The Church Needs 'Fevver Detractors'
CU1~mpion
E p use Cause More to Stress the Positive
DAYTON (NC) - Th0 modern Church is faced with "an oblique and subtle per secution" carried on in the pres~ by a small minority of her own membel's, accol'ding t-o Father Cornelius C. Bei'R ing of this Ohio Community. a member of the Catholic Poverty Commission. Addressing the nationall convention of the U,O{)O member Catholic Ladies @f
Columbia, Father Berning attacked those "highly de rogatory and destructive" articles, written by priests, nuns, and laymen, which are "undermining the Church's authority, strength and in fluence," He indicated that the spir it of renewal envisaged by Pope John XXIII is far re moved from the "spirit of iconoclasm which pervades
the modern atmosphere." "Too many Catholics are paying too n;uch heed to de tractors and critics of the Church," Father Berning stressed, "Bitter critics are focusing attention on the Church's "weaknesses and failings'and are ignoring her true goodne'ss and great ness" and her tt'emendous contributions to culture and civilization.
"The old institl) tions are condemned and criticized for being outmoded and mori bund. Statistics are quoted indicating a decline in n ligious vocations, the loss <l\ faith by ,thousands, and th. death of Catholic school S)'g. tem. To read some of our Catholic papers~ you would think that the Church is Zl little Mafia." 1.'urn to Page Nineteen
I'rnllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmmmcmllll18~mmllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1ll1l1ll1llI 1II111l1ll1l1ll1ll1t1l1t1l1ll1III 111111 II IIIIIIII 1111III IIIIII 111111lIltlll1ll1t1l1ll1lllUllUIlillllUlllllllltllltltIIII IIIII IIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItItItIIIItIIIII ItIt ItIIIIIII ItII Itllltlllll111111III III II IIII1II11111'1f1m!
ff:'7
$4.00 per Year PRICE ICc
DR. SiMMONS
Bishop Celebrates Requiem Noo For
Fr.
Gerard Boisvert
"Father Boisvert was a man of many talents and a multiplicity of virtues, but the outstanding characteristics of the late St. Anthony's curate were his unwavering loy altv and obedience to God, his ,Church and his Bishop,'" In 'such a manner did Rev. ' Lucien Jusseaume,· assistant been published in the press. . ' Sacred Heart Church, "He was' a well qualified· priest - ecumenically minded, New Bedford, s,ummariz~ the liturgically spirited and theo . , priestly life elf Rev. Gerand logically sound." , Boisvert: In conclusion, the: eulogist Delive'ring the eulogy at '·St. petitioned for prayers 'and em Anthony's Church, New Bed- phasized that in our sor.ro:W,at "rd, on Wedllesday morning.
Father' Jusseaume took for his Turn to Page Silt
~xt the beautiful and mean
ingful offertory antiphon of the
Mass for deceased priests.
Recalling Scriptural texts on the uncertainty of death, Father .lusseaume painted a picture of how the deeply spiritual priest is always prepared for the can ~rom this life. "Just a few weeks ago", the eulogiest . stated "this deeply seeded virtue on Father Bois ved's life was exemplified by hill own words at Jesus Mary Academy in Fall River. Caned to lectul'e of the encyclical of Pope Paul, Father Boisvert said, "I stand here not through com petence but through obedience' ". Fathel' Boisvert was not an
unchangeable traditionalist, Fa
tiler Jusseaume stated, nor was
lie all imprudent innovator,
nther he was the well-balaneedl
Jlriest always manifestine sound!
jud~cment and patiently await
ing the final approval of hill
supt'l'iors before carrying olJlfl
8D¥ directives that miBht ll1aV'~ FATHER BOlISVIEIIl'Jl'
~
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foU River, Mass. u TlhllLllll'sday, July 6, 1961 @]961 The Anchor
,
P?pe Gi~es t High Praise To U. S.
The ANCHOR VoL 11, No. 27
.. ..",
Dighton Man ~s Named Dean At Marquette
Dr'. Edward D. Simmons, 42, a native of North Digh tOil, has been nam~d acting dean of the graduate school[ o~ Marquette University. . , , 'Son of Mr. and Mrs. Percy B. 'Simmons of 224 Lincoln Ave'.. m~mbers of St. Josep~'s parish, North Dighton, Dr. Simmons is also the chairman of the Mar quette University philOSophy de partment, of whose faculty he has been a member· since 1952. He was awarded bachelor of
arts and bachelor of sacred the
ology degrees by St. Mary Uni
vel·sity. Baltimore, and a master
of arts and doctorate in philos-
Turn to Page Twenty
VATICAN CITY (NC)-, In audiences granted to 1,000 Americans who had ac companied the newly eleva ted U.S. Cardinals to Rome and in a semi-private audience to 'Whitney Young, president of the National Urban League, Pope Paul praised U.S. Catholics and lauded efforts in the U.S. to work for racial harmony. The Pope paid high tribute to U. S. Catholics and to their efforts in all fields of Catho lic life. "The Catholic Church in your country," "the Pope told the Americans present, "has dis tinguished itself in many ways and the new cardinals reflect these magificient qualities so admired by all. , "The U.S. has set an example by' extending aid to the suf fering and to developing nations aU over the world. Cllrdinal 0' Boyle, at the urging of the hier,. aichYjhelp~d to orga~ize a very efficient and effective"'relief orTu;n to Pag~ '~i1!=
FATHER BENSON
Fall River Jesuit New Headmaster AtCramwell Prep Father James A. BensoVll" S.J., a Fall River native, has been appointed headmastell' of Cranwell School, Leno~ Mass. where he has been servine: as chail'man of· the English De partment. Son of Mrs. Ann C. BensoL1. . and the late James A. Benson" the Jesuit educator was borro M;lf(~h 3, 1925. ,After graduatio!:l Turn to .P~ge" Nineteen
.Father Demers, Swansea Curate, Navy ChQplain Father Richard P. Demers,
assistant at St. Michael's,
Swansea, since Feb. 7, 1964,
has been commissioned a
lieutenant junior grade in .the
,U. S. Navy and reported Monday for eight weeks' training at Navy Chaplain School, Newport. Pre-embarkation training for
21 days will follow at Camp
Pendleton, Calif., after which
Turn to Page Nineteem
AT CHAPLAINS' SCHOOL: Rev. Richard Defilers lis welcomed to the Newport School for Navy Chaplains by Capt. Richard G. Hutchson, Ch.C., USN, officer in charge of the school; center, the dioces'an priest, a Taunton na. tive; Commander Paul C. Hammerl, Ch.C., left.
PCi[p.e~. Pa~l: Ope~s
THE ANCHOR-D.i6cese of. FolI·IHv.er-Thurs., July 6,1967
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~tO>~sters 'CoUelge'
Arc'hbislhop RaautrionoH New U~ s. Aposto~ic Delegat.e·
VATICAN .CITY .(NC)':--Pope Paul VI opened the Year of Faith' and crowned the crea'tion of 27 new cardinals with' a con celebrated Mass on. the steps
Year '''of Faith,
of
CGrdin'a~s
29, the consultative' fun~tjon G12 the College had come to an end!. Some suggested that"it be abol ished or reconstituted so that! it would function in close align-.
WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Luig( Raimondi is the new Apostolic Delegate to the United States of America. Archbishop Raimondi, who has been Apostolic.Delegate in Mexico since 1956, served as secretary and auditor in. the A po s t 0 1 i c Delegation i n ' Washington from 1942 to In 1949, the then Msgr. Rai ·d·o mondi assumed thE; post of' audi-' 1949 . H e Suc Cee ds . E gJ I . InternunciaCardinaJ Vagnozzi, who was tor of the Apostolic . ,
of St. Peter's Basilica ofcom with each the synod member memorating the. beginning the ment ship, e.g., cardinal might 19th century of the martyrdom be a represenetative or the pre& of Sts. Peter and Paul in Rome. ident of a region of bishops. In his proclamation, Pope Paul But the Pope said: "TheN declared: "Peter and Paul were have not been lacking-especialthe of the Jy afterof the institution of the an d fir~t the labors andFaith, suf synod bishops-suppositionB WIth teachers • ferings of their apostolate they about the future of the College gave to us its first extension, of Cardinals.. Some awaited ito Apostolic. Delegate in the U. S. ture in New pelhi, India. ' its .first forniulati1orl," its first suppression ,or at. least a di from December 1958 until his He was named Titular AtCb:..· ' a u t h e n t i c i t y . ' '. .. 'I ' . minution of its imporia1}Ce and elevation to the sacred colleg!'lbishop of Tarsus and PapillNu~::' . " T h e r e f o r e , ' beloVed ~oh~ and ,functions. I~ ,w,?s also,~~id that of cardinals ,in the consistory cio to Haiti on' Dec, 24. 1953.' .In ." daughters, we' rememJ)ek', we it was a superfluous. institution just held at the Vatican. Haiti, Archbishop Raimondi suc. ceJeorate'Uiis' bitUl""df the because it, is of eC'rl~siasticalt Pope Paul's appointment ~f ceeded: Archbishop Fran~e~ Ch~rcn in the words'and'in th'e law, which is not detive.d di Archbishop Raimondi was an- Lardone, who was named Papal ' blood' of the Ap'ostles • '. • ':for llD" rectly from thlil divine. constitu ru., , ", ,. nounced here by' Msgr.. ,F;ranco ~uncio. to ..;... '; . I ' . .&lR.C~~Il~~Q~')lt~IMONJI)][.,.. en~ireyear tl;lis thought :an'd th.~s I .tiOD of the,Cllurch. ',' ... : [, Brambilla, charge d'affaires ad' Archbishopt;.a1;done was sery- ,.' '. . : .;'t ~ ~ ~~oj,ect will ~i1l" oui"'sb\.ils. This' '"Lastly, . tliehypothfl,si~ Waf) interim at the Apostolic Delega in? on .the-'~ac!tl~Y of th.e Ca'th ~ wdl be the Year of 'Faith. The advanced for a different system tion here. ohc UmversIty of Amenca 'here' ' 'Ii'" ' . ' post-c'ouncil year in 'which the of choosing members of the sa Archbishop Raimondi was born at t~e tim~' he ~ntered thedipJo-' ~@ 'rro~\}i)e$ Church rethinks its' 'reason for cred college, with a temporary at Acqui-Lussito, Italy, on Oct. matIc ,serVIce Q~ .tp..e Holy See. A . . being and refinds its native en mandate connected to the period 25; 1912. He attended the'Sem large number of distiriguished WASHINGTON· (NC) - "The ergy· '" "'." in which a determined office inary of Acqui and was ordained American prelates and priests feJiowship that marked the The Pope ·also extended to was exercised." . to . the priesthood on June 6, were present 'at Archbishop R~i- early Christian communities is each bishop. of the wo~ld the To these suggestions the Pope 1936, He received a doctorate in' mondf1s'censecration'in Rom~(on'l' as vital to the modern, parish right, to gi.ve in' his :own', nam.e. ,sald: "We .d!><np.~ h~~e"'ariy rea Clui.on Law at the Appolinaris' Jap., 3l,1954. \",' ' . i, . , as it· w~s.. to ~t, .John" wr.~ting his -at the bIshop's conveni~nce-.-. sons that would lead us to Seminary ir Rome and, con·-" .On .15; J.956, ,.Archbisb,op of:', ,in love for Ble15sin g! i'ri con;", change the' : handecll tinuedhis ~ttidies at the Pon- RalmondI was named Apostolic Chnst,.. the director of the 1\fa:-: Jun~tI,01'/- w.~t4.· .~el~Rr;tions of . dQwn to us, by, pur m9!~t .:vene tifical Ecclesiastical Academy. Delegate in Mexico a post he tional' Center Of.me:·Con'frater':. ~h~ ~e,at. 0 Falth ·to· 'be he~d .J;ated pr~q.ecli!s!\,ors. ~f:, are. . He' was appointed secretary to has held until the pr~sent time. nity of Christian Doctrine de.,;·' m ..eadi. dIOcese.' i, .'.:' .mon:over, .co~v.inc:;ed. ,:thpt the the 'Apostolic' Nunciature i n ' c1ared here. , . ;.\ '." Defen~ Col1~g~"I, .' multiple demands of the Churcln Guatemala in 1938 and' was Father Josep~ B. Collins, S.S.,. E~rl,ie,r, ~he. Popei~~~,ip:~d ~e .. make advisable. the .r~ip·Yigorat'named a. Papal' Chamberlain. was director'of a wOl:kshop-held .College of Car~ipal~.,111~t. it is ing of the .functions. which in with the title of very reverend ,:iI at . the Catholic Univ~rsity of not in, a,ny \Ya)'q~~.I:c!-q4~d an9.. codified law. Jt~ve till now monsignor in 1939. 'He was 'F~&~t8.~O~ 'f\A' ' . '. America on "CCn'in theChang-. ~~<lth~plilns t,o qi~keLI~ts·func.,.. been carried.. oqt,bY, t4~,sacred nained secretary totheiApostolic u,li, ·.,:,"e. ~ :lJW'Qa~s. .1., ing Parish Community." tlon~:-W<;l those .o.f,.,,~nd,~yidtm1college, ,assu~I).g It ,in ~roadeil' Delegation'here in June'1942. Rev. Roger P. Poirier, curate 'Some 13() CCD workers fromc~rd~nflls even ,.c~l(are!",lr tne"and.more sYrSte~at!~ ~i1nr.!;!r the at'Notre..Dame Church, Fall Riv-' , thrpug~out the.. cp,t,ntr~ partici-·,.~utw~· .. · ," ",,' I .. ' 0;01 . / . ,~o~t useful; ,~r~ces, ..bCltp. in ~. " er, was .the celebrant of a Sol- pated m the workshop which ,It.had been s~ggested tbat dlvldually and.as a true and Jurist.Phys~cian emn Requiem Mass' Monday for featured lectures on the theol with the summoning of the first proper 'coetus' (senate)~ his .father; Joseph. N. Poirier, ogy, sociology and psychology of synod (If bish<?ps to open Sej)t. "The functions of the sacreell 70, who· died unexpectedly on "community," 'and field trips to. eollege are truly sacred anell Thursday, June 29. parishes which are experiment eccJesial, since they are· involvecll . IViJAMI. (NC)-A former Ju ing in the'fornlation of 'viabie . ass . r 0 in collabor_ation Wl'th the HO]T1 d'D .The. fune.'ra.I w,''as held at St'.'commum . ·t·les. d "t . o¥ vem'I e an.. .0!'Des t'lC R e1a t'IOns espl e ' racial and FRIDAY Fa.ther in the govemm,ent of the Court judge, who also is a pedia jos.~ph ,Cllurch;' .New Bedford, economic barriers. . -SS. Cyril and Metho . tTician. lias been 'appointed ex with Fath~r. :Poi.r:ier assisted by' .Father .Collins arid othe~ . dius, Bishops and Confessors.' ~Iversial Church. Having re ec director of the Diocese of Rev. Louis Boivin as deacon . speakers discussed the possibil . III Class. White. Mass Proper; eelved the fullness of the priest utive Catholic Welfare Bureau. and Hev.. :Roi:an~Bousquet Miami ity of'a 'true' ecclestical com':' ·Glor.y;· no Creedj Common lJood, the cardinals ..are both ... , . ,.' .. '.. , .,.su.b~e.acon,.. iJl'':mity· formed' ·th· .,. °t'h' th ·'.Preface. Two Vot.ive . Masses m,embers o.f ~he episcopal college ~".,.' ". ,. T"he ',a.ppointmen of ,.:Qr. Ben " ... : ,...... eI er WI m e , ". h' f the, S ac"ec!i,Hea'ri"·· JHld ..enter ,,',"'''' mto "los' ._1 t' ... .t ' ',.. :.' "p"'h"" t'(I"tsb";'d .- ':·'·In.;.onor·o·: e",r....aIOnfJ :,~.f).l1epp:jl!d.l'4i~,mi's. BishQP,:Cole,;.',;· C. Most, :Revi:. Bishop' ·James~•..' a'sanlsoA.aolr..onUe}dl ~'a~'ct.' ~~~",.at~It!~"''''''';'.iIOf ·J'esus·,pennitted.·"Glo"'7· 2n-d l,' witb... · ~ .. ~, ~,RQ, iparhPontif.f".sin~ man F "'~O C"rr 11 ,om.eou",m p . t d t ' d'1 onnoll . 'de d .~,' t ·'the., M ~':':reqUife " t' : '.S '.' n"l 'conal l E· ;l..:,·-.Pi'ayerSS.·€ ns· ' 'oT' 't' t . .. con "" .,' . Y presl ... u". y rill-·-and.iMethoi;;-' ~:..~<.~!l:"!l~~t~tQ.them"m ,,~ .' ~at~s. tlJ~ pro~ress in the ,~.iocese a.nd performed the fmal absoltJ,-" '. "They" ....' " ...dius;"no: Creed;"·Preface of the "., W,FJJl}ty...WIth.. ,tbe~.~cred.. "janons Of.. l1T1ple~.~n.tmg the. ,v.a~~can· II, ti.~n... H~~as' ~ssi~t~d ~~. Rey.... 't'" t 'S~gges~e~:~~t, the. pre~~ ::".v saCred·; Hea1't.. · "M:-::':"·'-'· ~ ,I:llect;, .th~ ,S\Il;~or,:,of Petei' .... ,.... de~,ee,.whlch, .. calls, for ,a more WIlham' Collard' and 'Rev:"HeIUi ... en ...s .~c ~r~ ~ ,pansh~; ·'·,SATURDAY'·.·....; St ElizabetJt··, ~m ·ther., goy.emment. ·of· t8e active o· th e la't" th Iife .. :Charest'ch l' artIfiCIal and"ndt suf" . , Ch 1. . . . ; , . . . . . . " of the role Chur~h. 1 y.m . e " " " ' , aP.,ams...... :.: . ficientiy'~' JtJridical concerned,'with t~ !,:J:.. Qu~en··.and.·W.idowL. IIhClasS."·;· . ur~&¥,·, ... ~s .1~ mdeed.·,a. deli ",," Mr, Poirieri" of· 31, Clifford Sf:,'" i'lrobl~ms""and "'ihteresfS of its .. :"White·'Mass,·,Proper~·rn6)ry;nti'··,·,ellte act'and,.. !s e,xPOSed.~itO ino .. Dr. Sheppard will put into ef~ .New Bedford;.,'was,the husband members. Calling for .pariSh.'·: '. Creed; € o mmon Breface. .,::: fl~nres, ~nd ,d~ge~ wbich are fe~t. al~.decisi9ps,of the di~ces;m, of. the late Irene (-Audette) Po- 'ceuncils to be.made"·up of 'repre'::, SUNDAY· - VIII Sundlay. After,··~f~l . Jo.~the entire, :,Chureh hard regarding th~. main. offi<;e irier, aQQ leaves" besides·: Father sentative lay ,persons from an Pentecost. II Class,Green. Mass' .·i ~h~n, 1~ .IS not,.p~te.cte4.. as it eperation and. those of'diocesan Po~r~er,: another son,Rolana A. Segments' Of 'life, several speak'::' .Prope!;:Glory;Creed:' Preface .:If!,n~\Y.,bY a .qu$lifl~ c~~lege of instituti~nl\ .currently under su POIner of New Bedford..' ers said the parish,' 'structure ot· .Trmlty. ..... ;1. cardmals, stable and, u:pmune pervi~ion o~ the, board, Bishop . Bo,rnin Cap St. Ignace, P.Q~·' soouJd be sufficiently. flexible ·MONDAY ~ The . Seven' HoliY '. ~om any un~ue and e~traneo_ Carroll said. He .also will super Canada, he resided in, New Bed-' '. t9 attract and hold everyone ill Bro~hers, Martyl'S" and. l?S,' ~nterference. vise activities of all lay workers ford' for 60 years. Interment the immediate environment. Rufina and Secunda, Virgins of the organization. . was' in Sacred Heart CemeterY and Martyrs. III .Class. Red. First The'dioc'ese has.' five regional New Bedford.' ' .' Necrology Mass Proper; Glory; No Creed; ST. LOUIS (NC)-E. J .. Hello offices of the Catholic Welfare Common Preface.. . man, . business manager of SL Bureau' in Miami. Fori Lauder-. relLY 14 TUESDAY - Mass of previous Louis University since 1964, bae Rev: Nicholas Fett, S~.CC., 1938, . dale, Key West, West Palm Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass become :.he first layman vice Beach; and Fort Myers. Pastor, St. Bonifa.ce, New BeG Proper; 2nd Prayer St. Pius president of the 149-year-olii .pr. Sheppard taught at the f~rd. 1<; no Creed; Common Preface. Jesuit institution. University of Miami law school . Rev. Edmund j. Neenan,' 1949\ OR.. . from 1952 to 1959. From 1960 The Present~tion of Ma'ry ~-. Assistant, Sacred Heart Oak St. PIus I. Pope.an,d Martyr. until this month he was senior vitiate in Dighton will benefit Bluffs. . ", .Red. Mas~. ~roper;. ~:.Ho.ry; 'BO judge in the, Juvenile and Do from the. Country Fair to t>e' JULY :u.6· Creed; Commoil' Preface. . , 'Jnestic Relations Court here. He sponsored by the Fri.ends of tI'le'Rev. Bernar4. Percot, cop.,'· WEDNESDAY-St.·John Gual .re.signed his judgeship to resume Novitiat~ on .the 'grounds of St. 1937, Found,er, .St. Dominic:, .'bert, Abbot. III ClaSs:"White :studies in adolescent psychiatry Anne's' Hospital,Fall River on Swansea. . .:M~ J:>roper; GlorY'; '2:~d pray; Prescriptions called: for
:at; the Menninger Clinic, Topeka, Saturday" July 15 from 9 in' th~ Rev. Joseph ~. Larue, Pas er SS. Nobor and F.eUX Mar and delivered
.Kan. . . morning to '·9 in the evening. " tor, 1966, Sacre<l Heart, No. At . tyrs f ; no Cr~;' ~9m,~O~ Pre lOFT
TheDightonNoviti~te is the tleboro.· . ace. . CHOCOLATlS
THURSDAY-':'MaSs' of ptevious only North Anierican Novitiate JULY 17 600 Cottage St. 994-743'
of the Dotninican Sisters wbo Rev. William J. Smith, 1900, Sunday. IV ClaSs. Greeri. Mass staff St. Anne's Hospital. '.Pastor, St. James, Taunton. Prop~r; No GlorY nor Creed' New Bedford
. . .' ' JUlLY 19 .' Common Pr·eface."· • FORTY HOURS
Mrs. Leodore G. Salois, presi dent, has announced the chair Most Rev. Daniel F.Feehan, DEVOTION
men of. the various features. D.D., 1934, 2nd Bishop 9f FaD July 9-8t. Hyacinth, New Among them are. gifts. dolls; River, 1907-34. Bedford. needlework, aprons, plants, a' St. Mary, South Dart corner store. a smick bar. a farm mouth. boot)!, grab bags, and prize St. Elizabeth, Fall River. ST. JOAN OF ARC PARISH tables. July 16-8t. Pius X, Soutb ,·JULY 11~ 1967 Yarmouth. Paint and Wallpaper ·f st. Stephen, Dodgeville. Dupont Paint . . AVCTIONEER: ''[)jckBourne j
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lFeU@w$h'i'ri Vita
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c;li~cip'lipe
Flro ,POmf'Oer Sinns
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Layman
Fair to Benefit' Dominican Nuns
LA~I.VIE.R~~S
Pharmac:y
AUC'TION
CENTER
layma" Manager
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ANCHOR 6eoond Class Postage Paid at Fall RIVl!.r~ .S5. Publisheo every Thursda) at 4w 'llghlano l\venue, Fall Rive, Masso, ;02722 ') the Catholic 'Press 01 the Diocese ,of Fall lItve,. SUll'Scriptlon price by 1Ila1l. pOStpaid.
. $4.80
I"l'. year•.
DALLAS '(NC)-John A. Hur son has been appointed to. the newly created position of busi ness' manager of the Dallas-Fort Worth . diocese by Bishop Tho~as K.. Gol'man.
~
cor. Middle St.
W· 422 Acush. Ave•
Q.t:.t..,
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New Bedford PARKING .. Rear of Store
REFRESHMENTS SERVED ALL DAY ,AT CHURCH, OF': THE· VISITATON GROUNDS IN' NORTH EASTHAM .' 10 A.M. to 3
P.M.'"
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~Off Route6-M~ss~s~i(Rd.)
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 6, 1967
New York Catholics Resent Rabbis; Ministers' Charg~
120 Conce3elbrate Mass at C~~~ege '
ALBANY (NC}-Catholics across New York state :reacted angrily to a suggestion by 72 Prote~tant ministers
txt
close Oatholic schools and the accusation that Catholics "irresponsibly" in calling fur the repeal of the Blaine ~mendment, which bar s state aid church-related Jewish and Protestant churches schools. For most, even the and synagogues close their schools and deny parents their \\lIlswer of the apostolic ad- . legally established rights to edu ministrator of the Albany dio cation in accordance with I:on,:" cese, Bishop Edward J. Maginn, science is a deep blow to the ~at the ministers' statement was cause of ecumenism and inter "outrageous and deliberately in faith relations in this area. &amatory" was a restrained "It is tragic that such Protes reply. tant and Jewish lead€ r s would Most Catholics held that in have the audacity to call upon oalling the efforts to repeal the members of other religioul! faiths BlaIne Amendment "irrespon and members of their own faiths ii1ble," the Protestant ministers 110 violate conscience in the rear reserved for themselves alone ing of their children. the right to speak out on public "How can the men who have issues. issued such a statement square "Democracy· gives us the right' its content with their constimt fit free choice of schools and free 'professions of brotherly lovel". expression on public "issues," a
kmding Catholic l~yman de,
dared. "We intend· to ,be good
eitlzens and make use of both
4Ilese privileges," he said.
