NEW BEDFORD JOHNT WORSHIP SERVICES: Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary. Bishop of the Diocese offers opening prayer at the services attended by 350 of the laity and 40 clergymen. Second: Rev. Sydney Adams, oocretaryof the Inter-Church Cl<mncil: Rabbi Norbert Weinbery, holding A jewish Bible; Rev. Constantine Bebis, St. George Orthodox Church. Third: Harold Cooper, president of the Inter-Church council; Msgr. Hugh
..
~1II1111111111111111111t1111111t1111t111I11I11I1It1It1HIllIttHllllltIlflttmlfUlIIIIIII,"IIIt1I11IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlIIIIIIIIIII",UftmllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltIlI1!!
The
ANCHOR
.
Fall R.ivelr?
A. Gallagher, P.1\., pastor of St. James Church; and Rev. Hugh McGhe~ Union Baptist Church, study the program. Right: Among the principals in the services were, Sr. Charles Francis, R.S.M., left, and Mrs. Everett McCullough, right, participants in the litany chat with the main speaker Rev. Charles K. Von Euw of St. Johns Seminary, Brighton. Rev. Albert F. Shovelton, St. James Parish, served as Master of Ceremonies.
Mass~11
Vol. 10, No. 27
.
Thursday, July 1 1966
';@196cS The.Anchor
$4.00 per Year PRICE IOc"
ICape ~:a:e::ok ~:::~ p:2:::ntians,I
= = ~ ~
FrankB. Cook of 152 Pur itan Rd., Buzzards Bay, and a .member of St. Margaret's Parish, has been' elected
presiden't of the Particular Coun cil of the St.. Vincent de Paul Society for the Cape Cod and Islands District of the Diocese. The new leader of the Vin centians in the Cape area has been serving as firstvice-pres ident of the Particular Council and president for ·the" parish group. == In adition to his Vincentian == work, Mr. Cook. has been very ~ actfve in the Confraternity of ~ Christian Doctrine· program in
= =
the parish and has received a ~ certificate for CCD courses that ~ have been conducted in 'the Diocese. He also serves as a church usher. The wife of the new leader, Margaret, passed away fifteen years ago and he has been living with his son John in Buzzards Bay. He also has two daughters, Mrs, Mildred Swee pey and Mrs. Mary Dimodica. Another son, Ensign Thomas H. Cook, Navy Air Force, was killed in World War 1. Among his 15 grandchildren is Thomas H. Sweeney who is studying for the priesthood in the La Salette Missionary Order.
== ==
§
~
Changes Affect Mercy Nuns' !1II11111111111111!1I111111t111111111t11t11111t11t11!lltIllllllllllllllllflllillllllltllllllltlllltlllllltl~1I1111111111111II11111111111111t111It1Hllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllltlllltllllllllllllllllllltlllllllli In Diotes(ln Assignments 'So. America Concerns Pope Paul
1.'he Sisters of Mercy, Province of Providence,' have an.'·· •
.. 'l'he Church's .answer to the desperate needs· of the people of Latin' America _ one
. third . the· total world. Catholic population-is crucial. So thought Pope' John XXIII om
Fall River D.iocese: . . ' From Holy Ghost Convent, St. Vincent Home, Fall River; . .
Providence: Sister Agnes 'Mary' Sister MarY.Celine to St. .Kiliaft his d~ath-bed;·:80 illustrated' Pope Paul in a dramatic manner' this .week. On Suriday,
00. Grade Five, St. John EvangelTurn to Page Five July 3, after hayJng summoned to Rome 70 young clerics' from various seminaries and fl8t School, Attleboro. religious· orders that. are at From Holy Name Convent, present attempting to come New Bedford: Sister Mary Mer- . tQ the aid of South America, lllouncedth~ following changes affecting Sisters in' the
L-.tnd a 0'8.ara,·. B-tS.hop Casst-dy H. tgh Grad uate
.0edes to Nazareth-on-the-Cape,
Hyannis; Sister Mary Nathan to the Holy Father personally
St. John Baptist Convent and II II f.,((, ordained them to the priesthood. School, New Bedford, Superior Among the 70, the Rev. Daniel and Principal. By. Dorothy Eastman . Corbett of the Diocese of Buf.. From Holy Trinity Convent, For the fourth year in a row a member of the Fall River Diocesan Catholic Youth falo flew to Rome to represent West Harwich: Sister Mary Mar- Organization has been elected to a majo"r office of the New England Regional Federa- u.s. efforts lor Latin America. gretta to Our Lady of Lourdes . " C The singular ceremony had Convcnt and School, Taunton, tion of Archdioces!ln and Diocesan Coun'cils of atholic Youth. This year the vice-pre.si-· the. Holy Father personally per. Superior and Principal. dent of the New England Federation will be a Taunton girl, Linda M. O'Bara. She was form all the essential acts of the From Md. St. Mary elected "at the Federation's . ceremony. However, the Pope . Fall. River, Burlington, Provid h' t . t' b' h From Mt. St. Mary Convent, annual congress, held this denc'e, Boston and Norwich. Two' an IS wo aSSlS mg IS ops
Fall River: Sister Mary Ludivine year in Stowe, Vermont. The" people gave nominating speeches - eilch performed the lesser cere..
ro Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fan monies-conferral of vestments, for each candidate and then the "ntc '.The Pop e perf or)11e d th ese Yearly meeting gives· mem- . Diver, Vice-Principal and Treas- ..... candidate himself spoke. I esser ceremomes . f or a smaller URrer; Sister Mary Caroleen to b ers 0 f th e 1oca I CYO' san oppor- iSS. Peter lind Paul School, Fall tunity to meet and exchange Other delegates to the con- 'group of 22 while the other lRiver,Grade Six; Sister Mary viewpoints with young people gress from the Fall River Dio- bishops did the same for tWit Edmund to Our Lady of Mercy from all over the New England cese were Ann Richards, Mau- "groups of 24. Convent, Attleboro; Sister Mary area. Linda says that the Fall reen Krausyk," Brian Corey, "Latin America, this is your Mercy to Bishop Feehan High River organization, directed by James Gibney, Brian Pontolilo hour," exclaimed the Pope durSchool, Attleboro, Superior and Rev. Walter Sullivan, is cer- and David Bisbee. Chaperones ing his homily, After briefly Principal. tainly one of the most active in for the young people were" Mary noting the needs of this sufferAlso Sister Mary Alminda to New England. Last year the . A. Cronin, Frances Parry, Abel ing part of the Church, the Pope St. Vincent Home, Fall River; president of the Federation was Marceline and James Cunning- Pointed to the Gospel joys of Sister Marie Lorraine to St. a Fall Rivedte, Brian Corey. ham. " . undertaking so generously God's ry Convent-Ba)' View, RivThe election was a lively one Linda, a demure, attractive 18bor. Later, he reminded Ro St. Mary Academy High with stiff competition for all the brunette, is the daughter of Mr, mans: . 'ster Mary Georgine to offices. Each diocese is allow~d and Mrs. Stanley O'Bara of 43 "The apostolate of the Church .nvent, Fall River; to sent 10 delegates. There were Cottage Street, Taunton. She is takes on a new proportions and 'ola to St. lVIar- delegates and candidates from a recent graduate of Bishop Ca§- directions, Today, it is this imSchool, Rum- the Dioceses of Manchester, sidy High Schoo~ where she was mense territory, which extends Josephine to Bridgeport, Worcest<:r, Hartford, JLliNDA O'BAlRA Turn to Page Fourteella Turn to Page Ninet~
Named. Are·a·.···CYO Fede·ra·t:o·n V:ce-Pres! -lent
2
THE
ANCHOR~
Scores Churches
On' Rights. Issue
Thurs., July 7, 1966
S~ys,'
Declaration On Freedom Aids Christian Fauth WASHINGTON (NC) Bishop William G. Connare of Greensburg, Pa., said the Declaration on Freedom of
of
the Second Vatican Council ,helpea in the creation' of an , environment in which men can embrace the Christian faith without hinderance and profess it more effectively. :Bishop Connare spoke :at a 'workshop on preaching at the Catholic University of AIDeri. ea. Clergymen, of several faiths attended. "Christ 'bore' witness con stantly to the truth, but He steadfastly refused to impOse the· truth 'by force on those who spoke against it," Bishop Con nare stated.· ' "So it is clear that no one can be compelled to accept faith, and as long as anyone is invinci bly cOnvinced,he deserves respect and ,his religious freedom is recognized and defended by 'the Church," he said. 'Perilous Theory' Bishop Connare explained that the declaration does not base the right to free exercise of religion . on "freedom of conscience. Nowhere does this phrase oc cur," he said. He added it is a "perilous theory" to hold that men have the right io do what theircon~ science tells them to do, simply because their conscience tells PLEDGE OF LOYALTY : Rev. George' Harris of Brownsville kisses the ring of them to do it. Bishop Medeiros in the Texas Cathedral as a pledge of bis'loyalt~ to'his new Ordinary. Thatwoulc::. be "subjectivism, the notion that, in the end, it is conscience, and not the ob jective truth, which determines . ' . ' , what is right or wrong, true' or false," the bishop said. But "if man has done every thing in his power to inlorm VANCOUVER (NC)-Father .cided ,few of the area's CathoThe only adult involved with himself about the truth,' but .he misses it all the same, no Agnallus Pickelle, S.A., devised lic youngsters were turning up, "the Club is 37-year-old Brother 'Guy, S.A., of the Friars of the, human power' has the right to a simple formula. It worked. It's for CYO meetings. They promptly called an in..., . Atonement, ,whom the' teenagers usurp the place of his erroneous this-when Catholic teenagers eonsciericeby exercising' coer . fail to 'respond to the appeal terparish meeting of the' re '. elected as moderator and_Whose elon," . Bishop Connare siated. . of' existing organizations, toss bellious, 'youngsters and :en ; car becomes ,"the 'iVall of Jeri· the problem 'into the youngsters couraged ·them to air their;, cho" when some 80, or more own laps!' ' "beefs.", , " , : Antonians go on camping trips , Family Fast . , 'The Franciscan Friars of" the , The rellult, was formation by ·,;.,.-the boys sleeping on one side' ',LONDON .(NC) - A Family 'Atoneirient; working' with three the youngsters themselves 'p£ ,the ,,:,'of it and thE! girls on' the other! Debating Team F'\lst Day organized by the Cath-' other. priests in the Vancouver ~ntonian,Clubforyoung people;. from 1~ to 25. Now it's, Canada's, ' 'At,. their mOl\thlymeetings, in early }962, ,de , olic lfund for Overseas' Develop':: 'archdiocese ,' . :fastest growing Catholic Club. "the:'Antonians have"invited po nientinay bring in $285,000. The . money,' represeriting meals sac 'With" more . ,than 100 full liticians, businessmen, police rificed 'by Catholic families here fledged members,another 100 are offiCials and social workers to as a 'p'racticai reminder of the on 'probationwaiting to take' speak on subjects· ra'nging from' hunger present in the rest of FRIDAY-St. Elizabeth, Queen their entrance examination-:. drug addiction,; safe' driving, political, current events and re . homosexuality . and alcoholism the world, will he used in fam... · . ~nci .Wido\\" III, (:la11s. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; ligious quiz.--l..and ·the· eight· "to marriage; sex;' politics' and ine-fighting projects around the Common Preface. globe. week trial period required of, international affairs. .Fourteen members hlbve' "taken a 20 SATURDAY - Mass of the Antonians.' . , Writing' their own constitu-' week public speakinlt c~)Urse' and BieSsed Virgin for Saiurday. IV Class. White. Mass Proper; tion' and rules' the Antonians have formed a debatmg team Glory; no Creed; Preface of came' up with' some self-disci-' . now in demand,' an" over the JULY 16 .. ·. ' plinethat includes no drinking arch?iocese. Blessed Virgin. l\ev. Bernard.' perc(it, and rio smoking rules, modest WIth club headquarters'in II 1937, Founder, St:' Doriiinic, BUNDAY - VI Sunday After dreSs requirements and a weekly three-room house on St. Joseph'. Swansea. ~. Pentecost. II Class. -Green. program of Catholic action rang chu~~h property, the youngsters Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; ing from work for the Holy' ,enVISIon a. n:-w two-sto~y club . JULY 1'7 Preface of Trinity. Name Society, Lions Club, Re house ~onslstllllg of a mam floor Rev. William J. Smith, 1000, tarded ChIldren's Foundation gym smtable also for lectures and MONDAY Mass of previous Pastor, St. James, Taunton.' ' Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass and other community projects. dances, and a second floor made Th~y print their own mags up ~f nume~us glass-,partitioned Proper; No Glory or Creed; JULY 19 . ZIne an d opera t e a car wash' cubIcles SUItable for study. 2nd Prayer St. Pius I; Com Most Rev. Daniel F. 'Feehan, mon Preface; to raise funds to be' used as D.D., 1934, 2nd Bishop of FaJi loans for students. Along with OR lUver, 1907-34. St. Pius ·Pope and Martyr•. organizing' four dances 'a year Red. Glory; no Creed; Com for teenagers, Catholic 'and non mon Preface. Catholic alike, they run one adult" dance a year, supervising TUESDAY-8t. John Gualbert, it with their same constitutional Abbot. '111 Class. Nhite. MaSll rules of no drinking. Proper; Gloria; 2nd Prayer July IO-St. Hyacinth, New 55. :'abor and Felix, Martyrs; Bedford. ~, ! no Creed; Comnion Preface.' 5t. Mary, So. Dartmouth " o 8'-Al·AMti:a DOANr. WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ July 17-8t. Pius X, South Michael Austin INC OR.PO R. ...n:o ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Yarmouth. Inc.
Mass Proper; No Glory or St. Stephen, Attleboro. Creed; Common Preface. ##~.#.##.,##.#.#.~##,##.~ II
F~stestGrowing ,(:Iub Van.couver 'Catholic Youth Write Own 'Rlliles
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THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall' Rlvel Mass, Publishel every Thursday at 410 , HighlarKl Avenue Fall River. Mass.. 02722 by the Catholic Press 01 the Diocese of Fall River. SubscriptiOll price lIy 1Illl1l. postpaid
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NEW YORK (NC)-Churcbell which practice racial segregati~ and decline, to .. !;Upport civ)t rights causes were criticized here by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. Discussing the role religiOll in civil rights at a. National Conference of Chrlstiahs ,and Jews dinner at which' he ceived a Brotherhood award, thei Vice President said "the past decade has seen new aware ness that religiouS faith is ba... ren unless it leadr;; to, action _ especially on such moral issu~ _ as civil rights" ·the .war on po.¥ erty, and. peace.~ "But let Us'be frank about OUl' , shortcomings," he'·said: "Let. in ali, honesty say that local churches still close the. doors to'many of their-·brethrea. and many more do not'speak and act on issues of conscience whicll arise in their communities." Humphrey sald· participaU. . of American churches and syna gogues in the struggle for hum. rights "has made a tremendoue difference in our country."
THURSDAY-8t. Bonaventure, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor. of <the Church. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; DO Creed; ,Common Preface. '·,"··\·'·~~'"'1.·;.1il:'I.;'~-·"."
t . t .......
RlNERAl SERVICE
NIEW BIEDFORD, MASS.
549 COUNTY STRlEmv
"
. • HYANNIS .. HARWICHI'ORT ~ $OVTH YAFlMOUTH --:
re
a
som.
. father Ditta m; .At Peabod'y: Rev .Mark Dittami, 0, Carm.. "grandfather priest," has been ~ssigned to the Carmelite chapel, Northshore Shopping. .Centellw Peabody. ' The 54-year-old Father Dit tami was ordained last August at the Carmelite seminary ia Hamilton., ' The former parishioner of Michael's, Ocean Grove, and ad vertising·:consultant is a veteraJi of two wars. He has a daughtew and three grandchildren. Mal' ned in 1936, his wife died sud denly some yea!'B ago. He said he 'entered the priest hood to be of service to people. Since his ordination he hllll been assigned'to Catholic Um.. versity Washington;' ·D.C.
sa.
J •.
'Jews A,idP,riest MAPLEWOOD (NC) - Ii priest here in New Jersey has been given a· scholarship by n jewish organization to' attend ~ human relations workshop ~ Rutgers University this'Summe~ The award 'Was given' -to Father Aiden J.Kenny, of 'Immaculate Heart of Mary Chureh by the Essex County Chapter, Ame..... ican JewJsh Committee.
W ilJiams' Furie,,11
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Prelate Stresses Moral Limits
In Conflict
BALTIMORE (NO) - AI filough there is no clear cut -Christian" position regard Ing the Vietnam conflict, ~ristians should be aware of
ltAaryfknon Bishop Donaghy:
ANCHORfurs., July 7, 1966
New· Bedford Native Now in Taiwan Postpone Jailed, Then ExpeUed From Red China Bishop FrederickA. Donaghy, M.M., a native of New Bedford, and veteran of 37 years in the Maryknoll mission fields of the 'Orient, spent five ye~rs as a prisoner of the Communists. Bishop Donaghy was arrested Dec. 19, 1950. Communists soldiers planted a package of raw opium and a revolver in his room. Following a pretended search in which the articles were
found, he' was bound with
.ropes and taken to j-ail in
Wuchow,center- of his dio
Cbe .moral limitations on modern :warfare, Lawrence Cardinal $lehan said here. In a pastoral letter the cardi pal s~id the Vietnam conflict is a'source of concern and contro versy around the world, and it _ evident that "Christians of Gqual sincerity and equal devo . oese. Two weeks later he was transferr~d to a new jail across 'lion to the Gospel may honor . ,ably differ" in their views. on the Fu River. In this new prison Bishop CIle subject. "But," he eautioned, "certainly :Donaghy, was locked up in ~ cell. He was subjected eo Catholic who claims to find Solitary ill the living teaching of the to frequent questioning. He had etturch a source of moral guid,; to sieep on the ground.' He was ance can be' indifferent to his given 10 ounces of rice a day and a few greens in water. After five duty to care ab'out the overrid monthS he was released and al Ing moral issues of modern war 6lre as well as his duty to know lowed to live under house arrest and follow the pronouncements with a Chinese priest. Bishop Donaghy and his com CJtf the Church on the moral limi panion had, to support .the~ tations even of lawful self selves. They began raising clefense." chickens imd rabbits. This ven The cardinal said the Amer _ 'limn Catholics have an especially ture was successful until an grave obligation in this matter epidemic killed their livestock. because of America's military They then began a small towel potential, the worldwide impact factory. When this became suc 0f the nation's policies, and the cessful the Reds took it over. lFound Guilty atrength of U. S. Catholicism. In June, 1955, Bishop Donaghy Citin'g the Second Vatican was rearrested· by th'e' Reds. He eouncil's condemnation of indis was put on trial charged with criminate bombing, the Balti more archbishop commented: "It establishing the Legion of Mary is clear how contrary to Catholic and refusing 'to allow a Catholic teaching are some of the sugges , young man to join a Communist tions occasionally made about youth organization. The charges Ute degree of and kind of vio-' under which he had first been Jlence our nation should inflict arrested seemed to have been cwerlooked. 9D its enemies:' At the end of the third day, Avoid Narrowness 'the judge declared him guilty He warned that voices opposed and' sentenced him to be ban;' eo restraint and to moral limita ished forever from China. He «ions in war-making seem to be reached safety jn Hong Kong a growing stronger in the United few days later in old clothes $tates. and hardly recognizable to To resist such "lethal appeals," friends because of loss of weight. the cardinal said, "we must con The Communists were not the fKantly recall that only on JPoral, fint. danger Bishop Donaghy grounds can our cause in Viet faced. He lived in Wuchow dur aam be just. If our means be the war with Japan and saw eome immoral, our cause will iltg aimost half the city wiped out in Bve been betrayed." bombings. .In one bombing the "Let us also avoid the narrow misSion was completely de &esli of supposing that all the stroYed.' Bishop Donaghy re vice and the bad will lie on one £used to leave the city as long lide of any major conflict and as he 'was free to carry on his $hat all the virtue and good will 'extensive relief and ehllritable lie on the other." opera:tions, The letter concluded with an Strange ProcesSion appeal for prayers for reason When the Japanese moved on able and honorable negotiations Wuchow in their drive to cut ill Vietnam. ehina in two, Bishop Donaghy The stated 'purpose of the pas waited until they were about toral letter was to suggest "some to enter the city. Then he left' lines of thought about the patri with all his seminarians. .tic duties of an American Cath The procession out was a _ic in the present hour" and to stra~ge one because they moved IIecaU "some of the pertinent all the seminary property. Be principles formulated by the sides the Bishop and his 22 ,Vatican council concerning mod seminarians, there were 11 pigs; ~ warfare." ~ ducks, two guinea pigs, a police dog with four puppies, and a mountain of baggage. Victims' List ,By rowboat the group re treated up the West River. When l:nclI'eases in Ch8na the Japanese followed they went HONG KONG (NC) - New deep into the Kwangsi Moun heads roll daily under the char tains. There in adobe houses k>t wheels of Red China's power they set up a 'mission and sem struggle-now officially named inary and carried on until the Proletarian Cultural Great Rev end of the war.
~tion. Consecrated in 1939
The current purge is being Bishop· Donaghy is the son of :wielded like a two-edge sword the late James and Rose Don against scores of Chinese Com aghy of New Bedf ord , Mass. He munist party (CCP) members attended public schools in New and government officials, as well Bedford before entering Holy as against intellectuals who as Cross College in Worcester. mouthpieces of the ordinary peo Following' graduation from ple oppose' communist ideology Holy Cross in 1925, Bishop Don and the totalitarian way of life. aghy entered St. Mary's Sem Sixty-five public figures are inary, Baltimore, Md., to pre included so far on the daily pare for· the priesthood. He en swelling list of those who have tered Maryknoll in 1928 and was 'been undergoing public attack ordained the following year. by Lin Piao, the emerging mili On Sept.' 15, 1929, the young tary dictator, with the support priest left for South China to Of Chou En Lai, Teng Hsia-ping take up work in the Kaying Mis and other present holders of sion. He labored' in this territory ~ty power. wr ten years. On July 20, 1939, C
Purge
,3
Synod
In St. Leuis
ST. LOUIS (NC) - Auxiliary
Bishop Glennon P. Flavin of St.
Louis said the archdiocesan sy
nod planned for September, 1967,
will probably not take place at
that time because preparations
have not been completed.
Bishop Flavin, general secre
- tary of ,the renewal program, . made the statement at the first meeting of the full coordinating committee of Operation Renewal, the key group in the preparation for the archdiocean-wide assem bly on Church renewal. The committee was brought to
its full strength recently when
Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St.
Louis named to the body 24. rep
resentatives from religious com
'munities stationed in the arch
diocese.The Religious ranged
from superiors and provincials
to teachers and other members
of the orders.
Their names were added. to
those of 24 appointed priests, 24
appointed lawmen, 24 elected
priests, and 24 elected laymen to
make the coordinating commit
tee's full membership.
Sees 'New id~rntitJI1
FolioWBlI'tg' M~ll'ch
MARYKNOLL PRELATE: Bishop Frederick A. Don aghy of New Bedford, sprinkles a congregation with holy water. The 63-year-old prelate was expelled from Red China ' \ in 1955. ' he wa$ 'appointed prefect of the adjoi'1ipg· Wuchow mission, a territory, ,containing some three' million people, and was elevated to the .ra~k of bishop. He was consecrated in Fall River on Sept. 21, 19,39. During his stay in America for consecration" the Japanese had invaded South China. The new bishop had to enter his territory by a difficult overland Journey from French-held Kwanchowan. He found refugees entering Kwangsi from the war zones, and he 4irected all his priests to begin relief operations. Chapter Delegate In the Summer of 1956 Mary knoll held its fourth General Chapter Meeting at which Bishop Donaghy served as a 'delegate and thus helped set society policies and elect 'gov erning personnel. . Bishop Donaghy was assigned to Taiwan lat~r in that year.
