (NC) - Neighbor working in the fields, and teach hood discussions on open housing ing children. will be held throughout the Accompanying the students metropolitan Chicago area in the will be Father George Fitzger initial phase of "Project: Good ald, C.S.P.. Tufts Newman chap Neighbor," a .new community lain who organized the project, undertaking here. and Father Robert Mize, C.S.P.. The program, being sponsored Northeastern Newman chaplain. ,by the Leadership Council for "Students who participate do Metropolitan Open Communities, was launched by community leaders including Archbishop John P. Cody. l\t!lk~$ Over ~~l1'il@~~ 'Cardinal-designate Cody laudPROVIDENCE (NC) _ Msgr.. , ed the program as an effort to Daniel F. Reilly chancellor meet the challenge of equal op announced the P;ovidence di~ portunity in housing "squarely Gcese will take over operation . a'nd openly." He said Chicago has of St. Mary's' Academy of 'the' .. · made significant progress" in Visitation in September. " .. : achieving equality for all but Since it was founded in 1912;' that "much remains to be done." the academy has been run by St.· , Mary's parish, but in recent· . Now Many Wear, years much of the student body
has come from outside the par~
'ish. The school presently has an'
With More Comfort
enrollment of 210' students, but FASTEETH. a pleasant allw.!in0
has accommodations for 550. powder, holds false teeth firmer. To eat and talk In more comfort, JWlt Enrollment will continue sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your throughout the Summer. The plates. No gummy, gooey taste or Sister;s of the Congregation of, feeling. Checlcs denture breath. Den tures that fit are essential to health. Notre Dame will continue to See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH at all drug countem. staff the school.
FALSE TEETH
" Laymen's School
1" ;~Ij\,'4; .. '
NEW YORK (NC)-Auxiliary Bishop Terence J. Cooke of New York gave the address at gradu JUBILARIAN AND SISTER: Very Rev. Roger M. ation ceremonies of the School Charest, S.M.M., Fall River native, pauses with his sister, ' of Theology for Laymen. Thirly two students received certifi Mrs. Elphege Belisle, befo~ the jubilee dinner that fol ~ates' of achievement for having lowed a con-eelebrated Mass of Thanksgiving at St. Anne's, completed 14 courses in such Chu-rch, Fall River. The silv0r jubilarian is provincial su fieldS as theol9gy, Scripture; so perior of the United Sta¥s province of the Moillfoct FatheIl'S. , cial doctrine and the liturgy.
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DUBUQUE (NC)-The fourtb John Fitzgerald Kennedy award, given annually by Loras College here in Iowa, was conferred on Msgr. Maurice S. Sheehy, retired vice admiral in the U. S. Navy Reserve. The award to an "out standing American" consists of a gold medal and an illuminated citation. Previous winners of the medal were R. Sargent Shriver, direc tor of the Office of Economic Opportunity; Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, and Miss Genevieve Caulfield, who is blind and operates schools for the blind in the Orient. Msgr. Sheehy, a Loras grad uate and former faculty member, has bad a career as priest, educa tor, author and Navy chaplain. His teaching career at Loras and at the Catholic University o~ America covercd 35 years. He has written eight books. Following extensive Naval service during World War XJr" Msgr. Sheehy was named a rear admiral in 1954, and became the first chaplain to reach the rank of vice-admiral upon his retire ment from the U. S. Navy w 1958.
Priest Add resses Communist Meet~lJftg , TORONTO (NC)- A Catholie priest addressed a communist JJ:leeting here on the subject of "The Christian Concept of" De mocracy." Father Edward Bader; C.S.p.. director of the Toronto Catho lic Information Center, discussed the subject and answered ques tions for two hours at a meeting at Canadian communist party headquarters. He said he hopes to further such dialogue with communists at a Fall seminal!' ,on "unbelief" at the Information Center this Fall. Father' Bader said that al though the seminar program has not been set, the idea has re ceived the general approval of Coadjutor Archbishop Philip F. Pocock of Toronto, and has beeen pledged support by several lead ing Catholic and communW scholars.
LaymC!ln 'Veepll JAMAICA (NC)-Charles R McCarthy will take office in September as vice president for business affairs and treasurer of St. John's University here in New York-the first layman to hold the position.
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Protestant Joins
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 22, 1967
Seminary Staff
War Babies Take Degrees, Ready for New Challenges
'ST. MEINRAD fNC)-A Die eiples of Christ layman will join: the faculty of St. Meinrad's school of ,theology, conducted here in Indiana by Benedictine priests. Be wJU teach ehurell
By Mary Ti~ley Daly, June tune ~throughout th~ land is once more a medley ef the National Anthem, f'amiliar processional "Pomp and
.Circumstance," happy interchange of "Cong'ratulations ," 'amongst dressed-il).-best, sigh of "We made it ''', from, the I'l"aduates. Each of the newly Then in 1957 at the launching ~aduated is wearing, "the of Sputnik I, leaders in the field most' expenSive hat in the of higher education panicked at world"......a: mortarboard. At ' the prospect of providing 'enough
,~ hous.e," mor~~bOar~ ,~ear~r' '87 was Ginny, completing for the Head Of the ...,. Bouse and me our 18th personally _ concerned graduation. "See how straight she stands, how high she holds her h e ad," proudly whispered the Head of the House, g i vi n g me a nudge in the ribs. Scene was proces!lion into ehapel at the College of S1. Elizabeth, Convent Station, N. J. "Sh-sh," I nudged back. "It's husted, the hat. That's why she has to walk that way. Hope it lItays on her head." Luckily, family mortarboard, kept for sentimental as well as economic reasons, lasted the distance until Ginny finally took her sheepskin, tntima Thule at our house. This graduation, we had throught, would be "just an·Gther." It wasn't. Surprise No.1 came when the teaching sisters entered .for bacealaureate Mass wearing academic robes of their various universities with their higher degree designations. The "Hum Night" following . parellts' banquet we had! anticipated might be but a series of nostalgic songs from one class to another-a ho-hum for parents. Not so at St. E's: a few songs, 'a
few talks, all zingy, all meaning" . fu~ommencement Day: also meaningful, succinct, au courant with the spirit of the day, temper of the graduates. How different. we thought, from graduations of even older brother and sisters, just as these young people themselves are a gener.tion set apart. War Babies This is the post.World War II Ileneration, the "War ,Babies" their, elders used to, wO~rJ' ~bout.. -:J:'here are so many of them," eeonomists a~d sOCiologists of the early '50s had noted as business took them into account in a for ward plunge 'in ehi)dren's cloth mg, furnishings, toys. .
historY:.
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William Carpe, who recen~ completed doctoral studies ill ,ehurch .history ,~t the UniveJ sity of Chicago divinity school, win *'team' teach" courses. hi: ,historical foundations and hi~ ,toricaideveiopment with Fatbet' , Polycarp Sherwood, O.S.B. Father Sherwood will teaclii doctrinal and religious aspects of the courses, while Carpe win handle economic and civil back ground of the periods. Carpe is replacing another Benedictine on the faculty, Fa ther Cyprian Davis, O.S.B., who ' is completing doctoral studies at Louvain University in Belgium. St. Meiprad's school of theo logy has a student body of 160, representing 21 dioceses and seven religious communities.
classrooms, teachers' 'edu'cational facilities,' Claiming as though' it "were a surprise, "Why, 'these children are here; They are 10, 11 and '12 years old!" TheY'rebere, all right. They are launched, educated, seeking even greater education, question ing old and accepted standards, and accounting largely for the fact that more than half of the
people in the United States are
under ~O years of ag~. Geared to a world of instanta neous communication; technlogi cal advancement; swift and easy
travel; music, art and literature
Sex Education Program often far beyond horizons of
their elders, they have learned
Newark Schools to develop a "we-us" conscious NEWARK (NC) - Twenty ness that makes communication PREP STUDENTS GRADUATE: Smallest and last schools in the Newark archdi with other college-age young graduation ceremony in the Diocese is that of St. Joseph ocese have been selected for an people easy and natural. They experimental program in sex . ~e tolerant of one another but Preparatory School, Fall River. The seven graduates are, education. disdainful of the banal, cliches front from left, Lucille Lambert; Marie Desrochers, class The program is designed UP and sham. Acceptance of changes president; Claudette LeBlanc; rear, Theresa Desbiens, impart b a 1 a n c e d instruction in the Church, sometimes diffi Norma Pelletier, school president; Sandra Racine; Lorraine from kindergarten through the cult for their elders, presents no 12th grade and is being worked Rocha. problems, indeed they find excit out by a special committee of o ing many of these changes. school supervisors for religious Tho,ugh born after World War communities teaching in the n, since when the country has archdiocese. been technically at peace, they
A committee report to Msgr. have lived their whole lives in
Joseph P. Tuite, superintendent a peace-threatened atmosphere. of schools, who is implementing They are now deeply and under the program, indicated that it standably concerned about Viet would approach the training in. nam, trouble in the Middle East. an all-embracing curriculum in They know that their lives will volving religion, guidance, health be directly affected by what hap When someone mentions hard of Fall jumper's, zip from wrist to pens in these areas as well as ware, the last thing in the world knuckles on, expensive gloves 'and science. by what is happening in the we generally, would associate it and' even stand .out sharply It will look to the spiritual, country's domestic affairs. with would be clothing. Handles against black wool as they run mental, emotional, social and on kitchen cabinets perhaps, from shoulder to wrist on a tail physical growth of young people, Never having known a crush ing mc;metary depression, they' fancy or plain doorknobs, draw- ored knit ,by Don j3imonelli. according to Sister Margaret Even the young set is ,not ne:' Clare of St. 'Mary's High School, take as their right a booming , er pulls, anything along the line glected in this new ~mphasis, on Rutherford, committee chair economy. They are willing and of household fixtures, but cer obvious: closings. Two all weath- , man. The program will imple eager to work but they want that tainly not some er coats that will be featured by ment instruction to be given by
work to be meaningful. 'They will thing 'that would Turtle Bay in their 7 to 14 range parents in the home, she said.
accept guidance from their be found on the
se,:ond floor of
and their 4 to 6 range will be elders but no stale platitudes. Bloomingdale's Those War Babies have grown highlighted by wide gold zippers ,n'e'....ve Par'Ish School
or among the instead of buttons. L "'" up. Let's watch them!
junior dresses at Of course, one objection that MILWAUKEE (NC) - The Franklin I personally have to the increased Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Names Nun Rerigious Simon's. Well, use of zippers, particularly in Virgin Mary wil Heave Gesu someone said ehildren's clothes is that some- parish elementary school here Education Director that the "67" bow little hands (and even big for other apostolates in 1968. COLUMBUS (He) ...;.. A DUll look was, going, hands) can get zippers off 'their' . They will operate the school JoI' will become full-time religiouS to be full of v:acks without even trying; th,us 'the 1967-1968 academic year.' . education director for st. .Joseph surprises Ii n d making the item of apparel un cathedral here in Ohio;' accord ,they weren~t far !>If, tor hard-' wearable. ' ing to" an annuoncement by 1be ware this season is' Used on eves I have more Jackets, skirts and the highest 'pIiced faShions. pastor, Msgr. Hugh Murphy. ll1acks waiting to have new zip It's a new glint and gleam way peri; put in them than I would .. ' She is Sister Regina Assumpta, P. C. J., 'now principal of at. .of finishing, Off fashions, a but eare to mention,for I would Stephen schooL Her order bas ton replacement, while at the rath@r start from, scratch and Pre-Cana Conferences released her from duties so that same time it brings a shine to' sew a zipper into a new garment
she can devote herself entirely sports clothes. Open to All. Faiths than rip out a broken one and.
Designers are borrowing these replace it. Perhaps this new em
LOUISVILLE (NC) The tc the new asignment, beginning new ideas for closings from phasis on closures will force Catholic Pre-Cana Conferences June 30. Sister Regina has been serving everywhere. One heavy eanvas zipper manufacturers to make
for engaged couples now are open to members of all. faiths as youth director of JOIN-a coat designed by Viola Sylber them sturdier than they have up
voluntary organization of priests, fastens with the aluminum to this time.
here in Kentucky. Religious and laity concerned catches used on firemen's coats.
The decision to open the mar A smart suit designed by Anne riage preparation course was with the inner city. She has al Negro Priest to Atd so been a part-time volunteer Klein fastens way up past the made "in the spirit of the ecu chin with large silvery catches Protestant TV Effort menical council," said Mrs. Jacob at the United Effort Neighbor that ,come directly' from those Steimel, co-chairman with her hood Center, a community or INDIANAPOLIS (NC) k.
husband of the Cana "movement ganization which the cathedral awful looking galoshes of the Negro Catholic priest will begin twenties. (Of course, they're a assists wit h personnel and in the Louisville archdiocese. work here this Fall as a radio great deal smarter OIl the suit money. Mrs. Steimel said some non television producer for an organ than they ever were on those ization of Protestant denomina Her :first duty will be the di Catholics who attended the con ferences with their Catholic rection of a summer day camp galoshes!) tions and congregations. Zippers, m LDnneJigbt fiancees, expressed 'the wish that and remedial enrichment pro Father Lawrence E. Lucas of .the meetiIigs be open to couples gram for underpriviledged chil This new look for hardware the New York Archdiocese willl from other faiths. dren six to 16. On behalf of has brought zippers into the be one of six producers for the Mrs. Steimel said she does not .JOIN, she has already organized limelight and this fastening that Church Federation of Greater think the Cana format will have several other summer programs we always tried to make as in Indianapolis, handling public in 365 NORTH FRONT STREET to be altered much for a mixed including a six-team softball visible as possible bas risen terest spots for local TV chan faith audience, since the view league, II three-center etiquette . from its shrinking violet position nels and radio stations. Be will! . NEW BEDFORD points presented are more "mor program for girls, and a course into that. of a star performer. intern this Summer in communi al" and spiritual than speci!fically in nature study and gardening Large industrial-looking zippers cations with WFBM StationD 992-5534 Catholic. for Small children. rise from the hemline to the neck here..