"How can they absolve them oolves from charges of 'bigotry'
--a point they take particular
pains to raise in the statementATLANTA (NC)-Lead
when they accuse the Catholics ei's of Atlanta's Jewish com
in the same statement of impos ing their views on the state," a munity s,aluted Archbishop Catholic lawyer from Troy said. fau. J. Hallinan's call for the 'Confession of Bigotry' United States to preserve the "That Catholics, or any'Amer- sovereignty of Israel. lean, should be denied the choice ' The archbishop told the Atlan at a classroom, or the right.to· ta Press Club that the U. S. speak out on matters of consti- should protect the statehood of iutional government is a confes- Israel, and the freedom of the sion not only of bigotry but also opeD seas and waterways. He lIR intrusion on these freedoms. said the nation should honor its which are as much the property commitments, adding he hoped 8.t Catholics as they are of /lny there would be no war. other faith. . Theodore Freedman, Southern "Americanism is not the priyl.,. director of the Anti-Defamation lege of' anyone faith; It is the League, called the statement "a. property of all who cherish and YeI'V good one." He said "th~ na .espeet and defend' it," he s.aid. ,tion has ttte responsibility to apThe controversy erupted :when peal» the President and Con • statement signed' by 7%. ,P.ro~.,. , '1llre88 .110.. I)Qn0t: ,our commlt. eetaot clergymen and Jewis~, menta,.... to Israel, He added: "I~ ~b,bis 1!V~s ,submitted' to N:~w we don't honor' our c9~mi1Ments, York' State Constitutional Con-,. tIleR why are we iii Vietnam?"" 'tiention and released to the pr~. ". ' . ,'Weleome SbwmeDt .. . The ,m'inisters' statement s8id: ,:Rillbbi ja~~b·:Rothschild said he 'earnestly invite and WllI8 hearten~d· by tbearchbish .:ourage the Roman ,Catholle. op's Stateme'nt. "I have an appre';;" 'Werarchy and other parochial oiaUon for his love of ·mankind ecbool le'aders throughout' the, and· his ,sense 'of justice which . t e who operate separate school : reflectS the concern of the Systems, to close their sch~ols Church he. represents." . and send their children to public aortle American Jewish Com aehools." inlttee . weicomes Archbishop The statement also called ef- Hallinan's forthright statement torts to repeal the Blaine of support for preserving the Amendment "irresponsible." territorial integrity of Israel and 'Inflamatory Demands' free navigation on international Bishop Maginn, whose Albany waterways," said Charles Wit See embraces most of the area tenstein, Southeast area director from which the statement's sig- of the committee. uatures were obtained, called it a "blow to ecumenism." Bishop Maginn answered the Attend Methodist
-atarges:
Laymen'!; Retreat . "The outrageous and deliber KERRVILLE (NC}-Auxiliary Mely inflamatory demands of a lfI'oup of local Protestant and . Bishop Stephen A. Leven of San .Jewish clergymen that Catholic, Antonio, two priests and a dele gation of Catholic laymen at
tended the laymen's retreat of
Un'ionization Effort the Southwest Tex<ls Conference
of the Methodist Church here.
, At' Hospital Fails They were welcomed by Method':'
HOBOKEN (NC)-Officials of ist BIShop O. Eugene Slater of Locaf 1199, Drug and Hospital San Antonio. Bishop Leven, who spoke to Employees Union, AFL-CIO in New York, said they would con:" the more than 300 retreatants, tinue efforts to organize Catholic centered his address on Chris hospitals in the northern New tian commitment. "We need to .Jersey area, after workers at St. maintain our commitment to. Mary's Hospital here rejected 'Christ our Saviour," he said, "because we need Him every Ol"ganization efforts. In an election held under the day. We must serve Him with auspices of the State Board of personal commitment-He is the , Mediation, the hospital workers only one who can save us_" Bishop Slater stated: ''1 was wted 3 to 2 against unionization. 'l'hree hundred nurses aides and most grateful for the presence of maintenance workers voted in laymen, priests and the bishop of the election, with 180 opposed to the Roman Catholic Church at our laymen's retreat. Bishop joining the union. A month's organizing' drive Leven is always welcome at any convocation. His preceded the vote. The hospital Methodist Christian spirit is transmitted permitted the campaign, al though not obligated by state or readily in hi!' very being as well federal law to do so. lIM .till his message.'"
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to
Jewish Leaders Praise Atlanta Prelate"s Aid
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'WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-The 10tb...annual meeting of the Con ference of Major Superiors of Men here at St. Michael's Col lege, distinguished by the fran.k ness of discussion, was also diS tinguished· by what must be one of. the largest concelebrated Masses ever celebrated in the U. S. - 120 bishops and priests. Also present was Metropolitan Emilianos of Seleucia, grand vicar to Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople (Istanbul) . Metropolitan EmilianC's first came to St. Michael's CoUege to learn English 18 months ago. Since then he has been exiled from Turkey, and has stayed at the college as a guest of the EdmunditeFathers. During the ,meetings, he mingled freely with more than COLLEGIANS' RETREAT: An unusual weekend re-' 200 religious superiors and bish treat for almost 200 oollegians was recently held under ops who attended the four-daw direction of Father Arthur Debevoise, Newman Apostolate conference. director for the diocese of Miami, sh0W!l atop auto during the weekend, which included informal outdoor sings, dis E,piscopalian Asks cussions on. spiritual formation and outdoor Mass and pray Papal Recognition er' services. ,Ne Photo. MOUNT VERNON (NC)-The reunion of Christendom is im possible without some form of papal recognition, an Episcopa lian priest told an ecumenical communion breakfast here ift Un;o~ of Orthodox Jewish Congregations New York. Dmssents From Student-Aid Statement The Rev. Albert J. duBois, na tional director of the American ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-The a "disproportionate amount" of Church Union which represents the $987.5 million expended un Union of Orthodox Jewish Con the "Anglo-Catholic" or "high gregations. of America has taken der the act in its first year was church" branch of the Episcopal issue with··a majority report for programs conducted in paro Church, made the assertion OR against federal aid to children in chial schools. Such aid, the re papal recognition without dis non-public· schools at a meeting port asse,rted, allows parochial cussing, the doctrine of papal in schools to "absorb increasing fallibility. Most Protestants find of the' National Community Re numbers 'of whiie' middle-class this doctrine unacceptable. lations Advisory, Council. comp~u~d the prob The 'report 'of the Advisory pupils" The statement echoed a view Council, . coordinating body of lem of achieving radal balance expressed e;trlier in June by the in. public schools: .. . . , nine national and 70 local Jew . 'rhil Orthodox group, 9t~ongly Episcopal Bishop C.Kilmer ish . org<lniz~tiqn9, said that the 'dissented from the report, whip~. Myers of Califorl).ia. Bishop ~'child benefit!'·, principle of the . is called .. "negative, hostile and Myers said that ali Christians Ele.mentary, ah~ ~econdary.Ed¥~· should ,'recognize the pope aM .'. " ", . cation .. Ad., of, 1965, which holds iiteiile~;t' their pastoral l~ader. The em that certain· ,assistance .to c~l1... phasis of both clergymen was oiII, dren· .' attending non-publie the pope's potenti!';l role as "chief Defends Protestant schools' is, constitutional; is ia spokesman" or pasto~ for Chris fact- '~a ,legal fiction·.'! Chttrch', in Germany tianity. , Th~ report· also charg~ that PADERBpRN (NC)"':':- Lorenz' Cardinal Jaeger 'of Paderborn Protestant Leader has 'defended the Protestant church· in Germany again.st an Score's: Predjudices attack' on it by the magazine WASHINGTON (NC)-A Prot Stern. Aluminum or Steel estant, ecumenical movement An article in the magazine 944 County Street leader, honored as Churchman charged, among. other things, NEW BEDFORD, MASS. of the Year, has deplored local that Protestant ministers do not WY 2-6618 and national prejudices-"pro believe most of the things that vincialisms of whatever kind." they preach on in the pulpit. Cardinal Jaeger said that the
Rev. Dr,-.Eugene Carson Blake, general secretary of the World article not only hurt the Protes
Council of Churches, told the tant church, but all the churches.
Religious Heritage of America The cardinal added that the
awards dinner meeting that the article does not serve truth but
ecumenical movement seeks to does harm to all Christianity.
be an "agency of reconciliation"
among men of different reli
, YOURS TO LOVP: AND TOGIVEI gions, races, ideologies and cul
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the life cit a DAUGHTER OF 81. PAUl. Love God outlawed wa~.
morel and give to souls knowledge and love of God Dy serving Him In a Mission which uses the The former clerk &f the Press, Radio, MoliQn Pictures 9nc TV. to bring United Presbyterian Church in His Word to souls everywhere. ~ealous young ·the U.S.A., feeis the ecumenical girls 14-23 years Interested. in this unique movement cannot expect to be Apostolate may write to: popular "because in the name of REI/EREND MOTHER SUPERIOR Christ it challenges the limiting DAUGHTERS Of SI, PAUL . and provincial assumptions of 50 ST. PAUL'S AVE.· BOSTON 30. MASS. the people of a country.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July·.6, 1967
~®w~rr»@ ~(gr *O[fW~~Ff\Ji)DUll@li'@Ull
~D1lG~(QJ~®n[p)[}u~~ [P)~@Ull~ [}={]D@~ ~«:Gu@@G rf®®ll <ellDD'!h@«:[kOrnJ ~@rniuD~~D@[f1)~ , PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The year's projected high school en Philadelphia archdiocese will rollment showed an increase of charge a $20 fee to high school 1,500 students over this year's pupils in September and cut by figure. We simply do not have 1,000 the number to be admitted the financial resources to ·pro vide all the additional teachers to Catholic high schools. The move, announced by Msgr. and programs that these students would ·need." Edward T. Hughes, superintend Msgr. Hughes said that even ent of schools, spelled the end ol the last Catholic school system with the enrollment cutba~k, the to make no direct charge to its cost of increased teachers' sal raies and new educational pro high school pupils, except for a small fee to cover the cost of grams make it "almost inevitable books, uniforms .and athletic that we will face another -deficit in the coming school year." equipment. He said the enrollment reduc The fee wil~ raise $1.2 million . tion was ·kept to.a minimum so to help offset an increased bud:' get deficit resulting from wage that the Catholic people .and all increases granted recently under the people of the' ·community threat of a strike by lay teachers "might have every --opportunity to aid in' the search for additional in the schools. financial resources." Tohe fee was Msgr. Hughes said that letters also kept low, he said said, 'SO had been sent:ro· the parents ·of that the children' of ·PQOrer fam paroehial school graduates re HEADS ASSOCIATION: ilies would not be ·excluded. fused admission to archdiocesan The first nun to head the high schools. He said the judg
Catholic Hospital Associa
ment on admissions was made by archdiocesan authorities on 'tion of the United Stat-es, the basis of the ability, perform Sister Mary Bligh, O.S.F., ance and effort of the students administrator of St. 'Mary"s as determi?e.dby eighth grade . NEW YORK '(NC)-A three Hospital, Rochester, Minn., marks, archdiocesan examina judge Federal COUI·t here dis has assumed the post and tions and standardize<! tests. missed a taxpayers' suit which sought to block Federal funds given her first presidential'
Forced to Decide The records of 'more than from benefitting parochial school address. She succeeds Msgr. 22,-000 eighth grade students students. John A. Trese of Detroit. The two-judge majority held' were examined in arriving at the NC Photo. that the taxpayers, ·a :group -of decision, he declared. civic and educational leaders, Msgr. Hughes stressed that the high school admissions cutback had no standing- to ·bring ·ihe suit w.as proportioned .throughout the in Federal Court and therefore school system so that no one area the court lacked jurisdiction." ' rAE! d ..0.,." -Jl",ite B~ in a 31-page-dissent, Judge was extensively affected. He -es Marvin E. Fr-ankel -oontended timated that 606 students in Phil WINOOSKI (NC)-'"It -isn adelphia were .aff~cted by the that the state permitted tax-pay mistake to treat freedom .as an ers to attack a "law I~specting an cutback, while the 'other -400 .absolute "n the academic -or .any' were ·distribute<' .among the four establishment -of l'eli:gion," .and· ·other society." :Auxiliary Bishop that there was lltJ basis .for-deRy SUTl'Oun<ling counties. . ing this right ·in Federal ·Court. -Tohn J. Dougherty -ef ·New.ark, The reduction is scattered suf The suit challenged the Ie3ality N. J. said' here. ficiently. so as not to 'create a Bishop Dougherty, 'president hardship on .any -one ·public of Federa~ fundstonnance.guid of Seton Hall University,. w-as .ance· services, instl'uction in va sch-ooI ·district. be noted. riou3 secular' subjects .and the participating in a panel -discus "It was with deep regret," sion on Catholic ·education at the purchase of jnstmotional ·mate MBgr. Hughes stated, ."that we 10th annual meeting of ·theCon w.ere forced t~ this decision. W-e rials for youngsters' attendiQg ference of Major Superi~rs ·of parochial and sectari.an schools, have struggled to find w.ays and .as provided by the Elementary .Men at St. Michael's College. means to meet the growing fi and Secondary Education Ad ~ "Freedom," Bishop ·Dou.ghedy nancial pressures without I'educ 1965. . said, "is necessarily limited -by iag the number of our students or responsibility andinstitutkll'lal without resorting to any form of purposes." direct payment by the ·students. New.mnn Foundotion Whiie rioting that -the attitude Foresees Deficit of Cathoiic educators has Cc.mdu,c ts, Tr.o;.n i ng "It has become obvious,how changed notably since 1'965 he WASHINGTON (NC) 1\5 .a ever," he continued', "that our admitted that' "tim~ has -not .al result of grants made available lowed for a developed theory .of financial resources,. a 1 I' e a dy strained to the breaking point, by the National New-man F.oun
academic freedom for Catho-li~ cannot be extended further. Next dation, new c.haptains ·training colleges." programs arHI in-depth special The fundamental -(IuestiEln ·he ized 'institutes .are ,being ·given An.o.etfltnte to Offer this Summer t-o' .priests .and Sis said, is not whether the .institu ters working in the ·Newman tional purposes of a Catholic Coun~J;nQ Proa-r.om universi.ty restrict fJ'eed-om. bl:lt Apostolate on the secular cam whether the existence of"-a Cath NEWARK (NC) - Formation pus. olic .university can be justified. flfa formal counselling program Twenty scholarships -of $100 "1 believe' most firmly that it by the Family Life Apostolate of . each were gl:anted te -priests and can," he' said. the Newark archdiocese has Sisters in Newman work who been assigneL ,to Fat.her John A. were selected 'out of 51 ';pplica
Meyer, a theologian with a mastions by a three-member com
.. ter's degree in counselling. mitt~e of the Newman Chaplains
Association for Summer insti Two other p'riests have been released to unaertake special" tutes of their choice. The pur pose of these grants is to ·provide Inc• ; studies .at the University of De. troit in preparation for .expan- further education as an aid to FUNERAL SERVICE Newman personnel in their work · sion of the program. on the secular campus. The program will offer 'mar NEW. BEDFORD, MASS. The 12 institutes selected are riage counselling to couples re being held at colleges and uni questing it. In addition. Father 549 COUNTY STREET versities on the West Coast, the Meyer will develop courses in Mid-West, in Boston,'New York, pastoral counselling to be given Washingto,n, D. C., and Canada. at Seton Hall University, South The studies-in-depth will focus Orange; and Immaculate Con on the campus ministry, theol ception Seminary, Darlington. ogy, pastoral coullseling .and psychotherapy, and will range Offie.in Is HnnQred· from human relations to the problem of God in contemporary HARTFORD (NC )-Pope Paul thought. . '"VI has honored two officials of the Knights. of Columbus fQr · their sel:vice to-the Church. The Tnk.es C.harge Holy Father has named Charles WASHINGTON. INC) -Msgr. J. Ducey, Deputy Supreme Brambilla as charge. -d'affaires Knight, and ViI'gil C. Dechant has taken charge of the apostolic · Supreme Master of the Fourth delegation here until the arrival' Degree and Assistant S'upreme in the nation's capital of a new Secretary. to 'p';!!hthood in 'the Apostolic Delegate. Order of St. Gregory the Great.
WILMINGTON (NC) - The' Delaware State Council of Churches has offered to join with the Wilmington Catholic diocese in exploring "the possi bility of an ecumenical journal for the area." The offer came in the form of a resolution which expressed concern "ever reports of t.he pos sible discontinuance of the Del marva Dialog," newspaper of the Wilmington diocese. Less than two weeks before, Dialog editor John O'Connor and a ·majority of the paper's 'boar-d of -directors resigru~d in.a dispute over the ·paper's fiminces and, by infE:rence, its editorial·policy. The Council of Churches reso lution said the DialOg "has made an outstanding contribuHon to the whole Christi all community of the a:rea." ..
.Court ' Dismisses Ta.xpave,rs Suit
Prelate Asse:rts J.". d F
MIDEAST \MAR OVER?
.NOT·FDR
THE VICTIMS
THI! HOLY FATHER'S MISSUDIII AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCIfJ
.'
A ~
.MARK'ED UURGEHT"
QUALITY and
Sr:RVICEI
T-hecable read, '~needs here are overwhelming emergency fllnds'urgently needed." It was the firstcommttnicatiori received from our field of.' . .fice -in· -the Holy land; after the shaky cease fire ·in tile -latest .Middle East crisis. That same -cable ·frOffl -Monsignor Thomas Gartland, the -on.the.Sf)Ot f)ir«tor of our Pontffieal Missie«l ~ 'P.alestine, statedttlat emergeru:y reMef Pf&' 1lf.ams were -being orpnized to assist the ~ . less victims ~90me ~mates place the numeer near -two -million) of the war. More than half are «rildl'efl, injllrelt.and sick, homeless and fac:iRg a .painful -s'klw death from hunger. Others ar4)' .aiting .aeults; some blind, some crippled, some 4leaf-frnftes. The,Se are the innocent victims ef war. :Bllt ·the funds you have given are already wor.hiRg. ~ight ilow, It Is an urgent matter fill survival: -mere bJ!eaCl, more blankets, more rneda' teal help .anei perI1aps, the encouraging WOPlt that~,Gares.
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Pope Paul has-alr-eady·tliven $25,000 of his We CN'~ -illr-eady airmtlng emergency suppties tel the war victims. Monsignor Nolan is now In the war zone, to -make SUnt they are used whefIII .~ ar~ rDOStneedicL
-
A woman from New York has sent us her 4lO..... tion oOf '5O-.eent- pieces; another woman sent r>r~isely $1-88;43 - tbe exact amount of her savings .a«lCOUflt. Some gifts from priests meas
uretl itl the hundreds of dollars. Catholic O'll""
n~ions thoroughout the country are sen6ln@
suPJ)&rt. lEK-traor~iAary events-which almost plunged the· entire _rid into the final war - have now ereated ~lltraordinary new suffering, Almost two million l1uman beings need help. Now that the immediate threat to us has passed. will we fOIib tlet them againlPlease help them ·today - 181J. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~C!!i£' an extraordinary way.
Michael C. Austin
famous for
Members of the Councl1\J board also indiciated that an ecu menical newspaper might not be too different from the presem Dialog. "The Dialog is a good ecumeni cal journal as it is," said Melvin Jewett, executive secretary ~ the Wilmington Council ca Churches. "A future ecumenicall journal should be exactly what the Dialog is today." Jewett said the Protestant community is concerned "be cause it might have stepped kl earlier with possible financial! ,help." . The Rev. Howell Wilkins, &) . Methodist pastor in Seaford, su~... gested establishment vf ail ecu ~enical advisory board "to llhow .SUPport for the Dialog, provide .J;ROre news information anti offelt financial help." .
Dear MonsignOr Nolan: Please "Ilturn couyour pon with
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NEAR EAST·: IVIISSIDNS FRANelS CARDINAL SPELLMAN. Preside'" MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN. NationalSecrebIIJI
Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAfIT WELFARE ASSOL ) 330 Madison Avenue·New York, N.Y. 100" Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840
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Vatican Official Hits New Theology, Radical Li.berals
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'THE .ANCHOR Thurs., July 6,
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5
K of C Aid Papal Mideast ReH~f
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MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-"Radical liberals" in the Church a~<lI their "new theology". were strongly assailed here by a Vatican official who asserted that POI>e Paul VI's appeal for ~he observ~nce of a Year of F~\ith beginning June 29 "is a ean to the people of God to To counteract this movement, renew our faith in response to the general menace which Father McCarthy called for III of conservative reform. ~hreatens it from every program Such a program, he said, would
1967
REGINA (NC)-The Knighta of Columbus have donated $25, 000 to Pope Paul VI to supporl his efforts to bdng food, cloth ing, medicine and shelter to vic tims of the recent Mideast war. The gift to the Pontiff was made at a meeting here in Sas katchewan of the board of di rectors of the fraternal society of 1.2 million Catholic men. It . was announced by Supreme Knight John W. McDevitt. Pope Paul has made a special plea for help to assist the many refugees caused by the Mid east strife. It is estimated that about 1.2 million Arabs still are living in refugee camps as a result of the Palestine war in 1948 and that the current strife has added another 200,000 people to- the refugee roll. The $25,000 gift by the Knights of Columbus is the second with in recent months by the fraternal society. to Pope Paul to relieve human suffering, The Knights . of Columbus sent $5,000 to the Pope last December to help him aid the people of Florence, Italy, following the floods there.
aide." He further maintained that be one which "admits positive (line Year of Faith "is a call of the new elements into the life of the voice of Christ for a reversion to Church and adapts Catholic life oonservative reform." to the changing circumstances of Father John F. McCarthy, an the times while, at, the same 0fficial of the Congregation for time, conserving the patrimony' (\he Oriental ChUI'ch, attacked left to the Church of the present o ~rrent liberal ideas and move by the Church of the past. ments in the Church in a speech "It means," he continued, "re tJo the Third National Wanderer fO.rm without demolition, it Forum. ~eans development without rev- . His speech was hailed by man:r elution." ()8 the highpoint of the conserva tive .gathering. Praising it at a later session, Walter Matt, editeor Gtf The Wanderer newspape'r, ~i(i ttlat the forum pal·ticipants bad been "emancipated from fear," llJy Father McCarthy. Hope for Future LAFAYEITE (N C) The speech, Matt said, had re assured conservatives that the Children in Catholic schools Church has not changed, the ()f th~ Lafayette Diocese RESTRAINED OPTIMISM: Bishop Josef CserhaU of Pope is still in Rome, and there . have been dedared eligible Hungry, left, says the status of the Church in His Com IS "every hope for the future." In his talk, Father McCarthy to participate in federally-spon munist-governed country is 'improved but could be better." sored programs, Msgr. Richard! asserted that "wild and undomes The prelate visited in Cleveland and St. Cloud, Minn. dur Mouton, diocesan schools super ticated ideas and movements ing his U.S. stay. Abbott Jerome Koval of St. Andrew's intendent, has been advised. lhilllve burst into the fold of 011' "Quite urlderstandably we are Benedictine Abbey in Cleveland is at right. flhodoxy like a new Germanic in vasion and are wreaking havec happy over this declaratiolll from the national office of edlll DAVENPORT. (NC) -A new- within the kingdom of Christ." cation," Msgr. Mouton said. Confraternity of Christian Doc "If these barbaric ideas are not· . Earlier in the year, the dio trine-Religious Education Office IlJrought under control within the ceslm department of educatiOB will open here in September to proximate future, we may live to. had been informed that its Cath encourage religious training fiee the entire work and all the otic schools were not in compli.; programs throughout the Daven fund hopes of the bishops at the ance with the Civil Rights Ad port Diocese. The office win "tluncil (Vatican II) reduced to of 1004. 81 mass of ruins," he said. bishops cORsecrated in 1964 in provide resource materials for CLEVELAND (NC)-A Hun Integraled Facilities' Dubious Content gar-ian Bishop believes the status the basilic~ of St. Stephen ip religious education and infor A statment of policy, sub Budapest, was a guest at St. mation on conducting CCD pro He stressed that "the menace of the Church In communlst with which we are faced lies not mitted to the national office of ruled Hungary is "improved but Margaret of Hungary parish grams, bere ift Ohio. He also visited An. the reforms of the council; it education and accepted by it, oould be better." Emphasis will be placed OIl that all. qualified .stu nes rather in the dubious theo . explained RishoiJ Jozsef Cserhati of Pees St. Cloud, Minn., at the invita adult education and teacher logical content in which they are dents are aecepted in Catholte said he' is. encouraged by the tion of Bishop· Peter W. Bar training during the coming year. schools of th~ Lafayette Diocese, fact that 15 to 20 per cent of tholome- before coming here. llJeing pl·esented. Experiment<.: programs in adult that faculties, as well as rocai, "T~e so-called 'new theology' university students are active in People of St. Cloud had raised education are scheduled to begin next Fall. . given wide publicity since the area and diocesan school events the Church and that about one $20,000 for Bishop Bartholome to (l(Ntvoking of the council,' was are integrated. third Gf the needed priests are distribute at his discretion dur Father Kevin Coughlin, full The policy statement also being ordained each year. prese'nt within the Church be ing Vatican Council II. The time director of CCD for the di fore the council. It came in the pointed out that assignment of a Both statistics are better than Bishop gave it to the Bishops of ocese, heads the office and Sis ehurch through the minds of iib-' large proportion of the faculties they have been in recent years, Hungary on the condition that is handled by heads of religious Bishop Cserhati noted, adding the youngest Bishop of Hungary ter Eleanor Anstey, of the Sis • era[ priests," he added. ters of Holy Humility of Mary. ''Those priests," he charged!. orders residing out of the dio there is still a problem about join him in his St. Cloud silver is associate director. cese and this could not be con "'welcomed the council as an op the future of Sisters in Hungary. jubilee.
l1'Ortutlity to foist their Ideas trolled by the diocesan depart Vatican and Hungarian of
ment of education. IlBpon' the Church." ficials have discussed the prob
Msgr. Mouton noted that he lem but the Hungarian govern He further charged that the ."'forces of disintegration being has appointed 10 laymen mel! ment still refuses to permit nuns CINCINNATI (NC) - Sister
That loosen
brought to bear upon the Church clergymen to serve as parish i.Ill the country. Mary Virginia Sullivan, presi (county) representatives oll: Bishop Cserhati revealed that are coordinated" and that "a gen dent of Our Lady of Cincinnati
Need Not Embarrass eral plan of subversion is in Catholic school children in the there are Sisters in Hungary but College since 1960, has been Many wearers of false teeth suffer civil parishes (counties).of the they wear no habits and they named director of higher educa opel'ation." embarrassment because their plate::! drop. slip or wobble at just the live in private homes rather tion far the Cincinnati province "There is a conspiracy of evil," diocese where there are Cath wrong time. Don't live In fear of olic schools, l:J:e said. than in convents. of the Sisters of Mercy. Sister this happening to you. Just sprinkle lln llO Counties B little FASTEErH, the non-aclell Path of DestrucUolll Bishop Cserhati, one of five Mary Honora Kroger, of the gen powder. on your plates. Holds fals:) "Those representatives enThe priests involved are not eral council of the Sisters of teeth more firmly so they feel more
• . oonscious of the conspiracy, he deavor to work along with local! comfortable. Checks denture breath.
