Pope
10
Paul Elevates
Dioce~an
Priests
To Monsignori
MSGR.J. IE. JBOYJ[))
!Pope Paul Vi today designated nine diocesall1l postors and a rector ~s Domestic Prelates with the title of Right Reverend Monsig'1or, the Most Rev• . .Dames l. ConnoHy, [Bishop of fall River, announced. They are: lRt. Rev. John E. Boyd, pastor of S t. Pat ric k's Church, Fall River. JR.t. Rev. John A. Chippen dale, pastor of St. Patrick's .Church, Wareham. Rt. Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor of St. Peter the Apos tle, Provincetown. Rt. Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis, pastor of St.Louis de France, Swansea.
ltt. Rev. Lester L. Hull, pastor of Sac l' e d H ear t Church, Fall River. .SGR. J.A.CHIPPENDAlLlE
dJThe
Vol. 11, No. 29. July 20, ,1967
Rt. Rev. George E. SlJ1~ ]ivan, pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Fall River.
lOe
$4.00 per 'lear
R,t. Rev. Patrick H. Hur ley, pastor of St. Joseph'g
Church, Taunton.
Diocesan Laity inI(ey
, Rt. Rev. William D. Thom son, pastor of St. FranCis Xaviel', Hyannis.
Turn to Page Six
ccn
Roles
tary Teachers, to be chairman of a Friday afternoon session on "Picture, Song and Film." Elmer Cunningham of St. Lawrence Pa'rish, New Bedford, Diocesan Co-Chairman of Dis Rev. Joseph Powers; Diocesan Director, in taking ,official part cussion-Action Groups, to be in the New England Congress of chairman of a Friday afternoon Religious Education to be held Parish, New Bedford, Diocesan' session entitled "Suburbia and PI'esident, to be chairman of a the Inner City-One in Christ?" at the University of New Hamp Sunday morning session Oil shire from Aug. 25 to 27. "Putting Group Dynamics to This year's New England Work." C.C.D. congress, to be held in Edward McDonaugh of St. the host diocese of Manchester, Mary's Parish, No, Attleboro, will bring together all interested in the religious education not Diocesan Vice-President, to be only of the public school child chairman of a Saturday after TM~key but of all Christians-adult' as noon general session with Bish op Primeau presiding, well as teenage and juvenile. VATICAN CITY (NC) Miss Patricia Makin of 'St. Those taking part in the con Pope Paul VI will take a gress and their assignments are: George Parish, No, Dartmouth, two-day trip to Turkey on Diocesan Co-Chairman of.· High Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Dioc ellan Director, president of a School Teachers, to be chairman Tuesday and Wednesday of a Satu'rday morning session where he will visit the ancient SatuI'day morning seminar en titled "From the Mor:;llity of entitled "Learning from the Christian shrines at Ephesus and , ,' Istanbul and meet with Ortho Law to the Morality of Love" Teenager." . with the Rev. Carl J. Pfeifer, . Miss Janet Barbelle of St. dox Ecumenical Patriarch Athe Dominic's P4'rish, Swansea, Di' nagoras I of Constantinople. S.J., as speaker. ' Edward Angelo. of St. Mal'Y's ocesan Co-Cl:iairman of ElemenSeveral re'asons prompted the Pope to decide upon this his fifth voyage outside of Rome. Among them, is the opportunity to "discuss with him (Patriarch) the best way to' promote theo logical and canonical studies to smooth the path toward the re establishinent of a perfect com munion between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, and to been eliminated at the personal examine together ways and VATICAN CITY (NC)-Offi request of Pope Paul VI. cials of the Doctrinal Congrega means to assure in the' present tion have denied press reports circumstances, with the help of a joint understanding,' not only that the oath against modernism which new bishops are required the safety but also the sacred and special character of the Holy to take before their consecration Places in that locale which was has been abolished. A'Vatican spokesman said that .the fatherland of Christ, the 'platform for the announcement the oath has been reduced and condensed in length, but that of the Gospel, the cradle of the its essential 'elements, including . CINCINNATI (NC) A Church and the ideal hub around anti-modernism, remain. In gen priest - seminary professor which Christian hearts revolve:" eral, modernism was a distor In visiting Constantinople and said celibacy for priests in tion of Christian truth which the Western Church is more Ephesus the Pope wished also amounted to a denial of revela to pay honor to "the memory olE tion, of the supernatural and of than a negati;'e restriction. the important ecumenical coun "Celibacy of the clergy serves the divine origin of the Chul·ch. cils held there and also at Ephe as a witness to certain truths of It was condemned in 1907 by sus the holy memory~()f the most Christianity," said ,Father Daniel Pope St. Pius X. blessed Madonna there vener The spokesman said that the E. Pilarczyk of St. Gregory's ated. Minor Seminary faculty during new version of the oath is ex The first eight ecumenical pected to be published in the .a television program discussion councils were all held in what near future, but no definite date hel'e. "All Christians by their lives is now Turkey and their doc has been announced. Prior to the Vatican statement, teach something about Christ. trines are accepted by both the seveml newspapers had reported lVIalTied people teach God's love Catholic and Qrthodox Churches. Continued on Page Nineteeml Turn to Page Three '\Ulat the 57-year-old oath had
Five lay members of the Fail River Diocesan Board of the' Confratern~ty' of Chl'istian Doctrine 'will join
P. H. lHI1UlRJLIEY
Rt. Rev. Robert L. Stan ton, rector of St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River.
ANCHOR
!Fall River, MassachuseWs © 1967 PRICE
Msm:~.
Rt. Rev. Armand J. Levas seur, pastor of St. - Anne's Church, New Bedford.
MSGR. A. J. LEVASSEUR
August Meeting Is Scheduled 'In Durham
Pontiff to Make Tw@",Day Visit
T@
MSGR. R. L. STANTON
Vatican Modifie~ Oath Against Modernism
MSGR. A.G.
DUPU~S
MSGR. L. L. HULL
MSGR. G. E. SULLIVAN
Priest 'Discusses Dynamic Aspect Of Celibacy
MSGR.W.D.THOMSON
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2
The
THE JXNCHOR....:Diocese of Fall Ri~er-Thurs., July 20, 1967 \
Parish ,Parade
Education Aid p@~!~y Shift Proposal Draw~ (C~,itic,i~Hrlro,
,
,Mass Ordo, ,
,i"
'.
FRIDAY-St. Laurence ~f Brin-:-, disi, Conf,essor .and Doctor, of the Ghurch" III ,Class. I White. Mas!!,,Proper; Glory;, no"Creed; Common Preface. ,.. SATURDAY-St. Mary Magda . , 'i~iie, Penitent. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed;, COIilmon P~eface. ' , . SUNDAY-X' Suriday Aft,er Pentecost. .II Class. Green~ Mass Proper; Glory; Cre~; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY - MasS of previous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Glory; no Creed; 'Common Prefac~. OR ,St. Christina;,virgin and Mar , tyro Red. Mass Proper; Glory; no ,Creed; Comlllon Preface. 'l'UESDAY-St. James, Apostle. ,II . Class. Red. Mass Proper; Glory~ Creed; Preface' of Apostles.. : WEDNESDAY-St. Anne, Moth erof the Blessed Virgin Mary. n Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed;' Common Preface. ' , THURSDAY~Mass of previou~ Sunday. IV Class. Green. MaSs Proper; No Glory or Creed;· CommonPrtlface.
A representative of the Jesuitlll will .speak at an Masses this Sunday on behalf of Jesuit mill\ mons. The parish _eensus will be taken Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings.
'FORTY HOURS , DEVOTION July 23-St. Francis of Assl si, New Bedford.. Holy Redeemer; Chatham. July 30 - st. George, West
port. Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. TIlE ANCHOli S&t:ond Class i>ostage I'llid ,at Fall River, MaSs. Publisheo every Thursda" at 410 IIlghlana Avenue, Fall Rive. Mass.. 02722 OJ, the Catholic Press 01 the Diocese of Fall
RIVa,. SUDscrlptlOli price b1 mall, IlCl$tpald
$4.00 per J8lIr.
ST• .JOHN BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE
the means 'available to the Con ,gress it· has 'acted prudently. The NEA proposals would ~. a retreat, from the areas where these battles must be, fought and won.", , Secretary Gardner said the NEA 'proposal "ignores the strong belief,on the part of, the big cities that if they are to cope with their critical problems they need some access to the re-' • sources' of, the Federal Govern ment other than through the state capitals." .Assist, Underprivileged He said the" NEA report "might have been more interest ing if it had been more candid in appraising the vested interests of the various 'parts of the edu cational establishment." Commissioner Howe' denied A JOB WELL DONE A hlliI d Ellswot' th B,unker ' that the present program of a i d ' . :'In'-TBa or constitutes FedEmil control of bids farewell in Saigon to Lawspn MQOney of Somerville education. He added that with(Mass.) who has been ~signed Nairobi, Kenya, afteF out a Federal program directed having served three years as Catllolic Relief Services direc to special needs, there can be no tor in Vietnam. Father Robert Chhrlebois of Gary (Ind.), in "equality of ,educational oppor- center, is, Lawson's successor. Photo. ' '" , tunity for those Americans w.hose interests, have ' been
neglected for many years and ' 11 who haven't the power to infIufi"'e~a ence local and state decisions on SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-San di' esa~ chancellor Msgr.