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THE ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1967
Patience N'ecessary Virtue
With Slow-Growing Plant's
~ndiana
Povinces To R'econvene
By J~pRa' Qmlirll' Marilyn Roderick Nothing is more 'annoying to me than stepping into my car on a oold Winter's morning and finding that it won't start. I have absolutely no'patience with mechanicai devices. When ~ faucet drips or ,th,e sprinkler doesn't sprinkle I see ll"ed and. vent my anger by:, with the price of their "pick-me
kicking a rock or hammering' , up" drink caused them to take
away at the appliance, what- this drastic step.
ever it may be. ', Oriental Legelll<l1ls
Some of my friends are as imMost of the legends that sur patient with plants. The pear round tea and tea drinking come tree doesn't bear the first year from the Orient because this and' they are ready to tear it' 'out beverage was popular in that of'the' ground and bum fit. 'N!?!'.' part of the world long before it for tlhe minute do they 'try'" 'to' 'was brought to Europe and analyze the 'reaSon for :toe slOw' . transplanted to the United production of fruit. "',' " States. One of the earliest fables The same holds true for many tells of how the great Chinese other types of plants, so before ' healer, Shen Nung, always in you lose your patience let 'me structed his servants to boil his give you a listing of a few ,plants , drinking water to rid fit of im which you may expect to come purities. into their own very slowly. On one of his many trips, as The slowest producers are nor- Shen Nung knelt before the fire maIly fruit trees. A standard that was being used to purify his apple or pear tree may take from water, a breeze blew and.tossed four years to seven years to pro- some leaves into the boiling aiuce any fruit at aU. Dwarf water. The fragrance that was fruit trees normally produce fruit wafted to his nostrils caused him 11 little faster but even they may to taste the brew and he pro take three or four years before nounced it delicious. The story they yield even a small crop. eoncludes that this plant was There are many reasons for what we know today as the tea
ibis but the primary' one is that plant and that Shen Mung was
the tree must mature before it the first mortal to taste tea.
lean produce. Once it does bear, A formal tea is one of the most
it should produce year after yea!!' charming ways to entertain a
with normal care, but that first, large gathering. The Kennedys
apple or pear may be a long time parlayed it into an exct!llent po
in coming. Many gardeners un- litical tool, much more genteel
wittingly retard maturation of' than a rally, but equally as ef
fruit trees by pruning heaviA:r fective, especially for females.
before maturity, and this mayIt is a marvelous way to intra aet a tree back several years. duce an individual, whether he
Slow Producers or she has political lIlSpirations'or Other slow producing plants Illot, and it' is also the perfect commonly found in gardens are occasion at which to int~':lce wisteria, peony, and lilacs. Peo-- new members of an organization
nies may take five or sill: yearn 01' to honor a group, such as re
before they produce flowers, tiring teachers.
oatalog notices notwitbstandnng, Food tba~ looks. as we.U as
but once they do they win oon- tastes good IS essentIal for a suc
tintle for as long as 50 yearn if cessful tea party, and a hostess
left undisturbed The same holds must take into consideration the
tnte for lilacs ~d other flower-- fact that her guest will probably
tog shruba. I have a mockorange be balancing a tea cup ailld saucer
which has been in my garden for ill one hand, along with what
five yelll'S now and has sUll not ever tidb!ts she. chooses ~nd also
pven a decent yield of flowers. her napkm. ThIS makes It essen-
Why ibia should be the ease Ual that tea foods. should . be with some flowers and not oth- finger foods. Such thmgs as tmy eros is a moot question: No one muffins, dainty sandwiches, and .eems to know why flowers are of course the French petits fours produced at varying rates "I' are perfect tea table foods even what the requirements are for- for the most aWkwar~ ~est. . Iq)ecific plants. The fact remains These puffs are delICIOUS WIth that we are stuck with the plants tea,' coffee or any of your favor 118 they are and, like it or not, the lie beverages. They are quite plant will bide its time. ' easy, store. well and tllle batter So if I appear to be stupid !Ill <ean be refrIgerated. ~mting and raving at my meCINNAMON SUGAR PUFFS manical devices in a futile ges~ miniature muffin pans, ture to get them to work, re- these make about :no bite sized member that you are no m&re muffins) Rssonable in wearing 11 path 4 Tablespoons butter 0Ir around a plant that is not promargarine, softene<il ducing up to your expectations. ~ cup sugar Take a deep breath and walk: 1 egg away and possibly, like the Red 1 teaspoon grated UemoR peel Sox, next year will be the ye8l1'. Z cups sifted all-purpose flour Ia tile Kltchn 4 teaspoons baking powcilel1'
Coffee is a beverage that we ¥.! teaspoon salt
associate with 10 minute wack ~ teaspoon nutmeg
Itreaks, paper containers and 1 eup milk
aroups oJ. women chatting over 2 o~ more teaspoons gll"otnM
• kitchen table. Tea, on the othel!' emnamon
lland, conjures up visions of ele- ¥.! cup melted butte!!'
pnce, long leisurely English aft1) Cream together the ~horten
ernoons broken by a repast of ing, and lh cup sugar until fluffy.
this beverage and flaky scones, %) Beat in the egg and lemon
.Ivery tea services presided over peel. .
it,. smartly clad matrons or . 3) Sift togt;ther the flour, bak
Oriental teQ houses, splendid in mg powder, salt, and nutm~g,
their simplicity. . add alt.ernatelY to, crea~ed mIX-
This beverage has wooed anell ture WIth the cup of milk, beat IlVOn many followers. Why, some fig well aft~r each. a~dition. ~rly American settlers :felt so 4) Spoon mto mnuature, well Iltrongiy that they didn't want a greased muffin tins, about % tax placed on this, their favorite full. . drink, that they dressed up like .5) Bake In ~ ~75 oven for 20 Indians and dumped crate afterr mmutes or untIl lightly browned. crate of teD into Boston Harbor. 6) Combine the % cup sugar History books claim that they and the cinnamon and while the were protesting British dlctator- muffins are still hot, dip them ship but probably the thought of in the lh cup melted butter and fI3Je Redcoata Qar~ ~ ~ fr.beo. into the cinnamon m..ixtw-e.
9
AWARDS CONTINUE: Janet Sienko, left, of East Taunton and Jane Baran, right, of Raynham, are recepi ents of ~artial' scholarships for their senior' ~eal" at Bis~ op Cassidy High, Taunton. The Holy FamIly W ~men s Guild of East Taunton has granted the scholarshIps to the two young ladies during their first three years at the Taunton Girls High School
Nurses', Education
NOTRE DAME (NC) - The 1967 chapter meeting of the Indi ana Province of the Holy CroSl;l Father r e con v e ned at' the University of Notre Dame here Tuesday. Father Howard J. Kennlll, C.S.C" provincial superio'r, saidl. the chapter, legislative body foil' the province, is composed of 45 ex-officio and elected delegates representing all 'the institution£,' and, ,apostolates .of the province· at home and abroad. The sessions, which are, bein&, held in the Continuing EducatiolIll' Center at Notre Dame and eJl:-· peeled to last several weeks, willll consider such matters as the re-' form and renewal of the consti tutions (legislation) of the worldwide Congregation of HoI? Cross. Decrees and recOmmen dations of the chapter will be submitted to the general chaptel!' of the whole congregation, to be held in RGme in the Summer oil 1968. Other matters to be discusse<!l include seminary programs and! vocations; various works of too province, such as education, par , ishes, foreign missions and the press; the religious life; finances, and province development. The provincial chapter is convenecli lin each province every three years, while the general chaptel1' meets every six years.
Nun Urges Cathol;c Colleges Establish
Baccalaureate Degree Program
",HICAGO (NC) - The chail!' man of a department of nursing said here that more Catholic col leges should establish programs in nursing leading to a bachelor'. degree. This would enrich the general education of nurses while at the same time removing from hospi tals some of the burdens of train ing, said Sister Mary Mark Duranty, C.S.J., of Avila College, Kansas City, Mo. Sister Mary Mark, addressing the meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing, noted that Catholic colleges have educational objectives common to all colleges which serve a community purpose. ,Catholic colleges should want to establish degree programs in nursing to "assist students in the development of personal quali ties, critical thinking and sensi tivity , to. human needs," she stated. ,
• A Catholic college has the re sponsibility to provide students with the opportunities to develop intellectually, morally, cultur ally, spiritually, and profession ally for ... leadership and serv ice within' the civic and world eommunity in which he lives. "Catholic colleges have an ob ligation to offer baccalaureate education in nursing just as they have an obligation to any other art, science or profE!ssion," she declared.
Dorothy Day to Re_ceive Art Association Medal
ALBANY (NC)-Dorothy Day will be awarded the annual medal of the Catholi,c Art Asso ciation in the name of the Cath olic Worker Movement at the association's national convention in Grailville, Loveland, Ohio, . Aug. 17. Father Thomas Phelan of Troy, Assigned to' Panama
N.Y., CAA president, will pre Exp'erimental ' Parish
sent the medal which this year. will be struck in pewter in line , NEWTON (NG)-Father Elias with the convention's theme of Mayer, O.S.B., who fled nazi op" 'poverty. It had previously been pression . with his family and,· struck in gold, but. a precious later became a convert from metal was deemed inappropriate Judaism, has accepted an invi- at sessions emphasizing simpli-' tation to help in formation of city in life and art.' lay leaders in the experimental parish of San Miguelito, Panama. Miss Day was co-founder with , Father Mayer, who has been Peter Maurin of the Catholic active in the liturgical, peace and Worker 34 years ago, and serves eivil rights movements, has been as editor of its newspaper, which retreat director of Queen of _ has a 90,000 cirCUlation. The Peace Retreat House here in New Catholic Worker conducts St. Jersey since 1959. Joseph's House of Hospitality in He is attached to St. Paul's New York City-a hospice for Benedictine Abbey, which al- the abandoned and impoverished ready .has one other priest in off the Bowery-and a commu San Miguelito. Father Mayer will nity farm at Tivoli, N.Y. leave for the Center of Inter-' Cultural Formation in Cuerna vaca, Mexico, in August for II BEFORE YOU year's preparation before under BUY -TRY taking his new assignment.
Acting lRector WA~HINGTON
(NC) -Msgr. Thoma Patrick Campbell of the Cleveland Diocese has been name _cting rector of the Pon tifical ColI e g e Josephinum,
Worthington, Ohio.
PARK
Indiana K of C CoundU Plans Housing Units JEFFERSONVILLE (NC)-TIw John F. Kennedy Council. Knights of Columbus, has fil~ an application here to construct housing units for middle-income families. Plans for a $1 million, 100 unit apartment-townhouse com plex for middle-income families were announced pending acqui sition of a seven-acre tract. Upon securing the site, the council will apply for funds from a Federal Housing Administra tion plan, which insures housin~ put up by non-profit organiza tions for lower middle-income families. The plan is designed for families whose incomes are ro. high for public project housing. but not high enough for privately developed homes or apartment!l. Monthly rent is planned to stari at $65 for one-bedroom units..
Advocate Veto CHICAGO (NC)-Tbe Catho- Hc Interracial Council of Chica go has asked Illinois GovemOll' Otto Kerner to veto a bill passeGl by the House which would out law picketing at a place of resi dence.
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THE ANCHOR 'Jihurs.; June '22, ',j9~7 .
~',~eligious
Edu:cation Bnl
,Urg~,
SAN AN~ONIO (NC)..-Fathell' Henry .T. Casso, San 'Antoni@l ~piscop~ vicar- oJ; ,urban mi_ istry, 88i~ here tha~ a proposeC.i bi-lingual education bill h3ll "received far beyond its ~ pectations-"and wen it shou~ have."
'Continued War On Poverty WASHINGTON (NC) - A mat ion wide' interreligious ant i-poverty organization
has called on the Senate to
'!;,
:,
More than 25 persons, inclu~ iog Father Casso, gave testll=> mony in support of the bill a:J)' Senate subcommittee hearing5\, These included city officials, ecJI=, ucators, specialists in bi-lingu~ , lism, ,state senators; labor lea~ ers, representatives of Mexico-> American, organizations, bUl> , inessmen' and clergymen.
extend the life of the Office of Economic Opportunity and to reject amendments to the Eco n'orriic Opportunity Act which, they said, would curtail the OEO's work. , The Interr,eligious Committee Against POyerty presented its views in testimony at. hearings : before a special Senate' subcom mittee on ,Empl9yment,' Man 'power and Poverty chaired by Sen. Joseph Clark. of, Pennsyi:. vania. , The, Office of E:col1omic Op portunity, they said, "should con tinue to be the agency of the fed eral govemment which bears the basic responsibility for our na tional effort to eliminate pov erty.'" But, they, said, several aspects of the war on po'vel:ty must be stressed in n'e:w l~gislation: com munity aCtion and the "maxi
mum feasible 'participation of the poor" and eXpe,i·iml,lntation. Failures Unavoidable The former, has ,been a con tiJ1Uing source of hard ,fe'elings, ,particularly at the local' level, and the Senate ,proposes ,to cur tail the latter in its new legisla tion,
,But,the committee urged the
Senate not to make the cuts, an~
praiseq the community action ~programs. "Certainly the appar- "
·el)t 'fai~uies have been "higll
lighted but the successes that ARBITRATION ·}iave: beeil ,achicved the OEO :progr~m 'have not received the, ..Action ,department" Jlotjce U.1cy deserv~, ".said ,the ,arbitration boartf to
in
'.ta~e~ent.
'Failures, ,howe.ver, are, un in expel'imen,tation, 'they indica'ted, buHhe OEO cori tinua1'ly evaluates progr'alns, and 'urops 'thosc"Which 'do fail: ' l\'orkers' Salarieli The committee als.) called on the Senate to eliminate limita tions on salaries for j>rofessional workers iri the povert.y program, and to J'cstore thc provision for 10 per cent local cont!'ibutjons to fedenJ1 anti-poverty, projects, Under new legislation, the local contribution' would be to 20 per ceilt, a provisiol~ which, ' paid the committee, would, pre vent effective participation by many voluntary non-profit 01' '~!l\ioidable
~ariizations:
The hearings were pi'eside~ over by U.S. Sen. Ralph YaJi\.> borough of Texas, eo-sponsor cna ,the 'biJI.
A recurrent theme th'roug~ out' Ule hearings was that the problems of the Spanish-speak- ing are really deeper than laD- guage, and aU of its ramifica tions, such as inferiority an~ misunderstanding, is the majoli' stumbling block in the eventulllll assimilation of the Mexican American into the mainstream of American life.
Attitudes of school boards and districts were aired' show ing that some have' igno~ed the problems Of a student enterinjg a school where English is the only language spoken in the classroom and Spanish is thl2 o~ly 'language the student un derstands. '
Says Commitment T.. "Israel Clear
,BOAR'D:: Msgr. :GeorgeG:Iiiggins, ieateil left, 'd'irector'ot'the SociM U.S. ,Catholic Conference, is 'chairman of Presidentjohnsonis spe~ial deal- with ,a threatened railroad 'strike. With', him as h~~l'fings' began -in W~shington are )lis fellow board membel~s; Rolf 'Vantin; c'enterj' and Lloyd H. Bailer, 'both, professional arbitrat01'@. ;NC PhotC). ' .' , '
, .