Mercy, Washington, D. C., was Dentures that fit are essential to public school directors of fedmaintained, but rather "are lead named acting president of the health, See your dentist regularly. eraUy-assisted programs so that IlIlg thei I' followers blindly dowll1l college. Get FASTEETH at all drug counters. the children iin non-public tlhe b~'oad path of destruction." schools will benefit equitably...... TORONTO (NC):- James A. from these programs," Msgr•. Scatena, head of a San Francisco Mouton said. refrigeration firm, is the new The Lafayette Diocese in- president of Serra International, eludes 13 civii parishes (COUIU- a Catholic layman's organization ties) of southwest Louisiana which promotes vocations to the SAIGON (NC) - South Viet CaUlOlic schools are located i~ priesthood. lilam's Chief of State and a presi 10 counties. Enrollment for tbe The California businessman dential candidate, Lt. Gen. Ngu yerl. Van Thieu, a Catholic, knelt 1966-67 school year was 22,158 was chosen at the concluding students. session of the organization's 25th lln the sanctuary of Saigon's Im annual convention here. maculate Conception Cathedrali IlIor a solemn Te Deum and Bene diction given by Archbisholl' Paul Nguyen Van Blnh of Sai BERLIN (NC)--Of 3,000 Pollsihl SOLD - RENTED - EXCHANGED . youths questioned in a survey 0I1Il !lllm. . Archbishop Angelo Palmas, religious attitudes, 78 per cent STEEL AND WOOD DEsKS rapostolic delegate for Vietnam claimed to be Catholics. Of those CHAIRS • FIUMB CABINETS lind Cambodia, met the digni claiming to be Catholic, how.,. TABLES. SAFES. STEEL SHElV· ~. caries at the cathedral door. ever, 14.5 per cent said they' did INB • BOOK CASES, ETC. Alttending the ceremony were not intend to be married in the l1llembers of the diplomaUe Chull'ch and 9.3 per cent said they Use Our Easy Budget Plan 454 MA~N STREET IDOJrpS, public and political iiig did not intend to give religious instruction to their children. ~ some members of the Viet SOMERSET, MASS. lllMftese hierarchy, clergy and The survey was reported b:v !laity. Poiiush sociologist Tadeusz Jaro OFFICE EQUIPMENT SALES The ceremony was held 1» szewskD., in the Soviet 2lthe~ lIIlark the fourth anniversal7 @it mOllltrnUy Nauka i Religiya '(Sci 106 JAMES ST., near Union, NEW BEDFORD, MASS. V1ElEPHONE 675-7992 POJ?e Paul VI's coronatioa. $lAce and Reli~ion~
Diocesa n Schools In lou,isiana See Gain U. So Funds
Religious Education Office in Davenport
Could Be' Better
Bishop Cserhati Asserts Status of Church In Red-Ruled Hungary Is ImpJ'oving
Nuns in New Posts
FALSE TEETH
San FranCiscan Heads I . I erra nternatlona
S
So. Vietnam OfficiaW
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At ,Catholic Se'rvice
OFFICE ..cQ EQUIPMENT ~
Survey on Religion
NEW-USED
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THE KEYSTONE
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GERALD· E. McNALLY
Construction Co., Inc.
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THE ANCHOR-:-Diocese of Fall River-Th~rs., July' 6, 1967
Ready,
to
Praises
Change
The few rubrical changes in the ceremonies of Mass have been in force for about one week. FO'r the most part it is the priest celebrating Mass who has had to remem ber to eliminate the multiplicity of crosses and genu flections that had grown up mostly through the Middle Ages when the mentality of the times was to elaborate and spell out everything in detail. This, action is another step in the general tendency • of this Conciliar age to simplify rites and to put the stress on making more meaningful what is done rather than multiplying actions. It must be carefully p~inted out that this is exactly what has been done-a simplification of externals that internal devotion might be deepened. And this' is the aim ~ and purpose of every implementation springing from Va tican Council II. lt would be false and wrong to suppose that essential change is taking place. The Ter,; Commandments, the Apos tles Creed, the Seven Sacraments-these are intact. But the Church in every age is called upon to p,resent thes'e in language that today's man will understand, to surround these 'With a setting that will show to best advantage their beauty and truth. If this means a change in language, a
ll"earrangement in ceremonies, a simplification in non essentials, then the Church is quite ready to make such adjustments which prove that she is not a museum nor a static monolith but a living organi,sm, rooted in Christ and at home in every age for every man.
Req l1l1~oltIlR9Al
U.S.
Continued from Page One ganization which still today, . . times of strife and calamJIa lends a helping band to the vte.o tims of war, tragedy and suIoo fering. "This national effort is ~ of brightest episodes of your bJs= tory," the Pope emphasised., "and we hope that it will servei to inspire others in deed as wen as in word. The Church fui America has been loyal to the Holy See and has been generol1€! ,with its assistance of the world wide programs of the Churcti. It has never stinted in giving service. ' "Cardinals Brennan, Krol an4 Cody have served in varying capacities before, during anel after the Ecumencial CouncfL Their unselfish service reflecUJ the dedication, loyalty' and ~ fection of the entire Church m '.:,. America. We are most grate ful for this and we cannot but take this ocasion to express' sincere gratitude and' appreci ation and to pray that it wiD serve to encourage ,others.
"We know the U.S. well be cause we have been fortunate in having the opportunity to vis it there several times," the Pope recalled, "We came to know
/l.. the great institutions: edue~ lrv lfU I V \iii tional, charitable, social and reContinued from Page One Funeral ceremonies were' held' ligious, aQ.d we have admired.
his loss, we accept God's Will at St. Anthony of Padua Church, ,them. The Church flourishes m,
"Thy Will be done". New ~edford, yesterday, with your country and we pray -thafl
, .• " HI'S preparedness wa's due to a' Solemn PontI'fI'cal Mass cele-' its fruits will be an increase <-.
Just a couple of yea,r,s a,go. a' directive' was I s s e dreading ' ."" , his u tremendous habits brated by the Most Rev. James saintly vocations. -from the Archdiocese of New Orleans ordering the dis- and the fundamental training, L. Connolly. "The Church must influen~ continuation of ,formal graduat,ion for elementary and J'un- given to him by the Sulpician, The Most Reverend Bishop soCiety with its message and ·this ior high school students. Also ,prohibited' were the ex- Fathers on the necessity of obe- . was asslste . d b y R t. Rev. Msgr., Christian is possibleformation through aofthoroughl!1, 'I'tS 'men> ,tended trips' and proms and class rings for students in dience in all things in life: Raymond T.' Considine, Assist- bers, We urge .all of you' to"co"': 'd 1 . h' h Father ,Boisvert, son of the t P' t R D ld B I .~ t h ese grades. The· ruling dI not ,app y to semor Ig late Alfred and the late Varina an ,':' TIes; ev. ona e ang- tinue to be model citizens mQco 'ons er, 'Deacon; Rev. Joseph Mar-' tivat'ed by the hI'ghest prI'n'cI'ples graduatI Quintin Boisvert, was born Jan. tineau, Subdeacon, • • Purpose of the directive was to eliminate expense for 13, 1916 in Fall River. He of Christian patriotism and love. Deacons of honor' were Rt. "Would that it were possible narents,' and also to emphasize that neither elementary studied at St. Hyacinth's ColR M Alf d J B JP lege, Quebec, Canada; St. AIev. sgr. re . onneau, for us to thank each one of Y01ll nor junior high schools are considered terminal ,in edu- exander's ,College, Limbour via and Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. personally. This is not possible, lZ:ation of y o u t h . ' Hull, ,Quebec, Canada; and St. Silvia. but we wish to assure you that Another purpose was to block the growing tendency to Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, Md;Serving the Mass were: Rev. the Pope has great admiration · d M 940 Arthur Levesque and Rev. Ed- for you and true affection for O r d ame elaborate on these ceremonies so that chi,ldren are given late 18, 1 E. Cassidy ,by the ward Duffy, acolytes; Rev. Ray- all. Most Rev.ay James 'too much too soon and led to expect-'tha~ every step in their in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall mond A. McCarthy, thurifer; "We bless you," the Pope con development must be applauded, marked with rewards River, the New Bedford curate Rev. Raymond A. Robillard, eluded,. "and, through you, we and expensive presents' and elaborate ceremonials: served at St. Mary's Home and book bearer; Rev. Manuel Fer- send our greetings and our reira,. candle bearer-,' Rev. Agos- blessings to your loved ones · , A t hony of Padua Church, St , n 'mple' lI',ttle graduatI'on c"eremony was' not the N B df d BI e d S tinho S. Pacheco, gremiale bear- at home, to all our beloved The sI target-but in all too m.any instances, the simple little m::i an~ ;:t;e Chur~~:~ er; Rev. William Norton, mitre children and to your fellow. graduation had exp~rid,ed into a ritual' that a university Fa)) River. . . bearer.~itiiens. May· qod continue • eould understandably envy.'," ' F a t h e r Boisvert also served Masters of Ceremonies were look 'graciously, upon your., , th F'll' R" 'Di ' P . the Very R'ev. R'egI'nald', M'. Bar- country and to pour out upoa,' And ,in an ag'e of a~fl"u','eiIce, this ela'b,ora',tion' ""ii, a'n,4' e a Iver ocese:88 ro.1' ...... Synodal Judge on the Matri.. ,rette~d Rev. Rene Gauthier. ',it richest blessings of peace, 410es mushroom so very <easily and quic~lythat positive and : monial Tribunai, Vi,ce-Presi- ,Preceding the Mass, the 01- ' haJ?piness, and prosper~ty.'" , I .harp ,pruning was .seeri as a necessity. " dent'ofthe ·Prieets"Senate; mem-' fice of, the Dead was chanted Raci?lI,HannoJ;lY , " b f th G ' I C .. To a semi-private 3udienfti , So far, the New _ Orleans program seems' tohal'e . er 0 ,e, enera ommls,~lon' by the ,priests present, Most Rev. , led by Whitney Young, the Po'" '11 d' 'th' , .. ' I 'J'ttl . 't", , : for the Synod and chairman of James L. Corinolly presided. The worked ,we 'an WI Sl\rprI~~~g y 1 e ~PP,Q.Sl .IQn. . the Comm'ission :theOlergy. chanters" were: Rev; :Bernard noted tha~ the problerps of aute . ' Many experts ~ttribute disrespect for authority toa He, is survived by Roger, a Unsworth, Rev. William E. Col_mation and fuli employment · . I' h' h . I' k f 'f 1 broth f L II M d l' ,lard and' Mo'st Rev'. Ja'm- T . "are most serious for those, With 'ac er; 0 ,o;we,' a e me, , ~ .. the' fewest' opportunities :tor e.. 1 k 0f dISCIp me w IC, means.a ac ,0 concern, 0 ' ove, :. for God and man. And',lack,'of,love comes ·from Jack~of SIster, ~all R:wer.: ,Gerrard., ucation and training; and . sacrifice, since the one proof and expression and ,developer encourage all your efforts te
of is sacrifice. If children are given all that they s,ecure the full benefits of mod want,.if they are spoiled, I,'f they are led to expeCt 'that· society for all its members without regard or discrimination they should be constantly rewarded with things, then they, ~Oll.llrse, for any motive whatsoever. are being harmed. This action by New Orleans hopes to NEW YORK (NC)-Some 200 but the preferred instruments of '~All men are brothers under keep a pleasant occasion a time of family joy rather than teachers in 90 Catholic high the Communist party. the fatherhood of God and aU a source of selfishness and greed. In itself, it is a part schools here will take a 15-week "In our revolutionary world have human rights' of self-de Df the children's training. course on communism this Sum- , it is vital that understanding of velopment and perfection which mer in a program sponsored, by social justice, individual respon- must not only be respected but
the New York archdiocese in sibilities and threats to world fostered, promoted and defend.
cooperation with the American order keep pace with rapid sci- ed.
Bar Association. ' entific discovery. Young AmerYoung said that the meeting
icans are idealists, looking for a was "most satisfactory" and The program, developed by the meaning in their own lives and that he had visited the ,Pope to ABA's standing committee on for good causes to serve. urge him to take the leadership -"'education about communism and "The freedom and well-being in the task of opening men'SJ its contrast with liberty under of people all over the world for hearts. He added that, althougli law, will be telecast via the arch years to come may depend in no laws of equality have been won, diocesan instructional television small measure on the wisdom there still is prejudice at work network. ' . and competence of ascending in the racial areas. generations in this nation." The night before the audience, In announcing the program, ,Young was given a receptiOlil Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River Francis Cardinal, Spellman of at Rome's Pontifical Gregorill£i New York said that world events 410 Highland Avenue University, attended by Cape. fliO!nllIflll.llfl'<tlJIIIS made the scheduling very timely. 'dinals Bre'nnan and O'Boylll:. Fall River, "(lass. 02722 675-7151 COVINGTON (NC)-For the "While America cherishes the Young was praised at the 1'&> third time since 1962, a group ception for his attempts to fOOl-> right to dissent," he added, de PUBLISHER bate is always improved if the of students from Villa Madonna ter racial harmony. ,AA09~ Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O.; PhD. participants have done their College here in Kentucky will homework. When students read spend the Summer working in GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGE~ Oppose Relaxation Lenin, Mao Ts~=-Tung, Stalin and Honduras. The group will par lID. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll JEFFERSON CITY (NlC) ticipate in a building projeet Lin Piao, they can see for them selves that class war, deception, designed to provIde simple but More than 20,000 persons bMNt MANAGING EDITOR signed a petition opposing rela]loo subversion and the strategy of habitable dwellings for the Hon ation of Missouri's abortion lawe. terror are not outworn myths duran poor. Hugh J. Golden 'l4lIJIliiiUI!i'Ii
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. THE ANCHORThurs., July 6, ')
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""" ..". TORONTO (NC)..,...,.;The vocation crisis: hi ·tne, Church is part of that continuing crisis wll.ic~ is ''.jorie' of,the dis tinguishing marks of the one, holy ROman Catholic Church," lVIsgr. Marvin Bordelon told! the Serra. International con vention here recently. Ser m International promotes quely" the Serrans' contribu . to th . h d tion to the Church, he noted. vocatIons e pnest 00. "It is the priceless gift which the OIlCertainly the Church is in Church desperately needs."
With .' De'ath'
Of CCard3nai
ST.. LOUIS (NC) - The St. Louis archdiocesan coun cil of priests and the pastoral council of priests, Religious
and laity-both created this year by the late Joseph Cardinal Rit ter-have apparently been sus pended by the cardinal's deatb June 10. Leo J. Wieck, secretary of the 'pastoral council, said' the June
17 meeting of 'the' cotlncil had
been cancelled because of the
cardinal's deilth and no further
~[J1lI?~~e IF,q~tGli meetings were scheduled.
~ H:L'~ Father Thomas F. Albrecht, 1i~lt!J {ftes ~ r.&...... chairman of the priests' council, said no meetings of that group WASHINGTON (NC)-Postal were scheduled. rate increases for religious pub-' Both indicated that the fu lications proposed' by the Post ture of the organizations was up Office . Department have been to Auxiliary Bishop George J. described as "tiekets to disaster Gottwald, administrator of the for smaller publications" and a archdiocese. Father Albrech~ serious danger to the effective called attention to Pope Paul's ness of all religious publicatiotW motu proprio, Ecclesiae Sanctae" by representatives of the Cath issued last August. olic and other religious press. GiV0S ][nstruction They testified before a House ed.His unique presence to him." Subcommittee on Postal Rates That documel)t, giving th~ ThCb~rch Way of Life. I" 'which is considering' legislation , ; KNIGHT INVESTED: Archbishop Luigi Bellotti, Ap norms to be followed in im ., ,e ayman, he contmued"" to .hike' postage on all classes of ostolic D~iegate in Lagos, Nigeria, solemnly confers the plementing conciliar documents, .must demons~rate this beli~f to., ImaU·. 'While second- and third the following instruc insigni·a of, Knighthood in the Order of, St. ~ylvester OR contains th~ world. He. must belte~e. "class mail rates' for all publica tion, concerning priests' councils: Sil.verium .Theophilus Da Silva of Port Har<;9\1rt, in recog He m';lst dynanucally exercl~" 'tIOns would be increased, the "When the See becomes va Ws faith. He must. allow hiS wit~ charged that the in cant, the council of priests ~ases, nition of, his' services to the Church. NC Photo. , know.led!!e of Christ to penneat~ creases would be even higher for unless in special circumstances fds"Th hfe. Ch . to be revised by the Holy See. h" h t· ,rel'l,glOUS non-profit pu bl'lCa urc, e con mued, tlons. e the vicar capitular or apostolie "'Is not a set of doctrines; it is administrator confirms its ex II way of life. He must allow .• l\Il~. Terr:nce P. McMahon" istence. the throbbing, living presence~X.:::UtcIVethedl!tOtT·o f th~ tHan: "The new bishop will estab Plans eli Christ to enter into his per- ...0<... a 0 IC ransc~p .anu' lish his own council of priests." oonal being. And this, i sub- presl~en.t o£ the Cathohc PreSli Than 100 Next Year There hes been no indication mit will cause c . . " AsSOCiatIon, told, the subcom what action Bishop Gottwald, M ";-gr Bord I nsts. rted th t mittee that a recent CPA survey white TV programs originated ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) administrator, might take on the ....... e on asse a i d th t " t li'
by the diocese, with subsequent priests' council the layman "is charged with the re~~~ e . a n;os t ~e f.g~~U~ Educational television in the'Di t expansion later to color trans ocese of Rockville Centre has . task of immersing, plunging, en- pu Ica Ions o~ra e a e ICI s. mission and four simultaneous gaging himself in the contem"The rate ~ll~reases would taken major steps toward becom Brother Eugene, 90rary secular world-now mean ·that SubSIdIes would have ing operational by 1968 with programs," Laforge fellowship O.S.:f., diocesan television co The layman can no long~r, if 1? be increas:d by the "organi~a completion of a design for a stu ordinator said. G~es to Gallagher indeed he ever could, allow him:' !:on~ sponsormg them, he SaId. dio and the awarding of a trans o~nner Systems S<!lf the luxuvy of seeking the " .Thls WOUld. decrease t~e mission facility, contract. NEW YORK (NC)-A Johs ,Ghelter of his quiet parish- Ilmou,nt of. charIty funds avall The diocesan ETV system will La Farge Institute fellowship. The four-channel system will . ahe exclusiveness of his ghetto "al>le, for n.on-government. spon be headquartered in. a Uniondale, ' also be capable of 'receiving com the first of, its kind-has been. mercial: television in the New awarded to James J. Gallaghei" -the sanctuary of h'IS C'th'l' ,,:89rOO ,proJects of mercy and , L. I.", stud.iQ, which will also, ,be a 0 Ie 'd" York area." .. " the primary transmitter site.. ' for full-time graduate studies in dub..The layman must take up- al·. ..., The diocese is part of a co intergroup relations. ..on hImself the reneWal of 'the ,;......ThE: Gathohc pubhcatlOns rep , .. , Color Late.. operative effort in ETV program Gallagher, who, was the inter 'Ge<:ular order and its continual "~~se,,,tativE,!s'were joined with 'TPT 'Comirtuni'cations, Iric;, Ii! , .improvement." .' " ",t~o~~ I from; both J:ewish and subsidiary , ,. of' Telepromtpter ming which 'indudi!s tile New' religious center's first adminis archdiocese, Brooklyn" trator, will begin studies imme Such understanding of' the i,~r~~~stant" publicatio~s in ~p Corp., will install an educatiElrial York role of,the laity makes it es- .• ,~~.I.ng the proposed postag~ I~ tel-evision ini'ctowave' system and Miami, Detroit and' Los Angeles "diately at New York University'o Center for Human Relations and! :.senUal for the Serran, he said, to .' ~reas~~, before the sUbcomrmt , in-school'distribution systems-for . Sees. \ j' Community Studies. ' ,JL'<!sist the "tendency to1ivard ,J~e.. , ; use in more, than 100 Catholic Father John Courtney Murray. .!clericalism"." ,., 1."01\4 . , schools ·.,in .the 'diocese. . ' if • 'DtmlJll$ ':'. E¢hD~ation director of the' institute, an-' . The' firm's 'proposal has been" " . " " , '. ,." . .. , "'~rrahS, lte warried, mu~t"itot ,·A\f'8~j,d'«!l See P~alil$ nounced the award carries a casla . . 'appro'l5'ed,byBishop WaIter" P. 1F@1f .AU~', A~e;, Groups ''''fali to note that much of con- J C·' ':11:11:.. B'·'; C " , '. grant of $7,000. ' temporary theology is re-think@Jrrl1U@uDC Ommll.!ln~ty Kellenberg of Rockville Centre. HOUSTON (NC) -'- The dio ing the importance. of the priestATLANTl\ (NC)-Archbishop "The system will inClude pro ce~e of Ga'veston-Houston is hood of the laity and de-mytho- Paul J. Hallman of Atlanta has vision for immediate distribution working on a religious education ll~gizing the ordained man" approved the establishment of a' of' two simul(~meous black and program. to meet the needs of MrEMO~gAIL CA~DS These cards are made on the finest saUD The state of secularity is ;'uni- "Catholic Community," with all age groups in the diocese. f1nisfl, double weight portrait paper tvitll Father Conald G. Foust as ad the photograph of the deceased on the front The .diocesa 1,1 . Committee of ministrator, on a one-year ex side and name date of death and prayer on ~(QJw~lJ1liPlO,ril' Se~ Hemp~ Religious Education has com the back sIde and lust the right size to fit F@lI'm Largest U. ~o perimental basis. In missa I or wa lIet. , pleted a preliminary, study and lM~'W lOay Cil1Hi'@ Centelf' is now workin,g on drafting rec \'lie can use most any kind of a pholograp(! or snapshot of your loved one to print 0:1 . ~«!l\t~$t~nJt ChllJfC/hl, " m::itt~erW~~u::le~::te t~~ c:;:: DAVENPORT (NC) - The ommendations for' changes in these cards. WASHINGTON (NC)-A~er-" ning'Mass on Sundays, and will Davenport Diocese has given the present system of' religious lP~nCIE Olr CA~iJlS WITfioIJ IfllHOlJ'~ lea's Southern Bapt~sts, long 'ac- .'hold study, prayer and work ses $20;000 to' a newly established education. 25 '1011' $10.50 . customed to being .the nation's ,. sions on Thursday evenings.-The day care center for pre-school The report noted inequities in SO '1011' 14.S@ largest Protestant ChurCh, are . experimental group will meet at children here. . Mass. Resident Add 3% Sales Tax money spent 011 Confraternity of ' 11 SAr~Pll< Of THESE CARDS Will BE now in second place, as the re- the, German Theological Sem Part of the grant is for the Christian Doctrine, programs SENT 01'1 REQUEST suit of the formation of the new inary. purchase of a home in the city's compared to that spent on Cath 'EDWARD LACRO~X United Methodist Church. The community will be open inner core, now the site of the olic schools. It emphasized the U26A frederick St• . Created from the Metho~ist to Catholics throughout the center. significance of the diocesan lNew l3edlford, Mass. 02744 ~~rch and the Evangehcal metropolitan area, without re The grant will be spread over growth rate, one of the highest Also Complete line of Wedding InvltatiORll Untted. Brethren Church by iii gard to residence. The group five years. It has been given to in the country. ~o-t1l1rds vote taken at re- will be relatively small, with a the center with stipulation that glonal conferences throughout maximum of about 75 families should the center cease to func ~II"IIf"llllllilllllllllll""Ill"III"I11I11"""""I11I11"""l11l11l1lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll"lIIImlll~ the country, the merger will be according to Father Foust. ' tion. any unspent funds will re ~ ~Oi.lDAV WEEK EXTRA SPECtAl ~ formally ratified at a conference turn to the diocese. of the two groups in Dallas in About 4G pre-school children April, 1968. ~== Maclean's first YJith the lowest prfOll ~=== Sail~r$ from low-income families are in months! Get your fill of lobster at The neW church's 11 million attending the cen~er. SAN JUAN (NC)-Archbishop § this holiday price! § llIlembers will give it an edge off Luis Aponte of San Juan has an 300,000 .worshipers over the nounced the establishment of an Southern Baptists. lL<mymen on IC~lI'd , archdiocesan home to be used as JACKSON (NC)-Bishop Jo IS ll'I28idence and spiritual and Named! Comptronell' recreational center by sailors. seph B. Bronini, apostolic admin /SANTA FE (NC) -Raymond The new home, Casa Mar, will be istrator of the Natchez-Jackson I. Ryan, Albuquerque accotmt located at St. Ann's Convent, diocese, ,has appointed seven lay men to serve with eight priests WIt, has been named the fim near the port area. The Reli UNIONI WHARF, FAIRHAVEN TeB. 997-9358 lla,y comptroller of the Santa !rei:! gious will vacate the oonvent on the diocesan school board. The , board wi.U meet semi-annually. iSmlllllllllllllllllllllllllOllllllllilllllllllllfHUllllilllllllllllilllllllllllllfUlIIllIClIIllIIUllIIlIUIIUUllIIlII1I1I11111!!ImE lUChdiocese. mor!ll-
erisis," he said. "The Church is in motion. The Church is evolv lng. It is experiencing the ever renewing presence of the Lord in our midst.. Crisis is the mo :'" rp,ent-tp-moment existep.<;e 00: - the collective body of belie.vers ." ':,w.tio profess to be membcljs of , . ,~brist's ChuJ,"ch." , :' ,Piscussil,1g the present, crisis t£!., the Ch,urch, Msgr. Bordelon, who is ,director of the Secre ,t~riat, for World Justice· and Peace, ,National Conference of , Catholic Bishops, reminded, the convention delegates that crisis "'is not the same as panic." The Christian, he said, may atroggle with identity but he also rejoices because he "knows that for some reason beyond his understanding the God 'who . . .cereated the universe has reveal
He urged the Serra members not only to promote but to pro teet the ordained priesthood and to "articulate their concern" about p,ractices "which deter the ontiined man froridtilfillirtg his missiort of serving,'l1;he' world." /;, ' :, ,~ t1'I'l ' ' IS) , fI
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Educational TV
New York Diocese System to Service More Schools !by
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iHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., July 6, 1967
Women's Conege Plans ExponsioA
Many· Matters to Consider When Couple B,uys 'H'ouse
'i!..OI)I (NO) - The Fellclaft here in New Jersey wJD 'expand their junior college' to • four-year institution for womeR: ' in 'the Fall. it will be called ,FeJician College., By Mary Tinley Daly , 'It wID be ,located on ground» "Likeskin"'diving,· swinging from 'a trapeze or' walking BOW ~ared, by, tlleFeJiciali • tig-htrope,"'b~y,ing an'd moving' intO a ne"r house is afl motherhouse, Immaculate Co& ception High School, ano the eXperience thaJt~' at" our age, we'd ,ratJler view than venture. ,fonner Immaculate Conceptioo Like mmtt f.amilies, we've done 0\lr, of following OPEN JUJ;lior College, a Sister-forma ejgns 'd~n this street or following leads, studying values tion 'iftstitution .which wa. ~at in our town" gone 'and 'neighbor~oods, going opened to lay students severai years ago. through old houses and 'new, through literally dozens' of' pOs The junior' college program eplit siding or split levels. ~ible 'homes, they know pretty will be discontinued. The new We've listened to agents "sitting" well what they want' and, equally important, what they do' Felician College has been an tm houses and heard every , not wa'nt. 'thorized ~ the State Board of thing from , Education to confer a bachelor Location, of course, is of prime "'This quaintly of arts degree. importance. A dream house that eharming place Besides four-year students. makes,access difficult to schools, would respond Fellcian College will accept church, stores and transportation bloorningly to transfer students from nearby is no dream; it's a nightmare. the imaginative junior colleges. Three religious Wuch of a A jumbo-size "prestige" edi communities are operating jun e ou p Ie like fice on an inadequate lot be ior colleges for women in the ~u" to the comes a gimcrack if you are area. eon f ide ntial practically living within earshot Felician College began as tl whisper t hat of neighbors' most conversa Summer normal school for Sis "Here's a real tional remarks: On, the other ters in 1923, became a full uteal at $57,000." hand, a house with insufficient fledged teacher-training institu :Well, for $57,000 living space, with crisscross tion in 1935 and a junior college . we'd have to do some real steal traffic patterns, rooms 'broken in 1942. Its president is Sister ing, such as robbing the First up with too many windows to M. Justitia. NatIonal or holding up a Brinks allow proper placement of fur . ' . .' " The projected enrollment is truck. niture, is 'no, bargain at any NEW LOOK: SIster MarJene 'Fox IS one of the flrst""'500 students. Two hundred have On one such inspection tour, price. nursing sisters to wear a white nurse's uniform at George-' been attending the junior col the Head of. the House brushed "!Leakage Money' town University hospital, Washington, D.C. Previously, 'lege; Two ne~ buildings - an against the wall of a small din Right up there with location in. the Sisters of St. Joseph wore their traditional Religious 80,000~volume library and a Ing'room, p<1pered in gold fleur importance is, inevitably, price: :h b'ts . 'd' h 't l' . Th . t 1 . combined classroom building de-lis. not only'$$$ in down payment, a 1 provI. mg OSpI 'a serVIces. e expenmen a " ',and auditorium-will be erected ":please, sir, don't touch the' $$$ in 10lms and %%% in inter_'dress, WIll be trIed ou~ for several months. NC Photo. on the campus.