'their behalf."' ' . Francisco's Archbish?p Joseph Th~as J. Bowe and archdioce-
Howe asserted he could sup- T. McGucken has reSIgned from ... ' , port general Federal aid to edu- the city's most prestigious coun- san SOCIal JustIce dIrector Father cation only if' it were accom- try club, the Olympic Club. Eugene Boyle. ' panied by "a strong program 'of A chancery office' spokesman ... categorical aids" to assist under- said the archbishop handed in
privileged' children. his resignation about four
Congressional 'Changes 'months ago, But word of, his
Coming at this time; the NEA action only -leaked out in the
propos'alcotild upset' efforts 'by·- , first week 'of 'June. ',;"
the "'Johnson a'dministr'ation" to'" '.: \,' \' ", , '.
persuade 'fhe; Senate toteverse' ' ,Wh,ile, the ,arfhbls1)op wason, '", 'the recen't,,:"Hoiise' aCtion' which" ~acat,ion an~, ul1!lv~i~a~le :for. ' ,; . shifted some Federal sc~ool-aid ,~p~lll~mt, his ,resig?ation ,appa~:' controls'to the' 'stiites. ' ~n9~ , resu!t~~ fr/?/P'. ~he, ch\b s ..... , '.As passed' by the House last .... ' ::V~Ites o,T.JlY. a4mI~~lOn;res.tnc .. , May, 'tHe" 'adtninistratiOli's bill" tIpns, WhICh th,~ bo~r!i o,f, dIrec extendimt the Sch~oI' ,A~sistanee" ,tors refused t9" c,h,a,t:lg~ last Fe».. Act w'as amertded to give' status' ~a!y.
COntrol. over ,allocating Fedel'oal." ,That.restrtct~on, ..,-' and the \
funds 'for various' programs, ,board's, ,ref4SaLto change - also
such as, speech and language, resulted in, the resignations of"
centers. " some of its, priest-members, in-
The "present law provides for· eluding the archbishop's secre
Federal grants to be made di- 'tary, Msgr. Donnell Walsh, arcb rectly to local school districts. ..
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The Ladies Guild will spon sor a food sale followhlg aB Masses Sunday, ,July I 30. Mrs. Clarence Kirby is chairman. Tickets for a lQbster" supper to be sponsored Saturqay,nigh~ Aug. 12 by the guild are now available from members and at . the rectory. Sittings wili be at 5:30 and 6:30 in the parish ball. In charge of arrangements is Mrs. Lynwood Potter. fiT. STANISLAUS. FALL RIVER
The annual parish Summer Festival will take place Saturday and Sunday at Urban's Grove, Tiverton. The public is invited and free bus service will be in operation fro~ noon :;3unday bom the Fall River Shopping Center. ' ST. ,PATRICK'S, FALL RIVER The Women's Gulld will spon sor Q cruise on the ,Oid FaD River Liner on Wednesday eve ning July 26 at 7:30. Mrs. Joseph Fazzina announced that reser vation!! may be made by con tacting either Mrs. William Don nelly or Mrs. Margaret Wimsett. Tickets are $2 for 'the two hour 'cruise and refreshments.
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SAVE 'DOLLARS" W·.th'the
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A9Jen~y ~e,t,s Grant
WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mount Carmel Guild, a social agency of the Newark, N. J .. JEFFERSON CITY (NC) Anthony F. Heisberger will take archdiocese" has received a 'office Aug. 1 as executive direc , $472,500 grant from t~e National tor of the Missouri Catholic Institutes of Health to help build a mental health center in New Conference, ,formed last Decem ber by the hierarchy of the state. al'k.The ceiite't wi'II provide in " Heisberger, a member of Jef:'" 'patient and' out-patient care, _ fersori City's civic government,' well as 24-hour emergen'cy serV-' ' council, is, ~n alumnus of LincoIii' ices. University and of the University , . of Missouri ,and a veteran of the' Polish Pi rimage u. S. Air Force. The conference, which bas' The annual' Polish pilgrimage
beadquarters here, was founded to the Shrine" of the North
to cooperate:' with other organl- ' 'American ':Martyrs, Auriesville,
zations on matters pertaining' to N. Y. will be held Sunday, Aug.
the common good and to provide 6. Our Lady of Czestochowa will'
information on current social 'be honored at a rosary proccil
isSues. , sion and the pilgrimage speaker
will be Msgr. William L. Woz
niak of St. John Kanty Church, Students To Meet College-age youth will meet at Buffalo. 8 tonight, at St. Mary's Church,
New Bedford. After a discussion
on "What does Catholicism hate Necrology
to say about Christianity?" Mass will be celebrated. Purpose of ',JULY %l ' the gathering is to bring young . R~v" Mathias McCabe, 1915, people from all parts of the Dio- '. _Pastor, Sacred Heart, ~all River. cese together to share ideas on JULY 31 ' current social ,and religious Rev. Daniel-Hearne, 1865, Pas problems. All are welcome. 'tor, St. Mary, Taunton. '
Missou'ri
"
ST• .JOSEPH, FALL RIVER
WASHINGTON (NC)-A proposal by the, National Education Association to' allow the spending of Federal achool aid funds in areas of their own choice has been attacked by a leading Catholic spokesman and top Federal educators. Msgr. James C. grams to uplift the underprivi Donohue, director of the Ed leged.. ucation Department, United . "The national resources are States' Catholic Conference,,.. under severe demands: Within has called the proposal "both -l\ disappointment and a surprise." It was also criticized' by John W. Gardner, Secretary of Health, Education' and Welfare, and by Harold Howe II, U. S. Commis sioner of Education. Specific Targets Two commissions of the NEA 8t its Minneapolis convention proposed an end to Federal "categorical" controls over school aid funds. Categorical grants were approved by Con gress two years ago' and are geared toward upgrading the education of low-income pupils in, both public and private schools. Msgr. Donohue maintained that the NEA action "certainly disregards recent eJtperiepce." "The public school educators," be stated, "may prematurely ehoose to disregard the hard evi dence that prompted CongreS!l to select specific national educa tional targets that demand im mediate attention through cate gorical approaches, "but the daily newspapers will not let the public forget these social and national security needs. They are real and ominous. Ignores Big Cities "Congress has wisely chosen 'm education and other related 'programs to concentrate on solu tions to our most pressing d~ mestics~cial problem by pro
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Growers, Unions 'ail to Agree SAN FRANCISCO (NC) 1.lfegotiations have completely ~roken down after five months _ intensive effort by a special b'l-faith committee of San Fr~ ~co clergymen with the Perel ~Minetti grape growers of Delano, the Western Conference of Teamsters and Cesar Chavez' Vnlted Farm Workers Organiz ing Committee. The UFOWC boycott against :Perelli-Minetti outlets Vl.!as ex pected to resume in the wake of rtbe breakdown in talks. The announcement was made by the clergy committee cQm 1)osed of Father Eugene Boyle, ttabbi Joseph B. Glaser and Rev. Richard Byfield. They expressed "extreme dh;appointment in the sesults and in the increasingly apparent attitude of the Perelli Minettis to refuse to come to any kind of reasonably' accept able compromise with UFWOC." The clergymen reported that at the last negotiation meeting, 'the UFWOC "gave mile after :mile of ground in seeking ~ bring a peaceful and honorable solution" to the 10-month-old ;[arm labor dispute. Rabbi Glaser, who conducted ifihe series of meetings between the growers and unions 'asked Perelli-Minetti representatives if fihey would join with UFWOC and the Teamster in final and binding arbitration. The answer was negative. ' Rabbi Glaser asked Chavez if he wanted release by the clergy from his promise to cease and tresist boycott and other eco nomic activities against Perelli Minetti. The answer was affir J»ative. The clergy committee then re ~ased Chavez and UFWOC, and Uledged support. '
New New England Area CYO, Head Member of St. Mary's Parish, Norton "They have problems and they're looking for an answer. They can be helped~and they ean use a lot of :help." That's one teen-ager's opinion of hippies, teeny-boopers and LSD users. He's Brian Pontolilo; 18, ()f St: Mary's parish, Norton, newly-elected presi dent of the New England region of the Catholic Youth Organization. Bri'an has never per sonally met a hippie. "They don't· have them at Coyle High School," h~l chuckled. But as a teen, he can under
stand what "turns them on." Re garding LSD, he opined, "Lots of times people try it for an ex perience. I can see that, although I wouldn't do it myself-but I can't see it as a regular thing. The new leader of nearly 2000 New England CYOers is a June graduate of Coyle High School in Taunton. In September he plans to enter St. Anselm's Col lege, Manchester, N. H. Is his important position the reward of years of labor in the CYO vineyard? Not at all, and Brian's the first to admit it. "My parish only became active in CYO a year and a half ago," he explains. "I was chairman of spiritual activities at St. Mary's, and then I was elected Diocesan CYO president." He still holds this office, and will serve on both the Diocesan and regional levels until Fall, when new Di ocesan officers will 'be- installed. Being Robbed But although his CYO experi
ence is short, Brian's enthusiasm
makes up for everything. "Any
one who isn't in CYO is being robbed of something,. he de clares. "I've been in it such' a . short time and I've done so much and met so many people." Even CYOers who don't pro gress beyond parish activities have much to gain from their membership, says Brian. ''The four phases of the program can lead to a well;.rounded life for members." The phases include spiritual, cultural, athletic and , social activities; Continued fro~,Page ane "There's no problem with ath 1M' His children and Christ's letic and social programs," grins IDve for His church." Brian. "But we have to work , ''The teaching· of' the eelibate 9ft the 'other two." dergy is that this life ,is not the During his term as Diocesan . .d....:...that there is a' sUbs.equent . president, the son of Mr. and iRate in which there will be Mrs. James Pontolilo has con aeither marriage nor giving in centrated on a spiritual project marriage," he declared. . known. as "The Search." This is Father Pilarczyk declared: a Cursillo-type retreat designed '"Celibacy is an opportunity. It for teens w,ho are in the process ~ns the door to the priest to be of making major d,~cisions about able to live a life of utter self themselves and their lives. lessness, complete giving, and It could be part of what Brian untrammeled generosity. 'Once has in mind when he speaks of be is a priest in a celebate the answers being iooked for by elergy, it is up to him to make hippies. The Search, which will use of the opportunity. It's Ii be sponsored during coming possibility, an invitation, a chal months by CY0 units in all parts lenge, rather than a guarantee. Iri the Diocese, emphasizes the Ws dynamic, rather than static." place of love in the Christian Church Law life. He acknowledged that priestly eelibacy is a matter of Church Deacons to Assist law and just as subject to Mange as any other Church law, !lUch as the one that forbade eat 'Military Chaplains . .eAMP DRUM (NC)-Richard ing meat on Friday. But the fact that it is a law Cardinal Cushing of Boston. said doesn't mean the end of disCus~ , here he hopes "to find a practi Iilon, he said, predicting that the . cal way for priests of the future IlUbject would be discussed to gain experience with the mil itary by volunteering to come to "'probably for years to come." Camp Drum to h4~lp the chapHe said "the net result of, the' .lains." iliscussion will be good" because Cardinal Cushing, in an 'ad tend to "clarify things and point up the advantages of dress to National Guardsmen' of eelibacy, which have been taken the Yankee Division who at tended a field Mass prior to go for granted." ing into the field for five days "I feel that the law will be of combat training, outlined a _ntinued," he said, "but that plan to augment the division's the controversy is doing a favor religious staff with deacons from to the Church." St. John's Seminary, Brighton, From his own experience, Mass-major seminary for the rather Pilarczyk said, celibacy Boston archdiocese. did not appear to be a major "I am sure the deacons would factor in seminary drop-outs or gain aD appreciation of what in any decline of religious voca you are doing here," the cardi tions. nal said, "an apprec}ation which
This is a "very 'iffy' sort of might prompt them, after some
argument to use for changing parish duties, to volunteer to tile law," he said. .fllecome parish chaplains."