Among the important posts he has filled since being assigned there are as regional vicar and as regional superior., The 63'-year-old prelate· has a brother, the Rev. William A. Donaghy, S.J., currently assigned to Boston College. A sister, ,Mrs. Thomas Quinn lives in South Dartmouth, Mass. ,Bi,shop Donaghy atte;"ded ses sions of 1he Second Vatican Council in 1962 and 1964.
JACKSON (NC)-Mississippi
Negroes "identified themselves
as being citizens and free men"
by joining the civil rights march
that climaxed here, a Catholic
layman who took part in the
demonstration believes.
"Mississippi will never be the
same again, nor will Jackson.
Negroes here have a new iden
tity, and this \yas the whole pur
pose of the march," declare<!
John T. Kenna.
Kenna is special assistant for
program and public relations
with the Family Life Bureau,
National Catholic Welfare Con
ference, Washington, D.C. He haF
been active in civil rights for 20
years and is founder and board
member of the National Catholic
Conference for Interracial Just
ice.
V'ote by Mail ESOPUS (NC)-Redemptorisb
in the United' States for the first
time voted by mail for delegates
to attend the 16th world chapter
meeting of the congregation ill
Rome early next year.
I
St. Francis
Residence
I
FOR YOUNG WOMEN
196 'lIIhipple Si., Fall River
Conducted by Franciscan
Missionaries of Mary
Officicd Photographer to
' ROOMS - MEALS OVERNIGHT HOSPITAlIlY
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•• • • • • • • •• •
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FINE ..rAUAN FOOD
GONDOLA RESTAURANii' and LOUNGE
on lake SabbatiCll
TONY MEDEIROS
623 ROBIESOIN 511"9 IFALL RIVER, MASS.
Pictures of Bishop. Medeiros' 'Consecl1'Oltiolnu
Receptioll1l OllruJJ Testimonial Now
A\fOlD~iOlb~1S
1094 BaV Street
TAUNTON VA 4-8754 ~ ~
LUlIll1JIIIII/III11I11I/III11I1I/III11I1I/III11 1111111111111 III II I1111/111111I111/1II1/1IU1I1WlJWIIIIIIIIIUII/II1I1II1IIlMli
•
4
~E ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., July 7, 1966
CLIP AND SAVE
WHEN ON DOUBT
FOR GUIDANCE,
_CONSU lL r LIS·T
CLASS A . SECTION 1 J'AORALLY UNOBJECTIONA.BLE FOR GENERAL PATRONAGE
CLASS A SECTION 2 MORALLY UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR ADULTS AND ADOLESCENTS
Fantomas (Fr.·ltal.l Alice of Wonderland in Paris Flight of the Phoenix And Now Miguel . Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Battle Of The -Bulge Bible, The Gospel According to Saint . Matthew, The Birds Do It Gunpoint . Bolshoi Ballet, The (Russ'! ·Born Free Hansel and Gretel Billy the Kid vs. -Dracula · Hold On Bremen T{)wn 'Musicians Honeymoon Machine Capture That Capsule Invasion Quartet las Vegas Hillbillys Cat, The Don't Worry, We Will Think ' Lassie's Great Adventure of a Title
Ma.gic Weaver, The Evening With The Royal
Maya 'Ballet, An .
My Fair Lady
My Son, the Hero
Mysterious Island
Night ef the Grizzly
Paradise Hawaiian Style
Pied Piper of Hamelin
Pirates ef Tortuga
Plainsman, The
Purple Hills
Dueen of Blood
{lueen ()f the Pirates
Rare Breed, The
Redeemer, The
Russ ian Adventure
'Russians Are Coining, The
Russians Are Coming, The
Agony 'and the Ecstacy, The Alphabet Murders, The Apache Uprisin.g Assault On ..aOueen Atlantis, The L-9st Ccntinent Big Hand for the Little Lady, A
"Big t:N.T. Show, The
Blindfold
-8ountyKiller, Tile.
Boy Cried MlIH!er, The
11 ri(\ge -kl -tile Sun
Vie, f40~r, Die .
:Or. ~1I00d' s Ooffill'
Dr. Goldfoot and the-Bikini Machine 'Doctor Zhivago Dracula, Prince of Darkness Eye For An Eye, Arr Frankie and Johnny 'Frantic
Glass Bottom Boat; The
~r~t Wall, The (Jap.)
-Guns of Darkness
flarumScarum
.fleroes of Telemark'
:fmtJoss~ on Saturilay
24 flours to Xiii
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter Johnny Nobody Johnny Reno Judex Judith Kid Rodekl Kwaidan (Japanese) La Boheme tet's Kill Uncle little~nes, The loll ipop Cover, The Mad· ExeClftionefs, Tile ~afl' Celfld Get Killed, A
Mel
&eat Spy Chase, Tile
'Great War, Tm
~icktY
~ille·.d
CLASS A SECTION 3 MORALLY UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR ADULTS
CI.JASS A " SECTION 4 MORALLY UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR ADULTS, WITH RESERVATIONS
~r
Ar..abesque .
Ar-fll()red -(A)mmaoo
;"BoY,Did I Get It Wrong
"Number
Breakfast ·At Tiff.ally's
llunny Lake Is 4IIlissillg
Casf A Giant ShaOOw
Chase, The
Claudelle fnglish
Couch, The
Dirty Game, The IFr.·ltal.)
Do Not Disturo
Friend of the Family ~fr.)
Girl· Getters, The tBr.!
tfe Who -Must Die ,,",ustler, The Mol, The (Br.) Inside Daisy Clover naliano Brava Gente' mal.} Johnny Tiger King and Country ilk) King Rat Leather 'Boys (Dr.l Lost Command, The liquidator, The · Madam X' Made In Paris
Anatomy etA M<lrriage Ifr.l Collector, The . Cool World, The
IJ<Irling
Divorce, Italian StyleHtal.)
Dr. StrangeJove
Easy· Ufe; The tltal.}
Eclipse tl~1.}
~Yz 1f1aI'>
Flame and' the Fire Girl With Gr,een Eyes (Dr.) Hill, The · Important Man (Me xK:an) Intruder Miet of the Spirits ittal.) f(nack, The(Br.) l-Shaped Room, Tile Ureat ·the Top (British)
' .....:r
Male~"r.l
One
'Mister 'lluddwiAg
.fIIIodesty BJaise 18r.)
-Moment T4 Moment
Money, Money, Money (Fr.)
l;1()rgan
Naked Prey, The . Nanny, The '. Nevada Smith Not On 'Your life (Sp.l Pad and How to Use It, The Panic in Year Zero Promise Her Anything
Return. From The Ashes
Aide Beyond Vengeance
l()lita l~rd L~ve
leve a Duck . a. Ia Carle . Marriage, Italian Style lItaLl Moment of Truth, The Nitlht of the Iguana Nothing But the Best l8r') Organizer, The Utal.) Pressure Point
Secret Seven Sergeant Was. A Lady Singing Nun, The" . Sleeping 8eauty Sleepillj~8eauty, 1he IRussJ Snake Woman Snow White Son of a Gunfighter Sound of Music, The ... <Tarzan and the Valley of Gold That Darn Cat Teenage Millionaire Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
Merry Wives of Wi'!fiser, The (Br.! Mystery ef Thug Island, The (Br.!
Naked Edge
One Spy Too Many
Othello
Out &f Sight
Pit and the Pendulum
Plague lJIf ~he Zolllbies
Planet {)f T'!e' Va"'f)ires
Ps}'toofU1th, The
Reptile,Tile
Sar9ollK:116
fI«co w His Brothers mat.! Rotten t(1 the tore IDrJ Sands ef the Kalailafi Season of Passion Second Best Secret Agent in the Whele Wide Worlll Shahespe'lle Wallah 41ndial Soop en Main Street, The Spy Woo Came in From the . Geld, Tile Stop the World, I Want Te Get Off Su.cker, Tile iFr.-fng.!
Susan Slade
Ten Little Indians
The Man in Istanbul
TIko and the Shark
Trouble With Angles,The
Ugly Daschund, The .•.. ' )
Valley of the Dragons; '~,." .
Voyage to the Bottom of lie :
Sea . .:. :. When the Clock Strikes Whitelt4ane IFrenclll ;<t Willie McBean
· Winnie The Pooh
'Years of lightning, Day ., . Drums You Have to Run Fast Vulture, The
Scream of Fear
Secret Agent Fireball
Secret of Deep Harbor
Slender Thread, The
Spy In Your Eye
Stagecoach
Trunk, The
Twenty.Plus Two
Waco
Walk in the Shadow
Weekend With llliu
Young DoctofS
Thousand CIOWIlS, •
Three On a Spree
Thunder of Drums
Thunderball
To Trap A Spy
Town Without Pity
Two Women (ltal.)
· Up To His Ears
Weekend at Dunkirk
West Side Story
When the Boys Meet tile
Girls Where The Spies Are
Wi~~ Seed (was: Fargo)
<
Pumpkin Eater, 1he Red Desert Servant, Tile Storm Center Strangers if! the Bity Taboos of the WeFltI l+1al.) This Sport~~ life Too YOOAg kl Love Victim tid
Visit, The
Woo's Afraid of Vir/li.
Woolf?
Yellow Rolls Royce, 1he
Yeung and the WiIIilll
Zorba, Tile Greek
S;mdpiper, TIie Seoonds Silven Women Silvonlh .(lawn Sex .aIld The Sillflle CId Shot if! the Dafk, A Silencers, lhe Sh~eping Ca;r Murder, The Small World of Sammy Lee, The IBr.) Soldier in the Rain . Space Flight 1C-1 tBfJ Spy With My Face Strangler, The . Tenth Victim, The This Property is C8nElemned
Time of Indifferenee ....J
Vice and Virtue lfr.J
.. Agent Jer ttA.fl.M.
Amor-eIlS AOvemures Motl
Flanders
Beach Ball, Tile
Blood: and Black Late
Boeing, Boeing
Cassanova 7fl
Cincinnati Kid; The
City of Fear
Cry of Battle
Curse of the Voodoo
Dementia 13
Desert Raven
Devil and The Ten
Commandments Diary of a Chambermaid IFrJ
«
CLASS B MORALLY OBJ.FCTIONABLE
IN PART FOR AU
CLASS
.c
CONDEMNED
Affair of the Skin, An
Balcony, The
Bambole Otal.)
Bell'Antonio Utal.)
Boccacc;io 7fl lItal.)·
. Bonne Soupe, la IFr.) Breathless. lFr.) Christine Keeler Affair, The (Dan.) Circl~ of Love Cloportes (Fr.) Cold Wind in AUfust Con~mpt (Fr.! Dear John (Swed'> Doll, The (Swed.) During One Night tBr.> . Empty Canvas Girl With the Gelden Eyes IFrJ
. ' ~?,~.-':: t"~:' !~:.}::, ~~) = t;'. ! .;;: (..' ~- .:,.~.{" t. ~.- ~L ti~ -t·' {~tt!.. 1.. ! -{~.t -{ f !
~
·f:·f -i Q<"4-<!-4
q ,~,\:
OueIAt DiabhI
t~e&
Eva Fine -Madness, Fr~m -Russia Witfl l~ GrouP,' The Gids on the Beacll He Rides Tall Honeymoon Hotel How to Stuff a Wild Bikifli Irma' La Douce Kissin' Cousins lady L Last of the Secret Agents long Ships, The . looking For Love. Love on the Riviera \
JVlilIe- HlItlt Man ill the Middle '¥arr.~e on the Rocks Money. Trap Mozambiqtle Night Must Fall No Gre.aterSin (was: 18.and Anxious)
Oscar, The
Our Man Flint
Psyche 59
Racing Fever
flasputin
Red Line 7000
fieturn to Mr. Moto. The
*
One, The
Village of the QiaMs
Viva las Ve«as
Viva Maria
What A Way to &e
What's New Pussycat?
Whl. Killed Teddy gear1
Who's Been Sleeping ill .,
Bed
Why Bother To Knock
Yesterday, Today and
Tomorrow Utal.)
Young Dillinger
Zombie
Green Mare (Fr.l Leve Is My Profession (fr.) . Oscar Wilde (8r.) (Swed.)
High Infidelity-(ltal.) L~ve on.a Pillow (Fr.)
Passionate Summer Ifr.-Ital.! Take It All IA Toue "re.'
I Love, You love (ltal.) lovers, The (Fr.)
Pawnbroker, 1he (Can.)
Image of love Magdalena (Ger.)
Phaedra (Greek) Tales of Paris "Ifr.)
Joan tlf the Angels? Maid in Paris Ifr.l
Playgirl After (laflt IBr.) · Temptation (Fr.-ltaU
Jules and Jim .Married Woman, The. (Fr.)
Please, NOt New! Ifr.) . Terrace, The (SP3llJ
Kiss Me Stupid Mating Urge
Port. of .Desire To Love (Swed.!
Knife in the Water Miller's Beautiful Wife (ltaLl Pot Ilouille fLowers flf ParisI' Too Young, Too Immeral
La Fuga (ltal.) IFr.) Mistress for the Summer, A
Viridiana (Sp.) .
Knife in the Water IPoL) IFr.l
Prime Time Wasted lives and lhe IirIII
La. Mandragola (ltal.) Molesters, The
Private f'Fopt~rty of Twins
La Notte (Night> (ltal.). . Mom and Dad (Sideroadl
Questieft flf ~Itery Weekend (Dan.!
, Mondo Pazzo (ltal.) . lady Chatterly's Lover (Fr.> Repulsioll White Voices UtalJ
Law, The (F r.) My life to Live IFr.) Saturday Hi@lit afId Sunday Woman in the Dunes tJapJ'
Let's Talk About Women Never on Suliday (Greek) "- Morning t8r.)· . Women of the Worlel maU
'(ltaL) .
New Angels, The (ltal.) Sevlm Capital Sins IfrJ Young Worlll, The IfrJ
Love Game IFr.> ,
Nude Odyssey, The (ltal.)
Sweet and Sour Ifr.) Love Goddesses, The .
Odd Obsession (Jap.l
Silence, The m:.) Love ia 4 Dime nsions U1alJ Of Wayward Love (ltalJ
Swedish Weddillf lIlipt
-.
THE M CHOR Thurs., July 7, 1966
Sisters of Mercy Appointments
"';
5
North Attleboro, Grade Two: Sister Mary Eucharia to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River; Sister Marie dePrague to Holy Name Convent and School, New Bed ford, Superior and Principal. From St. Lawrence Convent,
New Bedford:. Sister Marie Ber
CINCINNATI (NC)-De narde to San Vicente de Paul
votion to the Sacred Heart Canvent, San Pedro Sula, Hon
duras; Sister Mary Dolorine to is "by no means outdated," Sl. James Convent and School, Bishop Paul F. Leibold de From Taunton From Our Lady' of LOUi'des New Bedford, Superior and clared here three days before his flonVent, Taunton: Sister Mari.e Principal; Sister Mary Clare enthronement as bishop of Ev lLaboure to sf' Patrick Convent Theresa and Sister Michael ansville, Ind., when he officiated Mary to st. Xavier Convent, at the dedication of the Sacreri and School, Cumberland; Sister neart Archdiocesan Enthrone Mary Domitilla to St. Kilian Providence, St. Xavier Acad .Convent, New Bedford, St. Mary emy; Sister Madonna Marie to ment Center a. St. Clare Con vent,' provincial headquarters of School, Grade Four, Sister Mary St. Charles Convent and School, Woonsocket. Angelo to St. Kilian Convent,
the Franciscan Sisters of the From St. Margaret Convent, · New Bedford, St. Mary School,
Poor of Hartwell. Rumford: Sister Mary Eleanora Grade One. Rather than being outdated, From Our Lady of Mercy to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall devotion to the Sacred Heart is eonvent, Attleboro: Sister Mary River, M1. St. Mary Academy. "a new Pentecost, enkindling From St. Maria Goretti Con Louis to Holy Trinity Convent families" with God's love, the and School, West Harwich, vent, Pawtucket: Sister Paul former Duxiliary bishop of Cin Grade Five; Sister Mary Urban Mary to St. James Convent and cinnati said. He emphasized SchQol, . New Bedford, Grade ¢o Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall "true devotion," that "may in-' River, D i 0 c e san Secondary Two. cite us to a spark of the gener School Supervisor; Sister Mary ous and total -response" to God's From North Attleboro Jocelin to Salve Regina College, love which "filled a man like St. Paul." Newport; Sister Mary Aquin to From St. Mary Convent, North St. Margaret Convent and Attleboro: Sister Mary Baptista· The bishop said that as in "so School, Rumford; Sister Mal'ie to st. Kilian Gonvent, New Bed many other truly inspiring devo Merici to SS. Peter and Paul ford, S1. Mary School, Principal tions, our tendency is to get so Convent and School, West War involved in individual practices and Grade Two; Sister Mary Wick. -good mdeed, but only dress Dominica to ,Mt. 'St. Mary Con Also Sister Mary Timothy te vent, Fal~ River; Sister Mary ing, such -as litanies, pictures, · Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall Riv nine Fridays, 12 promises, that Rosita to St. Aloysius Home, er, Mt. St. Mary Academy; Sister Greenville; Sister Mary Geof we neglect the very soul of the Mary Anneen to Holy Trinity ~rey to St. Lawrence Convent, devotion. EVERY BOY'S FRIEND: Bishop Medeiros embraces· Convent and School, West Har New Bedford, Holy Family . Center of Devotion wich, Grade One; Sister Mary Grammar School, Grade Eight. a Brownsville youth on his art'ival at the Texas airport "Pope Paul VI b~s us to fiIKi lInearnata to Salve Regina Col prior to his installation. Also Sister Mary Joeline to St. the center <M: our devotion to the liege. Mary Convent, Warren, Superier Sacred Heart af Jesus in the From Our Lady of Mercy and CCD Director; Sister Mary Eucharist and our reception 01 Convent, East Greenwich: Sister this august 'sacrament," Bishop Paul Marie to st. Mary Convent Michael Anthony to St. Brendan Convent and School, Riverside; Leibold said. and School, North Attleboro, Sister Marie Luke to Our Lady "The human and divine love Grade Five. New Orleans Hoi, Cross Brothers
of Christ was expressed ill From Sacred Heart Convent, of LOUl'des Convent and Schoel, Taunton, Grade One; Sister every step of His life from Naz East Providence: Sister Rose Worth Collection areth· to Calvery. His acts, His Mariecto St. James Convent and Maria Thomas to St. Vincent Heme, Fall River, Grades Five fn~m· persons who seek to know 'words, His miracles, His mercy. NEW ORLEANS (NC) School, New Bedford, Grade Sil(o His cernpassion, His doctrine of "Save your Confederate money, tbe value' of Confederate cur SiJC. From St. Mary Convent, Paw rency they have acquired. love, and finally in His greatest boys . . ." From St. Charles Convent,
."Of course' we don't know gift to man-Himself, in the sa Then there are the Holy Woonsocket: Sis t e r Thomas tucket: Sister Mary John Vian Mary to St. Patrick Convent and ney to St. Mary Convent and Cross Brothers here who are the value of individual bills. crament . of the Eucharist," he
declared.
We're not experts in this field," glad they did. School, Fall River, Grade Three. School; Noi·th Attleboro, Princi pal.
the headmaster said. "Essentially, therefore, devo
But if the price is right, the To Bishop Feehan
From St. Mary Convent-Bay Brothers are willing to part with But the Brothers do know tion to the Sacred Heart is From St. Francis Xavier Cen View, Riverside: Sister Christo their .collection to swell the their complete collection of all nothing else than devotion to ?ent, Providence: Sister Marie pher Mary to Mt. St. Mary Con building :(u~d for Holy Crost <M: the 70 regular issues of paper both the human and divine love Marguerite to Our Lady of Mer vent, Fall River, St. Louis High School which they con money issued by the Confeder· of the Incarnate Word and to the cy Convent and Bishop Feehan School, Grade Three; Sister duct here. acy during the War Between the love which the Heavenly Father High School. Ann Maureen to St. Kilian Con and the Holy Spirit have fO'" The Brothers acquired the States has been valued at $10, From St. James Convent, New vent and School, New Bedford, bulk of their collection several 000. sinful man," he continued. Bedford: Sister Mary Eugene to Grade One; Sister Marialyn to years ago from Theodore T. The bills in the collection are
Holy Name COnvent and School, Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall GOI'e of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in excellent condition and have
Erhard to Speak New Bedford, Grade Four; Sis Rivel', St. Mary Cathedral father of a former student. been authenticated by currency rer Mary Kevin to Mt. St. Mary School, Grade Two; Sistet Don HAMBERG (NC) - German experts. One expert estimates The collection also included Convent, Fall River; Sister Mary ald Marie to St. Lawrence historical notes and original the collectipn is one of perhaps Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, a : Austin to St. Patrick Convent, Convent, New Bedford, Holy letters relating to persons whose 20 complete sets of official Protestant, will address the Kat Fall River; Sister Mary Alicine Family Grammar School, Grade pictures appeared on the Con Confederate money in the world. holikentag, the national meeting to St. Lawrence Convent, New One; Sister Maureen William to federate bills. Among the let The bills have all the distinc- of Catholics and Catholic organ Bedford, Holy Family Grammar Sl. Kilian Convent 'and School, ters is one from Gen. M.C. . tive characteristics collectors izations. This year's Katholiken School, Principal; Sister Marie New Bedford, Grade Two. Butler to Jefferson Davis, who look for-type of paper, water tak will open Wednesday in the William to Sacred Heart' Con Also Sister Mary Ellen The was president of the Confederate marks, signatures, engraving, Bavarian town of Bamberg. vent and School, East Provi resa. to Holy Name Convent and States, dated Feb. 26, 1878. other authenticities. dence. Scho()l, New Bedford, Grade In addition to the Gore col From st. John Baptist, Con- Two; Sister Mary Michael to St. .vent, New Bedford: Sister Mary Patrick Convent and School, lection, the Brothers acquired other confederate bills from .Jeremiah to Mt. St. Rita CGn Fall River, Grade Seven; Sister donors. Publicity about the Mointenance Supplies '/fent, Cumberland, Mistress ef Aurelia Mary to St. John Bap "bills acqui red has put the Broth P09hidants; Sister Mary Euclla t
tist Convent and School, New ers in an embarrassing. position SWEEPERS - SOAPS rista to St. Mary Convent ana Bedford, Grade Eight; Sister -they're regarded as experts DtSJNFECTAN.TS
School, North Attleboro, Grade Mary Thomas Joseph to Gur on· the value of Confederate Eight. . Lady <M: Mercy Convent, Attle ARE EXTINGUISHERS
From st. Joseph Convent, FaH '., boro, St. John Evangelist School, bills,but they're not. ID Exeel~nt ConditioD River: Sister Mary Edward te Grade One; Sister Maria ste Brother Robert Hampton, C. St. Patrick Convent, Fall River; phen to St. Patrick Convent and S.C., headmaster, said the Sister Mary Patrick w st. School, Fall 1886 PURCHASE STREET
River, Grade Brothers repeatedly get calls Xavier Convent, Providence. Seven. NEW BEDFORD
From St. Joseph Convent, WY 3-3786
From Cranston Pascoag: Sister Mary Thereslil Ann to Our Lady of Lourdes Providence: Sister Mary Evan From st. Matthew Convent, Convent and School, Taunton, Cl'anston: Sister Mary Stephen gela to St. Lawrence Convent, ~Il'llde Six. Joseph to Mt. St: Mary Convent, New Bedford, Holy Family ' Fall River, St. Mary Cathedral High School. To Attleboro From St. Teresa Convent, From St. Joseph Convent, School, Grade Eight; Sister Catherine Mary to St. Joseph 'Pawtucket: Sister Mary de Sales Pawtucket: Sister Mary Cor nelius to Our Lady of Mercy Convent and School, F,!1ll River, to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC River, SS. Peter and Paul School, Convent, Attleboro, St. John Grade Three. Grade Eight; Sister Mary Bea From st. Patrick Convent, Evangelist School, Principal. From St. Joseph Convent, Fall Ri ver: Mary Annita to Mt. trice to S~. Mary Convent and Providence: Sister Mary Jacinta St. Mary Convent,· Fall River; School, North Attleboro, Grade Sister Mary Bonaventure to Mt. One. 00 St. Lawrence Convent, New Bedford, Holy Family High St. Mary Convent,. Fall River; From St. Vincent Home, Fall $chool. Sister Mary Elene to St. Kilian River: Sister Mary Bridgetta to' Our Lady of Lourdes Convent From St. Kilian Convent, New COR vent and School, New Bed 312 Killman Street WY 7-9162 New Bedford Bedford: Sister Mary Baptist .t@ ford, Superior and Principal. and School, Taunton, Grade .Jri'eftl St. 'Patrick ,COllVetlt, Five. ' . . IilaQr Convent and, ~ Continued from Page One eonvent, New Bedford, St. MarY' School, New Bedford, Grade !J.'hree; Sister Regis Mary .to St. Joseph Convent, Pine Harbor, Pascoag. From Mt. St. Rita Convent, · ~umberland: Sister Mary OthH da to Our Lady of Mercy Con .' vent and Bishop. Feehan High ':sChool, Attleboro.