pap,er," the agent said. "See? est, but those many $$$ in main- ' ,
The gold comes off on your coat. d' ' 1m
And we do' hqpe to 'sell 'the house tenance, vutside and inside, that ' ~ ~ ~ ~ . , ~!'ters
sha.re'
I:?
this' week-end." 'Twas obvious we were classed as "ju'st looking, thank you." 'Fruth In Advertising
~il~ ;~~ft~~r Je~a;so:~~e c~~~; ~L ~WoRLD calls "leakage money."
OF ··fASHIoN 1~.
~ n> MARiLYN DODERICK ~ ~ JaY .... ~ .
THINV THIN
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INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Benedictine Sisters of Our Lady of Grace Convent here have com
Many a "mod, elec. ktch."with enough gimmicks almost to . ~. We've also been lured, over serve the food often bedazzles
. t f II . r I b f th the wife into a "Let's take it" ve a ways een one 0 ose hl's h'ealth as' well as hl's appear-, pleted arrangements with In til e years, moo owmg up mome of the real estate ads with mood. Fortunately for the fortunate people who could in- ance he should think positively diana Central College, affiliated
"... . " ex. con. d" " t '1ge area, " coup1e, men' are not 'so eaSl'1y d u 1ge h er sweet t 00 th WI'th of 'dol'ng somethl'ng about thl'S B withh the Evangelical United
OJJelr pres "'new eye-level kitchens," "pld. mesmerized, viewing with a cold every confection imaginable and' "fat tumor." ret ren Church, for the under . -c. ,an d crl . 't'!Cal eye the f oun d ' . never gam , an ounce. Th e wor d graduate training of the religious
..'" rm," "ll've fl'replace." ation . The author's hl'nts, such as' community's members.
"Distinctive," "charming" and of the house, its 'construction, its diet never passed my lips and getting plenty of sleep (while
lhose two adjectival nouns, heating, and perhaps cooling, _ people were alyou're ,sleeping, yQU can't be " Mother Mary Philip Seib,
"presti,ge" and "fun" 'seem to be s y s t e m . ' ' , ways urging me nibbling) and 'sqc,ializing. (when prioress of the 150-member com- ,,'
llhe most sadly overworked ad Will. the, roof need repairing )0 gain a pound you're talking, you 'can't l;>e munity, jointly an'nounced the" ~ jectives in the 'realtors' lexicon,' or replacing in the foreseeable .rather than lose 'stuffing) are common sense ones, new educational venture with for they appear in every ad from 'future? Are, the gutters and one. Malteds, we've always been aware of, but Dr. I. Lynd Esch, president of that' of a sagging shack to a 'downspouts durable? Will much hot fudge sunwhen' the reader sees them in . the nearby college. milHonaire's mansion. Well, ad painting be required? Are win- daes, rich desblack and' white, they seem to Next September, five junior: writers get carried away, far dows and doors weatherstripped? s e rt s we r e have more emphasis. professed nuns and two postuaway. Only seeing is believing Will the basement flood? Are urged upon ...me Readers may wonder what a lants will begin full-time studies when it comes to house-hunting. ,the taxes exorbitant or likely toby a doting book on how to "think thin" has , ,at Indiana Central. They will Your legs, not your fingers, do be raised? How's' about screens, mother, anyto do with a 'fashion column. . also attend weekly cha'pel serv the walking. and storm windows? thing to fatten ,Well,' anyone who has ever ices normally required of full Meandering, real, estate-wise, '. me 'up' This
picked up a fashion n:Jagazine. ,time students. Theology courses, might have seemed a waste of ca~~'p:s~r~:~ a' h~use is DO of ~our~e, wa~
must realize that the st.yles of 'fine arts and physicai education time since, we always returned B t 't' .ti 1
durmg an era
today are for the slim and svelte.-., classes will be conducted at the to' the 'or Manse, as the Head '. u I s exci ng.
when the ideal was the roly-, The models gazing at us with. Benedictine convent. of the House calls our house. poly, rather than the Twiggy huge eyes from the pages of. However, we have picked up Catholics, lutheralTbs look.
these magazines are as slim ,as, some pretty common sense ideas Well, quite a fe~ years and' possible; in fact, even slimmer from observation and from talk Discuss Missions three childr~n later, those than possible because any photo ing with friends who are impar pounds that refused to deposit· adds 10 pounds to a subject's' HAMBURG (NC) - For the themselves on my frame now· fi gure. · th f'Ie ld . ti a 1 exper t SIne first time, Catholic representa A f . f' dId f Now Markie and Brad, are tives attended a. meeting . rlend 0 mme mo e e or of the seem drawn to I·t by a magnet . ',' a'nd house hunting, a serious under su.... den·ly I 'have to reorgan-. the Powers agency in New Commission ,on' Questions of 4 ' f York, f ~. WYman taking and maJ'or investment for Roman Catholic Missions' of the' I'ze, my thl'nkl'ng and habits and. 'during our Summers of rom 3·6592 a young couple establishing ,"think thin." college, and she returned to German . Lutheran 'Missionary 't' I ' . 't'h t' '. their family. After months of campus 0 rega e us' WI sones 'Council, held here. WhatI' really ,need to do, ac-, 'of how the models existed on" (CHARLES F:' VARGAS Father,Joseph GlaZik, M.S.C., cprding to '.Dheodore Isaac Ru nothing but vitamins. 254 ROCKDALE AVIENUE recently appointed a ,consultor, bin, author of "The Thin Book None of this may seem impor Mi~~ion Nun Preaches to the Vatican Secretariat for by a Formerly Fat Psychiatrist," tant to you if, you're not inter 'NIEW BIEDFORD, MASS. . '.", Rn 'German Cathedral -' Non-Christians, and Father Lud 'is realize that being overweight ested in clothes or how you look, wig Wiedemann,' S,J., of Bonn is sickness. According to his ,but "if your appearance con'cerns ROTTENBURG (NC) - , A woman preached a sermon for were the Catholic representa~, definition, I'm only mildly sick you, overweight is a detriment, tives. The principal purpose of because I'm only a few pounds not an asset. Even a $1,500 ex the first time in the 150-year the meeting was discussion of overweight, but still I must real clusive design will look like old Catholic cathedral here. the,relationship of Lutheran and ize that excess fat is a disease nothing .if the wearer is bur The sermon, by Sister Eme Catholic missionary work. and one that needs to be recog dened with bulges in the wrong rita, a Benedictine missionary Also on the agenda was the nized by the individual in places. from Tutzing, Upper Bavaria, preparation of the reports which ,volved. This little book seems' Summer is the perfect time to was an appeal to Catholics to Father, Wiedemann and Lu to be just the thing that the diet.. 'Warm humid days seem participate in worldwide mis theran Pastor Dr. Niels-Peter willy nilly dieter needs to help to reduce the appetite and there sions. Mortizen of Hamburg, executive 'him to stick to his guns and is an abundance of what Dr. Sister Emerita, along with secretary of the Lutheran Mispush away that extra portion. Rubin ~calls "ammunition foods," other nuns and priests have been sionary Council, will make at Dr. Rubin points out vividly those that are satisfying and giving talks in the Rottenburg the plenary meeting of the Cath- and in very blunt language that . contain very' few calories. Let diocese in connection with a olic Missionar:' Council in .the overweight adult is courting tuce; parsley, raw peppers, eampaigh called Action Africa. Wuerzburg in August. The meet- paralyzing strokes, crippling string" beans, and cabbage are Since the campaign began in in,g will ,c,onsider questions re- heart attacks, and disabling growing in profusion during May 200 freight-car loads total arthritis, He points out the obli- thesernonths, so you can nibble ing. about 4,000 tons of clothing lating to cooperative efforts 'of g;ltion tliefat person has to his' to your heart's content, arm' and'textiles have been collected Lutherans and Catholics in family to avoid such illnesses yourself with Dr. Rubin's book, for the African missions. world missions. ..... , and notes that for the sake of "'and "think 'thin." , ." ..
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SAVE ,MONEY ON
YOUR OILHEAl!
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Thurs.,
1967
WASHINGTOl'l (NC) - The National Council of Catholie Women has honored Margaret J. Mealey, its executive director, for her 25 years of service. Miss .Mealey received the award,-a scroU-at the last of eight program development in stitutes, sponsored by the NCCW, and attended by 1,300 women from 125 archdioceses and dio ceses. The' women discussed action programs on subjects. ranging from. Scripture to human rights, in an effort to adapt to the new NCCW structure of five commis-". sions instead of the previous 18 committees. All the institutes featured a special session on the work of Women in Community Service, an interreligious· group of 'Women who cooperate with the Job Corps in recruiting imd training disadvantaged girls.
Seven or eight years ge,' my ·rtlother fell in IQve with • shrub she saw in a neighooFs yard. She described it in glowing terms: its double white flowers and its fragrance sold her comp!etely. My father'a~d I investigated and fiound it to be the mocko- because I'm a morning person . range common in New Eng.:. (that is the time of day when I hnd. We now have. m~k()- have the most energy), I try to range in our own garden, but get the house straightened out
a
July 6,
NCCW Honors Miss Mealey
By Joseph ~d' ,Marilyn ROderick
• has never quite lived up to very early in the day. Sleeping ller expectations. . ~he morning away is very temptMockorange is· quite easy ,to lfig when possible, but the jJrow,' needing only a bit of 'SUR' .. thought of facing all the morn to survive. The difficulty is .to, ,jng. q:hores at 10 o'clock saps get .. it ,to" flower to perfection.. any' energy I've gairied by the Ours is of, medium height, five extra rest. ~ six feet, although many varie, One advantage of this way of ties get to be 10 to 12 feet higb thinldng is that mornings are and must be kept in check. After .the coolest part of the Summer Geveral.years of experimentation day and getting most of youI!' with, pruning, we feel we have chores done by noon g'ives you finally learned how to get the . the warm afternoon to enjoy Ghrub to bloom at some degree the beach or even just the yard. @f its capacity. Secondly, I've come to realThe trick to pruning is to cut ize the hard way, that if my eye lJ)ranches which have flowered lights on something out of place only as far back as there are or needing to be picked up, the £lowers. In other words, we time to do it is that instant. prone off any withered flowers For unless your house is blessed but leave the remainder of th~ with a "white knight," you and branch untouched. This does not you alone are going to have t@ disturb the following year's buds pick up that item and the sooner but it does keep the plant in you realize it the better! eheck. Keeping wastebaskets in alAphid Problem most every room in the house is A second deterrent to flower!l good way to avoid clutter a;'d Ing appears in the early Spring to find a receptacle for the item in th':l form of aphids. Each you just picked up off the floor. ,.ear I have found the branches , Somehow in a house with small end leaves of the mockorange children, everything hits the Uterally covered with aphids. floor at one time or another and These ,little pests raise havoc the mother of the house can al with the bush and among other ways philosophize that the CIlings cause the leaves to roll, beRding is good 'for her waist 1lrither and ,die. This year, how- line. ever, I was ready for them with Of course, the best method! lI: 8ID insecticide which I applied have found for keeping Rlf' weekly and which put them out house in apple pie order is M eI. business for this season. keep the children outsfide. Thill Having taken the two steP3 is a bit difficult to do during the mentioned above, we have II Winter months (unless you want i)retty decent display of flowenr them to get frostbite) but in the WI. our mockorange this ·year alSummer they ean even -eat theil' though it is still far from satis- mRCh on the back lawn. This ·factory. The flowers are single doesn't do mUeh for the lawn, and do have a lovely fragrance. but it dOO8 wonders for the Marilyn has used them a number !louse. Gtf times in floral arrangemenfla When it comes to meall-plan hr the. house and their ira- ning, cool Summer mornings are fIl"llnce adds a great deal to theft" the perfect time to prepare eve lteauty. Ring salad dishes. Potato salads, As in almost every type <.li egg salads, or even the. greens "ant available on the market lor II tossed salad can be pre today, there have been great pared early ill the day, thus improvements made in thia leaving your afternoons free. shrub. One need no longer tol- My preference in the salad line Hate the huge straggly plants is a' molded salad, but even so which were predominant Hi I have been trying to keep a ;rears ago, for now there are IJUpply of potato salad lind hard !ft1lall varieties available at rea- oooked eggs in the refrigerator, iJlmable prices. In addition, the~ especially on very hot days. A are double flowered types fa mam dish salad and some of white and tones of purple, at- your family's favorite cold cuts though I still prefer the delicate can save you from heating your lJRlaH single-flowered shrubs. ltouse up with an oven meal. In the Kitchell Here's a perfectly delicious Finally the long awaited sum- salad and one that keeps for' Iller has arrived. Winter tbill clays in the refrigerator. rear was brutal and Spring just CHICK-PEA SAJ:'AD didn't appear but finally these 1 large can of chick-peas leisurely days we pined fer have J,oSJ package prepared garlic oome upon the scene. The wait cheese salad seasoning has been so long that now we ! Tablespooms red wine vinegar' want to make the most of them. ! Tablespoons ,water and avoid anything that inter- ~ cup salad oil teres -;;rith our precious momen:ts 1 ~und can of cut green beans, iR the sun. ' cehiUed and drained . Such mundane things aa Z stalks of celery, slieed Itousework, ironing, grocery 1 pimiento, diced mopping aftd washing should ~ teaspoon salt really be dispensed with, lit lettuce least for July and August. HowZ hard-cooked eggs ever, unless you're a beach1) Combine the 1h package lJIf eomber the aforementioned salad selilsoning with the vine ebores have to be done so the gar, water aDd oU in a «;overed ltext best thing is to try to dis- jar and mix well. ClOver the quickest, efficient 2) Toss the check-peas witlln ways of getting them over wi~ the salad dressing and refrig .ill a hurry. erate for at least 24 hourS. Housework is one field thiU 3) About 3 hours before seryI do it, but with little joy ill lng, mix the chick-peas and rm anything but an expert in. dressing with the green beans, my heart. Over the years, how- celery, pimiento, and salt and ever, I have found a few Stuu.- chill. lIlertime hints that make life 4) Before serving, line bowl! wi.th a oouse a 'bit easier. i'iaIt. with the lettuce and place tAe
9
fl'tl: .AN\..HUK.,-
Summer Is Time- to Make Housekeeping Easy As Pie
Massachusetts WomOlIl'1l Heads Refugee Service CHURCHWOMAN OF YEAR: Mrs. Marcus Kilch, former president of,the National Council of Catholic Wo men, and a leader in Women in Community Service (WICS), an interdenominational group working with the Office of Economic Opportunity, receives the annual award as churchwoman of the year from Marian Anderson, world famed contralto, who was winner of the award last year. The presentation was made at the annual dinner of the Religious Hertiage of America in Washington NC Photo.
Hospital Costs GooI of Government, Voluntary Agencies Best Care at Most Economical Price WASHINGTON (NC)-A AS tional conference on medicai oosts here was called "most .ben eflcial" by Msgi. Harrold A. Murray, director of the Bureau of Health and Hospitals, United States Catholic Conference, and one of some 300 health leadeN from around the eountry attend ing the sessions. The conference was called by Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare John W. Gardner and initiated by President Lyn don B. Johnson's concern for the problem of rising medical costs. . Experts from the fields ld health and hospitals discussed. ways of holding down costs while continuing to prov'ide quality services for patients in. five panel sessions on hospital costs, planning, community serv Aces, physician costs, and third party payers. ][t was generally agreed that better community planning fer medical services and greater use
Orientation Meeting For Representatives WASHINGTON (NC)-Amer leaR representatives to the Lay ~tolate Congress, to be held .iR Rome next October, meet here for orientation. The group includes the S6 official American delegates, the five official U. S. experts, 15 Americans invited by Rome to serve as international experts, and. also Americans representing various international organiza tions. The last category takes in Ii number of non-Catholics who will be observer-consultants at the Rome meeting. aalad in it. Garnish with the eggs, sliced. Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
c.f. group medical practice and group pre-payment plans are essential to health cost control. The conference, according 00 Msgr. Murray, also "pointed out @flee again that the federal gov ernment ~nd voluntary agencies are cooperating and working very closely together in an effort to bring the best medical care to all the people at the most economical price...
Catholic Paper Wins Association Award
NEW YORK (NC)-Matthia K Marley of West Newton, Mass., has been appointed supervisor for refugee services with the program in Vietnam of Catholic Relief Services, overseas aid agency of U. S. Catholics. Miss Marley's duties will in clude directing teams of social workers deployed into areas of South Vietnam where there are large concentrations of refugees, CRS headquarters here said. The teams will be involved in imple menting various types of com munity development and seIf help projects as well as training IGcal Vietnamese leaders to con duct programs for rehabilitating and resettling refugees withilll. these areas. The program HI !;)eing conducted ift cooperati_ with the U. S. Agency for Inter national Development. Miss Marley has been wi-' eRS since 19~ and recently completed a two-year tour c.f. duty in Yemen. Prior to that, she was project supervisor fQt" the Far East, and, from 1959 1» 1961, was progrlllm director c.f. CRS operations in India. She ia Ii graduate of Regis College, Weston, Mass. In 1952, she WM a Fulbright scholar at the Uni versity of Leeds, England.
ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) The Long Island Catholic, Research Center Pions Rockville Centre diocesan news papel!', 'won an award from the Hong Kong Seminar National Newspaper Association, NORTH EASTON (NC) the nation's largest newspaper The Food Research Center fOl' association with more than 6,600 Catholic Institutions will sponSOf' daily and weekly newspapers a three-day seminar in model'll threughout the U. S. hotel feod management at the The Catholic paper's continu University of Hong Kong earJy ing series on the New York State in September. Coristitutional Convention was The center will also take pari cit~ as one of the three. best ·in a pilot research program s.p9R community service efforts pro duced by American newspapers sored by the U.S. Department @f Agriculture on stabilizing the duting 1966. Theodore A. Serrill, association ris.ing cost of food in restaurants,. executive vice president, said cafeterias .and other "away fma "as far as I know" the Long nome" eating places. . The National Restaurant .As Island Catholic is "the first reli gious publication ever to will rJOCiation will co-sponsor the pro ject. one of our top awards."