Celibacy
• will
BRIAN PONTOLILO "After it, you just want to go out and love everybody," says Brian.' . Another' CYO problem is the recrui.ting of new ·members. "Some' members are selfish," says Brian thoughtfully. "They enjoy CYO themselves, but they make no effort to get younger kids 'interested. Then when the older ones leave CYO, there's no one to' carry' on." The remedy' for this situation, he feels, is the promotion of yearly membership campaigns on the parish level. Active, among other things, in track, drama~ics and glee club at Coyle, Brian' plans a career in accounting. and will study towards that end at St. Anselm's. But an outdoor Summer is pre ceding his September date with the books. He's working as a carpenter on construction of an Attleboro apa~tment house. Youngest of three sons, Brian has a brother a Holy Cross Brother imd another a student at St. John' Fisher College, Roch ester, N. Y. National Convention The dates of November 16 to 19 are red-circled on his calen dar, h~ says. That's when he'll lead' New, England delegates to the national CYO convention in Miami. New England's CYOers will form the largest single con tingent 'at the conclave 'and Bda~ds already working on his part of convention preparations. \
Interfaith Effort For InnelJ' C~ty CAMDEN (NC)-Four priests of the Camden diocese and three Presbyterian ministers are in voived in an experimental inter~ fai~h inner city project here. Purpose of the project, accord .ing to the clerical team, is to enable college students and sem inarians "to develop an under~ standing of some of the more im portant aspects of inner city life, and an awareness of the various attitudes among the several seg ments of the inner city com munity toward their common problems." The six-week program at the Camden Metropolitan Ministry Center here involves 17 Catholic seminarians, three Presbyterian ministerial students and a Meth odist college student. The pro gram is divided into five general areas: academic, housing re search, recreational leadership, manual labor and cultural op portunities. The Rev. Mr. Lawrence Black of the center staff said the aca demic emphasis would invlove readings, field trips and discus sions on social services, urban renewal and housing, and the church in modern community life. Archbishop Celestine J. Da miano, bishop of Camden, in an address during the program's orientation period, said: "We have a problem today-poverty -one that must be solved, not primarily with money or brick or mortar, but with the spirit."
IMMACULATA (NC) - Im-e maculata College here in Penn sylvania has received a grant of $13,500 for cancer research from the Damon Runyon Fund. Sister ~t. Agatha, o( the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary who ~irect the college, is project director, and Dr. Rolf K. Ladisc1l is research associate.
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ANCHOR-
Thurli., July 20, 1967
Cancer Research
He's campaign manager for Stephen Foster of the Manches ter Diocese, who is running for national CYO president. Nor is he neglecting the Fan River Diocese. A. good part of· his time in coming weeks will. be ,devoted to briefing incoming. Diocesan pl'esident Mark Brad bury . af St. Joseph's parish, North Dighton. 'rhere'll also. be meetings· with Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Diocesan Youth Direc tor, and with. Msgr. John Carroll of Boston, area eyO chaplain. Brian plans two more years of CYO activity until he reaches 20, "retirement age" for mem bers of the youth group. What then? "Well," he says enthusi astically, "then'there's the Cath olic Young A.dult Organiztaion. There's a group that needs a lot of work." Brilln's the bo:y for it.
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THE ANCHOR-D~ese of Fall River-Thurs., July W, 1967
Ecumenical Effort
Di·m~~,isOtiiotg.SMpport A~OHrms ,AM'er~(c~nJ l@~@r le@delrs
P[}uD~«ll~(p)~phia's
Johrin. CaJrdDIfi)(!B~ e{(j'<l)1 Pledges
I CC@rrufrD uing' DottiJDc91U1e W5fr1hJ ©frl}u~r Faiths .
its earlier stories and purports large, that labor leaders as ·a to bean, accurate summary of a group are much more conserva confidential poll tive than the rank-and-file. covering thou , I have always felt ,that ,many sandsaf union of the liberal intellectuals who membevs' from romanticize in this fashion .about about a dozen the "militant" J:an,k,.and-cfile, .at big un ion s. the expense of "soft" -or '~re Thei'eseems to actionary" labor leaders,.aFe suf be -no doubt fering from.a common for-rn -of that such a poll disillusionment which is largely, ' was taken, at but not entirely of their -own the request of making. the AFL-CIO, Feeling this way about the by John F. matter, I was gratified to ·dis Kraft, Inc., a cover, in reading the 20th' anni well known New York ·polling versary issue of Cornell Univer 'firm. It remains to be seen, sity's Industrial and Labor Rela however, whether' or not the tions Review, that Joseph Shis Journal's summary of this poll, t~r, one of the nation's ,leading .which appear€ d ' under the by . labor economists, agr-ees with line of staff reporter James P. nle, or vice versa. Gannon, is completely accurate. llIore Exciting Pl'oblems' I have heard it said by 'people Professor Shister, chairman of W'ho claim to have read the Kraft the . Department ,of Industrial ,report that Mr. Gannon's' second , Relations at the state University hand precis of its contents is of New York in BuffaHl, ·paYs distorted. Wc 'will ,never know his respects to labor's ·liberal fol' surc, of course, unless and - intellectual critics in the -course until the report is m~de ~ublic. ofa survey.article in the Review Substantially Correet of the direction ,of unionsm'dur MeanwhUe, if r were' a bet ing the past 20 years. ' ting man, I would be willing to Their disillusionment, he says, stems, in pal·t, from the \jnion'-s give reasonable odds that Gan lliID is substantially -correct own actions or failure ,tetake when he says that the results adequate action when called for. of the Kraft pol~ indicate that He hastens to add, ,oowever, "the' chief worries of union Ulat it "would be ina"ccur.ate to members have' a surprisingly attribute the liberal intellectual censervati-ve cast," particularly response solely to what laber·has done or failed to ·de. III I.arge illl th€ area of welfare legisI.ation part this response has .also ,been aad civil rights. {)ne doesn't have to be a scien caused by the attraction -of ·t-his group, both within and without tific pollster or a flrofessional sociologist to be reasonably cer academia, to new and more ex tain that there is a widening gap citing socio-economic problems: between labor leaders and rank international relations, economic growth, the civil rights move and-file union members on these ment, educational reform,pov two issues, among others. erty, and so forth. In other words, I am fully pre pared to believe, on the basis' of "Labor problems no longer hold the center of the social my own experience, that another stage, as they did in the '30s; unpublislred study of union atti and the liberal intellectual is tudes referred to by Mr. Gannon is correct in its finding that attracted, as are most people, to where the action is. rank-and-file union members, "Like most other ,people, he is by and large, are more conser influenced by styles and vogues vative than their elected officers on many social issues and that -an influence reinforced ,by ttte channeling of private and public the growing trend toward home research grants to the study of ownership among rank-and 'current' issues." filers has much to do with the way they react to the issue of Civil Rights civil rights. Turning to the specific issue of M~. Hero's Report civil rights, Professor Shister The authol' of the latter study says that the top . leadership of of union members' attitudes- the American labor movement Alfred O. Hero Jr,-is quoted by could have done more to ad Mr. Gannon as saying that first vance the cause of inter,racial generation home-owners in the justice, but the crudal question, ranks of organized labor are he points oilt, is: how. much deeply worried that racial in more? tegration irl housing will deflate He reminds ..us that "there the value of their property.. were serious l,imits constraining In general, we are told, Mr. union action, and one should not Hero's two-year study of some forget that union leadership 3,~OO union members from a so probably did as much as busi called progressive union shows ness leadership. that attitudes on social issues '''If one argues that is n~t very gI'ow more liberal as union m€ 1 1 much, one must remember that move up from local offiC€ to 'union leaders are elected of national leadership, but that the ficials' and cannot move teo far rank-and-file differ very little out in front of their member ir<>m a sampling of the general ship, for they will not merely be public on civil rights and a num generals without troops, they' ber of related issues. will be stripped of tReir stars Mr. Shister's View altogether. "It is not the leadeFsh.ip so This is what I would expect much, as the rank and file that aHy scientific sampling of rank has put a roadblock te Negro ad and file 'attitudes to reveal. It is vancement in the trade ~r in not, however, what some of the dustry. labor movement's liberal intel
LPHIA (NC)-John Broderick, Mayor James ]8[. Jl. rol of Philadelphia' Tate, Rabbi Aaron Landes, rep Fesenting the Greater Philadei he will continue his phia Board of Rabbis and Reog" ard advancing ecu the Philadelphia William Bentley, representing the Greater Philadelphia Coun . g 15,000 at a public cil of Churches. Rev. Bentley, a Negro who is n the Civic Center Conventio~ Hall, honoring bis active in the civil rights move ment, told the large audience elevation 1'0 the college -of that true ecumenism began 10 dinals, prelate underscored the ,need f r cooperation ~mong blossom in Philadelphia when Cardinal Krol took over in 1961l all religio s. The new Cardinal,particular.ly as spiritual head of the Phila asked for help from the -other delphia archdiocese. religious aiths in the field -of The program was limited to an hour but the Cardinal remained education JWhere some -differ en-ees hav crOPPed up ion the fer an hour longer, seated m II past. chair in the middle of the audi Dignitaries .at ·therec('pUoA torium personally greeting DUD included It. Gov. Raymond P. dreds. PHILAD Cardinal has asserte efforts to menism i archdioces Addressi reception
By Msgr. George G. Higgins . (Director, Social Action Dept., USeC) The Wall Street Journal reported on, July 6 that Amer Ican Labor leaders are becoming increasingly alarmed by diminishing support among rank-and-file union members. The Journal, as previously noted in this column, has -been keeping tabs On this devel opment for some time, but lectual critics have ·been telling us in recent years. its most recent report is On the contrary, these critics more detailed' than any of have left the impression, ·by and
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,FIRST CATHOLIC: Roose velt Carter is the first Cath olic ever elected toO t ·n ·e executive board of the 1\880- ciation of Council Executives professional emplo~'ees -of local, state and national Councils of Churches. ~4.. for mer newsman, Mr. Carter is community relations direc.tor for the Inter-Church Board for Metropolitan affairs and the Columbus (Ohio) Council of Churches. NC Photo.