,(
Urges Devotion To Sacre(l Heart In Eucharist
Confederate Money $10,000
SCHOOL
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t
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Co'rdinal Shehaa p'ermits Mass. ' , In Latin
THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., July 7, 't966
Teenage Drinking
A survey was recently taken in New York, Wiscon sin and Kansas on the drinking habits of the American BALTIMORE tNC)-~ teenager. Findings seem to indicate that drinking is a rence Cardinal Shehanaf
problem with !lnly a small percentage ,of teenagers, that
Baltimore bas authorize4
the habit usually 'takes its rise from the parents, that
,the Archdiocesan Liturgiaj
- CommissIon ,to permit 1:.3. teenagers usually obey their parents when ordered not
Masses in special eases. to drink. "Pastors' who, for .the' gOGO That the' survey sMuld betaken at all would, $eem' Of ,souls, !I~em it n,ecessary::!, ' to show that this proolem does exist to~ disturbing de. provide ~ :t\fai!S using _the, , '
gree, No matter how small a percentage of young people
. official Latin text of the Miss'
With such participation' as JDa\i' drink, the alarming ·,.paxt ,is ,that this percentage still
, be :possible' or advisable shoull represents quite a 'few young men and women who petition ,the Liturgical CommiBoo "' having a difficult enough job growing up without, the sion for the necessary" periniB addition of this problem,' ' , sion," the eardirial said' in • ,The survey, then, should not, make us eomp~acent.; letter to pastOrS. Pastors making such appliea Parents and teachers and officials would do we]] to be tions were asked' to indie* eoncerned about this matter. Almost any high school boy their reasons. , or girl can point out a few "spots" 'where certain oftl1eir "In those parishes' where, ...
elassmates drink. There are those of Uti who have ,asked
der the direction of our' 0IIl0II
commission," Cardinal Shebaa about this and received answers. ' "
wrote," "an earnest effort _ The survey shows that the fact and amount of teen.. been made to carry out the PJ!Ooo age drinking is modeled on, the drinking habits of the visions of the Constitution tOIi parents. Once more the children have proved themselves, the Sacred liturgy) and the dJo.
apt pupils of the parents. By early training and educa
rectives of the highest posbo
conciliar commission, admirable tion children are inclined to obey, to imitate. They follow
results lulve been achieved. what they see, however, rather than what is told them. 1\ Two Requests 'That should make parents pause and take stock of them I "Some of the faithful, how selves. ever, 'seem ,not to have beeII There cannot, be too much caution in this matter. able to adjust to the new order Parents cannot afford to take a so..-ealled sophisticated the ancient liturgy 'of 1be
Church, and I pave requested
attitude on drinking for themselves' and their children. By Msgr. George G. Higgins our liturgical commission _ They cannot afford to be so "broadminded" that they (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC) give consideration to the neecllil become "no-minded" on the matter. of this group," he stated. It is a redeeming feature of the survey's findings I recently took part in one of those open-end/midnightAuxiliary Bishop T. AusfiIIi,
that young people are usually quite obedient to their par to-dawn television programs which, for some strange, and Murphy, chairman of the com-,
ents' wishes not to drink or to stop drinking. ,This is' an unaccountable reason, are apparently becoming' more mission, said two requests':fa,
other example of the security that people crave--:----a security more po'pular in a' country that prides itself 011 beinl!: ()J)e Latin Masses have been,received, both, froI\'l national paris~es.' that comes from obeying legitimate authority. If :parents , of the most civilized nations , " ,'. 'BishoP Murphy: said it _
would only realize, far from repl;essing their children' they the face of' the globe. temporaries would, ~ave. tboUSbt been suggested that a LaUII
, , " , ' that he was out of hIS mmd. , ,are helping them to grow up wisely when they train their Why ,so many ,people stay Indeed,as recently all the Mass be offered ,daily at " " 'lIOns and d~ughters hi. obedience and 8e]f;8aeiifice.W~, Up most of the night to' 1930s most observf~rs' probably, Basilica of the, ~s~umption, . . all have something of the rebel in US, and. we are, aU watch these programs 'is a mys- 'would have been inclirn!d to: gipning ~ ,the Fall. most content when people and circumstances: help U8 to tery which 'eompletely defies 'agree with' the more pessimistie judgment of'Dom Cuthbert But keep this under control.' Rear" adulthood, after' all, means 'rational analy-' erecy,urging th~t it wa's agai~d sis. And why so ler, who,'in winding up bill·bis lIelf-control. ' . ' spirit ofithe age, which. wae many of us who tory of Vatican I, observe(l'lbat the all for publicity;, and, that, • never stay up "should the Vatican CouDtlil be would in all likelihood occasiOll to watch them called into 'being ag1'lin, it is im:' , far greater troubles and' eviJ8, can be persuad- possible to imagine a renewal of . A number of years ago there was a motion picture 'ed so easily to the wild worldwidE! excitE,ment than the publishing of 'all tbM ealled "Death Takes a Holiday." It was a fanciful 'affair- take ,part' in in which the'CouncH of 187l) was took place.
"The event seems,to show,fbaI
: ip which Death decided to go away for a rest and during them 'is even held." Shows DiffeJ'ence ,there was much trutli in 'the his time of vocation no one could· die. No matter what" more ' mysteri From one point of vie'M, of contention, and that less excite-. ous. Even our the terrible acCidents, the fbul plots of murder, the vio cOurse; there was a cE!rtain ment, less storm, less suspiciOll },>est psychia lent deeds-no one could die. A very happy state of. affairs trists have 'Yet amounCof truth in Butler':s ob-' ,and, misunderstanding' .would
indeed! . servatiori·. He was corred in 'have arisen, had even ,reporte. to expl~in this
Sometimes, the Summer could bear the sub-title <IRe.. bizarre phenomenon - possibly prophesying that VaticaJil n, of the public. press been giVeD ligion Takes a Holiday." There are those who f~el that, because they themselves have would' take place in a les.tl e:x- ' entrance to the debates. been too busy either watching cited political atmosphere and "Certainly, if ever the council Summer is a time of perfect relaxation from strain and or participating in such' pro- wouid be able to (:arry 0:0 its meets again, the surest way CIiIl work. They try to get by with a minimum of work. Un grams. . work without interference of killing off excitement; and eVeD
Be that as it may; I must ad- ' any kind by.the polUicalpowers.' of public interest in its proceed
fortunately, they carry this, attitude into their soul's life mit-now that, 48 hours later, I On the other hand, we now ings, would probably be •
and try to get by with a minimum of religion, too. And so the altar rails - see few people receiving Holy have just about caught up on my know that Vatican 11 aroused far. broadcast all with 10udspeake1'8 , slee~that the particular pro greater public intereBt than Vati- over the world: soon even 1be Communi~n. Thechildren~ following the example of their gram which I shared with the can I or any other previous most curious would tire ~ elders, stay away from Communion, too, with no reason 0rdinary of the local' diocese council' in ,the history' of the· listening lin!"
in ·the world except that it is "vacation time", and their and with a distinguished Amer Bad Propbet
Church. ican thelogian proved to be an Butler's own book 'illustrates Butler, it will be noted, was
parents don't insist on religious duties, Confession be interesting and worthwhile ex':' the 'difference dramatically. First ' opposed to the rule of secrecy ill eomes a hit or miss proposition. The good habits that perience. ' " published in 1930-70 years after Vatican I because, in his jud~ priests and sisters and teachers have. tried to build up Holds interest ' the event-it is still the 'only ment, it created more, rather I still' can't get over the fact English-language history of Vat-, than'less, public interest in the
through the school months begin to slip away. The sacra that the moderator; ,who is not ments, daily prayers-these become associated in people's ican 1, and, a very incoml~ete proceedings' of the counciL
' Given the highly charged and. minds with the Fall and Winter months. The children a Catholic, spent the better part history at that. of three hours in the middle ,of By contrl!st, as of this wr.iting rather unfriendly political a1>o especially begin to· get the attitude that religion is like the night plying us with perti~ -less than one ~ear after the mosphere of the late 19th cen school-there is a vacation from it. nent questions about the results ..·event-more than a dozen )f£ng- tury, his point of view is at lea~
of Vatican Council II. Presum Now is a good time to see if this Summer is betom lish-Ianguage books on Vatican partially understandable. :But,
ing for your children a "Religion Takes a Vacation" period. ably he know his audience well II have already appeared, and in any event, he was a very bad
enough to be reasonably certain many more presumably ar,e in, prophet. ' that such along drawn-out dis the offing. ' II'ar Seclrecy Happily, the rule of secrecy at Concl cussion of the council. -would There are many . involved rea-\ Vatican II was greatly relaxed hold their interest. Ana so it did, judging from the sons for this dramatic contrast iiI . 'after the end of the first session, number of questions. which public reaction to the two Vati- with the result - complete~ were phoned in by members of can councils.. Butler himself, contrary to Butler's prediction the audience up to the very end with a kind of reverse English, that even the least curious beg_ put his finger on one reason to listen in. ~ the program.' 'OFFIC!AL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER If our recent experience CllII which is worth attending to, alIf anyone had prophesied at Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Foil River the time of Vatican I that, a though it wO\lld be foolish, to that open-end television pro , hundred years later, an openend exaggerate' its importance.. I ' gram is aI).y norm, they are stiD , Al Ol-fighland Avenue' ' discussion of Vatican II presided' refer to the matter of conciliar listening, in-even as the da~ Foil River, Moss. 02722' 675-7151 secrecy. comes up over Miami and hUDover by a non-Cathoiic modera PUBLISHER Butler thought that the rule of dreds ,of other cities throughOld tor and staged in a predomi - Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D,D.~ PhD., , , ' ' mintly non-Catholic, area .would , secrecy at Vatican I was a seri,.. tp,e land. GENERAL MANAGER 'ASST. GENERAL MANAGER hold' the interest, of a predomi ous mistake. "At the verybeJ~n- , ' I can't help ,but' think . . It. Rev. Doniel F.Shalloo, M.A.. Rev. John P. Dris~oll' nantly non-Catholic audience; ning,". be wrjtes" "an influential,. 'Dom -Butler would 'be, J,la)JJllj, MANAGING EDITOR ' " ' from . midnight until the wee group of 1;lishops .made;8 re»re., , "about this·, unex,pected" .tum .. , Hugh. J.' Gold...·. boun of U1e morninl. his COD- IleDtation on this matter of Ie- 'events if he were still,alive.
are
Sees' Great Pu bIic ntere!st ' ' d'•In95 0 f COl.lnCI·'1 of I n Procee and
on
Religion Ta'kes A Holiday,
@rheANCHOR
,
ST. LOUIS (NC)-Jooeph Cardinal ,Ritter' caned on some of the nation!s top ecumenists here to. take, up a study of one of the "fonda'
Thurs., July 7, 1966
Patricia M. McGowan Father Emile Leclerc, M.S., of La Salette Shrine, Attleboro, oldest living priest member- of the La Salette Missionary Order, marked the 60th anniversary o,f. his first religious, profession last Saturday. He will observe his 54th anniversary of ordination Thursday,July 14. Bom in, St. Pamphile, Quebec in 1881, he came to Americ~ with his ,parents. the same yea.r~ set as exemplified by long moments tlj"ng in BreeDville, N.H. At 'of daily ,meditation in the Shrine ' - . ""Ii. .c' au' ed Chapel, and, his profound love age SIx "lie .Ilam~.r mov to fo~ the word of God, the Bible. Fitchburg, -Mass., where the
mental: Q.uestions'" needing: seMGUS dialogue-the Catholi.e un derstanding of' the papacy~ Addressing some. 3O(JJ protes. tanto Ot"thodox and Catholic' del.. egates at. the National: Workshop for Christian. Unity here, the you"hg:$lntl:e attended parochial ~Il:hbishop of St., Louis said schools. - ' . ', ,~tholic, adherence to the pa In 1899: at age 18 thejubilarian "pacy is not diminished in tItis entered the La Saiette minor age of,ecumenism. seminary in Hartford. Conn. "It would be an injustice and After making, his- £lrst prW'es-' a,decepti,on 'to suggest. other sion there in 1906, went to, wise." h~ said in a dinner aii ~ome for hiS: furtller studies and dress. He noted that the Decree was ordained there in 1912. on Ecumenism of Vatican Coun Upon returning, to the United ell II called it "essential" that States, Father Leclerc served as :the doctrine be pl'esented clearly professor and prefect of disci and in its, entirety. , p l i n e : and then as assistant mas "If in this. way we' Catholics tel' of' novices at the Hartford!. maintain honesty in our ecu seminary~ F~om 1921 to' 1930 ht=; menical exchanges," he said, was curate at Immaculate Con "we win honor the integrity of ception Churc;:h, Holyoke, Mass. our fellow Christians and pro From 1930 to 1944 he served claim our own sincerity." at the' minor seminary at'En Fondamental Questions field, N. B., and from 1941, to The cardinal said 'that there 1944 was superior. His other as lias been a' "noteworthy reduc signments were at East Brews tion of U'nsion in many aspects te:r; Mass., as provincial treas of the- dialogue in recent years,'" urer;, at the Attlebro major sem "Nevertheless," he' continued~ inary~ at the Enfield shrine; and "there remain some fundamental the Attleboro' shrine, where he is qU2stions; lingering always on currently stationed. the 'tl'treshold of enunciation, Strength of Character which continue to be postponed "Sixty ,years in God~s ,service,'" 'O? alluded to' only in passing." say Father'Leclerc's fellow mis He cited 'the Petrine office as. & sionaries, '''have not altered the eas'e in point. strength of character 'he, dis.. , Noting, that the topic is. "cap-", played the day of his first able of' inspiring the most in- religious profession. " tense l:oyalty and of stirring up".. 'An erect figure of a man, the fiercest hostility among white hair in marked 'contrast to Cbristians," the cardinal said: no adeep~tannE~dface, he Is,' at 84, , Christian could! "remain indif:" the' envy of me'll 50 years his ferent" to" it. junior, model of physical fit ,ness, the product of many years "It is either il, human or' di-, of" hard work in rain and cold' 't'ineinstitution," he said. "Cath>- ',and in the heat of day. During 0lics regard the;-Petrine office ,his 60 jTears of religious life,God ~ Ii ~cta~ellt . oil:' € h tis;iaIll " 'tEimpe!-"ed,' h~s 'natural bent for ,unity. It. is a gl'ace-.giving sign, strong physical work. by shut of gift of unity to His. tUng him. 'from one desk to an ChuJ/'dlr .hultnute4 by J'esus atner;' "Christ." "His , ' to positions of great truSt i~ his order speaks well of his abilities, but was ever 'an inhibition to his personal quest for humbler work. Teasingly one might saY' that he was willful PROVIDENCE '(NC).-Dep.lor Ing the unprecedented' inaease enough, 'to do well the tasks as 'of highway deaths tbis year. Signed foe him and stiUfind Bishop Russell J. Ml:Vinney of' time' to indUlge his liking for ,Providence exhorted motoFistl; outi-d'OOr work. Almost Singlehanded to rededicate themselves. to the "In 1952 at the age of 71, when ideals of sensible d'rlving. In adv,lDce' of the' Jtl1y ~, most men' have forcibly resigned "'long" weekend: which annually th~mseives to an inactive life, mounts an appalling toll of lives, Fa~her Leclerc was busy buildin highway mishaps, the bishop' called for a "sense of' respon- ' sibiIity" when a motorist gets. behind the wheel. Schoo~ "It is high time that each of us: BOULDER (NC) ~ A record makes 'a personal rededication' number of'participants is attend to the ideals of good sensible ing the Newman Chaplains driving, and so prevent the- con_ Training School, held at the tinued carnage that makes. the University of Colorado here. highways a menace to life and Some 41 - priests and nine Sis the pursuit o~ h~.ppiness." ters enrolled for the course. The training school is a con centrated orientation program J@5lfil\!" ~obi@ 'fi'@D&~\1' tor persons entering Newman work. it, is directed by experi fr@!i' N®~h~r~~lIj'uil$ AMSTERDAM (NC) The enced Newm~n chaplains. In the final week of the three Dutch Protestant Bible Society~ and the Roman Catholic Bible week training school course, 23 Foundation have agreed to make , more priests will arrive for the a joint translation of the Scrip-· Newman ~nstitute of Catholic Thought. The institute is held in \1;ures in Dutch. Under the venture, which has:' conlunction 'with the training the approval of the Catholic bish- . school to, provide Newman vet erans, with a refresher' course. 0PS, each group has named' two experts apiece to begin a new A translation. The committee is ta ,~id liolng Kong begin with the New Testament. AACHEN (NC) -: Misereor, ,The new ecumenical project German Catholic relief organi here was announced just a month zation" has sent $25,000 to aid "a1;ter ~evelat!ion' that a similar ' flood-strfcket;t Hong Kong. Rock Scripture project in Germany" ,and mud slides caused by' tor . bad, been, drGpped after ,initial rential rains:, have damaged ". ,~ttempts,ata common tl"ansla-"" man"public buildings' and made '. ' lion had failed ".thousandshomeless.
he
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God's
rise
'Prelate Makes ptea For, Safe Driving
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Newman Chaplains 111 Training
. 0 " , '• •
THE ANCHOR-
Oldest Living LaSalette Priest,Marks 60th A,nniversary 0'/ Religio~s Profession
Ca rd inaI Ritte,r Urges Stud,y Of Papa,cy
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7
Signs Agreement With Yugoslavia To Heal Rupture VATICAN CITY, (NC) A representative of the Holy See and the Socialist Repub lic of Yugoslavia have ,signed
an agreement healing a 14-year ,old diplomatic rupture . and pledging both parties to' Seek appropriate solutions to problems 'To Be AUve' of common interest. "Father still causes life to 1'he agreement, signed in Bel grow around him by his awe inspiring fidelity to the vocation ' grade, stipulates ,that official representatiVles of the, two which he chose 60 years ago. parties are to be exchang~d to "To Be Alive" seems to be his facilitate this new relationship. motto, and. everyone who has The Holy See will send an ever known him Can testify that this love for lHe' is Father's apostolic delegate to 'Belgrade trademark, arid that he has left who will also have the fun"tion it on the countless number of of an official diplomatic envoy people who have crossed his to the government. Normqlly a delegate is the Pope's personal path. representative to the Catholics "Naturally reserved and shy, in a nation and does not have Father Leclerc remains as the diplomatic status. Yugoslavia ever-smiling reminder to the in turn will send an envoy who pilgrims of the Attleboro Shrine will re,mesent his nation at the that happiness is not something Vatican., achieved once. and for all, but The agreement to regularize something conquered day by day relations was accompanied by a through an ever-faithful re protocol consisting of four ar.. sponse to one's vocation in life. Father Leclere ticles spelling out particulars of "Today at the age of 84, he is the procedure. A commentary the oldest living priest in the ing almost singlehandedly, the ,entire La Salette Order,. a perfect in L'Oss£rvatore Romano point ed out that the signing of the La Salette Shrine in Enfield, model for the younger genera N. H., which has since become tions of La Saletteswho' seek to documents "means an i'mportant step forward in the slo.w: devel as 'Father could' easily foresee, a spread around them at every opment" in the improvement of center of reconciliation and a level the ,message of 'reconcilia relations between the Churcl1 place of p~aYerarid pilgrimage. tion entrusted to them.", and the socialist country. Crippling Illness 'Step ]Forward' "For all the ,harsh treatment Diplomatic 'relations were to which Father Leclerc subjected his body ,during these ',' ~ terminate:d in 1952 by' Tito's e , ,government and during the ill> many years of hard work, nature finally aven'ged'itseH a few ' tervening 14-Year ,period the years ago by a 'crippling paralyFRESNO (NCj-Bishop Alo Church suffered persecution and ' sis. 'By dint of .prayer an(j,· ex- 'ysius J. WiIliriger;' C.SS.R., of harassment.' cruciating exercises,he won a " Monterey-Fresno, has' called for In recent years the govern return to health. a ''free election among all the ment's attitude" toward the Church in Yugoslavia altered '~StiIl, ,one could not ignore ,farm workers" inv.olved in the ~such' a, warning, and Father Le- current Delano area controversy slowly and for the past two :clerc submitted' to' his superior's where grape pickers went on' years there haS been held a series' of discussions by repre 'suggestion:' that he undertake strike. less stteiiuouS" 'work, work he In a statement released by the sentatives of the Holy See and Yugoslavia w;th, the, goal of ~still does at the Shrine in Attle- diocesan Bureau Of Information, 'planting flowers, trees, the bishop pointed out that the normalizing relations. L'Osservatore's commentary 'shrubs and doing ,a large sharerigbt lJf the fa'rm worker to or on the resulting agreement 'of:the'landscaping on the Sbrine ganize and seek collective bar noted that "important as a step 'gr~tinds.... 'gaining repeatedly has been em , "He h'as always loved to see phasized, but there also are two forward, the protocol can be ,life, grow around him, and his other rights~self-:determination ,considered even more significant because of the possibilities it :feUowreligiotis at the Shrine, and choice of representation. as mucb as theY-envy his physi"In the Delano farm workers holds for future developments." cal fitness; 'are' even more im- dispute, this type of self-deter pressed; by' his spiritual fitness" mination haS been advocated' as a goal for all farm workers," the CHANDIGARH (NC) - The California bishop said. "But in Punjab government here in In C, ,practice it, would seem, that the dia has proclaimed Sunday as a farm workers are being denied CINCiNNATI (NG) - Father this right by those who claim to I 'compulsory holiday in future for shops and commercial establish Paul L. O'C,onnor, S.oT., president speak in their behalf.'" ments throughout the state. of Xavier' University. here, has The reference was to the ef ~been named to a "blue ribbon" forts of the National Farm Work ,committee ,of the Ohio, College era Association and the Agricul f'I''''''~~ Asso.ciationto ,study the possi- tural Workers Organizing Com bilities for_iqter-institutional co- mittee which, <;alled the strike in oper~tion among ,association, the Delano area grape vineyards ~ ~ mem eYS., last September. Novice G. Fawcett, president of Ohio State University and association head, appointed a ~ine-member committee of Ohio PROVIDENCE (NC)-Bishop college presidents and top offi Russell J. McVinney has an 365 rrti<ON'ii' cials, to study cooperative pro nounced the initiation of a re grams dealing with computer tirement program for clergy and ~ II\![EW ~fE[Q)rro~[Q) / know-how, library' operations, a ali lay employees of the diocese traveling scbolar plan, urban af as well as a new benefit fund to fairs and water pollution. pay medical expenses for priests. {~~~~~~
Prelate 'Urgeill' Free "EI'ec t Ions
'boro.
