06.30.66

Page 1

The ANCHOR

fall R~ver, Mass., Thursday,. J~Uie 30, 1966

Vol. 10, N@.

~6

©

1966 The Anchor

$4.00 per Year PRICE 10c

O'rdin~\lgon of New Bedford Jesuit ~n Belgium July 30 Rev. Mr. A. Paul Paradis, S.J" son of Mrs. A:fltoinette BLESSING OF FLEET IN PR9VINCETOWN: Rev. Leo J,. Duart, pastor of St. (¥eJletier) Paradis and the late ROland A. Para,dis of 170. Betel' the, Apostle Church, PrOVincetown, arrives at MacMillan Wharf for the 19th annual Rivet Street, New Bedford, will be ordained'to the priest-' blessing of the fishing fleet. Many visitors were in the Cape town ,for this religious event. hood in the Society of Jesus on Saturday, July 30, by Bishop Charles-Marie Him­ " '~ . mel', 'Bishop' of Tournai, in , ~/II/1II/1ItIIIll/lIllIllHIt/lIllItHIllItItItUIllItI/lI,"IIIlIIIItIllIIt"ltltltlllmllttltllltlllll1IiIltlllltltlllltlllllllltltttlltllllltltlltll/llllltllllllllttlllltllilltilltlllltlllttllllllllili111111111'!!: the chapel of the College St.

Michel in Brussels, Belgium.

He ,will offer his first Mass on the following day in the col­

lege chapel, at which he will be

joined by his brother, Very

Rev. Donald L. Paradis, M.S.,

superior and director of the

La Saletce Shrine in Attleboro,'

Mass. '

After attending St. Anne's Gt'ammal' School' and St. An­ thony's High, School, New Bed­ ford, upon graduation in '1952 he studied for a year at Boston College and then entered the Jesuit novitiate at Shadow­ brook in Lenox, Mass. in 1953, . New Berlford Catholics will join their Orthodox, Protestant and Jewish' brethren at where he spent two years of 7 Sunday night, July 3 in a community-wide joint worship service at Keith Junior High noviceship. When Shadowb~ook was entirely destroyed by fire School Auditorium. Ina letter sent to area clergy by members of an ecumenical dialogue in March of i956, Rev. Mr. , group which has been meeting in New Bedford for the past six months, program organizers Paradis continued his studies in s,tat~d: "We think that the "With, this ,duaJ purpose in iI', procession at the beginning Turn to Page Fifteea . Rev. Mr. Paradis time has come' for 'us to dem­ mind we are planning a com- and end of the service, said the onsfrate our faith.' in God munity-wide -joint 'worship' ser- ,organizer. In keeping with the vice' in 'which we 'hope all' the patriotic and religious theme' clergy and laity of each church' of the occasion,the processional' . . , ' ,Almighty God as we celebrate and synagogue will participate." hymn will be "The Battle HYI11D , Participating clergy will walk, Turn to Page Five Independence Day? .

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!~ew Bedford to Conduct ~

:;;

Joint Worship Sunday

All-Faith Service At Keith Junior High School

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Bishop Gerrard, Msgr. Gallagher To Participate

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:;

Observe "Third Ann:iversary' ~sn:ti~~~:~nn~~t'us,'io~tl:~~=, Of Pope Pau'I's Coronation'

WASHINGTON (NC)-"Like the first' Paul ,traveling ft foot to the ends of the earth, Pope Paul VI. has gone as a humble pilgrim carrying the plea of Christ to awaken the hearts of men everywhere. Through all the ,ages that iieparate the two Pauls, ' Hierarchy, Fall River Brownsville Shepherd nothing alters their eternal energy, his courage, his gentle· ness,' his humility, is surely what, In TV Talk on Farm Folk in Attendance message of peace for man is needed in our age." Bishop' '

ttu-ough the reign of God." McDonald said. "To spread the ,At Enthronement

Labor Compl~ints In these words, Bishop Wil- word of God, St. Paul too trav· Bam i McDonald, rector of the eled thol'sands of miles, more At Mass' concelebrated with his Administrator, diocesan consultors and Chancellor, J€ atholic University of America, than, 3000 on foot and almost Most Reverend Humberto S. Medeiros, S.T.D., former Chancellor of the'Fall River Diocese tbaract~rjzed the reign of Pope 10,000 aboard ship, and nothing Paul VI at a pontifical Mass in nature, nor anything man and former pastor of St. Micha,el's Church, Fall River, was formally installed yesterday as s~ond Bishop of this southernmost diocese in the United States by Most Reverend Robert today at the National Shrine of ,Turn to Page Eleven Ute Immaculate Conception. E. Lucey, S.T.D., Archbishop The M.;;tss, commemorating the of San Antonio. The Mass third anniversary of Pope Paul's and installation in historic <coronation, was offered by Arch­ Immaculate Conception Ca­ bishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apos­ thedral were witnesed by 13 tolic Delegate in the United Pope Paul accepted the decision of the Vatican Council Fathers who asked him to Bishops, including the Most States. ''The icdomitable spirit of St. deal with the birth control issue personally. In this manner, the issue was taken from Reverend James i.. Connolly, ~ul' with 'his idealism, his the near public debates, where misunderstanding could so easily, be created, and given D.D., Bishop of Fall River, 'who instead to a more specialized group. The Holy F'ather took this 'request more seriousl~r and consecrated his former Chan­ cellor in Fall River on June 9. appointed a commission of . Also attending was the Most Jnternational experts-laity it complement it, the clamor of by the Creator and confirmed Reverend Estanislao Alcaraz and clergy-which beo-an to ·overpopulation, the true pur- by Christ. Figueroa, Bishop of Matamoros, <:! poses of marriage as envisaged sift the facts concerning th'e The secret findings have been Mexico, which adjoins Browns­ Sister Therese of the Child modern "need" for birth control IIt11tlllll/llllllllllltlllllllltllllllltlllllllllllltllllllllltlrnt turned over to the special "inner ville, just a bridge away, across the Rio Grande River. cabinet" that was especially ap­ and its permissiveness' along­ oYf>SUS, O.C.D., superior at Christ Special guests at the Cathe­ side the doctrines of the Cath()erucificd and Our Lady Media­ Summer Schedule pointed by the Pope. This group of 15 Cardinals and Bishops re­ dral were 40 members-cl~rgy kix Monastery, Dartmouth, ex­ The Anchor publishes ·today

viewed the findings of the ex­ and laity-fl'om the Fall River tends an invitation to priests, He Church. The experts studied the many the, Sum fit er sc.hedules of perts, and, witnessing the teach­ Diocese, including Bishop Me­ sisters and laity to visit the na­ ings of the Church, made its deiros' ilister, Mrs. Natalie Souza Masses and other devotions

tion's newest Carmel and first problems involved: just what is the natural law (the order estab­ in ,churches in the Cape Cod

own recommendations. and his two brothers, Leonel lin the Diocese this weekend. lished by the Creator),' does area, Martha's Vineyard and

His Emminence, Octavio Car­ and Manuel. , Visiting on Saturday and Sun­ birth control actually clash with dinal OHaviani, will formally Nantucket Islands. See page 4.

Bishop Medeiros was wel... day will be from 9 in the morn­ ing ~ntil 6 in the evening. , TUln to Page Five Turn to Page Fifteelll tnis divIne expression Or does Uti 111111 lit IIIII 1111111 1I111f11111111111 111111 I11111111 III IIIII11IU

~:ishop'

Pope $tudies ,Birth

Medei:ros ,Takes Over'See'

Control~eport

Carmel Invites All to Visit

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'THE ANCHOR-D'iOeese of Fan River-Thurs. June 30~ J9~ •

1

.

,Statue ,feHon'or

·Portuguese

1966· Christl'mal's. Postage: Starn,p '. ". To Feature M~donrnQ8 Child!

He~,o

, LISBON (NC)-A statue t.\on­ oling Blessed' Nuno Alvares de Pereira, a national, hero, will be erected here.

The statue, by Leopolda. de

.. .AJ.'meida, is: now being. cast in bronze 3t Oporto, and shows

Blessed Nuno· on horseback as

he led his armies: against. the Spanish at AI1'.lbarrota in 1385.

Blesse.:Ii Nuno was born near Lisbon in 136Q:. He mmied at the age of' 17 and when he was 23' was put in command of. the . armed forces of Portugal. His . ,forces helped overcome'· the . . armies o.f Castile and establis11eO ~the country as a sovereign iitate. .:iln Ji422, after. his· wj,f~~: had died, he entered a Carnl~lite friary ttat. he had found~d.· He died there as a lay brothev Nov. '.: 6, 1431. The ruins of the f~;aEY ehmch, parliaHy. destroyet.'!- in the. earthquake of 1755~ ':stil! standi in t.he ce.ntez· of Lisbon. .

15th century Flemish pa~ting

"Madonna and Child with An­

geIs." now part of' the Mellon ~l1eetion in the National Gat..·

lery of' Art here,.

This is the fifth in the series of ChristInas .stamps issued by

the U. S'. The first, in 1962, was of "secular design" and featured, a hony wreath surrounded 'by two burning tapers'. Though the department received' some'~plrotests on' Church-State,g'l;oundll, it proved a "best-seller;" The Itl63 Christmas stamp de."; FRIDAY-M0st precious Blood picted "the Christmas tree on the of Ou't" Lord Jesus christ. I White HotlSe lawn and .In 1'964 Class. Red. Mess Pl"oper; Glory s:ymbols associated' with .the' Creed; Preface. of the HolY . Christmas. season--holIY" mistle­ Cross. Votive Mass in, honor toe,. poiinsetta a~d pine.. c~ne-of the Sacred Heart .of JesuS . wer~ used:. . .. not PHmitted, Tomorrow is, The· 1965· design: featured the the .first Saturday of the: . weathenane: and': Archangel: month. . Gabriel blowing his, tnmipet,. as: SATURDAY-Visitation of the. it appears: atol'l' the lPeople?$ B}ess~ Virgin Mary. H Class. Methodist· ehurch in Newl!lUli'Y­ White. Mass proper;' Glory; JFAiL RiVER PARISH AWARDS: Rt. ·:Rev. Arth ttl' Fa port, 'M2ss., the. first. .definitely '. 2nd Player SS Processus and "religious theme" on a 0. S. Tansey, pastor the Jmmaculate C0neeption C]mreh, Fall .. ' NEW ORLEANS ~C)-Arcll~ Martini anus, Martyrs; Creed;, Christmas postage stamp. River;. congratulates Richard Wiles and J(}yce ][lIe Man&,l:lfsPltilJ!' Il'hiJIfp M .. Hannan has an.. Pieface 'of Blessed' Virgin. <Entirely Appropriate' SUNDAY-V Sunday after Pen­ winriers' of nigh 'scnool schoTarshipstn.~t were Hponsored' UQtlnti:ed that. he will assign Re­ . . M . Ii'gious to various hurricane The design for thel966 Christ­ tecost. II Class. Green. Mass \>y. ;the parish Women's Guild under- the l'eadeFS'hi l!> of rS. . shelter staffs in southeast Louis.. Proper~ Glory;. Creed; Preface:. mas postage stamp\. Postmasteil' iana. O'Brien said, "W<lO: unanimously George Charbonneau, president. of Trinity. Sisters and! Brothe:£ll of the lVIONDP_Y-Mass of previous rE!.CIilmmended to me by the Ci1i­ archtfi0~se willi work in the' SWlday. IV Class. Green. Mass. zens'o Stamp Advisory Commit.. shelters: und'er an emerl6enCi:Jl" Proper; No Glory or Creed; tee. an~ is entirely appropriate' Jllrognam developed! by the· to the spirit of Christmas and at Common Preface. Americall1 . Redl Ooss to .be .clU~ the same time will be a minia:" TUESDAY-St, Anthony' Mary in, m effecdl in tIb.e: \i!lvenll of huJlri­ Zaccaria,. Confessor; III Class. ture' reproductioi! of an·. out­ «anes~ White. Mass Preper; Glory; DO standing worn of art.'" MOire th::m 400 nuns comlilre~ Creed; Common Preface. Aeeording . to the NatianaJi WEDNESDAY-Mass of pre­ Gallery of Art's description of NEW YORK (NC).- Two S. Hamj.ItOiJ~ ""ho are mem1:lem mst aid. and! shelta ~na~· inenfl. fZC!luses: giiWD ~ t'he Red! vious. Sunday, IV Class. Green. the POrtiOD of the painting that € a thEllic biShOps andi'Six' priests ol the ecumenism commission. Mass Proper: No. Glory or will be reproduced Iiln the ,stamp; were pre:;ent in the sanctuary as MsgIr; Charles; E~ J!)iVlmey, vieall' Cross; dUring- the past :m,ve € r eed' Common Preface. "The ViJ,.gin, in a blue-green. the.. new 'Episcopal- bishop of general', and' l\fsgr. 1i'hemas' G. months;. Ct1leJr nuns had ~aliIeIli THURSDAY-SS.. CYl'H Q1:)d re8Je and. red mantle, is seated! Loog Isl;mdl was' inducted' into BageFily repl'estmtecll J!lrchbishop. tbe ~ pre:v:fousl1y,. and at'­ r.lngemeIl1ls: aJIe beii:lg mad'e 1_ Methodius, Bishop~ and Con­ _on a J."e~ canopied throne. She effiee.' Sryanti J. MeEhtegarli. Catholie ltimmu" «Otmlli!S loJ" BrotbeFs; fessors. IV Class. White. Mass holds in her lap the Infant" . ..mae, ~tltho}ic delegation took bishop of Broolrliyn. l\(l!Sgr, Hag­ Proper; GiorY;lIG Creed': Christ' woo with·' - one hand Red! Cross: dfiefah rer;ro~ part in the procession and wit- erty ig, pastor of st. Saviours Common PrE-face. One Votive to~c~es the page of a mi~sal:" nessediJ:le:.cel.'emonies as. the Rt. Churcl'l\ l1b'CIlOkl~·n and! a membett tbat d:wrfug 1lIu:lmi~e BetsY' last Mass' In honor of Jesus. Christ, : Septem1llel". ReI:igi~us proved! •. :Rev. JOrr.Ithan Goodh,ue Sherman ol the di'.OftS3n ecumenism <rem.:. the Et~nal' High Priest pep- . be sta.bltW'Eg faetQllS: iD' she1teq, Colf.eg' liI~me the: Episcopal bishep. ie! mission. Jl'irsfj TiiDe: mitted. . . and m~. ftIlteJi& Jl...GlI'" Island! iD' the Episcojjlal (KloIrY; 2nd J!>rayer ss: eyriE Cat~al of: the Incarnation. in At a pl"ess,-eron£el'enc:e fallow­ and Methodius'" DQ Cl'eed· J:.OS ANGELES (NCh-Come-' Garden City, Long Island.,. ing the ceremonies'. Bisl'.top 5116:He~tel!. . .. Comm~n Prefac~. '. . • .. ., . ' ." . ..' man said"as' far as !'le-'was aware; eian :Bo~ Hape received the mst. BishapWalte.r p~. Kenn~nbei:g it marked'tlie fusJt 1iime in this. DUBLINi tNC}J. Maitannlll Face;"" i.n Terris: aw-.· p'.Ji'e.sented..', A" Roct~nll'e C"'ntre headed' the . . . "'. "~"". ... . ' . country whenCatholie Bishons " House, a hostel. fo.r .t'eenag. e . . Ne~rotp9Y ,.' 9'y Imm:.'a Culate Hearl Co};ll>de· at .·.O.~·· Cath li'~' gl."oup """Lers', included! t' -' "-"'u.. .,. . and priests .were 'present"in the.···· . 'gjcls has bee.n open.ed.. helle. n • ViiIcent ~ ·dinne." h"'~e. e"'-bra"'-'" the A ux""" ~"a"" BI·sho ;S JULY' a ··oT • • "" ......., . . . . . sanct'....."".. -I"' ~lidJ,'an -iSCtil~;;,l! ''l1be: hostel, which, bas; a~ilemo-· ofth.It;' iDst1tu'~: 'D. }'''''''';'n. ""'ft"" ,," chard' 'Iffi. JI "U.'","'" ~~ ....11' JI'4"'" '. Qti'ODS~ fol" 18 girlS,. , wil] be· 50th. aru:w..·veJ!S~l1v. Rev. Edwaro. 'J.. Murphy., Hl~!7r, . tion.' . J ." . .Ji>a.I.•,~·_~, ."""..... "'" .. ' .. , " ceremtilnY.'· Pastor, St. Mary Fall RivlilF. . -Hanley,.ehaiJrm:<m 01 the diocesan . Bishop 'SherOlan,' whose die>. u'ndertbe care of th~. l!)isten JULY II) HE)JjIe. w2Si elwsen fait ~distrin.,. ecumenism commission _and edi-. cese eGve:rsi the~ same:' tet'Iritory;' (ill' .CDw lLad31" of Cha.rf1JJr'. . ' Rev. Pie "Marie' Berard,. 0.1'.,. guished service in the pursuit of" tor of the Long Island C~tholic~ as the _Catholic dioceses ·of. " .'.. . 1938, Dl,minican Priory, Fall freedom dnd peace." diocesan newspaper; Msgr. John . R.o' Meqa1;1D,.secre.tary ·~o. ia.ishop, BroeltlW;l! and! ReekviJIDe: eente~,: lRiver. Sister Mary William, pre·sidentl-·, d Jil 1ih elur' tolds: I!l~wsmen, ecumerusm QJl., I , .1UL~ U,. . of the e~llege conduct~d by the . KeI:leaDI1r g" an a, em;., '!5- . Long Island, is; makinig speed(y ,Rev.. NlCholas Fett,' S5.ce., Immaeul!ate Heart. of Ma"" nu"""'. ,ttilpR€ ' l' 1ilW!ltj,ngton aIld Jl)ame! ~" -. prog'lTcss>. II fUNERALKOME 1938, Pastor., st. Boniface, New characterized the entedainer as . \ He said' the l!'ai1th 'and' Order Bedford. . .46i LOC.UST STDET ' "a com.lp.1ttcd human being." ~ Dame: Committee of. the Nassau County Rev. Edmund; :1. Neenan., .];949\ sai(:F tMt despite the n ; l t i o n ' S o , Couricir 01' Chu,tl'Cl'tes;, c)f whi~' 1lW.. RiVER; ~s~ Assistant, Sacred Heart, Gak vast flrall'l:uilizer industry; ~'there·Re,s.um,e: Names he is' a member; 133$ been meet­ :Bluffs. [ OS 2'-3G8'11 are. so few ingredients .·~n our MONTREAL (NC).-The Sis- iog reglTlarIY fuE the ~~ast. year ~pec;l-QP world which .serve to 1leJ!$ oft1le,CeE1'fD!egatioIb.of Notre with the' R&ckvi'~ Centre ecru,.. [WilfNd! C~ James E: relax us that, I think, we can Dame ~·m resume the use of menfsm commiSSlToD. snsmn! Su~Yan" l)l1tllpedy call Mr. Hope.. seare& the!!' Illapusmal! . aDd! famiJiy I>UNKlRK (NC')-"'Fbe first natienal.. n s w . r c e . . . · Dame'S>. ecumernca] flag ~ in Cflatl­ The· 'oBtiler' waS founded· Deft 1auql1a County" was: blelisedat ia. 1653· .md., since 1698' members Holy Cross Seminary of the- ,tOftS; I w~re given 3 . religious Aame~ unero'! HotlYfe'

Passioni.it J'atheEs heJi'e in New.

Since a 1962 meeting of the C9m- .

li'aaer.aI II......, York. The 55-foot pole w~: o 57.1· SeCCl)I~' Stlreet f. munity's general' counci-!l new deseribed that way by FattleJp sAN· FRANCISC0 (He) ( UBI IdJeud S&'Jrt>etl membeuS1 have wtainedJ their !Fall ,R:i,veli,r 'Vi(,tGl' ~. »anovan" C.P~, Holly The at'cllmocese. o£ San. Jllranei&­ Saul Rfver~ . •" " € r oss rectol1, because the pole eo is prE-paring too apply .to the &WD names. 9-6072

The dectision for all of the or;' . OS,2..·2391,· was donated by a Catholic,. the .'. Federal Communications, tom.­ MiCHAEl!. JI. McMAHON,

dus' a,800 SiSteJ!S: tb:rougbout flag by an Episcopalian and *be . missi'cm for permission 'to con­ Boat! E. Sulllya licensed! Fune'lfa~ BBedor'

mylon £oPe by a. Jew.•, . struct 'lit instructional'televisioD, the W€lrJ:d! te resUDIt use of bap­ Y.. ffloQ." E~. SuDlv.aia. tismal! m.Q flumry' names: foL­ Register.edl IErnitaln'.e" system fin- the four eaun,ties. 01' lowed a llecent meeting; between the arcmdiocese~ Pope' Paul' Vl and Mother 8t: If permission is granted, the ~ FORTY H'OURS

first 9hase 011' thP.· program willi Helena d,u Sacre Coe.ur, supellior be . a one-channel' operatio~ gene~al.· DEVOTfON:

Four channels are being applied. for and will eventually be pUt . July 3-0ur Lady' of the Assumption' COsterviHe,.· to use. I . July 10-8t. Hyacinth, New The 2,560 megiicycle. system I ......... INiIf"

will enable the archdioCese to, - PUJMBIN.G 8: HEll" nU~ .... ~ Bedford. beam its own. programs. to, the, I '.. foiOomes.tic St. Mary, So.. l!>artmoutb special receiver sets; in the 142. ~J1nd·. Industri3! . l8atholic elementary and, sectI' sales, and, ServICe.' TIlE. ARCHOIr· ondary schools in the' foW' coun' I 611 .BurnerS Second, Class. Postage· PlIIlt. at Fall' flIvef ties, as well a.. to colleges. hosWy. 5-1i631: '53: ~M'ashi'n9,f~n'S~reettr Fai'rhaven Mas~. ~bllshet every Thursday. at 416; Wv, pitals, eCl!) classes, and'teacher 22Sa ACUSlrill'll:li AVEIl-U:m I II:!> G Mi6hlano. Avenue.... Fall. Rive". Mass., 02722: Illy the" Catholic I'l'ess CIt tlte· Diocese of Fan· .. training centers parish churches, NEW BEDFORD '. ,mCllnl 4-5.u5vi

WASHINGTON (NC) - Foy . the first time in the history of the U. S. Post Office Department. a postage stamp will depict the Madonna. and Child. In announcing the design of the 1966 Christmas postage. stamp, Postmaster General Lawrenee F. O'Brien said the fivecent vertical stamp will feature. 2 five-color repruduction. of the <central· part of Hans Memling's' ..

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Religious Receive: w. Shelter T in,ing

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Catholics

.Prelates, Priests Present Slone,tuory Fer' E'piscopalian Ceremon,

les Angefes e' Kenors. Bob, Hope

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Supreme Pontiff Continu'es Effort For World Peace VATICAN CITY(N~ ­ Stope Paul VI is determined to press his thus-far fruit­ .ss campaign for a nego­ 'Wated settlement of the war in ~etnam.

Holy Cross Brother Outstanding 'Mathem~tics Student in Massachusetts Colleges By Dorothy Eastman

Each June the HarV'ard Graduate School of Education gives 25 prize awards in the f.i-elds of _mathematics and science education. to outstanding graduates of colleges aU over the country. Each of the 1,100 colleges and universities offering· programs in mathe­ matics and science education' is asked to nominate its outstanding student in these subjects. The awards are chosen from among these' students. Their primary pur­ pose is to identify and give

, He said that although his 'sug­ neutral arbitration of the war have not been 8UC­ eesiful; "we are not on this ac­ eount disheartened in the pursuit suitable recognition to the most Of our efforts." , . , The Pope declared that Soviet promJsillg seniors of the 20,000 enrolled in programs o~ mathe-. I'oreign Minister Andrei Gr<t­ Ibyko's visit to him had kept matics and science education in the nation. Open a p.1th to further negotia­ - This year the award for the tions on peace and religious free';' .outstanding student from .a Mas~ dom. ' sachusetts college was given to The PoPe was speaking to car­ $nals who had come on their Brother' William Collins; C.S.C., who graduated this month from ~arly ~ongratulatory visit for Iris feast day, the birthday of Stonehill . College, magna cum laude.. St. John the Baptist. Having completed his course Church Problems He touched briefly on the ~ork at S~onehill in January, prospect for and problems in the Brother William has been on the ehurch itself, and then iaunched teaching staff at Msgr. Coyle into a detailed survey of the High School in Taunton since problems of peace in the world. the beginning of 1966. He He spoke first of' Vietnam, teaches science and advanced math to juniors and seniors. then of Burma, India and Pakis­ Many Awards tan, the Dominican Republic, Brother William was the top Haiti, Cyprus, Poland, Yugosla­ via and the African continent, ranking· student in his graduat­ mentioning Rhodesia by name. . ing class at Stonehill, and he received, besides the Harvard Vietnam, he said, is "tor­ mented by a conflict and by Award, the Cardinal Cushing struggles that make it suffer Medal" the 'award for the top greatly_ Clnd seem to have no ranking science graduate and the Phil'J,::ophy Medal. end." He continued: Recipients of the Harvard "With the worsening of the, Prize Awards are eligible for situation and the terrible pros­ pect of a possible extension of admission to Harvard's Master the conflict, the demands of our . of Arts in Teaching Program. apostolic ministry have spurred They are given by Harvard, in us to strive in every way, even conjunction with the National Science Foundation, a $4,600 blazing !leW trails, that a solu­ tion may be sought and achieved grant for one year of study at through frank and 'honorabie Harvard. Brother William, how:' ever, has not accepted the Har­ negotiations." . vard study grant because his 'Meeting of Minds' superiors feel that several years He recalled that he had made of classroom experience would llllreiterated appeals both publie be more valuable to him before and private" for peace in Viet­ he begins full time graduate nam and had left no stone un­ BROTHER WILLIAM COLLINS, C.S.C. study. turned "to hasten the meeting of De"n's List Student minds." He also recalled Ilis At Coyle this year the young The Holy Cross Order has an Brother' William is the son of proposal for a Christmas truce ambitious program for its teach­ Mr. and Mrs. William K. Collins Brother, who is as affable as he and' his hopes that it would be ing brothers, according to Jr., now of Elnora, N. Y. He IS brilliant, was active in the not ~nly prolonged but would. Brother William, aiming at gradschool's extra-curricular'activ­ graduated in 1961 from Vincen­ ~rve as "a base for launching . uate study in the summer' tian . Institute, a high school ities - coaching the freshman peace negotiations." months- for as many Brothers as operated by the Holy Cross baseball team and serving as' He indicated that he had chan­ possible. At the present time "'Broothers and the Sisters of assistant band director.llar­ Dell~d his suggestions for nell­ vard's loss is Coyle's gain, for he over 120 Brothers from the East­ Mercy in Albany. Upon gradu­ traL .arbitration in Vietnam ern Province alone are att~ndirig ation he entered the Holy Cross will retum to the Taunton school ~rough the United NationS: Summer graduate schools. He Order and spent a year in the in the ~'all. ' "Trusting once more iIi the work: himself will spend the summer novitiate at Valatie, N. Y. -From <Jf the United Nations-of that at Notre Dame University where there he enrolled in Stonehill. organization that works for he will begin a program leading Ends Tenure At Stonehill he was on the peace and in the 20 'years of its flo a master's degree in physics. DUBUQUE (NC)-Msgr. Dor­ Dean's List for four years. He CtXistence has prevented so many A native of Albany, N. Y., belonged to the Math Club and rance V. Foley has resigned as ~n~licts and settled so many wrote for Cairn, the college lit- president of Loras College after qth~rs .:..... we thought it' good 10 11 10-year tenure. He. has been "erary ao.nual. ~gge~~. ~r~i.t~a~ion, 10 be' confi­ Double Golden appointed. pastor of St. Patrick'ji dent in neutral nations, for parish here. . ., ttaci.fi~. solution of 'the grave ,Jubilee Ceremony CYO Elects problem." . . WASHINGTON (NC) - Two STOWE (NC) -'Maybe he .sisters will mark a combined century of religious life in a didn't write "My Old' Kentucky Vot~ Aid to Publicu double golden jubilee ceremony Home" or "Camptown Races," .: Just :Across The here Wednesday. The sisters, , but this Stephen Foster got him­ ,Private Colleges s~lf electe4 president of the' C~ggeshall St. Bridge both marking their 50th year in TRENTON (NC) - A. biU New England Congress of Cath­ .' Fairhaven, Mass. ~stablishing an' independent the daughters 'of Charity, are olic Youth and Young Adults. Sister Scholastica Fey, station"ed. state' authority for the purpose Finest Variety of The son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell of building facilities atpublie at De Paul Hospital, Norfolk; Va. Foster of Manchester, N. H., he SEAFOOD and Sister Bertilla Fey of the' and, private colleges and Uni­ will be a senior come Septem':" Served A.nywhere -Also versities in New Jersey has U.S. Soldiers' Home here. ber at Manchester Central Hig~ They have three other sisters School, STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN passed the Assembly by a 54-2 who are members of the Daugh­ vote. ters of Charity. A sixth sister, . The measure previously pass­ ed the Senate and now goes to now deceased, was also a mem­ 21 DAY PILGRIMAGIES TO EUROPE Go~. Richard J. Hughes, who' ber of the community, as· was is expected to sign it. Gov. their mother, who, after becom-, Tour I-legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept. 12th with Father Edward Hughes made creation of such ing a widow, lived in religious. A, Olivi~ra will visit Killarney Dublin, Paris, lourdes, Rome, Madrid, lisgon life from 1933 until her' death in a~d Fatima. Tour 2~Holy Cross Fathers. Pilgrimage leaving Oct. 10th, ~n authority a campaign pledge 1954. With Father. Robert E. McDonnell will visit· lisbon, Fatima, Madrid, Rome, in his successful bid for re­ lourdes, Paris and london. Total cost is $829.00-Time Payments arranged. <lliection last Fall. The bill calls for establish­ For '(our folders contact Trains Teachers ment of a seven-member New STIEIPHIEN A. MARKEY .Jersey Education Facilities PONCE (NC) - A teacher­ Authority, which would float' training program designed to bonds to finance the construc­ aid the mentally retarded hase tion of dormitories and cafe­ been launched here by the terias at state institutions, and Catholic. University of Puerto these facilities as well as class­ Rico at Ponce 'under the direc­ 28 Bullock St., New Bedford, Mass. 02740 rooms and other types of build­ tion of Ji'ather William F. Jenks, ,Washington, D.G., . , u.. ._....:. , ..!l ings" at private jnstitutiQUSo " ,. ~stionsfor

a Pla'n

(ASA BLAN(A

Catholic Travel Office

~.s.S.~"

,p'~

THE ANCHORThurs., June 30, 1966

3

Minister Lauds Unity Workshop ST. LOUIS (NC)-The only official representative of a major Protestant body to attend the National Workshop on Christian Unity here expressed surprise and optimism _over its proceedings. The Rp.v. John T. Middaugh of Baltimore, a delegate of the United Presbyterian Church, said the workshop was yet an­ other reflection of what Protes­ tants see 'as a "wholly new church" that started with the Second Vatican Council. "Hp.re, I am fiI-iding that Roman Catholic scholars are able to examine sacramental' principles and concepts that have been unexamined for a long time," Dr. Middaugh said. . "What is .more, there is a willingness to, listen," "It is meetings like this," he said, "that show an openness to talk about fundamental issues and not spend time quibbling about the significance of the rosary or novenas." Dr. Midduagh has been en­ gaged in ecumenical and inter­ faith civil· rights actiV:ities. in Baltimore for the past several years.

c(!Jltrrn©~nc Ciull21W>~@Dns

E·8<ec:t T~xas ~li'Be~t

CLEVELAND (NC) ~ Father John W. Mullally, Yorktown. Tex., was elected chairman at the National Association of Cath­ olic Chaplains' first national convention .here. The chaplains met in Cleveland Convention Center in conjunc­ tion with the Catholic Hospital Association convention. Father Raymond Bobber, O. F.M., director of the Veterans Administration Chaplains School, Jefferson Barracks, Mo:, was elected secretary. Both were chosen for two-year terms.