PICKING
UP THE
BRDKEN PIECES , 1HE HOlLY FATHER'S MISSDIllIB;J ADD TD THE ORIENTAL CHURCH
Through -At). fault gf their own, thousands of innoC€nt r~fugees In Christ's Holy Land are trying ·to ,pull themselves together. Hungry boys search -out soraps of food. Little girls IElok through -rubble -heaps for rags to cover thel' tired ,bodies. Cripples plead for crutches; the WmJ 'wounded, bandages; and the elderly, a roof to il'EARS ,cover their heads. it goes without saying that IN THEIR during -the aftermath' of any war, guilt·free vie EYES tims -suffer tt:emendously as they attempt to 'Pick -up the ~s of their broken lives••••These r.efl:lP6S are fW-ofoundly gratefUl for what you are doing fer tl:lem~ Reports an on·the·s~ priest.: "They spoke to me with tears in ~s ,of their loses, but expressed profound .gr.atiWElefer ~I AfRerican C8tholtes are deln8 for ,them."
Center to Study Health' Problenv SOUTH ORANGE (NC)---'Re search on 'pollution, ,commuflity shelter problems and public health plans will be carried on at Seton Hall University through its Center for Urban ReseaI'ch and Environmental Studies. The research will be under -the direction of William V. pye, who has been named associ ate ,direc tor for environmental studies for the center. ,Bishop John J. Dougherty, Seton Hall president, 'established the center 'a year ago to co operate in the solving of urbap problems. . Pye is presiden't of Planners Associates Inc., of Newark and has taught at Yale and Washin'g ton universities besides acting as a consultant to the city of Seattle.
"It is the leadership which must take the credit for wha l advancement has occurred in th' last 20 years, modest though i1 has been in most cases. It r5. thl leadership which must take credit for the financial support of the civil rights movement, and that has been more than modest in a number of cases." 'Workable Context Professor' Shister does not contend-and neither do I-that the top leadership of organized 'labor has done enough in the field of civil rights. He simply says that laqor readers, by and large, are ahead of' the rank and-file on this particular issue, 'among others. If this is so, labor's liberal in tellectual critics can reasonably be expected, I think, to come down out of the clouds and tell us just bow they -weuld go about changing rank-and-file ,attitude, for the better. In other WOI'ds, .as Professor Shister concludes, "evaluatien' and criticism and, ,adviC€ should be anchored in a workable- con text.. Let the critique espouse ideas that are highly imagina tiv~ but shape those ideas so that they can find a fertile breeding ground among unions rather than die from want of nourishmen t."
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What .ar.elheb" -immediate needs? $.. •. ¥mw 'stringless' gift soes where t1E!8ded'most. 0$25 week!s supply of antibiotics. o $20 BaDdag~s and Dressings. ,0 $10 Feeds a. family for one month. Dresses for orphan girl. $5 Crutches for a cripple. 0'$4 Shoes (one pair). 0$3 o $2 Blanket for a baby. Lunch'for ail orphan for one mOflth. 0$1
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Overlooked by the headlines from the Holy Land ·are ·our hundreds of priests and Sisters qUietly serving the suffering. A non-Catholic observe' at it hospital in Jordan spoke of four nursin. Sisters-"They care for the wounded with su BL SSED preme ·t:leElication ••• hours mean nothing to them." Vk.af'e -proud of. them for they are truly ARE THE peacemakers In a troubled area of the world. Pray, pJease:they'lI be safe. , .. Many youn! I>fJ~CEM~KERS girls that longed for a life of service to God noW facedisappeintment. Their families, Impover Ished by war, halie no means to support thel' training.as Sisters.• '•• Will you help? A Sister'S training lasts two years, costs $12.50 a month, $150 a year, er $300 altogether. Your "peac&>' maker" in 'one of,our 18 countries will write tc thank you,'
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JAonsignor
I
!Dear olan:
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ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $--------~o&wi
FOR NAME
_ _ _ _ _ _ STATE
~=....;
ZIP CODE_
NEAIll E~IlT WELFARE AS,SaCIATla.,
NEAR-EAST
IVIISSIONS ~f FRAftClS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preside....
MSGR. JOHN G. NOlAN, National Secret8~ Write: CMtfOLtC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 2J2/YUkon 6·5840
THE ANCH04t-Dlocese of FoI1l'Wer-ThuR", July 20, 1'"
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OrDthla Arruda Fall River
S_drs N. ~Ue N e'", lIJeodi'4K'li
GRADUATION
EXER(~ISES
Paulette D. )Smile Somerset
Sandra. Bente Ncew' Bedford
lFalll River
ALBANY (NC) - The New York State Catholic Welfare Committee has recommended ithe state Constitution retain at provisiGn that whenever prac ticable in child placement cases, the child be placed with pel'SOflS GJf his own religion. The recommendation was maGe I'Jiv the Catholic group in a memorandum submitted to the atate's Constitutional Convei\ llIlon. The memorandum underscored Chat the religious protectiOOl e~ause of the presentConstitu ~on contains such a provisien, cniginally enacted in 1921 and amended in 1961. "This confirms the present 00 atll'e of the people to guarantee il)V constitutional protection tine llundamental right of parent al-ld celltild to religious liberty wheth 0r they are a separated family 01' a family unit," the memorandum stated. . The committee urged that the [l»ractice be retained in cases of' <i:are of a child outside his ~own Ilnome, either temporarily or J10r oooption.
Schools to ~eeeiiwe Sweepstaktes ShlDllfe CONCORD (NC) - Despite <elIlar'ges of breaching the First Amendment, Gov. John W. lKing has signed a bill which Il)r'ovides for private and pars dlial schools to receive a share ()f the proceeds fr'om the New llIampshire sweepstakes. "I am aware that this legisla Moo raises constitutional ques ~ons. Were there time to do S9, II should prefer to seek an opin Ion of the Supreme Court sf New Hampshire before signing Ilale measure," King said. "However, I have been per (jOf\ally advised that once the Wfit becomes law, its constitu ~onality will definitely be chal llenged," he continued. "I am tJigning the bill with that knowl ooge in mind." King signed the )bill shortly IOOfore it would have died auto matically by "pocket veto" when the legislature adjourned.
Center Director NiAGARA FALLS (NC)
Jrather Joseph P. Ganley, C.M., ~hairman of the department of l!tOlitical science at Niagara Uni"": versity~ has been appointed di !rector of the St.John's Univer lJUy Brooklyn Center. The ceil 0011' is the downtown campus tat. JohD'. University, Jamaica,
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'Like .Ecumenical .Side' BALTIMORE (NC)-Members M the Religious SoCiety Olf Friends (Quakers) have contrib ute<i $1,200 to Caritas Intema tionalis, a Catholic relief agency, fO<!' the purchase of medical sup plies and equipment for Viet nam. Miss L. Emerson Lamb said she and 15 other Baltimore members of the society "wanted to help the victims of war, and we liked the ecumenical side of it," Car'itas lntemationalis pro vides humanitarian relief to all parts of Vietnam, and has a spe cial project for providing hospi tal supplies and equipment for civilians in North Vietnam. Msgr. George Huessel of the German branch of the Rome based organization made the ar rangements for civilian relief ac tivities in the north when he visited Hanoi, capital of North
Rule,
of Aid to
Vietnam, last· January. Miss Lamb, acting as spokes man for the 16 Baltimore Quak er's, said they selected the Cath olic agency beta use it is seeking to bring relief to all civilian war victims, and. because the reli gious and non-political motiva tion of its acti vi ties is clear. Helping Humanity Commenting on the possibility that the medical supplies could be d'iverted to military use in North Vietnam, she said "we want them to be used for suf fering individuals and hope they will be used for civilians. "But," she added, "our interest is in suffel'ing human beings as human beings. We think the idea of helping humanity is impor tant enough not to worry about whether a soldier gets helped also. "Our feeling is that it is not o!lly gi ving relief that we are
fPerrm~t Ci~U'®[J'~oans W~tftd
Claire Brunelle New Bedfor.
AT ST. ANNE"S SCHOOL OF NURSING IN FALL RIVER JULY 2ft
Quakers Contribute to Catholic Relief
Clause Protects Child's Religion
lJI. Y.