First Federal Savings AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
OF
ATfLEBORO
4%% on all Savings Accounts 4% % on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford
10
End/iana Priest Dmrects Rei ief
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Ri,ver-Thurs., July 6, 1967
;. ,Cho.rges ~mage of Christianity Linked With' White' Supremacy
LONDON (NC)-"~he image, black' parishioners will not be of Christianity which is pre.:. invited to play golf with his sen ted to the people of Africa is white parishioners." of a religious system closely Although 94% of the white linked with white supremacy," population is Christian, he said, the director of the World 'Cam"the overwhelming majority of paign for the Release of South white Christians in South Africa African Political Prisoners said practice ,;1 negation of Christian here. ity." , The, director,' Dennis Brutus;
was the first witness called by,
the United Nations Commisison
on 'Human Rights, now hearing testimony here on the 'treatment of political prisoners in' South. ., . Africa. ' ." , , ' (DUBLIN(NC)-"None of us For many years Brutus Worked wants indifferentism about the "', for the rights of non.:.whites in truth as we believe it, and ':' South Africa, and 'spent' 18. Roman Catholics and Anglicans . months at hard. labor after al~ will continue to cherish their legediy bi'eaking a ban against: distinct, doctrines. But they can 'his attending sports events'.. Pre-' both believe that. the finally vious to that he had been banned united church will be a church :l!rom teaching. so purged of the present blemThe most frightful thing, he ishes of all churches that it may !'laid, is that -apartheid, South seem to be a church different Africa's strict segregation policy, from L:ny that we can see today." "is justified on Christi,m Anglican Archbishop Michael grounds.' Ramsey of Canterbury said this 'Little Effect, in a lecture on "Rome and Can "People are imprisoned". terbury!' at the Royal Dublin ,banned, homes are, broken, up, Society's Concert Hall here. ." ,families destroyed all in defense': The archbishop also said that flf Christianity, we are, told,!' "each of us is in danger of being Brutus,. a non-white, pointed an apostate from the spirit of "" .mi that the Cath~lic'bish'ops.and Christ unless he is being dr,awn other churchmen have' proi;;sted nearer to Chdst in holiness and epartheid, but 'said'-' that these charity in a' way 'which'< must needs ~ffeet, his relations to , " \llave li ttle,effect.. .' , "It is the same Christians who," Qth~r Christia,ns of Whatever; ~l:~ ,',eondemn apartheid, who, praotice legiance." ,:.: U/' he c l a i m e d . " ' ArchbIshop 'Ramsey .w:as'· ffl,' "In, my own parish in ,South. 'Ireland on a three~da~ vi~i~ for, .~ .. 'Africa," )'le said, "I was president" . the centenar~ celeQrabo,nsof .St; of the Legion of Mary praesiBartholomew s Church, which C1ium for blacks. We met in the. belongs to the Church ~f Ireland, same presbytery as the white a m~mber of the Angllc~n com " t·Ime, mumon. ,praesl'd'!Urn, a t th e same 0 h' ' . 1h th A r but in differen't, rooms.' n IS arl'lva ere e , ng 1 "The ~nly other difference ean prelat~' was welcomed ~Y was 'that the blacks used the ,representatives of the Catholic 'b k d " , Church, as well the Church of ac ~~ite Boys Only ~elan~ and other denomina Brutus, who now lives here ons., with his wife and seven chil-, " ,dren, recalled how his sons used, , ,. ,to serve on the altar alongside, white boys until some of the ,,' white parents complained. Then it was white boys only. CINCINNATI (NC)~The gen ", "Even the missionaries who eral synod of the United Church " , have not been brought up in, the of Christ endorsed the work of " system drift imperceptibly, into the Consultation on Church ... adopting the prejudices of apart Union wJ1ich is planning a heid," he said. united church structure for 10 "The priest ;,; under constant Protestant denominations, social preSSUI·C. The Catholic The chairman of the United " ]priest who drinks tea with his' Church:s .delegation to the con !' sultation, the Rev. Dr. David G: Colwell of the First United Church of Washington, told the 'synod, however, ,that there: are many o,bs.tacles iiI: the way, of union., .. LA' CROSSE (NC)-The La Crosse diocese called on its He said that agreement on ]80,000 membership, to be more: the~logic~l, issues' is sometimes ~oncerned 'for the", w.elfare of easier'to attain 'tIla,i agreement migl'ants coming to work its' on structural or organizational ,]9-county area here in Wiscon-' differences. -, 'sin.' .... , ' 'J> ,American Protestantism,' he The plea "to' accept migrants said, has become "so enslaved as brothers," which' came in' a by its habits as to make it almost statement released by the dio-' immobile." cesan Social Action Commission, "I have come to the conclu was approved by ·the Diocesan Central Commission, including sion," Dr. Colwell said, "Jhat the American churches will be Bishop Frederick Freking. unable to find real renewal Noting that '''migratory work within. our present denomina ers are often victims ,of involun tional pattern of iife. ' tary poverty" although they Thus, he said, the churches contribute to the nation's afflu- " must be "open to new, creation, ence, the statement says it is the new forms of life." "obligation of society to create for them opportunities to escape Consultation members include from thc migratory system." the United Church of Christ, the Meanwhile, it is "society's re Methodist Church, the Episcopal sponsibility to help migrant la Church, the United Presbyterian borers improve their economic ChUI'ch, the Evangelical United tilllld social status as mignll1ts." Brethren Church, the African The statement makes no Methodist Episcopal ChUI'ch, the' charge as to who is responsible African ',Methodist Episcopal, for sub-standard co.i\litions ~f Zion Church, the Disciples of employment; hoiJsin.g and social Christ, the Presbyterian Church lDppol"tunities, but, it decries the in the:U.. S. '(Southern) and ·the apathy 01 local Cath~)lics ,con" Christi.an ., ,Methodist , Epi$copal ,ee~ning the ~igrants':plight.' , . Church., ''7', '
Anglican Prelate Visits Ireland.
Synod Approves Unity Movement
Diocese i,n Plea For,' Migrants
!'
,mn
Vietnam" ,
'NEW YORK (NC) -:.:.! F~ L. CharTeboif\,
ther Robert'
36, of Gary,
Ind., has beell appointed director of ~h() Vietnam program of Catholie Relief Services, overseas relie§ agency of U.S. Catholics. Father Charlebois, who hQ~ served as the agency's program director in' Ecuador' since Jan.. uary, 11)65, will supervise thf;j largest voluntary aid program . in Vietnam, which includes tM distribution of food\ clothinfj, medicines and other relief"sup.. . ' . plies to more than one million EXILE FROM P Al,ESTJNE: In the mountains of refugees, orphans, widows' and! Lebanon, Mercy Sister Mary' Michael of Albany,. N.Y., other victims of the war there. comforts another far from home, a girl born in exi'le from In addition, he willinitiat«l her family's home in Palestine. Pope Paul's Pontifical ',Mis.:.' and implement self-help and so sion for Palestine is aiding poor refugees scattered in '.four cioeconmic development pro- 'jects designed tQ rehabiI.itate countries around Isreal. Sister l\1'ichael and ,three ,othez: refugees and to help the otheli' New York nuns are starting an English-language school needy persons of Vietnam to in a Druse mountain village. ~C Photo. help themselves attain self-suiP> ficiency. Award Recipient Father Charlebois replaces Lawson Mooney, of Somerville, Mass., as CRS program directoli' At:te~ds in Vietnam, and Father John Jl.. Halligan, S.J., of New York, hoo , 'been named CRS program dn NOTRE DAME (NC)-What's 'literature, 'and things went so TectOI' in Ecuador. Mooney wiE be reassigned at a latel' date. well for him that, as he' rem em life like for the University of Before' .leaving Ecuador 011 Notre Dame'~' only rabbi alum"" ,bel's it, "my mother' started to June ·7,. Father Oharlebois woo worry that I would 'become a nus? awarded thl;! Supreme Decora "Where Protestants fear to' Catholic. 'tread, Rabbi'. Plotkin steps' , "She' was only somewhat'less tion of Gold, with Honor, from boldly,'" ,said Rabbi Albert A, disconcerted when l' 'decided President Otto Arosemena anell Plotkin, back' here at the after graduation to become 2 the Con'stituent Assembly, that nation's high~st award; and thE ]ioeral 'rabbi," he said.. "Fightin" Irish", he~dql!<'lrt7rsfor Gold Decoration for Service til the 25th reunion of his class. , '" ' tne People of the Republic ~ "Notre Dame," explained t.he Phoenix" Ariz., Jewish leader, Schoo~ Ecuador, from the Ministry dJ. Social Welfare. "has been,my,entree to the Cath.,., olic populatibn."Rabbi Plotkin He was also the recipient «l said his affiliation, with Notre the first award presented By the Dame has assisted him to foster, LANSING '(NC)-The legality Episcopal Conference of :Bisj,o~ the Catholic-Jewish dialogue in of Michigan's 1963 school bus of Ecuador :tor his servjces to the 'his community. Jaw has been upheld for the sec Catholic Church there. "There are some rabbis who ond time by Circuit Judge Sam will have' nothing to do with Street Hughes of Ingham dialogue because they feel that County. proselytizing is at the heart of Judge Hughes ruled a year it. I think they are wrolig. We' ago that the law is cOllstitu cannot continue to live in ghet-' 'tional. He has reaffirmed this DAVENPORT (NC) -Bisho)l> tos, even though they may be position by denying a rehearing Gerald O'Keefe of Davenport the gilded ghettos of suburbia.", to opponents of the law which has invited' priests of the diocese to nominate members for the Rabbi Plotkin said that at the requires public school districts diocesan board of consultors. heart of his own feelings about to provide bus transportation to Catholics and Jews are the' non-public school students on The Bishop will select at leas& healthy relationships he had as the same basis as it is provided, three of the consultors hom the one of ~four Jewish students in, to public school pupils. list of priests who receive the his Notre Dame class. ' , Opponents contend the law most votes. Each priest has been violates, separation of <;::h~rch asked to submit a list of nine "Never once at' Notre Dame' and state. names. did I feel the sting of prejudice or discrimination,'" he recalled;' In his opinion, Judge Hughes Bishop O'Keefe has indicated 'adding that his brother' had' t.he repeated that the, law "helps that he may select, the entire experience of being blackballed children to, secure an educat.ion board of six from the nomina and ass. ists their p"'arents in me,et tions. The term of office HJ by a fmternity at a large Mid western state university.
,ing the requirements of the com three -years. pulsory education law, and pro Born in South' Bend, Rabbi tects the health and well-being Plotkin was sent ,to Notre Dame of children." by his orthodox Je,wish parents.
He said' "such PUI'poses' al'e Whit~'s W study English language and secular, the prin~ary 'effe,ct of "SP.~CIAL MILK which neither inhibits nor ad vances religion." Tested Herd"
Returns
Notre Dame
Class ,Reunion; Rabbi Alumnus Lauds Catholic-Jewish Relationship',
M
ici'.igan Bus ,Law Legal·
Priests to Nominate Consultors in Iowa
Farm Dairy
Stress Importanc'e' Of Parish' Councils
CINCINNATI (NC) - Forma
Uon of lay-Religious-clergy par
ish' councils has been assessed
here as one of the most direct
and far-reaching consequences'
of the Second Vatican Council.
Some 200 such parish councils
have been organized in the Cin
cinnati archdiocese, which has
262 parishes. The call went out
last autumn from Archbishop
Karl J. Alter for formation of
the councils.
The ,average parish council is'
about four mont,hs old, has about
20 membel's, meets monthly, and
is engaged in serious discussion
of human and material resources'
in the parish, what form its own
stl'ucture will take, how to cope
with gl'Owing financial prob":
lems, and how to en'gage the"
members: ot 'the parish .. ,more'
"ac~ively in ,community,affaixs.
From" Our Own
,Federal, Grant NEWARK (NC) The Mt. Carmel Guild, social welfare agency of the Newark archdi ocese,' has .been given a $99, 940 federal grant toward con struction of a child care center here. '
I
Acushnet, Mass. 993-4457 • Special Milk' • Homogenized Vito 0 Mille • Buttermilk • Tropicona brange Juice • Coffee and ,Cl)oc. Mill.c f) Eggs - Butter
OPEN DAILY FOR THE SEASON AFTERNOON AND" NIGHT
-,...
Accuse Rangers!. off ~ntimidation ~n Texas Farm Workers Strike
_--~.
--~l"-'·
rHE ANCHOR July 6,
Thurs.,
t 11'
'1967
SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The lllgainst whom the strike has been r?~~mg~$ioll1l Texas Rangers were accused of directed.
, lilarassing and i~timidating farwi
Father Pena, who is director of workers on strike in the Rio t.he Commission for Social Action Grande valley in Starr County in in Brownsville, said: "We believe ~ report submitted to the U. S. there should be a stronger inter Commission on Civil Rights. pretation of the law than exists NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The report, made by the com : illl a.llowingg~een card,holders to mission's committee in San An Holy Cross College of Washe come and work in an area where tonio, said the Rangers along ington, D. C., a semin.u"Y depressed living conditions with Starr County enforcement ~)Iist.~ which accommodates abont -4)fficials, denied civil rights ~ 60 students from the eastern, the strikers. Ask Strletoer Enforcement Canadian and Indiana province!! The report also uged the U. S., The law is on the books, ready of the Holy Cross Fathers, probo Secretal'y of State, Secl'etary of for "stric'ter enforcement but it ably will be moved to the Un~ Agriculture and Attorney ·Gen versify of Notre Dame. is not followed and something eral to reexamine the policy should be done about it," Father The provincial chaptel' o( the which permits Mexican .citizens Pena said. Indiana. Province of the Holy to cross the border daily. and Cross Fathers, meeting her£\, work in the Texas fields. I ' "We are not saying we don't agreed to take prelimimll'Y ,stepo The policy, known as the green want our brothers from Mexico toward the move which will be card law which allows the Mexi-. , to come over and work in our subject to approval by the Holy I can nationals to work in the. ~ountry. We want instead for the See. This will involve obtainin{l Texas fields also was criticized. government to take a look and the endorsement of the depart by Father Robert Pena, O;M.L,'· ~ee if w: ~an't improve the liv- . ment of theology and the aClll of the Brownsville diocese in an' ,mg conditIons of the people here demic senate of the univel'sit~ appearance befol'e an inve~tigat.:. by strieter enforcement of this and permission of Patrick Car ing co'mmittee of the U. S. Agri- law," Father Pena said. ID. OF I. AID REFUGEES: Msgr. John G. Nolan of dinal O'Boyle of Washington W culture Department. the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, New York, dose the seminary.
"The conditions are bad and The United Farm Workers Or thanks Mrs. Richard H. Walsh, supreme regent of the
the green card holders are help Cardinal O'Boyle's permissiEm ganizing Committee, AFL-CIO, ing us stay in these conditions," Daughters of Isabella, for $25,000 check to aid non-com . is required because of a provi\.. which is trying to organize farm batant victims of Arab-Israeli war. The 120,OOO-member sion of canon law which sayo wOl'kers in this al'ea, has claimed he said. Catholic women's organization was among first to l'es,pond that the Ordinary of a diocese that the green card ·holding Others who testified before the must approve the "suppression2] . Mexicap nationals are being Agriculture Depal·tment commit t~ the emergency appeal of the Pontificl~l 'Mission for,' of any Religious house withiIU .•. used as strike bl'eakers by h\l'ger tee' included Father John Ma Palestine. NC Photo. his jurisdiction, lirowel's in the valley .area, , toch<l, director of: the Catholic
No t.ime schedule was set Jioo Action Office,. both of the, San.
'~he change. Antonio archdiocese. They. ,both. ,. . cited civil rights problems which lImprove Education exist and outlined lack of eco~, .A spokesman for theHolW nomic equality among minority, . Cross Fathers. said the order be . groups. " . lieved it could improve the 'ed... WASHINGTON (NC) -:,N"sgr:·· cation of its seminarians if llifo. William Baum, retiring execu~ lLauds Bishop )Wedei~~' OMAHA (NC) -The Omaha ~unity which provides 'goods,and' resources of Holy Cross C'olleg€l ltive director of the U. S.aish 4}PS' Committee for Ecumenical Cesar Chavez, head of the Archdiocese has Project Equal-. services to our religious institu were pooled with the University and Interreligious. Affairs, was United Farm W'orkers union; iiy, the national inter-religious tions '" '" '" in:eways that all of us of Notre Dame. It will also pei' honored at a dinner here spon'; who led the strike which gained program for fair 'employment can fulfill our responsibilities to mit the seminarians easier acceS!J sored by the Gustave Weigel better conditions for grape pick- practices. ~t.he university's recently estab give evel'yone an equal oppor ers in Delano, Calif., lauded the lished pl:ogram of graduate the Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan tunity for work and advance . Society, an ecumenical group, involvement of 'the churches ill' ology, he said. pledged the Archdiocese's moral ment~" and attended by ecumenical leaders of major faiths. behalf of the workers, but said and fina!lcial support to the pro Lloyd Skinner, employment "it hasn't been as good as illl gram. He asked priests and Sis- . committee chairman of the arch The spoksman said that som@l Msgr. Baum, who was ap- California." but not all members of the fac tel'S under his jurisdiction to cir- . diocesan commission on human pointed director when the bish ulty of Holy Cross College mighil ops' committee was formed in Chavez said the help of aU culate the archdiocesan policy on rights, announced the pl"Ogram become faculty members ~ employment practices in the absence of Archbishop ]964, came to Washington and church people and others was equal Notre Dame. t'stablished the office in Janu- .. needed in 'a petition to Texas among all firms and individuals Bergan, WhOSE! hospitalization ,prevented his attendance at a Moly Cross College of Wnsh= ary, 1965. He leaves his present Gov. John Connally to remove with whom they do business: The Archbishop called Project press conference called for the' ington, D. C., is a private iilst)c. assignment to become chancellor the Texas Rangers from the area. tution not connected with the of his home diocese of Kansfls As long as the Rflngers are Equality "a means, of educating purpose of making the anneal'by Catholic University oR ourselves and the business com- .nouncement. City-St..Joseph, Mo., on July 15.. here', we will never have a America. It is not to be confuse411 Among those who joined in chance of organizing a union. with the Holy Cross Foreigill paying tl'ibute to Msgr. Baum, The Rangers are the biggest J\Ilission Seminary, also locatecll were thc Very Rev. George J .. , threat to the union than anything in Wnshington, which trainv Bacopulos, chancellor of the' I can think of," he said: Holy Cross priests desti ned fm' Greek Orthodox Al'chdiocese of, He said the churches have, foreign mission work. NOI,th and South Amel'ica; the' contributed some moral support, Rev. R.obert C. Dodds, director' also have donated money 'and NEWTON (NC) Eastern-rite we pledge our help to those vic of ecumenical affairs, National food to the strikers. Chavez Catholic and Orthodox bisl)ops, tims of this recent war. We ., Council of ~hul·ches. lauded the effort of 'Bishop in the United States have made wholeheartedly adhere to your a public appeal for 'prayer 'and. statement of· May 23 that this Also the Rev. Paul.C. Empie, Humberto Medeiros of Browns emergency relief contributions great country stands for the general secl'etal'y of the U.s.A. ville to get the growers to rec National Committee of the Lu ognize the farm wOl'kers union. for the victims of the. war-torn freedom and terl,'itorial integrity Middle East and sent President of all nations in the Near East." theran WOl'ld Federation and He also called for stricter en member of the Luth~l'an-Cath- forcement of the green card Lyndon B. Johnson a telegram of The signers of the telegram olic Dialogue Commission, holders law. ' concern in 'the current crisis. and the appeal for relief meas ures were: . The bishops designated Sun Bishop Francis M. Zayek, ap day, July 9 <IS a day of prayer "for the ,souls of the victims and ostolic exarch for Mar'onite-rite for a just and honorable peace." 'Catholics in the U. S.; Bishop' Justin A. Najmy, apostolic 'ex They also called for contribu tions of clothing, medicine and arch for Melkite-rite Catholics in funds to Catholic R.elief Services, the U. S.; Orthodox Metl"Opolitan overseas relief agency of U. S. Philip Saliba of New York and' All North America; Archbishop Catholics, or to the World CQun Athanasius Y, Samuel of the cil of Church relief agencies. It was requested that the con Syrian Ol'thodox Church in the tributions be earmarked for the, U. S. and Canada; and Primate 373 New Boston Road Near East Bishops Emergency Torkom Mflnoogian of the Arme lFaDI River 678-5677 Relief. nian Church in North America. "We, bishops of the Near East churches in the United ~~ ~ ~ States, Orthodox and Catholic, representing over one million Americans together with our people," the prelates stated in their telegram to President INDUSTRIAL and· DOMESTIC , ,Johnson, "have been very dis tressed by the recent tragic events in the Near East. We preaeh love and reject violence ;:'8 means to the settlement of MORNING MIJ..K: Young Vincente of Guatemala gets any problem.
;·.·.. Weigel Socie,ty ,. ,.' Honors Prelat·e
Seek To Move CoUege from Caprnto I
Omaha Archdiocese Joins National Program. Seeking Fair Employment Practices
Prelates Asks Pr<Jyers, Financial' Aid for Middle-East Victims
IDEAL LAUNDRY
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.....
ANDERSON & OLSEN HEATING-PIPING and AIR CONDITIONING
hi8 rooming milk' in one of the projects' Father 'Gregory Schaffer of New VIm, Minn., has established in San Lucas Toliman. NC Photo, '
"We shall dedicate Sunday, July 9, 1967, as a Day of Prayer. . lior a 'peace in the Near East and
j........................................... ... Hmm~. s5?NTR~_;,~ORSN'W
Bedlon! ~
12
~~~r~~N~~~R~,
Scores
Je$uit Priesl-A'rtisft lftj Visilfrnr to aap~ Cod; 'Work QnExhihU .anW@UjleetGaliery,
1961
IExciusiOml
Of'~'Fa'~m ,Labor',',
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See'k' to P·revent
C~=:,c:.~~~)to.:!
'·tants
and
Other' Amencans·
",When LuciBaines Johnson got m~rried 'last Summer she wal},ted, give, an ,old "Uni~d forSep~r3jt,~~n of c~u~~ .' "p' 'Christian'tradition a persomd touch. A'duplicate of her bridal' 'bouquet 'was placed' at . -and State has filed suit to pre .'• 1', , t vent the Post Office from ilisuinl rom the' feet' of St. Agatha, Sicilian martyr ~f the second century: and payron saint of nurs.es. stamps bearing religious sym EDINBURG (NC) -.- The A week before the wedding of the I>resldent's qaughter at the Immaculate Conception bois. in' the nation's capital. ,.," '. . POAU's immediate target is lJItonly real issue" in the strl'ke aShrin'~ Jesuit priest then on pai" they woulll never produce an1' this year's Christmas stamp, II h among farm laborers in t e . h d t . N' Y k C't thing ~ reproduction of Hans Memling"ll His' own works are in the Tate "Madonna and, Child With An-, lower Rio' Grande ValleY' is 18 • U Y m ew or. ! Y, e-whether or not America's hired ~ecelyed a call commlSSlon Gallery i London, a~the Mu gels," a smaller version of whick,
F
'.,'", . rotectlon'
I
'
farm workers should continue' 109 him to execute a statue of sewn of ~acerata in Italy and was last year's' Christmas stamp. to be excluded from the protec St. Ag~tha to. be honored. at in many private collections The,group's·petition, filed witk tions which are available to most the Shone dunn~ the weddlOg throughou the world. the U. S. District Court for the other working men in this coun and kept by LuCl thereafter. They rsonify many aspects Distriet 'of, Columbia,., charges", , :ky," according to Archbishop Rev. Oscar Magnan, S.J., was of flesh and spirit with the that· stamps bearing, religious ,;, Robert E. Lu¢ey of San Antonio. on a two month sojourn in the honel;ty d manded' by this age symbols ,conflict ,with. the -". Saying that' farm workers United States that had started of amilysi . church-state 'separation. clause" mould be guaranteed the right with an exhibition of his work Be~ore the 20th century, it of the Constitution. 6f collective bargaining under on Cape Cod. was' suffic ent to' create beauti The' petition' says that Post-' provisions of the National Labor He had brought no tools or ful statue of saints to :evoke master General Lawrence F. Relations Act (NLRA), _Arch wax to New York. A sculp~r devotion f om the faithful. The O'Brien 1 should be 'prevented' bishop Lucey said the workers from Eastham, Yvonne Back~, clergy wa in' much the same from spehtling tax money for the '"will no. longer tolerate legis drove over from Cape Cod With distant el vated position as the "establishment of religion" by !ative discrimination." . the necessary implements. Later saints. Pe pIe ran to them for printing a stamp with the like she supervised work on the help but ever identified with ness of the Virgin Mary. k ''The dispossessed farm wor statue ~t the Long Island Foun~common gals, much less similar ers have demonstrated that they ry while he attended to hIS Shortcomin~s. The Virgin, says POAU, "is a tnean to do something about parish responsibilities. Today w en man's actions are religious symbol association with their lot. The want nothing Father Magnan was back in mirrored round the world by the Roman Catholic Church for ·more than justice." E.as.tham last week for. a brief instant re ordings and simul purposes of adoration and wor ' h d H - The archbIS op' s comments SIt . on C ape. C o. IS iates t _ taneous transmission of happen- ship contrary to . the beliefs of I .... · d 'In a s t a te men t '" are bei ng s h 0.wn a t the were cont alOe wor1\.S ings as t~y occur, resolute in .."'"- plaintiffs and others." delivered 'before the U. S. sen Wellfleet Art Gallery 10 a group tervention becomes synonymous ate Subcommittee on Migratory ing of liturgical. art. 'with pio contemplation and Labor, headed by Sen. Har Religion, Art Unite eXhortation1. rison A. Williams Jr., of New
Religion and art have always Ch'urch a Link Jersey. Because Archbishop been one to Fr. Magnan, who be Pope P~('l, as Cardinal Mon Lucey was unable to, attend, hiB gan to paint at the age of (j tlni, defincli the mission of the , WINOOSKI PARK (NC) atatement was read by Father and at 17 entered the Society Church as a link between the Members _of the Conference aI. William Killian, editor 0f the .. of Jesus. He is currently com sacred and the profane. , Major Superiors of Men gath Alamo Messenger, San A n tOOlO pleting his Ph.D. thesis at the . ''The two must be put in con,. ered for· their tenth annliai Sorbonne in Paris. tact in sulch a way that the Ill'chdiocesan newspaper. meeting here at St. Michael's Second-Class Citizens Born in Chicago of Scandi:' profane wi* not contaminate the College, warmly responded' to Noting thete has been a Sllight ~avian. French parenta~e wit!t sacred, riorl,the sac~ed al~er the the announcement that Pope klprovement in the "inhuma« roots lD Cuba, be received Ins profane, b9t transfigure It." ,Paul orI had just issued his ex oonditions" under which 00 education in South, America, and As the C'JlUrch is bridging the pected encyclical reaffirming the lI'ant farm workers have tcadi on the continent Of Europe and gap between the world and its Latin rite's .eommitment .. i!ionaUy labored in the valley, o,btained a master's degree iR re,ligious, (treater emphasis is priestly celibacy. Ute archbishop said the "next philosophy from Oxford Uni placed on their personal in Although individual SUpericulI lIlajor battle to be waged and versity in England. volvement both sides IJl the ad members of a pr~ ~anell. won" is the protection and fa With Castro's takeover ef Cu ience.' 8ft vocations who met, eoinci alitation of the workers' right ba, the exiled Jesuit- Province Father M gnan is in the van 00 col:ective bargaining under had to find asylum in Sante guard of Jhose religious who dentally, immediately after wOl"d . e NLRA. . Domingo, Dominican Republic, I are .able serve the Church Dl the encyclical was receiveci here pleaded, to the man, tb.at Without that right, the farm where Father Magnan spent ia the spiritl of the renewed tbe they had not yet seen the fuJI workers are likely to remaill several years teaching and in elogy callin,g for fulfillment of text, all welcomed its contents. :leCond-class citizens in "our af pastoral tasks. the self' 16 \the greater glory cd The topic at the morning ses
iIIuent econoMY," Archbishop Now in his thirties, he has ex God. sion was vocations. Both bishops
!t.ucey said. hibited in London, Florence, His drea -to encourage oth OIl the panel agreed that the aew
He termed the farm workem Rome and Toronto, always able ers in the Irevival of religious encyclical Hwill be a great aiel
-Victims of a conscious and to divide his time evenly be art-finds e!xpression in strong, • us."