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4

Prisorlaers Graduate

THE ANCHOR-DiOCese of' Fall River-Thurs. June 30, 1946

Schedule for Summer Season ASSONET. ST. BERNARD'~ lI6asses: Sunday~7, 8:3{), 10:30 A.M.

First Fridays-Evening Mass 5:30 :P.M. Holydays--8:30 A.M.-7:30 P.M. Confessions before every Mass

BREWSTER OUR LADY OF TIllE CAPE

lIIasses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30,11:30 A.M., and- 5:00 P..M. DaHy-8:00 A.M.

eenfessions: Sat. 4-5 and 7-8 P.M.

EAST BREWSTER 1~IMAelJLATE CONCEPTION n.'l'asses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M.

Cenfessions: 7-8 on Saturday

BUZZARDS BAY ST. l\IARGARET':' Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12 noon-7:3IJ P.M:. Daiiy-7:00 AM.

ONSET ST. MARY-STAR OF THE SEA Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, '11:30 Daily-8:00 A.M.

CENTERVJLLE OUR LADY OF VICTORY "asses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 Daily-7:00 A.M.

WEST BARNSTABLE OUR LADY OF HOPE 1IIasses: Sunday-'-lI:30, 10:38­

CENTRAL VaEllA~E ST: JOHN THE Bl\PTIST Jilasses: Slinday- 7:30,8:30, :9:30 aAd 5:4MlP.II. . Daily-3:00 AM: 'First Friday-8:00 A.M.; 5:30 P.M. ST, JOHN THE BAPTIST HAL'" Masses: SUnday-8:30" 9:30, 10:30 A.M.

CHATHAM HOLY ltEDEEMER Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:00, ]f):00, 11:00, 12:00 'Daily·-7 :30 AM.

'Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.II. Daily-8:00 AM.

EAST FALMOUTH ST.ANTHON'l'

Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, H):OO, 11:00, 12 noon. 5:0tl P.M. Daily 7:00, 8:00 A.M. c.m.H!ssi()ns Every ~aturday: 4-5 and 7-1)-- P.M.

,"It

EAST FREETOWN

CATHEDRAL € A MP LADY 6F THE ASSUMPTION CHAPBL Masses: Sunday-7:3O, 9:00, HI:OO, 11:416 ,Daily 5:00 P~M. until (:amp sea_ 4)IleRS. ~ssions !>efore every Mass and Saturday ,evening

FALMOUTH' ST. PATRICK llIaBses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:90, H):09, 11:00, _ 12 noon

Daily-7:00 A.M.

,\tiraeulous Medal Novena.: Monda-y-7:34) P.:M Benediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

FALMOUTH HEIGHTS ST. THOMAS CHAPEL alasses: Sunday-6:1S, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 11:00 DailY-78:OO A.M. Benediction: 8:00 P.M. Sunday

OUR LADY STAR OF THJE SEA

Masses: Sunday-6:90,.8:00, 9:00, 10:30.

Daily-7:30 AM.

Benediction: Sunday-6:30

EDGARTOWN ST: ELIZABETH Masses: Sunday-6:45, -9:00

ORLEANS

ST. JOAN OF ARC CHlJRCH

Summer Masses at Orleans Theatre Masses: Slinday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00

- Daily-7:30 A.M.

Saturday Confessions--4-5 and 7:30-8:30 P.M.

.

.

NORTH EASTHAM-

CIlIURCIIJ[ OF THE VllSJrnATllON

Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30

Confessions-7:30-8:30 P.M. Saturdays

NO

SANTUIT ST. -JUDE'S CHAPEL . Masses: Sunday---':8:00, "9,:00, 10:30, 12:00 Holy Day-'8:OO, 10:00 A I

,rVlEASLES .NEXT

nOOn

·9OPPONESSH

"'~EAR:

OOMMtJ-Nft'Y COmB Masses: Stmdar~7:oo,~:OO,'9~,.'10:00,11:00 A.M. Holy Day-7:OO.. ~:OO,&:OO A.M.

fiE MOLY FATH. . . . . . . . . AM,- YG

.

PROVINCETOWN ST. PETEIl TIlE APOSTLE

Masses:

S\Hlday~7:OO,

a:oo."9:oo,.

SANDW1CH

WHAT MEDICIIIES DO IN

THE

HANDS

SAGAMORE

OF PRIESTS AND SISTERS

ST.THERES~~

CHURCH Masses: Sun<!a:r-6:30; ~'30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 ConfessiOJis: ~aturday 4:W-S:OO cl!>d 7:30-8:30 P.M.

SACRED HEART Masses: Slinday-9:00, 10:00 Confessions: Saturday-7:30-8:30 P.M. -

MAnAPOISETl ST.· ANTHONY

Masses: Sunday-6:00, 7:00,8:00, 9:fl9, 10:00, 11:00, . -5:00 P.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. ,ROl."TE , DAMJEN COUNCIL, K OF C HALL Masses: Sunday-9:30 and 10:36 A.M.

NANTUCKET OUIt LADY OF THE ISLE Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,. A.M. 5:00 P.M. Daily-7:00, 8:00 A.M. Benediction-Sunday eveniGg at 7:30 P.1I4.

Here's' your chance to give them III hand.... Mark yeur gift "lepers" in any amount ($I.00D, $500, $250, $100, $50, $25, $15, $8.50)" and mail it today in thanks thafyOU .... ' well. The victims )'ClU help witl pray for you, and God wi II hear N!eir fWayefS.

SOUTH DARlMOUTH . S'r: MARY , M1lsses: Sunday-7~, 8:00, ~:OO, 10:00, 11:00, 12 110011, 7:30 ·P.M. , Daily-7'OO A.M. ~nd 8:00 A.M. on SatunJay

=

can

fJMldic:ines !willi:. peeple dose to God? ••'. TheAl ""as 'net eM CathOOc in the viffap ,ef, Wirur, northern Jmtia. wilen, native Sisters . , GIVE the Destitute opened a' Iittfe clinic there. LHt YOURSELF Christmas 40 HinElus were baptized•••• The A village 'lOW has 11 priEst and two catec"ist., IMt« un they are Iillin~ ina shed. $800 wit! build a Muse for aJI thfee, and ontv $1,800 wiD build • per... , manent chapel~ ,Give the house or chapel ~ both) if! yetlr leYed ~' memory, in hoRor .; your favoffte ~aiflt? Have a share in the joy ., defng gclOd!,

SOUTH YARMOU:r.K ST; PIUS'TENTH Masses: Sunday-,7:00. ~:OO,~:OO, 10:15, 11:30 A.M:. Daily-7:00 A.M.

BASSlIlVER TH~,HlGHWAY.

Masses:' Sunday-7:3Q, 8:30, 9:30,10:30,.11:30 A.M­ , Daily-unsc!leduled

=

VINEYAID HAVEN ST:-AUGUSTINE' Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:15, 10:30 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. Rosary and Benediction of the B~ssed Sacrament on Sunday, evening at 7:00 P.M· Confessions: Saturday-9:30-10:30 A.M., 4:30-5:30 :P.M~ 7:30~8:30 P.M.­

.we ask :Y9U \9 fur@Jve YS fer the wastefulneM of peoll~e &f' wealth, Archbishop Herm&nt& Schaufele of Freillurg (Germany) told 8 gat~ jog of g.'H'b~li!e -and trash collectors. • • • HftP much food and clething do you waste in a Only $35; will buy a plow for a hungry farmer illl India, giving his family twice as much fClCld.

A PRlVATE

yea,'

THOUGHT

C

ST.

PATRICK Masses: Sunday~ 7:00, 8:00, -9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12:00 noon and 7:30P.M. Daily~7:f)O A.M. Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Novena Monday-7:30 P-!'l.

Bequests_ made for oUr "£9/llorate purpoS&s" win, be us~d 1for the peor ,where needed most. OUr legal title; CAT~IL£ NEAR EAST WELFARE Ii....

MAKING A

WILl!

CIATION• .

~

WEST WAREHAM ST. ANTHONY Masses: Sunday- 8:30, 9:30, 10:30 A.M. Daily-to. be announced

N=: .

--~-~----~-----~~~

• " fIlliP ENCLOSUI ·"UASe:.

$

CO _

FOR-

Please

,ebtrn coupon

MARION

ST. RITA

Masses: Sunday-7:00 8:30, 10:00 and 5:00 Daily-tEl De announced'

with your

'STREET

offering

P.M~

CITY

_ _ _ STAn:_ _ z,p COD'&'f

i

"ME CATHDLlC .".AA .AST WELFARE AS.DCIAn • •

WElLREET

0111t LADY OF LOURDES

Masses: Sunday'-7:00, 8:00; 9:00, l():OO, 11:00

Daily-7:30 A.M.'

NEAR EAST MII$SIONS

TRURO SACRED IlIEART Masses: Sunday-8:00, 10:00 '

Daily-8:00 A.M.

fRANCfS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Presfdenll MOOR. JOHN G. NOLAN, Nation~1 Secreiary Write: CIITHOUC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoe. 330' Madison Avenue-New York, N.Y. 10017 IeJephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840,

NORTH TRURO

OlJR LADY OF PERPETlJAL HELP

Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, -9:30, 10:30, 11:30 KM. Daily-8:00 A.M. Turn to Page Five

n .V"l~"l~ ;"";'~:'~~t ~ 11..~.,~~,11tl(;~''li (~i!fJ~u~~n;'~t.f; fIl~(d~,.,!'tl''!':l''.~~)

DIIIENTAI. CHU•••

enough~

POCASSET ST. JOHN'S CHtJRCIB Masses: Sunday- 7:00, a:30, 11:30,'10:30, 11:30 Daily 7:30 AM. (as ;)f July 4) Ceniessions: ~akur-day-4:0()-5:00and 7:30-8:30 P.M.

c)'llt LADY OF

.,...

'Rel'TIeIITIber WheR yeu h8c1' measles . . • ehJW

Well, the Public HeaHh- ser:vic:e pre«f'lCts ~ measles will " Marly, eradicated from mest areas of ,the 1:1. S. A. in 1967, since' some 12 million American cmldrett are now wceina\e48 against the msease. tt's a triumph for mode'l9 medicine. • • • Mt'allwhile, in torrid soutM,. "ndia our flati¥e priests and Sisters are usiRif medicine with sreat success to fight Hansen's diseas-e (lepr~sy). The wortd has 15 millioll lepers, and only $8.50 will buy 10,000 Dapsone 'miracl'e' tablets (enough for 43 lepers fOr one year). Still, our priests and Sisters never have

1-0:00, 11:00

~.M., :&:00 P.M.

OORPUS CHRISTI CHURCllI ' Masses: SUlld~y-7:00, 1l:00,9:~. 10:00 A.M. Daily-7:30 A:M. Confessions: S3turday-4:00-5:00 afJd 7:30-'8:30_ P.M. First Thursday 7'SCHl:% P.M. .

'

WAREKAM

YARMOUTHPORT

., t..

-

OSTlERVDLLE OUR lLADY OF TillE ASSUMrTION ,- Masses: Sunday,,:",,6:00; 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11,00 AM. and 5:30 P.M. Daily-7:00, 8:00 AM. Holydays-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 and 5:'30 P.M

.' - HYANNiS ST'FRANCIS XAV'ER Masses: ,Sunday- 6:00, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12:00 A.M. and 5:06 P.M. Daily-7:00 8:00 A.M. First Friday-7:00, , 8:00 and 5:30 P.M. Holydays-7:00, 8:00, 12:10, 5:30, 7:3{) Cenfessions-4-5:30 and 7:30-9:00 Saturdays, 1st

Thursday and 'before Holyday.

...jJ jJ1!ll! )1$111"(t(·!t W~! ,-, ~w:~u~~~ t~~ tn !t.il'm ~ n f~' ~;,

comes down to this- 110 Y6e PROVIDENCE (NC) -- Msgr. Dafliel P. Reilly, has spoken at mature and live maturel3/," IDtl many commencements, but the told the prisoners. scene looked a bit different He defined maturity as ll' when he mounted the :rostrum "sense E'f responsibility whim fiere recently. The band, played makes you realize that you must jazz, the graduatoes WOrtl white - stand on your own two feei shirtsopt'n at the neck, and the and face life and its problems." doors were bolted. with concern for others. J! ~eans "being able to eonbo! 'The chancenorof the PTovi­ your temper, your spirit of ag­ eenee ~iocese was about to give . the -graduation address to pris­ gressiveness " . . being flexible, oners of the AduU COrrtlcyonal adaptable." Institute. Later, the prisoner-graduates' "Thank God for the J1ife He , ate cake and drank coffee with members of their familieS. WbeD has given you and ask for the day was done, the relatives B'e­ oourage to live it, and live it turned })( me and the prisonel'll wen," Msgr. Reilly sa.id. "I think the whole problem went back to their cells.

OAK BLUFFS.

SOUTH CHATHAM O(TR LADY OF GRACE

Proyidenlce Dioces, Chancellor SlPeaks A~t ConectionaB Institute

SIASCONSET, MASS. COMMUNITY CHAPElL Masses: Sunday-8:15 A.M.

.. J ..... ~ ..

~~,...

...

~ .....' ...... =0.,.

I.

i


THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 30, 1966

190th - Independence Anniversary

Recalls Charles Carroll's Words

luly 4, 1966 ·will marls: ~ lOOth anniversary of the "unani~ lJD()US" adoption of the Declara­ lito« of Independence by the 4Jcmtinental "C:»ngress of the U United States of America,­ lIIleeting at the State House 1ft Philadelphia, now known as independence Hall. Recurrence of the ~nniversary l!'eCalls an impressive "supple­ mentary declaration" which Charles Carroll of Carrolltown, Md., the only _Catholic signer, wrote on the 50th anniversal'y <af the day he affixed his signa­ Ilttce to the document. In 1777, the first anniversary of Mte Declaration passed unno­ Mced. The war situation was not 'rery encouraging for the Ameri­ a:ans. By June of 1778, matters Jaad so improved that Congress erdered July 4 b be celebrated liS a holiday, and so it has beel\ ~ch year since 1778. 'S upplemental Declaration' Some historians have thought that the date of July 4 was llu'ematUl:e, that the anniversary should be on Aug. 2, the date Qbat most of the 56 delegates Iiligned the engrossed copy &f the immortal document. Others, including delegate lelm Adams thought that .Jul¥ Z should be the .day t& he "0I01emnized," for. on that ,gate iifi 1776, Congress had passed' a llleriOlutien affirm~ng that the litates w~ "independent &f the Jll'iti~ C~wn.H

.

" · ·.ssou',. M

Priest's EHort Gets Infamous Dachau 'Name Changed

0n the occasion of the Wth anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, SPRINGFIELD (NC)-A per­ Aug. 2, 1826, its last surviving suasive Ozark Mountains priest signer-Charles Carroll; a close single-handedly has wiped oot friend of Gen. Washington penn­ tbe infamous name of Dachau. ed a "supplemental declaration." Due to his efforts the site of An official delegation from the the former Nazi concentration City of New York, who visited camp, now (l)ccupied by U.S. the vene!"able patrGit six years troops, has been renamed East­ before his death, requested a man Barracks. statement from him. He wrote: But many will remember the "Grateful to Almighty God name of Dachau and its evil for the blessings which through stench in the World War II days Jesus Christ our Lord, He has of nazi persecution. conferren on my beloved coun­ It was this stigma, which try in :ler emancipation, and prompted Father Leo W. Nugent, JOHN CARR<@LJL on myself in permitting me, pastor of Sacred Heart church, urider circumstances of mercy Conway, Mo., to wonder why to live to the age of 'eighty-nine the 'name was retained after the years and to survive the fiftieth war when the U. S. Army took year of American Independence, over the site as a training area. and certify by my present si.g­ It was 21 years ago this Spring nature my approbation of the 'The ~all River Lions Club is that 30,000 surviving inmates of Declaration of Independence,' adopted by Congress on the urging the churches to ring their the Dachau camp were freed by bells on Independence Day to American troops. fourth c.f July, 1776, which I Father Nugent, director of the remind people of those who originally subscribed on the second day of August of the lived an~l died to make this Bureau of Infonnation for the same year, and of which laIn country free, and who resolved Springfield-Cape Girardeau dio­ now the last surviving signel'; with cour2.ge and determination cese, visited the camp last Octo­ to keep it free and make it ber. He said the name offended I do hereby recommend to the him and no ready explanation pl'esent and future generations greater. waS offered why it was still th.e principles of that important During the first hundred years used. He said he got the impres-' docume~t as the best earthly in­ of the naHon's life, bell-ringing sion that those .stationed there ,lleritance their anc;:estors could . was the standaI1d way Gf cele­ would welcome a change. When bequeath to them and pray that brating bdependence Day. Few the civil and. religious :·liberties communities . hsve continued . the' priest returned home; he they have secured te my ·ceUR­ . the prat::tlce-B=istGl, has done went to work fee the name change. try may be pe~uated te re­ so since liSS.M attempt is be­ A practiced letter 'writer, motest postelit)' and extended iag made to revive this lost t& the w.hole family <Gf ma&.W kaditionthroughout the COltft­ tr.y. At 2 P.M.OD 'the Fourth 9l Continued from .Page One July, bells all 9Ve1"the- mltion­ eomed-- Sunday afternoon b,' a aAd all. cler§" ~ wiH ift­ wilt be rugg- fer foul" mmates. voke a benediction. Master of It is hoped thelecaiebu.rclles enthusiastic crGwd which gath­ &ecl- at t~ .B~u.e aH'POi"t ceremonies 101' the palgram will will join the- eitimated ~ ·as he left his Plane, e&l"r-yiRg be Rev. Albert F. SboveUon of tewns ami cities in thjs rceo:­ -1l'smail TexQIl flag .and landed st. James CbUl'eh. ninon (I{ America!s indepeRd­ fOl'the first time ee the soit eD.Ce. Music will inelude tlymDS par­ .~ his Diocese.. Tbe-eroWd was ticipated in bytbe eong.regati1Hl Radio !:lations will- broadcast tBe larg~ seen at the airport and vocal seledions by Emile the- sound of bells ami fGilOW' up siftce- its dedication m 192fl b~ . Lemoine with Edmond Des­ with the reading of. the Declara­ Cbades :A. Lindberg. Rosiers aecompanying _ tt.,e Gr-eettng.s were CJ[teRded by ·ttoB of ID1ilependence. Mgan. , Prayers requested to ask the lU. Re'V: Vic.~r W. Ralph, Repc.esentmg the four pal'tici­ G9d-'s f1treDgtbeniqg: g,Jidance . Administrator • the- BroWDS­ It~ting faiths in making prog,:am f()i" the P:residei1t asd .ail Gthers . viNe Diocese and 1t¥. ~el'Ql arrangements are Rev. Sydne.y ift positrons of leadei'Ship; aM .aftd. civic leadeFS and repre­ sentatives oi b&fR- Pretestant Adams, executive .secI'et3l"1' -ef ·authority; they .~ to- pre­ . the hIter-Churcb ,Council; Msg,r. serve .flre£:dCilm; maintain order, and- ·Jewisll· faiths. At yes(,erda:y's .IostaUatiGn; tfte aRd secure· and1mfeguarci- peace . Hugh .A. Gallagher, ·paster Gf St. . James Church; Fathei' Bebis..aftd as well as enforce .justice aad 'Most Reverend Thomas J. Drury, .:B-i s h o·p Gf Cq.rpw; Christi, Rabbi Weinberg. def~nd the natilm. preached.. The installing. Prelate, Archbishop Lucey ami Bishop Medeiros also spoke.

A reception and banquet fol­

. lowed the ,Mass and Bishop MeGeir95 spoke on Ius motto-­ ''Thy "Kingdom Come". His deep­ lYSfliritumtalkwas an- appeal f~ pe.rsonalrenewal in aH, that aH in my Diocese may eome -closer to their Father Gad, their

.New Texas 'Bishop Is Installed

Hew :Bedford Joint WO'rshipSunday Continued from Page ORe ." iRe Republic" and the re­ -. . ._al win be ''GeEI Btess • •eriea." . Openiflg prayer will1Je 0&­ , ieI'M by Bishop James ~. GeI"­ . "1"1i anel a Bible lesson wiB be Bead by Rabbi Norbert WeinDer-g , ~ Ahavatb Achim Synagogue. 4,' liIeCOnci lesson will be read DJ' Rev. Hugh McGhee of the UnieR Baptist Chureh. A litany for unity wiR"be led Sister Mary Charles Francis, •..S.M., principal of H~Fami­ IF 'High School; MT. Harele CGoper, president of the Inter­ Ch.H=ch <;ouncH; and 1IIrs. Ey­ !!lice. MeCu1Iough, president 91. tIte United Church WomeR,

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Reading the Declaration e( Independence will be MaY&r Edward F. Harrington of New Bedford. He will be feBo-wed ~ the principal speake!" aDd­ JaOteli ecumenist, Rev. 'Chules K:. VMl Euw.of St. JOOm's Sem­ Mary, Brighton. The closing prayer wiD be 01­ Iiel"eli by Rev. ConstantiDeBeblis M st. George Orthodo.: Ctnm:lt

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DAVENPORT {NC)-A raise ill salaries for Sisters %eachii1g ... schools in the diocese o&f. :Davcnperl has beeR approve« ~ Bishep Ralph L. Hayes. Sisters now receive$BD per lIllonth for '10 months, a ti)o1al !K $900 per year. Beginning lull' 1 they will receive $00 per month for 12 months. By the 1008-69 school year this wiD ge iscreased to $10tl per montk­ $1,006 per year.

brother . Christ, lovi,ag one __ &tfter in tnJe love-. RishGp' Medeiroibl'eugbt _t that tb~ Kingdom 01 ·God is a spiritual GRe aad oCanflOt ..0 should not be defined ia eHI­ mon political aad social teEM. Since his arrival in 'Br0WBll­ viUe, Bishop Medeiros bas-1ID" derstandably imp-ressed all here by .ms simplicity and w~th :and lily his determin.­ tion to ~ Father in- the ~ 0f God f-f) his flock. Already he had ca-Ueci 9D 1Ii~ people to !be brGtheTs ill CDrist inbis <'ommental'!" en- a .strike . movement involving ~rs and workers .in Starr Count)'­ 9neof the lour counties. in liis Di6cese. Bishop Medeiros- spoke 00. TV an dasked"both 9idelil· to realize that they are' brothers and must bring their differences to the judgment Gf the Lord . They must seek te settle theiT differenees in • Christ-like

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BISHOP GERRARD

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Schedule for Summer Season

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WOODS HOLE

Continued from Page Four

WIEST HARWICH lBlOLY'l'KlNllTY

masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15; 1):30, 10;<l5, 12 noon' Daily-9.:00 A.M. .

ST. JOSEPH

Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15,9:30, lUll) Daily~7:00 'A.M. Benediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

:INORTH fAIlMOUTH

DENNISPORi tJPPERCOUNTX·'aOAD OUIt LADY OF 'I'IIE ANNUNCIATION llItises: SUwiay-6;30, 1:31, .:4;;, It:OO, 11:1. Dail7~7:eoA.M.

Father Nugent began his corre­ s(..ondence at the top-tne Pres­ ident qf the United· Stat~S-aIll' carried on his campaign witl\ Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, the Department c.f the Army, the Office of the Pro­ vost Marshall General, U. S. Sens. Stuart Symington and Ed­ ward V. Long of Missouri, and Speaker of the House of Repre­ sentatives John W. McCormack an old friend from Father Nu­ gent's native South Boston. He got answers-and results. His most recent communica­ tion from t'he Office of the Pr0­ vost Marshall General's correc­ tion division starts out by say­ ing: "Today we were telephonical­ ly notified by headquarters, United States Army, Europe, that they had published a gen­ eral order redesignating Camp Dachau as Eastman Barracks." The name is in honor of Lt. Col. Tobias C. Eastman, com­ mander of the 37th Artillery Ba­ taillon, who was killed in acti_ in World War II. His widGW, Mrs. Leota T. Eastman, lives in Fryeburg, Maine. The priest said. he bas. informed Sen. Mal"­ garet Chase Smitlil of Maine that the. military installation has been renamed in memory of t..e American officer.

Urges Churches

To Ring Bells

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Masses: Slffiday-7:00,8:00, 9:00, 16:00.