Sandra A. Bell
to
IExper~ment
tLo{flUlrg;cG~' ProlCtaces
SPENCER· . (NC) - Cistercian monasteries of the Order of the Strict Observance were authorized to experiment with their stl'ict rule and liturgical practices :Jy a general chapter heIdi. recently at the Abbey of Citeaux in Dijon, France. Abbot Thomas Aquinas Keat-. ing, O.S.C.O., of St. Joseph's Abbey here and one of 82 astery and 42 convent superiors attending, discussed the changes which were based on a questionnaire distributed to all monks. The abbot stressed that as a res",U of the chapter actions each house· has moreaut-onomy to e,x:periment with the rule of M1e order according to its own needs. The local superior, he pointed oot, may decidll on the place, time, fr'equency and exterior solemnity of all -rites in accordance with local circumstanees. Rule of SUenee The monk's hour of rising may be moved ahead one hour from 2:15 A.M., the present rule, though the duration of sleep will remain the same, he said. Although the rule of silence remains substantially the same, Abbot Keating reported, greater flexibility was approved so that it call be adjusted to the needs oif' the community or the indivi- " dual monk. The practice of abstinence from meat and fasting from Sept. 14 to Easter was retained, he llddeGl, but eacb house will be
m0ll-
allowed to decide on the use of eggs and fish, formerly served only to the sick. The chapter also voted to ask permission from Rome for ex periments in the structure of the divine office, the reduction of the number of little hours, the distribution of the Psalter over a two~week period, the use of the vernacular and pauses for silent prayers. Unity· of Purpese According· to Abbot Keating t!ae- chapter sought to let each community accept "the respon sibility- of taking as full a part as. possi hIe in' the renewal and adaptation of the order. The chapter insisted upon unity of . purpose, goals, essential means and principal observances, but authori:zed each community to make- experiments -within the limits established by the chap tel' in ol'der to deepen and rendell' more effective its commitment to the- contemplative life lived and shared in common. "In choosing a wide range of experiments," he continued, "it was not the intention of the
chapter that each community
should necessarily make use of all of them, but that each house should have freedom to choose what it really needs for its human, Christian and monastic growth." He said the chapter wants gradual introduction of the experiments based on the desires of the monks in each community.
ViE~tnam
wO'l'ki.ng for," Miss Lamb con tinued, "but it is to do every thing we possibly can to stop the war," The 16 Baltimore Quakers, most of whom are members of the Stoney Run Monthly Meet ing, acted as individuals in mak ing their c-ontribution, Miss Lamb emphasized, although she said; they acted with the ap proval of the Meeting. Understanding Obscured The channel for most Quaker relief to war victims, is the American Friends Service Com mittee (AFSC), with national headquarters in Philadelphia. Mrs. Margaret Bacon, a spokesman for the national AFSC office, noted that public understanding of the extent and aims of Quaker relief has been obscured during the Vietnam conflict by reports which have emphasized aid to war victims in North Vietnam. Quakers, acting as individuals and regional groups, Mrs. Bacon explained, have contributed to international agencies which aid civilians in both North and South Vietnam and, in some cases, have tried to send relief directly to North Vietnam. Mrs. Bacon said that although AFSC is a Quaker agency, less than half of its funds come from the 122,000 Quakers in the U. S. More- than 50 per cent of the contributions each year come from· individuals and groups of all faiths who, she said, "like the way we spend their money."
AnLEBORO'S Leading. Garden Center
CONLON 6'
DO·NNELLY
South Main & WaD Sts.
ATTl.EBORO 222-0234
Diocese to Open
Dialogue Center
VICTORIA (NC)-The ThQma~ More Center,' an experimental project intended to serve other Christians and unbelievers as well as Catholics, will open soon in the Victoria diocese here in British Columbia. Father' Patrick Ratchford, proj ect director, said "this will nol be a center to push the Catholic religion. Certainly, it will serve as a community center for Cath olics but we hope it will also be a meeting place for dialogue anrl cooperation between persons o~ all beliefs ancl of no belief." The director indicated that the center will most likely serve as an informal meeting place for discussions, seminal'S and studv in religion philosophy and liter'. ature. The center is being fur nished by voluntary donations. and a library and reading room will be set up, Religion courses for high school students and catechetical programs for children will also be offered, but will be centere(: on discussions and encounter, rather than on classroom-type instruction, Father Ratchford said.
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Voyage of Faith
lItuc1Jed theology at st. MarTI 8eminary in Baltimore, wheM ))e received a Master of .Ans, eum laude, and a BaccalaurelilU ,in sacred. Theolog, magna cuM ~ude.
"Considerations of grave 'importance and much com Father Dupuis was ordained .. the priesthood on J:uDe 10, 1933 plexity" have bade the Holy Father to undertake his fifth by the late Bishop Cassidy. Jib, Papal voyage outside Italy since he has undertaken the first assignment as a curate W8I!J place and responsibility of Peter. " at st. Joseph's Church in Attle Though such events no 'longer evoke awe among us, boro and then he was transfe.. red to Notre Dame in Fall Riva papal trips and the often used symbolism of Pope Paul where he served from July 1933 are' not the normal, everyday work of diplomacy. The until July 15, 1937 when he was Holy Father has repeatedly mentioned the importance of his designated chaplain for the then "Year of Faith" and again he illustrates this importance St. Joseph's Orphanage (now :with a .well-planned meaningful trip. Mount St. Joseph School) in Fan Rivoer. He continued in this Pos-t conciliar years have always been weighed with position until May 20, 1959 when eontroversies so the Pope's visit to ,the scene of the first he was designated pastor of the eight ecumenical councils is a sincere prayer that the' suc Swansea parish on May 20, 1959. ,cess that crowned them (they are recognized by the Cath Father Pupuis has been the C)lic and Orthodox Churches) may also be fully attributed director or Notre Dame Ceme~ tery in Fall River since Feb. I, to Vatican II. 1947 and he has been a member Councils have a way of highlighting contemporary of the Diocesan Commissio~ 0Ii problems and the answers are not always immedi'ately avail Sacred Music since Nov. 26, 1958. able in a computer sense. The one great answer ,is always,
MonsignOr Bull
there, however-faith. GOd did found the Church and did
promise to watch over her till the end of time. '
One of the few diocesan v0 In the 'area of ecumenism especially, the fut~re lsnot cations from ,Nantucket, Father Hull was born on Oct. 2, 190'J, given us in detail. Countless problems loom ahead but with the son of the late Lester V. and eontagious courage Pope Paul has thrown all his activity Helen (Ayers) Hull. in fulfilling Christ's last heartfelt prayer '''That they may Pastor of the Sacred Heart be one;" How? We do not know the details but we do know parish in Fall River for the pal$ the one all-important factor-faith in the person, power, one and one-half years, Father Hull attended the elementary ~nowledge and love of Christ. Pop~ grades at St. Joseph's Academy Recent events' in the Middle East have complicated in, Wellesley Hills (Mass.) and. , Continued from Page One held until he was appointed pas ]post-conciliar problems even more. Or have they? Might tor of StL Patrick's Church, in then continued his education at they be the means of bringing brothers together to solve St. John's Prep in Danvers 'from MonsigIm(}r ]Boyd' Wareham Ion Sept. 30, 1948. eommon, serious problems? Who knows? Faith. he was graduated in The W~reham pastor has also which 1926. This voyage of Pope Paul again illustrates how man Born in Taunton on Aug. 6, served the diocese as a pro " t if a II d epen d e d on h1m '" b t . h h I·· 1907, Father Boyd is the son of After two years at the Jesui~ mus t ac as u WIt t e Ivmg the late Michael' J. and Louisa synodal jhdge in the Marriage operated Holy Cross College in Court. f,aith that cries aloud that "all depends on God." (McCormick) Boyd. Worcester, the Fall River pastor . Well may we all pray that the papal undertaking "obThe Fall River pastor, graduMonsignor DUlIart , "then studied philosophy and the tain from the Lord graces sufficient to render fruitful in' ated from St. Mary's grammar , ology at St. Bernard's Seminary the eastern-most in Rochester. He was ordained its historic significance, for the good of the Church and . and high schools in Taunton, befor he entered Providence Col parish in the 1,194-square mile for peace in the world, this deeision of ours whose true lege. After two' years at the diocese"F ther Duart has served to the priesthood on May' 26, 1934 by the ~ate Bishop Cassid3lo and only motives are the interests of religion and thoughts Providence Dominican institu as pastor ,f St. Peter the Apostle After serving' the Summer of charity." (Pope Paul). " t i o n , Father Boyd studied phil Church . I Provincetown for the months in his first curacy' at osophy and theology at St. Ber , past 15 .y~rs. nard's Seminary in Rochester, The Vi eyard Haven native Sacred Heart Church on Oak New York. was born 'n Tisbury on Dec. 29, , Bluffs, Father Hull was assigned The, new prelate was ordained 1904, the on of the late Antone to the Sacred Heart parish in September 1934 where he stayed It has been ,very well said that youth is a period of to the priesthood by the Most F. Duart ]Jr. and Delia (Bren for more than 18 years until E. Cassidy, the third Rev. James nan) Dual:' . ,life but it is not-or should not be-a career. One of the April 1953. His next assignment Bishop of Fall River, on June He graduated from Tisbury was at St. James Church 'i~,New reasons there has been so much catering to youth is that 10, 1933. He served as an assist grammar school in 1919 and Bedford fQr about 10 months and this segment of the population has so much money to, ant at St. Mary's Church, Nan then fro1TiSbUry High School then he was transferred to St. spend, And in a society that puts so much emphasis on tucket, St. Patrick's Church in in 1923 efore he entered St. William's Church, Fall River in, the material, those who have the money get the attention. Falmouth and, St. Patrick's Anselql's I ollege in Manchester, June 1954, a position he contin Church, in Fall River. N. H., which he attended for ued in until he was named ad Recent studies have shown that the teen market is a $20 Then, he was named to the three Yea~ before he transfer billion dollar one annually. inInistrator of Mount Carmel m Catholic Welfare Bureau and red to St. Mary's Seminary, Bal Seekonk in February 1960. .This in itself explains why so much atterition on director of St. Vincent's Home timore, in the Fall of 1926. After three years at the See in Fall River, a position he held youth and why this portion of society has been encour Father uart was ordained to from Dec. 1,. 1949 until he was the priest~ood on May 30, 1931 konk parish, the new monsignor aged'to expect attention and, indeed, to demand it. was designated pastor of St. designated as pastor of St. Pat by the late Bishop Cassidy. But the boomerang is in the air.. Margaret's on Buzzards' Bay. rick's Church in Fall River on Msgr. Duart's first assignment He served the Cape Cod parish: All of' a sudden business is beginning to realize that Nov. 1, 1962. as an assiJ'tant was at the parish for three years before he re while the youth market is a big one it has been overlook In addition, the new monsi he has ser1ed 16 years as pastor, turned to the Fall River patisli ing the elderly. And all of a sudden there has been an gnor has served as director of St. Peter the Apostle in Prov where he spent more th~m half awareness that this market-involving 19,000,000 elderly the Radio Actitivies Bureau,' incetown. 1Later, he was a curate of his years as a laborer for God. Bureau of Inf.ormation and Dioc for one year at St. John the Bap- , persons in the country-has twice as much to spend as esan Legion of Decency. tist Churci' in New Bedford and Monsignor lFhllrley the youth market. The elderly have $40 billion dollars to he served for seven years at St. spend now and this figure will rise to $55 billion within ,Nearing his golden jubilee as a Anthony's Church in Taunton Monsi'gnor Chi,pendale "ten years. before h~ assumed his present diocesan priest, and dean of the Seventy-two year old Father post at P town. Taunton deanery, Father Hurley So the public can expect a wooing of the old in busi Monsig or Duart supervised, has been pastor of St. Joseph's ness and marketing campaigns of the near future. All of Chippendale was born in Fall River on .July 16, 1895, the son direc ed the constrllction of Church, Taunton, for the past a sudden these older citizens have become a "precious com , of the late Thomas and Nora aandnew ' ,arochial school that 16 years. modity and ads will cry out all over the country that these (O'Leary) Chippendale. Born in Fall River on Feb. ~ opened i Jan. 1967 and serves After havin~ graduated from the youth of the Cape-~p area. 1889, the 78-ye'ar old TauntOJI should not be neglected, must not be overlooked, cannot be St. Joseph's elementary school prelate, Is the son of the' late forgotten. ' in Fall River, the Wareham pas Jeremiah S. and Mary (She~, It is too bad that the conscience of society must be tor Mo signor Dupuis completed his four-year high Hurley. He is an' alumnus of Sl, I ,-< pricked by a dollar' sign. ' school course at Holy Family ,in Pastor of St. Louis de France Mary's grammar school and' B, New Bedford and then matricu Church iti Swansea for the past M. C. Durfee High School, bolll, lated for two years at St. Charles eight yeats, Father Dupuis com in Fall River. Seminary in Catonsville, Md. He then matricula~ed at . .