'Defends': Sch'oolBoard's Integration Work' '
.
.
'
Prelate ,Denies Catholic Council Charges PITTSBURGH (NC)-Auxil iary Bishop John B, McDowell of Pittsburgh, superintendent of the diocesan schools, has denied charges by the Catholic Interra': cial Council that the diocesan school board has come to a "complete standstill" in ,advanc ing the cause of racial integra tion in area schools. Calling the CIC charges '~com.., pletely ,unfair and inaccurate," Bishop McDowell contended that the ,"racial, problem, has con cerned".our school board 'for many years ',and has ,motivated, ma'ny , of the' 'programs and 'policies dertaken 'duririg these years.... The CIC had said' that it' was' , "sad ~t h'eart' that our own Cath..: ,olic school board with a crisis situation facing our Church, our city and our nation,' has not taken' a sigle creative new step
un":
be
~,.:"._.,'...
o
*
::
, The' committee p,~aised efforts by Congress'to fOI'l11 ties between .Job Corps,cellters and localcom-' ~lJnii!e~, and io sfrengthcl1 job placement 'and, follow-,up' 'pro crams for Job Corps graduates., • The, Iptel:religious ,Committee Against Poverty was ()l'ganized, in 1966 by 'the-NatioTHil Council (If Churches, the U. S. Catholic Confereilce and- the Synagogue' Council, of Amel'ica. Its co-chairmen are the Rev. Dr. J. Edward Carothers of the Ohio Bishop' Grants, NCC Anti-Poverty Task Force; Eucharistic Rite Bishop Raymond J. Gallagher of Lafayette, Ind., and, Rabbi Sey BELLEVILLE (NC)"':'" Bishop mour Cohen, president of the Albert R. Zuroweste of Belle-' Synagogue Council. ville has approved permissions granted by the diocesan liturgi commission for distribution New Committeeman cal of Holy Communion under Doth : NEW YORK (NC)--Frank J. species and for con celebrated 'Shakespeare, Jr. executive, vice-' Masses.' president of the CBS Television Msgr, Leonard Bauer, vicar Stations Division, has been general and commission chair named to the' exccutive' commit man, stated th;t ge';el'ai per tee of the National Catholic mission is gi,ven to, concelebrate Of~ice for~adio and Television. Mass, whenever the 'needs of the, The committee serves in' an ad people do not' require that 'visory capicity to the Catholic priests celebrate an individual office of which Bishop JohnA. ' Ma.Ss. E.very p~iest, hp~ever,re, Donovan :',r, ~"'~cio. Ohio isepis- : tilins the ,right ,to celebrate alone: Sai~", ",' , " ," , eopal, chaullldu. ' ".', ..... :.., ; .:., .' , - ~
NEW YORK (NC)~eil, RoD , ert F. Kennedy of New York at 'fi'rmed her~ that the -U. S: ,com.. mit'ment 'to Israel'iI clear' amil 'warned 'that lIn~:;i' "lastinG ',peace settlement"· is 'achievetll this :eoun'try must maintain 'vigil in her behalf. , '
\
~'.
.
In a commencement address U4 Fordh'am" University, Kennedy praised the, 'recent Israeli v,ictory and said that for decades "irre sponsible leaders" of the Arab world have turned the frustra tions of t.heir people agains~ ....... that tiny outpost of West ern culture and ideals which isJ the state, of ISI'aet
in three long years." suburbia." Bishop McDowell cited the The CIC had criticized the new open enrollment policy an school because it had no Negroes nounced by the board in 1963, enrolled and for taking pupils two new reli,gion' programs de 'from two infegrated Catholic "This gallant democracy, this veloped recently which "express and one integrated public high nation of survivors from history'/] clearly the Catholic position on school. great,est example of man's capac race,", participation in Office of ity, .for senseless cruelty to his Integrated Neighborhood Economic Opportunity" Neigh fellow man, cannot be allowetll The school superintel)dent s,aid borhood Youth Corps, and Head to succumb to the... threats amll Start programs, and promotion that to suggest the new school assaults of her neig~bors," Ken by the' board, of a study of civil was created "1.0 irritate the racial nedy said, "and while this peri04ll tights by parent-teacher guilds. situation ,is c9mpletely false and of danger ,continues-until a lasi unfounded. ' ing peace settlement is achievetll Bishop McDowell also defend "'On' the oont~ary, 'it was' this ed the' creation of the new St: very crisis which motivated the ~we must, maintain our vigi lance in, her behalf.· Augustine Joint H'igh School iii local arid dioces~n action but the five-parish area of Law , then only after consultation with renc,eville as an aid to curbing knowledgeable, involved'," con. RIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII""lII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt. "the exodus of. the white to ~ DRY CLEANING ~ cetned citizens and ilchooi au thorities!' ,~ and ~ , He' said 'the board d'id not ex~ ~ FUR STORAGE ~ pect that the move would' inte-"' gl'ate the new high school be Faculty cause there are few Negro Cath , BALTIMORE (NC)-Dr. Abra ham Shusterman, rabbi of Hal' olics in the five-parish area, but Sinai Congregation here, will hoped that the school "may con 34-44 Cohannet Street join the faculty o.f Jesuit-opel''': tribute something to the main ~ J CIIunton 822-6161 §
ated Loyola College here in tenance of an integrated neigh borhood." Septe,mber. ~IIIIIIIIIIIlImllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~' Under a lectureship endowedby the Jewish Chautauqua Society, Rabbi Shusterman will conduct a two-semester, two~hour per week, three-credit-hour com'se on the Development of Jewish Thought-first course on Juda , ,fit ism 'in a Catholic college ~n this area. ' PreseT\tation of the lectureship . . .' . was J!lade to Father Joseph A. Sellinger, S.J., college president, at a dinner here by Sylvan Le bow, executive director of,the 11,5 'WI,LlIAM ,ST~ " :NEW' BEDFORD,MA S$. Jewis'h 'sQcletyfollnded 'in 189i ~ ':. .' "... . . '101' 'wterfaith ,iuidei'standihg. ' o
"
Rabbi Joins' Loyola
College
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T.HE ANCHOR Thurs., June 22, 1967
.,
Improved Race Relations
Urge
CHICAGO CNC)":""-Decrees of the Second Vatican Coun cil have provided for II two way flow of ideas for the
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renewal and strengthening of re ligious orders, more than 900 representatives of some 250 Ro man Catholic congl'egations and orders were told here. They participated in a three day conference at Rosary Col lege, in nearby River Forest, on legislative means to modernize religious orders in' accordance with a council mandate 'to do so. The meeting was co':s'pol1sored by the Canon Law, Society of America and the college.. Father Paul Boyle, executive secretary of the Canon Law S0 ciety of America, told th,e gather ing that high ranking officials of ~1In order are no longer the only Persons who can initiate changes. All order members have been encouraged to contribute their thoughts and their wisdom ~ that ideas can move from the bottom up as well as from the WP down.' .' , Guiding PrinC(i~les At the open'ing sessions, Car dinal-designate John P. Cody of Chicago proposed three guiding principles to officials of religious orders seeking 'to modernize their community struct':ll"(~s. He suggested a "willingness to adapt to changing .conditions, a return to the sources, and pursuit of the original spirit 'of their religious orders and the Gospels as the foundation for all Chris tian life." Father Kevin O'Rourke, O.P., ehairman of the meeting and. dean of theology at .Aquinas Do minican Institute in Dubuque . eaid that whileth'e bishops are responsible for coordinatipg reli gious activity in their dioceses, they should respect ~he purpose lor whic~ a parti,cula,r order was established. The two hold "potentially dis J>8rate rights" and' 'therefol'e co ,ordination is el:lsential,' Father O'Roul:ke said. ' .
Schedule Regi'onam Youth Congress MANCHEs'rER (NC) - Mary Clancy of Dover, N,H., vice president of the National Coun cil. of Catholic Young Adults, will bc the kcynotc speaker at the 15th annual New England Congress of Catholic Youth and Young Adults here Saturday ~nd Sunday. Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester will be the principal eoncelcbl'ant of the congress Mass in .!?t. Jt;lscph's cathedrlll 011 Sunday. .. " Rich,lI'd Chaput'· , of Nashua; N,H., thc National' Chamber of, Commercc choice as "Outstand ing Young Man of .1965," will be the chief speaker at the clos ing banquet.
JACKSON (NC) - T h ~ bishops of three denomina tions have joined in a raIn for creation of a statewide
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TEA BREAK IN KUMAMOTO: Fr. John Blowick, 78, center, co-founder of the 00 lumban Fathers, visited members of the missionary society in Japan and Korea recently. With him are Columban Fathers Henry Collins, left, veteran of 36 years in the missions, and Leonard Lavallee of Johnst.Qn, R.' I., chaplain of the Marist High School in Kuma moto, Japan. NC PhQto.
Anti-Poverty Training for Seminarians
commission to wprk for im proved racial relations in Missis~ sippi. The Catholic, Episcopalian amil Methodist bishops called the state's racc relations a " th reat ening cloud 011 the horizon" anell lamented the lack of communj~ cation between Negro and white
leaders. .
Not.ing a "tendency toward
greater polal'ization along raci311
lines," they asked that thc pro posed commission be composetll of recognized leaders of both the Negro and white communitiea and that it work toward "a great er sense of unity and responsibi).. ity among all Mississippians," _, They also proposed esta blisiF ment of similar commissions 2!l local levcls. The bishops proposing the commission on race in a joinS statement were Episcopal!alll\ Bishop John Maury Allin of Mis<> sissippi, Bishop Joseph B, Bnll nini, apostolic administrator o.!I the Catholic diocese of Natchez Jackson, and Bishop Edward ..1I. Pendergrass, resident bishop ~ the Jackson area of the Metho-. dist Church.
Pre~ote'
Praises Poverty Effort'
Course in New Jersey First-of-Its-K·i nd
derstanding of the' inner-city · Then will come a year-long fol
SOUTH ORANGE . (NC) family, and something about the low-U}:l program designed to keep Fo.rty-seven' students from Im WASHINGTON (Nt) - MsgIr.
them iii touch witli' iniler-City 'Lawrence J, Corcoran, secretary
.maculate Conception Seminary, Spanish culture." . Darlington, have completed an They mentioned these needs 10 'reaHties. of the Nlltional Conference' fij -intensive first-ol-its-kind kain- "Msgr. Joseph J; Vopelak, New-' Ditnliy of 'Man Catholic Charities; praiscd the ing pr!>g~am tn the problems of ark priest who is the New Jerse'y F\eming , ~id . h~" fO\.lnd the 'Office' of EconoinfcOpportuniiY Bishops' 'coordinator of educa , seminarians to be "a very aggres '. poverty and urban living. for iii; leadership incombattinll The specifically' prepared tional and anti-poverty programs , sive gj·oUp who really 'want to poverty. course, giveriat Seton Hall Uni with offices in Trenton. He "Jt represents, perhaps for too do something, who are really 'in passed the idea on to the train- ' terested .i..n getting involved with .first time in the history .or om versity, was given in consulta ing institute which then worked people." tion with the New Jersey Com country," he said,. "the nationa!! munity Action Training Institute. with the seminarians to draft desire to attack and eliminate Comparing them with the pro The institute is a private agency . the pl'Ogram, designed as a model fessionals, he noted "commit poverty." established by a grant under the for similar programs for other ment" is the common denomina Msgr. Corcoran addresscd thlil Economic Opportunity Act ·to groups of clergy, and possibly tor. "But the professional com':' mid-Atlantic regional meetinc prepare professional and non even for nuns engaged in sum · munity action workers' commit of Joint Action in Community professional anti-poverty work mcr ser\,ice in the cities. ment is based on the needs Service (JACS), a volunteer OY Dul'ing the course, directed by ers. they've seen," he observed, ganization jointly sponsorcd by The Darlington seminarians, Albert Fleming, a Negl'O, pI'ofes:' "while the commitment of the Catholic and Protestant J.(roups along with thr.ee priests and two sionals outlined economic oppor to aid Job Corps graduates OILI seminarians is based on the dig members of the. Young Christian tunity legislat,ion, discussed the their return to their communi nity of man." Students, attended' 011 a volun pl'inciples and techniques of ties. The priest is nation311 tary basis with ·15 hours of in community organization, ex chairman of JACS. ' struction and' discussion at eve plained the fundamcntals of .sur Because of the "magnitude o.!I ning: sessions for a week. vcy taking and outlined the the poverty problem" in the structurcs of Negro and Puerto Everyday Problems United States, he said, thc co~~ WASHINGTON (NC) -Lead Rican family life. Thc program idea came from tinuation and strengthening dl. ers of the Blue Army of Our the seminarians thcmselves some - This Summer the seminarians OEO is absolutely necessary," Lady-including delegates rep of 'whom had realized their in will wOl'k in various programs There is also, he continued, ~ resenting every part of the U, S. adequacies dul'ing Summer vol in the ci ties. BlJt their link with and some 58 other nations-will great necessity for the specia}..
unteer 'work 'in inner-city areas the training instit~te hasn't come
ized povcrty aid for' disadvaR~
,visit Fatima, Portugal, for a in 'Newark, Jersey City, Eliz :to an end bccausc mid-way dur two-day world convocation Aug. taged you'ths offered by the Jt)!I>
abeth and' Paterso/l .... ing their ser\'ice' 'they'll meet, 14 and 15. , . Corps: "We needeq to .know. the trend,' with ]<'Ieming to 'discuss the . Msgr. Harold V. Colgan. found where things' were ,moving,'" problems thcy have encountel'ed" er and i'nternatiomil director of. seminarian Robert Bahulski re the 'Blue Army, and John M. called.' . Haffert, national director, an "We needed to, know about nounced at the organization's na 3nti-povevrty' je'gislatio~' and the tional . headquarters here that role th'at welfare and some union Est. 1897 COVINGTON (NC) -Bishop · th'e' theme of the c'onvocafioil will ol'ganizatio;lsplay in d~veloping be "The nole of pJ'iests in the Richard H: Acker'man of; Coving , the city. Apostolate of Fatima." ton has given strong support to Inner-City Realities 23143 Purchase Street The convocation will follow Covington's mayor and two of "Many of us had been going the International Marian Con lNew Bedford the city's four commissioners down to the cities not thinking gl'ess, to be held at Fatima on 996-5661 who voted a fair housing 01' these are important. And we'd Aug. 13., dillllncc into law. hear people talking about differ The same day that the Ken ent organizations and we didn't :.1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111II111111111111/1111~ Know what they were talking tucky prclate's letter to Mayor Bernard Eichholz was released, about. And we needed some unMore a group of 28 Catholic and Pro § 2 testant clergymen approved a statement supporting the mea sure and 'congratulating those CLEVELAND (NC) - Arch who h:ld voted for it. bishop Paul J. Hallinan of At The bishop's letter prqised the lanta was aWa'rded an honorary cIty fOl' its aCtion, and expressed doctorate of human letters by ~ (Cash and Carry Only) ~' decp regl'et that 'some Citizens We s t ern neserve Univcrsity wish to invalidatc' the law. He
here. He received his Ph.D. from also cited the involvem~nt' of .