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A Nation's Prayer

Profitable Summer

,Sister' of Mercy, Visits Ireland ,As J~bilaiia.n

School days are over' for a few'months. For some, they are over for good. Many a college and l1igh school graduate has taken a last look at the degree 01' ~iploma and is now taking 'more interest in the want ads - A tiny brown-e)'ed Irish ~ 'fer of Mercy is having the ti.­ $han in the sport' and· social pages of, the newspapers. of her life right now ca~chins Others are congratulating themselves on getting 'DP on 1'7 years of conv~rsatiqil through this year and now they are seeking summer' jobs. and famHy news with her ,bxooo Some high school graduates are experie'ncing a bitter -P:.ers and siste~8 In Ireland. _ knowledge-the eminent position of senior came to a c.limax is Siste!" Mary Brldgetta, ,~.S.~ who for the' past 1'1 years, ev~ .on commencement day and now, there is the let-down---':':for BiDCe her }list hip,' to the who is more insignificant -than college freshman-tO-be­ ,00d, has' been ttellghtingliflli ':4n-September. . ' ',." , . . ','. ' iii'id sixtli graders at' St. Vince. .. , Those who have been graduated, from ~leme~tary Home, Fall River: ' , , " . The trip to Ireland, -a .gift , . Schools 'are anticipating with excitemElDt, all the changes' , " .8Jster Bridgetta's golden jUbnee ,that will come with high school-a pick of subjects, bOugh't , -i4 profession, came as a complete ~nd' brought lunches, more freedom, ~hey think.: · Burprise to her. It was arra'ngeCJ Class day orators have finished saving :tlie world and " , by Rev: John P. Cronin, dire~ "marching down the road of life. " at St. Vincent's; Sister Rose de Lima, superior; and members ~ , " , The teachers are getting' a ' well-deserved rest. , St. Vincent's Alumnae .A:ss~ ,But the Summer months can serve as an invaruabie lion. Proceeds of a recent suppeJ »art of tl1e education' process. And thisfoi:' young and old at the home were earmarked fOIl 'alike. .. the trip fund 'and, eh".ckled · someone in on the secret, "Siste,. These are the months when young people should be , B~idgetta was working hardel: '~ncouraged to read all those worth-while books that they than anyone else at the supp~ ,Dever had tinie for during the' school year. And here the · without the least idea it' was fQl' emphasis is on the word "encouraged," Not ordered or her." ,

'driven but encouraged. This could even ~take the form of Aids Youth

reading aloud to the whole family. Certainly "Treasure Sister flew to Shannon ~ port, Eire, last Saturday and was , Island' read aloud for a I-alf hour or so in the evening picked Uf! Sunday by her famil-Jao 'eould be 'a source of delight for adults and children both. She'll stay in Ireland until the These are the months' when eighth-graders and those end of August, A native of C~ nima, - she's never lost ,bel' in high school should make some serious effort with proper and interested guidance to decide what profession or vo­ V ~ brogue. Before assignment to St. Vi.­ cation or work in life they are suited for and want. . By Msgr. George, G. Higgins eent's, Sister Bridgetta served (Director, SociaD Action Dept., NCWC) , , What must be considered in this regard is not the dollar in New Bedford schools, and he:r alone, but the important aspect~ of sat{sfaction in one's The Anti-Defamation League of B'~ai B'Rithhas 1'1 years at St. Vincent~s have work and happiness and, of course, salvation. ' charged the John Birch Society with "deliberate pronlOtion included two years as principal. She is devoted to her fifth anO How often it happens that the only reason a high school , of hostility" between Christians ,and Jews. ,The Le~~gue's stu'dent, can give' .for taking a certain course is that a friend general counsel, Arnold Forster, s'aid recently:, that Birch .sixth 'grnders, says Sister' Rose de Lima" and is ever ready, .. taken' the same course. High school years are not too . give them extra assistance witA ,woung to consider the future. . ~fficials ' ~ross th~ ~ountry 'for many Christians the relation-­ - school wo~k or iend a symp&o , are know:mgly tWIstmg the ship exists. '" _ These are the months' when fathers' and mothers facts" of, a study sponsored Provides Unde~tandiJlg thetic ear to their problema. should try t~ plan affairs. for the ~liole family., Th'at ~~s by the ADL and are falsely Their book, as they clearly "Many former students come ~t necessarIly mean ~amlly V'acatlOn-how many f~mlh.es ' implying that this' study ill a state in the Introduction, "is Dot , back to see her and often ~ ~nafford that?, But It could very-well mean a famIly PIC-' diatrible against church 'going. - to be read as an indictmtmt of , she's the best teacher they eVQ ' Dic or ride or outing of some sort--modest in scope 'and yet 'The sociologi" ,religion." Moreover they r,~adily had," noted Sister Rose de Lima. The superior went on -to s&J: admit that _the· good will and ~ringing all members of the f-amily togethel': in a common ~al study, Chris, serious concern .of most Chris­ , that the subject of Diocesan E. . and happy enterprise. Parents can reap'rich 'rewatds Just ' ti,~n. Belie~s. and tian leaders bas already been - glish examinations this year was . th· ' a '.zoo. ' was' Anti-Semlbsm, "My Hero." "One littre"be\9; b.y seemg eIr Ch'ld I ren 's faces . ~s,th ey a II', e~pl ore made by demonstrated; t oge th er. Wh a t be'er tt t ' t h · ' , f h , "It is not our intention," they ehose Sister Bridgetta," she co~ way, 0 gIv.e 'e experIence 0 ap- , C h a r I e s Y . , say, ''to castig~te them if' (,our) : fided. ,»iness in'the f a i n i l Y ? G l o c k and Rod­ 'findings implicate religion in The jubilarian went ofi to Summer months are called' months of recreation, and ney stark ~n-'

contemporary anti _ Semitism. · behind clad in the new habit , that is exactly what they should be-a building up of dfertthhe,&uUS~llCer~

Rather we hope to provide them · of the Sisters of Mercy. She's ··t,a d eveIopmg · I' f or t h e f'uture, a WI'den­ 0 e Califor­ mve very perceptive to change," said 0 f pans WI·th th e necessary un d erst an d ­ sity of , '~.f amI·l y ~pIn nia Survey Re­ ing to transform the churches Sister Rose de Lima, also cha... , mg of mtellectual and cultural tastes. into a rC'liable 'foree in man's acterizing Sister Bridgetta as "a struggle to free himself from retiring person who can be found They should, in fine, be profitable months without search Center

bigotry." the suggestion of pressure or strain. at Berke ley. , ,

in the chapel when she ismli , The report says that mlsappbca­ tion of, C'hristian beliefs rein­ If the Birchites don't WSlllt to OCcupied with schoolwork." forces and fosters anti-Jewish . join in this struggle, so }J,e it. A golden jubilee dinne~ ea'" . prejudice. ' But they have no bus:iness 'ier this month honored Sister , Birch officials have critjcized -spreading false impressions Bridgetta 'and among' guests 01 . Death at any time of the year is sad. Death in the the study, saying that it tells the about the-, Glock-Stark study. honor were Father Cronin; Re~ Summer seems to carry particularly tragic overtones. ' public th~t "the more time Cath­ And to imply that this study is John E. Boyd, former director Because so many Summer deaths - drownings, auto olics and Protestants spend in a diatribe against church-goiDg of St. Vincent's and now pastOl' of St. Patrick's parish,' Fall accidents, boating incidents - seem so unnecessary, the church, the' more anti-Semitie eertainiy does that. Biver; Rev. James A. Dury, also result of a carelessness that 'should have been foreseeJl their feelings are," formerly at the home; Sisters 4lII Relationship Exists and could have belm avoided. . European Rerugiou:s

:Mercy from the Provincial COUD­ "Noth1ng could be further . The day that starts out, for someone, as a v,acatioJl from the truth," Forster told a cil of the community; other Si&­ ter friends;' and members of, the er a pleasant interlude comes to a harsh close in the B'Nai B'Rith convention in New Meet in France

VERSAILLES (NC) - }i'our, laity. screech of, brakes, the gasp of panic, the merciful cu:tting ,York State a few weeks ago. , "This wa~ not a finding of the thousand members of 380 I~ur­ All were happy to wish her off of pain. , study," he' stated, "and the' opean religious communities 1>on voyage, but will be eVell Men mU'st realize that they' hav~ an obligation before League neve'r said it was." dedicated to hospital social work more pleased come August wbeD God to take proper care of their own lives and the' Jives . " Forster charged that the Birch met here' in France to diSI~U8S she returns to St. Vincent's aDd of their neighbors. Carelessness that becomes a danger Society, by its attacks on the . their adaptation in a chan~ting her special children there. study and on the ADL, is "not Church. to their life or that' of anvther is a matter of sin. Mother Guillemin, supeJrior This is a salutary thought to keep in mind through only contributing, to anti-Semit­ general of the Daughters of Spirit of Poverty

ism but is treading the path to­ the Summer. Charity, declared in her 8\Jlm­ ward the lunatic fringe." Mr. Forster's point is well, mary' of the meeting's work that CQnference Theme

ATCHISON (NC)-More thaB taken. The Glock-Stark study religious societies were never most certainly does not say that more needed than 'now, and at 150 religious superiors are con-­ "the more time Catholics and the same time needed a great vening ~t St. Benedict"s Abbey here in Kansas for the annual Protestants spend'in church, the deal themselves. She listed ed­ assembly of the Conference of more anti-Semitic their feelings ucation and adaptation to con­ Major Superiors of Men (C.M. temporary society as two im­ are." What it does say, in sum­ S,M.). mary, is that an alarmingly high mediate needs. percentage of Christians are Theme of, the ,-assembly i8 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF nile DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER caught up ,in a ·process-"ortho­ "The, S;>:rit of Poverty: Op­ Windshield Sticlkelr Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River doxy" to "particularism" to reli­ portunity for Total Service." gious bigotry-which culminates DUBLIN (NC) ~ A small Principal speaker will be Fatbel' &10 Highland Avenue' in secular anti-Semitism. windshield sticker bearing a Bernard Haring, C.SS.R., moral Fall River, M,ass. 02722 675-7151 It is important to note that white cross on a blue-green , theologian and an expert a1f PUBLISHER Glock and Stark ,do not maintain ' background' and the letters SOS 'Vatican Council II. ParticipantD Most Rev. James L. C;onnolly, D~D., PhD., , that th('re is an inexorable is seen with increasing fr,e­ in a panel discussion on religious GENERAL· MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER causal relationship ,between quency on European cars. It poverty will be Father Danielw:. Rt. R~v. Doniel' F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll Christian beliefs and anti-Semit­ means -the driver' is a Cathollic Kucera, O.s,B., Father William MANAGING EDITOR , ism. They merely say that their and in case Of accident wants' J. Fitzg,~ralil, C, SS, R., anel' Hugh J. Golden il4>ciological studies indicate that a' priest. · Brother John Donoghue, C.s.c,

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Death in Summer

@rheANCHOR

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan R1ver--Tlturs. June" . .

,Serra Spea,ker' Deplores .

Falling Vocations Rate

LOUIS (NC),~The "Golden age of vocations" to ,_, , the, priesthood in th~ United States may be coming to an end, the head of the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) told the Serra International convention

'ST.

here. Although there is a 441a~k of empirical evidence due' to the neglect of' sound research,' said Father Louis , f J. Luzbetak, S.V.D., director 0 the Washington, D.C., research center, there are many signs that "a vocation crisis similar to that in Europe may be in the , "offing in this country as' well." , '''Vocations -are fallin'g, far :' , 'behind' 'actual needs" 'almost ': "evetywhere in the world,"" he , told the cOnvention. Serra is a , 'laymen's organization ,which 1 seeks to promote vocations.: ;" , , "Vocations are not keeping up "'with "the natural population growth of Europe, while' :the rate of withdrawal from sem­ inaries ;:nakes the problem 'even more acute." And with the increasing com­ plexity of life two or more priests are often required where one was enoogh previously, he added. Although the picture in the U.S. js "confused," he said, ,gen­ eral impressions, unofficial re­ ports and some partial and'more ex less reliable Sllrveys" .seem to indicate a falling rate of VlilCatiofls. Witbdrawals Increase ' "Baltimore, an arehdiGceBe of ,some half-million Catholics, has anly IDX new priests tbis iYear. The archdiocese of Boston, with l,800,OOOCathQIies, has' onlV 31 new priests .this year, «>mpared for 1966 shows ~ost' a thousand fewer seminarians than ~e had last year," ~ -said. And, he added. stu~ ~ow .. defini,te and steady _increase ila wi~w~." " " CARA's first major research ~jeCt" he declared" wi~ be "focusea(i)1\ vocations and, 'vo­ , cati98' 'J)1'o.Mems." ' , , The {I)1.'O-ject will lieek "to, an­ swer two baSic ,questions: ,What the real situation ,~ the United 'States regarding the ,n,.wnber of 'Vocations ,awl .the rjlte 6f penerverance? What lfaclOl's are respoasib1e f.or this situation?"

Mea.niDA' of Mass

Once the answers to these questions are detennined" .he . added, more vocations CaD be 'stimulated by using the research flo guide the rect'uting ~ethods to be used. " , 'Another speaker, Father J. Edward :Duggan, Chicago ar~h­ <llocesan director of vocations, urged a professional study ta determine what values stlJdents place on priestly functil?ns. "What does the Mass really 'mean for them? U it poesn't ine~m"too much," he' said" ",t~en we are not going to, dra\y 'boys to 'the priesthood by talking 'about the priest's great power <;f saying Mass. What does'the "'forgiveness of sin mean' to ' the Gtudents? Again. if 'it" dosen'!

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Evaluates Catholic Business Education RUTHERFORD (NC)-A ,sur­ vey of business education in Catholic schools is - being con­ ducted by Sister Mary Peter, O.P., chairman of the bus~ess department of St. Mary's High School here and president of the eastern unit of the Catholic -Business Education Association. Sister Mary Peter, who 'Was asked to undertake the project by the National Catholic Edu­ cational AssociatiOn, will' ,eval­ uate course material in -light of euiTent -business needs and rec­ , ommerid revisions ,for upgrading business education ill Catholie 'schools.

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mean too nll,lch, can this pri~stly power beco~e ~ moti,ve for at­ tracting bpy's to the priesthood,.? "I'm sure 'that I was rt()t drawn to the priesthood becauSe I could be the, official minister ' in baptizing ",baties or the of­ ficial witneSs in marrying' couples," he satd. '

Serra ,President~", i,

Uloges Memb~rs

Revise Methods' " ST. LOUIS (NC) .,- The:' new president of Serra In- ,­ ternational said the organi­ mtion must update 'its 'tech­ niques and its know-how if it wishes to achieve its objectives. .... Jan M. J. Berbers, a Monte­ SERRA. TRUSTEES: Four CQuntries are represented by these new members of the video, Uruguay, textile manufac­ turer, told the convention that board of trustees of Serra Intern~tional, elected at the organization's convention in St. elected him: "We must approach , Louis. Left t<? right: Peter Conlon, Manchester, England, trustee; J. Joseph Cornish, Tor­ tbe 1966 problems with 1966' S6­ onto,Canada, trustee; J.M. Jan Berbers, Montevideo, Uruguay, new president and Rafael lutions." Ezquerro y Alvarado, Acapulco, Mexico, trostee. NC PhotoO. Berbers succeeds Joseph M. Fitzgerald of Miami, Fla., as head of the worldwide Ol'ganiza­ tion of laymen dedicated to fos­ tering vocations to the priest-' hood. " All Serrans must do their "ut­ 'most to achieve the goals -SQ 'There was a time when a clearly reassessed and renewed 'CLEVELAND (NC)-The dis-' of poSitive health through ed.u-' small community that eQuId ,f(}r us during ,this convention," , ,t.inguishing mar~s ofa Catholic 'cation, tbe provision of 01' par­ Berbers said. "We all must put hospital are a profouOd ooncem : :ticipation in education of per;' 'not (!)l' believed it could not into practice the theme of our for the 'sick, social justice, ex- sonneland in r-esearch in the finance or staff a hospital with­ GUt assistance '" .... If a town M" meetings these past days--reas- cellence, a medical moral code fieid of health." city in the United States cannot sessment, renewal and respGnsi-' and. ,universality, ,a hospital ad- '" "Justice for Personn~l bility-fOl' these are the princi- mjpistrator told. the Catholic' A Catholic hospital, she -said, , support a hospital unless it is ()JJerated by Sisters, it should palchaUenges for the coming Hospital Association's 51st aa-' '''is all of this and more." ' ' not 'build a hospital," she said. "'ear;" Berbers said. nuaf convention here., t s · I t I·";' h " Sister Mary' Brinl., admiriis' I, essentla apos 0 a"",,' s e DiviDe, Civil Law " He urged Serrabs to: Ii"< ,'said, is the "expression fiJi love", "Present always the ,right teator of St. - MaJ:y's Hospital, , for tlhe patient, which, is charac­ "We do DO kindness to a pa­ image of the priest to yOung R'0Chester, Minn., said a hospital teri~cI "by a profound concern , ,ij,ent t;o ,make it possible for him people." . ,"ism institutioofor the ,care for peopie," in both their spir- to Ige hospitalized in his bome Explaio Greatoess , '()fttie sick and injured. which "itual and physical welfare; , oommulility, even thol!gb, he , ~oyides 'facilities and ,":Sooial -J'ustiCe for persoanel, Wishes it, but deprive him 9f " "Nevel' fail " to explain to the ,~~,,,, d' . d '"t -, -' the ....". t.....~, t.Ue lagnoS1S an ,:,,'ea .....- -;d, m-ust also be ."......... o:>t. the modern effeetive treatment :rO:ungsteis the- greatness llf _I! di ...._ _.. lODC ­ .~_•• PtiesthOOd." men :..... . sea~, 14K: prom_lOll "It is not charity but rather it which he also desires." -' "Co' . .- til t the , i s inJ'usUce to dive a patient free Although all hospitals must nv,mce , vocation to theparen.... priesthoodaOf one care ()l" cut-rate care financed by, follow civil law, Catholic hospi­ Of ,their children is the greatest' "tbeu.nderpayment of personnel tals must also follow "divine law news they can ~ive in, their f"lIIIl or the rEquirement of unreason­ as it is interpreted by the cath­ llfetimes." SANi.J.tANCISCO (NC)~The ' .aWe work loads or difficult time olic Church." ','Co . te 1 to' th lIChedules," she declared. "The Catholic hospital assUmes mmumca our ove e superior general of the Sisters priest himself, so that he always ,of Charity of the Blessed VirThe tbil'd characteristic, ex­ regponsibility tor assuring to ita finds in us. laymen. a great ",gin Mary said _here that the' role ceDence, is as necessary in a patients their inherent rights to understanding friend." " of the 'm-:>dern Sister has changed Catholic hospital as in any (}thel', 'life, to the integrity of the body. '~be[s, the first presidEmt from "isolation in the class- ,she said.

and to provision for assistance io obtaining their final end, unioo from ootside the United States, to that of intense involve­ with God. All of the problems caned for more research' to ment in many areas." ' counteract rumors about whole­ '''Of oo~rse tbl're is need for " re a e rgantzes

that may arise concerning moral practice in specific situatiolUl sale withdrawals from semina­ Sisters in traditional claSs-Special Commission

have their origin in one of these ries and defections of priests. rooms," Mother Mary Consala­ trice remarked."But there is'aiso ,,' "NEWARK (NC) -Archbishop areas," she asserted. need eisewhere-in Newman work Thomas A. Boland of Newark , has organized a special nine-, Says Mexicans Feel ill ,the 'CCD, in the inner-city . member conimis'sion to instruct parish. They ai'e- n'eeded for the Clergy in the documents ot United' With Poles helping delinquents and unwed ,the Second Vatican Council. ­ , NEW YORK (NC)-Jose Car­ mot,hers, for Head Start pro­ ~dinal' Gnribi of Guadaiaj~ra, grams' and for helping people He, also announced the ap­ 'Mexico, has declared that' the 'lost/In federat housing projects." , pointment of Auxiliary Bisho~', "Mexican people feel "deeply , ,Mothet' Consolatrice gave' the :' Josep~', A. Costello as pastor !>f united" with the people of Po­ keynote address to, some ,400 st. Peter's parish in Belleville 'land during the celebration of del~gates 'attending the ~6th 'and the release of two priests 'Commercial • Industr~al

their 1.000th anniversary of biennial' convention of the Na- for missionary assignments. Institutional

Christianity. 'tional Federation of B.V.M. "Father Harvey J. Ballance waS Painting and DecOf'ating

alumni; 'released for service in the dio­ Cardinal Garibi voiced the Po­ "The authentic Sister emergcese of San Isidro, Argentina, lish-Mexican 'solidarity in a Fall River OSborne 2-1911 letter to Stefan C a l' din a I ' ing in the Church today must and Father James F. O'Brien 74 Williamson Street Wyszynski of Warsaw promising be mature, theologically up- was released for service with dated, and psychologically se- the Maryknoll Fathers. prayers for Poland in all Mexi­ can churches during the mi.lien­ . cure;" 1\1: 0 the l' Consolatrice nium. The letter.' released here said. She is not content merely by 'the' Inter':'Catholic Press with the "good Sister" label, for she knows she is an individual, Agency, said: "The Mexican people dearly the superior general explained. love their patron, the most holy Virgin of Guadalupe. They feel Heads Ursulines deeply united with the Polish CLEVELAND (NC)- Motlier nation which guards as its dear­ Annuciata. director of teacher est treasure the sanctuary - of education and registrar at Ur­ : 'Our Lady of Czestochowa, the suline' College here for the past - symbol of its national history, three' years, has been elected 'its protectress and mediatl'ix. superior general of the Ursuline , It is sh~ to whom Poles tum sisters of Cleveland. She s~c­ 'with trust during times' Qf eeeds Mother Marie, _superior "trials e'. 1'/'­ , '~en~ra1 for the past 12 ;years.

Stresses Marks of Catholic 'Hospital Nun Says Concem for People 'Essential

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DONNELLY, ,PAINTING SERVICE

OPENDAILY FOR THE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT


8

CentraI Concern Is Fami Iy Unit

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. June 30, 1966

Columnist Sees Hope of Future · ~n Intelligent Youth of Today

LOS ANG.ELES (NC)-Sister Cecile Therese believes "It is no longer enough for a woman to ·know how to bake an apple pie." She should know that life de­ mands more from a woman and the home economics profession must be broadened to assist her, the president of the National Catholic Council on Home Eco­ nomics, observed at the Council'fJ national conv'ention here in Cali­ fornia. Central concern of home econ­ omists today must be the 'family as the oasic unit of society, the nun asserted.

"The synthesis of behavioml sciences must be brought to bear on the breakdown in communi­ · cation and tensions of modern life that threaten the family and nation," said the Sister of st. · Joseph. of Carondelet from Mount St. Mary's 'College here, who is an .exchange professor at Fontbonae College in St. Louis. Home economics, she noted, must place emphasis on such behavioral sciences as child de­ velopment, psychology, eco­ nomics and sociology.

By Mary Tinley Daly Dear Mrs. Daly: What do you think of the young people of today? I know.it sounds old-fogy & "square" I guess they'd call it----:­ t.o compare them to those of another generation. But all · they' seem to want to do is literature of Milton and Shake­ driv'e around in cars, study speare. Likewise; language ma­ just enough to get by, boys jors, lawyers and journalists with h~iir down to here, should not deprive themselves looking more lik~ girls, the girls wearing pants, and all of them thinking they have "the answers to everything. I "tuned in" recently· on a group hanging .around a n e ig h borhood · drug store. Talk was about "getting a . good thing going," a'

of the mysteries and mental discipline to be found in chemis­ try and physics. Excellence Everywhere "In pursuit of this learning, we must also strive for .excel­ lence in .every aspect of our lives. As we "increase our understand;ng of the world and its

problems, we must be careful

not to let· our spiritual lif~

decay. As knowledge grows, our

relationship with God' should become more close and more personal. Cardinal Newman said way to make a' that a man was not trUly edugreat deal· of cated if he did not understand, P ASTOR PRESENTS SCHOLARSHIPS: Monsignor money in some specialized field or if he was unable to' defend Thomas F.· Walsh present~ fres.hman year sch01arships where' competition would be. slim, where "you don't have to the truths of his religion." . for Bishop Feehan Regionai High "School to Barbar~l Kelley bother. about going to college Answering today's ecumenical and Michael Zito, students· in. the 35.:.member graduation except :,ust·lorig enough to get drive for an "enlightened laity," class of St. John' the Evangelist School in Attleboro. The BETHESDA (NC) _ Mother draft deferment.!" Some of these young Patrick Schuette goes on: "awards were m~de on the basis' of gener~l schola8tic ex- :Mary .. Reg ina. Cunningham,' children, I happen to know, are ~'As 'w€' prepare to take our' . Mother General of the Religiou8 place in the world, we' wiiI i:"on:' eellence.' Sisters' of' Mercy of the Union, Catholics. . Frankt"y, i'm disguste~l: . Are tlnue to m'ature spiritually and •.. . .·officialiy closed' the seventh the Yolwg.·people''I see the' ex- intellectually; building' the ~ ·c··· 'general Chapter of the institute·· eeption,ot·the-nol'm?· ... ' foundathms of faith: and.knowl-· at the .Mercy Generalate here' :. (N(!me withheld):. " edge 'whichwere begun"'during .. ... ~. '. "' . "'. in Maryland,. . * .* .• .' . our years' at Cardinal. 'Newman' M' '. : . ........ .t 0" 'd' Th' "'M" e <:: II ..' Thirty-four delegates' f. r 0 JJl

. Frarikly·we·~thirik ·thew.;·i~r.· :·(:Higll.. S,cho~I',., COI~~bia,:' S.C.):•. ' '... olne:. ~~qhve: o .. Ire . :' " .. ' ~mas· Or: " 0 .ege .. , ~in'e :pro~incei; from 'all Over the ..

. " . '~tuned in" ~ 00:' thf!' exception, .. By .dOI.n g. thIS .~e ·vvI1l I;ea,ch. ful,. ';" 'At . Jesuit"Conductedfordham . University.':, .. unit~4. Staie~ ~(mcluded·.dtlbate· .

.. ; ·.hougif· goodness '. kiyows ',neigh':" f!Hm.entin e~ery,~hase .of·.our . . . :..' ' .. ' -. . , . . .. . . : . . . . . . . ., ." .~n- ~o.ro~llity. !!t,ructm:e, ;~l~~ " " 'ool'lioOddriig.' stores: have' suc~ . '.~Iye~,' th\i s . ,~.n~\yenng.. ~G~rdm~·:. NEW. Y:ORK . (NC) -;:.;.. PatrIcia' JE,:\ghsh from .Boston UniVersity'. Uon of chapter delegates, eshtb-" .', , " ~g·atnering8"nigh~tiy ...,. .. .>. >-:'.. ~e'Y,m.~n;!! ~l~!l;' T w,l!'nJ aJ.i i!'Jtel:- .. Pla~i~ ..~.~sb~~ome ~llf~ _lir~;' '. 'r~o~as' Mor,~ .C~ll~~,· ..f~~n~e~ ~.isii~ep.t; ~i., a. ,~lc:'i~t~r . s..ectioi!, · ". In . 'thil' ·".higblY.:': competitiV.e . , llg~nt·la~ty,· .. -:· •.. , ".;. ..': woman 'dean'of ,an. 'undt:rgradu~" two yeal's ago,-'J.!! said to ~" !h~ . fiurrent aP9.>l!tolic neeOs, ·.th.e 'sick ..,.. , < world' 'of" 'today", most . young: . "'R-ather than :·t\Jhing:.iii.~, tKe' '~'ie schooLhi FOl'dham .·Uili-ver-'· lil·st· ~ootdinate 'li~de"i·llr"8d:U~!~.: :aitd seni'or'-Sister. "the roie of the . ".'.':' ~ople·... ·':':'ind ".themselves/., uP.. ne!gh.b.O:rh~ .:.. dru~~t~te.:c~~w~. '" 9i~y's 'l~:y~~r.'~istor.y~t~e· dean '.". ~o.n!:ge 'f~r '~~~,":~n 'at. '~.~'~~'~~~~'" ~iJ~~:: Ii~~!th'~ '~foii"atns . ,f~, .' ···against ·'p.i.·pblems ....their :elde,J"s' ';incessantly,' iet!s."-rememb..er th~', ~rtheum veFslty's' 'I1~om~s More '" J~a~ e~th~bc. um'\Terslt~. , l~. h~" ~ist.er$,3~.~~~.',)ft :~f .~~f:!, ~!'\I.it~\, " · .:: Rever '.ei1co~nt.~tEd::·>.~,·: :;"."~'. ,~,' !o\in~,;' !'t.ltJ'~C~·. Sehu:~t;~e~ .:' an~.·· ..~oll~ge ~()r :~~m~rc .'. '.' . - :.. a: curr~nt _enrollm~nt. of. 43G: ..m~m.t ~d.ii~t~r;;· .~.or!«J. :,roJ!1~i.o~s. . :. ..,' ~' '~:'~s: .c~.~~;f~rbala~~-< ~.e.~ s~~l~.; .. Qt~rs, ... ~":l'~l~ .•cf>~pa~~l(>.~s:.; ~))e . : .'" .:';~~ss. '~:la~~~; -~h?:. h~ \~e!)~ .a~~ ",.. ~~mft? ~tueents. and,. ~~~~~ ~ ;, . ;'~~a~ch, .flg~ .lt~\l.~8i.....: ."..._.:: .<;,.:.~; )." , . [ 'llke ··10' ;,prmt .&Xcerp{s··-frem.. a. "on~ommgmtelhgentlaity... . lnstantr'dean'of the 'college, ,,!dl . mo~~m Sef)tt:m~r... ' . , , Committees .on ·.religlOus . go'¥-. '. ~. '. fuought1.i;i1. • 'salutatory: ",,,speec~. .: '.. ' c · •. ,.... · . . .· ""'!luceeoo"lfath'el: JohnW; Dono-' .' ".:' .' .1"',' " . . . ' . ' .... ··ernmen( ~~~;altii' aiid~ ;;;elf"are, ,: .' '.

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"'erl1or of th:e state·'aS'weILas ,the ' . ~o.'Y,~r_.e c(J.r~ . '.' A native of Maine; Mtss Plante .' 0 (:Jt::t,· 'coiiabe>ration :with the .' laity.