pleted 34 Years in the priesthood Then, the new prelate studied on June 1'0 last. Charles' College in Catonsvil~
philosophy and theology at St. A nati~e of Fall River, the Md.; St. Mary's Seminary iii
Mary's Seminary in Baltimore new prelate was born on Jan. 30, Baltimore and the Sulpiciali before he was ordained to the 1907, the I son' of Hormidas J. Seminary, Washington. ' priesthood on May 26'" 1923 by Dupuis ¥d the late Marie-' Ordained on May 25, 1920, the the Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, new monsignor served for the eFFle'AL N1EWSPAPEIR OF THE DIOCESE OF FAlL RIVER second Bishop of the Diocese of Louise (Guevremont) Dupuis. After Eaduatin g from the Summer months at St. FrancirJ P~blished weekly by The Catholic Press of th~ D'iocese of Fall River Fall River. Notre Da e parish school, in Xavier in Hyannis before be went to St. Marys Church, North Msgr. Chippendale's first cur 1921, Fat er Dupuis then at _410 Highland Avenue' acy was at Our Lady of the Isle tended tnd graduated from Attleboro, in September of that Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 on Nantucket. In the Fall of the B. M. C. Durfee High S,chool, year. On Feb. 24, 1921, he was assigned to SS. Peter and Paw PUBLISHER year of his ordination, he was also in F 11 River, in 1925. Church, Fall River, where bel transferred to St. Mary's Church The Sw nsea pastor then con Most Rev. James L. Connoliy , D.O., PhD. in Mansfield where he served tinued his studies for two years served 13 years until Feb. ~ GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER 1934 when he was transferred. for the next 14 years. Then, he at St. Chailes Borromeo in Sher I.tt. Rev. Daniel F.' Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll 'was 'named administrator of brooke, ( uebe,c) Canada before Holy Name Church, New BecJ,o MANAGING EDITOR Holy Rosary parish in Fall River . he enter d the seminary, of ford . ~iugh J. Golden on Oct. 7, 1937, a position he Philosoph in Montl'eal. He Turn to Page Eighteem.
EDevQtes 10 Priests
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Susaa DiAndrea FaU'W'11er'
Diane Daigle New Bedford
MilI7 AmI DIM lll'alllIUv0ll" .
Baehel FreU
.Joan Gallagher IF!&U Riftr
Fall River
BiSH6P OONNOJLLY TO PRESENTDIPWMAS AT NURSING SCHOOL COMl\fENCEMENT EXERCISES
Seminary Hires
Husband, W~fe
'For !Faculty ,": N][AGARA (NC)-A Ro man Catholic seminary has hired a husband and wife team to teach sociology to geRlinarians. Announcing the appointment of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Castantipo, Father Keith Egan, O. CarIn.. president of Mt. Carmel College, said it was probably the first time a North American seminary has hired a married couple to clo team teaching. The seminary trains future Carmelite priests. Castantino has been chief ad ministrator of probation lrervices for Niagara County since 1953. His wife has been director of social service at Mt St. Mary's Hospital, Niagara Falls, N. 'Y., and a teacher at Niagra Univer oity. The Castantinos will some times teach simultaneously and at other times lecture separately on special subjects. Father Egan said the college hired the couple partly because Gf the importance of seminarians ooming into contact with women of high professional training and experience. "With Mr. and Mrs. Castantino teaching at the college, our stu. dents will have first hand evi dence of the cooperation io a professional endeavor that is possible for a husband ..and: wife," he stated.
Outlines New Loolk for Ohio K of C
'God's· 'Little Acres' to' Open in D'etroit
Charity Wuth, No Strings Attached DETROIT '(NC) - The mea 'who are getting the Detroit archdiocese's latest facility for the homeless and stricken ready to open call it "God's Little Acres." "Legally, it's called Charities, Inc. Father James W. Bodary" who initiated the plan, and Father William Statham, M.M., and Bill Carey, who will oversee its launching and immediate oper ation, call it a "flophouse," the first. project of its kind to be undertaken locally. The acres-almost 10 in num ber - are the site of the old Sacred Heart parish, just soutb. of the Chrysler Freeway. The small, crowded, and dilapidated houses and stores that once 'served a multitude of city's poor, have now fallen to the urban 'renewai program. Some of the remaining struc tures, now awaiting demolition. are sheltering homeless derelicts who will probably be the flop. house's first customers. "We have a lot of volunteer help promised," said Carey, "in addition to what we've been able to do ourselves * * * paint el"S, carpenters, wall washers,
Study
members of Alcoholics anony mous, friends of friends who have heard about what we'N! trying to do here." The flophQuse will have no "gimmicks," 'explained Father Bodary, "other than charity with no strings attached. Our firs~ commodity is a clean place to sleep for those who have no where' to 'go, reasonably good! food and lit lot of understanding and kindness. And for those who say they'd like' to do something better with their lives, we'I! have facilities to help. ']Evell'yone Needs Love' The priest said those facilities will include day labor place ment, AA meetings, a nursing 'program and counseling services by a local psychiatrist. "Everyone needs love to ex ist," Father 'Bodary emphasized, "no matter how battered! 011' beaten down he may be. Vatican II tells us to go where those in need are, to accept them where they are and as they are.'" The priest said he hopes to undercut some of the flophouses which, he said, are making money on misery. "Our charge will be as low as we can make it-50 cents if we
Russ,ia
25 Gee>rgetowlJIl tUJlnl51f~lf$;ty Students Take Course$ «lit !Leningrad
WASHINGTON (NC)-Undei" Russian culture and Soviet civl COLUMBUS (NC) "The a aine-week, Summer program lization. Knights of Columbus is no long Zi), students of Georgetown UniThe study-tour is under the ar limited to baseball for' the' ,versity here are studying in the direction of Dr. Dmitry Grigo young, bowling for the middle- '"Soviet Union. The course will rieH, professor of Russian lan 'aged and" pinochle for the old," ,'ll'un :thr@ugh Aug. 19. guage . ,and 'literature at the " Robert Vogelpohl of Cincinnati. The program calls for six: .. Jesuit Imiv.ersity, oldest Catholic " tlle new' Ohio head of the K. wee~, of study a~ Leningrad ,institution' of higher learning in , 'of C. saia here. ', State' University and three, this" counti'y, ,with six crediw 'The 'new state deputy told a, .. ,:weeks of touring-one week in " award(!d at its completion. ' , meeting for' Ohio's district depu-,, ,~eningrad, one ,at a southern ties: "Although there will" al-r ~,USJ?ifll, ,youth center and the D®@lo~atl'e Wg~dCW$ . ways tie a place for fun in th~ r .. thlr~ visi,tjng other major places , 'K. of C., our local councils hav~ of interest. to be 'more and more concernedl,·, The study program includes A\i' [P>@~i$h SlJiJ'!?SFl1le DOYLESTOWN (NC) - Some with carrying out the directives ,language practice readings in of Vatican II." modern Russian literature, spe- of, the, nation's largest leaded In line with this aim, Vogel ~i!il exercises in translating and stained.,.glass windows, forming pohl announced, the Ohio men's interpreting work, and study of the east and west walls of the National Shrine of Our Lady of . ()rganization has inaugurated Czestochowa here in Pennsyl three new committees: ecumen fill ~ ~ vania, were dedicated. Our Lady , ism, 'interracial justice, and so ,1Ar.<m1Dl I on racudJ ~al welfare, with a program of NEW ROCHJ<:::LLE (NC)- of. Czel?tochowa is the patroness dtaritable and civic cooperatioQ, ,Rabbi, Henry E~ Kagan of Mt. of Poland. with other fraternal organiza Vernon, N. Y., a practicing psy The two windows - each 41 feet high and 45 feet wide-de %ions such 'as B'nai B'rith and eoothecapist, will join the fac 8be Masons. Rabbi Bruce C01e ulty of the graduate division of pict the history of Poland's mil lenium of, Christianity, and re eN: the B'nai B'rith office in pas1ora} counseling at lona Col COURt . Catholic and Polish Columus spoke at the meeting., ,lege this Fall. The Catholic CGI the first to- address a K. <if C.' lege opened the pastoral iDSti- Amencancontributions ,to the ~istocy and culture of the U. S. aiate meetina in OhiG. tutein 1963.