WRU in 1963. He was Newman diocesan Clergy in local efforts
Club director at the university in beiullf (~f civil rights a's evi while' a I:l'ad~ate shident in bislory. .' , . dence of his 'c~lI1 victiotlS. ~llIlillllllil"IIIII,"lIilllllllHlllllllllllllillllillllfifIlIIIIIIIIJllllilimmllli.mllllllIllUIIIIIIHIIHIIIII""",,"11111I1lllF.
Blue Army Leaders To Attend Meeting
Sturtevant Hook
Bishop, Clergy Back:, Fair HOll,sing' Law
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Builders Supplies
Loyola Appoints First Lay Dean BALTIMORE (NC)-Loyola Collcgc has appointed FI'ancis Jr, McGuire dean of studies, making him the fil'st lay dean in ~hc collegc's 115-ycar history. The 34-year-old fonner chair man of the chcmistry depart mcnt received his mastcr's and his doctoral degrees from Johns Hopkins University in 1956 and 1961. A 1954 graduate of Loyola, McGuirc joined its faculty in 1963 and became chairman of the chcmistry department in 1965. McGuire !IUC~S Father BeilrY 8t: C. Lavm, '8.J., ill ,~ new POB~tiOn.
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.AsksCooperatiQn With .Clergy
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall- River-Thurs. June 22, 1967
fcrd~@m, H<e~d Adlwo~~s
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MADISON (NC) - ~he d .. embracing pr.ogram ,of the post.: conciliar Church cannot be ae- complished by the bishop alone, or by his priests alone, or by the laity alone. This must be the work of of us together. We have much to learn' from eaclll other," Bishop Clettis 'F. O'Don":' . nell of Madison"said here. ' . Speaking to some 450 membem _of the laity who took part. in II concelebrated Mass for adult Chri~tian, r~llewal::?t St., :I'homas .,,' Aqui~as, .earis~h.ere, the, Wiscpn- . '.' ".' _sin prelate. Il,aiq:, "'Thetime.is past when. we can, speak of. dichot()my between· bishops .or. priests, on the one hand, and. the laity on the other. The Church is. the seamless robe of Christ. If you tamper with one, you' will affect all Weare Christians together."
Gen~[?@lfo@mt
BROOKLYN '(NC)-"You are' 'the damning leads to . hate. ' going from a generation" which "On' this day when you enter is about to be' damned ~ join the older generation * * 0 when a generation which is alreaay you enter the ranks of thOSe who damned" Father Leo McLaugh-' are already damried • • 0 you lin, S./, president Fordham hilVe almost your last chance to University, 'told graduater. at the . understand the younger genera 42nd commencement elrerCises tion. Now, when it' is a1IDost too of .Brooklyn College of the City . late, I hope that you will resolve . University of New York: . . not to lose this' understand~ng . The priest urged the graduates which has made you a part of not to "lose. their' chance' to" the younger generation: unde'l'stand the' younger 'gen~ril':'" '. "Maybe youwiU'oe able to. tion. . . . , ; . , '" , ' : :'., .... ·t· . Set new"paths and .becciin~~t~¢ , "This is, a wonderful ana" an .. I·only ':'older generation 'in man's '.:: awful day," he said. "It is won history to understand that the derful because you haVe reach: ne~t younger "generation is not ed a sort of goal. It is an awful necessarily on the way to dam day because· in all too real a nation, ~ Fat her· McLaughlin sense today' marks the end of stated. your youth. : "It is not" merely a. question S~@frfrO$h of the evil we do. It is· more' a He also urged the laity to work question of the good which ~e with the various commissions of have not done. The evil we do T@ ASi"sist Agelrn«:J
the diocesan priests' senate, say NEW. YORK (NC)~The re ">ts petty and. mean and, for the ing: "Renewal of the Church is .most part, insignificant. The cently formed Scottish Catholic not merely the work of experts. good which we do not do _is Internatiomil Aid Fund will help our effort reaches down to effectively almost' infinite in finance a two-year pilot project CHURCH, LABOR TIES: Church cooperation in the Until the grass roots, the renewal will developed' by Catholic Relief scope,"·.Father McLaughlfin de labor market benefits workers and industry, says Steward not be successful. Services, overseas aid agency of dared. A. Kulp, employment manager, Norris Industries, Vernon, American Catholics, that will as KJ3ut good will is not enough. Easy to Call Namces Calif., talking with Mrs.. Rosalia .Nolan, director, Cardinal We must be competent. We mUst sist pre-school chiidren, mothers "We did not bring about peaCe. and expectant mothers through McIntyre's Job Finding Bureau. Norris has hired 200 Mexi know what we are doing. Good We did not conquer poverty and · out rural areas of the· West can-Americansfroni nearby East Los Angeles, and has more will is no substitute for under injustice. We did not change Mrican Country of Sierra Leone. factory-openings. Job bureau a.P.elcs job,S for minority group standing or for depth of percep the fact that men still hate 'each 'The program calis for the es tion in matters that concern the 9ther. tablishment of milk stations in members. NC Photo. life and future of the Church. "When we talk of the bate 48 villages of· western Sierra Therefore we must be sure 0ll which has not been overcome, Leone. During the first . year, each step that we take." ~ the hate which still rules su milk. and U.. S. government:' . preme, we are· inclined to think donated foods. will be distributed .. of the fact that some white: men Cleveland Colleges the supervision of CRS to " 5 still hate some Negroes (')[' all under 5,000 women and 12,000 children. at OIC jCOO Of"f" _ ICla arnarents Negroes • • • and that some Study Cooperation the second year the program Dange,rs to Youngsters Negroes still hate some white In will be ·increased to reach 7,000 CLEVELAND (HC) - T h. men or all white JRen," the · women and 20;000 children. CHICAGO (NC)-Officials Of They were reminded that even presidents of six Catholic insti priest stated. .. . . Teams of social workers will '12 Catholic high, schools in hiner youngsters who are merely curi tutions of higher education ill "And when any man hates tour t~e 'villages regularly to : city areas here' have urged par . osity seekers sometimes undergo the Cleveland area are conduct another man, he tries to cov~r distribute the food commodities. ents of more than 15,000 students ing a feasibility study of greater bis hatred by calling his enemy · They will also demonstrate to : to keep the youngsters away a radical alteration in behavior collaboration am 0 n g their under the influence of a crowd. a 'communist,' or a 'fasciet,' or IIChools. mothers and expectant. mothers from scenes of possible disorders a 'racist.' It is all too· easy. to proper food preparation and' this Summer. Another priest at ~t. Rita's, . . Participating in the study are call names and aU too fre 'dietary habits. ,Father Michael Hogan, O.s.A., quently the name-calling w pre' The schools are located in· the said the letters were being sent Father Hugh E. Dunn, S.J., Pre9 Marquette Park and Chicago to urge parents "as Christians te ident 01. John Carroll University; tense to try to justify our' hate. -C lie A iL III . Msgr. Robert C. WolH, rector ol Leads to Bate '0 ges S'K. .olne Lawn areas where demonstra take responsibility ~ .. to insure Borromeo Seminary; Msgr. ltIi tions and riots occurred a year a peaceful Chicago' summer." "I have not seriously liw.d~d 'Amendment Repeal chael J. Murphy, rector of st. ago. "We are seeking a peaceful Mary's Seminary; Msgr. Law the ~atte~, but I ~ quite s~l'e ALBANY (HC) _ New York "We feel that the presence or solution to community problems renee P. Cahill, president of st. that l\hW~ll. be pOSSIble t»,~IJjstate's private colleges and uni 00ver a m every age, ere versities have joined opponents participation of youngsters in -and many, many students are John College; Sister Mar,.- Inez, have been good ~ excellent rea .of the state constitution's Blaine any' disorder could be seriously cooperating in this effort,'; he president of Notre Dame Col lege; and Sister Mary Rose An lIOns for worrJ;m~, about the Amendment which bars state aid 'detrimental to their indiv.idual eommented. futures," said Father James Cor gela, president of Ursuline C0ll younge~ ge~eratIon, .Father Mc- ·to church-au ported schools. LaughlIn SaId. "And if we worry ~ . rigan, O.S.A., human relations ege for women. <enough, we' are inclined to go The CommISSIOn on I~dep~n~- ~director at St. Rita High School, . a~e ayman eon This study follows intensive from worrying to damning and ent Colleges and, Umversltle5 'ina letter to parents.. Of St. Michael's cooperation over a period of . . made its opposition known in a three-and-a-half years through.' "There is a definite danger of WINOOSKI PARK (He), statement asking the constitu a liaison committee representinc tional convention here for repeal financial, personal and moral Robert J. Giroux, director of.ex Retires Pastorate . the institutions. It has resulted of the amendment, contending liability for a 'boy or girl who is tension services at St..Michael's Becorne Curat~ such action "would provide flex:' physically present during an out- _ College here in Vermont, will in agreements on 'complete traD& break of tro~ble," he wrote. become the first layman to hold fer . of credit; , shared use' at PARSONS (NC)-At his GWR ibility to promote the develop e1alIses and interchange OIl 8equest, a Wichita, Kansas, priest ment of the totai higher educa the post of academic vice-presi Crowd Influenee faculty. will became :assistant pastG>r in tion resources ot the state in the dent and dean in the 64-year Parents were warned of the history of the college, operated manner the legislature deemS the parish he: has served as pas danger of bodily. harm to the by the Edmundite Fathers. . .. tor for the pa~t 20 years. He will . most' prudent." 'students,: and the likelihood that serve as assistant to a man who The commission, which repre Giroux was named by .:tbe ~orris was his assistant from 1948 until sents 109 private 'college~ and a· permanent police ·recordwould board of trustees to sucCeed mar' future employment "and 1953. ' ··SHEET METAL universities in the state, sai(i' that . Father Joseph L. Hart, S.S.E., career possibilities. Msgr. Edward I. Gunning, 75, "there should be in the constitu J. lESER, Prop. who will head a new guidance who began his work in the tion no prescription or proscrip and counselling office at . St. RESIDENTIAL priesthood as':assistarit pastor at tion as to the form these devel Michael's. Yrofession oflFaith INDUSTRIAL st. Patrick's parish here in 1920 opments should take." In his new post, Giroux wiD COMMERCIAL and has served as pastor since' Commencement supervise academic departments, 1947, will become assistant pastor 253 Cedar St., New Bedford JAMAICA (NC)-A profession admissions, and the extensiOn .July 1. He explained that his K of C Urge New 993-3222 of faith, marking the beginning and associate dean's offices. Giesire to retire from the pastor... of the Year of Faith on June 29, ate was based on Pope Paul VI'. Scholarship Plan highlighted the 97th annual com wish that pastors resign vol.un WINOOSKI PARK (NC)....:....The mencement at St. John's Univer tarily at age 75. Vermont Council, Knights of sity here in New York. RESIDENTIAL His successor will be the man Columbus, called upon the na-. The Yea~ of Faith was pr~ ""ho came to him "fresh out of tional organization to broaden SCHOOLS. CHURCHES claimed by Pope Paul VI to com- . the seminary," in April, 1948, its scholarship program by al memorate the 1900th anniversary Msgr. Denis Dougherty, moder lowing winners to attend any INDUSTRIAL • BUNKER ator of the Diocesan Councilli of college or university ()f their of the martyrdom of SS. Peter and Paul. Jl/Ien and Women. . choice. ' ,D ADSON 011 BURNERS The convention, at St. Mi . Father Joseph T. Cahill, C.M., ;, Complete Heating Installations . chael's college here, was remind president of St. John's read the Lay Coundl 24 Hour Oil Burner Service ed that the 12 annual K. of C. profession of faith hand BROOKLYN (NC)-Archbish scholarships are restricted to the lettered' and illuminated on a ~ Bryan J. McEntegart, bishop Catholic University of America, parchment' scroll. The scroll was ~ Brooklyn, has announced cre Washington, D. C. It also was then presented to Archbishop ation of a committee of laymen noted that the national organiza Bryan J. McEntegart, bishop of f» study the most practical tion has a $500,000 scholarship ·Brooklyn, N. Y., who receiyed it. methods of establishing III lay fund. It urged that more money in the name of Pope Paul and 640 PleCllsClInt Street New Bedford Tel. 996-8271 lMlvisory council. be used to assist members. :will forward it to the Vatican.
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Explain Appointment of Layrmen To Catholic College Boards WASHINGTON (NC) - Why "We may yet have to fight have Catholic universities and lor our very existencf!, and we colleges in the United States must try to read 2lrigh1. the signs begun in such large numbern of the times. The essential point, to seat laymen on their govem- however, is that we should not ing boards? form our ordinary structures Two competent and Independ- .and procedures ~ meet 8?me ent opinions have become avail- future, indetenrnn21W enses. able here abnost at tile same Sound standard' opernting pro time and show an impressive cedures should characterize the simiiarity in their analyses ef ,?,diJ1ary operati.on cd a univel'-. ~ lilly" the process. They also assert .. . .... . that the movement existed wen Dr. McGrath .and Father Du before the Second Vatican Coun- pont sa.v .at least .m. Catholic . ell, but that the council lin- colleges MHi lmJliversities Put doubtedly accelerated It and in- laymen CJ!I1 .. their governing creased Its a.cceptabiUty. lloards between 18415 and ·1889. In II message to the alumni, Father Gerard J. Campbell, S. :T., president of Georgetown Uni versity here, said the situation resulting from persons serving as directors and administrators at the same time was "becoming Intolerable." "The function of the admini strator within the university Is different from that of the policy maker and governor," Father Campbell said. "The administra tor is subject to the board for his appointment and is bound to carry out his office within the limits of policy as deter mined by the board. Consequently, the administra tor is placed in a difficult po sition when he has to function hi both capacities." Complex Problems Dr. Earl J. McGrath and Fa thcr Gerard E. Dupont, S.S.E.. who surveyed 168 four-year Catholic colleges, reported that . "there is every reason to be licve that as the problems of educational administration and policy-making becomes increas Ingly complex, institutions will bc increasingly compelled to en gage thc services at the policy making level of lay persons pos sessing knowledge and experi ence seldom possessed by Re ligious persons whose principal orientation is, and properly should be, toward their religious vocations." Dr. McGrath Is former U.S. Commissioner of Education and Father Dupont is president of st. Michael's College, Winooski, Vt. Neither source saw the Mary land court decision denying state aid to religiously controlled in stitutions as having any impor tant influence on the movement. Dr. McGrath and Father Du pont reported that "the. re sponses of the Catholic admini strators clearly show that the Maryland decision has not hati m major effect on theeomposl tion of Catholic college govenr ing boards." Future Crises Father Campbell, in bis message to his alumni, wrote: "Let It be said that II law or eourt decision which would declare that no Catholic college or uni versity could receive federal funds for any purpose or under any guise would eause Iil state of severe crisis which would adversely affect an higher ed ucation' in the United States. Once this is said, I would venture the opinion that no urn versity should undertake radical ehanges just to be in the position to meet future unnamed possi bilities. What we' do must be defensible and not simply a re action to or anticipation of eoud 411ecisions.