Sunday ,Holiday
Stu d Y" I'ntra-Stat., College' ooperation
, ~ DEBROSS OIL (
Retirement Plan
co. ~ Heating
'On'
W"\fm~li'D 2l-55~41
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ChuW'(:~ SUIP~@Il'~
NOTRE DAME (NC)-An in
stitute on church support will be
held at -the University of Notre
Dame's center for continuing
educatiod from Aug. 2 to 4.
Father' John' K. Reynolds, of
Hyattsville, Md:, general chair
man 'of the planning committee,
said-the meeting will discuss va~ riousi aspects· of churcb support. .including wills, truSts and insur 'an<:e:i '
.
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at
NEW· BEDFORD-ACUSHNET 'CO-OPERATIVE ,BANK .\.".
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,NEW BEDFORD,. MASS.
115 WILLIAM ST. .
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8
THE. ANCHOR-!?iocese of Fan Ri~er- Thurs., July 7, 1.9,66
Women Support Job Corps
Grads Take Brief, Nostalgic . G~a01Ce
WASHINGTON (NC) - F-oUJ' nationwide organizations of wo men urged the Senate subcom mittee 'on .manpower, employ ment and labor to support e*, ".ension and expansion of pro grams under the Economie Op portunity Act of 1964, especially the' Women's Job Corps. Mrs. Joseph Willen, president of the National Council of Jew.. ish Women, appeared as spokes man before the committee. She also represented the National Council of Catholic Women, the ~ational Council of' Neg~ Nomen and the United Church Women. . She .reminded that the foul' Qrgan[zations banded together and formed Women in Commun it)' Service (WICS), which con tracted with the Office of Eco" omic Opportunity to recruit and screen disadvantaged women be tween 16 and 21 for the Womem. Job Corps. Mrs. Willen said WICS has screened·7,500 eligible girls after interviewing .more than 20,000. C;he said the program has met with outstanding success and de serves to be continued. Statements'were filed with the subcommittees on behalf of the other organizations. Margaret Mealey, executive director, in a statement for the National Coun cil of Catholic Women, said the program "could bring thousands of girls hope for and help to • better life for themselves aJlIl future generation." ,
~t S~~<dl~D1t l((6arS
By Mary Tinley Daly
This post-commencement time in universities, colleges,
even some high schools, means reunion for old grads, a
brief, 'nostalgic, "backward-turn"-backward"period, if for
only a week-end. Hearts quicken in anticipation, yet there's
the inevitable self-conscious glad to see you!" (Your name is
shyness. Here we'll be, you Mary.) "Did you marry that boy
think, classmates ag'ain after you were dating?"
each has long since packed Yes, you admit truthfully,yoU
away cap and gown, has "picked ,up the torch" tossed to that long-ago gradu~ting class by the commence
ment speaker
(what was his
name?) and en
tered "the wide
world of chal
lenge." "T h e
torch," the im
mediate 0 n e,
was probably
an employment
a p p I i cat ion; transcript for graduate school, a marriage license. Light of that
torch has alternately brightened and dimmed, sputtered often, but never quite been extin guished. . Now, seemi~gly eons later, you're back at Alma.MatEir, back on the campus you knQw so well. All these new buildings? That's progress for you! It's a campus strangely. quiet, eleared out of present-day stu dents, gussied up for th~ arriyal of the old grads following recent commencement activity, faculty bone-weary after the academic year but still friepdly and wel coming. . Rememberi.ng Teachenl You glimpse a .favorite . teacher, one who remembers you! And. another; who even recalls your married' name and asks abqut your children,' How. 'do they do ·it? . : ... ' . . . . Though. you're well' 'along in maturity, 'probably as old now as these teachers were when you' sat in their· classrooms, the for: .mer teacher-pupil relationship asserts itself and y'ou find your self somewhat ba'shful, hesitant, almost tongue-tied in this per son-to person confrontation. With trepidation, you dress for the class banquet. (Why didn't you start that diet earlier' or stick with it more strictly?) Mentally, you go over the. roster' in the class yearbook, su're you'll remember every classmate, won der if they'll remember you. You don't,. and neither do they. You rely heavily on the nametags with their large letter'" ing, if you can see them in time. You find yoursel~ engulfed in a pair of arms. "Connie! rm SO
Spanish Missioners Head Start Pioneers'
married him. And so, probably,
did the unknown "Connie"-at
least she must have dated the
guy before she married him.
Say, come to think of it, peJ;haps
"Connie" didn't marry at all, but
it's too late to do anything about
that now. Your classmate is
affectionately 'embracing some,.
body else. (Maybe' it's. the real
Connie!)
, 'Another' gives you' a peck' on.
the cheek, holds you at arins'
length by the shoulders, looks
you'up and down with the'prag matic: . .
"My, . how you've changed.
'You really have changed!" You counter with the cliche .that "Time doesn't stand still for any of Ius, does it~" wonder.:" ing, however: "Change? For better? For worse?" Rationaliz ing, and to save face, y'ou kid yourself that Ruth, beil)g one ,of' PRESIDENTS ALL: Org'anization heads at Jesus 'the smarter ones of the class, Mary Academy, ,Fall River, are, fI:ont f.rom left, Rita: La wouldn't have brought up the matter if the change hadn't been flamme, National Honor Society president; Janet Pouliot, for the better. But you still Catholic Students' Mission Crusade; rear,Linda Dugas, wonder •••• JMAO president; Madeleine Vand<a;l, Sodality prefect. Visitation 'Guild One Who Fainted Guild members will meet at You inti'oduce yourself to an- . 8 tonight at the home of MI'8. other, using the name you've had . John Connors, Camp Ground for ·years, so well known ,to your
Rd., No. Eastham. creditors, ·then quickly supply Domi nican' Sister, California' Mi.ssioner,
'your . maiden name. .. . ' A ham and bean supper. fol lowed by a square' dance will "Of course! I remember you. , ,'tisits Home. in . Germany You're·.the one who fainted' in . ' .,.' , . , be held on the church grounds, ... C)·,.,-., The wh.enth.e..·.receivedthEdrmiss.ioll. biology. when ,we h a d t 0 cu t up ,L,OS.A.NGEl,ES.. (,.N 01
Massasoit Rd" No. Eastham, 6IIl the frog!" , la'st time· Sister .Eusebia was crosse.s.·
Saturday night, July 16. '" That's fame for you~. . I ' ho~e, everythi ng was gem~tlich The 20 German-born nUllS llad . Supper will be served in the Gradually, all the 'old· grads -tranquiI;peilceful;:, been aWBY froiD. home without a hall at 6:30 arid the dance will get themselves" sorted out, .and ' 'That ",~as' 53 years ago.. Sinc~ 'visit' for an average oj: 3,7 ye~lrs . be at 8. Cha'rlie Tilley will be it's almost the sarrie as being : then many a tear has been shed. Times c~anged, jets came; rules the ea)ler. . .... back in school again, 1!S .tongues:sister Eusebia is from Germany. were altered and they were' p,er Tickets are available hem ·clatter· getting caught upon When she left in 1913 to come to mitted Ii visit back home. . guil~ members. what has happened since. we California. ,as' a missioriary, 'flipped' those mortarboard tas- Europe wag. ill the' last days of sels. i,ts Grand' Age. . ' But not quite. Now she hal; 'flown home on There is the inevitable sadness her first, visit. She'll' meet her at the ga,s in the ranks. sister, who has a store' Of stories Some of the dolls are dolls no about her daY3 as a teacher ill longer, some of the quiet, more the dictator dHY~ of Hitler and bookish have bloomed as poised, Stalin, and hE~r brother-in-law in'teresting persons. who was kidnapped by the Rus sians because he was a scientist One constant you note among and a ll:liversity 'professor, and what Michael Field calls "the can recall harsh years behind the enchanting miracles' of change": Iron Curtain. that those who were. kind and Sister Eusebia is one of 20 charitable as students have reDominican Siliters of Mission ·tained and even augmented that San Jose who l,~ft here for a six virtue, "the greatest of these." week vi:lit to homes'in Germany they never exp,~cted to see again
After 53 Years
DoCtors Post Rewards In Abortion Fight
W,EAF(
SAN'JUAN (NY)-:rhePue~~ . Sh h
Rican .Med!cai ASliociatioit in an oeS' at ,Fit MIAMISHORE.S (NC)....:..S~an~ . "unpre~eaerijed step agaillst'abor,. "lliE fAMILY SHOE· STORE" ish missionaries in· Florida;- Cal'': -tions, has posted rewards' up . t e ' , J" IL.:' . II" .' '.' . ifornia and.' the Southwest in ef" $10,000 for,"evidenceleliding to .0, fect ~onduct~d' t~~ rrst·. "~f.a~< ~nv~cti.6A·c;>~cri!Uip'arab?~ti~iii, '.' Start programs slI1ce theIr m~,,. ISts. - :' .,,-... : >- .:' ",",. ." '. , ..: . - : ." , .... ;. ," , .... ~i.~nsw.~re .. iio.t'.Qnly:~ate~ji~tic~t ' ~. ,Dr.;:::j:'iiis:::S-ala~;·a:;.sociatioii'·;'., ': :: ,'3' ~U~TH"'STA~Et. .'.' . ~'?:t.~r~ bi:tt.,tr~!~il)? _S~'n~plll:, f~r.}px~sid~n,t, di~clo.s~;: ·,~b~ . ~,ofief . FDIt,RiYev.; ",::~. OS .•~.~',1 eJ.vI.hzmg the fronber, a pnest- ·during".a: press' ·conference.. He . , , . ". .
hist~r~an !!tated ,her~. : " said: "Puerto Rico,iS getting a '
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-The:.off~!"ili part Of..the· assO elation's efforts 10 'curb increasSrontiers in north Florida."" ·.. ·liig·ab<5rti6n~' iii 'this islaiid; Prtis 'Ac~shnet"Mass:W:r, 3.44$7 f :,. "In . these "'co·mpollOdSl'.. he ent anti-abo.rti,oll laws; amended eSpecialMilk ~atedi "the India'ls w~retaught· 'two years ago, 'makea erime the .• Hom'ogeniied Vii; lD ,Milk. ". mot only the .. tenet~ of Christian': failure ,to report ~ny_ i.ncomplete e . Buttermilk .. ity,but also· reading, .writing, . OJ;' c;Qmplicated.abortion, and also .. :,,-. 'troPiCCJ~i:( Orange' Juice' agr!cultu.te,·~aEi>entr:~" si~girJ{, : 'lJ1ak~, e<I~l;lliy ~i~ty. t~e 'physie- , •. ,~o£f~~ Gri<f (hoc:; ,MiI~:.... ;iO . mlSSlOQ compounc)s a~ong tile
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Few! Too' Many Dairy Farmers For This Confused Columnist By Joseph
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NOTRE DAME (NC) - TW6 hundred nuns who are house~ keepers or food service directol'lll at Catholic convents and insti tutions attended a five day work shop at the University of Notre Dame here. The nuns represented 46 re ligious communities throughout the United States and Canada. The program was held under the auspices of the Food Re search Center for Catholic In stitutions, Stonehill College, of which Brother Herman Zaccar elli, C,S.C., is director. The combination of profes sional in-service training and spiritual formation which the workshop provided "should en able the Sisters to find continued happiness in their work and real ize its full spiritual and apostolic dimensions," the Brother said.
kind librarian will help a begin ning library visitor feel at home, and free to ask for assistance. Cookbooks are among my fa vorite reading material, not only during the Summer months but all year' long. Many of these are not only informative but ~ntertaining. This year we- plan to spend a couple of weeks at a Summer cottage and since space won't allow me to trans port all my cookbooks I must bring only a couple-which is very difficult. My choices as of this writing are the "New Eng land Cookbook" by Eleanor Early, the new "Good House keeping Cookbook" and a new little gem on the market, "The Fast Gourmet Cookbook" by Poppy Cannon. This latter is in pocket book form.
Nuns Superior Gener01~ Shuns 'Mother' Title
This following recipe given to me by Mrs. Manuel Perry of St; Anthony of Padua parish in Fall River may not have anything to do with Summer reading but it could be a high point of good Summer eating. 1 3 1
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1966
200 Nuns Attend Food Workship
The time has come for my semi-annual search for manure which is getting progressively more difficult to find. The number of dairy farmers is dwindling and those who remain use their manure to fertilize their fields in an 'attempt to grow as much of , their own feed as they can. reading everything as it came, from the A's on. This is one way . Last Spring we had quite a tQ develop a, well-rounded ,novel experience which I reader, but a little help from a
:Miuy'sCustard Pie unbaked pie shell whole eggs egg separated teaspoon teaspoon salt nutmeg
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teaspoon vanilla
cup sugar
cups warm milk
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THE 'ANCHORThurs., July 7,
MarilyllU Roderick
think worth passing on to you. • My mother has a number of eousins who own dairy farms in Westport,' so I asked her to con tact one of them to see if. they would be' willing to part with some manure. This she did and then told me that the cousin she had talked to had requested that ][ take a few young trees with me as he needed some for the front of his house. So I dug up several small maples, placed them in the trunk of the car, and proceeded to the farm. When I arrived, nobody was bome so I loaded up on manure and showed the children the barn and a nearby pig sty. The children' were enjoying them selves tremendously, therefore we lingered for about an hour letting them get their fill of the £arm and hoping all the time that the oWJ;ler would show up so I cou' Id' ' t'han'k hl'm for hl's kindness:' He finally did arrive and after introducing myself and the childfEm I "chatted for 15' minutes'or so,'then gave him the trees. At thl'S pOl'nt I was sll'ghtly befuddled becfluse a large num ber of old trees surrounded his house both front and hack but !aSI'de brushed questioning nature al1d :ny dl'dn't thl'nk anything more of it. Next day, however the mystery was explained when my mother received a phone call
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SASTER'S SALUTATiON: One'11 of the t 97h sisters labor-' f h ingin 'God's vineyard 0 Brownsvl e gree S er new s ep herd.
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OTTUMWA (NC)-Sister Mary Benita Pieper, chairman of the division of sciences and mathe matics at Marycrest College in Davenport, has been elected to . .t . . a slx-year erm as supenor gen eral of the Congregation of the Humility of Mary, which has 400 nuns serving here in' Iowa and in Montana, Illinois,. Minnesota" Arizona and California., t d Sister Mary Benita, 48, elec e at the. congregation's general chapter meeting at Ottumwa Heig~ts College, announced she prefers not to be called "Mother." She succeeds Mother Mary Nicholas ~cheetz. A native of Lee County, Iowa, Sister Mary
joined the sisterhood in the ,white of the sepa In McNOImarQl Suggestiol11l ' , Benita 1938. She is an alumna of Mary rated egg and beat while grad . crest College and holds degrees ually adding the sugar, nutmeg
TARRYTOWN (NC)-,-Volun "1 believe that not only ~very . from St. Louis University and! . and, salt: Be.at uritll whitfis stiffr tary stints for women in public young college .man, 1,>ut also. the University of Iowa. ., ~), In a small saucepan warm service in the fields of education, . every woman graduate should the milk to just. a little n1Or~ health and welfare were recom be' encouraged to Ilerve her tha'n lUkewarm.' Rem()ve 1ro~ . mended by Rep. Hugh L. Carey . 'country in some· voluntary effort ,Revised Guide heat and add the vanilla. of New York in the commence or engage in somechurch-spon WASHINGTON (NC) - The 3) In a good sized bowl beat ment at Marymount College sored work in educational or the 3 eggs and the remaining egg here. health or social welfar.e which Department of Education, Nat ional Catholic Welfare Confer Noting that Secretary of Deserves the country and the com yolk slightly. Add the slightly R rt M N tl .t ence, has announced publication beaten eggs to the milk and mill: fense obe camara recen y mum y. of the eighth annual revised seem to go hand in hand and the well. Fold in. the beaten egg. had suggested a two-year term Ali Americans long le~surely days are the per .white. of national service for all young "Further," he continued, "I edition of the Official Guide to fect time to catch up on all those . men, ':::arey said, "I would go would not restrict this to recent Catholic Educational Institutions books you've been wanting to 4) Pour into the' unbaked pie f\uther." and Religious Communities. open during the year. If there ,shell and bake i.n an oven that graduates but to all Americans, ,has been p~eheated to 450· but young and old, who are in a po ~_#o##.,.,.,.,#'#'_.,#'.,.,.,#'_.,.,_ is a particular 81'tl'on to serve as teachers or . I subject thatb you 1, then lowered to 425«> as the pie f:v"" SOisters on vcr would llke to earn more a ou " ... aides in education or health and S . th e answ er, iliI placed in it. Ii ummer course IS TlI"aveling Workshop social service. but if this isn't feasible, then 5) Cook for no longer than 30 "Perhaps the time has come," reading books on the topic is the minutes_ The filling will harden WASHINGTON (NC) - Five be said, "to consider federally Aluminum or Steel lIlext best thl'ng as it cools nun-specl'alists in a variety 01. ,944 County Street " supported midlife institutes for One of the most enjoyable fields are conducting an institute those who choose a second ca NEW BEDFORD. MASS. · hre""'lIo on inter-group relations, spon S ummers I rememb er was one Il:xpio'lns Red, T reer in public or private volun WY 2-6618 · k ' a co11e g "",U sored by the National Catholic tary activities in education or d UrIng w h'lCh I t 0 0 e il;;... . • A ' ""onference for Interracial Jusd H COUI"Se in Melville an awBrro latin mencCll.... other related fields." , " f . I tice, at the Georgetown Univer thome. A whole era 0 writll1g BOSTON (NC)~A Marykno!ll. Carey's daughter Alexandria, and a style of living came alive sity Summer school here. the eldest of his 13 children, nun who spent 11 years in Latin l' k h ".Lfor me and one discovery led to The "trave mg wor s op ... was among the Marymount h h Id America said here "communism another. As I was single then, directed by the nuns w o o graduates, The degrees were is a· bogey-man that appeall'B .. 1 'I" al much of my studying was done doctorates In SOCIO ogy, C IDIC presented by Francis Cardinal . e~'ery ,time there· is a change h I ' t t· 1 1 at the seashore and I don't know . psyc oogy, 10 ema lOna re a Spellman of New York. . Th ey WI'11 what kind of figure I cut with i2' one .'of, the, governmentlJ tions and economlCS. III huge volume of the Concord there."
oonduct similar workshops in .. storyteller's works propped OIl Sister Maria Pia Remmes ad Toledo, Cleveland, New Haven,. my stomach but "What are you .. ded: "Although 1 do not think New York, San Antonio and • : • . . reading?" was a much better ~ we should ignore thecommuniEJt Milwaukee. Coordinator of t h e : .. ' • opener than "Haven't I met yoo threat, I do think that we should workshop b~re is J~hn J. O'Con.., • some place before?" . ' "no~ be ',tc;>o hasty in pinning c~m- nor, Georgetown professor of • INCORPORATED 1937 •
from her country cousin asking when the trees arid I would ar rive. Needless to say, I had gone· to the wrong farm. " In the Kitchen . Every ,advertisement that de picts Summer living seems to be illustrate,d. with" a. drawing or photograph of a contented look-· lng individual reclining in a hammock, book in hand. Sum mer relaxation and reading J'ust
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Children' find this season' III munist labels on any radlcall history. II a m rio perfect one to frequent the I i-' ideas that! come out 01. L NUIllil participating in the. II II brary and discover the'faseinat- : An\erica. ,'('.0 workshop are Sister Rose Mau- II III ing worlds within the pages· of . SOme of tI;le ideas,· saidSiste1l'· reen of the Sisters Formation iii II books. Most libraries in tQe ~rea. Mllri\l, "might ~the .an~'Yer to Program, Maryknoll, (N.Y.) iii ". l1li allow their young readers to soine of ~he' prob1Emls facing t!ll:e 'Juniorate; Sist~r M. Audrey III II borrow more books at vacation countries down'there'." Kopp, lSocioiogy and anthropoI,;, III .. time than they do during thta:. • 'The' MaSSachUSetts-born nWl ogy professor, Marylhurst Ore.. : JAMES H. COLLIN'S, C.IE., Pres. : school year and even the very at present is establishing a chef'lJ College; Oregon; Sister ,M.·Man-. 'Ill' Registered Civil and 'Structural Engin'eer If beginning reader isn't wo' young institute for mothers in the Boo gan, chairman, history depart:". 9 II to get into the library habit. ton area under sponsorship of ment, Webster College, Webster iii Member Not'· nol Society ~rofessibnol E:'lgi,neers • Joe frequently speaks' of' bill the. 'Bost~ ., Housing Authorit) Groves, Mo.'; Sister~. Eric, psy~ III!FRANCISL COLLINS,· JR., freas. • .early library experiences whea United Commun~ty servicell ehology professor, Notre 'Dame .. THOMAS 1(, COLLBNlS, Sec'y. • be was too shy to ask assistance Afte:r .seeing the instit~te throUgh .College, St. Louis;: and Sister M: : : . from the librarians and thereo Me'final stages she pians to JIe- Yolande, dtairman department· • ACADEMy BUILDING FALL RI'fER, MASS: • fore would progress from' sheH fsum to South America in aome ". of socia,l science, St. Teresa Col- . • • .. shelf and ae.:tiozi to:)$edi_"':J~ci,~~:' .. '.' .' ;..',- ,, '.,Lllege, Wi~Mi!lA'L' ' • • • • • • ill•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.