::Bishop 'c;if'. ,the: '~iQcese~ :.The .' ATLANTA '(NC)~The t~ree, is anah!mna .of the C;:0llege of·cIi.ICAdO"'CNC·)·· ~ : norotb~ ...·. ~i ·~o.nti.n~o~sfY~b.et~~~:n· ::~: .

speakerwas.'patnck.Schuette, Catholic hospitals in the.Atlantll ··NewRochelle· (N.Y,) and St. j w'li . f tb N i: . I S sions bringing to the floor three

· agE!' 17:' . . , . . . . . . archdioc~se have qualifted.to re- . Joseph:s' .College; . Standisb; .. d' i.t ~an~ C a ~~nt"?- year~of research analyses" and '

. "Iri' this ..modern :soCiety, .all a .ceive funds under. the medicare" Mailie She' holds a dOCtorate 'iit ~lll Y ~r,vlcteh 1·e9~6erS" .,-. MOUdJI'J,:' eonseq'tient' 'recommendations i4

· th d' t' I . h' h b .' 'J I 1 . WI reC61ve: e . 'U e ...... ..' . Y~sU It 0 f . e ·e uca I?n expo o-program w IC . egms .u y ~ ai of. 'Theta' PhI Alphalena Sorority over 7.~OO Sisters. .. ': IlJOIl,. therCls ,an ~v~r-l~creas~n~ " Spokesmen .a~ ~.t.Jose~h's and. ~iibrs.· .Aid •Siste.rs. . at its oollvehtioL here Sal:ul'daY. In . her eoncluding remal'ks, trend toward speclahzatlon. Fre- . Hn;)' . Family both 'in. 'Atlanta ." .. .. . . Mother Ma r 3' Regina emphasized quently people. are ·inter~st~l.in. a'nd: St;Mar~'s iri . Athens; Ga:: ' A t Home 'for Ag' ed . MI~s" Wl1~lams' . has,. bee~ . the e#o'rts stili to ~ inyolved i~' only ·onc subJect an~, ~o~flne said the hospitals areiritegrated ass?clated. WIth,. the U .•,. So .the revision' of the institute's · Yeading·.to a single: type:· Some' imd qualified to receive funds." ,CARTAGENA (NC) ~ Eigh'!' dahty mllvement .for :J7: y~ars:. Constitutions. and Directory in promineilt educators·· feel .that . . F "th J h'J FI .' . ··S j . teen' .sailors from . the North . She. was co-foun.der,~l1th.. the. order' that each .would reflect students in colleM should study a. t~r do. u t ' .:~~gat th" Americail oil tanker Salomenis late Father. Damel L~rd, 'S,J;, the spirit"of'the Second Vatican &nly thQllc slibjects which' are of.t:~eciIu IV~ Irec or. o. e ... 3. donated' their 'services to' the of the Summer Schools of .Cath~ Council which characterized ttMi . t . t· t ·th ... . tho se·· re' .. bc ospltal Assoclatlon,s8ld re- nuns 'who run a' home for the 'olic Action (now the ·Summer· .... . . .. ~':t.~reds'f.or~th .eriHi~~r ':s'~ re~' . eently s.orne CathOlic. hospitalil aged here in Spain. . Schools of the Christian ApoS-' . pl'oc~~dl~gs of the. two. ,seSSIons .. I e . . elr < J. • '. . th S· th h .. 'd'H' ' '. . of the chapter. suit, sonie students tend 'to place In. .~ ou. . ~re: aymg. I l~ "While their ship was in port tolatet and "IS currently '~_ .

little or 110 emphasis' on subjects c~~ty ... m~..etlnggov~J:nment. re~ here the seamen painted doors eiate editor of Direction maga,;.·· _ _ ~...-'"'"'_-~--..

which .do not fall into. those .. ql,ureJ.:l1 entsJor medlcarebeca~. and windows ·and cut enough zine, publiCation of the'N~itional .: eategories.· Thus,' th~·.· science ~ .cf::~gr~gati~n". . firewood·· to laSt the home' for Federation ~f So(jalities.· .,

~ajor will be .le8:S int~re8ted' i l l . · .. .. . ,..... • ·year.· . ' : . . .. The Siena Meda~ if; givimbi" ...:. p~~r",.a~y'·. E'1g lish , andtb~J1Umaniti~ . · I'Time-Out' Prog' ram ~ One .of t~e . sailors. explailled: ennially' by~ Th~ta 'Phi ·"Alpha'. ..ArthUr, jciMo.i;. P~~ • .. majer ·will be· indifferent .M . . . . ' . ' .. '... ; .: "We' usually offer our services . t4I a Catliolic woman' whOS'~' life .: ;:'.: ··~ienee.·· , .,. - .. . ..., : ~A:id$ . Teqching , N~n~: ill' every pt!rt 'to a 'charitable exem~~ifies : t~~ ~iJ:tues' c~f' ~t~.· ~ DlAIJJJC ~ND SICIe 'OOM , ··'.':Yet t~l:be truly IIrep,ared for, MIAMi: SHORES" (NC'j~ A ,instituHQIi; ~n'd"~paY"'re' re- "Cather~ne',of Sleh~:. : . . . .. '. ~.'.'A;-S".·HS1UEY'~.'IOLIESU- l'1ftI.A. • '. the ':. '0'"urogram 't'" ~p"'J" . ' ,,,' ....un ··'d··e r' "'.: eeive,' t~._sa~sf~cti9n . th.at .. we' ·Prevlo.us· ..... .' .chalknges·.present~dby ",.. ' . .. .',. ,.,. Jhe .:... ·.~·r'· . 'Ime... l" ., ''·r'eeiplentli .. . . . melude ,. "'the .· ....ve Ilerv.,.. .someone e lie.·.· . authors ·PhYl~ls·~:,~ql.nlc;y'__ a~' .. ·,.:·. . . . . . edfO... .,~~~,~~~ .~~~,ld,:~tie,~ud.~~t.:R,l~~'·" w'hicb ':ia" tea'i:her' . , Jearn" a.1l much· as heean:'m leV., .. ·· '. ,,' ,.3! .. -, ..,... ..li,...,. ;.~ . " . . . • . '::.. . . Franc'ell "Parkinlion . Keyes aIHl" • Y ... .' .eiialdift~'reitt··tield$. ·Scl~nti~tii· ,~.~~.I~ ,~:~~r,~~.I}' .~~ln~.~~~.SIIl.:" ',St~ Catherine Cotiege"aeirey"'Loretta 'Yoit~g;' > ... . .... ~ ",:.,.. .'Ut;t not·~o~n·1hc be'ul".tY. "'1be,' ·.~-:s .!'- e~;l8llr99~.fi" If'!!_,t~~~~.the ""~'':'t''·, $1''00' '000'·'.. G~1.i :. . . ' . '.. ,.'. .. :.. .",:'.,'," ',.

. . . ,'. '., •.. "'.':.'. :·', •. >".L.,_, . ' . ~~~.,m~y·~~o~pl~te.~~gre~. re: . ~. s· '. i ' . . . ITT ii~~~gEgg'~'~"'§' g"~'~' .~·~~~·5·~~··~··§··§· .~ ~~§.~'-~'§§~~~ill . .... . . . ,iJir,em~n,ts,~l!s. be~n i~ufiur~ted ... '. ST. P A.l.JL(NC) .- Anunre- ·.llIr .:.:.i'.... , Name '-L:enihon . atBa~ry:·~~!lelle.h.ft~· .. · '. ' .. sirichid$l00,OOO lift fr9m: thci ".' ,., .'_ :,oij ~ .;·"· .. Sisfer.'.R.obert .. Lo.uise,· O.P.; •. ·.Frank· J. Lewis ·Foundation 'of .: " 1\" .., .'., 'I.:. y:~~: P":e.ct~r· ·:etillii-m~ic'·'Of the coll'~ge's·Eng~·. Chicago"";waS "do~ated to th~ Col., . . ". , . . . .. ... . , :, :: .... . . . '.:'. '. ~. .~; ~ ".:~ · ,: .W.A~HJNGTON·f~C);-emdr.: .. lillh.deJ)~rtme~t, said,volu~~ew.' :,iege ·ofSt..Catberine: heYe' . : , : , .. :. '. ·:Rita,. LenihaH: ·.·has·: been::,.namecl··,c,. teachers,wilLtak~ tim~~outfroni .. ',,:MInnesota', . . .. ..:. ,.. ~., :. .. '., .....,; ....' . : ::,,=1:.; . ;.:: ,::.,. . (.>": ' : .. I , . ';'l!'" ·:i':,·:,.) .. director· of the 'WAKi;ESitcJ sue:';. "Pl!lblic~hool':~f;hing car~eFs to' ·'·.Sfster:Fides·.·Huber, president· . ,._. ··~:.l E' .';"'ceed·.' Capt, :Vhlla 'iSiin.ders" whe, . rep.l.a~e"",SisterF;in ~lementary . Of· the' Sisters" of' St;;iJoseph of' . . : •. ~ A'" . , . ft· ~.. : :.: .. ::. '- ,.:­ ..ill ret~re Sept, ~;., i' . sehoolsj~hFloridu at. a ·.sacrifice : Carondelet college, said ihe Bift·· ~.:. . . :..~.'::~:,; ... ;~ .,;. . ... . .. :. . ,'.-: 'The n:e'wlyapp()i~~d: di~ecto~· ~f ~bout"2',OOO.anilUally. .. .. '. ".lias 'been ~ur i~to: 'tbe'e~iene;li.. '"... . ".. . , .,>•• " .• r , ' , , .. . ;,,:, . • ~ a'gIiaduate:';ef .S~; Elizabeth '..The'sehooh~ receiving' ,~e·improvenientfund. .. :~.::BANQtJEfS,.. ·.< WEDDINGS· ;~,.P,ARTIES; .. College in Morristo~ ·N. J.;and. Barry;;,cappointee. will· ,provide .. ~·Thefund, .:firSt· conducted by . ,,.,.... . . .. " •. ,... ., .... -,. . ... _.' . ~ ... ,.. ' . , . : " ','" ., '.· ...was·the· first womaii'to attend suJ!>erviso~y 'and. elassroom' 'M': ,the, 6O-yea!."~~ld : eolIegej·.was .. :.: ·.. BREAKFASTS. ..... J '. . the ·gradl,tateschool::at George.". s.istanee ·an,I·tne·parish .will afl iaimched ;Ju~Y." 1, 1963;,·and ia. : tOWll' l:.Jniversity. *~ received.sist· in nnding'suitable housing.. ,sch~uled.to· terminate .J.une. ·30; ;·,·}343 P.1EA$~Nl";'AE~'. '::~,"-;, ,. _·..>',~FAU;'.IIVR'; . . ' . ." ., .. , ) her' Nav.y commission ',in '1943. . Barry:":Col.lege, first Ca~holie . Its goal ..is $4 million; The.-':ord . ' . : .·Her,· 'appointmerit,~ wail. an- .W&inen1~C:ol1ege.south·of W~sh..,·:. p1oundation"has offered . $1 ~il-·. ':.;;,~ :::;.~'. ~QSI~~ .~~7i~'~ ., ' "·,- .. ,'i.· : •... ' .. :', :J:. -" ,. " •••. • • .; ..: ". ~o~n.c~ .. ~y .. : ~eret~i"y.~, ..~ )ngton, D.C., will. p~ mostof·tbe·· iion :if the' coll~ge·raises mil~:

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Summer. Means Fres:h Produce

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., June 30, 1966

To Enthusiastic Gardene:fs

9

Col lege Pa-ojoect Poys Dividends

By loseptl nod Marilyn Rodedck It is just about this time of year that my wife objects Regs a.nd less to being a garden widow. A few roses cut in fue bud help to maintain peace and a basket of strawberries J'OOS a long way toward soothing an irate wife-The idea is to 'keep a succession 'of gaf"- Uncle Em 'would ~rriYe fromeut den products rolling thrGugh . of state with II 1l.ar,ge box of ~e kitchen door',as peace every type of firework manufac@ffedngs.. tured att1hat time.

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - St. Mary's Dominican College of New Orh-ans has just completM a project in secretarial training and business speech that has already begun to pay large divi­ dends to its participants. It has E.'nabled n Negro moth6'Z' of four tu move fl'om a $26, six­ Wiib.this approach in mind, ii These wouidbe .set off enu-. night a week job in a bot restau­ rant kitchen to a $225 per monti\ is q. .good thing to plan ahead so tiously by :the adUlts cn the eVle position in the office of a to, tb:ltJ: the gamen ds ,always procif the Fourth !m the :SD.nUs ·of dueti'Ve. In my ease, producUv- Horsenecl,Beaeh, where weai-. official 10 a local university. ity centers around fresh. f.ru.i,t. ways spt'nt the month of July. Another participant reported a 60 per cent increase in salary, and vegetables. I have to a~mit.. We -children would oh andah from $250 to $400 monthly. that fresh vegetables picked in while OU'l' fathers ran back and the. late ~nl~on and eaten at forth '.>e1:ting up display after They were among 86 young the sup?er table aren't too diffi-' display, and ·our mothers kept a women who completed the si](­ 'Cult ro taite and make the chQres wary eY,l on the roofs of the month adult education program of gardening reem rather minor. summer cottages lest a stray at the Domini~an college. The There are mal<Y vegetables spark wrJuldl. result in the West­ school operated the program un­ that may still be planted in that port volunteer fire department der the Manpower Development bare spot in the garden and joining our celebration, and Training Act in cooperation which will bear before the Sum': This aforementioned fire bri­ with' the U. S. Departments of mer is over. Suct: vegetables as gade was a welcome sight how­ Labor, and of Health, Education, late tomatoes, beans and squash ever the next day when they led and Welfare. Two-thirds of the a "Horril;.les Parade" down the students were Negro. llnay stm be planted and har­ streets of the town. Antique They went to school wgethel" vested. autos,pztriotic floats, Tag tag Squash is one of'my favorites, eight hours dally, studying typ­ although it takes up a great deal clowns, and baby carriages re­ ing, speeeh, shorthand, English. o! room. Depending on the seed, splendent with six foot, bearded spelling, charm and grooming. it may 'be plan~ed any 'lillie now, infal,lts were but a Jewoj' the Some 20 per .rent of the stu~ an.d.. wi,ll yield eatable...sql,lash .in sigpts that delighted the specta­ dents ha<;1. jobs before gradua­ tors. I haven't viewed one of , . DELIGATE WORK: 'the Poor Clare nuns in their ab@,p,t 55 days, This means tbat . tion. and the others are being if .it. is Slarteli in early. July" it ..:' ~hese' pHtades in ye~rs but it '!s . convent' at Sanginelin~,ir,..the·diocese 'of Nkongsamba, . placed rapidly: . sh@,\.Ild be .ready for picking. no. Just a.s.w~for 1m sure i[:d. 'noi~ f~i 'theiI: fine e-mbroidery~ Cameroun, Africa, P.reviously, aU ,were eitneil' la4!r .than the first of.~pte~b~.. " neverenaoy It as much as I -did unemployed· or underemployed. NC PhQto. .I one lif the when I watched through the Ull. or.se, S 1,1mmeI sql1 . '.". '" h' t' . t d " . f th' Many worked as domestics. yeHow vatieties. is a .great, fa'lfqr- . sop IS Ica e e oY es; 0 . Y9U . , , 'te'~' . ''I. i'So easy, 'to grow.' To go along With the straw! cause.l S " " ' . " berry festivals that are so popuG·.Lt. "

. The ~ed .should be ,planted. .lu. 1M' in .'June ana July ih~e is " . '.. . , . . . to Co ~g~'

little ~ {about ~a mot. WIde.. nothing better. than a (1~lh;iGUS PURCHAf;lE (NC}-The J.a~

3R& 'Bl~. orsev~ mches d~). , strawberry shortcake. The '£61": Bjshop.· Wright· Gf Pittsburg $tresses Urgen.cy panese government. bas don:;tteti

approxunalelyeight .~ds .t.\) a ... lowing. recipe is _truly .. fol: those _ the -stone structul'e used. at the

hiU., ..soWJl .abQUt ·an, web. deep,. who like thclr shortcake m a d e 9 f lnvql'iem~nt .ClYiJ ~ight$ Issue Japan Pavilion at the NeW.YOf'I!:

The-seed.; should sprout in alJNiwt in the i:>ld-fa'shioned mann~.·.. I • World's Fair to. Manhattanvil1e

a week and then ~y be thilmfld ·StrllwberJ.7 S~tcake PiTTSBuRGH: (NC)' '.:..:.. Tlle tions or resistance to litate en- College. The stones will be in­ to' about .three~plants .>to . .a hill.. 2 cups flour. urgency' , of' involvement of croachl)i.ents." '.' .. corporatt-d int~ the college'. Jr·rO!!a~.·on.;mall the yoong ~ cup sugar -..w.omen hi .the civil rights issue But, be suggested· that if the new La!'lguage and Asiari Stu<i~ seedlings need .~ ~oomto..spread, 4 .~a~ns ba!ringpoWdl>l' . haS' ~n empha.'lizecl bT : e-xc~ was Ilot Utis QUe' it~· ies Center. plenty of ~ne.and..<a ..rellS@!!.lh .. ~asp~~ ..sa'ft . '. Bis1¥'~.JO;hn J;. W·r.ight of _Pitt~.~ . be.something e~e,. He o~ed: llb'le amount ai·water....... tAJ teaspoon nutmeg, ... . _ . bu~. "" .. ," .. ; ''They .aLways ba'feagj.mmie".

We:like the squash"\Niheo' '>the,. Jt.!"CUP (i melt) butter M' SpealPng lip the :r.it~a;g9,,,' Even if it .is II false Olile, it is are'smailand·ten~i·SOwe<pidt '. marg-dI'ine. Dipcesa,!'t Council'. &f..~U~o~.., often inveked." them w~.tbeta:re·about'flqe:" 1 egg. :we!llbeatell . W~,,·tlhe Bi~op,~u.PJ.ed ~~r ..· Bish'op "Wright 'eOOtirlood: inches ',long' and two· inches .~,. ¥.s C1<lp 'milk plea with a reflection UPOOl me.Ji\~, .. , "Woon~. are more immune and diameter.' If· you prefw 1) Sift .tog~r.. ~~ .flour, fol,k., .fJ>r~he. ease .. wj,~ . :w~~~ therefore more 'bOund' to ;Om' the ty.~es of ·squash·thew "811e 'equaU7' , sugar, baking powder" saU ·and theysemetimes exC!;l!!e the~fight" for faith and freedom 9D easy': Zucchini. the 'little green" nu1inleg. 'se'lves fr,:)JIl involvement.. ,. '" '.. every·level, sacred and cIvil.'" ". WYmcnt ·!taHan. squaSb.' lis ·one·of .rqy fa2) . Out in fhebutter;"Add the Bishop Wright stressed it ,is. The 'Bi:;hopsaid he was s.peak­ voritcs ';ond my next do.or nei,gh-" egg· and the milk, sliirring 'until .. important· that .w0IDeiltake. "a .... mg Wall women., but '''partdcU:' 3-6592

wrhassmne giI'OWling'Hl hiis~"" just· ib'lended. "l'he ckmgh 'will .. specific and keel',. not merely lad" Christian womeD and"m05t . CHARleS F. VARGAS

den Be he ,can expect a feW y;uiits ,. be -quitem.e'ky.' general and ~onal, interest" PM!dcldarlyeatbolk: ~omeo.,. from 'time to··t1ime. . ~) .. Pm· inte' ' •. weU-'butteted in the problem of eiVil rights" 'OC3CO~I.EAVlNUI .

Taik>W,gabout ZAlleCb:ini,'1I ean-' .. pie .plate or· ~ki1i1et. and· bake ia. because ·'Qn this poi'llt :of. R16ralJIle1" pass IDP' this littAe sWI?" a 450' oven for about 105 mia-· ity it sGmelimeshappeos,"as it Choose 'Nun to. Joift .NEW BEDFoRD, MASS.

wbich' ma7 giire some insight .. utes. docs on other questi~ns, tbaCtbe in~ ibhc thinking of !fanners. 4; Spilt shortcake as Seon as . menfolk bave haU.:.a-doren ex- '" Study ..T~".r of Isroef Last· summer, my Uncle'FmGldy you tak':l it /from the oven 'and . cuses 'from involVement." ST.. LOUIS (NC) _ Sister M •. Plante,d a ~el1i of 'ZUcChini '011 his butterooth la~ers . The Bishop said men "may say' . Alfred Noble, S.8.J.• who will re-. f~ ill Diglnton, and ~ry gm5) Place the tW1) layers tothat"·the.ii- business or statUs iii" tire as president of Fontbonne mMlSly ~ve ~ a h~ busbel for gether with crushed ·strawberJ · the businesscoinmuriity' will . College Aug .1 .has been select-ed the fanuly My wife wascie- . . d 'ttl . .' . , . .. rles sweeten~ WI' • sugar. suffei if they fake a stand tm to join the Summer Study Tour ltghted WIth the fresh squash 6) 'ToPW'ltb whIpped cre.am .. 1···· .. ' I d" " .•1..... f T~ 1 ----:.. b _ '." h t . . . . · · ed ...... -& mora lSSues, Jne U 109 CiVl 0 .~rae£," -.spon",,",.,.. y .., an", e was ra ner -surpns on".... fla¥or.ed. with· sugar and'vanilla, 'gh''is"" .. . .... '.' -. .... I i ' U· 't Co ':tte we liked it. He had never.·tasted .. '. ,. .... rI .' . '~.' ,. .he .,. • ....._. n er- ,mversl y .. mmJ: e, .. :on St. ., He coneeded that men "are,jn Israel in c.oope~ahon With the . In the'Kitchen . Pr'¢ldfe .Ded.icates ". fa(;LJTlQr~._diret:;tJy. ..ltit <\nd. Jik.E1y He_brew UmversIty ?f Jerusalem. [t is 'vm3zing to .an,'S'6ne aoing' • • to .be. hu!"1 'by ,~copomic. P9Wica', The tour,' scheduled from 'July l!'CSearch"'on' 'holidays al1d·:·'cos·;'· .' Plo.que .In·~l,a·~;lom.. . ." ..;. an~ Jike p:r:es!iUTf~ if "hey staJld, 12 to..:A.~' 1~, ..wi~ .:provi~e. "fdid~" ~., toms. how many. celebrations' .NEW·YORK (NC) ...:....: BishOp .. up ,to ,.bce:cnmt~d WI a.~m.oral".. AmerIcan educa~o.rs and ~l~rgy­ .i·· h~vc :..;,beene 'bro\llght..::·~ .. :th~se· Charles p, Grec0 'Q{Ale1li~ndria" iss.!J9!, whether. civdi. rights. qu~s:-". men an~p~ortum-t~ ~ ViSit: Is~ . ,~., ":"'res by the ,vas't wav"" of im-:"La'" "·li ·T~nie.~~ buin. of: th' . . , , '.- ,..· . c raers -relJglOus sbnnes and '{R'''' S "'" ..".. ': . :: '" p". " P,. '.' .'., e cheological-sites and. to study' Us .migrution.'Thehi'·is i>ile holiday KDI~hts ~f .Columbus•. blessed . S· .' ('y Facultv .. "I' 1 . 00'·, thOtlgh that jj(phrely''American :" and dedicated. ii' plaC;rue -in Ya~ em~~o . . '.. . ~, ec@~oml~, SOC'lO .o?l~a 'S'9.le.n. c

in origin and that is our own kee Stadium'oommemorating" Has Nlin. Merni:Jef . ~01bca.1 '. ?D d ' reIJgJ~us. ms~tn~ .

Feurth of July, or I.ndepende·nce the. Mass -celebrated there by' . h~s. F~rt¥. persons wIll· be Oft.

Da1r... Shll~e that'· magic day in Pope Paul VI on the occasion of. ~ S~Y~N:~~H (NC) ;SiS~ .thls year s tour; . 171<6. when the Dec.laratiem (j)f his historic visit to the United '.. : M ~;Y. ',~a,.. rms~~.. a .~ImIOl1laJ;Y

...... f ~.t: . ':'. . _. . . . ._ ' . F rapcl !S9:<ln .. IS"",I ~., mac-. l1li In(j~endence was SIgned and . NiltlOJ1S lilst Oct....4.. . 1't . C 't·· h b· .the f.u.ndameJ:tal··ooou-- Speaking at"ceranonies which ".' u a ~ . ,.~n~!w IOn, .' as ..een .. m~1\a GI the. United 'States of~' preceded' a.: basebal1.gamebe-:~: vna.~.ed to,:~ Iac.u~y ?f $t. ~00n"' ·A~br.ica, it hap b~e a datetween.the·Yankees-and the Chi~; "f Janne~ .. !nor 'h rmnarr.· ~~_. ' l:.... Wh·t S s " as ,a.....science cr. to .... pehOllo red byparad e~.pa""-l-rc1l.go<je., ox. ,upreme,:.. ' ' ' ' .teac ' .. otdc~~ speeches, strawberry'!lesti'Knight 'John W McDevitt said,··~· ~r .3ppomtment, sairl .'F~1J!er va,!~' pJcnicsand fireworks. "It i~ .t~e· fervent hope of our;,\,.Wllh<,lm,,'~" Colerpan, .~e~I[).~Y. lWhen I was' YGung the 1iire- . aSSOclat~01" of 1,200,000 Catho-::,;.rec.tol1, ..wlll,..add. a :f~mlnJntun .... w~ll.:s were the 'h..1gh1ight·Of' the·; ')ic· men that in··the. years iahead:': fluence to. th~ tr all1l ng ;of ·QUI:. day" I can still see Ute' silvery this pl2que will remind the mil- .~;.: young..$eIlWl,anans and ~,U cer.. stre~k of the sparkler§l,'as; ,Wt:' -lion.s; ~llQ·will ,visit this stadium.;". tai.J:I.lY enable. them. to, bett:r..-un-" .. BANK ... , .-' ­ wr:-Q'te our 'names with them 1m nthe stirring beauty of the night:;~:der~nd..the ,woman,s_ poW. aJ. ., . . , BRISTOL COIJNTY the'i~ight ait. 'The. pinwheels and that the.Pope.prayedhere; and;' view!' '.' ,..... ,.... ,..... ­ rOCkets wereworla;·of art in·our· even more- impress 0il them the.~i "We'k-el'a1so that it Mil =lead .. ' .. ' . JH,rARiA's'MOST'ACCOMMOOAnNG eANlt' ey-!!{ and the th01.i.gbt of datfger -seriO,US 'purpose .00 that prayer-';' to a· better '. appreciation· ~! ·the ", llle~~r . entered our .youthful to emphasize thpt the place· of:~;vocation, -of,worRet:l-Religious''lJ)R' " •.• n. 'c':'NORTH"AnCEBO,RO •.. MANSFt£LD' . ATTLEBORO FALLS m~s. When their. sa1~.._ was; ch_arity lik~ . God, is. eyeJ'y": .~ the .partof ()\u,,,'f.J¥"Ta pviestAS,~·,·~ r.aRned ill MassachuseUs, ·m,. where ···,-- .. ----' ..... ---he a d d e d . ' -'._. -n

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Maryland Court

THE ANCHORThurs., J~ne 30.. ' 1966

Approves Aid

Prelate Asserts _Social Pressures Deter VO<CQtions

To Hospmtals ANNAPOLIS (NC)-The

Maryland Court of Appeals

has upheld the constitution­

ality of state loans to church­

MILWAUKEE (NC) - A priest who conducted a sur­ vey among high school stu­ dents concludes that their

related hospitals. It did so three

weeks after barring state con­

struction grants to three church­

zelated colleges.

The unanimous ruling by the

appeals court affirmed a de­

cisiori by circuit court in Balti­

more dismissing a challenge to,

the hospital loans by Mr. and

Mrs. Gr'egory Truitt of Salis­

bury, Md.

The couple ,claimed that loans'­

to church-related hospitals un­

der Maryland's Hospital Con­

struction Loan Act of 1964 would

be "in whole (lrin -part an estab-,

]ishinent of religion."