Layman Manager
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LANSING ENC)-Howard Walsh, SS, business management consultant here for more ttKm 20 years, bas been appointed to the newly e:rtablished office at business managell" :fm' the ~ 5ing dioceae,.
WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi dent Lyndon B. Johnson had il farewell meeting with cardinal designate Egidio Vagnozzi, apo stolic delegate in the United States, at the White House. The 'President asked the car dinal designate, who is return ing to Rome, to express "his per sonal greetings to His Holiness (Pope Paul VI) and his deep affection for the Pope, and to say how much he appreciates' his influence for good in the world and his efforts to achieve world peace," George Christian, White House press secretary, told newsmen.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Jime'22, 1967
Teachers to Get Pcr Increases
SYRACUSE (NC) -Teachers In the Catholic high schools of the Binghamton area of the Syr acuse diocese will receive pay raises which will make their salaries more.nearly competitive with those in public schools. The increments were recom mended by a committee appoint ed by Bishop Waltl~r A. Foery of Syracuse. The committee· \n cluded' the dean of the Bing hamton area, Msgr. Frank ;So Harrison, two pastors, two prin cipals and two teachers. Raised from a starting salary Id $5,200 to $5,700 for a be
ginning teacher with a bache lor's degree, the new scale ha:J a ceiling of $9,650. Incremenw of $250 annually through a M step program are also part Glf the plan. A $500 stipend for a masten degree and $700 over the base for a master's plus 15 graduate oours is also included in 1be scale. Binghamton public schoo1rJ have a base salary of $5,900. The committee also took inte consideration the need to p;v' better wages !for coaching statiIJ in football, basketball, base ball and track.
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THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP IN THE SUMMER TOO! Iff. RBV. BDWARD T. O'MI!ARA, NATIONAL DIRI!OTOR, . . IOOIITY 'OR lHII PROPAGATION OF THE PAITH, aae PIPTH AVE., N.Y., N,Y. 10001
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THE ANCHOR':':"[)ioee$e of FQn River-Thurs. June 22~ 1967 :
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Experiencing Hurri(;ane By Rt. Rev. Msgr. J(,)bn S. Keimedy Early last year the Saturday Evening Post carried an a.rticle entitled ''1 ama Priest--I want to Marry." It was migned "Father Stephen Nash,", which -yvas admittedly a psuedonym. "F'ather Stephen Nash" was actually Father J~mes Kavanau~h, of. th~ He is. very quick to tax the DiOcese of Lansmg, MlChl- Church and bishops and priests gan. Now, under his' own with arrogance. He never once name; he publishes a book, .' detects any such strain in, him-
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ing, exploitation of the poor. out-dated' public facilities, lim ited recreationai areas, segre.. , called for correction of the "so cial, causes" which touched, off , gated educational and high 1118 four nights of rioting in the employment which create them predominantly Negro Roxbury must be eradicated." "When those who are young, area here. The cardinal said that it is in the midst of a nation of aHlu not enough 'for the community ence, see no real prospect for "to deplore what has happened themslves they cannot fail to :re and to regret the turmoil that act, against a society that blllJ has occured among us. We must made no plans for them," be set about the task of finding said. Cardinal Cushing also defend the social causes that have brought a peace-loving and re~ ed the conduct of the Boston spected portion of our people Police Department 'during the to acts of disorder and public rioting saying he was "deeply . disturbed by the criticism that Violence." ' While maintaining that no one has been directed at the pres can excuse participation in "mob ently over-burdened officers." Police .lob Difficult action, looting, vandalism, snip "The police," he said, "have a ing;'destruction of property," the REV. JI>JIlERllllE IE. lLACllllAN{)lE cardinal also emphasized that difficult, disagreeable and often dangerous job. They are, how society must give a "real op portunity for the good life to ever, our representatives ,and all of its citizens" and the Negro tbey need our full support and in America or in Boston has not assistance in these troublesome times. In my own judgment, they been given tbis opportunity. perform their arduous duties un Conditions Intolerable Rev. Pierre E. Lachance, O~P., der hazardous conditions with "Many times in the past," he eommendable restraint." director of St. Anne's Shrine in said, "I have raised my voice Fall River, will observe the sil (The Commission on Church ver jubilee of his priesthood as I do once again today"-to and Race of the Massachusetts next Sunday, June 25. Relatives summon to this cause all the re Council of Churches had charged and friends are invited to attend sources of our city and our the Bostoin Police Department the Mass o£..thlmksgiving he will state." with "a major responsibility" celebrate at St. 'Anne's (upper, Ghetto conditions, he said', are , in touching off the ,rioting' and chur~h) at 11 o'clock Sunday criticized "over-reaction by the "intolerable" and the slum hous morning. police to situation as they' arose" The jubilarian is a native of during the period.) Cardinal Cushing said that in Fall River, the son of, the, late ,INDIANAPOLIS (Nc)-:-M~gr. "assessing blame for the current Emile R.and of ,Helena, ('Robi ,', naymond T. Bosler, editor of 'violence, we must look ,before tame) Lachance, and the eldest all else to our individaul respon of 12 children, most of whom are ,the Criterion, Indianapolis arch sibility for the social conditions well-knownresidentsofthe:area. !iiocesan newspaper" hall, ~~which have caused it. We can One is a Dominican lay brother ceived an honorary doctorate not conveniently escape this re ,from ,christian Theologi~al.Sem stationed at Lewiston, Me. inary, which is affiliated with' sponsibility by making any' pub Aft~r completing his' elemen , the Disciples of Christ (¢hris lic agency serve as the consci tary grades at St. Anne's 'paro 'ence of the commUnity." tian Church). ehial school,' Fr. Lachance' pur 'sued his education at College de Montreal, Canada, and later at the Dominican House of Philos ophy and Theology hi -ottawa. Meantime,in July 1936, Fr~ La chance entered the novitiate' ,of the'Dominican Order at st. Hya Clnthe, Canada~ On June 27, 1942, he' was ordained a priest in St. Mary's Cathedral by the, late Mos't' Rev. James E.Cassidy, bishop of Fall River. ' Father Lachance was first as signed as a professor at the Do minican House of Studies in Ot tawa, where he taught various treatises of philosophy, theology and liturgy for 11lf.! years. In January, 1956 his religious Supe rior sent him to Prince Albert, Saskatchewan to take over the ,pastoral care of four mission dis tricts then entrusted to the Do OO~rt@nom,1Il miilican Fathers of Canada. BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car
,dinai Cushing of Boston, ,has
A ,Modern Priest Looks at His self. . , . 'Outdated Church (Trident Press. But we cannot sunply diSmiSS ' h i m on th~ grounds of ~rrogance. $4.95; 630 Fifth Ave New York' We must ltsten. What IS he say 0" • , N. Y. 10020). mg. . '. ' BaSically, he is saymg t~at the The dust jacket a:arries strong structure and the operation of ll' e com menda the Church, as these have come tions of the ,to be in our time, tend to deper book by Father sonalize the members of the Gregory Baum, Church, to deprive them of some Mfchael Novak, of their God-given and essential and Jus t u li freedom ,to substitute canon law George Lawler. for theolog.y, and to mak? legal Look magazine ism the chief preoccupation and pub lis h e d a mark of the Churc~.. 'lengthy excerpt from the book in He draws a slashing cancature its issue of June 1 3 . ' ;of the process by which a young This occasioned a statement ~er became a priest - in his from the Lansing Diocese which time. (It is ~ell always to re said that Father Kavanaugh had member that he was ordained in refused an assignment from his 1954, well before Vatican II.)' ' A caricature stings precisely bishop in June 1966 and' had left tile diocese against' the bishop's because it has recognizable ele I wishes. He is now working as' a ments of truth in'it. The educa dIild, family, and marriage cOtin ,tiOD of priests has unquestion aelor at the Human Resources ably been deficient. Steps are Institute in La Jolla California. ,l:!eing taken to remedy that, But IDghlY Emotionl~n ' 'One must feel anxiety as t~ the , ff . ' , It is "",jth this background un ,,~;,~tlveness of the .steps; .are y -:nd tha't one takes up the ,book. ",th.e b.old,enough and 10 the rJ.,ght d t The title immediately creiites, an Irec Icon . Unfavorable impression.' It clitee i lbacy 'Se~ness' gorizes the author and" the Celibacy is, of counie, men-, Church not only definitivEily but ~oned. But the discussion, of it
prejudiCially. The first adJective is,~ hectic and irate. Celi~acy is
, '~nnotes complete relevance; the smd to be ~enseless, to prevent
, llleCond, complete irrelevance.: one from bemg a man, to ,bar one The final score is given 'before from concern. This is d~monthe game starts. ' strably untrue.; One begins to read. The book There is room - and need 'IS highly emotional, indeed 'im ,for e~amining.the advisability,of passioned. It is not calm, 'tea- allowmg candidates for the Goned discourse but m blast' of ' ,priesthood the option of marry . g b e f ore 0 rd'lOa t'Ion. B u t·In b'IS ' ,fury reckless in , denigration and m the imputing of motives. scor,nful, blunderbuss manner, One notices how often words Father Kavanaugh insists on im like "anger" and "angry" occur possible absolutes - he who is how frequent are extreme stat~ constantly chastising the Church ments and accusations ("the hor for being absolutist. ror of our convents") how un He believes that the building remitting is the shouting, even of any more Catholic schools. is the screaming. Reading: the book folly, and advocates the phasmg Is like experiencing a hurricane. out of the system. Once mor~"be , lLikely Effec~ is not alone, nor is he in his con . . ,tention that religious teaching . And yet, when one has flOlshed for Catholic children not in ft, one has to say .tha.t in many 'parochial schools and the aposto l!'esp~ets the aJ.lth~r IS nght. Many late of the secular college and of hIS shots are .n~ht on the tar university campus are getting far get, many of hiS Judgments are ' iess attention and financial out perfec~ly correct. On balance, lay than they, deserve. " 'Finally, in September, 1959, ' His plea, that inherited struc there IS more good than bad, to Father Pierre was returned to be found. here. , ""tures be evaluated in terms' of' 'his native city to assume hew . ' ,One Wishes, however, ,that the ',the contemporary situation is a kind of duties as spiritual dir'ec author had been ~ore temperate, ' 'vaiid one, a~4 ,'ina~yare', ~on- 'totofthe well';'k~lOw'nshrineded filiat he had had hIS say less sten vinced of its urgency.' ;.' icated to St; Amle':In recenfyears lklrianly and sensationally. This Untempere411 lllag0, ' Ft: 'Lachance has' also been 'active fs probably to ask t~at ~e be a The religious life needs updat 'lninterfaith grotipsand ~toperson other than he IS. Hlsman .fng,.he says, and few will dissent, grams in the Fan River area~" '. ner, non,e the less, mean!, tti~t the any,,~ore -than from his allega book cab. be all too conveniently tion''iliat have: been narrow eondem~e~ and igno~ed: in our view,' and shabby in our , What IS ItS effect hkely to be'!' treatment of Protestants and ,LAKE FOREST (NC)--'-Scrip ), Th~re are those who will be 'hurt - Jews. But changes, in these i-e tural skirmishes between Chris by It. I do not mean members of spects are underway and will tian and Jew are based' on a Father Kav~~augh's family" go far. "family squabble," and are not Church authof1t~es (who,ought to For the most part; then, Fa~her to be understood as attempts be able to. take It), w~ol~ cl~ss~s 'Kavanaugh's charges are not on the part of Christians to something which the Church and promote anti-Semitism Father ! of people wh.o are mdlSCrIml nately abused, but, Catholics are unaware of nr Thomas. A M OP th and th u.nJustly I ~ oore, .." pro ll'll er e simp e sort who can about which they are indifferent. fessor of Biblical studies at " 13Ot, properly evaluate Father He states them, invariably in Aquinas Institute of Theology, Kavanaugh's shouted argument extreme fashion ("There ~nc Dubuque, Iowa, told 150 nuns and may cut t~emselves off from place for persons in our Church";' at a session of the Catholic Adult the source of hfe. in premarital instructions the Education Center's Summer Church on His Tel'IDS' Church seeks to "under~ne" Biblical Institute here in nIinois. - He himself has not left the and "snatch a'.vay" a 'Protestant's Church. He defies anyone to put religious faith.) him out of the Church. This he And his' untempei-ed rage is disturbing question, "Is 'it neces aays again and again and again.· ,hardly consonant ,with .the rea- sary for anyone to have' to kick But he will take the Church on sonable attftuae·· which he up such a ruckus as this to' get, his own terms, and he requireS ' strongly advocates.' But, with all 'a hearing ~ the Church,?',,: If ,it filiat the Church conform t9 those the, shortcomings' ' of" the bOok, ,.is" ,something Ds incontestably , fIerms.' " " ~~deFed,_we.ue leawitl:ttbe wronjl,
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Asserts Catholic Education Needs New Ideas MILWAUKEE (NC) - A leading Catholic Educator said here th2t Catholic ed ucation is in a sstate of oon fusion and urgently needs new ideas. Father 1/:. AUbert Koob, (l). Praem., executive secretary of the National Catholic Educa tional Association, said that few people are able to speak con vincingly on the need for Cath olic schools, how they should be financed or designed, and how laymen should be involved in them. Father Koob was keynote speaker at a conference at Mar quette University on trends in Catholic education. Educators at tending the conference repre sented schools in 35 states and the District of Columbia. The priest said that thinking "has not been our strong point in Catholic education" and urged a reexamination of the aims and organization of the en tire system. He said it is difficult to jus tify Catholic schools in an area where the public schools are su perior, where finances are inad equate because people are reluc tant to support them and -where the Catholic schools are white ghettos. Father Koob suggested merg ing several weak Catholic schools 0:'- combining Catholic schools with schools of other de nominations as has been done in several places. He also suggested that some inadequate Catholic colleges be elliminated, noting that of the 400 Catholic colleges in the eountry, only 285 were good enough to be accredited. "More state and federal ,aid is not the answer," he said. "We need a broader view." Father Koob called for more lay involvement throughout the educational system, not just as teachers or board members, but as top administrators. He said religious orders should no longer control the schools and predicted that high schools would eventually come und'er lay control just as many colleges have.