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10
Jewish, ,Meeting Gives Ovation To D@mefilican
THE ANCHOR~
Thurs., July 7, 1966
Communist Party
In U. S. Shows New Activnty
CHICAGO (NC)-A D0 minican theologian assertecti here that the Second Vatican Council's statement on the
WASHINGTON (NC) Reports emanating from the 18th convention of the Com munist J;:arty U.S.A., largely
a closed affair, created the impression that the party was making gains in the ranks of college students and within re ligious communities. The Federal Bureau of In vestigation here has warned for some time that the U,S. Reds were making a play for young people. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said in a report that' they concentrated on youth re cruitment in 1964 and 1965.. ' What gains the'Red party has made have not yet been ac curately assessed. The FBI warned that it would try to put communist' apologists on cam puses as speakers wherever they could, and apparently speakers ,at the party's New York convention were gauging its" "impact" on college you'th by the numbers that turned out FIRST ADDRESS: Bishop Medeiros addresses the .huge thrOJ)g gathered 3.tthe Air for these talks. ' ' port a~ soon as he set foot On the soil of Brownsyille. Claim 50 Million It was noted that' the 18th convention was' the first the party has held in seven years. ,Whether this could be taken to indicate a resurgence of the party is not ,yet cle;lr,' , " Eadyin ,June, ,the bureau 9f. going to New Guinea, "pra~tic~d intelligen¢e and research of the" LOS'ANGELES (NC) _ Juan The ll-year-old association landings with, X-15 pilot Bob U.S. State D~pa~tmen~ re'por~ed . Alva'rado; a World War II lighter now seiids one-sixtli of 'all ihat a survey mdlcated the ov~r.:-, pilot and onetime resident of 'the 'Amerkaillay Catholic petsonnel'White in 9,000-foo1: high valleys ,,' ~all members, of t,he Commum~t i-iot-riddenWatts 'area 'stood to Church missions overseas for 'up n,or",th." party ,round ,', the, worl~ .. had, before :j2m'es' Francis Cardinai , work' at' their particular' occupa"We'll 1?e' flying single engine ~ropped sharply, due, ,m ~ McIntyre ,of 'Los Angeles, and , tional skills - teaching,nursing,,' CeSSnas,'.'Alvarado explained. , IImall .. i>a.rt t? thedeb?cle )t solemnly 'enrolled as a member flying, 'printing, bookkeeping, "I'll' 'be responsible for· light ,~xperlencedm Indonesia. last of the 'Lay Mission Helpers As':' farmif1g, plumbing,' carpentry maintenance;' Anything more ·Fa l l . ., t , I ,"p" " t . t· f t' hd' '
and dozens ,of others. will have to be done in Guate. 'd'Ica, perlo ' ar y SOCia ion 0 he arc lOcese. A,' S oVle Darl,-eyed, 'rugged Alvardo, mala City;;' Alvarado, 'who lives in. Los
Life," said there are 50 million who iii in his early 40's, figures - During WoJrld War II Alva Communi'st party members in Nietos, is leaving for Huehuete . he'll he flying' "some 30 or 40 rado trained at Luke :~ield, Ariz" the w~rld while the U.S" sur.:. na'rigo in northern Guatemaia'. hours a: week." ' 'in P-39 and P-40 fighters. He There he will 'work as a pilot vey placed the number at, 43.8 million. It is interesting tnat flying persoimel ar.d supplies for "I'vcl seen some color slides of also, trained in night fighters in 1964 the findings of the' . the Maryknoll Fathers who have the a;:ea; Average altitude is and was made an Instructor in Soviet and U.S. surveys were schools, clinics and churches about 6,500 feet. Most fields are fighters and :iri instrument fly • closer-44.7 million according to , throughout the mountain region. , dirt strips. There are some val- 'ing." He was on his way to pick Moscow; 44.5' million according leys where once you come in for up a P-51' for· assignment 'for 'Practiced (,andings a landing, you've got to land. overseas when the war ended. , to Washington. Alvarado' was one of 36 men ' There';; no, going around again,"' . He came out of the service z Decree Remains ' captain.' The' New York convention, and women enrolled by Cardinal' he said, ' $25 a Month In voluntee,ring to go over fIlccording to reports, 'also heard McIntyre in the Lay Mission ., se'as as' a' Lay MI'ssJ',on Helpe'r, Alv~ rado and David Morman, the, time is ripe to seek gains He,lpers Association #lfter Mass another Mission Helper pilot Alvarado said he is motivated by among religionists. Much was in St. Paul's Church here. "a determination to serve God by made of the fact that one speak helping "thosEl who ;ain't got it er had studied for the priest 'so good~" hood and now was a Communist party member. It' was said he had taken Change NCJ'mes simple vows, and also that he VATICAN' CITY (NC) -The had spent' 0I1e year in -~ semi Holy See has llhanged the names nary. He was reported as urg of four archdioceses in the Congo ing' the convention to make it in line with the government's clear that there is "no contra':' adoption of CongoleSE! names for diction between being' a com the See cities. munist 'and a communicant." Several times in recent days Catholic spokesmen have made ~-------clear the Church's position on this point, When the Communist party SHEET MErAL· in Italy sought to influence the J. TESlER, Prop. June elections in that country INDUSTRIAL by creating the impression the RESIDENTIAL Church had changed its stand c;m commUllism, the Vatican COMMERCIAL 373 New Boston Road issued a state'ment saying: "The 253 Cedar c'l., New Bedford decree, of July 8, 1949, which Fall River OS 8-5677 WV ~-~':!2~! t h rea ten s excommunication against those who profess Marx ist doctrines, remains in vigor." .' ~lIIl1l1l11ll11ll1l1l1l11l1l11l1l11l1l11ll1ll11l11l11l1l11l1l11l1l1l1l11ll11l1l1l1l11l1l11illllllllllllllllll1l11l1l11l1111II1II1II1I1IIliil!
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Jews has been criticized "be cause it does not contain ali explicit acknowledgment of Catholic guilt for anti-Semitm crimes in the past." "I' wish it did," declared FCllJo ther Benedict M. Ashley, O.P"I> president of the Aquinas Insti tute of Philosophy and Theolo~ River Forest, Ill. ,The first Catholic priest t\Ii address the fraternal' Order oR B'nai B'rith, world's largest Jewish organization, was given a five-minute standing ovatioJii when he concluded his talk at the organization's convention here. Father Ashley appeared witli Dr. Joseph L. Lichten, nationall director of intercultural affairs for B'nai B'rith's anti-defamae tion league, in a discussion o~ relations between Catholics anell Jews as a result of the Seee ond Vatican Council. Father Ashley denounced all persecutions as incompatible with the true Catholic Faith. Catholics must look on other re Jigi'ons ,with genuine sympathy and a desire to cooperate witiiQ them, he said. ' , '.Get to Work ~he problem .of convershlll is no longer the central poiJllt 'of activity for€ h ristians," be . declared. "In the process iii ,dialogue it will not be' neceSsa'., ,for men of other religions .. - repudiate the esSence of wnal , .they also believe. " '''The idea of persecuting the Jew because he remains a Jew., the Dominican continued, "be 'comes an attack on the veJl1/ -thing'which Jews and Christian&!.
have in common. Thus, the Christian who understands the teaching of the council will sa.v 'to himself every time that he sees a crucifix, 'To persecute 'the Jews or any other man fM his race or religion is to kill Christ. If I am anti-Semit~ . then I am a Christ killer." Father Ashley' said it will not be easy to implement the mandates of the Vatican com~ cil, "but our faith in its essence demands that we get to work.,
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$181,300 undergraduate psychi '~tric nursing' grant from the National Institute of Mental '§ , , ii Heaith has been made,to Mount .~ " St,'Mary's College. Sister M; Re.:.' CARDINAL GREETS PItOT: J::lmes Francis Cardin~l '==, I~'O' E becca, college president, said the ,'~cI~t~re'of Los Angeles ~,hats with Juan Alvarado, who '.§ , : '.~ .grant, which runs from 'July 1 h' II d' L M' . "H I' '. § 1= , through June 30 197iowili assist' ~!3 ~?r<? ~ as!l ,ay ,lSS;OJl. e per. ~h:arado, a .fIghter == ' . ,' ' . ':' "~e"integratioil ~£ mehtal' health' ,pIlot ,m.:World .War II w,hf)': grew up ~t:l, ~he ..Watts, d}strict, -~, '':' , Ma:cl.eei'n'~S,': .= ~ncepts into the 'tot.lil 'Jmhiin&!',· of ,Los Angeles, will fly ,misi>ionaries ~nd' mission materials" "~UNION,WHA"F, '!AIRHAVEN _. ,~", ,~:~ '997•• 3;1. ~ "',,\,~..,. ,-(w"''':' "",,',lNrl'icuhun.' ,,~ ",:,.')','i"~ "",", ""ill- ..the" ~o,uD:t~~DI"~, ,Guatemala.. NO., r,hQ.~, ,,:\.,'~ t ~;"; 'tt ,) :~ ,i ,~>,,~wlWJJJliJ.w","lfHutllllliIlIH~lIiitMHIHIl·PI1'1!nin!!.!M!lPMMr"'''iwMm''lIIlMlIIlHIUIIItlAAt~,t,
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Superior General Sets Major Goa'· For Brotherhood
ffl'f ANOIURThurs., July 7, 1966
Co.nadian Prelate Suggests Rules For ECMmenism
NEWARK (NO) - The new superior general of the Christian Brothers of Ire land already has decided upon one major goal-providing HI per cent of the members of the far-flung community for missionary work in Latin Amer ica. Brother Arthur A. Loftus, first American to head the 164 year-old brotherhood, said in an interview here this objective is in keeping with the request of the late Pope John XXIII that U. S.. religious communities "tithe" personnel to overcome the priest and Religious shortage in Latin American nations. At Essex Catholic High School here where he was serving as principal when elected to the top post of the brotherhood in April, Brother Loftus discussed his plans. The community at the high school is the largest main tained by the Brothers.' The superior general returned here from Rome and presided at ~eremonies at which 32 Brothers took their final vows. He dis 'closed that he will visit estab lishments of the Brothers in this ~ountry and in Canada before buckling down to his duties as superio'r general at the brother hood's headquarters' 'in Dublin, Ireland, in mid-August. Specia.l Cause
will
MONTREAL (NO) - The ecumenical movement needs action rather than jus t words, Paul Emile Cardinali
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OFFICIAL WELCOME: Mayor Tony Gonzales, 'center, greets Bishop Medeiros at the Brownsville International Airport. Sam Perl, lay rabbi of Temple BethEl in the Tex·as See city,' is at the left, and U.S. District Judge Reynaldo Garza, left background.
Scores OEO Stand on Birth' Control Prelate·,., Soys Office Abandons Neutrality
. TheB'rothers launch theIr· Latin American ~xpan~ion in WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop Until now OEO funded bi'rth January when they' will opeJ.l. a Paul F. Tanner, general secre . control programs under the con n.ew ~Ch~OI at. a M;rYkn~1 mt~s- 'tary of the National' Catholic tention that it was responding Slon HI, .requlpa, er,u,. 1'0 ,.er .. Welfare Conference, has accused to eommunity requests. No~, ~oftu8 saId.. T~e expan.slon ,~lall . the Office of Economic . .oppor OEO has become an active. proOf ~IIS peLt Pt~oJeActs, .he tunity of abandoning "neutral , ponent of birth co~trol p~ograms. JS o~tet d , Fails. to Reply a d ml . e ' . see., a 111 merJl)a 'ity" on birth control in favor of ~s the specIal f,ause o~, the Amer-, "outright advocacy." In February of this year a lCan Brothers, he Sal? Bishop Tanner sharply criti- memorandum of law challenging Brother Arthur always has cized a memorandum by Sargent . the sta,tutory authority of OEO been expansion-minded. From Shriver, director of the O;EO, to fund birth control programs 1954 to 1960 when he served as outlining the agency's policy in was sent to Shriver ,by' the Legal Department of N.C.W.C. American provincial, he pre- regard to family planning. sided over the opening of 13 new The head' of the U. S. bishops' No reply has been received. By schOols, including, Essex Cath- secretariat said Shriver had his own administrative discreolic. Prior to that, he hlld been "mov~d into this area without president of Iona College,' New 1C0ngressional authorization." . Pope Paul Names Rochelle, N. Y., for six years and 'Remedy for Po,"Cr~y' dU~ing t~at period the college "It is a cruel thing to offer to Brazilian Bishop enJoyed ItS greatest growth. the poor as a remedy for their ROME (NC)-Pope Paul 'VI poverty what 'Theodore Roose- has named an ex-German sol velt called 'race suicide,'" the dier and prisoner of war as 'co bishop said. ' adjutor bishop with right of suc The text of Bisho'p Tanner's cession to the apostolic prelature statement, in part, follows: of Jurua, Brazil.' DUBLIN (NC)-Sean Lemass, Mr. Shriver's revealing boast The new prelate, .Father HeinIrish premier, addressed the an "that it was OEO which first rich Rueth, C.S.C., was born Jan. nual Catholic Sodal Study Con created. these (governme~t- 14, 1913, at Essen-Steele, Ger gress here and warned that the spon/lored birth control) pro-' . many. He was ordafned in 1939, question of a country's nature .grams" makes it clear that O~O • and went into the German army has abandoned' "government . soon' after. He was taken pris must be continually answered.. which was the. oner by the Russians during the He asked the Irish people to neutrality" w!nmit themselves to a form of espoused poiicy when support . battle of Leningrad. After his liberation in 1945, government, and then defend it. for the war on poverty was Pointing to acts of vandalism, being sought, in favor of out- Father Rueth taught for four years in the Holy Cross Fathers' a reference to the recent destruc . right advocacy of birth control. seminary. Sent to the Porto tion of the Nelson monument in Walter apostolic vicaJ'iate in downtown Dublin, he said that Christian Brothers Brazil, he was named soon after the acts were not so bad as the t.olerance they were greeted Have New Provincial as vicar delegate of Jurua. with. NEW YORK (NC) - Brother At the same meeting, Douglas Augustine Benedict, F.S.C., 52, Theology Award Hyde, an English convert and president of De ~a Salle College, PROVIDENCE (NC)-Father author, sought a strengthening Washington, D.C., has been ap Paul K. Meagher, G.P" of Wash . of principles on the part of pointed provincial of the Chl'is adults so they could give young tian Brothers' New York dist . ington, D. C., has been named as the 1966 recipient of the people something to respect. He rict. Cardinal Spellman Award for added'it was'little wonder teen He was' named by Brother Theology by the Catholic The agers became beatniks, as the adult wOl'ld gave them nothing Charles Henry, F.S.C., supeJ'ior logical Society of America. The to respect or even to accept as general in Rome, to succeed announcement was made at the Brother Bertrand Leo, F.S.C., society's annual convention here. worth having. who recently was elected an as sistant to the superior general. Fund Over Goal A native of Minneapolis, Minn. f"_ BALTIMORE (NC)-The '$11 Brother Augustine joined the U .t/)illion goal of the· Cardinal's brotherhood in 1931. Prior' to Campaign for expansiol~ projects heading the Washington college, in the Baltimore archdiocese is he taught in Albal1Y, New York, Est.' 1897 over the top. Auxiliary Bishop Barrytown atld Lincolndale, N.Y. ,Bui,ld.ers Supplies T. Austin Murphy,' campaign In his new post he ·will direct ehairman, said $'12,2:3,6,679 al- activities of:650 Brothers .in 42 '343 Purchale Street ' ..eady· has beert sUbsc~}bed, with .educatio'nal institutions in three . New 'Bedford ·14 per cent of pledge.·cards dill-' states' and . three African' COUll.• WY 6-5661
Scores Threats .To Government
tion, Shriver has moved into' · this area without congressional .authorization. . . It ~s .a cruel thing to offer to · ~. poor as a remedy for their · Poverty what Theodore Roose velt called "race suicide.'~ As Bishop' Wright has so well said, "Parents lose none of their dignity' nor their rights when · they happen to be economically embarrassed; when they ask those in charge of the common good for food, education, shelter or opportunity for their chil dren, they should not be handed contraceptives by the political authorities. When they ask 'eco nom'ic opportunity,' they should · not be directed by representa tives of public authority to pri · vate agencies to' receive contra ceptives indirectly provided by the state.
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CHARLES F. VARGAS
Gets Papal Honor
254 ROCKDALE AVENUE
WASHINGTON (NC) - Sister Columba, vice-pn-sident of Trin ity College here, has been awarded the Pro Ecclesia et - Pontifice Medal in recognition - of 25 years of service on the faculty and as an administrator at the liberal arts college for women.
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Leger told the 18th biennia.l con gress of North and South Amer ica here. The Montreal prelate sug gested three rules 'for activating "noble sentiments." The first, he labelled "The Principle of Self-Discipline." Under this rule, he said, a per son should "say nothing and do nothing that will be contrary to the ecumenical ideal and the eager search for Christian unity.'" The second rule, he suggested, would require Christians'to act "together every time we can." Paraphrasing President Ken nedy, he explained this rule bSi'" saying, "Let us not ask ourselves what the other churches shoulcll do to encourage Christian unity, let, us rather as}{ what God e)! peets us to do ourselves." The third rule would require prayer to accompany all efforw toward unity. It will be praye.., t.he cardinal said, that finally "keeps us' united and confidem in our efforts." 'Common Undertaking' Cardinal Leger shared 3he platform with Archbishop lake · vos,primate of the Greek Ortho dox Church of North and South America; the Rev. Eugene Car son Blake of the World CounciR of Churches, and AngliCDJIl Bishop Kenneth Maguire. Orthodoxy, Catholicism an() Protestantism, Archbishop lake·vo.s said, "exist for no other rea son than to reconcile man M · man and all men to God." "It is to this common under taking, this unifying call that ~ commit .ourselves anew thio · night," he told the congress.
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T~E ANCHOR-Dioce~e,of FC?~
12
River...,.Thurs.,
J~'y
7, 1966
All "Go Go'" ancll No "Come Come"?
God Love You
MacEocn Assesses Meaning
Of· Vatican II Proceedings
By Most Blev. FultDO J. Sheen. D.p. The first word .of Our Lord's' public life 'was "Come." His lase word was "Go." First, we come to Him, then we go to the WOrld; first we lean on H:is breaBt in prayer to learn the secrets of His Sacred Heart, then with His love enkindled, we go out' to inflame other hearts. The present tendency of the Church is to be all "Go Go" with little or no "Come Come." We yell about the necessity of "adaptation to the world, but rarely whisper the need of "attach ment to Christ." We play the guitars of the world to make every day' a Palm Sunday, without having learned the music of Good Friday. Ecumenism .thus bl~comes indifference to making converts· liturgical reform hardens into shifting the Eucharistic Lord to ~ out-of-the-way corner and we define freedom as contempt of authority with a dose of brashness.
.
Hy Rt. Rev. Magr. John S. Kennedy
I thought I had it so far as books on Vatican Council n
are concerned. But Gary MacEoin's name, favorably lmoWJl
from a variety of earlier works, persuaded me to try hIS
What Happened at Rome? '(Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
New York $4.95) and I am
glad I did. What is valuable reasons, do not see it as such, adduces warns against the con about it is its shrewd attempt sequences of this condition, and
to assess the significance of touches on what some Council
the proceedings and the docu- Fathers proposed in this re
ments I?f the Council. The open- spect.
ing chapter is Mr. MacEoin . has not said the
Why are we cleluged with books about the "secularization tedious ~ enough, last word on the Council doc of Christianity"? lii~cause the world cannot see any great lIi! in all '. consciuments. Indeed, anyone who has
ference between the way we act and the ence. Entitled -carefully read the documents
way it. acts. No one can influence the "The . Council has little need of his informal
world who is too identiified with it. Begins,:' it reand fragmentary commentary.
lP'aul tried the Go-Go metl!lod in Athens hashes with no But the great majority· of us
by .seCUlarizing hi!! speecllJ. with. pagan particular dishave not read the documents,
poetry, but he had sense enough when tinction;' what and for us there is in this book
he went to Corint.h to s:~y that, from lime has already incentive to do so arid some
then' on, he woull:l know only Christ ~ encoUlltered in indication of what to look for.
and ililim Crucified. It was a Come Come. lleveral books Gentlemen in Their Season
, Church which showed the llcars of' Christ
nnd irmumerThe gentlemen alluded to :in
in the beginning of Christianity. 'Today;
able magazine _ the title of Gabriel Fielding's'
not even the devil is afraid of a. Christ
and newspaper a. __ -,les. , new novel Gentlemen in Their
without scars. A Go-Go Church· is a
Mr. MacEoin is no admirer . Season (Morrow. New York missionary Church, and a missionary
of the Roman Curia. Indeed, he $5.95) are Randall Coles and Church is one wl1o, likCl 'Peter, !'has
Is severe and relentless in fault- '. BernaI'd.. Presage,· and their been with the Galillean." During' the year' 1964, Catholics closed
TOPS MONUMENT: A log" it; arid the Curia, comes, season is middle age. They are 102 churches in the F:reneh' colony of Tunisia, among them the
in for' a trouncing at regular., friends ' of .a sort, or ··at least , lOO-foot shtue of' Christ the massive Cathedral of St. :Louis, and left open only seven. Why?