The hospitals involved in the case are the Greater Baltimore Medical Center, the Presbyterian Eye, Ear and Throat Chal"ity Hospital, the Church Home and Hospital (affiliated with the Episcopal Church), and S1. Jo-. seph's Hospital (llffiliated with the Catholic Church). Secular Purposes' The court's opinion, written by Judge Reuben Oppenheimer, distinguished state aid to church-related hospitals from state aid to the three church­ related rolleges involved in its earlier decision. It maintained that the "pur­ poses anrl activities" of the three colleges were "predominantly sectariall in nature, and that, consequently, the state grants, to those collegeS' for construction of bUilding~ ha,d, the, 'operative _ ~.ffec-t, of aiding reli;Pon." 'But, it said, the purposes and activities 'of' the hospitals are "secular in nature," The plaintiffs had contended that because the hospitals main­ tain chapels on their premises, state loans to them would be un':' constitutIOnal. The appeals court disagreed because, it said, the' evidence showed the chapels "are, maintained, to a large ex­ tent, because of their thera­ peutic value ih the treatment of some patients."

attitudes toward religious life aJ;"e "po£itive and reassuring" but that s0<j.al pressures are a serious dan[(er to vocations. Msgr. Ralph R. Schmit made ihe SUf'iey at Messmer High School here, where he is busi­ :ness manager: , The results indicate that: Both sexes and all class levels have a l1igh regard for religious )iocations. ',As the student becomes older, file idea of personal religious )'Ocation becomes more remote. There is an admiration for :priests <llld Sisters coupled with a recogn;tion of their vital role in the work of the Church. There is an acknowledeged ~ar of entering religious life. The survey war conducted a­ mong th;~ entire stuaent body of 1,200. The results were based TRACTION FOR YOUNGSTERS: Marc Theroux is visited by student mm~e, Miss ,~jl a sampling of 400 question­ naires selected at random to Barbara Barboza, ina private room in the new pediatric department of the recently com­ represent 50 boys and 50 girls pleted addition to St. Annes Hospital. irom each class. .. ' , Lose Inclination , "It weuld seem that normally a'religious vocation is first en­ eountered before the boy or .' girt enters high school," Msgr. Schmit' said. "If a young person takes no positive action' regarding. his WASHINGTON (NC)- "This '!We are informed," Carey population in element;lry and eal1ing . <1t this tirne, he places country faces an ,epidemic of uri:: said, "that i-Jationwide among elthey' doing .to themselves, and himself jn ,a sodal pattern which ~anted children of unwed and . ementar,y--":yes, 'elementary-and .' what call we do for them?' ~. hard-ly conducive to the per­ pro,bably unfit mothers," accord- secondary schoolglrls,more than ,"We have cert.ainly launched during ,If this calling. ing to the chairman 'of, the Ad half of all' school dropouts do 'a vast number of far-reaching "As' the high school years Hoc Subrommittee on the Hand- so because Of childbirth. Couple programs' intended to help the pass, dating aild ma"rriage be: ­ icapped of' the, U. S.· House of· this· with further statistics that aged, ·the infirm, the disadvarieorne regarded ,as almost syn­ Representatives. while our population in the 10": taged; aild even the hungry of enmous with happiness and suc­ ' 14 age group in .his country' has fa'r':off Jands. Now, at our dooreess. Some who fntheir earlier Rep. Hugh L. Carey (D~N. Y:) doubled since 1950, the same step we' find. a cradle of misery high school years seem to in­ said th3t information provided group has experienced a sixfold, which- cries for attention, 4licate, though _ perhaps with . the subcommittee by Dr. Eugene increase in admissions to mental . Mental Inness some fe"r -or reluctance, tha,t H. Guthrie, assistant surge4;)\1 hospitals. "On' the basis of experience general for operations, Public "I believe it is time that our and stuciy, we know that these the,}' might have a religious vo­ el!~iqn, m later years apparently Health Service, 'indicates "that society took a keen, hard look children from the cradles of lost all ~uch inclination." we may be heading fo,r '3. na.., at its ,young members, and it is misery will have a higher rate , Delay Entrance tional family. brHlkdown. unless -, time to begin a&king ourselves of mental illness, and mental ,He said. the present trend to somethin!!. ... effective is ,done not only what are we doing to re t ar d'a t'IOn, 0 f a 11 1'1 an d'lcaps an d delay the entrance into the about school-age pregnancies." these children, )'/hat damage are all forms of disadvantage than lI:Qnvent or ,the seminary until any other group In society. Board of Education

aiter co;nplehon of high school F. "The pity of it, of course, is Backs Student Aid

its ,cause for grave concern. , that not only will dropouts beget LANSING (NC) - The State ~'~urrent thinking in many dropouts, much worse is the im­ Board, of Education has urged the fluarter~ is opposed to this early U plication that, these' childhood Michigan legislature to pass a entry," Msgr. Schmit pointed The close of ,school 'for Cas-' Purchase.' The former is COn- mothers probably wish. they bill desigrled t9 provide tuition eu,t., "Stronger efforts, then, are sidy High students means the - tinuing graduate study in Re- themselves, were never born. J1.ecessary for the.promotion and opening of' Summer" Sessions ligious Education and the 1at-' - "In' this condition, the,yare' ,grants for students attendin( preservaHon: 'of ,reiigious vo­ for the Fac-ulty' pursui.ng· adter is attlmdioJ{ the : Pius X totally unprepared to provide private colleges and universities " eations in the high lichool'." "anced ~.tudies' in their 'individ-School -of 'Music 'for "advanced ' , parental guidance to children , in·Michigan. , The board' also urged Gov.

:'Among these are, closed re­ 'tial -professional" fields.' .'" study in LiturgiCal Music. Sis-" who come into' this world ,be­ , ' treats, ,days of, r.ecolle'ction '. Sister ·Mary. Charles,'awarded ':ter is a'm~mber of the'Diocesan . .causeth(,i,r -infant .pareritswere , George. Romney, to sign the biM

into hiw if itpassea the . either unguarded or misguided. workshop&, and \'ocation camp~ . an -'NDEA, --grant in·tlie de- Liturgical Music Committee , . . t fl' ;'This 'dual impilct of preg­ , lature. where the interested students can p~r ment _ ~ ,-socia.· StudIes, ' is.' , .Sister Paul Elizabetli is con-, je~ aninsig,h~ into religious life.. one, 'of'thirty ·.seco,n,dary.' scho.ol' , Ufiuing, graduateshidy i'nEn- "nancy arid mental and emotional ~~ ~.~ Th t h f h t d 1 'instability amOl;g' our - nnfimt " . e·, help <if lay organization!!', eac. ers ~,~s ory, a.,~, ~OC.l~, - glish '~t ~ridgewnier State' C'ol.., : secondary' schools" demai-Jds im~ " ,'. such as t)1.e Serra' cliJbshould' be ,stud.les atten,dlOg a. Sl,X' weeks lege. ' , mediate, attention." t S 1I.10re fully u1ilized." . I ns t I t u t e l!' _, ml th , C,0II ege, Sister Margaret Eugene '--., \ Northampton.;. heads the Business Department Awarded an. NDEA grant .in ,is continuing her studies' at Meals for Poor' Sees Church, Union Mathe~::;.tics, Sister' Elizabeth Rivier C:>llege. Nashua. MADRAS, (NC)--About 1,000,­ S· t ." Marie is continuing graduate A"l S t Relatio.ns Warmer • So. Dartmouth • work in Modern Math at Bos­ . IS er .nose. llge a, ecre ary : 000 breakfasts, lunches and din­ t ' C 11 of the TeachlOg Brothers, and 'ners prepared from foodstuffs BREMEN (NC)-Better re­ :: and Hyannis : on, 0 ",ge. 'Sisters Committee, participated donated by Catholic Relief Ser­ lations lJt'tween the Church and SIster Mary Hortense,' head' in a two weeks intensive woi'k­ vices-National Cmholic Welfare Germany's soci;:llist-dominated of. the English Depart.ment is shop for Secondary' SchoolCCD Confel'ence 'of the United ,States .So. Dartmouth WY 7-9384. trade unions contirlUe, 'as evi­ attendi~g a s~x weeks Film teachers at Catholic University, were served here in India to the denced by Father August Sand­ Hyannis 2921 • EducatIon InstItute at Mary­ Washington. Later in the Sum­ , poor dudng a 20-month period • ' teI:s visit to the Bremen con­ gr~ve College, Detroit, Michi~an. mer she will attend a workshop struction workers' 'meeting. that ended last April. ~• • • • • B • • • • • • • • • • ~ for Chemistry teachers' in New Fathe-, Sand tel declared that ThIS course stresses a new Im­ H:ampshire. trade unions, in their efforts to perative for teachers at sec­ on~,ary, c~)llege, ~n~ adult levels Sister. John Elizabeth, the achieve sgcial justice, have the ,., as hteratme IS taught, so Pri c'p I 'll tt d ' '1 Church as their ally. He also must the film lle taught, for n 1 ~, WI . a e~l. a specla stressed that mflterilil welfare 'th' . th' d' ·th th t workshop for Adrn1l11strators at IS IS ,e me G eorge t own U ,,' . W ash­ is not enough, an'd that the spir­ l 'la WI t e grea ­ nlverslty, I t lIra es cu.• Impac on our ingto DC' itual and intellectual enrich­ times." n, .. lInent of the people must ac~ Your Gulf Hill Route Man Sister ~ar'y Teresita, Art company their increasing ma­ Department Director is at Uni­ Support IEcumenism

terial wealth. A/wclrs at Your Service! versity (of Notre Dame contiilU­ Thank;ng the socialists· who N A~'TliCKET (NC) The FOR HOME DEl.IVERY CALL WY 8-5691 ing gra~Jate work in Art. invited him to the meeting, Joint Cummission on Ecumeni­ Father Sand tel emphasized' that Sister Jane Raymond, Relig­ cal Relations of the Episcopal a few y·~ar: ago such coopera­ ion Department Head, and Church has issued a strong state­ tion was unheard of. Recent re­ Sister Stephen Helen, Director ment in support of Episcopalian lations ('(';tweefl the Church and of Music. are at Manhattanville participation In ecumenical ac­ so. DAR:TMOUTH. MASS. unions jlave ben much warmer. College of the Sacred Heart, tivities•

Sees Epidemic' of Unwanted Children ,

School-Age, Pregnancies Problem

Cassidy ,Hig·.h. a.culty Members T a k e Ad'va nce'St d y Cou rses

.

'·•.•..•.... 'J..B ....•..•• • • • • .'•• .• • Ie""

who

: LUMBER CO.:

'

:"You Cal1l Whip Our Cream" but

You ,Can't Beat Our Milk

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I-lllL DAIRY

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Raffle of Pop'e's Ca r to Benefit Indian Lepers

Expert Asserts Bartenderr$ Often Best Th~rr@~D$ts

CALCUTTA (NC) - The

sale of tickets for a raffle

for ownership of the limou­ sine used by Pope Paul VI in Bombay in 1964 has opened here at the headquarters 9f the Missionaries of Charity congre­ gation. The limousine, a 1964 Lincoln originally given to the Pontiff by Notre Dame University alumni in the United States, was donated by the Pope at the end of his visit to Mother Teresa, foundress of the con­ gregation,' "to share in her 'uni­ versal mission of love." ,

The Indian government last year gave the nun special ·per:-. mission 'for the vehicle's sale, although customs clearance 'was originally given to the car on condition that it would not be

sold in India. Mother Teresa has now an.., nounced a raffle which may get her 400,000 rupees (53,000 dol­ lars) from 4,000 subscribers.

For Leprosy Colony Tickets, each costing 100 ru­ pees (about $13), will be issued to' the subscribers who will par­ ticipate in a drawing to decide the winner of the car. The money from the raffle will be used to finance the con'" struction of a leprosy colony in' Asansol district here. Patients and the;r families will' be housed ,in the colony in small but separate cottages and will be trained in crafts and in mak... ing firebricks for neighboring industries.

11'

THE' ANCHORThurs., June 30, 1966

ROCHESTER (NC)-Bar­ tenders are often the best therapists, a counseling ex­ pert told 250 priests attend­

NEW PEDIATRICS SECTION: Sr. Chira Maria of the staff of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, chats with Roger Costa, a patient who occupies the new type of crib for young children in the new hospital addition. The feature of this crib is that the old type netting that formed a high side has been replaced by a plastic protective.

Coronation Anniversary in Washington Mass ot Immaculate Conception Shrine

ing a pastoral workshop at St. John FisJ-.er CoHege here. The man behind the bar need only be a good listener and need say little to provide effective therapy, Brother Joseph Egan, a psychologist and pastoral coun­ seling teacher at Iona College, New R<,..heIle, declared.

What is important, the Irish Christian Brother continued, is simply that the good listener is with the troubled customer "who is washing out his conflicts in his favqritE1 suds."

The role of the priest as coun­ selor, however, must go beyond that of listening therapist, Brother Egan said. Real Presence

Priests must be "dynamre listeners" and be felt as a "rea] presence" by the person they are trying to help, he explained. Nor is it enou.gh, he continued; for the priest-counselor to per­ ceive the right solution for the person's problem; the priest must help the person to "see the answer for himself." Such effective counseling is' properly a part of the priest'~ spiritual work, he asserted, be­ cause people must' work out their pr·jblems in order to be' free to Jive the life of grace.

this Pope has been Paul; in his Catholic· Polish nation if that Continued from Page One had been possibk." thought~. in his writings and his could d.), checked or discouraged Speak.ing of Pope Paul's 1964 actions, Bishop McDonald as.., him." pilgrimage to the Holy Land, serted. Bishop McDonald spoke of a Bishop McDonald said, "Truly· "In his appointing a repre­ dedicati'on equally unsparing of BUENOS AIRES· (NC) sentative to treat with atheists; the Lord can say to' him as he self in "that wearying pilgrimage said to St. Paul of old, thou hast Argentinn's traditional right of in ·his granting an audience to a WESTFIELD (NC) - A com­ in search of a conversation with borne w,tness to Me in Jerusa­ patronage, exercised by the Communist official, this global­ promise Christmas pageant will the entim world" that brought' govemment to choose bishops thinking Pope w:::s like Paul, lem' ". In India, too, that same be part Qf the student program Pope Paul on his "singular jour­ year, in Pope Paul's own words" for the nation's dioceses, is be­ clearly \Jndel'standing the drama at Westfield High School here in ney" of 9,000 i1)iles in 36 hours ing negotiated into oblivion. "his heart beat as one with those New Jersey this year - but it ' when he visited. the United of the w.1rld in which he lived, of an enUre people." The Argentine foreign min­ recognizing the anguish of so­ will be held after regular school Stafes last October. In all he has done in his three­ istry has made public the text ciety." hours and attendance will be year reign, Bishop McDonald of a letter on the subject sent St. Paul's travels th.·ough the "Indeed," Bishop McDonald voluntary. by Antonio Cardinal CaggianG observed, Pope Paul "through entire known wodd of his time commented, "Pope Paul would The compromise has been of Buenos Aires to President the fervor of his presence and was this same search for dia­ have 'gollc in PCI son behind the worked out by the Westfield logue wl~h all thl: people of God Iron Curtain to visit the ancient of his message has raised the Arturo U. IIlia. The letter, an­ Board of Education after a year nouncing negotiations aimed at unifying love of God above the that we know today, Bishop Mc-. of contl"Oversy among pageant establishing new norms of divisive temporal power of na­ Donald said. "Thus do we see p.-oponents and opponents. tions. He has followed his own Church-State relations, praised this unchanging mission which Some residents wanted the words as archbishop of Milan, the government's attitude illl has been the burning inspiration BUFFALO (NC)-The seventh Christm<1i> pageant discontinued. adopting the ideas and spirit of of the Father of Christendom annual <:onvention of Citizens 'It is not enough for a priest to Others wanted it retained, as in . ring his hell and wait; he must the Second Vatican Council. from the first, is ever new, ever for EduC<1tional Freedom -(CEF) the past during school hours ~'The Argentine episcopate, 00 . modern, ever the cause to which will be held here July 29, and go 'for~h and seek the strayed with a'ttendance obligatory. as' at behalf of an its priests and and the bewildered, the lost and all men,' in all lands can unre,:" 30. CEF· is a. private, nonde­ other school ~ssembly programs. people, congratulates the go?­ the lonely' " servedly 'give of themselves." .nominatIOnal citizens' group The pl;lgeant is to be repeated on i\nd if there has bee~' weari-. erpment for this important in.... From lhe day in "1963 when he which seeks to· obtain ~qual ness intl"!e Q,uest, Bishop' Mc­ one' ever.ing fo1. ·parents and tia~ive. It warmly invites the other ·residents of ·the commu- said, HI accept~in the name of treatment for students in both Donald said, "it is the weariness . eountry's' high officials to con­ .u,. . ~ Lord-I 'rill be called Paul". , ·public .and. non public ·schools. . of 'Paul, "of both P~uls,weariIlg tinue negotiations untii sue­ cess is ~chieved; and it prays out' all'that God has given to fervently t~at the Divine Spirit, them in His service." the Spirit of Wisdom and coun­ . Spirit-of Christ Bi's'hop'McDonald noted that sel, may grant an infusion ftI. grace. . . in an .age when others save themselve~ through the use of electronic images. Pope Paul has used himself alone, adding: . "He hilS seen that the living m:mifest<11ion of the spirit of Christ is needed by man as never FOR YOUNG WOMEN before, in a time when so much 196 Vhipple St., Fall River is vicarious, and so few will give Conducted by Franciscan of themselves. He has brought Missionaries of Mary the power of the presence of the ROOMS - MEALS Vicar of Christ to thrill men to OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY their very souls as Paul did be­ Inqui,e OS 3-289' fore him."

Church,' Argentina Negotiate Accord

New Jersey Education Board in Compromise

CEF Convention

,

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--------­ St. Francis Residence

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CHlLDREN'S NEW SEMI-PRIVATE ROOM: Alvin Lavoie and Edward Cidade are the object of the watchful eyes of Miss Jean Gonet, R.N., during a busy painting period in a semi-private room in. the modern pediatncssection of the new wing of the Fall River St. Anne's HospItal. '

~ Shop Saturday ~ Closed All Day Monday JULY 4th

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12

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TH~ANC'"'OR-D·i~ese·~fFall River-Thurs. June 3.0, 1966

For Yourlnfolrmatiolll

.

God Lo"e You

Reviewer' Commends 'Two Newly Publish'ed Memoirs

By Most Rev. FuJion 1. Sheen, JI).D.

Up until l1r1ay 15j;h, The Society for the Propagation of th Faith sent to Africa alone $4,360,805. The followiDg' dioceses sharediu yo'w' sacrifiices: ALGERI COSTANTINA LAGBOUA'I' ORANO TUNISiA RABAT TANGERI 'BENGASI-DERNA TIUPOLI MlSURATA DAKAR ZIGUIN­ CHOR 'KAOIACK S.LIDGI DEL SENE4

GAL OUAGAUOUGOU .BOBO DIOU· LASSO K 0 U D 0 U(i 0 U KOUPELA NOUNA OUHAIGOUYA 'FADA N'­ GOURNA A BID JAN ABENGOROU BOUAKE DALOA GAtr6NOA KATIOLA COTONOU . AIBOME1' NATITINGOU rar," Straus and P.iroux, New on as the greatest wealth." If · PA'RAKOUPORTO NOVO KONAKRY York. $5.50), recounts the au-' the family's househoid -furnish­ K A NK A N N'ZEREKORE NIANEY thor's experiences as a boy in ing were of the simplest, and its BAMAKO KAYES MO:PTI SAN SEGOU Poland before and during World fare of' tliescantiest, at least SIK'ASSOLOMIE ATAKPAME SOKODJE War 'I. there 'were .books, and both par-' DApANGO . BAT H·n R S .TNOUAKThe period of ' ents were always: reading them. · CElOlITT BAMlsARU BANGUl! BA.lli­

the two books Mr. Singer's book.. takes its

GASSOn BElRBERATK BOSSANGOA

is roughly distitle from the court which his

BRAZZAVILLE FORT'ROUSSET POINTE NOIRE YAOUNDE

s i mil a r. The . father conducted for the people

BUEA DOUALA DO:OME GAROUA MBALMAYO NKONG­

Godden sisters, whose rabbi he was. In his flat

SAMJBA SANGMEIL!NA BAFIA LIBJlUEVllILLlE MOUiLA FOR'li'

e a c h with a he heard suits - sometimes for

ARCJl3IAMBAUL'l' FOlR1r lLAMY MOUND on PALA CAPE COAST ~ touch of magic divorce, sometimes in matters of ACCRA 'KETA KUMASI. NAVRONGO TAMALE tVA FREE­

in her pen, as equity, . etc. His wisdom and

TOWN MAKENI KADUNA JOS MAKURm VOLA l\IINN./h.

readers of their fairness brought him clients

LAGOS BENIN CITY IlBADAN ONDO OYO WARRi ONITSBA

novel s know, from outside his own following,

CALABAR EN1JGU IlIiOT EKPENE OGOJA OWEIRRI PORT

evoke the bril- . and sometimes the suits in which

IiARCOURT UMUHAIA iLORIN LOKOJA l\1AIDUGURI SO­

liarice of' India, they were involved wer~ most

KOTO' ARABIA. JOJWAIT· MOGADISCIO GIBUTI NAIROBI

its .' color and, complex and required lengthy

ELDORET KISIl KISUM:U KITUI MARSABIT MERU MOMBASA

glani:our, its profusion of flower . trials.

· .NYERI' NGONG PORT VICTORIA NDANDA PERAMIHO DAR·

and fruit, its lush jungles and The house would be in an up­

. ES-SALAAM AltuJSHA DODOMA IRINGA MAHENGE MBULl1' REV. FELICIAN PLICHTA tremendous rivers.' Mr. Singer roar when trials were taking MOROGORO MosmNAcmNGWEA SAME TANGA ZANZI­ on the other hand, is portraying place, and especially at their BAR e PEMBA 'll'ABOiu. BilKOBA KAREMA KIGOMA MBEYA MuSOMAMwANZA R'ULENGE' SHINYANGA' imBAGA ARU"':'" tenement life in' the" Jewish start. These were people' of ; FORT PORTAL GULU HOIMA KEBALE KAl\IPALA, MASAKA quarter of an- Eastern European strong feelings, '~hO expressed • MBARARA MOROTO 1'OROROEL ,OBEID JUBA KHARTO~M" city, 'themselves emphatically, raged; MOPOIRt,TMBElK .W.i\lJ,MALAKAL. BLANTYRE.,.LIMBE CHI.. " ·~he·Goddens .were the daugh-. '. wept, called down curses, fiercetel's. of an ~?glish~an who had· •.' ly protested their innocence, KWAWA DEDZALI)~ONGWE MZUZUZOMBALUSAKA a good' ,posltion.~nth .8' steamer thundered charges. '. ABERCORN FORT JAMESON FORT ROSEBERY .KASAl\I,.A LIVINGSTONE MONZI:NDOLA SOLWEZI DIEGO SUABEZ company. They'lived 10 a hu~e,. ..Dedication of Spirit . . sprawling 'house, on. extetlslve '.' B'ut 'is was' not oi-Il y for' trials . . AMBENJA.MAJUNGA·· FIANARANTSOA FARAFANGAN4 grounds, and ·were waited on boy· . that people came charging up Rev. Felicia1,l Plitchta, -0. FORT DAUPHIN MOROMBE· MORONDAVA TULEAR TANA­ NABIVE . ..AMBAroNDI!~AZAKAANTSIRABE MlARINAIUVO a \largecompany' ·of· servants~. the stairs. All sorts of questions . F.M. ~nv.;·· pastor' of Holy.... TAMATAVE TSIROANOMANDIDY ·KEETMANSHOOP· WIND-· . "The difference betw~en us·.and. were proposed to the rabbi: for Cross' .Church,Fall . River, the:-mi1liilgthousands of Indl~n8 . E~xample, concerning matters ot . HOEK SALISBURY BULAWAYO GWELOUMTALI WANKIB . round us, all· added up·to apnn- .. ritual puritY.' ,... 'wjlrceh~brate a 'Solemn High .ECHUANAJ,ANJD. BLOEl\iFONTEINBETHLEHEM KEIMOES:' eess qu·ality." This 'is a bOok with a piquant l\Ia~'of Thanksgivin,g Sunday KIMBERLEY KJltOONSTAD. CAPE~WN ALlWAL.· OUDT·, .~e'Sit~rateIY P~' . . ..' flavor,' openmg up a worl~ vir- observance of the 25th anniverSHOORN .,PORT, ELIZABETH QUEENSTOWN' Dl1RBAN·" Mr.' ~mger s ·father...m~nt~ tuallyunknown .to. the .Christian sary of his .?rdination. . . ESHOWE .. KOKSTAD. l\IlARIANmLL UMTATA' UMmm:ULV w:as'a ~vout,'otherw~'I~IY'Hasl~.. reader and prob;lbly tQ a"good . ~~ jUbliaria'.1:was.. o:n.lai~ed MASERULERlBE .QA(:HA'S...NEK' l"RETORiA JOHANNES.;', die 'rabbi,' 'not 'an -offiCIal-rabbi' . proP9rlion of. ,A,meriean Jews, .11 .. ~uly .5•. ~~41 ..by the late, :p,q~~t.. BURGL¥DENBUJlGWI'l~Al'O[MANZlNI P1ETERSBlUltG' DE­ (·that is; ~ot licensed by 'tbeR I1S "· ,. wodd ..relati,vely .. innoc.ent and· ... Rev... ~o~as, J4.. O'~ary;, Bj.$~p, .. AARINGWA VUl\!lA LOUIS 'TRlCHARDT VOLKR'UST 'WEST-" .. stan';goyemment), ~t one'Vene'"' quaint, .poor in .,.worldly statUS, of $Pringfie~d"m St.S~i.slaus .' ERN TRANSVAAL BUKAVU.,BENI GOMA KASONGO KlNDlJ' rated'by a 'small Cll'Cle; of Jews' 'and resources"but with a"nobil- .. Ch~rCI1, 'CNc9pee; .His,.first .lUi:- .' .UVIRA.COQUILIlIATVR;LE BASANKUSU BIKORO BUDJALA who gathered in 'his flat'forser'" ., itY.",of. heart and, -dedication: 01... , &ignment was to Holy CrOS5,,Fan,.;' IKf,:LA.~~ ,LO~O ~OiE,GBE,..E~A~ETHVILLE:BAlJ-" vices. y:e.w~ d~ratelypoor,' spirit which it is refreshing'oCven'" Riv:er, . . ,," DQINVILLE· KAlIONA !KILlVA KQNGOLO: SAKANIA .LE0..,. and hl~ .fanllly lived .from hand to read a b o u t . . Assisting tbejubilarian at .the· , PO,LDVILLE. Bo.HA IDIOFA. IN'ONGO :KENGE KIKWr.rK7JSAN.. .... to . mo~th. ' . .. . TheGOdde~'b?ok. is, as has I Mass. wilLbe 'Rev. Fulgen~ Gor- ., T.U . .MATADI ,POP·OKI.uIA:Kl\ LUL1,1ABOtJItG .. J[ABINDA The Godc:\e~ were Chrls~;l~, •been said,' gorgeous in depictiOft··. czyca,. O.F.M.:Con.v., archpriest,· .,. TSHUMltE •MWEltA· KOLE 'STANLEYVILLE B0NDO Blffl'1A .

bllt not. m'!ch· for.· churchgomg. :'oJf .the exotic quality of lndia. " -&f Our. Lady.Of 'Perpetual Help;,. BI1TA ISANGI MABAGI NIANGARA WA'MBA DO:RUMA ) [ 0 ­

In the; section. of. Be~ga~ ,wh,~re Whether it' be 'in: descriptiOn ·of . New Bed.ford; Rev. Jolm. Bam~ ; G~:Y~."VT~aE Nl!':tTNiDO .•UHENGE~I . GlTEGA BURlJJU

~y hved, there was no Chns- . Indian' music 'heard ·by 'nightor' bol,' O.i\~.. ,Com,-.,, ·deacon, ·.'of. " NGOZl BUJUMBURA BAR~ HOSANNA e NEGHELLl GIMMA

. tt~n chu~ch in e~~ .reach. But .i 11 ·recounting· th 'e' fabulous . St. Hedwig's, New Bedford; Rev. FJ:R.}liANi)O )"00' ~O ~1'iI.· MONROVIA. CAPE :PALKA'S.·

once a ye~r,: at (;:tlnstmas,.Jh~e charms .of Kashmir, the. 'authors' ,·William Maeiaszek, subdeaCOD,

was a sort of service which. t~ey are like Mr. Singer.in·the ability of Boston ' ..