Propose Adapting Church to New Liturgy Continued from Page One
Council of Rabbis Opposes Amend ment
NEW YORK (NC)-A nation al council of Jewish rabbis has asked New York's Constitution al Convention to remove the controversial Blaine Amend ment. A spokesman for the Central Rabbinical Council of the United States and Canada has testi fied before a convention com mittee that it feels the contro versial amendment, which' bars aid to children attending church related schools, be removed from the state's constitution. Rabbi Menachem M. Rubin of WASHINGTON (NC) - The Congregation and Yeshiva Ye head of Catholic Charities for shurin of Brooklyn, told the the Washington archdiocese has convention committee: "Those attacked a rule under which who are chained 10 the old unwed mothers seek birth con cliches and see any kind of as trol aid before receiving wel sistance 10 pa'rochial school fare benefits or risk prosecution. ' ehildren, as violation of the First The policy was spelled out Amendment of the Federal Con late in May by Arthur A. Mar stitution may bE! forced by their shall, the state's attorney in rigidity 10 the ridiculous ex I!IUburban Prince Georges Coun treme of denying' children police, ty, Md., after he arrested three fire, health, sanitation servi~ unwed mothers who applied for which ultimately IOOme flrhm welfare' benefitS. The! charge state funds.", ' was child neglect, based on il Maryland law linking ~e pres ence of illegitimate 'children Printing Firm Official BJl'd child neglect. ! Marshall then said he would Heads Conege Board POUGHKEEPSIE (NC) DOt prosecute unwed :mothe1'll who can prove they have BOught Harold D. Spencer, printing and lithographing firm official, is birth control advice from coun ty clinics before they' ask for the first layman·, to head the
board of trustees IIllf Marist Col welfare payments. Within a week, Msgr. Leo J. lege here. Brother Linus R. Foy, SM., COady, head of Washington president of the men's eollege Catholic Charities, wrote Ma:F shall and criticized bis plan. eonducted b:f the Marist Bre "The fact of illegitimacy in DO tilers, said the action was m way proves neglect," be said. keeping with the new policy of • An unmarried mother needs giving laymen control of the in many social services . ' . • and stitution. There DOW are eight this alone is the functiOn cd the laymen and eight Religious on legal arm of the government.- the board, but Brother Foy said Msgr. Coady said that wei four additional laymen will be :tare assistance Ilbould be based named in the Fall. Three Pr0 em human need, rather: thaD Oll.\ testants and a .Jew aft amoDB tbe _ Vwiteea. .... pmi~ »soaram-- !
Scores Welfare Benefits Pol icy
15
War on Poverty Most hnpolftant
tant aspect of Vatican n so far
as church design is concerned
is its emphasis on "the theology of the assembly of the people of God." . "The fact that we are" assem bled for the same purpose is what matters-that we are not a chance collection of individuals." For Same Purpose , Miss Bethune noted that the chief architectural requirements of the new liturgy are the altar as the table of the community Sacred Meal; seating the con gregation in a semi-circle, as the assembly of the people of God; and use of the sedilia as the seat of the "father of the family." Also important is the position of the choir, which should be part of the congregation, not as "entertainers, but as helpers of the people in song." The bap tismal font, too, should be in full view of the congregation, instead of in the secluded corner where it' is found in most churches. Most Civilizl~d "The semi-circular table is the most civilized way 0.£ eating," said Miss Bethune, in explaining why the congregation. should be seated in this manner. She said that in early days nobles reclined at this type of table and were served from its open. side, thus obviating the need of slaves pushing between il'1e diners with food. "We too have a, Suffering Servant, Christ," she said. "His place is taken by the priest who serves us the Eucharistic ban quet." In practical terms, she sug gested that the present Holy Name altar be retained as' the focal point of l\ Blessed Sacra-
THE ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1967
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d D!SCUSSES ADAPTATION: Adaptation of the in terior of Holy Name Church, Fall River, to conform with changes in the liturgy is discussed at a special parish council meeting by Ade Bethune, internationally f.amed Hturgical artist. At left is Magr. William H. Harrington, Holy Name's pastor emeritus, at right Dr. John C. Corri g·an, council presjdent. ment chapel and that the Altar of Sacrifice at which Mass will be celebrated be brought for ward into the church transept and raised on a platform. Exist- . ing side-altar pews would be turned to face the new altar. "You will see those seated across the altar from you,," she said, "but there is no better way of looking at your neighbor than with Christ between you." Tbe present Holy Name bap tistry would be retained, accord ing to the tentative plans, but as a room for the first part of the baptismal ceremonies, while the font as situated in the church proper would attain a greater symbolic meaning than in its present position and would also enable all to see the rites sur rounding it during the annual Easter Vigil service. Miss Bethune said that a cen tral position of the font empha sizes the importance of baptism and the fact that the child or adult baptized is now "one of ours, a member of our parish community," not simply a mem ber of his particular family. "It is sa~," she added paren thetically, "that we attach so much importance to the entrance of a man into the Knights of Columbus, for, instance, and so little to his entrance into the Church. An adult convert, a new member of Christ - he simply goes bis lonely way. We ought to have more sense of adding Christians 10 the community, and the location of the font may help." / In Sanctuary Miss Bethune envisions the ehoii' as seated in the present sanctuary, with a new pipe organ also located at the front of the ehurch.
She commented that many ex
nsting rules regarding Church
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Cooperation Week WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxil iary Bishop Joseph M. Breiten !Deck of Detroit, subcommittee chairman for the Catholic Inter American Cooperation Program (CICOP) of the U.S. Bishops' Committee for Latin Amercia, has announced that this year 'L a t j n America Cooperation Week will be held from Dec. 10 to 1'7-during the time when the Feast of Our ,Lady of Guadalupe ill liturgically observed.
construction are more applicable to the museum churches of Eu rope than to America, "where we have plain simple churches." She said that during a visit to Rome last month she enjoyed a private audience with Pope Paul. "I besought him," she said, "not to have manJ' new regula tions in church design-to leave as many possibilities open as he can. "He said that the only regu lation will be that the tabernacle must be in a place of honor." Discussing the reception of Holy Communion, Miss Bethune said that it would be received standing in the redesigned church, with parishioners ap proaching the altar one bY one or two by two, depending on the number of priests distributing the host. The much-praised Colonial ar chitecture of Holy Name Church
will be retained in any changes,
said Miss Bethune. She im
pressed her audience with her
quiet assurance and her obvious
grasp of her subject. Interesting
ly, for the designer of outstand
ingly beautiful liturgical jewel ry, she wore no ornaments what ever. "I don't like things that dangle," she said. And, consola tion to southpaws-Miss Beth une, who is known as a pen and ink artist and calligrapher as well as a sculptor and church designer, 'is leftbanded.
JERSEY CITY (NC) - 'fho bright side of the war on poverty was depicted here by Sargent Shriver, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Speaking at the 76th annual! commencement at St. Peter's College here, Shriver said Presi~ dent Lyndon B. Johnson haD evaluated the effort as "the most important piece of legislation we have." He listed among supporters o~ various phases of the OEO programs the AFL-CIO, the U. S. Conference of Mayors, the Amer ican Medical Association, the American Bar Association, the National Education Association, the National Congress of PTAD and others. He said the vast majority of the nation's young people have become perSOl~ally involved in various progmms to alleviate .... the underprivileged. "In the third year of the war on poverty, enough money h;w gone out and enough returns have come in to tell whether we are creating the conditions by which life can be lived," Shriver said. "I am convinced we have made a strong start-and that to turn back now would be an act of cowardice and a move toward despair."
Kentucky College To Admit Males NAZARETH (NC) - FulltiDWi male students will for the first time be admitted on a regular basis by Nazareth College, a Catholic women's college here. The board of' tru.stees agreed upon this move by the 153-year old educational institution oper ated by the Sisters of Charity at Nazareth. The new policy be comes effective immediately and. applies to juniors and seniolS only. All male students, including freshmen and sophomores, will continue as in the past to be eligible for admission on a part,.. time basis as well. '
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THE ANCHORThurs., June- 22, 1967
The .Parish Parade
IT. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER
For the second year m Summer Vacation program will be spon sored by the parish. To ron from Monday, July 3 through Friday, Aug. 4,. it will be open to students entering grades four through seven in September. Crafts, games, skills, instruction and all-day Dutings will be in cluded in the program. Rev. Mr. Robert McGowan, deacon as signed to the parish for the Sum mer, will direct the program, aided by three Sisters of Mercy. The annual parish picnic is /llated for Sunday afternoon,· June 25 at St. Vincent de Paul Camp, North Westport. Parochial school students will graduate at church ceremonies at 7 tonight. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER The parochial school will hold graduation ceremonies .at 7:30 tonight in the church. Arl." eve ning Mass will be celebrated and refreshments will be served to graduates and their families in the school hall following recep tion of diplomas. ST. PATRICK, SOMERSET The annual Parish Lawn Party will begin tonight and continue nightly until Sunday evening. Both American and Portuguese foods will be served starting at 6:30 week nights and at 1 Sun day afternoon. Many booths and a large va riety of games for family play will be in operation. A giant raffle is slated for Sunday night. Tickets for the raffle will be available on the parish grounds located at the St. John Fisher" House, corner of High and South Streets, Somer set. The public is invited.
Father Boer Named University Official SAN DIEGO (NC) - Father John E. Baer, 37, has been ap pointed fourth president of the University of San Diego. He for merly served as president of St. Francis College in EI Cajon, which now is a part of the uni versity's theological school. Bishop Francis J . .Furey of San Diego, chancellor of the univer sity, named Father Baer to suc ceed Father John 'Paul Cadden, president since 1961, who re signed because of ill health. Father Baer, a native of Stre ator, Ill., attended San Diego State College and studied for the priesthood at St. Francis College, EI Cajon, and the North Amer ican College in Rome. He was ordained in Rome in 1956.
OUR LADY OF VICTOUY, CENTERVILLE The second annual penny sale of the Women's Guild is an nounced for 7:30 Wednesday night, Ju]y 12 in the church hall. Co-chairmen Mrs. Donald James and Mrs. William Devine will be aided by a large committee. The annual Hasbion show is planned for August, under direction of Mrs. James Murphy.
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Continued from P.age One as civil rights, obscenity, crime and similar fields. "The heart of the l1i1atter is doctrine." Archbishop Hurley stressed. "I hope that the im mense difficulties of the past 400 years during which we have gone our separate ways, will not dis courage us. 1 see no reason why we should not candidly identify, the points of difference and ad dress ourselves d ire c t I y to them," The archbishop added that is why he supports "serious and prolonged dialogue" between Catholics and Protestants "on a national scale, about the cru cial problems of our doctrinal differences." "What is the road to genuine unity? What does it profit the cause of unity if we do not achieve religious unity'?" he ask
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VIETNAM C~LAFN': Chali>lailn (Lit. C01.) J31mes C. priest of the Hartlford arch~ioeese, who is deputy staff chaplain in charge of personnel at USARV (U.S. Army in Republic of Vietnam), takes a full schedule of pastoral work on weekends. Here Father Carroll gives Communion to Col. James '\'. Graham 0:£ Minnetonka, Minn. commander of Special -Troops 8Jt USARV Head quarters. A senior paratrooper, Col. Graham was once pro fessor of military science at St. Thomas Academy, St. Paul, Minn. NC Photo.' C~m'en,
Father
~~~sbur9h
Name~
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SCUTH BEND (NC)'-Fathel' Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.. president of the University o1l No{]l'€ Dame, has annOunced the 3veintment of Phm]} J. Faccendlll of LaGrange, TIl., as his speciall assistant. Father Hesburgh said Fae cenda -u.-uI work wrincipalIy witl::: the university's board o:li true tees and the acl.vi'sory council:!} asseciated with each of the UI1: dergraduate colleges, the law schOOl and the library. Notre Dame's government Wall reorganized May 5 when a boarw of tFustees consisting of 30 lay ID€ f i and seven Holy CroS5 -priesteassmned virtually aU ~~L'S for operation of the uni ,,€ l 'Sity. F.acccnda Is a partner in ~ Chica-go law firm. He is chail1man. of the board! of the MURFAft. C~ratIoII.
PatlIei' Hesburgh also a~ nounccd' that the university aoe. its Aluoni Association- have e~ t2.bIisfied an endowed schola1' sluI} in tIl.e nam~ of Jam~s E. Armstrong, executive secretary o~ the association, who· is retirinG Aug, I.
ed. "We may not avoid discussion of the sources @f faith - the Scriptures and t.radition - we must seek agreement on the questions of sin and justification. The Church and its governance demands answers from the pro moters of true unity," the arch bishop said. "It will, of course, be legiti
mate to paper over the cracks
of custom and merely ecclesi
astical law and precedents. But
it would ·be self-delusion if we
were to use t.hat method with
the chasms which separate us
on certain questions of faith.
.. :Prime Goa.l "The road is rough and it may well be long, .but we' must steel ourselves.to perseverl! on it to the end. Even though the need for Christian unity is urgent in our dangerous world, it would be better if we keep unity in doc trinal essentials as our prime goal," he said. "Meanwhile, we may de "outly hope that the followers of the Prince .of Peace may be able to exert the powerful in fluence of charity nn n world tornassunder. Toy hate. "Charity' is nourished by pray er, that interior prayer which makes man an intimate of God. Men of true prayer will draw closer together under the in spiration of God. Our only hope of union comes lIlot from our selves, but from God and His grace. God is with the melll who pray. 'Wherever two or three are gathered together in ' My :Name there am 1 in the midst of them'," the archbishop declared.