IntervalS throughout the book. they drink together and discuss , King tops. a 350-foot monu The French moved out and the Church had not been sufficiently
This is how as familiar as a their problems and predica ment at. one end of' the missionary so: as to infhie:nc~ the mass of Tunisian' societY. U we
Puncn-and-Judy '·Show. The ments with each other. bridge over the Tagus river care only. ,for our. parishioners, what will happen to the lonely
Ihortcorpings of the Curia are , Coles is smug humanist. In
extended, in the author's view, childhood, he was exposed to near ~isbon,Portugal.lt is. crowd ",ho stumble in the darkness, which neon lights only
make". dark'er. < • .' • lot only 'to' bishops who studied' a strong. Christian influence thelon!r~~t1:>ripge in Europe. It Roman universities, but also and was 'proffered a glimpse NC Photo;: . Christ redeemed humanity and it is to humanity, in all its ttl the products of. almost any into the heart of the. Christian phases, that the Church rou,st .Go Go. Go to the teenager who is Jeminary anywhere: mystery, from which he recoiled A LrLlf;\ll. (PI fNlr:JOo@{';,t:MQr-;;) 'in' rebellion against the world-and .rightly so! He would go' mad On the other hand, Mr. Mac- and is recoiling still. Presage ,#I\Kl/I:Q)'WU ~~U <l)UIWUU if he did not react in a mad way against a mad world. What goin . is quick to acknowledge, is a Catholic, a convinced and t'?:.. t.P are . we doing for the millions ·who stomp and. squeal, as . de lnd rejoice in, the fact that an 'fitfully practi'cing one; who ~®U'~ ~:@@<dJDMU'@[f werwhelming maJority of. the wearily feel~ that he is stuck 'NEWTO:~ '(NC) Abbot' tribalized. ap.d.. dis.-herded :young elephants. in protest. against their ~ishops . at the . council did not with belil~f in God and cannot Charles Cor,iston, O.S,B., of St. frustations and .10nl~liness. They are unhappy because they lack l<> along with Immobilist ideas e.scape it. P au l' s'A bbe)" here in New Jersey mission.. The teenagers who write to us; sending their odd-job money and. allowance· for the poor, are happy and normal teen ht t h ese' f ully. md foug The ~ost strl'kl'ng character h as receIve . d permission for elec. Evidently, there is a .contraagers. They' have a missioil. They are serving, which is ·the con Iliction here. Its resolution seems in the book, however, is no tion of a l:oadjutor abbot to dition of happiness. May we hear from others? . In be that, as the third chapter' g~ntleman at'all, but a convicted free him for missionary work. Indicates, the bishops, once in murderer, Chrisopher Hotchkis: 'Abbot Coriston said since this . lFin,l;'lly, lest we become a truly Go Go Church, will thell'0 touncil," discovered that they Hotchkis, a Catholic, killed a is the 25th anniversary of h'is be'm sUff~cient number olr. our readers who will try to redeem lad powers hith~rto unused and . map who had committed adul- ordination "1.£ is a good time to our times witii a double "'Come Come'." Come daily to Our Lord IIso coriVictions hitherto' unac- . tery with.,his. wife, and killed. ask ·for·a favor, and this is the in,;the Blessed Sacrament to atone for the loss of· faith in, this • Ulowledged. hi~ . precisely because. the ofone I picked." "~ystei'Y' Oi faith," and to beg God to raise our ,priests to great . fender was a .Catholic 'and thereHe was ekcted the first abbot . er ,.. holbieSs~ Come away from the table,the snack'bar or yo.v 'Greatest Gain fore "knew wh!}t'he .was doing." of St. #paul'il19years ago,'oD. pleasur~s after denying ,yourself something little such as an There ~re those who wonder Alike in Absurdity the eve of his projected depart extra cigarette or a~ cockta~il and, at tbe end of each month send whether the changes appointed' ure for the missions in Perami us .the, .equivalent' to help feed the poor. anel give the l~ve off will, by the teS't of time, prove How do the gentlemen get in- ho, East Mlica. Christ ~. thoSe in m!ssioll lands. Write to ,me. God Love You! real and lasting, just as there volved .with. a convict? Coles visits prl'soners to Upll'ft th The electh,lll of a coadJ'utor'is are others who hold the changes ' , . em, h' scheduled for October. It WI'U and Hotchk I's,. 1uck y man, IS ,GOD .LOVE YOU to the 11 Garrow children for$5 ••• to to be excessive and disastrous. IS Mr. MacEoin belongs with the present beneficiary. And Pres- be supervised by Archabbot· M.R.S. for sending her paycheck of $38.03, a week's wages for the Iormer.' 'age learns 'all' about Hotchkis Suso Brechtl~r, O.S.B., head of poor of the world . . . to E,C. "We are a family of farmers and from Coles. the Benedic:tine Congregation in our long day's work it is very difficult for us to fast during For him, the crucial point of: St. Ottilien. Lent so' we· send this $100 instead." Is the coming into being, the Not all, really, for Coles does ~haraeter and the. functioning not begin to understand the Abbot Col'iston, a registered depths and the awful . pl"t pilot who fOimded Mission FlyCut out this column, :pin your sacrifice to It and mail it to Df the senate ,of bishops. On . of Hotchkis, who commands slm ICI ya ing Inc. to bring flying to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society _.mol·e than anYthing else, he . ddt h d' aid. of the ',missions, w·I'll VI·SI·t for the Propagation of th(~ Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York. - lays, depends the final verdict WIS om an ouc es Imensions . of real·t too d f th missions in Mexico and Latl'n N.Y. 10001, or to your Uirector, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. 10 be pronounced on the Council. Iy eep or e mon strously 'self':centered and self- America pri)r to the election. Considine, 368 North Main Street, FaU River, Massachusetts. To his mind, the greatest gain satisfied Coles. Hotchkis' sense He is a former Air Force chap to date is that of open discus- of justice, for example, far sur- . lain.. lion, This occurred within the passes Coles' vague verbalizing.' . . 1 fI5)
as the bishops aired .Jl 08 council, , , An elaborate pattern of adulU ",,~... 1# ...,...,0. gO"$ opInIOns which, until then, it Y
would nave been considered: tery is ~et in mot~on, ~nvolving Attend l~ordihGm
improper to voice. Coles With Hotchkls' wife, Pres.' .. . . age with ,a young freak, and NEW YOHK(NC)--Seventh TEXAC~O Such wholesome fre~dom has: _lesser. fig~res. one with. another. and. eighth g'rade boys from the . gone beyond the CouncIl and'all In each instance the motive th', .New YOI'k'" metropolitan area- DOMESTIC & HE,~ VY DUTY' OIL BURNERS'
through the Church· ·so that' .' ',' '.' 'd'.. c, ' . • " .. , e. have arriv,ed'at F.'ordham Unl' 1 .' .... '., manner an the conseQuences c elg~, rehglOus and 'laity are"'ill'e Cliffel'entbut all a 'l'k~ versity to: h~lp in'ilUgurate the Service - I sp~a,kIng out. ar:'-~ engaging .in "in their' abs~rdity and~:er~i~i:' university'sn "v'i'3-3" program. spIrited an~ InCISiVe .exchanges sadness;' ., '", :,' .' ..' Si)!; . years. fJ:o'in now' some' ·of MA8~ OFF'IC:E - lei DURFEE ,STREEr, FALL ,RIVEI
Mr. MacEom believes that there . . . " ,t,heIP will$-l JL9.-year,.0Id lniiver is need of new institutions to' ." Complex Novel' ". , .sit;y, gradU'a·te~ .. "." . ' . perpetrate su.ch discussion and" '''It ~sonly Hotchkis, brelikhn,' 'Thepro'gram 'alters-the tradi'; make it as productive as possi- out of prison and going to his, ti,9,n .of four years' high school ble. deat~,'Xb?. has ,dignity, ii ,sense: ~nd ;four years' college training , ,. Relation to'· Poor .~ of·..direction, 'a;..sUccess :trans-:. to achieve the B.A.. degree,. 'and ' I ' "cending th~ .vagaries o.t'the flesh provides for'. two ,perl'ods .. of . b' . . ... , A seemll1g y mll1or' phase ·of.· . rftl the council is highlighted by a .th~ etrayals pi. time. . . study' in foreign countries. The Mr. MacEoin. It is the Church's ThiS IS a co~plex: delicately" .b0y~. also attend school·dur.ing l'clatior. to the world's poor structur~d, ..·shlmmermgly" sur.;.' " the Summers, ' .. ' (estimated by him to be two- faced; sUb~ta~tial :novel;" say·ing ·Filther.Robi~rt J. Keck, ::'>'.J., 36, thirds of manJ,dnd). 'hie Church;' ~':l~~:~Y.:) 1?~1~ec!lOp1 ,an~ sl:l.Y,-', \\:,asappo~nte<l to' direct .the pro has always been for the' poor 'l'1'lg It fastIdlOu~lyan<;i, w~tti,1Y. gram. Father Keck,sai'd that 118 with varying; degrees "of effec~ ~he bedroom" scenes' will un- . boys were'. (:hosen. out of 675 tiveness. But has it been arid oubtedly be, too graphic for . w}:IO'apPliedaft'er the plan was is it, the Chur.ch of the ~oor! ma?y a rea~er, ~ut ~he.y have annouIiced ,hLSt ;October. They . -thel.r p.lace 10 t.his pltymg yet come from. r'U.bh.'c, priva"e .and' Mr. MacEoin, who has , lived t ~rn,YI,ng, f to '.. e,·se·.·":: , . mo.ck.mg yet. con)lJas-. parochial "sch).·o.·.ls, an.d. we-r and wotked in' several parts of' slo~a t e exposl19n t . 0f . our way...)ecte(l n~t ·.fo:r thei'rintellectual<-' _ &be world, feels t~at' the poor wardness. . .:'brilliance but for' their matuiit';~ ' ...... ,,~' .... -': :);.
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13
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs .. July 7, 1966
BISHOPS 1"ROM 1'HE NINE DIOCESES OF TEXAS: Prior to the Installation of Bishop Medeiros in the Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Brownsville, the Bishops from Texas gathered for an informal photo. Seated: Bishop Metzger, El Paso; Bishop Gorman, Dallas-Fort Worth; Archbishop .Lucey, San Antonio; Bishop Reicher, Austin; and Bishop
Protest Appo!ntme~t of Sister To Run Anti-Poverty Center MIAMI (NC)-Employment of
.Gordon asked Weatherley what steps he had taken to make an anti-poverty center here has 'certain that the nun would not sparked controversary among "exhibit religious symbols "when members of the Dade County in her new position at the. Cull anti-poverty board and caused mer Day Care Center in the eurtailment of the hiring powers' heart of Miami's Negro district. 4)f the. poverty program director. . Weatherley . replied that be Jack Gordon, poverty board had "had her ·remove her' tiny member who is a1f~9 a member gold cross." of the county schO?1 board, said Other opponents of the hiring at a board meetmg· that the of Sister Gonzales whose. reli nun's religious gllrb "bothers gious communiljy' 'members are me;" . employed in federally supported "How can we ::pend ,?u.bhc anti-poverty ·.programs in other money to propagate a relIglOus areas of the country said the faith?" he asked. black habit of the ~un might Removes C'ross have·.a"bad effect"on small chil He accused Richard Weather dren enrolled at the day care ley, director of the poverty center. 'Like Policeman' program of beinl: untruthful about the hiring of Sister Marie The Rev. P.W. Williams, a
Infanta Gonzales, :l member of Protestant minister who is not
the Oblate Sisters of Providence a member of the board, said
and a Negro, who last Summer that he was "just against her
organized and directed a Head garb. It's the same as a police
Start School in Washington, man's uniform."
D.C. Fred W. Hartnett, who 'repre-, sents Catholic Charities on th' Mexican Prelates
Poverty board, asked board members: "What are we doing Evaluate Council
here? We who have been most MEXICO CITX (NC)-A cli concerned about discrimination mate of confidence and renewal a I' e showing' discrimination exists throughout Mexico, ac'" right here. in this room." eording to repOl·ts published in Miami attorney Tobias' Sinion, . Mexican newspapers. local legal counsel for -the Amer DU'rangO'S Archbishop Antonio· ican Civil LibertiesU~ion,.. sup';' LOpez Aviriasummed ·.uP ·the ported Hartnett.. He,.• read, a prevalent attit~de,' commenting' Iegar" opinion' on . the.hiring of' '~hat -"the 'faithful "have . thor:;' ~iergymen' and oth~r' r~J.i~i,()~; . "oughlY"assimilat~d litui~gt'i:al 'persoilliel' in' the federal !X'verty . Jlcwal, and ea~h day 'Jive ii. program: '. ·~tii,.i:h '~ sta't~(r' ~at' more." .' .churches hav~ :~n 'in t~e.·fore-,. . The only field, accord'iog to ·front.;in the wa.r against poverty, . the' rei:>~rts, ·where both th~:Mex.. ,.Iiil some •cases the prO-:' 'iean people' and the Clergy are ..gr~m "~rom the'.. 'st~tt"" . . ... : '. hesitant js ecumenism.. Some bishops feel that· history miJi.. . _ _~""""_.;_, ......."_'_":.... ~_ _..._,,
tates against Mexican' ecumen-:' 'E~' ism, and others are waiting. for «uidelines to come from.the na- ... Pai"t and .. ,WaJlp:aper &iomH bishops' 'conferen~: .' ..
a Catholic nun as director 6f
Morhovsky, Galveston-Houston. Standing: Bishop Drury, Corpus Christi; Bishop de Falco, Amarillo; Bishop Danglmayr, Auxiliary in Dallas-Fort Worth; Bis'hop Medeiros; Bishop Leven, Auxiliary in San Antonio; Bishop Tchoepe, San Angelo. Bishop Medeiros' Diocese is the youngests inTexa~ having been. established July 10, 1965.
Aged. Vietnamese Couple Gave 'Five Children to God's Service
Southern Districts Lose School Aid . WASHINGTON (NC) F i ve .more Southern school districts be cut off from' federal funds for failing to comply with .the non-discrimination provi,:, !lions of the 1964 Civil .Rights Act, Secretary o~ Health, Educa tion and Welfare John W. Gard':' ner has announced;' '.
HpE (NC) - God's grace,:" bearing fruit in Vietnamese 'hearts is a story centuries' old 'and ever renewed.
will
Ma!iyred, .Beat~fied Here, under the old tiled roof , . A framed certificate of the and leafy trees of the Ung 'Trao papal blessing sent for paul home, you find another chapter ',: and Magdalen Ung Trao's· gold of that story. . wedding anniversary in 1961
.
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White-bearded Paul Trao, now and photos of, the jubilee Mass 84, and his wife, Magdalen,73, are treasured possessio·ns. Pic live near where the old cathe ,tures of the Sacred Heart and dral stood, where the new one's Our Lady have places of honor. a-building, in the Catholic dis Patriarchal Paul and :his' fath
trict of Phu Cam. er were converted to the falth.
They have had 16 children, of 'His father was a grandson of
whom 13 are living. Two of Emperor Minh . Mang, under
their sons are priests in Hue whom Catholics 01 Vietnam
archdiocese. Three of their were bitterly persecuter. in the
daughters became nuns. One of first half of the 19th century.·
these died, a 36-year-old Sister. Magdalen Ung Trao comes
Another is superior of her con from a family that has links of
vent. its own with Minh Mang's reign.
When you step from the tree Her father's maternal grandfa
shaded yard into the open-front- . ther was blessed Paul Tong viet
ed house, you see photographs Buong, martyren under Mink.
ot the Ung Trao children and Mang and beatified:
Gardner said he approved the cut off orders only after exten sive effor.ts to achieve voluntary compliance had failed. He said that the districts will again be come eligible as soon as they ceomply with the Civil Rights Act.
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Two of the districts are in G~r'gia, two are in LOUisiana: and one is in Mississippi. The action 'brings to 30 the number of school districts found to be out, of line with' Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which' bars federal assistance to any pro gram that practices racial dis IlJrimination.
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their children's children ranged 'on one wall. There are now 26 grandchildren. ,
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CYO .Offlcer
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of .Fan River-Thurs•• July.1,1966
..:.....:----_...:.:...._~------.,.---
'Asks Spirit of Poverty Renewal Among , ReDigious Communities · ATCHISON (NC)-A renewal side· the structures which foster
d the spirit of poverty is needed the spirit of poverty, w; must
both among religious communi- leave enough space for pIOneers,
ties and their individual mem-for charismatic members ,of our
bers, Father Bernard Haering,: . orders, men and women w~o
C.SS.R., said he~.in Kansas.. courage~uslY go new :-ays lD
The Redemptonst theologian self-demal and service.
made his appeal in three sepaRelation io CeU~J
rate conferences featured at the ;: . '1be' pursuit of the !lPirit of
ninth annual assembly of .the~·. pOverty by Religious, 'he said, is
Conference of Major Superiors: not· an end in .itself but simply
of Men at St. Benedict's Col-, a special means of the pursuit .: ·lege. . of . :'perlect charity" by all .. In his first address on the Christians. · 'spirit of poverty, Father Haer . Religious by their vows of ·lng emphasized that in the New pOverty, give special witness 'Testament, "it is not poverty . and emphasis to this .pursuit . . "as such that is praise~, ..but . of perfect charity, he said; . "those who possess the splnt 'of. In this regard, he continued, poverty." , . pove~ has a "very fundamental ,.;, This spirit, he said, should 'be 'relationship 'to celibacy for the. based on an imitation of Christ, kIngdom of God." but "must not begin with the "Celibacy," he said, "means external imitation of the ex-: undivided love for Christ and ternal conditions of the earthly His work. In the vow of Celi life of Christ." bacy man pro..mises to keep his Speaking of the examples of heart pe~ectly free fo~ the poverty found in Christ's life, overwl;1elmmg love land JOY of Father' Haering said: Christ, even to such an extent In Different World that he might be able to love all . .. men with Christ's own loving' , "~o".e of th~se SituatIOns can heart in' the power of His Spirit. be . Imitated literally, but -the ''The attachment to earthly disciple must be ready to face goods destroys tliis freedom for similiar situations and he should Christ's love and His redemp have fl spirit.of initiati,:e to fin~ tive work. We must not only see an appropra,lt~ ;mbodiment..o that .a careless participation in the same splnt m. a world dif all goods of our modern wel ferent from the time ?f Jesus fare society endangers the fi-. · of Nazareth. delity, .. to celibacy in many. · "Christ does not wish stereo priests, we must also think .tllllt typed copies," he continued,.. the world will not believe our · "but real followers through witness of celibacy if we appear · whom His life finds an ever,. to be rich and seek unnecessary new incarnation during the his- wealth."' tory of salvation. "Earthly goods and a com · "One poirit, seen both in. the fortable life can be a substi example of Christ and in,. His .tute for mardag~, which one has , teaching, is most cha~acterictic. renounced, or can be' at least , This is_his nearness to the sim-'" 'an appearance of such to others," , '. pIe people through a way of life he 'said. "Therefore redeeming · and language which appealed love of our neighbor obliges us
. '. particularly to the poor, ,to' the ''Religious to l>ereally free from
", great mass of the people.",,'.. ' , . all kind. of greed 'and to' take
· . This' type of spirit cannot be care that our witness" of the'
l~gislated by. Religioussuperi-' eschatological realities be credi · oI's, ,Father Haering said. "Be- hie to men.:" . .
....
FIRST NUN PRESIDENT: Msg't~John A. Trese, left, diredor of hospitals in the archdiocese of Detroit, has beeIl installed as president of the Catholic; Hospital Associ ation. Sister Mary Brigb, O.S.F., right, administrator of St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester, Minn., was chosen presi dent-elect and will take over the top position next year. She is the first nun ever named president--elect of the asso ciatbn. NC Photo.
War
Experien~es
CoDlYHmlb<1IJ1nl father Renews' Acql!Jl(('-hl'tanc~s
Continued from Page One active in the SOdality; the Sci ence Club, the Dramatics, De bating and Athletic clubs. A girl of maily interests and talents, she plays the: piano· and has taken ballet and tap dancing les SODS since she was a tot. Fasllion Model The new vi~-presid~ntis well known in the Taunton. area as a . fashion mOdel, having appeared in many clothes and hair style shows. . Linda's enthusiasm' for the CYO knows no bounds.. She' says if more young .Pe<!ple ~ew of the groups' planyactivities and of all the wonderful times the members have :ther.e would be . a CYO in every,pl!#.~h., only a little more ttuw haH the parisheS in the Diocese now hqve the CYO, but the.. organization is growing.. Linda)s vice-preSident of the organization ,~t ,the Im maculate Conception parish and secretary of the Diocesan Coun cil of Catholic Youth. In the fall she will be heading for Oklahoma to begin a liberal arts course at St. Gregory's Col .lege in Pawnee. She'll be flying back ·to Taunton frequently to keep in touch with activities here and she' is on the planning committee for· the next New England congress in Manches ter, N. H.
Physic1ia"s Deptore'
Aboll'tions 1il'U~rease
Of .KOll'ealf\) C@~HBclt Days
BUFFALO (NC) - Some. 160 Buffalo 'area physicians have ex pressed concern oV,er "the.alarm G.!.!; came m and rescued us. ing increaSe 'in the'. abuse of They' treated :us wonderfully." inedi~al. indicatiQnsfor thera Following 'the liberation of peutic abortion in Buffalo." An articie -dep~oring this prac 'Korea in T94S' .Father 'Woods' worked in!1' parish: .:JIe mas. tice an~. ~igne4 py the doctors there teaching' a catechism class appeared. in the Magnificat, newsPaper 'of the diocese of when he' heard the North Ko .' rean 'communist a:rn1y had ,BuHalo... The story said that "less than croSsed. the" 38th . ~ril1lel on 'iour per c·ent. Of, therapeutic June 25, 1951l.' ; . Rememt>enhi itieea~ly . days' abortioi:lS: are' uiedic~y .hldi of the 'Korean 'war, he told the, ,cated. The vast. majority,. 96 per cent of ther:!ipeutic;, ab(Jrtions, newspaper:. "It w~ I desperate situation at, that time. I could are done fm: various socio-eoo nomic reasons,.. ,the true" reason have left Korea but 1 didn't want .to. '. When t!b~, Rem; came, down being cam!Cmflaged in' a maze of deliberately .hnprecise state- that time, if it hadJll'tbeen for ments writte,n routinely for the the <as. I;d have been, slaugh tered, killed, and t' owe my life hospital record.." to them. _ :My. sUP4~rior; ,Mag. 'Pen .Patrick Brenna~was taken by WASHINGTON (NC) - More the Reds and I never saw him than 150 pupils at St. Gabriel'S again., They killed bilp." School here write' iegu~ly to U. S. servicemen in. Vietnam in a "pen pal" program of the school's' fifth. siXth and seventh
CAMP HOWZE (NC) - Irish
born Colu~ban Father 'Frank
Wooosreturn~ here to head
quarters of th~ United States
'Second"tnfantry Division ..to' 're
new 'lld 'acquaintances from Ko
rean War days.
. 'Father WoodS Spent a year
with the division as interpreter
'arid' 'volunteer . chaplain from
'JUIy,:1950 to Juiy,. 1951.