!LbO
Invites Pontiff To 6~f!1 Series
CHICAGO (NC) - There's 1I operate on ~t. And if we do have great big "if" involved, but Pope anything left' it will go right Paul VI mas been invited to attend baseba!l'a IB57 Warldl back into the operation of the Series. flophouse." The site acquired-donated by Mayor Ric~ard $. Daley of the archdiocese of Detroi~on Chicago dfrsclosed he elctended sistsof a!1 entire parish plant, in tile invitation if the world good conditio,n considering that lreries is betw~n the amazing it has been largely vacant for 'Chicago Cubs oil the National two years. League anril the Chicago White SOB: of the American. <Dlluill"clS Remains Open The mayor said the Pope The rectory is still occupied didn't accept the invitation ill by the Holy Ghost Fathers who will continue to reside there for so many words but "through hiD the present. Two floors orf the facial eXl;)ressian" showed "great red-brick schoolhouse have beelil interest.... ' turned into dormitories for The mayor was a membell' of about 300 men, while the other the party' which attended the floors will contain a kitchen anO! elevation of John Cardina! Cody dining hall, showers, storage of Chicago to the college 01' car space for used clothing, ancl dinals. The party had an audi meeting rooms. ence with the Pope at which the mayor extendzlll the invitation. Father Statham, awaiting re assignment as a Maryknoll mis sioner, lives in the school build ing. Carey, the former genera! manager of St. Aloysius parish, will also share in the adminis tration. He does the pr:icing and purchasing, and says he plans to stay with the flophouse "for the CIIlTilIES SlElRV5CIE rest of my life, if I can." lDDS111W3UIOiS The heart of the flophousa project, the men agree, is the Gasol.ine 92-year-old Sacred Heart church Fllle~ and Range building. Father Statham willl celebrate daily Mass there and it wiU remain open for those who come to pray, think, or jum OBil. BURNERS to rest.
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'HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fatl River-Thurs., July 20, 1967
Members of Many Meet ail" Dia~ogue
ceo
Fa Bt&1)S DalY
By :Mary Tinley Daly It was a day of dialogue, ecumenical dialogue, at the recent annual meeting of Religious Heritage of America, inc., held in Washington, D.C. According to its own defi nition, "Religious Heritage of America is a national, non profit, nonsectarian organ ization founded in 1951 to Ryan, S.J., and the audience, were discussing the Supreme eombat the decline af relig ious V'alues and increase gen Court's ruling on public school eral knowledge of the Nation's religious heritage; to encourage the application of religious prin eiples to all as pects of daily life and to encourage personal :Il'ededication to spiritual worth." ]Discussions were guided by out manding reli gious and lay ]leaders of the Jewish, Protestant and Cath. Cllic .faiths, and were followed - eagerly by people of all ages, states of life and religous per: wasion. . Open-Mindetll:MooclI . Mood was one of friendly in terest' among people ·to all of whom religion was a vitally im portant element, personally and for the benefit of mankind. One eould sense the evident. respect these people had for one anoth er's opinions and beliefs, their aineerity and a desire' to com"'; municate, to start off on a com mon ground. There was no hud dling in ghetto-like groupings: .Protestants here, Catholics there, ~ews in another corner, each. amp eyeing the others with euspiCion. _ This openmindedness, com bined with a sincere belief in one's own religion, reminded us of a quote from Augustinian Father Gregory Baum, writing on "The Catholic Quest for Christian Unity" (Paulist Press; Glen Rock, N. J.): "A Catholic would be untheo ']logical and disloyal if he de~ spised or belittled the worship of separated Christians; but he does not take part-.in it, since he has access to the realities which bis dissident brethren ·lack." Fr. Baum also notes how the ecu';' meriical dialogue, "producing a new outlook and leading to more profound research, has initiat,ed considerable changes in the eu charistic theology of Catholics and . Protestants: Without any compromise, without any- wishy washiness, we have come cl.oser ' to one another." We came closer together that day, all right. For one thing, each speaker, from the morning symposium on "Contemporary Religious Ferment in the Amer ican Context" to the evenil1g banquet, used the word "ecu men ism" or "ecumenical"-and everyone either stumbled over it or pronounced it a different way! This, in itself, became a humorous; "ecumenical" bond. Another bond was the good humor prevailing even in the serious discussions. For example, religious vocation: Rabbi Leon M. Adler told of three Jewish mothers, two of them boasting
. of the success of their sons, the thousands . of dollars each was making, as scientist and physi cian. The third mother almost shamefacedly confessed that her son was a Rabbi, earning far less. "Oh, my," sighed the mothers of the "successes,'" "What kind of a job is' that for a good Jewish bo'y?" An another point,! panelists Rabbi Adler, Rev. Dr.: M. Chan- , dler St.ith of the Baptist. Con."ention . and Fathel" John L.
Prog~m
sAN ANTONIO (NC)-A nun
prayer. Consensus was the im portance of teaching religion in the home and Rabbi Adler's comment that "everything from tooth brushing to soul searching comes from the home.'" Annual Awards
At the awards presentation, Mrs. Marcus Kilch, past presi dent of the National Council of Catholic Women, was named "Churchwoman of the Year". and told of her work with . FISHERMEN AND i:lIIERARC Y: Archbishop Igino Women in Conimuniiy Service (WICS) in screening girls for Cardinale, Apostolic Delegate to Grea Britain (center) and Bishop Steph~n, McGill, S.l?, Bishop Argyll and the Isles the Job Corps. Other' award winners were visit with fishermen in the Hebrides, a group of more than Max lIII. Fisher of :!Detroit, na 500 islands off the west coast of Scot and. The prelates had tional chairman of the United just blessed the bell, salvaged from a unken G~rman battle Jewish Appeal, "Layman of the ship, when the photographer snapped he lens of his camera. Year" who dubbed helPing one.'s ' '. fellowman as "no spectator NC PhotOo sport"; Rev. Dr. Eugene carso~ Blake, generel secretary llJlf the World Council of CbW'ches, . "Clergrman llllf the "ear." Also, Faith and ~ o m awards went W. Rev. Francis .ll. . Heyden, S..1., and Rev. Daniel E. P~wer, S ..1., for their -televi. sion series; Miss .1ane Goodman, Council of. Churches of Greater Fall promises to. bring many seem to call for more than any Washington for public re1atioDB; fashion changes if' the early thing e se are perhaps a long the literary award to Harry showings taking place at this cigarett holder and a set of Kemmelman, State College 0If moment in New York are a good false ey lashes! Boston; Sidney C.' MoOdy, Jlr." barometer. The feminine look is icorice Slender Associated Press, for journalism; returning, ,they claim, and out Blond s are breathtaking in and a' special citation' to Edwin standing among black, r dheads sizzle and bru D. € a nham, editor:"iJi-chief of , 't he des i g n s nettes s ddenly become myste The Christian Science lIIIonitoz. stressing t his riOUS_(eJ'en if 10 minutes before Matter of fact, the dialogue look is the return of the lityou "w.,re wearing a cobbler sent us to re-reading the "Ecu apron 1Vhile you bathed the menical Series," pamphlets. put tIe black dress. Color, color and youngest in the tub). Just try out by the Paulist Press, includ more color has it and s~e. ing "Episcopalians and. Angli Most bf the new little ebony cans,". "The Orthodox," ''The been the cry for the past few designs kre slender as a .licorice 'Methodists," ''The .Presbyteri stick (hbre we go back on that ans" and the study-club edition years but sud-diet) o~ tightly belted with a of "The Decree on EcumeniSDl." denly the designers have wide-.bubkled belt. Skirts are decided to give' . just . aS~hort as you have the everyone's tired old eyes a rest nerve 1. wear them and the Dioceses Coopera~e and muted shades are returning neckline are plunging. as low On Curriculum GUUdlS along with that allUme favorite as the s irts are rising high. black. One articular charmer by OKLAHOMA CITY (Ne) Not being what one thinks of Morton yles for JeUnesse has a The Oklahoma City-Tulsa dio as a trend follower, I still kept scooped Tom Jones neckline cese and 10 Texas Sees are com bining efforts for the secQnd that little black dress in my trimmed with wide elegant year .to provide a curriculum' wardrobe. In fact without a Spanish lace. This delightful guide for parochial elementarY doubt my favorite outfit of last cohfecti n is accented with a schools. Each diocese provides Winter was a black sleeveless waist-w ittling wide turquoise two .representatives to work on sheath dress that had its own satin sas . This is one outfit that the curriculum. . diagonal buttoned jacket. For fairly cr es out, "Bachelors, be In Oklahoma the guide win rne it seemed to be that one out- ware!" coordinate. academic programs fit in everyone's closet that she The uestion of "what to of schools t~roughout the dio:" always reaches· for when she wear?" ith these femme fata1e cese· and will assist teachers to . 'Wants to feel welldressed. It blacks an be answered when could be dressed up or down, you see the new dulled silver meet state curriculum require q1ents. depending on accessories or· calf pu s that have just a me A curricula guide was com whether I did or didn't wear the dium 10 heel to add proportion pIeted , for grades one through jacket.. I firmly feel that every to high hemlines. Silver again three last Summer. Pilot schools girl should have a jacket dress can be dded to black in the throughout the Oklahoma City in her wardrobe in a neutral form of tiny little silver mesh Tulsa diocese used the guide, shade. evening bag that has a long which will be used even more Of course many of the new slender ilver chain to toss over extensively next year. The guide delightful "little black dresses",your sh ulder. The look seems for grades four through six will that are being shown are any- to be bl ck and silver, a look as be tried in the Fall.
thing but little black dresses. ageless s the Ar~bian Nights They are dynamic, smashing and a,bO~~ as dynamic as Salom~. looking, sensational bIack $500,000 HEW Gr01U1lt dresses that have all the punch f ff Trans ers 0 ices PITTSBURGH (NC)-A grant of a fist in a velvet glov.e. They of $521,523 has been awarded to are romantic, dazzling and si-· ST""P~UL (NC)-The Catho-' the nursing department of renish. lic Diges will move its business Mount Mercy· College here by The necklines are anything and edit rial offices to the Col-, the U. S. Departm'ent of Health,. Qut jeweled' as we think of lege ·of ~t. Thomas here. The Education, and Welfare.· Sister jeweled as' being. You know magaZin~ was transferred from Mary Louise Nash of the Sisters what I mean, that simple round private .wnship to the college of Mercy, chairman of the nurs neckline that the ads advocate' in 1964, When its present edi ing, department, said the money you dress up with a' string of . torial an business office build would be· used for replacement .pearls. Well, these· 'new black ing, loca ed . in the city of St. and. expansion of· present nurs-' dresses certainly. don't need . toPaUcla·'m.·iS'p''~eldq;utahreteSr~aff will m.o.ve ing facilities. that string of pearls. Wh~t they ..... _
t
I. '
.