. .Non~ 01. .. thi!! could have~n unless, Gut IJf love f@r a1:l tile attended. So much for reltgton. to open up an unknown world Rev. Jeremi Chodacki, O,F. Missions, you ha~pcactiCE!d, seff-:denial in the name of Our Lenl., ~minK Is ~eaUb and make us move delightedly M. ConY,; Of Granby. will' be' . God Lo!ve Y e.~! " the. preacher. . The SlDger;'were'mtenselY l'e.- througp. i~. IlgiOUS. I8aac~ father, as a rabbI, Colorful SettiD~ . ·Father·.· Plichta was :'001'1\ GOD .LOVE YOU to Mr.. Mrs. N.S. for $8 "After goinc ). ~ould, of course, be constantly . .. .' . . March 14, 19J.7, soil of the late • .preoccupied' with, the' study. of It should not be thought 'th~t . Stephen and. Mary Miska. Plioh~, through YOllT . MISSION nlag-azine I feel. ·~l~ssed, ov~ .and over the Law, but, unlike some other th:ey overloo~ the .p~vert!' and . tao A m-'!mber. of the'first.gradagain by God. EveJll.th·ouglt to some .people our home.and.clothes ..abbis·whomhis !l9n ·had :a . ~Isery besettmg mIllio~sm~-: uatingclass .from Holy.CrQSS are .not nearly as.fushionalble aDd up-to-ilate .asOteirsj eompa.recl ch~nce to observe, he was also dlll.·These theY'saw: at fi:st haJ,ld,. Grammar School, he entered ,the' to the People of.South ADleriea and .MJi~.lfeel tJ:1;lt my ~deeply pious.. .He. ·Pfilyed con- .;.and ·of.th~se they. retll~n ~~~rp '. Franciscan' Novitiate at Ellicott·'" ~t home. is :SW8ll1~ ~ntho~e.~.·•••.•.••. W, th,e S.e\IrlOI'S ~ sta.~tly, aIl;d all his talk was per-. mem~nes.. Th.ey, _show us. th~,. ,. City, Md. following graduation.. S-105 lor..$~50 . W.e a~ .~:nc1osiDl'o~r.ehee~ •. and. are t:Tll lefu mea ted WIth, r~ferencel; .~ God .. o·poor carrymg a f!ltal~Y .stnck;en... , from RM;C.Durfee High ScheoL .... for ,the, Pt.J.v.J.le~e. of .~stiJtlg,~ven o~.e: ;J~Dg'. ~1l. ~ tll,~ ~.t;ar.. . FoUowa'ng ,philQsophical ~stud-: , Hifreligion mattered' siJpremely.· .:: mem~r of the .~a~1l1Y to. Ul.e Increase .your knowledg~ anil love·.;of the .Missions by:reading and: almost ~~clusiyely, for him.;banks of a .sacred·:nver,:so that . ies in Montreal Father Plichta,.·. ;;- ' .. ·,~·.";~i:i,. "... . .. : j'deathmay 1ak.e plac~·jl1.. t~ose·:·:" attend~ the, ,u'rllvel'sity,of' 5t.MISSION'; Poeket-sized.,'·bi-hlonthl,.•. maga,zin'e ·edited,'··by Most • War·;,yetel'bns ...· ~;holy,.·precincts; .. and; ·crefhatibh'.: Casimir, Lwow. :Poland" remain.. ·.. Rev. FUl!on~f. .:$~eeJi.,K~pY;9Urself; ·up-'to-date On mission .ac- '. ~fonow, TheY,'ShOW. l.i~ th~~terri:' .. in~:,ther.e unti~,. World .. War·,~U .. ' tivi~~sthe-w6rld. over.~t .~put ~u··~. ,our''SUbscrip.tion' list·· A i.d ~. egt'O· ause. ble,effect on the destItute of .the forced ·hh leavmg. After 'ayear' . ·for only. one dollar n year.. ,~ .. <...... ,.' - " • '. . ' " KLI.ENTOWJll (:roan ..''"':'''' ,Tile .: violent change~.iri weather:' .' .. of 'theobgy ·.in' Rome he ~'eQm';" '.' ' : . ' - . .. . -:"-- -, . geileral counsel' of the Pe~nsyl~ But'~hey insist that tliere'arc:".·pletedbislstuiie·s·at:St:.HyaCinth 'Cut out this'eolum~ JiiD y'our satltlflCe'to·itamJ'm-ail·jt 10···· vania ~'eatfiol'ic 'Corlft!renre·-'ad,." innumerable Indians w~lO'do n?t. .' Seminary,' Granby~ Mass. .'. '- MOlj;i.·!.tev; Fu.lt~n ..IT. S~eeill, :N~tional Direet4r' olTbe Societ7'······ yoc;;ated her~ that. C?atholic ~ar' drag out a wretched eXIstence 10 ~rio~: tQ: his.":ap'poin~ment ~ . ;'01;'. tile, tJ;'OP~~~~D .of th~,,'a.~~, 366 'Fiftll:"Av~nti~, NeW Yor~' . Veterans' gIve theIr organlza- W~llt. And. they;. tell us. of the. ::pastor of ~oly Cross June' 12',. N.Y. 100.01, or~. J'!l'u~,Di!reptqr,' Rt; Re..... 'Msiri:; R'a:Ymoml'T4 tio:" a, ,:";r~w 1.9.0~..• ~~q..lf.': new" '. ~~l~~, ,f~r;: ~x~mple,~dur.1D~ ~t~e "19f!4, Fatbe! p'lichta had served CODsid~ . ~68 North ~1' Street, Fall River, 'Mas'saefnlsdtS,; ". heartbeat" by'maOlfeshng con- great festIvals, ' . .. . . at Sacred Heart, - Taunton; 81. ' .. • , " ., cern for the. ,N'e$I'o":"";~'-- . . Although a setting so ·colotful \'Hedwig'~,' Floral .:Park, N.Y; and . As maln:)s~irll:~r~~YJjte":state and;ds ·many "~spects,' ~pizarre', St. Sti'lJ)~slaJJS;, ,Chel.se.a, .. In co~,,:elit.i61J··.)}a:o.q~~~;; .. "4!~ot!1eY' is ~ikel~.. t<>: ~~,?oP~I~z~. t~~ r.e~~-. ': _Jt.i~e, '11J6Q; ;lie:was: O'amed 'direc-: " Wl.lhaql.B:·.. ~a.ll~,';l~~4,·:C~ ets notlce,.actually ~lils rooK ~s !tot· of. vocatIons .for St. An- .. m~mbe.rs to:'Wake~"~ pr.o~r.llm· . "?-~.;~,ucl:I.. ~b9u~,.~~?~1:?g ~~.,~;t . ;thony's Pr,o.~j~_ce,..... ,,'" .: Uf~lly :.:=2!e~t'I"iW,::¢ominunity" ·lS about growmg tip In IndIa. . " The jubil;1ri~n~s.'''-inlrriediate needs' of ·'thi! ·pr~iit·,hot.ir: .. ' ·A:, ..to,. the:ie~lings,oft.the: child ': family includes two brothers ••...• ~;. . . . . ' - • ~·I· ," •... '. ~":. ",:'; ' . . 1'; - ' . ' •• ~' ':.~. ':'Like -ai(~otgan~a'fi6Qs:": he, and the .adolescent,' ~e authors !'RaymoD;d ,.E. !':nd"·YranJt; .. and· stated, ~~you ."have '-/i";"coriStant are sensitive' and true·,. They-are ' ~ thl'ee SISters, 'MrSr' St~IiIey'-W; .' ""'~"'.' ~.." .~~~lJlt..a8~; dtIee ·Jfj.l3·· ne~ for ,scr.utinizing. ooth·,y..our;- .J~al1di.g .ilQO.ut,their ow:n budding ~Nowak, Miss Celia M. Plichta ..... selves andthe,w({rid'.tiil:oiit.-y6U> ':live's,·iln'd.';j~]!,r'easy~;.i~c'Pe~eive. "and Miss HelenW:.. Piich·ta. AU , ... ' Yo~r stated:.pr:ncivie~ia:ri,in~g':,':;il'1whaftheY'l'l.iii~~.t·1ihemselves;'residein· Fan River. . . .,,' ,:.... ... ;. .. . ' ... nif:icent b4(:ifrqgram$:fu@;~ii~~~~.~~e'thiri~ 'W~i~)f:M;,*5i.fulii;;p to .; Anothel }·.. sis~r,:,;.~ist.er ,,Mary.::... WY :3'.,09~ WGter~ startl~. ',' ~~. ,,:~ up'.d,l,lted sq'.:.:th,~ "..~U~Wl nat~,~' ..bl:l~;:~-l.t~~,'. ~. iWqfred,'a . Franc'is'can Sister of ". . , . ',' , ' ' ' .. : :.. ..• ,~, , ". '. ,,,,,. . ". ~~1~~~~~~~?.:....a~~~l?.?~ L~~£~~~~~1!!c;-~~t.<..!¥:'""'ll~~:3·JOst!I>~" 9:~e9,:·A'3-,·.fa~!ol~rl .. "'l~_~ --.,;;.~;....~~.;.~,~ ~~:~:::J""~: ~';'~·'j·~·c-:· ~,......~~j-~-~.:j-i.a. .... __....~ " j """au' lehei1Jo . . press. _. i1V1 • .

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy . Strikingly different, yet strangely alike, are two new­ Ry published memoirs. One, Two Under the Indian Sun by Jon and Rumer Godden (Knopt .and Viking Press, New York. $5.50), oomprises recollections of life in India in

the second decade of the In the'rabbi's house there: was, present' century. The other, inevitably, an interest in learn­ In ..My Father's Court by. . ing: "In our house," says Mr. IS'aac Bashevis Singer· (Far- Singer, "learning was looked up­

Father . 'Plichta" To Ce.leb.rate Jubilee Mass

in

A'

! ",

Asks' .N

a

'.CO' .

~.: :.·~J~IiEMtAj"'.~. COHOLAH ~

' ',,'.' PlU·MBIN·(;·::&·~·H··EATiNG -'." man:

.

__

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1... ".. 703$. Street New 8edfonI;" ....


Manitoba Priest Named Consultor To Secretariat

THE ANCHORThurs., June 30, 1966

13

Says Council Put Catholic Colleges mn Good Position

WINNIPEG (NC)-Father Arthur Gibson of the Winni­ peg Archdiocese, has been named a consultor to the

CINCINNATI (NC) -

Vatican's Secretariat for NonVatican II has put the Catho­ lie college ina very favorable Believers. Father Gibson, who is lectur­ position because of "the ex­ jng this Summer at the Univer­ plosive reawakening of theol­ sity of 1.,ilanitoba, hopes to visit ogy" it generated, Father Ray­ communist China in late' August. mond A.Roesch, S.M., Dayton He said he hopes to go "as a University president, told the simple tourist, simply to see the graduating class of .Our Lady of the country and the people and Cincinnati College. if possible to establish contact "Scholars of world renown are with some of the institutes of issuing from the Catholic' cam­ atheism there."" pus and are being listened t6 Difficult Task . by an aurlience that never before . In September,. he will begin listened to Catholic scholarship," teaching a course in problems of he. said. modern ath~ism In the Graduate As a result, he add r"l, "the

School of Theology, University time is now ripe for the Catholic

of Toronto and a similar under­ institution of higher learning to

graduate course in St. Michael's resume the university's historic

College 1here. role of independent criticism."

A former student at the Pon'7 "The university is the Church tifical· Russian College i!1 Rome, learning," ~e said "As such, it is he is cUlTently preparing an subject to all the demands and English translation of an Italian risks of the learning process, in­ history of modern atheism. eluding free and open inquiry," Comm~nting 011 his appoint­ The college should not· give ment as consultor to the Secre­ students "an encyclopedic com­ tariat' for Non-Believers, whose pendium of knowledge and de­ head is Franziskus Cardinal COLT"EGE'SFIRST GRADUATES: ,The first commencement of the College of the tailed instruction on how to Koenig of Vienna, 'he said the solve every problem," Father secretariat "has a particularly Sacred Hearts, Fall River, was held Sunday with Most Rev. James J. Gerrard conferring Roesch said. difficult area assigned to it." deir~es to the following : front: Sr. Bernadine Marie, S.U.S.C. ; Sr. Kenneth Agnes, Center of Po~er Critical Ai'eas S.U$C. Bishop Gerrard; Sr. Marie Albert, S.U.S.C.; Sister Catherine Gerard; S.U.S.C.; "]t is not the duty of a col­ "There is need fo'r"a minimum' Standing: Sr. Eu'gene Qlga; S.iJ.S.G.;· Sr. ¥ad,e. Louise, O.P.; Sr. James Michael, O.P.; lege to tell people what to do. effanfare 'and a maximum of. Sr.' 'Virginia ..Emmanuel, ·S.U.S,C. '. . ' .. ' . . , It is the right idea of a univer­ serious work, pi'ayet; alld' quiet ' . ' , ... -" ... , sity to conceive itself as a center dialogue," he c o m m e n t e d . ' . . of intellectual. and' contempia­

.

o1the~slJi"and

A'..s·k . '$·... ··,.C· . ·.··,·a.,·t. ·h·. o.··I.~· c.··,··.,:·H,.,. o,'.. ·s· I·,t.·.~.·I·..s'...· ·S···.e·e. k.·. "Ex'c''el·I··enc·e'·· iive,po~er,to

~s

('Between Cath'7 p·:.. . . . . . . : . . " . recogq,i2!e itself olicism there can b~~ no' dialogue . . distinct from the centers 'of i1i­ whatever j betwecil' atheists and . ,,, .' '.' ., . . ' . ...' '... . ~itutional power.~~ ·he .declared, , · Cat~oli~I>' the~~ :cai(.be. '~ver-y., ." .;'::'/: .Str~s$es.·,CC)nce"'ti A c:~tholic'college s~i>uI~ ~~. f!'Uitful exchimge,"'Father,Glb.",,, . "",'" .. ,'.,' . . . . ,' ,." jllst 'be "a dispenser Of' apOlo­ ., sOn .obstli,ved. ':."," ".. .:. ~ . '. :., CLEVEIJAND. '~NC-)7WithQ~t",f~ent. al'e~~a!ld:make·them.out":. .pretty -generally' admitt~d' that, «eHcs' and'. professional' h'aininf He added, that toore can:.be . Cathf)lic"~ospihd~' ·tbere","Jl(Quld: ." standing,. even, if"it .w~r~, ne(;es~, l;3t:gtt. proport~on. of .ihei~, .physi;"·' t4!. its:clientete;'l he added';' . ,"c~~~~i·~tj,?f1,' :.~~w·f~.f .~~. ,h'(,~ .'be niedt¢al'~h~Q$; but'too' ofteJl,< sary'.to cr~.. ~he,:boundaI'Y lines" , car .al·e the ·p,.',otluct of. dis:" ~" ·It shOuld ~ilr the ·.need· of ihe '. gfroup~ . ~n,. tV~d'~r~.~s}ifc.r..tlcal, are~..,'"C~~holic ··hOspitals".faU. ,sh0l't ~f . ,''', of Pl'o.v~n,c~s,;.t.,<.... orp,ere(l: .eflll>tions. .' ,,' Ch~reh '.(or '.: "an "i.ndeI?e~dent ' e presen - ay e such as ... , 11' ~!n' th t h ld be . " '., ~ ..'" ," _ ..... .':. . " 0, ~ou~'ce t~ clarJfy, tb examIne, ex­ '. .," ,."'" t. . '." ·d.· tiM! e.~ce eu"e:·, a;. ·so'1,1 '.:' .In E,very,AsPect '.' .::Ps.Yo.,cllIah.lC, 1,Hl~ts'.).n., thes~ m,. 'poundan'd'occasionMly tes·t. ·1 ...

.an P4!~d·c.~ll.t~ 1?~·o.b.I!~~ . of .. h\!~~~~;::' theit. mai!'i.ch~racteristic,aP$.y-·. ; "'ExceHe~":e' sheuld.bethe, H t t t" 1.­ II>

JJ Iteracy anu .above all the h'at ·st· tId' tb 'eth Ii H" '. ,.... " s I.U lens ar~· non-e;X1S ~I) .~ ';' , • ..,.1 ,'ieiions and ~h(rapplicationof j~ I \vhoie' ta~~l~d qUeStio;;, e 'tll lA,,:'.0 . .ti·'.. ~'!I' .to c. o:s~,. watchwor~-'-exceHence.'In .every '. d~clare~j' . a~4 ..: th~.h6sPlt.als . ·teacHing," he-' said. .... . ...., ,")'0 a anda i' · : .• ,.', . ' , .. ' ~I a .. ~so.c.a .. on~ ... 9..,:onyeJ.l7· ··aspect.ofhospital.care~ no ,mat:- .. ~11.g~t ~~ll.h~n.., slgns.ou~stde '.' . JIl'~:d6ing thi~.· "non~CathOlic p ..~ g ' . ' .,' , . tlOn ~te. . .' . ., .' '.. ·ter· what rearrangIng, major 'per-. readmg.. AU.:;y~ who ente.r .here . positions 'in theology and' phil­ '. (Jl\use ~I ~~~ist . br: F.rari(ii~.j; 'B'racehind): sen-' sonnel sllrg&r¥. 'othurt feelings It .~el;\ve· yo?r D)lnds and yoW ~eel-. .Osophy'" should' be' considered .: . "The interest and assignment ior' consultant iil the, Inst1tute ·of· 'reQuires," ", mgs behmd; ~e. have r09mon~. . seriously he stated.' ..of-the secretariat is the problem hiVing', :jfa'rtford, Conn".' criti... In some' ,hospitals, ·.he said, f~r your bodies." ' of atheism and we are absolutely .cized Cathi)li~:hospitals·'for'de- elabo.ratepreparationsare.made d~vorced from ihe' political fiCiehcies ;in 'pi~nning, coot-dina"; ·10 heal· men's homes and there . , . '. arena,". Father Gibson said: tion;cooperaUon. 'a'nd conc~rn' are chaplains "to tend to their' . "Anytbmg that can contribute· for the sick.' . . . spiiitual wants, but there are no . 0" .B· he' .I to a better understanding be­ .' Dr.' Bra~eland' said he ~uld. provisions for the care of men's., INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

·tween human, ~eings c~ntribu~es . never undersfand 'why several mindt; or emotions, though it .is . HARRISBURG (Nt)' - 'The H WILLIAM STREET

~lso to the cause of Chnst, whlch Catholic hospitllis' "can exist Ca.tholic· bishops 'of Pennsyl­ loS that they may aU be one. I do withiri a few miles of each other va'nia, in' a state~eni assailing. fliEW BEDFORD, MASS.

. .' ~ot.. I·ecan G:hrist having 'set any under the auspices of different . government birth control, made . WY 8-5153 . WY 7-9167 ))'!uts to the 'th~Y.' w~o~, He religio!.is communities." ., a plea for state "neutrality" i~' WIshed to be one In HIm; . he . ,.wou Id' "t t b b tt t "1 this area. PERSONA~ SERVICE : I no . e e .er opoo MADISON" '(..~C) "'D . . . n'oted' . the excellent faculties that the .' . l~ rop The bishops denied thatgov:" . ' .' down dew,' y'ou" heavens'· from ern t ' d b' th several i.nstit.~tiol)s h.av.e a n d " men' sponsore IF eon';' nave' one outstanding hospital?" above . .'.' This is my' constant trol'IS an e ff ec t'Ive so1U t'Ion to prayer, .. that'" the' heavens :will" t ff . t·' .' ne. asked... ". ~.... send bo\h rain tv our hard soil pofvertYt. or anife eChve means "I would, 'w'hI'Ie' on thl's here-. . 0 cu mg we are COBt S,' They Building. ContradOr an~ grace to' hard hearts."· d .(NC)-.AI·chbl·sh..... tical ,bent, even ..ven.ture. to. hope' . Th'IS . IS how.Auxiliary ' war!1e. . t~at ~uch' . LEMONT ~.. .. B. ishop would" .I . . . • .'ptogra~s . d thO .T P C 0 d y chicago. f C . of .that e'~ch o'f .tpe larger" r;ell·gl·o.u~ e .. ohn·. -" 'Juan Baptist Mudaiihaspo'ke of .' . . IOVOi fve ' "coercIOn an' Masonry · . t d t d d' . I orde'rs would, so ·sta·ff one or' . tw·vA . his work ifI' the Ja.nsi diocese 01.:. mvaSlOn prIvacy' 'and might. f ICla e.a e Icahon;ceremonies I . d'- 0.' t '1' • ..' '• . of.' ,t.heir' hiI' . .ter ... ho.·"pitld- in difea IV . S en Izatlon' and aoorat De Andr-eis Seml~ry .here ill '" 0 "" ·northern··India and prefaeed a ti6n programs. Illinois.·' ~. . " .' . plea for Amel'iean :aid during "We' h' Id .thr'f ' . .. t · .Pri?~ipal ~le~rant: of· t~ : h,stihit~: :ASStf vis!t heri'.· . . . , . s l i o u i d m~iri'taln·a g:i1i::d,:e~ d~dlCah?o·MQSS wasjos.e~h:Car:- " '. . , . '. '. " ... ,. $ ... ' '" ~The.d~w. ~f..~avenly 8r~~, ·pi~ise.'neut:r~lit.y iii uch'mDt-, '.' dlD;!1 ,Rltt,er. of. St, '~o~~wit~ : ·S. t "· " . W~U:more: ea.silY. warm-hearts of . . . . ., .. eonce~eQr.ants mclu41ng.~l'ch~. ..' ...., ,.,..... " .'.... _.... oodles 110unshed by f()()d" the' t~~s=-:-th!lt it is n9t .tjt~ .busihese ' 7 .RA..m,E S~H1' . . :"D1sh~p 'COdy; ~n(l . HI, :.pHesk -.e( , ...; .~C;>T~E. P""'~I:' j~W ,::- ;;'f~:': "bishop exi>lairied·..-liI~ 'do~'t\i:how . : of ·iove~nmtmf·~itlierto penali'1le , ,.; :. t~~.: .y in!l~ti~... Y~be'rs;.. : t~;)~pa~ . ,?f. :.~.: S~t;~l(l·. -y~~~~~ : what 'we:wilf d'Oll1t 'doesiitfl'ain' .or .elic~rage.indiyjduals; in: the ·;.IIHAVIN ·WY 4-7311 • • l'der, a.imini8tet'i»"~.ihe"Iiet8i:...' Jrounctl . -~Clm~n ~ ,.!el~gl.c,)l~: . in Jndia~ this 'suinDier,:" ·'tle' prel:' ...!.j~~tic~ :. ~ :~i~th. 'p~eve~iion," 0.' . ;Rary.· .' ". , ...., ' ... . ' , ::n:~u~~~~ wiJI I';h as:C/!~-:dl .~te' inusecl,' saying that even' now . ,,!,ey ~id; . ... . . ' '. '~a:aI:l:la:::a:ll:lci:a:a=S::I:i:'JdI . De . Andreiii i8 'a four. year ' . e . ' .nnua- . e(? O~tca . : most 'peOPle 'Only .one' meal' . .., . . ':'inlitit\ite Of the01ogy'lor:colfege ;msbtllt,e.. to",. Loc.~' Supenors,·,: a"day'''' .. ; .._...." -;;'.'. ..... ... r-~-:--~~~-:--'O-~"""'I~~!"""...;'!"!"--..... " .lI r ad·uates· preparing for ordi­ .. \0. Qe.he.ld at..the Un~v.e~sity ~:::." . .,. I' ..riaUoi{as.Vlncentian ..prie8ts·.·.Jt. '.N{)trf;!.D.a~,A~J·.•. ~.'~~··,·T· t, '\'~'c·~.;.,., :. ",, __ ... ,.....,'.. .. 'W<ls formerly th~ :theology de:' ... Some i,700 !luns from through-" .. " . .. ". '. ,: . ~ ." .' , .' . .', ..: ... ~""''' ".",~ .. ' ..

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IU Comml~te. itiei; .of theLocaISupei'ioriiJ.~i\ ,r, i .. iamou~: .~adi~~· HARD. '.coAf j ..CHICAGO (N.C)"':-Twenty':tW~ . yie~: o(rlthe,D~isio~, ..and:·:' ':-';"" ,." ~ -NEW':ENGLAND COKE'·· " .~ ~V~ p)'i~~t~ .w~~e .elepte~,to.: a.':ne"".: _TJ:~f}dB .lilitablish.ec:L ~y. Vatican;, '273 ':CENTRAl' ' A V E . . . · "...... , . , . ... ~~~ Coordmatmg Committee of the' )!.,' ... "'. ' . , . : ; .. ' • :'" ;." " '"'''';''' .'. . .;" ". ' f · . ~ ,,'lIil: .. ' .' . Cl.et:gy.t9 establish workirig e.• The institute ,,,,UI.be.spensoredl,. . '. . " " , .., i , .,.roups 'io' stud¥ ,'.varioUil 'Pl'ob"- by the:N,itre'Dame'tbeology:de,;;' , '. :.' ::W\f·2~6.2:16 ". lems 111' modem ch1Jrch wotk and'... pBrtment hl' cooperation wiUithe'· ' " . ; •.. .... '"." ' .. , ::. p~es~nt practilllil prbpo8al~' ~ ·Con~ereilre 'OIl iMajOl'!,.Super.iorS!I~· "NEW"BEDFORD"

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14

.Chic:ago, Priests Requ"st Improy,ed

Comlmuirtications With .Archbishop

THE ANCHOR-:-Diocese ~f Fan River-Thurs. June 30, 1966

Official Asserts Participation

'By iLaity Aids" CQtholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC)-A'report by" ' . ,'.' \ .assistant pastors and other' '.. It also covers the role of th e priests ,()f the archdiocese of:' parish priest, diocesan pastoral Chicago said that many of them' planning,. and other mat.ters. CHICAGO (NC)-The increas- ' fog involvement of Catholic he indicated that many 'were desire ,to 'have improved chanIn its. section on "communica 'laity in parochial schoolsllas re- .. seriously considering the move. nels of communication' with tions ," the report says: 'sulted in parish school bGards ,Belanger tpuched on ~ther Archbishop JOhil P. Cody. ' "Many. priests were much. con­ and in better cooperation' be-. methods of p~rent-teacher com-' , The report is a summary of cerned not only· about their ·com­ 'tween parents and teachers; the ' . inUnications already in such . discussions by <!{)O priests, ,none munication with each other .an d · head of the Chicago' atchdioc- l¥l. the mandatory twice-yearly of them pastors, who held a with their respective pastors " .esan school board told' a 'group individual: conferences, and the series of three :meetings in. the concerning parish problems' but of nuns here. ' . ... . parent-teacher organizations. are:hdiocese recently. ... a~o about their communicatio n Albert 3. Belanger a~dressed ''These contacts are nec~sa:ry Archbishop Cody who re- With the Ordinary (archbishop) •. a study day for 'Sisters sponsored. to renew $lderstanding of each 'ceived a copy of th~ report be-' "They felt their was appre ­ J:>y the Urban Al'ostolate' of the' other's problems';' he said. The fore leaving for Rome, was're­ hension in th~·diocese today due Sisters at :Resurrection. parish next step would be home visi­ .. ported· to be receptive'to its sug_· to ~ack of communication. They ., .. a.uditorium. . '" ,tations. "B'ut we haven't gone .gestions. ' .... .' . deSIred stronger bonds of mutual :Responding to questions '(rom that far yet, have we?" Belanger' .' Bishop Cletus F. O'Donnell, .tJi:ust.· .... .; the floor, BelangF'r admitted ,that, asked the nUns. vicar 'general, 'said he had' no ':. "i'The . priests felt· that·, 'they the more democratic poli-cy in· . 'comment since it was addressed "·should: be more clearly appraised .'" the Church todqy raise{prob-Federa.1 ~RlEAT CHURCHMAN:' .tothe··archbishop,. All' priests in of his goals and programs. They .' ''terns, for example the .'practical . A :memorial ~ Archbishop ",the' ~rc!hdi~cese Ireceived coi?ies '.' . also expressed. the desirE! that ~""integratiOIi' ofCatholid schools.;~ John Ireland,. first archbish- ' . ~f the. report.. . , ". h~ deleJate hIS authority mor e To a suggestion that· aii' !i>pen

op of St. Paul Minn' who' Bishop O'Donnell said the' re­ wldely~· . enrol'lment policy such: as that. died in 1918 be ., ted port m\.tSt await the attention of .. practiced by: Catholic. high I . . .' . erec ArchbishOI? Cody, who is going sChools here might combat the ' WASHINGTON' (NC) near hl~ birth place (1838) to,meet with the ad hoc commit-· NASHuA (NC)-Msgr. Ernest de .facto segre~ation caused by, Several Catholic agencies in County Kilkenny, Ireland. . tee that called the meetings and ·parIsh boundaries, Belanger. re- . . . E. Brodeur, recently resigned as plied that some of the. high'" are among the housmg Archbishop Ireland is one of also prepared the report.. pastor of St. Jean parish in Man­ schools are not fined to capacity,' .sponsors for whom the first the great ligures in Ameri-. ~Iutual ~l'rust chester because of ill health, ''but parents won't :send 'their . 'fund rese:rvations for rent sup­ . can Church history. NC' In a covering l.~tter the comhad a reunion with his eight children." plements have been made by the Photo. mitteeexplained that the 400 · brothers and sisters at the family . met together "so Ithat we might · home here. The family includes These parents can't be forced. U. S. Department of Housing become more eff,ective iostru­ to send 1ftl.eir chi'1dTen to an in-· and Urban Development. Father Louis A. Brodeur, 78, tegrated school,Belanger' noted. Total fund resefVations, as an­ ments in Q;ur WOIK with God's .now retired after serving 54 -And what do ·you d(iJ; out off nounced by Secretary Robert C. · years 3S a priest, and Sister LISBON (NC)-Lay perSGRS people;'" their 'heads'? They are part !1f' Weaver, are in' the amount 9f are !lOW being encouraged, Marie Calixte, 74, a nun for The report deals with commll­ the people of God~" he added-. ;$663,4'70 to be used in 12 states. through a miSsionary center nications between pastOrs and 51 years. Another brother is Parish Boards .' The funds would .supplement here, to volunteer for work in 'their assistant, between priests Charles Brodeur, SO; recently re­ Belanger said he sends his rent on 1,095.unitll·of hoosfRg for the Portj,lguese foreign missions. . .and the archbishop, and. between tired as the Nashua boal'Cl of OWIl two high-schaolers' to low .income families: ­ health inSpec¢or. _'. pnests and lailty. .S Cihaolsin 1llhe city. ·even though . I SGut.bem Dioceses ­ be lives in suburban oak P~rk, . Under the' new program, low .~lilSe Of-the ..greater llP3Iilof income families; would pay one- . . rfourth 'of their income in -rent ctm.d.ren tbeywin meet;" · fie.5tressed. the :iim.portance of. ..for . approved housing and the the ;pari.sh .school board.- "the :Iilifference between the faftuly!s concept c1f a parish school as -a payment and the economic rent sman sclwol system of its own" . would be made up by' a payment-·· --as 'a tool ·of eommunldltion. from the federal government to' SGme 20 .or 30 parishes'·are the housing owner.' .. nQW :in -the process M fmming A $60,000 ·rent supplement was .these sohQ0!l boardS. he isaid, 'and' 1 '1'eserved for 100 housing Ilflits ill . Church-NOnprofit' Homes, Ine., ." .. ·Sena. . Adyjse.·.S·sponsored by tile al'chdioceseof, New Orleans.