'largely successful effort t.e eJl: tween the disciplines of the triumphant crucifixes; humble, Bishop Charles Helmsing ~
elude them from much of the 9Q artist an dthe priesthood. simple forms of man at prayer; sal legislation enacted dtlll'iRC As priest and artist, he needs fleeting fi~res in sear~h cd Kansas City said the encycllcal "is a welcome supplement" _ communion with people, their sublimation, ' Ute 1930s and since." human loves and anxieties. His Phase Development .the Vatican 'council's document 'Chattels, Maehines' apostolate is to keep in tOIlch . His co cern with earthly OIl .the ministry and life of.
priests. "There have been SORIle
He accused the large' ocale with people. He helps them and bonds and ,ains serious ~f in few agitators" promoting a re
tJOuth Texas growers of geing they. help. him. I~ i~ a mutual tent, leads i~elf to misinterpre "'a century behind in,their rela relatlonshl!'. he lDSISts. tati~, but~.sonly one phase ill laxation of the present law, he
tions with their' fellow men," ,He c?nslders th~ ~r?bl~m etf MOTHER, CHILD: "Moth-' 'the develop nt of II gifted art said, but he was convinced there
was, "no thought among the
and said they were "equally the artist ~od~y hiS Isolation. ist and pe ptive priest. successful in ignoring the main ."Th~ artist. IS n~ longer con er and Child," marble-base4 Everyone has differeQt ways bishops of the Chureb. of chang
point of the Christian dispensa tributlO~ to ~ enVironment, not - bronze, is work of Rev. Oscar· of commu 'cating with the ing the law at the present time."
tion-the law of love, that all commUD1CatlD~ .the be aut ~ Magnan, S.J., internationally world about us. This means ab-' men are equal, that all men are around us which IS part of God. known Jesuit artist whose sorbing th n sifting just as brothers." !Ie is saddened at the materi much ~ rekching and of "Farm workers are ,looked' ahsm t!'tat ru~es t~e world ~ work is currently on exhibit- fering one,jown contribution. apon as chattels, as machines, day.. Everythmg 'IS .becemlOg tion in Wellfleet. . _. The prckess is edifying _ as less than human, as commOEli func~lOnal. and_ has little con-' watch and 1wortliy of reSpect. CO~ ties devoid of human hopes, nectIon w~th art. • "No longer do we have u.e Nostalgic ~or the Rennaissance dreams, ambitions, 'and aspira "Ther~ IS n~ !oom for spon Rennaissance patronage of. the en; ,Father Magnan hopes to re tiORS," Archbishop Lucey stated.. taneous. ereatIVlty any more. arts' where benefactors, teak capture the ~ommunity sense an "Yet these working men are Everythmg has to be subtle, pride' in the works of art the,. used to hav~ in embellishing a tMle-half of the two-fold proo.uc-' has to be planned." . backed. Today all is based lMl nation, a m,FcipaHty, a home. tiod cycle of capital and labor. Business Enterprise commercial value." Art must I ~ot preach, must 365 NORTH FRONT STUE1' But in south Texas and other Father Magnan does n9t COR Energetic and an optimist, Dever be ~e servant of .... NEW IEDfOIlD parts of the nation, management sider himself as predominantly a Father Magnan believes arlisU idea. Fathe~ Magnan wants it bas been able to silence its pact sculptor or painter, but is never-, can. adapt io these conditieRS, <JI' Oe be a very human expressioe 992-5534 ner in the enterprise. Now we theless preoccupied by the re to help m~ see the beaut,. ~ are at the crux of the situation striction lack of financial meaftl God in erea ~on. ••. the silent partner does have imposes on an artist's -work. Lay a right to b;) heard and. to par He is glad, however, to /f() t ticipate." tbrough all his fellow artists ~ OS on ~u FIVE CONVENIENT OFfICES TO SERVE YOU have to go through in order to CHESTNUT HILL (NC)-Tw. gain recognition. vice-presidents, one a layman, Unfortuntaely, he notes, art have been appointed at Bostoo.. "1IENNA (NC)-For the first has become a business enter College, Father Michael P. ~rise. . Walsh, S.J., president of the llni time since World War II a na "Either through galleries GIl' versity, has announced. tional Eucharistic congress has been held in communist-ruled foundations people invest money Thomas J. Cudmore, the tim Yugoslavia, but all attempts to in an· artist, but do not look lay vice-president of the insti- . OF TAUNTON abtain permission for a proces at the esthetic value and func tution, will be responsible foil' Ilion and open-air Mass in Pula, tion of his work." development, public relatiQRS Norton, ~. Main St.-Raynham, Ite...."-Taunton, Main St. . "To hang in a certain 001 and alumni relations. Father_ whose church was too small fer . Nort Dighton. Spring St.-North Easton, Main St. the large number of congress lection or foundation makes lift George L. Drury, S.J., witl be participants, were rejected b,. artist more famous and IMH' vice-president for studeot Ilfi , Me ber Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatloa ~I"L , _lIlhasel'i more prosperoua. .vil authorities. VI.
Men's Superiors Hail Encyclical
I
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1 I
out
DEBROSS OIL
,Heating Oils and Bumers
Name First ..t.t B C nl
.First Congress
VP ege
lONE-STOP BANKING
FIRST-MACHINISTS NiATIO'NAL BAN K ',' I .
Orthodox Prelate Says Ecumenism Has Staned LANCASTER (NC)-TlBe primate of the Greek Ort·ho dox Church ,the WesterJ! Hemisphere ,said here ill
m
Pennsylvania' the ecumenical movement appeanl t4l llaw Btalled. Archbishop Iakovos of NeW: York, who met with Pope Paul VI last February, urged the clergy to more vigorous prom& 'lion of ecu~enism in their paJ' ishes. But he warned that ecu menism is' not the exclusive province of the clergy and must activate the lives of the laity' at! well. The bearded churchman made the comments at Lancaster The ological Seminary during the question and answer period fol.. lowing a luncheon attended by some 50 Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant clergy. He said leaders of the ecU- menical movement must under take the searching self-examina tion and self-renewal which has been evident in the Roman Catholic Church since Vatican Council II.
lHE ANCHOR":"Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 6,
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Paufiist Superior Says Ferment Work of HleBy Spirit
NEW YORK (NC)-The superior general of the Paulist Fathen said here that much of what he tenned the "fermllnt in the world ana in the Church" is the 1I1()l'k of the Holy Spirit. Father, John F. Fitzgerald, UoP.. fin ~elcoming delegates
to the world conference of the throughout the Church." Paulist Fathers community here, Father Fitzgerald urged the said "the ferment and agitation 36 Paulist delegates to the con for change is not confined to any . ference to listen to the prompt particular group or class, to the ings of the Holy Spirit as they Paulist Fathers or other religious approach the task of implementcommunities, but rather is to be . ing within their religioulJ com found throughout the world ' an!! m,unity the many challges recom m'ended by Vatican 'Council n. ,
The superior general express~ the hope that the Paulist Fatbo ers "may prOVe to be a worthy, instrument of the Holy Spirit-Iff The delegates represented thti 263 members of the Paulist .Come muriity-the first body of Catho-> lic priests to ,be founded in tile U. S.. in 1858.
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Archbishop Iakovos, spiritu~ leader of 1,800,000 Greek Or thodox, said he dislikes negotia tion aimed at arriving at an acceptable least commop de nominator in' matters theologi~ cal. '. ' Father Thomas Gralinski, pas-' tor of St. Mary's Catholic Church here, asked if this meant that unity will be achieved only, when churchmen strive for closer union with God and show their love for other like-minded Christians. "Exactly," Archbishop Iakov(l;i) Jleplied.
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Asks La ity StClrtlldl O~ Own feetl'- , . MIAMI (NC)-Laymen mum stand, on their own feet in theiy own apostolate, the episcopal vicar for conciliar affairs in the diocese of Miami said here. Msgr. John J. Fitzpatrick spoke at an installation dinneY for officers of SS. Peter, a~d Paul parish council. "Your apostolate is everything and everywhere, at home, in, the office, in politics, in civil rights," he said. "We have to change and: we need to be humble to accept these changes. Many CatholiCfl llre afraid of this revolution be cause they prefer to stay statie, but the world is asking m W:? make changes in structure. "The question is whether @@' not the laity consider them selves, and are as a matter sfl :liact, mature enough and self>, sufficient enough to do the j~ expected of them," Msgr. Fitz. patrick stated.
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"Are they willing to give ~ ~ent burial to those Catholta organizations and clubs that no longer serve a purpose &nQ), which only waste the time and energy of their members?" Msgn, Fitzpatrick asked. Emphasizing that the total n~ 02 the community is no longeJi' centered in the parish, he said that "today other activities have decentralized the importance af:J the parish in our community. "It fs no more the center €il the community but a paEt oil ~ lVlsgr.· Fitzpatrick continued\. "You Oi'e iJn the world, ~u ~ in ,the streets and each oil ~ must choose ;vour apostolic ~ tilVity-not waiting for the pri~ to :ren you which 11; is because
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Macao Leftists -lHarO_5s Catholics
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Cordi'nal Discusses Needs·
Of' Church in latin America
From "Social RevGluntiOmi ll'n ~he New L~tin America" , Edited by Joh~ J. C«nllsidine, M.M. ' Pope' Paul VI in his 1964 Christmas message sircl.ted: ~Deniocracy, to which all mankind appeals today, must take @n a more universal aspect which will transcend all' the' obstacles in the way of effective brotherhood among men." Effective brotherhood' is on integrated by charity, and put , trial in the world, in the de- irito 'practice in freedom." veloped nations of the world Cardinal Speaks which have not yet found
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MACAO (NC)-Leftists here have posted a ''Little King" style cartoon of Pope Paul VI on an outside wall of St. Joseph's dioCesan boys' school. In an eff~rt to dist;ub Cath olics' attending Sunday Masses in St. Domingo Church, leftists play music through loudspeak ers outside the building. 'At the' rUins 'of St. Paul's Church, leftists celebrated· the explosion of Red China's H bomb 'by'coverin-g with red paint the words Mater Dei (Mother of God) over the doorway of the church's facade. The church was dedicated in 1634. They also " painted over the names of Sts. ;'Ignatius, Xavier, Francis Bor '-gia and Aloysius on 'the facade . and the names of Sts. Peter and .,' Paul on obelisks..,il~ ,~!'Efcorners. The roa~, J~adiiig' ~ ;to the grounds o,"'.tli'e church,:'ruins is blocked by, a, large stag'e with a portrait of' Mao .T~e,-tun·g, chair man of' the Chinese ,communist party, flanked ,by' huge five star flags. . ,,Hundred\!, of.piet'ures' of "atro cities" by- Hong ~ong:' police block' the road ieading to the church's, facade, which was de signed by Blessed Carlo Spinollll, an Italian Jesuitpiiest who later 'became Ii martyr iti Japan.
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the heart for the kind of' masI want to present a factual sive commitment needed to help picture, simply and candidly, of their brother certain aspects of the Catholic nations through Church today .in Latin America, their crises to writes Juan, Cardinal Landazuri that 'minimum .,' Ricketts,i\rchl:/il;lhop of Lima, ~ O'U d'i tion . o f P e i u ' '..' ,', economic fr¢e'r'shall'divlde' niy~emarks-into dom which will four ,main. points: ~ inake ' political The first point' ,be the freedom more lirogress" the Catholic Church meaningful. Ef has made in Latin America in fecti ve ' b r o t h - r e c e n t years;, seco~d, some of erhood is on the major problems the Church trial in Latin currently faces' in Latin Amer _ America, where ica; third, the recent help 'sent free, expanding democracy is by North American ,Catholics to eften . only beginning to be a the Church in Latin America; reality. fourth, a few guidelines for the' 'Vice - President Humphrey, kind of help Latin ,America still apeaklng last year i.lll the Senate. requires. .' insisted that in the revolutionary First' of all, I wish to make it atmosphere prevalent in much Of· . cleat 'that I do not pretend to be TAUNTON PROFESSION: Sisters of St. Dorothy who' Latin America "ideological fac a spokesman for all of Latia ~rs are often as important as America. I am only one bishop professed ,their. vows at Villa F~ltiina before Rev. Bento gtraight economie' programs'" out of hundreds. As the Areh Fraga of Somerset, were: Sr.EiJ n McGuire of St. Mary's {March 21, 1964)__ bishop ()f Lima, I find myself Cathedral; Fall River·; Sr. CoruJtane Rogala of St. Joseph'~ There is no substitute for flhe shepherd of one, of the ol<test .Church, in its hierarchy and in dioceses in the New World,. the Fall River; Father Fraga; Sr. ca1'dadPortu Of. New Yor-k all its members, as the principal former capital of the Spanish (final profession); Sr. Anne Mar e Lewis of Mt. Oarme~ source' of this ideological Empire in. South America, a New Bedford. . Gtrength in Latin America today. diocese founded' sixty yeam This has been the burden of before the Pilgrims landed OIl ~ l llddress. Plymouth Rock, a city which RSlr'Ge~i DOAN,.6&.AL·AMts' Meaning of CICOnglories 'in four canonized saints. INCO~Po~AT£D While Lima may be typical of II' What I have said' is informa'; Latin Americ!, in some respects, A~most \ iton . brought to this Catholic'. in others it .is quite distinct. Let CARACAS, (NC)-A new look:' 0 will say, ''Let us pray for Jrnter .. American Cooperation us r'e~ember. Latin America is III in Catholic liturgy almost caused my's ck child." Another; "Let us Program meeting. But it is not vast· area, and although we can another Arab-Israeli "battle" in .,pray for the hungry of the ' . HYANt-HS \' the whole meaning of 'CleOI», speak iil general terms of prob a tiny chapel here in Venezuela. worl." . . .. HARWICH PORT -which ,is as broad as the'Church lems and needs of the total re At 'Sunday Masses in Holy At one Mass a member of the 'hetself. We, here ,assembled, 'gioO: still, the individual differ • SOUTH YARMOUTH chapel on the city's. out con egation called out: ''Let us
il:ardinals, archbishops, bishops,. ences' of the various countries Trinity skirts Father Lawrence Lyons, .pray or the defeat of the Arab -.'
.. . priests; religious, lay persons of are ,m~i:-ked.. S,S.E., of Pj:tt~ield, has.. int~, co unists!".· '" .
many. ;and ',quite diverse· back-., , ' ,~,the:M:aS~,.t~ree ~a.ct!on~.- .n-................ ~ounds and 'occupations: we are :'; W~~'in:ust realize, for instance, duced the custo.m·of :haviilg tlie ; " the. Cl1urch.. ' . ,:. 't~a.t .: :.s~veral . langua~es are worshipers m~ntion' aioud their nearl ,mobbed Father' Lyons; ~ H~ vehe ently voicing their points ~_ ,. If: effesti:ve l~brot9-el'l):o~(r iSon~:s~k;e.9-.. Ill: Latm .Am.enca. ~e private petitions during the Of of vi ws on the Middle East trial within ~each 'of our 'nationS :: ,~pealc," ,po.rtuguese In Brazil, . fertory.. and betweei'\)>U! na.tions;· it :~: ,F~el1f~'in Hait~, Quechua in ~he crisis. The friends of the Arabs "'.. ;'1 insis .thAt the"IsraeIis were .' ,.,' above all we :Christians, disciples' "~def, wountams, and SpanIsh comm nist:'Others supported the of Him whose~:priJlcipai' com__ .' .JU~about ,everywhere else. number more than four thou Israe ' s.. ,Anothf'!f' g~up favored mandment ' ,is: love ,for' od':".' ~~so;' governments, and econo 'sand. cmlES SIERVICIE In ' 1945>,:,:, tl!-e~ .,:wer~. ,,~,;iOO, w~r~~ ,p,ea~. lJnlit ,claimed that brother who'iruJstgiV~"leader';;' ,~es, geography and communi-, i!lloSi1mOImUrrOR$' priests in all of Latin Americ~. both t e Arabs and Israelis were. ship in 'bringi~\ ou~ nations,!l,~,~" f cations vary conside~ablY. ..' " In 1960, there were 37,500--an wron. our world successfully :t~r9-l.lgb . B~~s,e., ~uch. SOCIal, pohtIcal Gaso~oll'lle
the -trial.' .. !In,it ',~*I!I~t',i_c dl:f!ere~c~s affect increase of more than 50% in 15 . EsCjPing:!~ro~ thecQnten!i.hlg. years. In the last four years, the forces among his parishioners, In our own times we are wit-, ' "the" ~~urcll",.r thmk It IS neces fll!l(!~ 1ll1lrnd Range
. nessing the struggle ofChris-' ,s~Q':, to ~errl1nd, o.urselves fr~m number of priests in Peru, for Fathe Lyons said:, tianity in Africa and Asia to .tlI~l,e, to .~Ime that It can ?e qUite 'example, has increased 22%, "I khew that the reform of the O~LS disassociate itself from the old misleadmg· .. to "gen~rahze too while the population of the liturd' 'would be difficult, bot eolonial policies of the EJiio:' ]'~trch,'abo~t .a region in whi<:~ country has advanced only 20%. I didn t realize that it would M ,OOl IBIUJINIERS The' chief' contribution mis pean nations. Christianity. ,hi _.live.20~ millIon ~e,ople of varl dangelous." sioners from" abroad make in many areas of the East has been ous cultural, lingui~tic and racial IFor IP'ronipt ·Delivery Latin America is not to fill-in coldly rebuffed ,because of this back~ounds: " & Dey 8. Night Service for missing clergy. They do this, association. 'JP~.o~cl;lFact'61 Progress of course, and they do it well. G. IE. ~ioOIl.IEIl Imt:liRNEIt UNITS in Our Hemisphere Regarding the f~ur points I ,But more important, they Dring Christianity is also on trial mentioned, the first point at with them new ideas, new J. TESER,Prop.
IRI.lIPlNllO IScll1tOedl GCDs - Servica In our hemisphere. The chal- issue concerns the progress proaches, new' enthusiasm anell RESI[ ENTIAL
lenge is seen differently by which the Church in Latin a new zeal.' i'l C<O>IHIAINlINIE1T ST. North Americans than by Latin . America has achieved in recent The .work of Father Roger iNDUSTRIAL
lI'AlUlNiON Americans; but it is the same years, especially since World Vekemans in Chile is a case iJm COMMERCIAl Attleboro - No- Attleboro
challenge: to find the sense of War II when, among other sig- point; As direCtor of DESAI., 253 ~ ed/CDO' St., New Bedford our times in elfective brother nificant events, hundreds of dis Father Vekemans has contrib Taunton
993-3222 hood. This is the fundamental placed miss10ners from the uted substantially to Chile's ad social revolution we must bring Orient' were shifted to Latin vanced, socio-economic program to our times. America. . in which the ,Church plays so In this spirit we can work Following the publication of effective a role. • with all men, as Pope John Father John J. Considine's fa In Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru., XXIII points out in concluding ~ous book, Call for Forty Thou Father Thomas Verhoeven has his encyclical, Pacem in Terris. sand, literally thousands of mis organized a system for training "There lies ahead," he says, "an sioners from all parts of the volunteer catechists which hIllS Immense task -for all men of world poured into Latin Amer already prepared more thllml good will, if the mutual ~e.1ations ica; and in the last few years 3,000 teachers in the far reache£l of the human family are to be the pace has even quickened due of the Andes Mountains. restored in truth, in justice, in to the urgent pleas of the be~ . Most of ,you are familiar witlln ' love and in freedom. This is a loved Pope John XXIII; and of the work of Father Daniel Mc most exalted task, for it is a task the gloriously reigning Pope Lellan, who has revolutionizecll (lJf bringing about true peace in Paul VI. From Spain alone private CI-edit in a, half dozetlil. the order established by God-' there are nO'W eighteen thousand ~ountries in Latin America, TI 15 WWlUAM ST", INIEW IlElDfORD, MASS. an order founded on truth, built, missioners in Latin Amerfca;, through the parish credit ... according to justice, vivified and United. States missioI\ers now operaUv~ ,
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Sympath'izelr°s Petition
Starts Aneth
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fein River-Th~rs., July 6, 1967
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Asks to Combine Compassion With Technical Care
TH·E ANCHOR-Diocese of Folt River-Thurs., July 6, 1967
Crave[fBJ1~9life' of' Je§M~O
. JONTREAL (NC)-The mean
ing~Of suffering inman's world
Show~ A~li'o..Chur~h BD@~
Bishop Noel pointed out that mankind, in the battle, expects two services from the nurse. "First, right care; then, fra ternal compassion," he stated. Noting that "the technical field is where the effective combat against suffering begins," he added that "to deny the previous goods of friendship and under standing would only add to their moral suffering. That is why a nurse must combine fraternal compassion with technical care." 'Mutual Understanding "Before surrounding sick people with equipment," he said, "each item more bizarre than the other, there should first be established bonds of mutual understanding, precluding that you will be like strangers to· each other." "The final duty, especially for a Chrisian," Bishop Noel said, is to be aware that suffering will "never be altogether taken out of man's' world." It is nor mal, therefore, he added, to "un derstand the meaning of suffer ing and ~ts place in God's hands." "Charity," he said, "impels us to combat suffering, but when it becomes insurmountable, it is the light of faith that' reveals its worth and helps us to make use of it as a mea.ns to moral uplift."