. Ma:i~, qen, . John: H. ' Cliiles, comrrlandinggeneral of theS~c- . orid Division, had invited the ,.'. Colurnbanmisslonary to visit hi~ B rid meet old friends. When they. first met during the battle of.cbipyongri in February, 1951, the . !~neral a, lieutenant- , colon(~l and. commander of the OKLAHOMA CITY (NC)' well:':concealea enemy, around 23rd lnfantry Regiment.. Bishop Victor J. Reed left here us.'" He belittled some sermons ThE~' battle was the first mlJior 'for Louvain, Belgium, l;lUt the . he had heard as "nonsense'" · . shock occasioned by his walk.' ,. , viCtmy of the United Nations · out of the Oklahoma City" questioned reluctance of priests fOrcefl . against tl!e communists and Parents to teach doctrine Knights of Columbus annuaL . to children, and' charged some. after the Chinese' entered the, awards dinner lingers. Kore~:n war late in 1950. Popes have admitted Catholic Speaking in an interview for Clergy Glroup ,The bishop of Oklahoma City 'priests, laymen and theoiogians irades. and Tulsa retained his com- .. are spreading' imti-iritellectual- . the division newspaper. Father UNION (NrC) ~ The Union' · posure, but many of the Knights . ism. . Wood, . said: "Twice American" Ministenal' ,Association was re · .squirmed in embarrassment as '. soldiers have saved my life and - organized after Pri,ests of the ELECTRICAL. the dinner's chief speaker, ~.ollowi1Jg the bishop's walk~ I wiU do anything to help, any 'townShip's t'ic;> Catholic parishes Contractors Francis J. Kovach, professor of . ,out, Mitchell G. Brantley,- toast G.!." . became ~emlbE!rs. 'T-ne new or medieval phi.losophy at the Uni-... master ,at the dinner, wrote a , ". . n.lo's 'Came ganization will' be'. knoWn as the versity of Oklahoma, spoke ,letter of apology to Bishop Reed. Duiirig World War II Father Clergy' AsSociation of Union ab,out "Anti-Intellectualism, a Ita1Ph M. Jones, Grand .Knight . Crisis in the Church.'" ',of ~he council, said if there had . Wood,; "and 15 other Columban representing' 20 congregations. ' pt:ie~b\Vere under house arrest At· a JIleeting' at St. Michael's At the conclusion of Kovach's' .. been any indication. the talk by' the Japanese when, as he Catholic church. members draft ·address, Bishop Reed when' w:ould have been so embarras said' "we' 'were at the end of our ed a statement of purpose pledg called upon for scheduled ."re- .... sing, .it would have been can 'roP~. /\nother' six weeks and we ing "a fellowship e,f. Christian marks," sharply referred to'the cele.d.. w01,11d ~ave been dead. But the clergy . . . seekmg t<El learn and last half of .:Kovach's talk as And while the apologies and express our. mtituai ministery." "one side of 'a personal feud." . post;..dinner shock prevailed . .They also schedUled a Christian 944 County St. The prelate added: "The best . .Bishop' Reed left for Louvain, ~@(dtO«:COIfr@$ lBlMOMOIJ'\l@!li unity service for Nov. 27, first New Bedford thing' to do in closing is to . where he filled an engagement 'BO:ItDENTOWN (NC)-Three Sunday of Advent. say grace." He did-then walked· 'to confer major orders on stu new buildings in a planned five- ~ out. dents of the American College building. complex ~ere dedica /F================="""",=om=====S_""""""""IJ Some of Kovach's remarks' in . there. The bishop. is alum ted 11(~re in New Jersey at the ~ 0 0 ~ID B"® I?iJi) gM mO O cluded there is "contempt for· . nus of the college. SoCiety of the Divine Word sem Catholic doctrines, the Holy in.arY the 25th anni\;ersary Fathers and the Vatican Coun of the institution. DADSoN on: BURNERS'
cils" and there is "corruption '~Ol®S$ M©l1'@II'~W<i:U@$ by existentialism." 24-Hour Oil Burner Service
ENFIELD (NC)-Father Wil "Anti-dogmatism signs are liam Slight, M.S., stepped, out on, ~,amous Reading HARD COAL
found everywhere. One priest· the mountainside at La Salette. ). told me dogmas are only guide Shrine here and raised his hand NEW ENGLAND COKE
i1:emiUi~ lines. 'My conscience is my ,til' bless more than 30P motor guide,' .he said. And the' guide cycles. After the ceremony, he , , 'Reg. Master Plumber 2930 of my conscience is the Bible,'" distributed St. Christopher med.,. (JiEORGE M. MONTLE i· Kovach said.. als to' ,·the, motorcyclists, mem-:-. , Over, 35 Years Sermons 'Nonsense' bers of uniformed cycle clubs.' ,.. 'uf ,Satisfied Service f.: Kovach said he selected his wl].o travel every year to. the . •· . 806: NO~ MAIN STREET I,. . topiC because "it b better' 'to- ,.' ceremony from all Qver New 640 Pleasant· SttEle' '" fef•. WY6-8271' New -BedfOrd Fall'lRiverOS ,5-1497 know our epemy than have a England ~"'_"' ·~i.··"! oio··.·'' '"'.:IilI'_..·•{ I
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Prelate Pra ises
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Polish
Re~'igious
Liberty R(!cord HARTFORD (NC)-Areh
, bishop John J~ Krol of Phila~ delphia led so m e 3,000 Connecticut residents of Pol
Sister Leaves Career as High Fashion Model To Find Vocatio", in Aiding Cancer Patie,nts Can' a lovely young model and Broadway .dancer find happiness as a nun dedicated in~urably ill with cancer? Heaven knows what answer a television' soap opera would give, but in real life it's a resounding affirmative: The yea-sayer is Sister Mary Alice, O.P., for the past two years stationed at the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home in F'a]] River. Behind her lies a career as a New York model, botli ln fashion shows' and for haute couture
to caring for patients
ish descent in prayers here "for the preservation and restora tion of God's precious ~ft of personal, clvil, and religioUS freedom to the J)E!oph;' of P~ magazine photography. This led land." The archbisho]]) offered a to a stint at 'New York's R,oxy Solemn Pontifical Mass in' St. Theatre, modeling costumes in Joseph cathedral marking the production numbers and occa sionally dancing. J,OOOth anniversall"y. of Christi "But I was really interested in anity in Poland. He also preach writing,'" she says. "When I came ed the homily. Archbishop Henry J. O'Brien to New York from Worcester, of Hartford presided. Five other Mass., my home town, }. wlilnted bishops were present. Gov. John to write, and I got as far as going to the New York Times to apply N. Dempsey also attended. Speaking first in Polish, then for a' job. But the elevator let in English, Archbishop Krol me off at the wrong floor and a haughty receptionist fright noted that "the events of re cent years and recent days bl. ened me right out of the build Poland give cam:e for serious ing." . She had previously been of-· concern-not about the inevit able victory of truth and' free- . fered a modeling job, so as a dom, but about "lhe immediate stopgap she accepted it. But a few weeks at modeling stretched future of Catholic Poland. "Communism is resistable and into seven years and then the reversible. It has not achieved stage beckoned. But God beckoned too, as Sis and win not achJeve final vic ter looks back on her career. tory," he. said. Jl:l[iGll«llen Hand! IFDX'St Defenders His hand was well hidden, The Mass highlighted the however. Sister Mary Alice's' Connecticut celebration of the mother, who had accompanied millennium. It was followed bN her to New York, became seri a convocation at which Eugene ously ill. Her condition was Kusielewicz of New York, vice president of the Kosciuszko diagnosed as cancer, and she was given only three months to live. Foundation, and Thaddeus, V. Mother and daughter returned Gromada, professor of history at Jersey City State College, wete to Worcester, where nurses helped care of Sister's mother. chief speakers. The events con "Besides my mother's sickness, cluded with a banquet, honor 'ing, in absentia, Pola'nd's' heroie it was one of the nurses who made me decide to devote my primate, Stefan Carilinal Wy life to, cancer patients," she re szynsk1. . ,
counts. It . was not, unfortu Archbishop Krol said the Po lish people have always been nately, an example of tender de among the world's' first and ,votion that inspired the future Sister, but a display of callous foremost defenders' of the free dom which is now denied them. ness on the nurse's part to the He said in the 13th century sensibilities of the dyirig woman. At the time, Sister Mary Alice when wandering Jews found had no thought of becoming a refuge in Poland, "King Bole slaus the Pious enacted the nun, but within Ii few days of Statute of Kalisz which granted the incident that had horrified her she bappened to read an to all Jews equal protection un der the law and guaranteed article on the work of Rose' freedom of wo.rship," unheard Hawthorne Lathrop, niece of of at that time and for many Nathaniel Hawthorne; and the Dominican community which centuries later. He cited also treatment, given she had founded, the Servants of Protestant reformers in Poland Relief for Incurable Cancer. in the 16th century, after some God beckoned a little more ' sought refuge. He said Poland , ·strongly. Soon after her mother's death, enacted a measure "proclaim ing for the first time anywhere Sister Mary Alice found her way to the Rose Hawthorne mother in Europe const.itutional guar house, Rosary Hill, Hawthorlle, antees of religious freedom k N. Y. There she told her story to all citizens." a somewhat surprised Mother Superior, who wasn't accustomed Appoints Ilecruiter to aspiring religious with such unusual backgrounds. Of lay Mossioners
Piayhouse 90 She was warmly welcomed, NEWARK (NC) -Archbishop Thomas A. Boland has named however, and returned home to Father George L. Mader as the make preparations for her en first full-time director of lay trance to religious life. Funds' were an important considera mission recruitment in the New tion, so the future, Sister re ark archdiocese. Father Mader had been serving turned to New York and the as part-time direlCtor of the New entertainment world, this' time ark Liaison Lay Apostolate, es that of television. She became a program coordi tablished two years ago. He has
been instrumental in recruiting nator for CBS and among her ·60 lay persons for mission ser responsibilities was the assem bling of props for the famous vice here and overseas.
Playhouse 90 program. But the glamorous world of CommunnS\f Paper video held no more attraction for Sister Mary Alice than had MOlllJrns Prelate
modeling or the stage. As· soon SANTIAGO (NC)-EI Siglo, as possible she returned to communist daily here,' featured, Rosary Hill and plunged into preparation for her life as a a picture of Bishop Manuel Lar rain of Talea 011l its front page nursing nun. the day after hill fatal car crash, n was in the convent that and hailed him as "one of the most brilliant figures of the Aids Victims clergy." . The paper made special. note NEW DELHI (NC)-Pope Paul of Bishop Lanain's active dedi- . VI has donated $25,000 for fam cation to the work of agrarian ine relief in the'drought-affected reform and ef ~rganizing faJ'Jll state of Orissa· on the eastern - t _ India. worken.
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., July 7, 1966
Plan Ecumenical Chapel for Skiers VANCOUVER (NC)-The fiM ecumenical chapel in this area of British Columbia will be in operation by September. Located at the bottom of the "gondola chairlift" at 7,500-foo& high Whistler Mountain, Alter Lake, B.C., the chapel will serve some' 2,000 weekend ~kiers wb8 otherwise would have to attend churches 40 miles, away. The Whistler Skiers ,Chapel was conceived by Franz Wilhem son, a Vancouver. Anglican , whose wife is Catholic. He ap proached Catholics, Protestarits and Jews and a $15,000 frame chapel was designed to seat some 60 persons. Both the Catholic hierapchy and the United Churches of Can ada have approved the ,inter denominational chapel plan. A local rabbi said he, too, would make use of it if there are suJ ficient Jews in need of his serv ices. Ten trustees have undertaken the responsibility o~ raising funds. They said the time will come when the largely transient community, which occupies 50 cabins, 60 room hotel and two lodges, becomes more stabie and a regular schedule of church services .will be devised.
SISTER AND PATIENT: Patient care at the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home, extends to 'helping aspiring young authors literally from the ground up. Sister' Mary AliCe, O.P., herself a writer, aids a small patient in getting some thoughts em paper•. Sister's writing ambitions at last . bore fruit. "I'd been' scribbling all my life," she said, "but I. lacked confidence and never showed anyone my· work.". At last, however, chance led. her to a meeting with Rev. Fran cis N. Wendell, O.P., editor of "The Torch," a magazine for Dominican tertiaries. He read, liked arid published several of her stories and her new career was under way. As Sister Mary Alice explains, the duties of her vocation come first in her life. Care of patients and fulfillment of her religious obligations are pa'ramount; and writing is something that must be done in odd hours. However, opportunities seemed to come her way with increasing frequency. She was assigned to the community's house in At lanta, Ga., where a remarkable child was a patient fo~ nine years. Mary Ann came to the Sisters when she was three and died at age 12. Her life' was an inspiration to Sisters, patients and visitors alike and after her death the Sisters wrote her biography: Sister Mary Alice did rewriting on this project and in its course met Flannery O'Connor, famous Georgia au thor. The two became friends and soon made a bargain. "I'll take on eriticizing your work," said Miss O'Connor, "if you'll take on praying for mine." A literary correspondence en sued which continued until Miss O'Connor's death in 1964. Of this Sister Mary Alice wrote in .an "ppreciation of the author that she contributed to the "Sat-
urday Review": "Fl;nnery O'Connor died of lupus on the ., third of August in 1964. I died, a little, too, the hour I received the news." '_ The article went on to quote. letters from Miss O'Connor criti cizing various writings of Sister' Mary Alice. As a direct resuli, Sister was asked to write a spe cial vocation article for the "Young Catholic Messenger." This appeared in March and de scribed a typical day in the life of a Sister caring for patients with cancer. . "I had lots of mail from school children after it was published," said Sister. "The article, 'An Open Book-A Shrouded Mys tery,''' was also reprinted by Sister's own community to use as a vocation leaflet. It was engagingly frank, be-, ginning: "I hate to get up and I guess I always will," but at the same time clear-eyed about the mysterious vocation of the Sis terhood: "The externals of our selves are easily seen or read about, but the mystery of our lives has not opened its pages so that a person may really look and really see. A smashing, stunning knowledge could be had if one but 100ke9,' wide eyed, at the real nun-the whole nun," Sister Mary Alice is doing her best to spread that knowledge, in her life as in her writings, encouraged, she is quick to note, by her superiors, including Sis ter Evangelist in Atlanta and Sister M. Paul here in Fall River.
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI authorized a 10 per cent pay increase for all Vatican em ployees as of July 1. The Pope ordered a 20 per cent raise three years ago shortly before the second session of the ecumenical council started in 1963. The new increase has been granted to off set the rise in the cost of living ia Rome.
Sponsor Colloquium On Vatican Council WASHINGTON (NC)-A five day colloquium on Vatican Coun cil II and the Church in t~ Modern World will be held aa the Georgetown University Summer school, starting Mon day. .. .. .particlPants w~ll mc~~de Bishop John J. Wnght of. PI~~ burgh; Msgr. George. G. Hlggmll, director, ~ocial Actio? Depart~ ment, NatIonal Cathohc Welfare Conference; Father John Cou~ ney Murray, S.J., WoodstQCk (Md.) College; Father Francis X. Murphy, C.SS.H., of the Sail Alfonso College of Moral The ology, ~ome.; George N. Shu& ter; Umverslty of Notre Dame, a.nd Donal~ J. Tho:ma~, pub hsher, NatIonal Cathohc Re porter.
Warnt Bishop INDIANOLA (NC)-A reso lution adopted here at the South Iowa Methodists' 123rd annual conference called for inviting a Roman Catholic bishop to ad dress the 1967 convention. The resolution was referred to the program committee for the con vention.
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16
British Churches ,Fight Poverty
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 7, 1966
LONDON' (NC)·..:.... A British foreign aid program. Critics of a Council,of Churches' (BCC) re- ,British report on internal and port on world poverty has trig,- external development point out gered a massive anti-poverty that Britain plans a great in campaign by British churches. crease in national revenue by Foliowing the meeting of: IICC 1970, but plans no correspond delegates with members of, the ing increase in foreign aid; British cabinet, the report may Religious leaders have given draw the government into the the report full support; and" are campaign. requesting the governmi:mt to , Compiled by econl)mic and ag- lend a careful ear to its recom 'ricultural experts, the report mendations. Anglica,R Archbish calls for large-scale internation- 'op Michael Ramsey "of Canter at planning, intense cooperation bury has discussed the' report between' government depart- with British Prime Minister ments, and a government-sup- Harold Wilson. ported campaign to :,timulate inJohn Cardinal Heenan of West ,terest in po.verty problems. , minster spoke to newspapers and A prime aim of the report is reminded governments of the to secure revaluation of Britain's. scope of the problem involved.
Independence' Effects Vary
'In Latin Lo'nds, U. S..
From "Social Revolution' m the New Latin America'· Edited by John J.' Considine, M.M. It was at the beginning of the twentieth century that the first elements of a transformation began to take form." in the north and south of Latin America., In Mexico there was the revolution -of 1917 and the socialist type regimes which succeeded each other Hence Latin America's Church after 1917. In Argentena leaders often saw their future iindustrialization of Buenos only in the light of the Church's Aires had its beginning. past. They contented themselves
These two movements were to with condemning liberalism, re usher in agrarian reform. In ferring to religion's former glo ries and seeking support in con
Mexico the eji servative parties.
dos, a form' of
However, within the last
collective prop
twenty years or so a profound
erty, played a
Ai u. ;;04 change has taken place. In sev": ¥.. & role. In Argen
eral countries the hierarchy has
ti!la at a later taken the leadership' in social
date came pe
b'ansformation, by sound decla ronism. In the
rations, by good 'example in'
twentieth' cen social initiatives of its own and tury the demo
by strong moral support of gov
gl-aphic expan ernmental social programs. In
D i on began.
'the' face of such a disfuncticinal
There were 63
role in regard to' existing social
million inhabi tants'iri 1900 and 131 million in structures and of attitudes which
often favor social revolution, !9clO. Then came the population explosion which was to result in some have become frightened, THE HOLY FATHER'II MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH .... 163 million in' 1950, more than even in the Church. Thus one of DHESSED IN RAGS: Fr. the elements in the current crisis Mario Borrelli went out into' : ZOO million in 1960, and about POPE To save families from ~tarvation, Catholics and
225 million at the present time, 'is a danger of the creation of PAUL Protestants In well·fedNorth America are ship
rather new and aggressive con . the streets of Naples 16 , kt· 1900 the United States had 66 IHAS ping food and farm supplies to India this week.
year" ago to find and make servative fronts. . 'lI\iUion inhabitants, practically, SIENT •.• Why Is India hungry? Last year's drought " friends with homeless boys' the equivalent of all Latin rHOUSANDS , ruined the crops, covering fields with worthless, U. ,S. Independence , OF s~ln·baked stalks. But, even if rain is plentiful, America, and has reached only and young men. Out of this In the United States, indepen 168 million today. TONS food production Is always low In India:-Farm·, dence had a pifferent meaning. entel'prise was born the OF RICE ers lack the basIc tools. Whenever Indians have Social Movement The war, of 1812 and the Napo- , "Honse of Urchins," estab '~ND "s,omethlng besides a sharpened stick to plow A few social movements arose, leonic blockade made the devel lished in· an abandoned 90 TRUCKS with" farm yields are up 50 per cent, the Wall but very sporadically, before the opment of local in'dustry indis Street Journal reports. • • ~ "What can I do chltreh in Naples. Today it Second World War. These move IJensable. Besides, the improve about Indlal" Give. farmer and his family a ments gave an impetus to mili isa 'home and the opportun ment of. communications pet' simple, Iow'cost plow. The total cost Is only tary.or civil dictatorships attrib mitted massive immigrations itv for a new life for S5 $3:5.••• By enabling a farmar to raise twice as lJIted to interest in the' rural O£ from Europe and facilitated in much food, your plow can keep an Indian fam you ths from 6 to 20 years of lllcban masses. 'Communications ternal commerce and trade. i1y, together. It guarantees them, besides, a age., NC Photo. were improved and quickly less The difficulties of 'all kinds sel1se of self·help dignity.••• Give one plow ~ed the cultural isolation of the which the immigrants encoun ($35) all by yourself? And why not make thIs lI\al'ginal populations. tered on their way westward suggestion to your family, that they contributa , But despite such. movements IJrompted many to settle in the a I>low among themselves? The time to discuss and several revolutions, such as cities. Thus, in addition t6 it ils when you sIt down together for a family 'Utat of Bolivia in 1952, social IJeopling the vast hinterland mE!tll, structures have remained rigid. they swelled the ranks of the MADRID (NC)-Spain's per , A break with the ancien regime urban industrial population. ,It. mane'lt 'episcopal committee, 'has not yet been made, except was the boom period for such follovring its meeting in Madrid., WORDS, A healthy young man becomes a priest in India perhaps in Cuba. However; rad cities as Buffalo, Chicago and has i,;sued a long pastoral in"; WATI~R, to teach and baptize..If people are hostile, hi. kal social change would appear Cleveland. ' s t r u c t i o n encouraging social jusfOOD be!lt Introduction Is frequently food and medl· 00 be ,a ,sine qua non of develop-, With ample manpower, freed tice and limiting Spanish Cath AND cine.••• For only $8.50 you can put In a naUvlI ment. 'The population explosiol\ from' economic dependence 011/ olic Action. MEDICINE pri'3st's hands 10,000 Dapsone 'miracle' tablets makes it imperative. Improved England, well supplied with both' Ope,ning with a plea for uni (enough for 43 lepers for one year). And for communications and the mass raw materiats and capital, cul- - 'versal justice taken from Pope onl,~ $8.50 a month you can train a 'priest of media have drawn the marginal turally your own.' He will pray for you always and write anglo-saxon, North John XXIII's encyclical, Pacem "masses out of their isolation and Americ.!l embarked on the road in TelTis, the instruction pointed to Ilxpress his thanks. His training costs $100 a lCreated an increasing social con year, $600 for the entire six-year course, pay· to economic prosperity. Rugged o'ut 1hilt all' change and all llCiousness. The need for an ac able at your convenience. We'll send you full individualism was the catch growth. comes 'slowly, step _by eelerated economic growth re phrase that inspired vigor' and step. information on request. quires that the Latin American courage but solid social strucIII its references to Spanish peoples be masteI;'s of their own tures took form as well. life, lhe instruction said: "The 'economic decisions and less de It was at this time that the perfec tion of Spanish political pendent on outside help. This Civil War broke out, really.'a and s~>Cial institutions demands a USE Thanks to gifts he receives ,for use "where situation has prepared the crisis result of the socio-economic im- dynamic conception of the com IN needed most,' Pope Paul has sent to Indie rice : • which moce will be said'later. balance ~xisting between. the mon good, growing through a ANY and supplies worth $200,000. Such stringless Place of Church EMERGENCY gift:lln any amount ($1,000. $750, $500, $250, U. S, North and the U. S. South, mutual tension towards that ." '. $100, $50, $25, $10, $2) take cere of countless The Catholic Church, still the The defeat of the South marked ideal outlined by the Second emergencIes•••• It's worth remembering now lIlajority ,religion, is in a very the progressive disappearance Vatican Council." and when you revise your will. Our legal t1tfec The bishops warned that Cathdifficult situation. She too has of the slave-centered social sysCATlfOLIO HIAtt EAIT WILFAIt. AHOClATION. auffered from the revolutions in tern prevai,ling there. Racial olic Action must never step out- ,
,the measure in which she was, at segregation, howev.er, was t9 side the competence of the hier
least in her hierarchy, an ex- remain as a witness to the slav- acchy in temporal matters, either
' . pression of the power of the ery that had been, and was ~6 in its collective actions or in its De3r INCI.otID Pl.IIAH P'ND f C:..;O:. 'influence the whole of American publications. ~mother country. Besides, the ifeAlftftor Nollnl JIOIt., _ This elaborated the criticism' wealthy classes coveted the societ,.. levell(,d at Catholic Action by 1K"0perty of the Church which NAML·..;,' _ Madrii's Archbishop Casimiro Please was confiscated. Liberal ideoloreturn coupe'n .,.1I1a:' Morcillo Gonzalez at the close gies, the regalism prevalent, in _ with your of its last national meeting iA Brazil, controversies over the offeri",s right of patronage which the June. The archbishOl charged ClITY. 8TMI_ _,_Z'p C O D I new:republics ch~jmed as a heriPITTSBURGH (NC) A them that the organization's tage created politico-religious Methodist has been named di-' resolu':ions were "too temporal,.. · 'IHI CATHDLIC NEAR IAIT WIILlPARI ASSDCIATlaN conflicts which prevented the rector of institutions for the
Church from developing her Commission for Catholic Charn structures. Thus her seminaries, ities and Social Welfare of, the at'homiC omments
parishes, convents and 'schools Pittsburgh diocese. WASHINGTON (NC) - The
, have suffered. The social revoAlfred A. Darter, former ex- Catholic Association for Inter'" ::
lutions of the twentieth ceQ,tury ecutive director of the Family nationlll Peace has published a . FlIfANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President quickly took on anti-religious Guidance Center' in St. Joseph, : summC.ry _and 'analysis of com, MSGR. JOHN 0. NOLAN, Nationel SecretaI}' aspects. One thinks of Mexico. Mo., as director will oversee five ments ma'de by 34 Catholics who"
Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. From all this followed quasi- diocesan institutions-Holy Fam- particil9ated in the National In
330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017 permanent conflicts between the ily Institute, Gilinary School for ter-rel::gious ' Conference on T,alephone: 212/VUkon 6·5840 State and the Church in all but Girle, Toner Institute, Auberle Peace,held here March 15 to 17. _ a few Latin American countries. Memorial Home for Boys and The analysis was written by.
A great number of Catholics, St. Joseph's Temporary Home. Gerald Renner, assistant direc
particularly the clerics, possess He is married and tlie father of tor, Bureau of Information, Na
,, ~ti).ing ~tt~~,~ a point of refthree children. All are Method- tionai Catholic Welfare Comer- ocencetban the ancien reeima:":f w...., ,! " I, " "ence. , , I ' • , 'i'.
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WHY IS INDIA
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Bishops Restrain Catholic Action
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Methodist Heads Catholic Agency
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 7" 1966
Senators Urge Delay in Signing Labor Contract
. . II II,
WASHINGTON (NC) Two u.S. senators have in volved themselves in the controversy over f r a u d charges in conjunction with the election of the Teamsters Union as bargaining agency for grape harvest workers of the Di Giorgio Corp. in the Delano, Calif., ar~a. • Sen. Harrison' A. Williams of New Jersey, chairman of the Senate subcommittee on migra tory labor, and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York, sub committee member, sent tele grams to the Di Giorgio Corp. and the ·Teamsters Union asking a delay of contract negotiations. The telegram said California Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown will appoint a special arbiter to investigate and make a report of charges of fraud and coer cion in connection with the June 24 election at the Di Gior gio vineyards when' workers voted for the Teamsters Union as bargaining agency. Support Governor The Williams-Kennedy state mel1t asserted: "We sup p 0 r t Governor Brown's proposal for 'an im partial investigation by an ar Biter of national stature' inte the representation election con ducted last week by the Di Giorgio Corporation in Delane, Calif. "We are calling upon the company and the Teamsters Union to t.::lld up contract nego tiations pending a determination by the governor's appointee.. "In view of the serious charges made concerning the election, this procedure seems to us ta be the only way in which the company and the union can dis charge their responsibilities to the employes and to the public, "Among the more serious' charges which have come to eur attention are these: "1. The election procedures used and those eligible to vote in the election were determined solely by the company. "2. 'ne union and only ene union was permitted to elec tioneer on company property. "3. Workers were coerced in to voting against their will and into voting for representatioll by the Teamsters. "In view of all these facters, it seems to us that any con tract negotiated prior te an impartial investigation such as proposed by Governor Brown, would be subject to grave doubts as to its moral and legal validity."
Observe Centennial Of Chilean Cardinal SANTIAGO (NC) - Congres sional leaders of all parties, com munists included, spoke in trib ute to Chile's first cardinal, Jose Caro Rodriguez, as both houses of Congl'ess marked the ] OOth annivel'sary of his birth. The Senate a day earlier had passed and sent to the P.resident for promulgation a bill provid ing for the erection of a' monu ment in Cardinal Caro's memory in the heart of Santiago. where he served as archbishop' from 1939 until his death in ] 958. Cardinal Caro died here b'arely a month after attending the Vatican conclave which resulted in the election of Pope John XXIII. The congressional tribute in his memory took place on the aflniversary of his birth in 1866. Cardinal Caro's successor as archbishop of. Santiago, Raul Cardinal Silva Hem·iquez. had a place of honor at the commemo rations in both the Senate and Chamber Qf Deputies.