A $72,000 reservation ~ rent' supplemt'nt funds ,was made fO!' DOVER (NC)~A US. SeflatOf'·the diOOeseof 'Ntltchez':Jacltson 4ispensdsome advice··tQ higk . MisS., for rent, supplements . ~ achoolers here~ : UO housing Units ia it&Greea­ "The way ,to dlailenge"'a ltIW'" '"riIle project: is: in the courts. not through' " A reservation of $76,800 in wolence,and·t:be way to change' funds was made to supplement · a law is in the legislature;' and reiit on 144 of the 234 town­ O0t in a riot," u.s. Sen. ThGmas' houses being constructed in the McIntyr~ of .New Hampshire' Washington Park Urban' Re­ .. told the graduating class 'at St. n::lwal area,Boston. The projeCt · Tboonas Aquinas High School 'is being. Spoftsored' br the .here. . . ''Charles St. A.M.E. Church, .St. He . said ""yoimgmen who 10seph's Catholic Church.: and' .. burned their draft cards in 'vio-' Twelfth Baptist Church ' tation of the law ·to pr()teirt" Cleveland Projed , i against fore~ ip0liq and young A reservation' of $40;820 was . Resident . . and Day CClmp for Bovs men who threw eggs at the'····made to supplemeiltrent on 60 pacifists at our state university" .. of the 116 -low income housiRg .•• '. .expressed ,belief that"satis- units· being rehabilitated ia fac~lOn of "their own .personal . north North East Harlem by the . desIres was .more important "''U.' S. Gyps'urn' Company. '. On . Day .Camp for' Girls . . ~th~n observance of the la~." oompletion' the ·'·units" are to be . ., But they were wrong," ..the' . sold to the Metro NorthEast' se~ator said. ''They were misHarlem Housing Association. Sponsored Cathoiic of Fo'U River gUided End. ,they failed' to ac-' which is comprised of the 'Mar~ . co~plisli what they set out· to ····mont Foundation, Union Settle­ n.OCATED .ON LONG POND, ROUTE l1J; EAS~ FREETOWN, MASS~' do. ..... : ment House, St.' Lucy's eatholic .' .', . ,-Church, and the Church of the ..' 47th y~r of .•xpeD'i~nce'in p~gran"mi~ camping activities o'. " Dirksen ·to ForCe' ' Resurrection of the East Harlem' 1n~~vacllual1 ins~ru.ctional prog..~m fo!' each age g~UllJ; AcUvities !Delude 'swim' '. Protestant Parish. swling, c~noemg,. water,:,sk~i~g, softball, volleybaU" basketball, baseball end,men(J: . A $12,200 reservation of funds ~~chery, riflery, horsebackndmg, cook outs, field trips, Indian lore, woods:nanshi ' WASHINGTON (NC)~U.S. was made for supplements on special events, camp ~raft;. ar~ and .crafts, camp fire, canteen, etc. Excursions :; Sen. Everett Dirksen of Illinois 22 apartments at Belvidere Cape Cod· and other histone sites and .places of interest. .' '. character.i.zed his proposed con-' Project, Inc., a rehabilitation stitutional amendment to over- housing project in Cleveland J?ailY M~S$ in Assumption Chapel on Camp Grounds. Private beaches lar e c .n!ie the U.s. SliPreme Court's Ohio. The project is sponsored liouse, .dn~ing hal~ spacious do.rmitories,: moderll washroom· facilities' ind~or amp­ ban on prayers in public .schools by. Hope, Inc., a nonprofit group recteatIon hall, lOunge with .TV crafts b U 'lding .' gym. ., • arts . _ ..~~d ~. l , camp ·infirmary. as "probably the biggest tliiilg' .founded by Father Albert Kol­ in my life." '. kowsky of Our Lady of Fatima S~p~ate S~~· Boys'. 'eamp~eminai-ians OlE the Fall River Diocese... !he 'Senate Republican leader Church and the Rev. Walter E. Gl,r~ C~~l~ters of ~otre Dame de Nllmur & qualified Catholic college students 8wd . he plans ,to force the .Gravatt Jr. of the Hough Ave­ lllesIden~Ca~hohe ChaplwD. Resident nUrF.es and doctor on call 24 hours. 'Q11lendment outafa' Senate nue United Church of Christ. Bus TraDSPortatdon for Day Camp i'll'om Fa.iK Rive:r, New Bedford and Taunton areas ludiciary subcommittee for a BhowdQwnonthe ,Senate floor For further information write to TWQ-:thirds ·of the 100-membe; BALTIMORE :NC}-Fourteeo. Senate must ,approve the con- deacons from seminaries here UY. WAlLTER A. SUWVA~DiRECJOR, P.O. BI)X 63, EAST FREETOWN, MASS.' stitutioaal amendment. : have been assigned to Summer . or call 71&3-8874 . ;: If he cdr.not get the two-thirds . parish work by Lawrence (:ar­ vote, IDi:rksen .said he' plans to ',?inal Shehan. Theil' work will Member of NOltional Catholic Camping Assn. offer ,the measure as .a .SlIDiilti­ ~c1u~e . prea~ bapti:dng, ilIl1ld New Eng1and Campi,ng Assn. tute for a bill :awaiting Boor' distributing .Jloly' Communion action. and varied other ,Parisll dilti~. '

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Popal Study

Continued from Page One present the findings and recom· 3JIlendations to the Holy Father, possibly tomorrow. Then the decision, which Pope Paul has already often referred to as a heavy but personal responsi· bmty as the successor Peter, must be made. Repeatedly, the Pope has asked the faithful to Pl'ay for guidance. ' God Given Principle The decision to be mad~ by the Pope is not wheth~r or not to change dogmas or the teach­ log of the Catholic Church. '!'here are God-given principles according to which the Church is to make decisions. To man­ handle the law of God~natural, 1Vritten or spoken-is never permitted. Tbe d~sjon which weighs heavy on the Holy Father and for which he needs the testi­ Jl)()ny of experts in all fields is whether in' the light of what God has already revealed the present use of. birth control ·practices is permissable. , Wt'igh Contentions If it could be proven that birth contral practices are a help, and not "an obstacle, to the sanctity of marriage and to the intention of God in estab­ lishing marriage, the answer would be in the affirmative. If, however, the use of birth control would only feed the lowest passions of man, breed license, and present man with the rights and joys of marriage without considering its duties and God's part in this whole human activity. the answer can only be in the negative. Briefly, do the modern uses of birth control and, more im­ portant, the intention or reason for using such means support and help G9d's natural law or are they only purely human de­ sires that have risen to a riotous height? It is the Pope that must provide the answer. Menstruation Cycle Though the commissions' re­ ports are secret, 'it would seem· 'that there is near agreement' concermng a "qualified endorse­ ment of the oral contraceptive pill as Cl supplement to 'the' 'rhythm' system of birth con'­ troI." Such II use of '''the' pill" would be not in contraception as such·-which can never be permitted-but "as a means to regulate the menstrual cycle and thus make the rhythm sys­ tem"-the only system which seems to consider God's part 'at present-"safer."·

Municipal, Fete to Honor 'Diocesan Missioner

On Return to Brazilian Parrish ,in August'

When Father John Anthony Janson, O.F.M. went to Sacred Heart parish, Goiandira, Goias, Brazil in 1948, 10 people attended his ,first Mass. When he returns to Sacred Heart in August, a municipal holiday will be declared. What brought about the change? Eighteen years of hard work on the part 0 f Father Janson and the pastors who·succeed­ ed him are part of the story. ' Anoth~ part. is the warm personality Of this genial FrancisCan who says,"Wher­

THE ANCHORThurs., June 30, 1966

1B

Vote Extension

Of School Aid

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Senate education subcommittee has voted to extend the Elll!­ mentary Education Act of 1'965 for two years. The administr~ tion sought a four-year exteD­ sion.

The measure provides foy federal financial assistance for ever I have gone,' the people the education of needy children. have been friendly." In 1950, aftei' Father Janson Eligible chilclren in nonpupiie had finished building Sacred schools Qenefit, from programs Heart C~urch, started a, parish . of shared services under the legislation. ' school a!)d conlStructed a rec­ tory, he was transferred succes­ Nonpublic school children and sively to other parts of, Brazil. teachers also receive textbooks He did not return to Sacred and library material provided Heart until latl~ year" buf his under the act. pioneer work for the parish The education subcommittee had not been forgotten. also voted to continue the pro.. ''They were glad to see 'me gram of federal assistance to back,", he said ~imply. school districts "impacted" by With 3 population of 6,000, the presence of children of fed­ Goiandira is largely a Catholic eral employees. town. "Our Men's League is running the place," chuck'led Father Janson. He explained that in the last municipal elec­ tions, member!': of the Sacred Heart Men's League ran for NEW YORK (NC) - Former and won every town office. President Dwight D. Eisenhower Honorary Citizen presented a group of collections Another example of the of s~amps, given to him while esteem in which the greyhaired ,President, to Francis Cardinall Franciscan is held is the po­ Spellman at the prelate's resi­ .sition he holds as an honorary dence here. citizen of Goiandira. "They put my picture in th~ town hall," he The presentation included the said. Only two or three other first maH from "out of space to townsm~n have merited this which was carried in theco~e honor. ' of Discoverer 17. addressed to The parish is an active one. President Eisenhower and auto­ "The renewal in the Church has graphed by him. definitely reached' 'us," 'said Cardinal Spellman, one of Father Janson. An excellent the world's leading stamp collec­ liturgical choir has been train· tors will place this collection f)I) ed by the Franciscan Sisters display at the Cardinal Spe]]­ and the congregation .partici­ WE'VE, KEPT TRACK ~ Rev. John Anthony Janson, man Philatelic Museum at Regis pates fully in 'vernacular Masses. O.F.M. looks over back i88'Ues of Anchor in which his ex­ College, Weston" Mass. Sister The parish primary school has Mary. F,idelma of the Sisters of an enrollment of 280 and a eo- ' periences in Brazil :have been related over the past six years. St. Joseph" is curator of the ed high school ha!J 155 students. H~ is in p'.~ ..for ~servance of silver jubilee of ordination. museum., . Started last .year was a ,"normal 'school," which offers, a three year couJ;se beyoJ'l,d high 'school, its yield to his needy parishion­ : a flourishing parish musical 01'­ _ ganization which is subsisting 'at for teachers Graduates, or ers. present on 'instruments borrow-. '''normalistas,'' said Father JanNear to his heart is the pro­ NEW ROCHELLE (NC) _ son, are paid more ,1'iighly· than ject'of enlarging and improving ed from a neighboring town. "They fire really very good "The Young Woman T,oday­ those teachers who' have' only' Sacred' );leart Church. "I hope players," said Father Janson :aer Changing Roles in, Changing c'oinplet,,:d high 1':choo1. A total to pull down the entire front proudly. Society" will be the theme of a of 33 students are' enrolled in of the church and add two new The power mower is to keep study seminar here July 10 ttl this course. wings," he said. The extra 'space the parish grass in trim. "In 14 of the World Federation of Soup Kitchen is neede.:'! The four Masses that the very hot weather it's a Catholic Young Women and An important activity' is a he and his assistants say on Sun­ little hard to push the old­ ~irls. The seminar, at the Col­ daily soup kitchen, which aids day are always crowded. fashioned kind," said the mis­ lege of New Rochelle here, wiD some 80 fam'n.\es on a regular The two priests are responsi­ be followed, July 15 to 18, by basis. "Soup, milk and bread are ble too for a nearby town's, sioner, who is nevertheless proud that he's still' the same th~ federation's 18th interna~ given out 'five. days ~, week,"' chapel and for an outlying weight a" when he was ordained, tionai council meeting. said Father Janson, "and on Sat- village. They, manage to say "maybe '3 little thinner." urdays there's a ,dry ,Yun," Mass for the people in those ,The ,occasion for hiS home with bags of rice, macaroni and areas twice a month. dry milk distributed. Catholic And if anyone, should have, visit is the celebration of the 25th anniversary of his ordi­ , ANNAPOLIS (NC)-Petitions ,REtlief Serv~ce, foods fr!>m the,' band instru~ents gathering dust nation. 'All my classmates who United States form the basis or an extra power lawn mower, have been file<! with the Mary­ Father. 'Janson could put ',them, are still living attended an ob­ land Court of Appeals asking it of the Kitchen's operation. servance at' the Franciscan mon­ "For exercise I plant grass 10 good use and would ~ glad 10 reconsider its recent ruling astery in Paterson, N.J,," be Reg. Master Plumber 2930 against state construction grants and shrubs," said J.i'ather'Jimson, ·to take them back icI Brazil in said. GEORGE M. MONTLE adding that the grass is im- August. "It is so much easier to to three church-related colleges. Locally, a sister. Mrs. Edward' Over 35 Years

The petitions contend ,that the portant in keping dust down as take them with me than 10' DeGagne of Blessed Sacrament of Satisfied Service

decision by the appeals court well as providing exercise. The ' have thenishipped by frieght," parish, Fall River, organized a 806 NO. MAIN STREET

"manifestly conflicts" 'with its mission;lry also planted a rice he explained. get-together for friends and The band instruments are for Fall River OS 5-7497

ruling in February upholding field and has ben distributing relatives last Sunday. There was tax exemptions for church prop­ also a :Mass of thanksgiving at erty. . Sacred Heart Church, New The petitions were filed by Bedford. state Atty. Gen. Thomas B. NO JOB TOO BIG Continued, from Page One to the College of St. Albert in Father Janson is a native of Finan, on behalf of th.e sta~e liberal arts at ,St. Isaae Jogues Louvain, Belgium to study The­ Blessed Sacrament parish in NONE 'rOO SMALL board of. public works, and at­ in Wernersville, Pa. ology. While in Europe he haS Fall River, but h:s mother, Mrs. torneys for St. Joseph College in He "concluded his studies at , also stur!k!d Spanish Language Marie Anna Janson, now lives Emmitsburg and Notre Dame Weston College in Weston, Mass. - and Literature during the 8um­ with another sis tel' Mrs. College in Baltimore. Attorneys (a division of Boston College), mel'S at the Universidad de George Lavoie, in Sacred Heart for the third school, Western where he received his A.B. de- Deusto, in Bilbao. Spain. PRINTERS parish, New Bedford. Maryland College, a Methodist­ gree in French Literature in In addition to his studies How does shE' feel about affiliated school in Westminster, Main Office and Plant

1959 and his M,A. degree in in Theology, Rev: Mr. Paradis having her only son so far are exp~)cted to file a petition Philosophy in 1960. _ also teaches religiOn at the Col- away. "Sometimes she says I 95 Bridge St., Lowell, Mass.

shortly. For the next three years lege deSaint-Paul at Godinne­ should work a l home for a' Tel. '458-6333

Rev. Mr, Paradis was a mem- sur-Meuse in, Belgium, and is while," says Fath~r Janson, "but bel' of the faculty at'" Boston the chaplain and co-ordinator of I tell her that I'm at home in Auxiliary Plants NEW YORK (NC) - Some College High School, where be student :lctivities in the Home Brazil now." BOSTON "1 dodt know when I be­ 28,500 students were graduated taught French and moderated 'f!>r Underpriviledged Children came a 'E!razilian;" he muses. from 433 Catholic schools in the the French Academy. During the in Charneux-Herve, Belgium. CAMDEN, N.J. "I don't' consider myself an After ordination and one final New York archdiocese in June, summers he studied French 'OCEANPORT, N.J. Language and Literature at year of Theology, Rev. Mr. 'AmeriCan-I don't consider my Msgr. Raymond P. RigneY,'arch­ MIAMI Georgetown University and at Paradis will return to the United people Brazilians, We're all one diocesan superintendent' of family, and 1 call walk into any schools reported. The figures Laval University in Quebec, States to teach Fre'nch Litera­ PAWTUCKET, R.I. included elementary and high., Canada. ", ture in flne of the> .Jesuit scbol!lls home in my parish and be wel-: PHILADELPHIA comed." lD 1963 Rev. Mr. Paradis went ~ New England, . Khools.

Eisenhower Gives Stamps to Cardinal

Changing Role

Ask Court Review

College Aid Ruling

Montie Plumbing & Heating Co., Inc.

Ordain New ·Bedf()·,d Jes'uit July 30

SULLIVAN BROS.

28,500 GraduOItes

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THE At-!CHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 30, 1966

Latin American Dictatorship Protected Special Groups

~

Day .(amp for Ex(eptional (hildren

From "Social Revolution in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. Latin Ainerica's revolutions' were directed at the politi­ tal and economic power of the mother Country just- as in the Unted States, but the basic social structure was com­ pletely different. Feudal type local oligarchies became even . more solidly entrenched in but they found their justifica::

!tower through the, break' tion not so much in the will of

with Spain. Like the United the govt'rned as in the national'

States and France, Latin betterment which it was so

Adlamsville

urgent for their nations to ac­

America wrote liberal constitu­

tions, but without a basis in its tua~ize. These dictatorships, de­ .scribed as democratic caesarism, social structure

restricted liberties and thus capable of guar­

were not able to provide an ap­ anteeing them.

prenticeship for democracy nor " Latin America to give the people the mearis of likewise lacked achieving democracy. They the technical were jnterrupted by military means that dictatorships, representing pri­ mig h t permit vate interests. From the second her to estab­ half of the nineteenth century, lish hel" eco­ these regimes often served for­ nomic i~depen­ eign economic powers. dence in the Li'tin Americ!"s Economy jungle of polit­ ,Indeed, Latin America found

kal expansion, itself at grips with the expan­

," Thus the revolutions were po­ litical without being social. This sionist policies, of the Western

nations. It was not only a ques­

particular sOcial situation and tion of military or political ex­

tb~ vi....ulence of centrifugal furces-the feudal caudillismo of pansionism, It became very soon

the landed proprietors' aiui of a region of foreign investments

'Ute "military leaders-brought to and served as a veritable finan­

pOwer new independent regimes, cial and commercial colony, first

of European then of North

Migarchies or dictatorships: " American capitalism. '

As Leopold Zea' puts it in ,aR This ('conomic role Of Lati. article in "Espirit": ''The conser­ America certainly did not pro-:'" ' ­ 'Yativeforees were so poweJiul mote its development. Neither -iRat they were quite able to PHYSICAL "'NESS PROGRAM make use of the possibilities of­ did the fact that during the colo-· nial period the conception of a fered by a democratic regime' to destructive' economy had pre· ~stroy liberties, and the liberal forces wore themselves out iR vailed. This economy led rather multiple political struggles to the exhausing of natural re· against their enemies and among sources than to their full utilii:a­ Utemselvt's to the detriment ,of tion. The desire for easy wealth, , Spiritu~l, EdUCGtf'onai and Rec~.ational ttte otbE'r condition indispenSa­ 'unaccompanied by any spirit 'of enterprise or appreciation of the ,. "Ie to the strength of the nation: value of work, developed if! the material pr9gress, and 'well­ Well·being of campers primory CClIACerA of trained and' under· Latin' American countries a being. Faced with the dang, N spirit ,of iooividualisticspecula. that conservat~ve action repre­ standing directors and counsellors. lteI\ts in a democratic regime iion,' lacking any~ national out­ look. '

Jluly ·4,11, 18, 25 'whose institutions the conserva­ With independence the social

tives use to overthrow it, a41d $8.50 per week feced also with a pitiful material groups of the ,'colonial period

J~ug. 1, 8, 1 22 atagnation, it was easy te, faM were slightly modified. The ad­

-mto the opposite extreme, into ministratiOn of the D:lother coun·

try had :1'. fact been ousted, but

d.ctatorsh;ps called 'dictato-r­ Transportation To CII1td f~om Camp there remained the landed oli­

ships for' freedom: garchy and commercial capital.

Pl'cKediveDiriaiorshipa "In the history of our COWlt,r!' ism. Further, the lot of the mar-,

these' 'latter were a necessary 'ginal ma"ses had not been basic-,

step toward the formation of thc ally changed. An intermediate

nlucleus of natior.hood. But the class did not get established, ex­

<iictatorsiUps, forgetting the end cept to a slight eXtent through

means. Foreigners,

for which they had been created, political Europeans and North Anier.

7 .. 14 Tears ci Age became purely and simply dicta­ torships for the protection of the icans, E·xercised an important

C:am~rs engage" Us. aft, types of Athletic Events and visit the beach interests of a particular social role in the economic functions., At the end of the nineteenth ' It'0up." ...Water Events..· Lacking the social an'li cultural century and during the first part foundations which permit the of the twentieth, a large number A. opportunity _ ~rficipate i~ "oily Mass is offered establishment of a democracy, of Europeans immigrated t<» the countries of Latin America Latin America. But the coun­ tries they chose were those o-f A Fjeld wip is CIAlCInged ORce II went through a'series of enlight­ ened dictatorships and oligarchic the southern zone: Argentina, Uruguay and Chile, as well' as governments. These minorities, sometimes .interested in the the south of Brazil. In the three progress of the nation, theo·· first-mentioned countries they Faa' REGISTRATiON retically represented the people settled in the clties and formed the basis of tlK, present Ruddle class, more developed than else. See Plans Assembly where in these nations, while in urch Rene'wal !ion Brazil, it was above all a ques­ On Ch "'" of rural settlements. P. Q. ' b 147G ,.02722 let 6-8943 ST. lOllS (NC) - Joseph During the nineteenth century Cardinal Ritter :>f St. Louis has the social structures remained ,named a' coordinating committee fairly fixed. The principal in­ for Oper..ation Renewal, the key' fluences were the following: Ii group in the preparation for' an rather numerous but quite suOOOOC)CC)OiOOOClOC>olOOOOCCK)C)Ol30OCllOCMJlIlll archdiocesan-wide assembly on perficial political changes; '2.) church :-enewal. the birth of the republic of '~IS MESSAGE SPONSORm • llHlE IFOllOWING INDIVIDUAI.$

Cardinal Ritter na~ed 24 rep­ Brazil, its regime based on mod· At40 BUSINESS CONCERNS lIN G·REATER FALl RIVER'

resentaitves from reliiious com­ els quite like those of the other

munities stationed in the "arch­ countries; 3) breakups and inter, AlIIN'itAt.E ~RODUCTS; INC. MACKI:NZIE & WINSlOW,. INC.

diocese. The group ranges from nal struggles: Uruguay, Central . BRADY ELECTRIC SUPP"" ,MASOIll FURNITURE SHOWROOMS '

superiors and provincials to America, Greater Colombia, CASCA,DE DRUG GERAU) E. McNALLY, CONTRACTOR

teachers and other members of wars between Chile and Peru; 'GLOBE MANUFACTURING . . $OBILOfF BROTHERS

Ute communities. 4) the manifestation of certain.

They Joined 24 appointed lay~ foreign designs: those of the HUTCHINSON! Oil CO. SVERlIlIlG BEVERAGES, lINe.

-Men, 24 elected laymen, 24 ap­ United States on Mexico and R. A. McWHIRR COMPANY _flU: WORKERS UNION OF AMt:RICA

pointed priests and 24 elected Panama, of the United Kingdom' INTERNATIONAL LADIES GAUl... All-CIG

;0 .>'llK'iestsl~the first full-scale ce­ -on Venezuela~·.. et' FRnoe... .. WORKHS-IlIN1ON ',~, CM~

S,

Catholic Boys' :Day Camp

daily.

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77

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., June 30, 1966

New Parish Lay Boa rd Relieves Pastor of Money Raising Work LEONIA (NC) - The estab­ lishment of a lay board in a Catholic parish h.as increased parish income, improved rela­ tions with public schools, and taken a load off the pastor's shoulders-according to a man' who should know. Msgr. Robert Brown of Im­ maculate Conception chu!-"ch, Ir­ vington, N. Y., told what a par­ ish lay board has meant to him at a meeting of the Bergen County Catholic Education As­ sociation. "Now I have time to do the things I like to do as a priest, instead of raising money," Msgr. Brown assert.ed. The purpose of the meeting was to inform mem­ bers of the association of· the growth of parish lay boards and the implication such boards have for pastors and parishioners. Msgr. Brown said he organ­ ized his board four years ago when the parish faced a heavy debt. Th' first ohing board members did, "was to eliminate all fund raising activities such as bingo, car raffles and card parties. They even cut out basket col­ lections in church. Instead, pa­ rishioners now drop their money in a hex at the entrance of the ~hurch each week." In the' first year, revenues in­ er"ased by 34 per cent, he said. They are now up 100 per cent, he added.

Asks Film Industry Use Self-Restraint BEVERLY HILLS (NC) Jack Vellenti, new president of the Motion Picture Association of Amei'ica, called here for "an honest effort at self-restraint" by .the motion picture industry. Valenti, addressing an indus­ try luncheon, stressed the need for "self-discipline" by film makers. Without. it, he said, "there will be such a race toward the excess that we are bound to injure progress toward adult artistic !'tatements-as well as eripple the industry itself." The fOJ mer White House aide confi rmed that the Motion Pic­ ture Association i-s preparing "a new set f)f guides to direct 8ur self-discipline"-presumably a revisi'J(\ of the .motion picture productien code. .

Carmelite Chaplain Gets Navy Medal WASHINGTON (NC)-Father (Cmdr.) Ger<lrd Taylor, O.C.D., a Navy chaplain, was decorated with the Navy Commendation Medal fer bravery in Vietnam. Father Tllylor. 42, a Navy chaplain for 10 years, was at the Chu Laid expeditional'y airfield, when it was attacked by - Viet Congo Despite explosions and small arms fire, the citation said, Father Taylor rushed into the area, disrega':ding his own safety, and ministered to wounded Marines and Viet Cong, in some cases administer­ ing the last rites The Discalced Carmelite, a Jlative of Philadelphia, formerly 'Was stationed at the Carmelite Monaste~'y here, which received tile report: of his decoration.

110..1

110..1

Former l"'IIlavy I"'IIlUrse Heads Mission Nuns SHIELDS (NC) - A former Navy nurse was dec,ted superior here of the Mission Sisters of the Holy Ghost, whose motherhouse i~ in Saginaw, Mich. Mother Lucia Medina succeeds Mother Marie Callaghan, long-time superior of the modern-garbed order which specializes in catecheticf and soc;;';l 'Work.

17

Prelate Confirms Retarded Youths

Parishioners also began taking an increased interest in the school. Its standards have been raised, teacher salaries increased, the image of Catholic education enhanced in the community, and' there are more frequent new$­ paper stories about the school. "Public school officials came to see my school because of the changes that were occurring, something that never happened before," Msgr. Brown revealed. "Now we have 100 per cent co­ operation with the public schools."

ST. PAUL (NC) - Auxiliary Bishop Gerald F. O'Keefe of St. Paul confirmed 20 mentally re­ tarded children, ranging in age from seven months to eight years, at Welcome Home here. Confrimation names for the infants were chosen by their parents, who attended the cere­ monies at the home. Some par­ ents also chose sponsors for their children's confirmation. A man and woman from St. Patrick's parish, St. Paul ,acted as spon­ sors for the other children. Welcome Home, founded in January, 1965, is located within the St. Patrick boundaries. Mrs. Helen Hesty, director and ownell" of the Hom.e, said that the 20 Confirmation candidates were indicated by a red rose placed on each of their beds. There are 39 children in the Home.