wa the subject of a three-day con erence of nurses here. By Msgr.George G. Higgins Tlhe meeting, which included so e 1,500 delegates from 46 (Director, Social Action Dept., USeC) pal' icipant countries, was the One of this writer's favorite pastimes during Vatican firs regional North American con ress' of the. International lIT was to keep tabs on what' the Italian press was saying Cat olic Committee of Nurses 'about the council. I used to read a sampling of six or eight and Medico-Social Assistants~papers every ,day, ranging from the extreme right to the T e theme of the congress was extreme left, Frankly; it was out ined by Auxiliary Bishop a fascinating, but 'rather and Schleiermac.her, to name La~rent Noel of Quebec, who re pIa cd Paul-Emile Cardinal confusing experience, for t~o~e whose public has not been Leg I' of Montl'eal as keynote d ·h fern ,limited to scholars-as a com generally I ha t e e 1 g pxehensive, well-organized, pro spe ker'. . tbat each of these papers wa.s vocative, and for the, most part Ii ferring to the ,attention reporting, on a different council cunvincing story." drawn to man's world by Expo and that none We should be grateful, he says. 67, \BishOP Noel remarked that of them, was "to Cravcriand other seekers of "chief in man's world is man reportin~ on the. the historical Jesus who have him~elf: ma~, not just an object <!!Ouncil which I rolled away the stone from the of study, but the only one able ELECTED: Father Wal w,as attending mausoleum of tradition and to think, to ask questions: .to in ter J. Burghardt, S.J., pro 1d at which, for dogma and let the man step qUi~ into the universe and to better or for forth into,the fresh air .and the fessor of patristic theology buHG a world." worse, happened light of common day." [l't Woodstock, Md., has been' Three Role~ ~ be the only What the Star's very starry elected president of the One of these questions, the one going on in eyed reviewer is saying, in ef Catholic Theological Society biSh!P said, is "the right outlook Rome at the fect, is that Dr. Cr:>veri,writing of' America. NC Photo. f()r Christian confronted with time. My point in a rationalist tradition which suff ring in man's world." is that Italian has long since been repudiated H outlined three roles of a papers -- Wit? by scholars of ail faiths, has Christian nurse in confronting notable-exceptions, of course - . "rescued" Jesus, so to speak, sUff~ring: " tend to a much greater extent f!"Om the Church which He Him "~o be aware of suffering; to than the average American self established to preach the com at .it, ane. to know and teach paper, to editorialize in ,thei~ Gospel to all_nations until the SPICER (NCf-A sp.ecial in news columns and to cover the end of-time. dult from the Congregation of its caning." B~ing aware of suffering is events of the d!ly from the point Wc cari leave it to the scholars the Council at the Vatican has Triple Consecration of vicw of th'eir. own particular .to set the record straight in this made it possible for Catholics in ,eaSi~ in today's world, he said. :'S cial communication now the Little Crow Lake region of ideology. regard. For my own part, writ In Chicago, Aug. 24 . Some .o.f. them tend ~o be ,ing as one less wise in the field' Minnesota to fulfill their Sunday brin 's us cries of pain from all CHICAGO. (NC)-John Cardi over the world," the bishop as highly clencal, others deCIdedly . of biblical studies, I should Mass obiigation on Saturday. . nal Cody of Chicago will offi anti-clerical. Some are "liberal" merely like to say a' word about The indult was requested by serte<i. "No one is uninformed; ciate here Aug. 24 at the triple no ore has the right to remain in the old fashioned, 19th c~n- Craveri's typically 19th century Bishop Alphonse J. Schladweiler consecration' ceremony of his unin{ormed about the starva _tury sense of the word, whIch anti-clerical exegesis of ' the so of New Ulm for the resort par three newly named auxiliary tionthat is ravaging India." means. that they are" ~ltra-~I.'- cial message of the Gospel ,and ish of Our Lady of the Lakes. bishops. Two Services ' servabve; others are lIberal In his dyspeptic criticism of the Prior to receiving permission, At afternoon ceremony in. III different and more modern social teaching of the contem between 1,000 and 2,000 vaca . "0 I' television screens," he Holy Name Cathedral the car sense of the ,word, which 'means' porary Church
tioners, crowded into the 200 conti ued, "picture the emaci-' dinal will consecrate Auxiliary that they would like to. alter 'E va d e 'P robl ems '
seat chul"(~h for the three Sunday' ated fa~es, the gaunt" bodies at. Bishops-designate Thomas J. the present system rather dras DC' h Masses during the Summer peop e, lacking the food that our Grady, William E. McManus . r. raveTl, w ose serene con tlCally and, more often than not, f'd . h' 't' I months. In the off-season, the coun ries have in over-abun and John-L. May. would also like to put the I ence .m . IS own' exege ~ca parish numbers about 75 families danc ." The three auxiliary bishops Church in her place and keep powers IS simply ,breathtakmg, or about 300 parishioners. Be ng aware of suffering, how designate were members of the h th ' flatly and repeatedly,asserts that The indult has been, granted e~tiller~ihers, of course, are the Church has del~beratelY on a five-year' experimental ever, is not all, the bishop de Chicago party which last week clare, attended the consistory at which oobstantiall) free of any par watered down the SOCial mes basis. The permission extends "It has to be combatted, a,nd Pope Paul VI elevated the Chi I 'd I . I b' d t d sage of the Gospel. · t tCU ar 1 eo oglca I3S an "Ch TIS . tlam " t y as it·IS un d er from the Saturday preceding done efficaciously," he said. cago 'archbishop and 26 other . . ben t to play It down the middle, u, t d t d ." h 't " , . Mejnorial Day to the Saturday prela'tes to the college of cardi subject to correction, I would s 00 0 flY, e ~TI es, .asse~- following Labor Day. SuPIPort Christian " mils. sa that the are in the minority. bles pe?ple of dIfferent SOCI?1 Y Y classes m brotherhood only. III ,Ideological Bias the sense that it requires all of again in contrast to the ideal of CititenShiP Sunday HO G KONG (NC) - Hong In any 'event, I could not help them to believe in the same dog a world of total universal happi but think of the strongly ideo mas;, it does not invite them to ness as Jesus preached 'it; and Kong s three leading C_hristian logical bias oLso many Italian eliminate differences in ca'ste. ONE STOP
they sing praises to poverty churc men, working together to emph size the relationship: be papers' as I began to read, in "All the more, then, has the SHOPPING CENTER
(Which turns its back on corrup tween' Christianity and cIvic recent days, a new book by Mar projection of the kingd0!U into tion and vice)!" .' • Television • Grocery ~ello Craveri entitled "The Life a world both extra-terrestrial There is no use arguing with duty, have set aside July gas • Appliance.s • FurniturE) of Jesus" (Grove Press, New and extra-sensory brought a surly ,-Italian ,antj-cleric;al Chris ian Citizenship· Sunday. York, $7.95). Christians to a complete rejec Usi Ig three ecumenically com about anything that happened in 104 Auaen St:, New Bedford Dr. Craveri hails from Turin, tion of the brotherhood preached the Church between the reign of posed prayers,.. the' ceremOnies 997-9354 Italy. I had never heard of him by the Nazarene. Pius IX and that of John XXIII. were eveloped by Bishop Law before, but, even if he had writ "Imbued with the belief that But bear in mind that Craveri's' rence Bianchi, P.I.M.E., of Hong ten his new book under an they should conduct themselves' cl'iticism of the social encyclicals Kong, Anglican Bishop Gilbert Anglo-Saxon pseudonym, I think on this earth as though they includes those written by Pope Bake and the Rev. Peter Wong, ][ could have guessed, after read were not of it, the individuals John. chair an of the Hong Kong ing the first few chapters of the who most sincerely seek to be Councl'l of Churches. Frankly I find it almost im book, that he is almost the clas Christians tend to evade mun possi ble to understand why he sic prototype of the old fash dane problems in order not to neglected to cover his tracks by COMPANY
ioned, Italian anti-clerical who impair their hope of eternal sal limiting himself to the reign of is still living back in the days of vation." John's immediate predecessors, Vatican I and has made up his Social Teachings fOl' he,must have known that the mind that, unlike so many of his Indeed, he con.!inues, "the reaction, in so-called progres Master Plumber 2930 less sophisticated contempora-· Church has strayed so far from sive circles, to Mater et Magistra , GEORGE M, MaNTLE ' ries, he is not going to be taken the ideals of Jesus that every (and, to Pope Paul's more recent , laver 35 Years South • Sea Streets
in or bamboozled by 'al~ of the 'movement among the poor~who encyclical, Populorum Progres '~ Satisfied Service romantic talk that is going always rebel in periods of great sio), was almost universally fa al'ound these days about the al economic depression-even if it ,vorable and that the reaction to NO. MAIN STREET Tel. 49-81
HyCllnnis legedly open and progressive draws its inspiration from the these two documents, in so Fan River 675-7497 . spirit of Vatican II. Gospels, has ,been condemned by called conservative circles, w:as A newspaper editor for two the Church." almost universally negative. years, Dr. Craveri stil~ hasn't Turning specifically to the so That's the trouble, however, been able to shake the habit, so cial teaching of the contempo with being a doctrinaire (as op <!!Ommon to the craft in Italy, of, rary Church, Dr. Craveri says posed to being a pragmatic, on Co or Process Year Books covering events-in this case, the that the social encyclicals of re again off-again) anti-clerical. events in the life of Christ--:.. cent popes, starting with those By definition, doctrinaire anti Booklets Brochures from the point of view of his of Leo XIII, "are far indeed clericalism, like any other kind own ideological bias, which hap from the spirit of the teachings of doctrinaire bias, tends to blur, pens to be not only anti-clerical of Jesus; they vigorously uphold if not to destroy a man's sense but 'almost passionately anti- the right of private property of reality, and, worse than that, Church. against the ideal of community his sense of humor, with the re~ Starry-Eyed Reviewer ownership promulgated by sult that he ends up taking him The number-one pook critic Jesus; they maintain that it is self and h'is prejudices much too PF S ET - PRINTERS LETTERPRESS, seriously. of the Washington Evening Star impossible to have a world with says that Craveri's new "Life of out social inequality, against the ,In, Dr.' ~raveri's case" t):lis COFFIN A VENVE Jesus" "will unquestionably take ideal of perfect brotherhood that could turn out to be a full':time its place among the best of its Jesus preached; they declare occupation, for his prejudicCfl New Bedford, M~lilL many predecessors - the ·works that it is equally impossible to against the Church are almost of. Straus, 'Renan, Schweitzell' eli~ __ and anguisll, without number.
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17
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Brighter Future for Deprived
Thurs.,
July 6,
1967
Aw@~uu~s~ P~«lJ~
f¥Jl'f@U'®~V'@ULU' ~®®S HARRISBURG (NC) - They students live at the schoo~ aoo
call it Operation Awareness, but eat at a nearby diner.
Visit IHIomes
~~U'lli;@~~(( ~lm®@@ maybe Operation Brighter Fu During the afternoon, the stu ture would tell the story better. Whatever the name, it's an dents take field trips with the ~un ffi:~(]J.'m~!Ji)D~mtil effort to give both hope and help boys to such sites as ~ibraries, FARMINGTON (NC) -=> the state capitol, city hall, local to 72 deprived boys from the Harrisburg area. Church, state, and state police and factories. The present "honeymoonW "After each trip, each boy is collegians and seminarians are between Protestants an «1l cooperating in the project and asked to describe in writing what Catholics inlhis country win he saw, what he learned and why they're carrying a full -cargo of probably last "for a number ot! ambition, idealism and sociology. the facility is important," Father years" but after that, tensiono Under their plan, each of the Weigand said.- "This report pro and difficulties will reappear and vides the staff with an index of youngsters will attend a two there will be "some setbacks." week rural camp and a two-week each boy's emotional and educa This is the estimate of a Proi city day camp, take field trips tional development. estant Scripture scholar who, "After the field trip each day, and help in planning his own while he concedes thaf. he is not the .leaders visit the homes and program. "a professional theologian," hail families ')f some of the boys so But some of the most impor engaged extensively in ecumeng.· tant work will be done before that each one's background even cal activities. and after the camping periods. tuany will be known for future Dr. Harvey McArthur, a cleF reference." This is the time when parents gyman .of the United Church Ol! and group leaders will exchange, Christ (Congregational), ex Joeas on how to give the young pressed his views on the possi~' sters a better quality of life. bilities for Christian unity to· Although the Catholic Church more than 100 priests attending is prominent in the program, the Confu~ion a pastoral institute at Holy Fam boys r:e of many racial and reli NEW PRESIDENT: Pericle Cardinal Felici. shown SHIRESMANSTOWN (NC) ily Monastery here. gious backgrounds. Their names Bishop George L. Leech of Har-· here with Pope Paul VI, has· been named by the Holy Dr. McArthur, professor fd were suggested by churches ano risburg said here that Holy Father president of the Commission for the Revision ()f Scripture at the Hartford Sem social agencies. Name societies are "far from the Gode of Canon Law, the long range project for the inary Foundation, saw future Six Teams through," and defended them difficulti"s stemming from an i~ The organizers of the plan are renewal of the Church's basic law. NC Photo. against "prophets of confusion" ability to resolve some of the Father Claude F. Wiegand of the who say that they are. ebstac]es now confronting the diocesan anti-poverty commis movement for Christian unity. ' At a testimonial banquet in sion, Father Neil Murphy of Spirit of God , Cathedral parish and Father his honor the Pennsylvania . He listed these present barriem Joseph Pease of the vocation prelate also charged that Cath olic laymen have become the to unity as the problem of au and youth offices of CYO. Wheeling Study Program Represents . thority; differences regarding the Leading the program on the victims of "a veritable flood of sacraments, especially the Eu Intensive Jewi~h-Cathoiec Dialogue
field level will be five student confusion." charist; ordination; the role J: Bishop Leech laid the blame members of Notre Dame Uni Jewish scholars are the teachers. Mary; and many "socia]-ethical;' WHEELING (NC) - A rabbi for current confusion on "8 versity's Committee for the In The institute· is under the differences, some involving in.: who is a national official of ternational Lay Apostolate, along whole rash of superficial, self B'nal :q'rith believes a study direction of Rabbi Martin Siegel, terpretation of the natural law ., with six seminarians from the seeking crackpot speakers and program here "represents a· new who prepared the course. Grad But despite his misgivings f~ writers who have the presump diocese of Harrisburg. dimension in Jewish-Catholic uate school credit is gi ven at t.he the future, the Protestant scho]ar The seminarians and students tion and the gall to tell our University of Detroit graduate said the thaw in Protestant-Cath Catholic laity and the public dialogue." are ciivided into six teams 00 center of Wheeling College, elic relations in recent years hM orciinatoo by Alpb()nse Formica, just what it was that the (ecu "Instead of just talking broth been "incredib]e." He said he both Jesuit institutions. n teacher and coach at Bishop menical) council did and said erhood in a genera] way, Chris Institute courses include con saw it as evidence of "the Spidt and meant by its etficial ee McDevitt High SChool. They re tian leaders are studying in temporary .Jewish Community, of God at work in the midst of{ et'ees." eently began an orientation pro depth and in an intensive way the Christian community." The Pharaisaic Period of Jew gram at Cathooral SChoel where "These authors 01: confusion," about Jews and Judaism," com ish History, the Jewish Bible Although he feels that rela they take morning courses on be continued, "are Christian be mented Rabbi Arthur Gilbert, tive]y few of the differences be and contemporary Jewish The urban problems and the work lievers, believe it or not, as well effkial of the Anti-Defamation o]ogy and Philosophy. !ween Catholics and Protestanu ings of social agencies. The as unbelievers. They are Cath League, B'nai B'rith. Father Frank R. }laig, S.J., are "insuperab]e" in the ]01111 teachers were provided by vari olics as well as non-Catholies; He was discussing the l.wo Wheeling president, noted the Fun, Dr. McArthur warned that -.us t'lepartmCfolts et the state. The they are priests anE! Re]igious, week graduate study program at Institute of Jewish Studies be neither Catholics nor Protestants male and female; Religious as Wheeling College at which· some came a permanent pHrt of the should be "too eager to eliminate weD as laymen." 40 faculty members of Cat.holic college. curriculum in late 1966 these differences" because in 00 Among the "strange notions" . colleges and scholars from 12 in an endeavor "to provide edu doing "some of the richness ff ef these writers, the bishop said, states throughout t.he country cational leadership ·io the ecu tlleir faith" might be lost. Is tbe belief that the H~ly Name are the students and four t0p menical movement...· Society is no longer useful and should be disbanded. DeveloDment Aid CORPUS CHRISTI. "I publicly ask these prophets ST. MEINRAD (NC) - st. SANDWICH. '&f confusion precisely what Meinrad archabbey and sem Members of St. Teresa's Guild single word or expression of the inary here in Indiana has hirecll will sponsor the annual Sum council would imply that the a lay director of development. mer Fair on Saturday, .l..1y I, Holy Name Society has had and NEW -:~ORK (NC)-The exe Vagnozzi, ·who has served AS John S. MacCauley of Corrales, from 18 in the morning until eompleted its spiritual and prac cutive vice president of the apostolic delegate in the United N. M., has been named to the 3 in the afternoon. tical and apostolic day among American Council for Judaism States for the past seven years The affair will be held on our laymen of the Church," he has denied any religious Hjustifi_ but left the post to return kI post by Archabbot Gabriel Ver kamp, O.S.B. the ground,. of. Corprnt Christ:! ehallenged. cation for the territorial aSJ)ira Rome to be elevated to the col Church, Sandwicb, however, ill tions of the State of Israel," lege of cardinals; Dr. Arthur ease of inclement weather, the Flemming, president, National Rabbi Elmer Berger, jon a letter fair will be conducted in Fa Father Laubacher
Council of Churches; Dr. M. A. M leaders of the Catholic, Prot ther Clinton Hatl, alse in Sand Rauf, director of the Is]amk: Maintenanee Supplies Semi~ary Rectcr
estant and Mos]em churches in Foundation of New York' and wich. the United States, said that in Dr. Abdel Kader, the I;lamic Various committees have been SAN' FRANCISC0 (NC) SWEEPERS - SOAPS
any consideration of Israel's an namoo for the white elephant Father James A. Laubacher, Mosque, Washington, D. C. DISINFECTANTS
table, surprise .gift table, grabs 8.8., 59, has been named rector nexation of the Old City of Jeru The rabbi said that he wrote for children, special awards, of St. Patrick's Seminary, Menlo salem, it,should be remembered FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
to them because it was important home-made food and candy Park, Calif., majo·r seminary for that recent Israeli military vic if they were to formulate posi tories cannot be seen as the ful booths, and apron sale. the San Francisco archdiocese. tions on the Jerusalem issue that fi))ment of the "spiritual aspira Pony rides will Joe available The appointment, effective im 1886 PURCHASE STREET·
for children and J1'efreshmentfl mediately, was announced by tions of many Jews with respect they, understand that "Israe]'s for all. Father Paul P. Purta, S.S., newly to the Zion of the religious territorial claim cannot be sup NEW BEDFORD
faith. . • • ." ported by alllY valid interpreta elected provincial of the Su]pi 993-3786
HOLY NAME, eian Father!: and Archbishop Israel, he said, "does not amc1l tion of the religion of the Jews." FALL RIVER. Joseph T. McGucken of SaR Rev. Vincent Liu of the Ai'ch Francisco. Father Laubacher eannot represent a)) Jews in any diocese of Taipei" Formosa, win succeeds Father Purta irn the national-political sense. . •." speak at all Masses Sunday, July position. The American Council for .Ju RESIDENTIAL • under auspices of the Mis Father Laubacher, ordained in daism is a national organization lJionary Cooperative Plan. 1932, became the youngest re4! . which repudiates any political SCHOOLS. CHURCHES 10r in the· history of the oldest nationality relationship to Israel ST• .lOS EPH, iNDUSTRIAL • BUNKER seminary in the United States, of Jews in other countries. FALL RIVER. St. ·Mary's Seminary in Balti Zionist Allegation more, in 1944. He held this posi Parish Boy SCouts are eom D ADSON OIL BURNERS Judaism, he continued, "con pleting l\ week of eamping at tion until 1958 when htl became Complete Heating Installations tains no justifiable basis for the Camp Noquochoke. superior of the Su]pician Novi 24 Hour Oil Burner Service '!'be parish vacation program tiate in Baltimore. Since 1960 he Zionist a))egation . • . thlllt "the Jewish people,' by virtue c4I II now in progress for boys imd has served as professor of dog atria in arades four through matic and ascetical theology at recognition of Zionism in public law possesses nationality rights st. Mary's. He served as a theo -.ell. in and obligations to the State American flags for the church logical adviser to Lawnmce Car yard pole have been donated 1ft dinal Shehan 01. BaltimQre at of Israel." New Bedford TeD. 996-8271 640 Pleasanfr Street Rabbi Berger's letter Wall ad memory of Com. John Jr. Shea three sessiOM oi the Vatican CQUDCil dressed to Archbishop Egidio and Daniel O'Keefe.
Scores Prophets· .Of
New Dimension' College
The Parish Parade
Says Israel's Territorial CI,aims
Without Foundation in Judaism
SCHOOL
DAHILL CO.
FUEL OIL
Establishes New Secular Mission In Rochester',
rl'l'E ANCHOR-Dio~ese of Fan River-Thurs., July 6, 1967
Down Frank,
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Tltu®~e' Mean roJ®~ressing
Streets
Book
ROCHERTER (N C ) Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of Rocheg.ter bas es'tablished Gl), By lR.t. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy new diocesan secular mission Piri Thomas's autobiography', Down These Mean Streets to work in rural areas among (Knopf. $5.95; 501 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. 1002~), "unchurched sheep without 8l shepherd." tis certainly not, for the squeami.sh.. Obsoonities and ~ul Three priests have been as gariti.esare almost as common In I,t as are punctuatIOn signed to the mission in differ marks, and; after awhile, be.. ent areas of the diocese. They . bout as unshocking. whG persuaded him to VlSlt the wi'll live in established parishes oome a .'.b South If Piri was going to be, but will work outside the par Much of what It descn es as he' decided to be, a Negro, ishes in trailer camps, villages, is brutal, .violent, perverse. he should know what the Harlem.. farms and elsewhere; ft is hardly a pleasant diversio~' Negro came from, what, exist- ' In announcing the new mis for a summer afternoon: ,But It ence in the South was for the sion, Bishop Sheen said: "Two does give some Negro. The two went by bus to things have' agitated my souR Mea of what it Norfolk, Virginia, and shipped 'since coming to Rochester: one means to grow out as mess boys, on a tanker is the vast number of un tiip in Harlem, which would put in at ports in
churched sheep without a shep as the "author the Deep South.
th UN herd' the' other is the zeal of th0 did. He is of , He-learned, arid returned to
- UND:TE][Jl NATIONS: UAR rmbassador e . , )':oun'g priests who yearn also to Puerto Ric a New York bating all whites and Mohamed el Kony talks with M gr.. Albert GIovannettI, shepherd those that are not of .' srock. Born in 'detemi.ined. to get fe;,r himself the Holy See's permanent observe ,at the UN. NC Photo. the' fold." .R'e w Y'o' r k everything that whites enjoy. His , The' new mission, he said, will around 1930, he mother's death did not bring . ". '
not only do, much for these had a white abou't, reconciliation with his people but will also provide the Puerto Rican family, but, rather, a final brea~, :2J Jl .1 opportunity for young priests to assume :."eal responsibility illl mother, a Negro 'occasioned by a bitter fight with", A' C, tL W" Puerto Rican his father. Now Piri' took to, U II their work. father, both Protestant. He was peddling heroin: He was using it WASHINGTON (N?)' -:-' A, Teilllard de Chardin, whom he Beyond Parish Walls a Depression baby, and, although 'as well as pushing it. He' was prominent non-Ca!.hohc .spechll~ desc-~ibed as "a more radical Each priest assigned to the his father worked hard at any 20 years old. ist on the current God-Is-dead thin}(er than any Protestant the mission, he said, "will be teth job he could get, the family had At this point, he wanted to trend in theology asserted he~e ologi~n of the 20th century." , ered to a parish, but his rope jbo have home relief support. marry, some day, a gir~' from "it is consoling to kno,,:," that It "Iti the United States, at least," will swing' widely enough to They lived in a wretched tene Puerto Rico named Trinidad. She 'is in the RO,man Cat.hoh~ world 'Dr. j'ltiZer said', "and pe,rhaps in , embrace those not presently en linent sweltering in summer, was he was convinced, a good t d t rev rolled in a parish, Trailell' fIoeezlngin winter. " ' girl,' and this was important to that. theology 0 ~y I~ mos, the orId at large, Catholic the t oluhonary,and ahve. . olog ,is passing' through a revo- camps, villages, farms, where ' But life was lived mostly ou ,- him, although his own code was Dr. Thom~s. J. J. AltIzer, pr~-, lutio~ary transformation" and ever there is a door 1lo knock Illide the house. From an early hardly better than that of the fessor of rehglOn at Emory Um one ,}hiCh has no real counter soul to save-these 'will be ~ the boy had to prove to his l!-lley cat. Somehow he had' a versity, Atlanta, addressed a part in either past or present and the object of, what is' now eontemporaries that he was cool, dream of a decent marriage and workshop' on "The Problem ~~ form of Protestant theology." called: the secular mission." ~l!lt he had heart. This me;mt, Ii better-life. God in'Conte~porar~ Th?Ught, ,,~ C'h I' h Theolo"" Bishop Sheen said, "Our an physical battle to establish his In fact, he was' on !lie verge of, ,at the Cathohc UnIversity of ' u Cl, .. guish is not just the inner city., '1uality and to acquire a reputa-, the worst, phase 'o,~ hi~ life...HeAmerica ,on "Catholic Theology
wC;> viously" qatholic the~logy tion. On these depended' his aC-"'becarrie'inv'olved~witha paJr of and the Death of God."