P,iests' Senate SCRANTON (NC)-Bishop :r. Carron McCormick of Scranton has announced. Dlat a senate of priests will be established in the diocese. Beforlll setting up the Dew I1tructure, priests of the di ocese will be poUed OIl their views about formation. fJIl. the &EV. JOHN &. BA.EJL
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lMl\fACUIl.ATE CONCI:PTION, TAUNTON New IWly Name Society offi cers are Louis Dupont, president; Joseph Andrade, vice-president; William Anger, secretlllry; James Cunningham, treasurer.
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Thanks to improved thi",-wonins~~otion one:£: intle:vior de~i9n6 lJl1loderUll refrigerators store more food~ '-
Not many people' alive today can recall the time when familyf'ood was stored in a bulky wooden box, cooled by huge cakes of melting ice. The electric refrigerator has become the "old faithful" membP.r- of ine major appltance family. ~Over 99.5% of all wired hemes have them.) As with any daily necessity, however, we're inclined to .take the re;. frigerator for granted. Unless you've bought a new oVie within, the last wuple years, you're probably unware of how much "Ole] Faithful" has ehanged ! Automatic ice-makers, more interi~r lights, automatic tlefrosting, but ter oonditioners and ingenious Q(c)0.Jr-stoJrage sheLves, are just a :few of the added features f~un~ if! nwdern, 1967, refrigerators.,
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18
,Cites Problems Of Colleges'
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall' River-Thurs. June 22, 1967
Smorgo~lbord
On
of Comments
R®ce®U1t Articles,lEw®nts
By Msgr. GeOrge G. Higgins
(IDirectoll", Social AcUmn Dept., NCWC)
Washington had an unusually cool Spring this year,
but reversing the eurrent advertising slogan, we are paying
for'it now--":not later. In other words, the .traditional dog
days hav,e invaded! the Potomac basin' ahead of schedule.
We have decided, the~fo.re, be 'justified" suddehly changed
to jump the gun and, III heu their tune and not only called.for
0f a serious column on a sin- unilateral U. S. intervention in
gle subject, arbitrarily to the. Israeli-Arab war but ~ven
advance the date of lOur annual w~~ht IS~' far as to speak of It as
mid-summer "smorgasbord of a 0 y war. '
brief miscellaReject Argument
Deou~ comments Hats off to Arthur Schlesinger
en a random Jr. and John Kenneth Galbraith
sampling of refor their courage in refusing to
ient statements run with the pack. While I don't
art i c I e s and agree with them completely on
events. 1. First the issue of Vietnam, I must say
of all then we that I admire their consistency.
should lik~ to 3. A recent article in the
WITHOUT A COUNTRY: Refugees of Arab-Israeli announce that Christian Century argued that fighting now number 1,300,OOO--more than half of them Fact magazine prayers at public events should has been awardbe universal - i.e., that they children too young to remember how the dispute started. ed the annual should not have a Protestant, Through Catholic Near East Welfare Association, New Yardstick t r o - , Catholic or Jewish identity. The York' the Holy Father's Pontifical Mission for Palestine phy for the worst article pub- editors of the Century reject that assists in educating these yo~ngst~rs to live full and re lished in any American maga- argument; so does Archbishop
warding lives. NC Photo.
zine during the past 12 months. Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta; so The article is entitled, "The De- do I.
cline and Imminent Fall of the I agree with the Archbishop
Roman Catholic Empire. when he says that "prayer should
Its author Paul Johnson, re- have its roots in the conscience, «:eive~ a su~plementary award not in the consensus" and with PowedlL!l~ mnstrul1\7U~ll'Ilt of Communication, (known as the "Whose-Ox-Is- the editors of the Century when Being-Gored-medal) for sheer, they say that "all prayer is lan P'lI'ofessor Theologians unadulterated inconsistency, po- guage of a particular community, ,,' litely known as ambivalence. fashio~~d and shaped by its erstressed there are opportunities SOUTH BEND (NC)-An au Sees No Hope perience." thority on communications told too for the church. Mr. JOhnson, who is identified Price Tag "Words when spoken are pow a forum of Protestant, Catholic erful instruments of communica , by his editors a~ a "student of 4. Related to this matter of and Orthodox theologians, dis religion (sic!), sees absolutely no "conscience" versus "consensus" cussing common approaches to tion," he said, "but people in this day consider words as just words hope for the Catholic Clnurch un- as the root of public prayer is a evangelism, that society is re ' less ,and until Pope Paul VI 'abdi- gr.owing tendency on the part of turning to the "spoken word" as and without meaning." (Cates and unless and until the some Catholics (and, needless to primary communication. Father Ong urged churchmen headquarters of the Church are add, of some Protestants.. and to "study the media as much as "And evangelism is communi moved out of Rome lock, stock Jews) to attach a kind of price cating with people," said Father you can" to see what applica and barrel and relocated in, "a tag to their involvement in ecu tions can be made by the church Walter J. Ong, English profes country (possibly Holland) more menical or interreligious dia of oral, electronic communica sor at St. LouiS University. suited to the climate of discus- logue. A single example from tion advances. The day's sessions of the Na Ilion." the Catholic side of the fence tional Faith and Order, Collo illustrating the "power of the Mr. Johnson complains'that will suffice to illustrate the point quium, convened' June lIto 16 at spoken word," Father On'g said the Church "is a pure autocracy . I trying to make. he'believes that as long as l>eople the Center for Continuing Educa in which the principle of limit"~ recently received, a .lengthy tion of the University of Notre keep talking they will not fight. less authoJ:ity is enshrined in a , ~d;, rather ,patr~mizing' letter Dame, featured Roman Catholic . He· said men. cannot be totally single individual." " from a Brooklynite - who had speakers. hostile when ~hey are re<:ogn~z~ " On the other' hand, without read that I was scheduled to ing each other as persona , Earlier in the day, the theolo batting an eyelash, he then goes speak at a Catholic-Jewish dia through exchange of speecb. OIl 'to say, apropos of Cardinal logu~ in his city ~ reminding me gians, representing 27 Protestant denominations, the Greek Ortho Spellman's recent' statements on in no uncertain terms that I had the war 'in Vietnam that "a an obligation, as a Catholic dox Church, and the Roman Con~ge to Operate Caiholic Church, hear~ Father Strong Pope like Innocent III 'priest, to demand,' as a quid-pro Kentucky Seminary would have stripped Spellman of quo for my involvement' in 'the Joseph P .. Fitzpatrick"S,J" Ford his cardinal's robes, 'relieved him dialogue, that the Jewish panici':' ham University,sociologist, out LOUISVILLE (NC) ' l - Bellar line the effects of culture on mIne College, a Catholic men's of his archdiocese, and dis- pants come out against the so patched him to a monastery, to called Blaine Amendment and iri evangelism and faith. college here, will start 'opei'ating live his remaining years in con-' fa'vor of public funds' 'for pari>the" St. Thomas Seminary of tlie· Presents Problems templation arid: penitence.", cIlial schools. Father Ong said the. world is' Louisville" arclldiocese begin j . ' LO~ic, of. Doves Compro~ise CODvicti~IU!, becoming increasingly oriented ning ~ith the 1967-68 academie ;,::Ii 2:' 'It would' be hard to match I ~ld him, in" my reply, that I -to oral communication, as it was year. '. that,for.ambivalence, but some wOuld have nothing .but con prior to the invention of writing . Administrators of both iniJtitu ; Of'the "doves" who clamored for tempt for any Jew' would He warned church leaders that tions reason that operation of the unilateral U. S. intervention in cllImge or remain silent about,his the trend present~ problems, ~ut seminary' will, through sharing the Israeli-Arab war could give cMm opinion on this or a~y other ~ faculty aI\~ facilities, strength , Mr. Johnson (Paul, not'r..Yndon) siUbjectof pUblle poli~y, merely , , en the curriculum of the :Jemi . a close run for his money in thill' tOr the purpose of "buttering up" Language Institute' nary and ,afford a diversity 'of educational 'experienceS other iegard. "J1i8 Catholic'counterparts in the lece.·ves ,'Grant I 'was pro-Israel in the r~ent 'dIalogue and that: by 'the' same , wiSe riot' provided bY such an " , . , ' •war and would' have been ill f»ken, I would have notliirlg but WASHINGTC!N (NC) - The iristitutiori. ,favor, of 1:7. S. intervention as a contempt' -for any '€ a tholic' who'" American Language Institute at They, say the arrangement will , last:resort. would compromise ilis views on ~rgetown University has re- provide greater opportunity for Nevertheless I" simply can't the subject of federal aid or any eeived a $231,842 grant from the seminarians to develop" social begin to fathom the logic of some other matter of public policy just 4gency for International Devel and cultural contacts valuable to' of the more doctrinairedoveB: to please or placate his Jewisli or opment 'for continued support the future clergyman "who' must who, though they have been tell- Protestant counterparts", and/or from July 1, 1967, to June '30, " understand the milieu of whicb he is a part." " ing us for months that modem to advance the cause'of inter- 1968.' war as such (any modern war) is faith cooperation., The ALI is a division of 'the
intrinsically evil and that uni": What I was Vying to tell my university's Institute of Lan~a
lateral U. S. intervention anY-Broo~lyn ~orresponde.nt w~s ges and Linguistics and is fund
CONRAD SEGUIN where in the world can no longer t~at, In my Ju~gm~nt: Interreh- ed by AID and the State DepartBODY COMPANY" ~ous cooperatJ~n Isn t worth a ment subsidiary, the Cultural Aluminum or Steel dime an~ WIll n~ver get off and Educational Affairs Agency. Serra Officelf's the ground In the first place 944 County Street New officers of Taunton Serra if either or any of the parties The course has been set up NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Club of are Joseph C. ,Murray, _ expects the other (s) to compro- at Georgetown by the State De
WY 2-6618 president; Robert G. Funke, first mise or water down his own hon- partment to serve as an English
vice-president; Frank L. - Tosti estly held convicitions as the refresher course for foreign stu
Jr., second vice-president; David price of admission. ' dents before they begin State
...-/,.P. Schnopp, tl:lird vice-president; That's all for today. Next Department assignments. A' $15,
. Matthew F. I'vIcCarty, secretary; week, regardless of the weather, 381 grant was also awarded to Francis A. Guay, ,treasurer.. Trus we wiil be back at the old stand' ALI for a Summer workshop, tees 2" ~""eph E. Nates and with a one-shot column on a who'se participants ~ be se .John Abreu. aangle suojeci. lected by AID•
Stresses -Spoken Word Tens
am.
1,
who
ST. MARY'S· (NC)-"If Cath olic colleges and universities are to survive, they will have to face .a number of problems ranging from academic freedom to sel£ identity," said Father Charles S. Casassa, S.J., president of Loyola University of Los An geles, in the commencement ad dress at st. Mary's College of California. CCWith reports that God is dead and rumors that Catholic educa tion in the United States is dying, one may wonder whether the graduation exercises this morn ing are a commencement or a requiem," the priest stated. Included among the Catholic college problems cited by Father Casassa were academic freedom and the proliferation of too many schools of poor quality. Yet the priest expressed hope for the future. "Surely problems remain in Catholic higher educa tion," he said, "but they are being clearly identified and vig orously attacked. "In short, rumors that Catholic higher education is dying are premature; A fresh commence ment, a second spring really awaits us," he concluded.
Urge Educational TV for Two Sees CINCINNATI (NC) - Estab lishment of an instructional tele vision system for schools and in stitutions of the Cincinnati arch diocese and the Covington, Ky., diocese was urged at a special joint meeting of the boards of education of the two Sees. Father Herman H. Kenning, Cincinnati assistant superintend ent of schools, is chairman of a special educational television study committee which made the recommendation. The two boards of education will review the rec ommendation at separate meet ings . later this month. Committee members called for "Church authorities to proceed to bring such a system into ex ,istence and provide adequate support, 'publicity and encour ,agemen~."