Urges Catholics, Jews C~ope~cte To Aid Needy WASHINGTON (NC) Msgr. John 'rracy Ellis urged here that American Catho­ lics and Jews work together

to aid the current residents of Cardinal Roy Lauds urban slums in which their own forbears suffered. Quebec Hospitals "Probably no two distinct CONFIRMS RETARDED: Confirmation was adminis­ .' . QUEBEC (NC)-A cardinali groups in this Republic have had tered tc 20 mentally retarded children between seven here cnaracterized the newly as long, and often as sad, experi­ months and eight .years of age by Auxiliary Bishop Gerald formed Association des Hopi­ ence in the vast human jungles du Quebec (Quebec Hos­ that for more than a century O'Keefe of St. Paul, who visited a home for the children. taux pitals Association) as "ecume.... have constituted the urban slums Here the bishop bends ovel a crib to annoint one of the ism' ]iv~d in daily life." of this country, as have the children. Thomas W·. Flynn of St. Paul, one of several .. Quebec's Maurice Cardin~ll Catholics and the Jews," said Roy was speaking at the asso­ sponsors, looks on. NC Photo. Msgr. Ellis, professor .of church ciatiOfl.'s first convention b&n­ history at the University of quet attended by' representa­ San Francisco. tives of 200 Quebec hospitals. "What better background, The new body is bilingual therefore, could one ask to en­ ~ulti-confessional, and was / able you Jews and us Catholics formed by the joining of tbe' German Missionary in Australia Twice to unite our energies against the English-speaking Hospital A5­ present poverty, illiteracy and Escaped Death in World, War II sociation of Quebec and tbe spiraling crime in those pockets French-speaking Catholic Hos­ of American urban life where bel', 1940, in the Bay of Biscay, MELBOURNE (NC)-A for­ pitals of Quebec. . once your forbears and ours mer German U-boat commander and sank. Forty-two drowned, The c3t:'dinal said the forma­ struggled through their pioneer who narrowly escaped death but 'he was one of 28 survivors. years in this land?" he asked He se:'ved on minesweepers . t.ion of the .association was in twice in World War II is now 'a keeping with the needs of tbe in an address to the. National priest and the vice-principal of for the next two years. At the Community Relations Advisory a mission college in Kew, a sub­ end of 1942, when Germany was times, ~nd had the approval! Council, a .national Jewish or­ sutfering a trem(;ndous loss of f)f tile Catholic bishops. urb of Melbourne. . . ganization meeting here. . He is Father Wlllter Silvester, U-boats because of Britain's use In the face of the "patent and . S.A.C., 4'7. who has been in Aus­ of radar, he was selected to pitiful need" of urban slum tralia since 1951 helping to su­ enter a U-boat commander's ., 'Convocation Center NOTRE DAME (NC) - The

dwellers, Msgr. Ellis said, Cath­ course. pervise the work of the Pallo­ . University of Notre Dame. bas

olics and Jews should drop mut­ tine missionaries among western Survived Sinking awarded cont!'aets for an $8 mil.­ Hal prejudices and suspicions Australia's aborigines. . He was graduated as a sea­ lion atllletic and convocatioll and mobilize their new 'wealth Father Silvester was con­ going lieutenant and took com­ and social status in a cooperative scripted for war service just as mand o( a U-boat. The sub­ . center. The twir.-arena, 12.* seat facility will serve commun­ program of aid. . .he had started hi!> studies for marine was sunk by Royal Air it.ies of northern Indiana aIM! the priesthood 2t Olpe (near Force bombers near Antwerp in Exchange or Views southwestern Michigan as we)]! "To do less," he said, "may Muenster). January, 1943, but the future as the university. The buildiJlii 'He fii'St went into a labor well invite a mark of shame priest survived. is scheduled for completion dUlr­ against the historical record of camp and then into the German As an oberleutnenant, he ing the 1968-69 ,school year•. navy. our respective communities' in served a tour of duty in the His fin,:t job was that of an or­ the United States, as it may Arctic, off the northern tip of dinary seaman on a minesweep­ likewise cast an enduring shad­ Norway. ELECTRICAL Late in 1943, he "was ordered ow over the heritage we share . er, which hit a mine in Novem­ Contractefs with foul' other U boats to at­ as sons of Abraham a~d children of the same God." tack a Russian convoy on its Renewal Benefits way to Iceland. His U-boat at­ The church historian also tacked and sank one of the Rus­ called for "sustained and produc­ Outweigh Problems tvie exchange of views" between PORTLAND (NC)-Catholics sian ships. Catholics and Jews in the area shouldn·t "run scared" about the Despit.:l Hitler's orders that of . theology based on shared drop in (onversions or vocations no . German boats were to pick Scriptural resources. . accompanying the current tran­ up Russian survivors, he called Emphasis on the Bible, he sa'id, sition 'period in thf' Church, Aux­ for volunteers to pick up the "focuses on what is the common iliary Bishop James P. Shannon Russian survivors who were spiritual source of all Christians, of St. Paul, Minr.., said here in freezing in the Arctic waters. 944 County St. whether they be Catholic or Oregon. jected. New Bedford Congregationalist . . . and in so "Dislocations· and tensions Only his. chief engineer ob­ doing it ultimately and inevit­ were foreseen by Pope John, ably arrives at Jewish theology, Pope Paul and the Council Fath­ tradition and history, for the ers," he ;,sserted. "But the great Old Testament was of the Jews." benefit from renewal is certainly of far gr(;ater va!ue than the dis­ locations of the trcmsition period. WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBLEMS Father Kilroy, "The CatholiC' Church prob­

at the ably enjoys wider respect around Jesuit Years the world today than it has in BOSTON (NC)-One of the many ce,lturies," he said. best known Jesuit priests in the SOMERSET, MASS. eastern United States observed his 70th anniversary as a Jesuit with a Mass of thanksgiving The most friendly, democratic BANK offering here. I=fJ~IFQAL HOME. INC. Fathee James M. Kilroy, S.J.; Complete One-Stop Banking 89, spiritual f.ather of the Jesuit R. Marce' Roy - G. Lorraine Roy

community at Boston College Club Accounts Auto Loans Roge, laFrance

Checking Accounts Business Loans was fii'st provincwl of the Jesu­ FUNEflA~ DIRECTORS

its' New England province and Savings Accounts Real Estate Loans 15 Irvington Ct.

former rector of Weston (Mass.) At Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St. Bridge 995-5166

College. A native of Boston, he was ordained to the priesthood New 8e,.jford

'Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in 1911..

Commanded U-Boat

CONVENIENT BANKING

89,

70

SLADE'S FERRY TRUST COMPANY

BROOKLAWN

(L~;:':: _c ;C:l"':<:<:::~_Sv_;J~tt)t:tM: -l''Q;'( ;:'!J:".q:"'~mJ~~~jl)7!§~~10~li)f:l~.€',;t%ill-~~!'!iJ)~·'Y{;~4l't411t·~ri·a'ittif)~,

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18

THEANCHOR~Dioceseof Fan River-l'hurs. June 30, 1'966

Religious Leaders. Issue: .'Joint ~tatement on J=amily Life

NEW YORK (NC) ~ Repre­ .Sentatives of the nation's major rel~gious traditions ~ave issued a joint statement on Marriage and Fainily Life in the United' States. The statement was said' to~ be the opening gun in a ~ori~erte" effort by Catholics, Orthodox; ProtestantS and Jews to offset "powerful'.and pervasive social conditions which threateli ~ undermine human dignity, 'mai:­ tiage and, family Ilfe." .It has the approval of the N'aticmal Council of miurches,. the Family Life Bure'au of the National Catholic Welfare'. Con­ ference, and. the Syn.agogue Council of America. •

j

The P~rish .Par.ad@ ,

vnSITA'fION :-GUILD, . . . NORTH EASTHAM' .- Members will hold a social at 8 tomorrow night at the home ·{)f Mrs. Jam'es Bresnahan, Mas­ 'sasoit Road, North Eastham. ST. JOSEPH,' FAlLL RIVlER . Boy Scouts will. be- at camp' Sunday, July 3 thru Sunday, ...... July 10. A Summer vacation p'rogram for children entering grades fou,r through seven will begin. Tues:" · day, July 5 an!l continue through ,Wednesd:lY, Aug. 3 Crafts, games skills and religious instl'ucUon ,will be provided and a weekly field trip will be held. The pro­ gram will be directed by Rev. ·Mr. James H. Morse, deacon as­ signed to the parish for th~ Summer, three Holy Union and two Mercy Sisters, CORPUS

CHRISTI, . St. Teresa's Guild has coin­ · pleted plans for their annual lawn party· scheduled for Sat­ .. uroay, July 9, fr«;>m iO to'3 on the Ch.urch grounds. Mrs.'Albert J. Govoni,· presi­ ·dent, has announced that the 'features will inclllde home-made foods, aprons, toys; 'grabs, pony ~'rides, ~hite eiephant. table and. snack b a r . ' .. .A doll house, made and furn­ ished by Mrs. William Bullock, will be givE}I! awa~. . ~ANDWICH

ST. JOSEPH'S,

F.AIRHAVEN

Mrs. Nonnan Robinson, presi­ ; dent offhe Asil"ociatloii of the , Sacred Hearts, appeaied 'to' ~embers ·to.·consider early· reser­ vations. for the National € o n­ ; vention of the Council o~ Cath­ olic Women scheduled for Miami · Oct. . . 5-8.' . Voting" delegates are neces­ · Sary, . she added, since MisS · Margaret M. Lahey has been · ehosen by the Fall River cesan group as a nominee for -the' office of director from the Boston province.

has

Dio_

ST. LOUIS OF FRANCE,' . A square dance a-go-go will be held on Saturday evening from 7:30 to 11 in the parish hall. Admission is 50 cents. ~~ANSEA

NewmanChaplCllilllls STONY BROOK (NC)-Three 1C1aretian' priests have been as­ signed' as resident Newman chaplains. at State University of New Y<>rk, founded here on Long Island fou.r years ago; They will also coordinate New­ man activity for 12 other 'col­ leges and universities in the Rockville ,Centr.e., diocese..

"Keenly aware of the role religion ascripes to thehoine anll family life * * * we wish to bring the religious teaching· of 'our re­ spective faiths to beartipon our society and to join with all men of goodwill to cI:eate a healthier . soCial .climate in which family iife in America· cim flourish and be strong," the statement said. J~int Action Recognizing differences of "ap­ proach, emphases. and contribu­ tions'! of each faith, the state­ ment .declared that there are also "large areas of agreement" and "numerous possiQilitiesfor joint pro,grams 'and action." called' the establishment of . f~milies a part of the divine plan for 'the human race. "Because Of our' imderstanding of this plan, we believe' arid unite in affirming that our $exuality is a wondrous .gift from God to be accepted with thanksgiving and used 'within marriage. with rev­ et:ence and ·joy. "Ideally it calls for ·lifelong commitment in fidelity to a con­ tinuing, supportive relationship in which each partner helps' the other to develop to fullest capac­ ity,'" the statement affirmed adding, "we are united in our belief that God is an active' part­ ner in 5ustaiIiing and enriching. the husband-wife relationship in marriage."

It

Does she know sO!I1eth~g

Women 'A~proYe Pending C~vi~ Rights .laws

a'

WASHINGTO.N(NC) President· Johnson's plan' to end racial discrimination in housing received support to­ day from a group of· eight na­ tional women's groups, repre­ senting more than 30 million women. Th.e joint statement filed was with' the House «;>£ Representa­ tivesJ u die iii r y Committee, wh~ch began closed sessions on the administration's .1966 Civil Rights bill. . The women's statement said they endorsed ilie whole bill but· were particularly' concerned with its fair housing provisions. Mrs. Marcus Kilch, signed as president for the National Coun.­ cil of Catholic Women. Other groups included the National Board of the Young Women's ·C.hristian Association; National . <?oim'c,il of Jewish' Women, Na:' : tional (;:o.\lJi"cll of Negro Woinen, Nationai Federat16n .of Temple Sisterhoods, 'National Women's':' Leagues United Synagogue Of AIDerica, Uilited ChurchWomen lmd the Woman's Branch, Union. ~f Orthodox Jewish· Congrega­ tions of ·America. Stress Fair Housing "As women, we are i>artic~ larly concerned to assure the inclusioJ:l of the Fair Housing provisions in this legislation," the statement said "These pro­ visions would bar discrimina­ tion not only by the owners of !lousing, but also their agents· and by those who provide the necessary financing. : "We believe that the time is now, in, fact is long, overdue, to assure all citizens their .rights, including the right to live, in a neighborhood of one's choice, and to have access .without dis­ .crimination to. its housing. "We are opposed to 'any at­ tempt to weaken the proposed legislation, hicluding the sec­ tion on. housing,. We oppose the pos"tponing of a decision on housing which we know must be reached before the ·justice :We seek can be achieved.

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'fI

THE ANCHOR­

Airpo~t

Throng Welco"1.es New Brownsville Bishop'

.Thurs., June 30, 1966

19

Urges Co'thol ~c:s

Aid Vocations:

"I give you my beart, such as .it is," Bishop Humb'erto S. l'~edeircs told ·'the hundreds who greeted him at the Br6wnsville . DALLAS (NC)-"The major­ cirport when he arrived at that TeJIas city to take over the duties ·ity of Catholics today make no oX Ordinary of the most southern U.S. Diocese in the United States. . Cm'ltribullOn to the vocation "Loving one another with sincerity, we shall work tirelessly program," according to the foun­ :lIor the advancement of His Kingdom." the former Fall River der and national director of an· diocesan chancellor and pastor told the throng of well wishers. organization dedicated to foster­ Bishop Medeiros' airport ~alk to religious and civic leaders and ing religious vocations among the laity follows: ' girls. I give thanks to our Father in heaven for the joy which now spoke of you to me, not in words '. "Not enough people recognize mIls my heart 2S I find myself alone because words cOlneeasy, . .' the vocation effort as aD_ aposte­ present for the first time among they spoke to me of you by late,." said Msgr. Elwood C. Voss, our ~loved people of the Dio­ their own 'courtesy, their respect, ,superintendent of schools 1;01' the Il:ese of Brownsville.' their sincere reverence and af­ diocese of Pueblo, Colo. . fection for one they,' :hardly , But M~gr. Voss. here to assist It is true that I have been knew: it was their"faith:' I saw in the pjanning for the 'national present among you in spirit ever in their attitude, your faith, y~ur mnce t1ne day the Holy Father convention of the Theresians made manifest to me his 'desire willingness to accept me as your 'was optomistic about a future to appoint me your Bishop and shepherd because I am sent to . increase in religious vocations. Father in Christ. Throogh His you by the Holy 'Spirit, through ' The Theresians, a group of lay­ Divine Spirit He poured then.' the voice of ollr Supreme Pon­ women dedicated to fostering into my he3rt floods €It His own ~iff, to be your Father)n Christ. vocations to the sisterhoods, was Divin~ Love that j might love This faith' of yours and this rounded by Msgr. Voss a little you cll as His Son Our LO.rd love rendeYed,niY,A~parture more than four years ago in Jesus Christ loves us. Ever since from Fall River noton}y' easier Pueblo. Today, there are 5,000 that day I have yearned to see to be.:u even a joy,a:l>piritual Theresians in 135 units, in 32 'fI yeu, to be with y<!u,' to share joy because it came' 'from the HIGHSCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS:Rt. Rev. Arthur W. states, Canada and Hong Kong. Holy Spirit. To ·you all,' my your joys and your sorrows, to beloved brothers and children in He noted that there has been Tansey, pastor of the Immaculate Conception Church, Fall laugb and to weep, with you, to Christ, I give you my heart, , River, presents scholarships to parishioners Dennis Ledo no decline in religious vocations be ClDe oJ! you, in one word, to among women, but indicated be yoW' Father. such as it is. and Judith Gettings in the presence of· Manuel Pontes, that the Jncrease is not sufficient I am very eager to prove to And now I am with you and I president of the Holy Society, sponsoring organiza­ to meet the demand. lSee you and the cup· of my joy you in deeds that my love for tion. . is full. May God our Father be you bums bright and warm Jl within me: it is a gift from the blessed forever ~or His goodness Lord, because all, love of charity.' and mercy, for His mysterio\l8 love of charity, for us all, His ill from God, since God Himself to children. is love. FREEPORT (NC) The

In return for all his wonderful Love and Reverence ChUl'ch must. go where the

A~sociation gifts. 1 pledge myseLf anew, to­ I salute respectfully and lov­ people art· if it wants to elimin­

gether with all the people He has irJgly our Christian brothers of ate "much of the disturbing

entrusted to me, to advance His other churches and cmomuni­ leakage," Bishop John King

kingdom of truth, of love, of ties, especially the members of WASHlNGTON (NC)-Farm­ extensively modified by various Mussio of Steubenville said in

justice, of freedom. of peaere nnd the clergy, and join with them ers need: "democratic, coopera­ · means of control • • *. Farmers dedicating the 13th diocesan

of j0Y throughout tbe territory in the prayer and the hope that tive organizations" to "bargain alone adhere to an extremely mission ~t St. Matthias churcb

of the BroWDSvill'e diocese and Our Lord's will for all His fol­ eHecpively for them in the mar­ competitive system that is at the here in Ohio.

origin of many' problems." even beyond, because charity lowers to be. one will s~on be ketplace," a JesUit priest, speak­ "Many are of the convictiOJll

Although other laws have liinows and aceepts no earthly fuUilled through out common ing, for the National Catholic that thf' big center parish

~undaries; eHort aBEl sacrifices. I look to Rural Life Conference, has told given farmers this right, the churches are enough," he said.

I saMe in the Lord all my them for the tl n d e r s tan d­ a Senate committee here in the Jesuit said, "rapid (levelopments "If people want service, they

within the food .ndustry in the bnthe1'-priests of this: dioceSe,' i n If whieh :r know they have nation's· capital. shoulq ~c to these centers. This

past few years have unfortu­ the chosen and dearly be-loved because of our eommon .Love Father Michael J. Schultheis, may sound good If you are put­

nately been accompanied 'by cer­ friends of Jesus, our great High fer the Lord: and Master, Qur 5.J., supported a bill which ac­ ting pins in a map.

Priest. All that I am 8Jld all: that Lord Jesus Christ. tually is an' amendment to the tain abuses, that In effect emas­ "But in practice it fails te

I ilave from the Lord' is. theirs: 1 salute, our brothers who fol­ Capper-Volstead Act, that would culate much of the legislation take .into consideration' many

that Congress' has enacted." 1 am happy and priviledged to low the' faith of tbe Old Testa­ allow farmers to form associa­ human facton which govern

belong'to them and to be their merit 'from whom came the pro- 'tionS to win higber~rices for The bill; 'he added, is "impera­ the lives of men," he said. Tho

lll'Other and their Ii'atbeE. phets and lastly Our':,Lord Jesus. - their products. '.-f tive" to "protectl farmers, com~ Trust In the Lord Christ. t salute them with love "One of 'the chief reasons fol.' modity by commodity, in their ':first covsideratioD should be

"the needl'> of our people and the

and reverence and offer with the· chronic distress [of Amero. efforts to form: bargaining asso­ :r have already. sensed their·· them'to our common Father a ·iean. farmers] ;s the extreme ciations and cooperatives, from circumstances of their con,dition.

love of. charity for, their. pew. heartfelt prayer for their peace competition which exists 'in discriminatIon, obstruction and Then we should arrange OUI'

8I'tepherd, because Its warmth and spiritual happiness. agriculture," Father Schultheis' abuses of market power~ Th~, .' service to them accordingly." " ' l'euched me all the way from.' " r salute an mY.fellow citizens told the .Agrieulture and Fores­ family farm will' be fiii» aQQ., Texas . . t 'tt tile'. to Massaehusettli f dial ."through Ie ,. . pi what eveI' rehglOus .persua-ry commi ee. stable' only when it yields in:­ IT mes~ge 0 cor we orne . sian and also those' who thirik "In every other sector of olii" come sufficient for decent' and and promIses ~f progreB$. Isa.l- sincerely that they have no ee0nomy, eompetition has ~n hu~ane family living." . u~ them ~~ 1D ~hem the:.IP"~;It 1aith at all. I salute them in the 9NF STOP pzoneer mlS~llona~Ies of ~e past Lord whom I believe and love

Name

Effective Bargaining

Urges Church Bring

Servuce People

Jesuit Supports Farmers' Bill .Now Pending Before U. S. Senate

. CORREIA &SONS

=QS~~C:~a:t~e~~;:,. and

'ho'p~

Texas Prelate Scores. Primitive A letud'e Toward Lab U- e or ...Ions.

thrOUgelfh whom I to spend mys ,for the splntual welfare of all our citizens. . tt' ' ! humbly offeI' my services . . " to one and all, loeClause. the Lord sAN: .ANTONIO (NC)-Arch­ an "outstanding leader \n the, lay the solid found?bon of H)s has, taugbt.'usby: word .ap.d ex­ bishop RQb¢r~i~. Lucey said here ecumenical movement, a friend Chur<:h in the Ma~e Valley of . ample tha·t in'. HiE' Kingdom we ' that a prbriittv:e attitude towards · of the' oppr~ and downtrod­ the Rio Gr.mde. _,.. . 'am all. ~ervan~ one of another~ orgasize<l'labor; bOrdering on den and a, friend of the working Tr ~Yt beloveC.' bt'ot.t~-:P1'[~t ·It will"be my. joy to 'be 'of ' savagery,~exists in.this city. ' · man." ,A copy of the resolution ..._U>l' 0 ~ th , a I IlL£lOW ........ ',serviee to' 'you all ii1 the things . Y~t :~,.employed. .peFSon who WJ:1I~~ them r ¢a~ d9 next to : of GOO.. . . Hi not,a . meinber·of 8 union is was presented to the archbishop,' described further as a man who nothmg and that With them. and I salute Fespeet1ilUy .tbeciVil • ~erable,_~~ archbishop sald. ~ grace-of oW'" Lord' .fesus t1il' "ti· 'f ' d" and; TheunorgBnized. .people stand has "the J:espect and love of memberso~ all denomit:Jations.". €bris1: we can do all things for . ~Ul on l' t~ °th our I zoeeset e 81'1 • before their :~mpIoyer defense­ saIu ' ; · l e s S ,n.. _· _... . ' • •' )ll saumg em '1' .... Arhb·sh Delegates g~ve him 8 standing,. UJC' iW'vaneement of His· Kingh m ri th ·t·· l' . ' d ' . and. ,a. GDe, ClOP ovation. dem here b e l o w . . u an, II on~. ill exas an : L'UeeYStaietf.' . . The archbishop r e c e n t 1 '7 " 'Splritual ~. . )Jl., o~ country, beea~ all:' ali~ , Arcbbishop Lucey spoke . ~ ' . . . ; . thonty, C:0J?~ fr()J!l, Gl?d, and I delegates of the Plumbers and marked his 75th birthday, 50th My ,tz;1IS1; )S ~izrst ef al!l: lll. the ,pledge as a ctt;izen to rev~r ,?nd Pipe.fitters Union, Local 142, ill year as. ~. priest and 25th year Lord,. then m eur Blessed to obey them ill all that IS, Just eonvention at the Gunter Hotel as aFchbishop of San Antonio. In his talk, the archbishop ob­ Me.fuer. Our. Lady of ~adalupe, and fol'" the common good of all here. 'He struck out at what be Patroness of the AmerIcans and our peop~. .' . termed the "power structure" served that public officials "with Mothe!' of the Church, and then .In saluting all. I ,a~. Wish to which hI! Said discourages 'tabor few exceptions" are sometimes in them whose love for the Pe~- express .my deep gratitude for organization' in this area and opposed' to organized labor. "Public officials are sometimes pre. ~f God entru~ted to theIr your courtesy of this afternoon, . through. much of Texas. SOlicIt.ude and care 15 well known f~r the hearty' welcome you ~ave. ~ '. Moments .before the address, elected by those who have to me. ,gJvenm~,and_ for your gracIous delegates heard Elton SChroeder, money - and there is such a I salute all of you" my brothers presence here.. . _business manager of local 142, thing as buying an election," he and my children of this diocese, Advance HI~ K~ngdom praise AI chbis},op Lucey for his . said, referring to candidates backed by big-money groups. with love, j,oy,. and, peace from Together let .usthank our "st"!adfast efforts in support of or­ the Lord Jesus Christ. Your Father in heaven for '·this day ganized Jabor. "No one in this

faith and devotion, the warmth and let us rejoice in the celf'­ community 'has done so much

Back Prayer, of your affection have been my tainty of His infinite love for for the downtrodden," Schroeder

DALLAS '(NC)-Tbe U.s. GJonstant sUPP(trt and delight ever u~ all. Loving one another with declared. "arid ~ personally have

since I accepted freely and lov­ sincerity, we shall work tire­ a great admiration for Archbisli;' Conference of Mayors. annual ingly to carry olit the wishes of lessly for the advancement of op Lucey." ' · lConvent~on here adopteo arese-. om' HQly Father,' as your Bisl1op. His Kingdom, a 'Kingdom' of . Delegates then f. 0 r rna l,ly , lution endorsing a proposed lConstitutional amendment to Some of you, both clergy ·and truth, of justice, of love, of adopted a resolution lCongratu­

laity, represented you at my peace and of jpy. ' l a t i n g the archbishop on his permit voluntary prayer in pub­ €loflsecra,tion ililFall River. They Thank ~O'Q~and Crild bless you. triple jubilee and citing him 'as lic schC?0ls..

. ~ 1 d 'n be \1a :e~~ns 0 your. an WI . OOJ.'" lDSptration, as tbey ~ve been the means the L~rd used ~o st

School

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NEW BEDFORD (Q)pel1l

Evenings


.0

we A1IlCHOR-Dioc-ese of fall River-Thurs. June 30, 1966

J>ROVINCE'l'OWNBOA'l'S BLESSED: Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor of the· Cape~tip parish,'-leaves St~, Peter' the Apostle 'rectory with two'

acolytes. to form .the procession following the 11 o'clock- Mass of Thanks­ giving. Right: Father Duart, assisted by Rev; Thomas C. Mayhew, curate

Catholic Schools Deepen Concern for Community

at St. Peter's Church, Provincetown, stands on the pier and blesses the boats of the p.r.ovinGetown fishing fle~t: The gaily deco:rat.ed boats are in formation at' the "'·harf as Fathl~r Duartreads the' blessing from the ,official Ritual of the Church.' ' " " .

Ministers, Wives, Priests Make Retreat Participants Enthusiastic About WASHINGTON

(NC) -

The

Succes~

Joseph F. Denges, Washington;

BEAVERCREEK (NC)~ , first retreat for Catholic priests 'Father Shane Ma<;Carthy, Silver Spring, Md.; Rev. and Mrs. Wil­ ~atholic school's deepen the and Religious, Protestant minis­ ters and their wives; was held at . liam S. Causey, Kensington; Md., ooncem of Catholics for the the Washington 'Reh'eat, House and ·Rev. and Mrs. otto Schuetze eommunity's general welfare, conducted by the Franciscan Sis­ of Bethesd8 Maryland. Rev. Mr. Auxiliary Bishop Edward A. ters of the Atonement. Schuetze is a -Lutheran pastor. 0

McCarthy of Cincinnati said at The three-day ecumenical re­ His son Loweli, a Lutheran the dedication' of the new St. treat was arranged by the Gus­ seminarian, also made the re­ Luke's parish school here in · tave Weigel Society, an inter­ treat, accompanied by his wife. Ohio 'emphasizing that "there is national, interreligious group , Mass, Bible Service· 1l\0 conflict between the parochiai dedicated to continuing the work Brother Frederick john, F.S.C., ~nd the public school systems·­ , of the Jesuit priest who was a db'ector of, the -Ammendale In­ no lack of esteem' by Catho~ics pioneer ecumenisnmiong Amer- ,stitute (a Christian,Brothers no-' ,{Por the public schools of the ican Catholics. Father John R. vitiate) Beltsville. Md.; pro Ar~ . ~inmutiity." ' ' ' .. · Sheerin', .C.S.P., ,editor" Of . the thur B. Crabtree, professor of Public school board members · Catholic World magazine, .was' theology at' Eastern' Baptist ,and officials at thecel'el1lonies retreat mast~..' TheOlogical' Seminnry; Phihidel­ heard Bishop'McCarthy declare: , '--Participants included" ·Ms.gr. " phia/ and' Sister Theres'e' Anha "We dislike our' schools to ,be flOnsider,ed a mark of isolation eatr exclusi:veness by which we separate, ourselvee . from the 'IIOmmunity."

. ' St'u'cJy and "Work

... ,"

Jos~ph's "·This is 'certainly not the in­ , : " IT flrent,". he said. ''The Vatican eouncil strongly insisted on the PONCE (NC)-,."Buenos dias" ebligation of the member of the. BONN (NC)-Six Huni~ari~n .. areas and community develoP­ "'1" Church to play a 'role as good is coming across ,in the distinc­ , ment projects. seminarians have been ,ordered ' tive accents of the Main Line Christian in contributing to' ttie . to report ~or service in the Hun­ Their trip to Puerto. Rico . gariari ariny, acco~ding to Ger­ general welfare of his commu­ 'this SUlllmer as eight college 'students from Philadelphia com.,. brings to 60 the number of St. ,man news agency KNA.· This is nity." . bine 'apostolic service with study Joseph's students who have 'the first time that theology' stu­ Eternal Destiny at the Catholic University of studied abroad in / the college's dents have been. inducted into Latin American studies program, He decllued "we are sepal'ated Puerto Rico/here. the army, and is a violatioiI of The students, from St. Joseph's a four-year academic course that Hungarian law, which exempts only because we prize so highly College hi Philadelphia, are prepares students for careers in all studfonts until they finis,h the value of religion illeduca­ tton, of the freedom to teach our studying Spanish and also work,. . Latin America. More than' 40 their schooling. former studente of the college children fully of God, of Christ, ing with Puerto Ricans in re­ Gf their spiritual dignity and of furbishing the quarters of the are presently living and working their eternal destiny, of the university's new Inter-American in '.Latin American countries. seriousness of a moral life in Center. BIG DIVIDEND NEWS! ,The center's 'study and resi­ eonformity' to God's will. dence facility is a $500,000 pro!?­ a SYSTEMATIC "We want our children to be erty donated by the Puerlo year SAYINGS able to explore all truth-especi~ Rican' bishops. The center, BOSTON· (NC)-Catholic and ally that about God.' We want through 'its In'stitute for Inter­ a lIIVESTMEHIT them to. be able to see the · cultural Communication, will Protestant church workers have year SAYINGS ]!'elevancy, the relation of this conduct training programs for joined, here to combat the REGULAR a ,ether knOWledge to the truths apostolic personnel and others growing use of dope among the year SAYINGS about God. We want them to preparing for service in Latin young in the affluent suburbs. be permitted to pray in school. ,America. In addition, the center Operating through a non-de­ "Far from isolating them, 'Y(e will sponsor research and serve nominational organization called Ri~'er as' a conference and seminar 'Teim Challenge,. the church hope .that this full religious facility. workers are preparing a major training ,will give our children The, 10,·week work and study educational program aimed at ilU the greater love and esteem, alertingsuburpan ,parents to the program for the St. Joseph's stu­ • SOUTH YARMOUTH problem. kl Christ, for the other members dents is sponsored by the Cath­ • DENNIS PDRT , olic University and by their col­ An official of· the organization of the community; make them all ,reported that in its two years lege. In addition to language • HYANNIS the more aware, all the more study and work on the Inter­ of operation, Teen Challenge has • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA anxious, to be good, contl:ibuting American Center, the students worked with 1,000 young people • OSfERVlll.E members of the neighborhood." have scheduled trips to rural in their teens' and earl~' 20s.

· Collegians From St. in Philadelphia In Combination' liuertoRican Effort "". Draft Seminarians'

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