LITTLE BROTHERS, SISTERS: Father William Ma& with the aid of Sisters of St. Joseph provides the neees sities of life for 600 boys and' girls at several orphanges in Mexico. Originally from Arizona, Father Masson went to Mexico for his health and was so impressed with tbe plight of homeless youngstel~S that he began to care' f{)(f them. He is assisted by volunteers and many- friends in both the United States and Mexico. lOn
Provides Home, Education for An Members of Motherless Familie!
thinks, it is the mother who MEXICO CITY (NC)-For a holds the family together, and dozen years a U. S. priest has been aiding Mexican orphans the poorer the family, the truer and is now caring for 600 of this is. As a result of taking in entire them in the Homes of Our Little families for the past seven con · Brothers and Sisters. The homes were .started in secutive years, the orphanage now has 600 children of all sizes, 1954' by Father William Wasson, who originally came to Mexico from a 14-month-oldo baby girl to teenagers, and even a few from his native Arizona to re boys in their early 20s. cover his health. The first home There is no age' or t.ime limit began when he started to care · for'a 12-year-old boy who had for the children to leave: they can stay as long as they like. · robbed the collection box of his Providing them with an educa chu~ch in Cuernavaca. tion is Father Wasson's primary During the first five years the aim. He is trying to turn all of home took in only bo)'s them, .or as many of them as orphans and some juvenile de possible, into teachers. linquents. Then, on Sept. 11, It is his dream that these chil 1959, a woman died at the Mex ico City Cardiology Hospital dren who have suffered the leaving her four children-two direst poverty and whe thcl'eboys and two girls, one of them only a baby-in Father Wasson's care. Having to care for the two WASHINGTON (NC) - Twe · girls, Chela and Lourdes Arane led to Flither Wasson's decisio~ Catholic agencies were among to start a home 'for "little sis ,those named to receive grants ters." He also decided that from for Summer Head Start pro that time on he would never grams in the most recent an .give shelter to just one member nouncement. by the Office of cf a family. He would provi(je Economic Opportunify. home, shelter, food, clothing and Named as grant recipi.ents education to all members ef a . were: ·motherless family. Catholic Charities of the dio The Sisters of St. Joseph of cese of Roc){ville Centre, L.I., a Lyons look after the girls and $12,346 grant toward a $14,246 smaller children: The mother program for 75 children. St. Luke's church. F~-' T.T~~~_ superior is Sister Bernadette, who is from Boston. ton, N. Y., a $2,535 grant toward. Particularly in Mexico, he . a $2,905 program for ]5 children.
Catholic Agencies'
Receive Grants
fore know their own people's greatest needs, will become teachers. In order to house the 600 youngsters, Father Wasson now
Prelate Becomes -Kentucky Colonel EVANSVILLE (NC)-Bishop Paul F. Liebold got more than his crozier at his enthronement here as head of the Evansville diocese. Following the ceremonies, Msgr. John N. Dudine, pastor 01 St. Elizabeth cHurch in Louis ville, Ky., presented the Indiana prelate with a commission as a Kentucky Colonel. Msgr. Dudine served as a representative ..,f Kentucky Gov. Edward Breath itt, who was in Poland at the time of the ceremonies.
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Father Wasson asks only one t.hing of the children, that once they have obtained their teaeh ers degree they give their sen> ices as teachers in "Our Brothers and Sisters" schools for a mini mum period of one year. Tbill system is working out very we)J. EveJl before the older girls and boys finish teachers college, tbey begin to practice teaching a¢ their own schools.
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has several homes: three tIl Cuernavaca plus a school foll' grammar school boys and girls; two in Mexico City, one for boys and one for girls, all of whom are going to preparatory school or teachers college; and one iJl Santa Clara, on the outskirts of Mexico City, for babies and pre kindergarten tots (even they
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Asserts Students , ·Have Wild' .Idea Of Liberty ,
THE ANCH'OR-
Thurs., July' 7, 1966
Back Ca.mpaign, Against Crime In Philippines'
MILWAUKEE (NC)-To day's students are "harder , working," "less friendly" and "have a wild idea of liberty,"
MANILA (NC) - T h e eatholic bishops of the Phil ippines have pledged full, support for the government's
compared to students of 30 years ago. , . This was the sen'timent ex 'pressed by Father, Robert L Gannon, S.J., former president of Fordham UniversitY" who gave the baccalaureate address at, Marquette University here. 'I'oday's generation wants "a ,,voice ,-in' everything/' he said. "They, hEl,ve a wild idea of lib el'ty. Nobody can tell them what .to read or w~at ~ do." .This attitude grew out of the turbulence ,of the world, he said, .' whicg. created a rootless society. ''The oid idea of legitimate au " thority has been lost,';' lie' said. "The belief today is that no one has any ~ight to give orders." But, he said, "when these youngsters go' out and meet life _ they will understand tllat regu lations are made to be followed. . They'll discover SOOh, whether in service life or working for ,a ,large corporation, that ,their personal conl!iderations will not 'be the key to Whether or not ru1es will be made or orders ;-.issued."
4Wrrent campaign against crime. Alarmed over the increasing erime 'wave, President Ferdi:' nand E. Marcos called a meeting of civic, religious and, govern ment leaders together" with dtie'fs of national and local po llce agencies in a major step' tl9 combat crime. ' Representing the, bierarchy were Bishop Lino Gonzaga y Rasdesales of Palo, president of e,atholic Welfare Organization; ArchbishOp M~ana Madriaga, of Lingayen-Da'gup;m, Bishop Wil Uam Brasseur, CICM, for Moun tain Province, and. B i s ho p , Mariana Gaviola of Cabanatuarl, two secretary general. A report of t1)e, National Bureau ot' Investigation showed an annual increase in the over all crime situation from 1963 to 1965 of to.4 per cent in the whole country, The highest rates of crime increase were reported ; in the Visayan Islands where ,smuggling has been rampant since introduction of high tariff eontrols five years ago. Commenting on the statistics, the ,Manila Times' publisher, · .Joaquin Roces, said they could . THE APOSTOLIC' DELEGATl~: Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, welcomed Paul Bamela actually be misleading, since BUENOS AIRES (NC) -The Engo, charge d'affaires of the embassy of the Federal Republic of Cameroun, at a re they represent only the, crimes ,signing of the proposed accord eeptiol,l following the Archpishop'3 offering of a Mass obsl;!rving the third anniversary reported to the police agencies; between Argentina and the Holy Many more 'crimes 'remained of th~ .Holy Father's coronation ill the N:ationalShrine of the Immaculate Conception, See aboli~hing the traditional unreported', he said, because (jf Washmgton. NC Photo. ' practice by which the govern the growing indifference of the, ment nominates bishops was people. ' postponed indefinitely by the Need Swifter Justice new military regime here. Bishop Gonzaga told the meet The agreement, negotiated by Ing that, there ,is a need for former Foreign Minister Miguel good legislation as well as swift Zavala and Archbishop Umberto elK" justice by the courts as major Mozzoni, the papal nuncio here. steps to fight crime. NEW YORK (NC)-Qn a hot· sionary community which she lished th", Missional"Y Sisten had been expected to be for , Bishop Gaviola stressed the summer day 20 years ago, July had' 9'> long yearned to join. of the Sacred Heart. ~alized imminentlY. 'But with leck of priests and ministers' as , 7, 1946 to be precise, the United , Within thrE!e months, Mother ,the ouster qf the civilian govern Aftl:r nine years of work , a handicap of religious ele States' first citizen-saint was amo~!: the needy of Lombardy Cabrini had opened al school and ~ent of Rresident Arturo U. men'ts to inculcate fear of God. canonized in St. ;Peter's basilica, and. l1:ome, Mother Cabrini was orphanage in New York. Dlia· on June 28, by a military He said that for the more than . Rome, as crowd of 40,000 per Realizing that not only the 'junta, .the signing was put off. told by the Pope; "A great field ~ million Filipinos, there are United States but al~ Central ':No date was· announced. lIGDB ,cheered. awaiU: you in America!" , enly 1'0,000 priests and rilinisters, and South American cOuntries' : Meanwhile; the new, provi Less than 30 years after her With little, delay,' Mother Ca · :which js considered insufficient. death'in a Chicago. hospital, she , were ',receiving ItaAianimmi~ , ,9.lonal president of Argentina, brini left for the Unitea States " He added that if the more than 'had' founded, Mother Frances .grants, Mother Cabrini crisS- Gen. Juan Qarlos Ongania, sent with six ,companions.· On ar 180,000 public school teachers' Xavier Cabrini was given the crossed, the ocean 25 .tim'es to a congratulatory message, to · were alloweli to teach religion, highest honor the Church can ,rival in New York,she learned establish sCQools, hospitals and Pope Paul VI on SS. Peter and the' he.use which had been pro this would greatly help incul bes~ow-sainthood. mised them was not available. orphallages: witlereverthey were 'Paul's day'-:-the great feast' of Gate mo'ral values in the youth. ' Th,e last of 13 children born The archbishop of New York !1ecessary for the otherwise ~~e Bishop o~ Rome-the day The present system ()f teach-' to a poor couple in a small town friendless immigrants. after the military seized control. ,fng religion in public schools of northern Italy, Mother Ca was sympathetic, but not en In the 'United StatE!S; she pep. 0ngania's message said: "In may even' be a dangerous thing, brini was so frail that she was coura~:ing. sonally visited New York, Phil- 'the naip,e of the people, the Ar';' he said, because students get baptized the day she was born. ''The only solution I See, adelphia, Scranton, P,a., Chicago,gentine government and myself, the impression that religion is Mother," he said, "is that you New ()rleans, Denve,l' and Los I, send Your Holiness sincere DespitE! poor health which 'Dot as important as reading, ~eartfelt congratulations for the piagued her childhood, but and :rour Sisters return to Angeles. Writing or arithmentic. Italy,>n the same ship which Admiring ,the democratic ,grandeur of holy Church and seemed a stimulus for action brought you." . spirit of the nation which re- your personal leadership."
rather than an excuse for need"No, Your Excellency," Moth ceivedher irilmigrant country ~overnment ed rest later in life,young Maria Francesca Cabrini yearned to er Cabrini replied,' "this· I can . men, she becnme an American
not do. I came here by 'order citizen. '
be a missionary to China. Geo Comic Book Craze When· she died 011 Dec 22 MANILA (NC) -'- Philippine graphy was her favorite study of the Holy See, and here I 1917, in Columbus Ii:ospit~l i~ Education' Secretary Carlos P. in elementary; school and in must Btay:" "Yo\:: 'always wanted to be Chicago, it was estimated that ~omulo, former ambassador to teachers" college. And, when she the United States, has warned' became a nun, she added the a missionary," the· bishop said. she, had founded one school, school authorities to take meas name of Xavier, the great ,mis "I knew of no such order' of ,orphanage or hospital for every ures against the influence of sionary, to her baptismal name women. Why not found one year of life -67.
CITIES SERVUCIE She had pra.yed: "Give me a yourself?" , oomic books. of Frances. DIS1TIIUBI P"'I)RS heart as large as the universe." With no resourceS but with Pointing out that one-third of But circumstances, Providence Mother Cabrini's prayer was the, Philippine population reads and t~e wish of Pope Leo XIII seven dedicated companions, answered. The work which she Gasololl'1le ~omic books, the secretary' also kept her from China'and turned France:!' Xavier Cabrini estab-' established still flourishes announced the fiildings of a re her eyes to the West-to the Fuel ·and Rall1lge and thousands flock anmial.ly to pOrt by Father Pedro Ferrer of lands of America to which her her tomb on Fort Washington Ministell' ito Teach San Agustin church in Manila. countrymen were migrating in ~venue in Manhattan to honOr Father Ferrer reported that large numbers. . In PubDoc School the ,woman whose fin&l wish seven per cent of the comics Turned down twice for en 91L BURNERS LEBANON (NC)-The public was to die 'of love. ,specifically dealt with violence, trance into -the convent because , school Bystem here in Kentucky, For pro"- .< delivery Illudism, drunkenness, and sex I of poor health, Frances Cabrini erimer;. The other 93 per cent ,was 24 when she, was aSKed by once the, center of a fracas and & Day & Night Service Bes't !Iealt less specifically with the the local bishop to work in the ,lawsuit:; when nuns were hired to teach, in the schools, will have' same,'material. . . House of Providence of Codogno, G. E. BOIILER BURNIER UNITS a Baptist minister' as a teacher .a hospice for young girls. this Fait . The job was supposed to last Rwul Bottled Gas Service Pg'n~$ll's The Hev. DarrelM. Lankford,
a few weeks-but she remained BONN (NC)-Two Rumanian six years, enduring hardships pastor of the GravelSwitch Bap
6] COHANINIE1I' ST. ~ishops will ordain 25 'new from the trio of women who had tist chu,rch, has been hired to TAUNlI'ON priests from the seminaries of mismanaged the home before' teach sdence and mathematics
., Alba Julia and Jassy, according her arrival. at Leba non, High School. Some
Attleboro - No. Attleboro to ,KNA, German Catholic news
When she was 30, the bishop ,nuns will also be teaching in ''YOUIP T::JUnton ageD.advised her to found the mis t~~, P?~ lic: ,syst~m,
Postpone Signing Of Agreement
Anniversary Re(caUs' Sa'intls Heroic Life Mother Cabrini Fought ,Po~r Health Handicap
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Car
,Latin America Concerns Pope
, Continued from Page One naires of Christ (Mexican) (2), from Mexico to Terra del Fuego, Servants of Mary (1). that is the object of particular , It is hoped that the dying interest and of great hope on the gasps of Pope John "Latin part oftlle Church." America ... Latin America ••." To second the Holy Fathers will soon multiply the activities dramatic appeal and response, of the Church in that suffering part of the Body of Christ and Bishop Giuseppe'Carraro of Ver make this great third 6f the ona, Italy, chairman of the Ital ian Episcopal Committee for Church a generous contributor ,Latin America, called a press to the health of the entire Body in more ways than patiently conference to outline the des perate'needs of the Church of the bearing pain and hunger. South. Briefly, he repeated what the Fall River Diocesan Propagation of the Faith, CELAM, and CICOP 'have so often, ,brought to the attention of all diocesans thanks to the' active work of Rt. Rev. 'Msgr. Raymond Considine, and , BROOKLYN (NC) - The Rev: James W. Clark, St. Joseph, Brooklyn diocese has launch ,Fall River. ed a $60 million program for Maryknoll Series construction of new and continue to focus the at tention of all the readers, THE improved medical facilities, in ANCHOR begins with this issue cluding a new $8 million medical a series of stories highlighting 'research center, to serve the the pastoral activities of the Brooklyn and Queens areas. Under the program, scheduled priests of the Diocese of Fall .River who have enrolled in for completion in 1972, one new hospital will be built, an exist Maryknoll. ing hospital will be replaced and Bishop Carraro pointed out enlarged with a new building, that the quarter of a billion and three other hospitals will be Latin Americans-90 per cent 'expanded. The new and im baptised Catholics-have only proved facilities will provide 43,000 priests to care for them more than 900 beds, increasing (one 'fO! every 5,000 Catholics). the total to approximately 1,700 Soon the alarming rate" may beds. even approach one priest for The research center is planned every 7,000 Catholics! The Italian contribution to as a key unit' in the proposed Latin American efforts has been medical complex to be known as the establishment of a national the Catholic Medical Center oj( Brooklyn, and Queens. seminary, Our Lady of Guad'a It will be devoted primarily lupe, Verona,Italy, which traiJUI both priests and seminarians for to patient-oriented research' and its facilities will be available to work in South America. There are over a hundred the medical staffs of all hospitals in the system. It will provide seminarians from 53 Italian di facilities for approximately 100 oceses there now; 33 were or medical research specialists. dained this year and 20, ordain Details of the program were ed last year, will leave for South announced by Archbishop Bryan Amercia next month. J. McEntegart, bishop of Brook Common Effort The seminarians ordained by lyn, at a dinner at the Interna the' Pope illustrated the common tional Hotel with more than 600 effort of the Church~ BesideS government officials,: doCtors, the U.S; representative, others hospital administrators· and di came from Italy (31), Spain (10), ocesan" leaders in attendance. Medicare Needs '" :aelgium (8), Rome 'itself '(6 "The' steps we are' taking,'" from'the Pio 'L~tino College and one froin the Brazilian ·College). Archbishop McEntegart said, "go' beyond providing' 'enlarged The efforts of varioj.l~'religious communities were also cited by 'and improved facilities, iinpor representatives 'from the Jesuits tant as fhese' are. Our' program also encompasses 'medical 're '(5), Fathers of the African Mis sionarib' of Verona (5), Legion- search and education,and takes into consideration the' needs that will'arise'from Medicare." " "In 'essence, our program re' Marks Anniversary emphasizes'theprinciples of ecu Of Coronation menl'sm' l'n regard' to medl'call VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope care," he continued, "and repre Paul VI observed the third anni sents a'voluntary commitment to' versary of his coronation June the 'communities we serve. 30' by attending solemn pontifi Through it we are making avail cal Mass in St. Peter's Basilica. able more extensive and im The Pope entered the basilica proved facilities and service to preceded by 33 cardinals includ the sick' arid injured-regardleoo ing Francis Cardinal Spellman of creed, 'race or 'economic con of New York. As in the past, dition." Pope Paul eschewed the use of his tiara and wore a white miter and carried his crosier-crucifix. "Priests Try End
The Pope assisted at the Mass Teachers' Strike
~elebrated by Lorenz Cardinal TRIVANDRUM (NC) - Two Jaeger of Paderborn, Germany, at the Altar ot the Chair. The' Catholic priests were in a five Pope delivered no homily or man delegation that met the gov discourse, but when the Mass ernor of Kerala here in India for ended he walked over to the talks to end a strike by thou seats occupied by the diplomatic sands of school teachers in the state. ~orps accredited to the Roly See The delegation was sponsored and chatted with a number of ambassadors and members of' by the Kerala School Managers" Association. Priest - members their families. . were Father Jacob Mannanal, the association's general secre Degree Program tary, and Father John Vallamat tam.' HONOLULU (NC) - Chami The, delegation asked Gov. made College here will launch a BhagwanSahay to 'grant house degree program for military per flonnel in the Fall semester. rent allowance, now paid only' Known as "Operation Bootstrap," to teachers serving in municipal towns and headquarters of sub it will be the first separate de gree program in the state offered districts, to all teachers and to within a college curriculum eJl: raise their age of retirement to elusively for military personnel 58. The teachers had been 0111
who wish to complete require strike since June 22 for t.hese
ments for a college degree. and other demands.
Brooklyn Diocese Starts Medical Building Proj-ect
To
",
fo
nt1: Am..nVft-
Thurs., July 7, 1966
19
Pontiff Pro ises
American Band
_VATICAN CITY (NC)-A 123 piece American high school band ~omplete with baton-twirling drum majorettes and a high stepping drill team of 61 girls played and marched before PoPfJ Paul VI in the Vatican: In San Damaso courtyard, where kings and presidents have been re(,;eived in all pomp, the bravely bedecked boys anell girls of the Cardinai'Dougherty High School band of' Philadel phia put on a tremendous show for Pope Paul, who enjoyed it thoroughly and said so_ From a balcony overlooking the courtyard, Pope Paul beamed throughou~ a 45-minute concert. ,if marching through dozeps of FOLLOWING INSTITUTION: Rt. Rev. Jonathan GoOd intricate geometric patterns as hue Sherrn'an, left, fifth Epi13copalBishop of Long Island, well as playing music can be to as a conc'ert. greets Bi&hop Walter P. Kellenberg of the Catholic diocese referred "You have let us see' a spec-> of Rockville Centre, LJ., outside the Cathedral of the In tacle more perfect, a more cb~' carnation, Garden City, LJ., following Bishop Sherman's reographic, more beautiful than we have eyer seen," Pope Paul installation. declared extemporaneously after reading a prepared text in Eng lish. ' "If you are as superb in yom studies as you are in' this chore ograplly, you are the best in thfJ Dominican Priest Completes Medicai
world," he said. Even as he read his preparetll EdMC«Bti@/l'i to A.id M;ssions
speech he departed from it 00 SACRAMENTO (NC) - "Just Realizing the need for medi exclaim, "we have never seeil call me doctor," blithely greeted cal help at the Chiapas mission, such a performance." the man in white as he reported Father Flannery received per for a medical briefing at Sacra- mission from his Dominican su mento County Hospital here.periors to complete his medical There was one distinctive ad- education at the Jesuits' Mar mtion to the man-in-white uni- queUe University medical form _ he also wore a Roman, school. collar. There he first donned the ST. MARGARET. The new intern is Father John white uniform with Roman col BUZZA~DS BAY Flannery, O.P., 34, reputed to be lar. He began his studies in 1962. 55. Margaret-Mary Guild wiD the only Dominican priest in the He was graduated and received sponsor its annual '''gigantic world who eventually also wi)} his medical degree in June. penny sale" at 7:30 tonight ill become a medical general pracAfter his one year internship, ' the church hall. ProCceeds wiD titioner. in white uniform and Roman benefit parish youth" activitiCil A native of North Dakota but collar, at the hospital here, ,and prizes will include a blendeJ'9 reared in San Diego, Calif., Father Flannery plans to return vacuum cleaner, Polaroid cum-> Father Flannery put in three to Mexico as the "Rev. Dr. John ' er:a and equipment, electrie years iiI the pre-medical school' ,Flannery,' O.P., M.D:;' at, the toothbrushes and a hanp. mixe.. at Loyola University, New 01'- 'Chiapas hospital. 'leans, when hedetided 'his "oca tion was in' another field. MEN 17. 2S 'Accordingly,' he 'jofned th~ onor Bishops ,
JOIN THE N'EW
Dominicans 'and went to St. 05NABRUEQK (NC)-Bish Albert's College, Oakland, C;:tiif., ops Heinrich Mada Janssen of
Society of Brothers of
He was ordained' a' Dominican' Hildesheim an'd 'Heiniut Herman
OurLady of Prov.idence
priest in' 1960 in Sar{Francisco. ,Wittler' ot O~nab~tle~)< received
N d M: d1c " t' H I the Ge:rman Cross of the Order /for information wrjte to:
ee, e 3; eP of Merit with' Star., The award FATHER MASTER
After ordinat~on"Fat,her Flan- :was given by Ministe'r-President St. Joseph the Worker
nery pioneered with other Do- G D' d . h minicans in·' a 'mission with Sl ,eorge Ie enc s 9f L9wer Sax Novitiate
' .. , , ,ony state at the order of German Warwick Neck, It I.
hospital 'at Chiap~s? :M:exico. P ' d t H . emrich Luebke. , ~!,\Sl en
Man-in-White
The Parish Parade
H
Teacher; Student To Figh,t Cancer ATCHINSON (NC) - Father Eugene Dehner, O,S.B., has taken a year's leave from teach ing at St. Benedict's College here in Kansas to work with a former student in the fight against can
,eer. He is chairman of the 001 lege's biology department.
Father Dehner will do Fe aearch work with his former student, Daniel M. Ziegler, now professor of chemistry with tine Clayton Foundation Biochemical Institute associated with the
University of Texas at Austin.
They'll work in the field of
mammalian oxygenases, a basic approach to cell functions. Zieg ler was graduated from St. Ben edict's in 1949.
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