is ~Irst a Ghurch'theology, ,Dr. but also the outer country;. not eeptance. by a gang.: ", white holdup men'. T~~ firstj~J:I·,." Panels of theologians and phil- , Altizf.rst~ted, ,:~a theology in~or":" just Samaria, but also eve,n the ' .. :... 'Sense &f Belong'mgelated him: ~'Just· like that we osophera-including l)anielCal-: p()I:l\!fn g t~e l~fe, and. teachmgs,' thirsty who gather at country . Such' acceptance was libSQ:-'· iuid over $100 'for a'c~u'ple,miii::: lahan"associate editor of om- ,o,f tile ~q~~~ Cathol,lc Church,. wells: Christ is beyond the 'walls lutely essential: Wi~h~utit,:he .. ~~es~ work,'::' ':':'his. k!,ud C)f, _t~ing, monweal magazine; Louis ~~pre, . and. ~s. s.~.ch" I! ,mus~ .cle~rly I>.e. ' of the' parish. It will be thenr noble apostolate' to make' visible would have been an'yone's prey. went on for many, .m0n.ths·"PhilosOPhyprofeSsor at Geo.rge,:-: ,s~b()~~m.atef.(}. ~,he hfe ,of the ' 'AlsO i(gave him a sense 'of 00-" : ,,"-')'Blaek Musli~ . '.town University here,; John Mac... Church.", ,',' , " , ' tha't love' of· 'Him: whom ,othem 'Seek without knowing it;" ',,' to "quarrier theology .' w:e an<;l. belongmg" meant . d~)lng, shot a P9lIceman, ,w~. ~hC?.t, hJJn.-. Union' Theological.,Semma.rY,ogilize thatCath()l(c :theology, "JS '';'. '. 't
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'i!'lls,S~Jl:;'.the~~ wll8 using mari- .... ,sh_oflly ilfter ~~rl"a},a~..S~n~ Smg .' ~uSsed. lJl,lch,~~pics l!-s" ''The, R~b-"" c::::~.R." fac~~tr "Illernt;'eJ" ,Gf t~e
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Wilfrid. H, Paradis, chancellor, . has been' ,appointed 'to the new iU '~, all In, the early tee~ "was 't.r:~~~ferre~, tt.t €om,stock gious Meaning and the.1Iie,gatlon. , 'Ponti~ical Lateran 1:!nIvp,mty 1ft Position, Of vicar,episCopal :fOl" 'rears.'. ' , : . ' . ','." .. ' , 'St~~ PrIson. ," . .. " , ' ,of God~'" '''lteligio~, i" ~ SecY_!ir, Ro'rn~, lectured at. a worJarhop On' renewal in : the Manchester diG ' Haderrimay Ilave looked,mean, Now inpt-is~nPi.ri'.~J!-~~un~.cuiiu~,:;,"~ligion !lndthe Ex- .,' "Pe,rsonalism imd :E~istehtialism. 'cese by Bishop Ern~st J;' Pri rind-grimy and ~ecrepit bYd~y", tered il group of Bl~~k MU~I)).ns.· , istenti~lPh.ilosophies"; "GOti i,n, ~n Moral T~eology." He' anal-' meau.T-he'office, 'established ' Bu.t by. night, WIth !ts .neon. diS,. . He wa~ struck by:t~eJr d.iscJPlmeSym~~1 and l\{yth," and' "Pe~- . 'YZ!'ld. land suggested solutions f~r , duri'ng Vatica?~oi.Ul:cil II, .is .in gUise, 'It wa.s a swmgmgplace, "and pride. He ,sat 1ft WJth them 'inanence; 'Evolution and 'Reli- anuthber of mO,dern moral prob:-' tended to assIst a bishop 10 his " lind it was the'~sual, r;Ither than, ~,uring rec~e~tion periods" w~s 'gio'us:Truth.'" ' . leinS,£USin g 'insights from the' pastoral work.: The m?nsignor e unus~al, thmg, ,for a, young Ulst,ructed" Jome.d t;hesect~ ..The~r ,~adiean,Th\.nker , n e w , pproa'ch to moral theology.. also is secretary to the bishop.
ster to be on .the streets at three sense of superIorI~y, and theIr, . ,Dr. l,.ltizer· spoke of the "rev-' 'Fa er Robert G. Howes, head' 'r-'~-"';------''''''--''
in t~e JI.l~rnmg.. School meant hatred of all whItes. we,re a , ~.uiionary state of the. c.ont m- 6f C.TT.'S regional, plimning com 7 Illothmg, dId nothmg. source of strength for hJm. porarY Catholic theologIcal SItUmitteb and a staff of planning 01 It SYSTEMAnc But the? .~ame a move to Long In his study of psychOlOgy,. he iition ." ,He referred to, the "im.; expe~" conducted a workshop 10 year SAVINGS .. Island. PJrI s parents hated the learned that ~e knew. nothmg, pact" upon it 'of the .late French ,on'" he 'Church in Metropolis."
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squalor and dIsorder o~ Harl~m, really, about ~,Imself, hiS nat~re. Jesuit scientist, Father ,Pierre and wante,d .to g,et theIr fam~IY, "I began to dIg what was inSIde," away from It. An opportUnIty of me. Whl\t had I been?" How • ll~se, but .it. did n~t pro,,:e bene- had I become that way? What PteO'lPetu~tlC~n BClal to PIrI. For 10 the suburbs could I ber How could I make Of' Ca,'r,dmll1lal's orj( he, being b~a~k, did not belong. 'it?" His values, ,gral;lually , VISits South , changed. What. after all, was a ST. LOUIS (NC)-A foundaThe other children in the fam-"rep"? What was it worth? ~e tion to perpetuate the w,ork of fiy were light-:skinned, .as was ceased being a Black Muslim. the late Joseph Cardinal Ritter Mrs. Thomas. But Piri· was un;" He prayed now amI then.. ,'of St. Louis will'be established , mistakablyblack, like his father. . He was. r,eleased _~ro~ ,pmoI)- at St. Louis' University. A ~~t . His father pretended not to be, after six years, at the ag~ of ~~,- , of '$100,000 win form the initia.l black, pretended, not to notice and was put on PX:0D;;t!lOn for , endowment. ' the slights directed at him. Piri' three years.. He got a Job. ,He ' The donor, a St. ~ouisan who GlOuld not PI"etend. , "decided to ,put ~he past com- wishes to remain anonymous" , He left home returned to Har- pletely behmd, hIm ,and ~ do sought approval for, the founda"': Bem, "knocking around, sieeping 'something worthwhile with the , tion from Father Paul C. Rein in cold hallways, hungry a lot of future. ert, S.J., 'university' president, the time." Jobs he wanted he ,At this joint, the book ends. shortly' after eardinal Ritter's oould not get because of his But we l~arn from the jacket death.' " oolor. At 17 he was making a that Mr. Thomas went on to very The foundation has been des living of sorts by selling mari good things.. He got ed~~ati?n., ---ignated the Cardinal Ritter juana. He began taking heroin., He worked m a rehablhta~lOn Foundation for Human Rights It enabled him to forget his center for Harlem drug addICts, and Social Justice. and his acc~mplishmen~ th re •__,.;,. ' • . misery. 7 He became a close friend of a were the subJect of a prJze-wm ,Negro named Brewster Johnson, ning documenta.ry film. He ~id WIEAR similar work 10 Puerto RICO. Sihloes That Fit He is marded, has two children; ~id .War Voctims· "THE FAMUiL'If SHOE STORE" 'and is making writing his career. This book, in the argot of the WASHINGTON (NC)- The street and of prison, is· rough , National Conference of Catho unsparingly frank,' Hc Bishops has given a grant textured, of $200,000 to the Pontifical often depressing, sometimes dis Mission for Palestine for aid to. gusting. But the person who c::an 43 FOlJll:lll'H STREET
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Twenty-five clergymen, Sisters, lay p~OPl,e, and city planning stu dents participated in the sessions, ' and xplored theories and prac tices of city and regional plan ning. . ,
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Church S~g~~~sts Use of S~m~l}Jary For Rene'W'ct~~
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., July 6,
Pled~e
Wmth
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t • ,
IIIeDII Movement .
. ~We ..hope this .will become
D
~i!ihops
WINOOSKI PARK (NC) The Conference of Majoll' Superiors of Men pledged at the conclusion of their tentb
reminary as a CiCnk:l 1101' CTilrilil tian Renewal. ~ Ministers cd: PI('~tant de nominations heaM ~~~ offer lit II luncheon hosted .' ~ fihe Cath olic Church. II Father Daniel Cawthon, o:f the , 'Bt3ff of St. Fr~l1lcis IDe Sales , . Seminary here, said that the high school division of the sem , mary has been closed since 1959 , 'and that' college-level seminlllr , " lans now attend classes at Ok ," ]ahomll City University. This ar rangement' leaves only a smaJll , '.' iportioll 'of the seminary in use ,I, 'Os: DiVing quarters. The bw1afng has a chapel, re .. fectory . with kitchen facilities, ]CO-bed dormitory, 150-seat con-, ference room, six smaller eon tlerence rooms seating from 2S to 40, D gymnasium-auditorium 'with D capacity of 600, labora ,' tbi'y "facilities and various O'lllt door recreational facilities. I
t@ W QJ~k
folT' Co@~er(ljtDon
OKLAHOMA O'iiy (NC) - The Catholie (~hlJlrellil in Oklaooma has ofi'e:rred the use of a multi-mi'fJwn-doUar
•
19
1967"
. ,'JP>~~-~)ffQ()lL',~EALTlI: PROGRAM: 'JosePhi~~ Doyle,
~ V9,lunteer wOJ;'ke;r !rqrr(Lon~'
annual meeting here at St. Michael's College to work £07 eioser cooperation between their own organization and' the Na tional Conference of Catholia Bishops. , lin other actions at the ,conclu sion of their four-day meeting. the superiors general l!nd, pro vincials representing SOl11e .35,000 religious priests and Brothers in America resolved: ., That "for' the effecti ve " Qper ation of Catholic education there be, full cooperation, 'at all lI.eve]s. in all forms of education: diocesan, private and public:'; To work for the "involvement of the laity in the apostolate oi Catholic education in all fonns and at all levels, specifically in cluding governance and, policy making";' , Voc21tilonn IDill'eetors ' "That the full resources '6£ the CMSM and the NCCB b-e' made available' to the laity in' "their effort to 'secure public' slJpport for the education of all cHlJdreli'1 according 'to their patents' , 'choice"; , . :, . That 'the bishops be' urgelil '"'through 'th'eir diocesan senates or pastoral' councils to' integrate the work"of their diocesin'i'voca tional directors with that ~ bf the 'lTocation directors of religious institutes"; "That, for more effective co eperation in vocational direc tion, the ,membersh-ip of Reli gious on diocesan senates 01' eeuncils".where it is not already II fact, (be) urgently, recom mended." ,
place Iwher:e the various com d()n..,an~,Louis Jak of Serra Leone, keep track 'of a baby's prqgress on the, scales. in an .munions, can come together in African 'project conducted"l>y U.S. Catholic RE)lief Services ,in :conjunction: ,with the distri':' a real joint effort to provide ed bution11of surplus American food which ',incl4<;l,es .heaJth ::tndmedical checkups fol" preucation ,and meeting facilities,'" School children,'Ne'Photo, ,:,'" '. , , ' ' "'. '" , ,Father Cawthon said. , , . Bishop,Victor .T. Reed o.f Ok- , lahoma I. City-Tulsa said: "We felt the, ecumenical movemei1~ could be. helped by throwing the seminary open to use by groups. It has been brought to our at tention by our own priests that AUSTIN,. (NC)-A new kind "ll had worked with the Sister and sent to Rome in August last 11 is difficult to find places for of nun is, functioning among the formation program in Austin," year. ' " ' meetings." people of.' the Austin diocese Sister Mary Agnes Zinni re Approval CamE! in December. after ,more than six years fjf Jated, "and had become aware of' Formation faculty had been set groundwo;rk and preparation. this special need for a type e!f 'up'for the new Sisters-iriclud:" The new S,lsters, belong to the r~Jigious woman, who is com iAg:' Father Goertz;' Fathe'r Ed Continued from Page One diocese. They work only to serve miffed to, ~he diocese rather than wanf Jordan, the present secre from "B:'M. 'c. Durfee' High the, ,many , ne~~s ,of the ~ee and te a.particular comunity." taI'y' to the bishop; and' Father School and completion of fres1:l, ,l!r,: S\lbj,~..:,.~ : 4lJ stin 's Bishep'" 'In August, 1964, Sister' :Man! ,," :Ri,~ Mee:a~,. ~r~t,or .S·,a',e': ,'::S Re'y -.·e''~.:', . man ;yea.r;tlt}lply Cross Coneg~h; lLf:!UlS"J. ;Rel~~e~., " '" ." . Agnes 'was erected' Vice' provin": , ,C.a~oJ~c C?ar~ti.es In 'the AustiJ1. ,.. A "' .;, .,!orces.ter, '. ~e, .entered. the So ,Lefl)~~ ."pon a~ ;..the..cQHnter.. eial 9f the"U. 'S~ province' of th~. 6,i~se., , . ., '. ". "'~ NEWA'RK- {NC)--Josepho Oli ",; .ettr~:y. of.,J:~~~ July I, 1943 ~ "~ of. ttw~san Priests, the neW';, Mi§ionary Slste)-s' of "the Im~"" '. ~~ng t~e"eat~~,~~~~l?nS of,. ,fice 'of Jersey City, 'a membeP "" S,~.ad~w~f~P~ ~n,Lenox" ", 'S.lsters,;bilv~""n9.' ~?therhousej'maeulateC6ncePtion,'' . ' '.,.~ .for~ationf~lc:~ty ~~ 0ll~" of the &rehdiocesan Hoi5"Name ,.. ,. .Ji'~Jlo~ing tra4itional Jesuit r~gid ,r'll1e~, ~J.:.: traditIons., stem.. '.' " :, ". ;: "'''.;' """,;', ' '~onl.!ermng the ~arti..~.e.~aculty Society board and an official 02 fltl,Jdies, t\lere, and. at Weston Col mipg,fTqm" any ,religio~ order" Ai tha~.. ,tu~e,: ,BIS.hQp R~I~her, ,~hese, ,contElmporary- ~loJhing -.;-: :,the :archdiocesan Cuu'ncil of lege". ,Fllther,,:aenson taught at ,-hey,. :lhre,,ill, II '; borne am~mg' eJiteJl,dted an InVItation,. tpSI~eJ.',,". ,~~iP,lg, ~ti¢h ~i~~ ',thaf ,of ,~n air.-. Catnelie' 'Men, has asked- the ,B,oston ,Gol~ege" High $chool, ,tI'Ml, po0J.:,~ Austll1l's east, SIde, '. Mary, A~es,,"~Q ,to father VJ~J.,' "~~. ~e~ar~e~s.--: for, t~~ new Newark ·Archdiocesan Seniite et! " £rem }9~O to.1952.. He then took wear cOllt.emppr,ary garb,and {]~ ·~l.'Geertz,.theIl;.~rf'!taf.Y.t~ S~st-:~" ',. ' '. :,',' "" . Priests, to reconsider its'l'ecom : gr!l~",at,e ~o~rses at Boston Col not take, the YOW of poverty but, },}}S~~, to ,estabbsh ,a ne;w du)ce,~ ,a~tual formatio~ .p~ogra~, mendation of the abandOl'lme~ , lege, e~rning, a master's degree U.ve 9Il,a"stlpen~ 'rom the dio san SIsterhood, ' , ' , ' " "of ~ .Slste~ i~ sW~ ."evolving,~ efthe,',annual Holy oNaml'i So, .ill edu~atipn PI,1954. ,eese. I " I' , In .Tune, 1966; after two yeal'S ~~erdlDg to both ,~lste~Agnes " eiety. p a r a d e s , " " " ,Returning to Weston for thea-, The ,contemporary tone of the of eensideration, Siste!' Agnes ,,~,d Fathe,r ~~ At pr~s~nt, ," logical studies he was ordained S,sierh,~d:t7,~hich. is currently moved ba:ck'to"AttSti'n' to accept pJ~ m:e ,to diVide the t!lllnmg to the priesthood in 1956 by engaged chiefly in broad based Bishop Reicher's renewed iAw",; Pl"o~ mto three partS: aea Cardinal,Cushing. From 1957 to sociall' woi-k--':is exemplified by tatioon 'demJe, personal development
1958 he studied ascetical theol " stress en personal development The papers for the new SisteI' and apostolic work.
DISPENSING ogy at St. Robert's Hall Pom of s'lillls,'interests and abilities in g1l0Up were quickly prepared ''Each candidate," declared 0"-'-' ON fret Center, Conn, ' virtually any field. 'Sister Agnes, "will be prepared Father Benson taught at Fair The apostolate of the new fo~ w~atever field she will be tield :?reparatory School Fair,;' nuns is as diversified as the Workshop to . tudy gOJn~ Into-for ~~atever wOFk , ' n e e d s of the diocese and they C Ad missions 'will she 1$ best qualified." Courses Oh.. ,pUIS field, Conn. fro~ 1958 to 1963 may tackl~any task to which allege be taken lilt Maryhill, the . 9:00,5:00 , when he was assIgned to Cran ", " . , . ., excopt Wed. 11
the bishop assigns them-just CLEVELAND (NC) -'- College new women's college on the St. Fri. Eve. by Appt. we .
as he would his priests. atlmissions 'officers" and high" :Edw~d's UniveE-sity campus, at saturday.,..9-3 The creatiolll, 'of this new con sebeol guidance counselors fn)})} , the University of Texas other ' Ro0"1 1 eept of religious life for women 22 states will'participate at John mstitutions as the' particular 7 No., Main St., Fall Riwr 67,8-0412 is the. outgrowth of years of CarToll UniversitY'hennn'a tWQ- ',Beefts ef the individU;al reqlJire. Contin~ed from Page One. planning ,and serio!lS considera week graduate workshop 'on Ule Iron~cally, critics stress char tion by the Sisters, the Texas practices and pdliCies involved '.~ • • • • • • • U • • • " . '• • • • • • • • ~ • • • II •.•••• ~'• • II., ity, but seldom extend it to the bishop and: his advisors. in ,admittihg'students to college. P0pe .01', ,authorities of the The ,Il Church, he pointed out. They will be. organized by the univer disparaged the Church for be sit,'s graduate ',school, educati9J.1 ••', INCORPORATED 19~7 : ing "too dogmatic," but are most Continued trom Page One department, and office of con dogmatic themselves in their de the ehaplain will be assigned to tiBuing education. It will p r e - : Bunciations. the Fleet Marine Force ift the sent national education leaden • • The Church needs "fewer de Pacific. directly concerned with the • • tractors," and "more champions Father Demers, son of Hector matter of college ,admissions.. to espouse her cause," Father and Mrs. Yvette (Yelle) D e m e r s , . , • Berning added. "She needs few : was born Oct, 19, 1936 in Taun : ' er calumniators who condemn ton. He attended St. Jacques BEFORIE YOU • '• ber, because she will not approve Sehool, Coyle High, Notre Dame • JAMES H. COllINS,' C.E., Pres. . II Y of divorce and sanction the use University and Cardinal O'Con BUPAY -RTRK Register'ed Civil and Structural Engineer • • of the pill; more Catholics wbo neD MinQr Seminary, Boston, • ' . will in their devotion to her rise compieting his studies at St. Member No'· ':II Society Professional Engin r • ~ the defense of her teachings John's Seminary, Brighton, ' • FRANCIS L. COUfNS. JR" Treas. • and practices." He was ordained by Bishop : THOMAS 1(. COLUNS., Sec:'y. • Fr. Berning urged the women Connolly Feb. 2, 1962 and has OLDSMOBILE : • "to help reestablish the image been co-director of the Fall, Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault • ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER, MASS. • of the Church which has beeJlI River Area Confraternity of 67 Middle Street Fairllaven • ' ' • tamisbod la.u bar eritics." Christian Doctrine since 1964. • • • • • • • • •I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • B • • • • • • • • ~ "
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New Headmaster
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ANTONE S. FEND, JR.
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More Champions
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',•=. ' F ,• L.' COLLINS . . .& SONS.
GENERAL (ONJRAOORS an'd.
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. THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 6,
1967
[~\~[]"U1fll5U'~ ' ~QHrelml'$
T@ DITil
[P@[]"U'5~o[p)ate
C@M[fU' (6@se NEW YORK (NC) -N (II
one has a more vital interest in the education of a child than the youngster's own
'J
parents. This, in effect, was the reason a state' Supreme Court justice gave in ruling here re leently that a group' of parents leould become participants in a lease involving assistance to paro chial school children under the U. S. Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. ' The parents, who come from low-income sections of New York ,City, have children in Jewish, Catholic, Luthel'an and GI'eek Orthodox schools, where special services in such areas as remedial reading and guidance are supported in part by govern ... ment funds. Officials Defendants The legality of that support has been challenged by the Amer ican Jewish Congress, the New York Civil Liberties Union, the United' Federation of Teachers and the United Parents 'Associa tion. The defendants in the case are public officials involved in the administration of the progt'am. The parents had asked, in effect, . to intervene iIi the case on the side of the officials. Supreme Court Justice J. Quinn ruled that they would be allowed to do so "to insure ade quate r~presentatioIi of the point of view held by them." "Our legal system is, of course, adversary in nature," Judge Quinn wrote. "The present de fendants, consisting of pubiic of ficials involved in the program attacked, have not oppose(l. the 'intervention, and have an inter est in the continuance of the' program different -in degree than the interest of the p'roposed in- ' tervenors. "The interest of the latter is personal in nature, and is ex pressed voluntarily, not from a duty,arising out of an office held. However, the intervention will be granted not as a matter of right. Allowance of the inter venti on would thus appear de sirable, to insure adequate repIresentation of the point of view lIJ.eld by them.'" Judge Quinn noted that inter' vention has been allowed in many similar cases., : In his motion ,on beha~f of the' parents, former U. S. Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell had' said that ,more than 425,000 ciiiidl'en at-, ~end religious-affiliated schools 'ill New York City and "at least·,' 10,352 of them who "live in al'eas @f high concentration of low in <l:ome families" are receiving ll'emedial instruction and special' 'guidance counseling.
,MOn'qMette Deo,n
OPEN YEAR OF FAITH: Concelebrated Mass in St. Peter's square with Pope Paul V,l as principal conceleh.'ant ,and the new 'Cardinals gathered about the altar, .was the Concluding ceremony of the creation of new Car-
dinals opening ceremony of the Year of Faith. whiGh the Holy Father had proclaimed to begin on June 29. th feast of Saints Peter and Paul. '[
Asks Warning of fiJtu eSchool Closing
Vermont Official Suggests Long.Rang~ Plan
MONTPELIER (NC)-Harold Ra)~;olds, of Springfield, chairman of the Vermont State Educa'tion Board, has appealed, to'. representatives of the state's. Catholic school system to give the state board and local com'munitics more warning in the, future before closing Catholic schools. Raynolds made his statement at the board's monthly, meeting during a discussion on what to do with students of Bennington Catholic High School, which is closing. Apparently, the new Mount Anthony Union High School in Bennington is not equipped to handle the 400 Catholic stu dents from the Catholic institu tion. Raynolds, asked the' BUrling~ ton diocesan board members to . develop a lorik-range'plan for, Catholic education so the state could plan' for "future parochial· school c1osin'g. '~':' ' . Mrs: Mari" Miller'''of 'Water~ 'bu'ry; slate board member,' said th~ pr~bleins 'i>{ closi~g ~ Catho lics schools' should be looked at "from the standpoi~lt' that evet·y child is guaranteed a free'
public education." She suggested
the board' come' up with "a "new
idea.", '~
. Bond Issue Out Continued from Page One Gphy by the Uriiversity of Notre Henry Fairbanks of Winooski, )Dame. . also a board member, said his Dr. Simmons held teaching idea' would be that state edu-, positions in St. Joseph's College, cation aid be calculated on the, Collegeville, Miim., Xavier Uni-, total number 'of school-age pu versity and the University of pils in any oonimunity. By do~ng . '
Notre Dame prior to takung up a that" he said, 'money would then,
, position with the faculty of Mar be available in emergencies such
quette University. ' 'as the one faced' by Bennington. He also serves as vice-chair man of the university's Com mittee on Faculty and was vice president of the Marquette chap Sturteya~t ter of the A,A.U.P. The Dighton n'ative. wiII serve as the acting dean for the Rev. Est. 1897 Lawrence W. F,rid:rich, S.J. who has been granted a one-year leave of absence. Dr. Simmons is married to the 2343 Purchase Street former Marguerite Scheinbelhut New Bedford and they are the parents of four 996-5661 boys and eight girls.
,
Bennington's representative on the state board, Mrs. Madan Taylor, said the new Mount An thony High School was planned for an enrollment of 1,000 stu dents, but that the school will have to open with 1,450 stude~lts
NEW from
tall. She said chalIces' ond issue for enlarging' 001 are bleak. Taylor also pointed out Mount Anthony agl'ee a $47,000 rental price losing Bennington Cath-
oUc High School to be used as a part of Mount Anthony school. Msgr. Harold Field of the di ocesan board assured the state board he sees nothing to indi cate .any further closings olf Catholic schools in Vermont.
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