Stays Open LANHAM (NC)-The Divine Savior Seniinary here in Mary land; scheduled to elose in .June for financial reasons, will re main open for at least one more year due to fund-raising efton. by 19Cal, citizens.' "
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19
THE ANCHORThUfs., June 22, 1967
Newark Archdiocese to Assume Operation of Private School
SUMMIT (NC) Oratory Such priests were under DO P~anning School, privately owned and 0p diocesan jurisdiction at ordina erated by II Catholic priest here, tion and were free to seek em will become part of the Newark ployment where they wished. archdiocesan school system next Wortl:l $2 IIlillioD Fall. . Oratory School, which had Father John J. Baln, OWDeJI'" been founded as a private secu CLARK (NC)-Guide1in~ and headmaster, proposed that Jar school called Carlton Acad for so-called folk Massoo the school join the archdiocesan emy in 1907, had by this time will be drawn up by thtiJ system last year. "Only eight become the property of an Ital ArchdiOCesan Commission Olil eight years ago, Father Bam ian priest whose family had pur Sacred Music. supervised the construction of & chased it for him. $1 million school plant at 0ra A workshop sponsored by the When the priest died, he left tory whose original. facilities Catholic Choir Guild has ae-. the school to Father Bain and were built in 190'7. quainted priests, teachers, prin~ five other priest members of the Speaking at graduation cere eipals and others working with faculty. Each of his colleagues monies here, Father Bain said eventually died or otherwise ·young people of the possibilitieD it would "be a real joy to see the ended his association with the of a meaningf~ liturgy for' them.. ochool fulfill its greatest poten Father F. Flusk, choir guilcl!. school, and Father Bain became tial. We have not quite been able sole owner. official, said work on the guide.. to do that on our own." lines is now in progress. In n The property is currently esti lImP4)Nnt Ad«1lntiolll letter approving the workshop mated to be worth $2 million, program, Archbishop Thomas A. Headmaster since 1944, Father and has a mortgage of $300,000, Boland of Newark pointed OUlt Bain has been named headmaster Father Bain said. that the Bishops' CommIssion ou emeritus and will remain on the Liturgical Apostolate had «:ampus lilS a student counselor. noted that various styles of music His replacement has not been ShN~J$$e§ P~H1'8~~ could be admitted to the litup named. as an aid to worship for particu lVIsgr. Joseph P. Tuite, New Serv~~e lar groups. ark archdiocesan superintendent of schools, said, "Oratory is an Goocll Taste, ll"mdence important addition to our school At the workshop, Fathel: Flus!!: ALBANY (NC)-"The big system, which includes 240 ele-' told participants that "thete are mentary schools and only '58 high question is this : do the peo.: 'some of us who will never like achools." ple of New York state want a. JPlitar Mass as well as' some Oratory currently has 180 stu to pay for part of the educa who will never like a Palestrin13 dents in grades seven through 12, Mass. This cannot be argued although it is expected that the tion of these children in nonpub witb. We must have the charity seventh and eighth grades wiD. lic schools or do they want to' of an open mind." pay for all of it in public be phased out. Archdiocesan Father Joseph Roff of :arook~ plans call for the school's enroll'; schools?" Msgr. Edgar P. McCarren put . ]Yn, who has composed two ment to reach 400 in the neal1' that question to the committee , ,Masses in the folk idiom, saId the future. on education of the New York present age i~ one of expeJ:;men.. 'On Patrimony' . Il:onstitutional convention. tation. "The age of anathemas hi Father Bain, 65 years old and Msgr. McCarren, director of over," he asserted, "We mulrt an amputee, became owner of the Research Institute for'Cath have good taste, prudence, but Oratory School through what be' .0Ilc Education, cited various not cowardice." , described as "an unusual set of programs of New York state de guitar," he added, "need P AlPAL BLESSING: Paralyzed and blind, Antonia not"The circumstances." signed "to mobilize' all of the be considered a secular in- He joined the faculty of the available resources in the local Llamas lies Ol1l a stretcher in St. Peter's Basilica as Pope strument. Remember, there was III school shortly after he was or community in order to solve Paul VI places his fingers over her eyes in a blessing time when the organ wa& prC)c> dained "on patrimony" by Bishop human problems on the commu hibited.. Why condemn th.e use during the day's general~udienc;e. N<l. Photo. Francis B. Carroll of Calgary, nity level." of an instrument when played Alberta in 1936. Examples of this effort in the m a proper manner?" In those days when priests field of education are the Re were in plentiful supply and vo gents Scholarships and the cations were not needed in many ,Sc,holar Incentive progriims, ~e: En joy Dining . dioceses, bishops would ordain saId.. .. " Pr'elate Say"s Pr.·vate e~s· .·t.·es '. D man "on patrimony", an 1Iill';;' T r " ,rangement whereby' the man;il Stabilizing lInl1nence " . , ",",1' I IN THE father would put up a sufficieilt The people' of New York must' ree to a e omm,itment sum of money to guarantee that· ,.' decide whether they also' wish .to, CINCiNNATI (NC)-T~e com..,. ,her of a' faculty who freely ac JOLLY WHALER •...e pn'est would never be a encourage voluntary effort in ed- !!IIitment of a university.' like cepts Il contract to teach at an'" , NJ .-ANP·burden to the. diocese. ucation on the elementary and .~condary levels, Msgr..McC~r:-:· 'Xavier to Christian 'humanism. institution·· Ofl higher' learning' SPOUTER INN". , ren said. does no harm to the quest for under ·these· .conditions·,'therebY . . ,'Texas P'riests Back He noted that one child in foii~ truth or to academic freedom,. limits voluntarily his' .acadeD'lic RESTAURANTS .. , ,'.. in New York state now attends a Archbishop Karl J. Alter de.., freedom SG as to bring it,in eo#, In ParochialWo,k nonpublic school. Of this group~: elared here. . fonnity with the purposeiof toe Always IFree Parking . .. institution." . ' " SAN ANTONIO (NC) ~ Two 88 per cent are enrolled il/1 Cath.., He spoke· at· Xavier Univei sity's 129th commencement exerAeademicf 'Freedom ,priests suspended in -May bj- . olic schools. Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of Msgr. McCarren called' paro- eises at which .1,048 degrees were "Ordin'arily;" he continued, San Antonio ~ter they had erit.- ehial schools 'H a stabilizing influ conferred. . . . "there should 'be no conflict ~n· icized the archbishop in a news- .ence on the neighborhood." ,.~, . respect to' academic freedpm un paper interview, and subsequentHe said: "When. the 'ileighbor-"Every .private institution of der there circumstances; nor will ]y reinstated, have been trans- . hood 'starts' to change, some par- higher learning should be free there be' atly restriction in the ferred to new assignments. ents of white parochial' children' ,to choose. its: own specified goals pursuit of' knowledge' and in the" Father Lawrence Murtagh was BeeJn to lag behind the general and make Jts own commitment to acquisition "of truth, as' lOng' as"
granted a six-year leave of ab'- exodus; the local public school a system· of education which will neither' the 'histitution'''rior ariy , " .Prescriptioris called for sence, at his request, to work'm . ,rapidly becomes almost· com'" enable' it to achieve its declared of its faculty, trespass Upon one'"
.. and delivered":" O! mission parish in the Cuerna-' , pletely non-white while the pa and distinctive purpose," Arch-" another's 'rights 'and dutie~~ ., ...
LOFT . ,. vacii diocese in Mexico. He had: rochial school becomes relatively bishop Alter said. '. . "Truth is: one and irid'ivisibl~, ~ ;"'/.'" CHOCQJ.I\TES been spending his Summers dO- ' balanced and integrated;" ..' He asserted that Hevery mem-' and theie"can tIe no conflict De:':' 600 Cottage St. 994-7,439 ing missionary work there.. The education specialist, who "tween 1he'word 'of "God;"iightly ..... New Bedford' .. Father Donald Heffernan wlis . for. many years was sch601 su~. .... ' Y k 0 d· ., understood," and· the word 61 d' . permtendent for some" 90,000 "ew·, 'or r .nary.. , : science,' rigoroUsly limited toi'ts ft8me an assIstant pastor lD Vie-: Catholi t d ts ..lD thOeI d'lOcese .'. own' ·coinrie......ne·e," he sta·te·d. ; .. toria Tex · , · · C s u en t .' , " . , ' ·of Rockville Centre en' Long ree S" erv.cemen, Therebas"been an'aC'iidemic Three other pnests, ~amed m. Island, noted the contributions" RocitVILlLE 'CENTRE (NC)·fr~do~ 'conttoversy at 'hearby" ~ ~e~r 'SY:::I~~~c the newspaper intervIew ~ of private schools tc. the state.' After' announcing . that he Umvel'Slty of 'Dayton "recentlY'.· !Ill manill" lIcposi~ requircll not quoted-have also been trans He said their survival is an im-, ':WOuld send' 's note of'greetings' A . fact-finding 'co~ission ap...... ferred: Father. Maurice Dillane to. portant question Kor all citizens 10 members of the diocese now' pomted· 'by' 'ArchbIshop Alter tr= n.tf\ OJ.. a INVESTMENt Pleasanton, Father Marvin Diel!' of New York. serving in Vietnam in' conjunc-' supported char"es by philo.sophy . .J) 0 VI!<lJ -;0 vear SAVINGS fler to Seguin, and Father Jolm with Masses (lor peace held professors that some of thel~ ~oltion lIlI IIav notice I'Gr tViilldrawal ~o~o~~~:~~~ce~. in the 8a1lI "Holuu Cr""'...... F..... &.IL ... ,.... throughout, the diocese, Bishop leagues had a~voca~ed ~OSltlO~S" F ""'''''''' "'" n ll1I""u Walter P. Kellenburg received contrary· to (l,lthohc faIth and (0 v:ar Scho.@~. more than 775 letters of grati morals. NOTRE lDAlVlE (NC) _ The tude from families of service-' PAVLA TrainDffil9 B@S)$ WASHINGTON (NC) -More lIndiana Province of the Priests men. 09. Holy Cross dedded to discon The letters told stories of sons, than 50 lay men and women Clillll\ S~WD01l®~ ~@Hrnk didates for the Pape1 Volunteern tinue operation of the 115~year- husbands and nephews serving trJ,~l1tfu 1$11 AAl!llilJ
for Latin America (PAVLA) ond Holy Cross High School Sem~' in Vietnam, ·and enclosed their will errive here Sunday to begim intary here this month (June) . . . .present addresses. Bishop KelWe fPltlIy i~e ~ostltllge
preparation for their assignments The decision reached at a pro- lenburg wrote to the soldiers and vincial chapter meeting followed said: "This friendly greeting is in Latin America. The volunteer «> OOUTH YARMOImI S HYANNIS candidates will live, study and 11 decision to concentrate voca- my way of letting you know !' YARMDUTH ·SIIOPPING PLAZA tien recJ11iting 'efforts hi the l~te that your bishop, your diocese work In the community for m weeks. They will also do field high school, eollege Il!ld post and your loved ones are think- ,. . • DnNlS PORT • OSTE~VIW " eollep . . . . . ~ of you and praying for you." wwk. "~I
Newark
Rules to Guide Folk MO$ses
Sclh@ols
Q
To Commu[l1ity
No F
Bar. ,to Truth M k C
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New ,Bedford Hotel
.LARIVI ERE'S ... , Pharmacy"
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20
TV Network-
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., June' 22, 1967
Rep~w h2'
Four Texas Unoversities Are ito Comprise New Closed Educational System in Fall
Detroit
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[P@[f)®rf
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DALLAS (NC)-The University of Dallas, conducted by the Dallas-Fort Worth diocese, will cooperate with other Texas uni versities in establishment of an educational television network. The microwave television sys tem, which will he operational in' September, will consist initially of a pilot ,installation linking the" University of Dallas, the South-' west Center for Advanced Studies. Southern Methodi;Jt
DETROIT (NC)-Leaders (j)f the Michigan State Senate and House of Representa tives have ,'joined in a ,bi partisan response to an editorial in the Detroit Free Pre,s which
opposed state aid to pri vate and parochial schools. The editorial by John Mill bone, Free Press chief editorial wdter, suggested that recent ed lllcational provisions passed by the Senate and' Holtse had breached the "wall of sellaration" between church and state and threatened the continu~d exis tence of puolic schools. ' Millhone' said the legislators had acted because of undue pl'es l1ure brought by ,·spokesmen for Catholic education and such . ~roups as Citizens for Educa tional Freedom. , 'Near Unanimii" The response to' the Fl'ee Press editorial was signed hy Emil Lockwood, Senate major~ty lead ~r; Raymon~ Dzenq.zel" Senate minority leader; Robert E. Wal dron, Speaker of the House' of Representatives and William Ryan, House democrati!: leader. .JI'he Democratic and Republi ~an leaders of both Houses said in their foint letter on the con . troversial issue of church-state relations in' education: "John Millhone's editorial op posing aid to students attending private colleges and schools fails to report on the near'unan imity of the state Legislature on this issue. "We believe the Legislature is Q:ommitted to the concepC that all <children should be treated equal-' By and without discl'imination with regard to public welfare benefits in education. TIle over whelming bi-partisan support re <cei ved by each of the acts to which Mr. Millhone' refers make this point entirely clear." Cite Record The legislators then.noted that the 1963 Bus Bill' was adopted by a vote of 90 to 9 in the House, and 33 to 1 in the Senate; that the 1964 Scholarship BJtIl, pl'O viding aid for all students in ail <colleges, was adopted without a dissenting vote; the 1965 Auxil iary, Services Bill providing as sistance to handicapped children on an equal basis in all schools,' was adopted in the Hou 3e 90 to 9 a nd in the Senate 33 to 1; and that the 1966 College Tuition Grant Bill was enacted in the ,.JI0use 84 to 17, and in the Sen ate 27 to 4. "In this current session of the H 0 use of Representatives, amendments which will provide for participation of non-public schopl children along with pub lic school children in vocational .educational centers, transporta tion to these centers, and psycho logical services all passed by the same great majority," they said. Absolute Necessity "Bipartisan leadersh!'p has ad vanced on the belief that every dollar invested in Ollr youth is a dollar invested in the future of our nation - that these dollars should be invested without dis el'imination of race, color or ereed-and that religion should not obscure the questions of pub lic services involved in provid ing for the relevant need!s of all school children," the legislators continued. "We do not believe that these bills endanger the wall of sep aration between ch'urch and state, but rather have advanced the principle of freedom of choice in education and substan tially assisted in pel'petuating a non-public sector of education," they sp"
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University, and Texas Christilllll University. The academic network will ~ closed-circuit television to make the strengths of each institutiolm available to the others. Course offerings will be at the graduate level in science and engineering, in the beginning, but eventually will embrace tb~ social sciences and the humani ties.
ECUMENICAL PROGRAM: "Team Approach" to heal the sick is part of a six-week "intenlship" program at Lutheran ,Genet'al Hospital, Park Ridge, Ill. Admiring a new arrival there is Mrs. Clare Doud, ·RN., head of the nursery staff and Father Albert o.l;:th, S.V.D.,~me of six' Divine Word Missionaries from Techny, Ill., engaged in the 9uccessful ecumenical training program' there. NC Photo.. ~ng
p'ri,est-Interns .',
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Newly Ordained Missioners' Enrolled
In Lutheran Hospital Trainong
TECHNY (NC)-Six newly or dained Society of the Divine Word priests in a six-week "in terneship" program at Lutheran' General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., learned the "team approach" to healing the sick. Completing their formal sem inary training at Techny, ,the "priest-interns" have brought a new concept to service outside the seminary and established a precedent in Catholic-Lutheran relationships. They were the first group of Catholic priests to be enrolled in Lutheran General's Clinical Pas toral education program directed by Rev. Lawrence Holst, head of the hospital's Pastoral Care de partment. ''The presence of the priests in our' program has been very helpful to us' in at least two ways,". said Pastor Holst. '''First, it has deepened our ministry to the Catholic patients in our hos pital; secondly, it has brought our Lutheran chaplains jnto a closer personal relationship with our brethren, of the Catholic faith. '
human reiationships. I feel that I have benefited a great deal by the fact that several people have shared themselves with me." The priest-interns spent two week periods in the hospital's medical, surgical, orthopedic, and psychiatric set"vices; the duties varying with the clinical de mands on those services. For the most part their minis try was to' Roman Catholic pa tients; but in many ways they were regarded as a part of the hospital's pastoral care depart ment and occasionally were called up to minister to nonCatholic patients as weli. '
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"We have come to see ip this -. short time how much we can give to and receive from each other personally and professionally. Institutionally and personally it has been one of our most re warding experiences at Lutheran General's "over-all" approach to modern h01lpital techniques; the study and treatment of the total human being as he stands in dy namic relationship to his total environment. Father John Bergin, S.V.D., of Beaver Dam, Wis., describing the effectiveness of the program: "My experience at Lutheran General has been a deep; per sonal realization of the value of
SULPICIAN: Rev. Paul P. Purta, S.S., has been elected Awarded Solver S~1Oi1l' , to head the Sulpician Fa thers in the U.S. in the first' FARMINGTON (NC)-Father such election in the 'history Rene Luedee, C.P., a Connecticut Passionist priest, has been award of the society. The 40 year ed the Silver Star for heroism ol<l native of Scranton has while serving as an Army chap been sei'ving as rector of St. lain with the First Brigade, of t,he 26th Infantry Division in Patrick's Seminary, Menlo "Hetnam. Park, Calif. NC Photo.
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