~~PMA2LZb§HION
LITTLE BLACK' DRESS
t
, I
specialist in catechetics said
here that many U. S. parishev
are spending more money to
help fewer people learn thes
faith.
This, she said, results from the
fact that many parishes put fa:r
more money into parish schools
than into Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine programs.
Sister Maria de la 'Cruz
Aymens, a graduate' of the
Lumen Vitae catechetical center
in Brussels, Belgium, and the
author of the' "On Our Way'"
catechetical series, conducted a
two-day seminar at Our Lad-y
of the Lake College here for
more than 300 Sisters and' 131,;
CCD instructors.
In most places, she said, the
majority of Catholic children do
not attend the parochial school
and can be reached only through
> a CCD program. Sister Maria also observed that "the size of the CCDmovement has reached the point where you need pro fessional paid instructors." "Right now," she said, "most of the help in CCD is voluntal')l, ,and you have to take what you .. get, so to speak. But. this does .not mean, necessarily, that the teachers we do have are bad.: ..' ,Thef:~ is just room for iinprov~
ment."
,; Sis~er Maria said that by not
.giving as much support to ~CD • j.
programs as to !he minority of 1"\
Catholic students in parish
':~chools, pastors are "in effeCt,
,~utting off the great, potentials
of many of our young people."
Remodel Bishop's Tomb ..For See's Centennial COLUMBUS (NC)-The tomb
of Bishop Sylvester H, Rose
crans, first bishop of Columbus,
has been remodeled in prepara
tion for the diocese's centennial
in 1968.
. The 51-year-old bishop died Oct. 21, 1878, just one day after 'he had conseerated the cathedral designed' by his, brother, Gen. William S. Rosecrans, a Union Army leader in the Civil War. The bishop's crypt is in St. Jo seph Cathedral directly beneath 'the inain altar. The remodeled tomb incorpor ates paneling from the original cathedral' altar' as well as from ·the alt~ir replaced la'st month
"by an altar designed for the
. "new 'liturgy."
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THE ANCHOR.:....
Thurs., July 20, ] 967
For Adventurous Eating
Dominicans Eijecit
By Joseph and Ma~ilYIll Roderick
Mother
What oould be more oooling on a hot Summer dtty filan the sound of running walter, a hammock under a sbady . tree and a tall, cool drink? The last of these I can have for the asking, bu.t the first two are still some where in the future. No garden can be called com publishes a huge list of award restaurants in its June issue. plete without a hammock or Places it has mentioned that we its equivalent and a source have been able to visit have
&f running water. As for the hammock, I will have to settle
for a chaise lounge at the pres ent time, but I am definitely go fng to do something about the fountain as soon as possible. ][ was quite discouraged about a xountain in my own garden when I wrote to some of the leading garden ornament com panies for catalogs. The prices were phenomenal. Granted the merchandise offered was of ex ~ellent craftsmanship and was made of only the best material, in most cases, lead, but the thousand dollars plus being asked for it was' far beyond my lIleapl'1. , ReproduetfOllS Available Since then, my wife and X laave been shopping around for reasonably priced fountains iii tile hope that we could purcbase .ne without going into hock fer ~ next 10 years. We are happy 60 announce that we have dis lMwered that good reprooucti<toS a.re now available. Most garden ornaments IlOd -IGuntains are produced f()(' eit-' ~rt in Florence, Italy. The fa mous Florentine metal workers are still designing the excellent llarden furniture but the origi Dals are now being copied by JIlany American dealers in fiber glass and molded clay. These will not wear as well, but they, are reasonably good substitutes iJIt prices most of us can afford. lIt is only recently that garden furniture has been in great de lIland. With the addition cJf patios to many homes, a demand fIor patio items has grown, as ~ell as the desire for the sound ef running water to lull the master of the house to slee[). .Aa ~les have increased, American ingenuity has managed to keep pace, using artificial materials to lower prices. So if you haven't eonsidered using statuary in Four garden because you were afraid of excessive costs, take Mother look because things are ehanging rapidly. III the Kitchen Millions of Americans are about to embark in their cars and tour the great United States, millions of others will sail aREI Oy to other nations this month and next. What is this great eKodus from familiar surround ings? Nothing more or less thaa Mlr national pastime of taking Yacations. One of the most exciting as pects of visiting new surround ings should be the opportuDi~ -. tase food cooked in a manner iillightly different from what we are used t.o. I always look fer ward eagerly to trying new res tau rants and finding, on a trip, the unusual in eating places. My idea of ecstacy would be to eat ...e's way around the world, sampling the best in cooking ()f each eountr7. Generally, both Joe and I like to try new eating places, but if we're going to an unfamiliar area I try to discover the res taurants there that have the finest reputation. This can be done quite easily by keeping an eagle eye open when reading travel magazines and by jotting d.own or tucking away in your memory any, reference to a dining place ill the vicinity 9€ where you're planning to travel. Solida,. .a;azine lMUluau.,
Genera~
SINSINAWA (NC) - Mothe!!' Marie Amanda Allard has been elected the fifth mother general of the Dominican Congregation of the Most Holy Rosary at Sin sinawa, Wis. She was elected at the opening of the 14th genera:D. chapter of the congregation. succeeding Mother Mary Bene dicta Larkin, who served two six-year terms.
lived up to its recommendation. In fact, this was how we discov
ered our favorite eating place in Cohasset, n restaurant justly famous for its chowder and fresh-cooked lobster and also re puted to be a special favorite of the late President Kennedy. It is said that many containers of its chowder accompanied hnm on trips. New York
Bishop Cletus F. O'Donnell o£ Madison, principal' celebrant of the Mass of the Holy Spirit which convened .the chapter, presided at the election and made the formal announcement that Mother Marie had been. chosen.
Restaura1lll~
Gourmet is another magazine that is reliable in praise it gives to an eating place. If you're planning a trip to the New York City area, one of its columnists reviews three New York restau rants each month, describing in colorful detail their decor, price ranges and special dishes. The DISCUSS EXTENSION VOLUNTEERS:, Leo D. Crowley reader knows immediately what the specialty of the hOlASe ls, of Syracuse and Father John J. Sullivan, national director, and what he ean expect to ];}alr review the success of the currertt gix-week training program fur it. for 215 Extension VolimteersD{)w ·a:tten~in~ a special course Last Summer, using this col at the University of Chicago. The VQl.unte~rs will be assigned" umn' as a guide, we dined in • .to work principally in the South and' Southwest United '·fabulous 'New York Italian res taurant way over on Second States when they complete their training program. Fr. Sul Avenue. From the outside, it livan, priest of the Oklahoma Diocese, has held his present would. hardly appeal to the un 1nfermed, but once you passed ]lM)st since 1961. NC Photo. within its portals you realized that elegance in both decor IlOd food was to be found there in. Never have we eatea such Lucullian food. The service w6ud not have disappointed the Roman Emperors who decorated. its walls, and the Italian fooe was indescribable. Another way to learn of out of town restaurants worth vis iting is to remember what you read in the papers. Last year I ROted that the paper menti()nee that Jacqueline Kennedy hali taken time during a· trip to B_ ton to visit her favorite Italian eating place. Recently when JGe and I were celebrating our !.umi versary in that exciting town we dined at that restaurant ami H more than lived up to our ex pectations. So keep your eyes open during the year, make !l note of any worthwhile spots ia the area where you plan tAt vacation, and happy Summer dining! This delicious recipe for baked stuffed shrimp is as good as any you'll find in a gourmet resUlt! rant. It comes from Miss Gloria Rapoza of St. John the Baptist Church, New Bedford.
The new mother general was born in Illinois and made her profession in the Third Order of St. Dominic at Sinsinawa in 1947. She has taught in Epiph any School, Chicago; St. Ceceilia High School, Omaha; and was founding principal of Regina High School, Minneapolis.
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l;X)und of jumbo sbr-imp (shelled and deveirnel! ex cept for the tail) . butter ! cup ~ead crumbs (ver" fine) ~ cup butter (melted) 3 teaspoons sherry pannesan cheese about ~ cllfll ¥.i teaspoon tarragon ¥.i teaspoon chervil pinch garlic powder 1) Wash and dry cleaneGl shrimp and split lengthwise 8G that they lie flat. 2) Place on a cookie sheet covered with foil and brush the shrimp with melted butter. 3) Place in a 350· oven for 5 minutes. Remove from the ovem and pile the dressing on the wp. Bake in a 350· oven for 25 or 3() minutes. 11.
Dressing 1) Mix ,together bread ctumbs. melted butter, sherry, eBeese lKlei seasoiungs.
9
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10
.. " . .. THE ANCHOR-Dlocese'ofFall River-Thurs., July 20, 1967
Marlon GasiOr' Fall'River
. . .' •. Gi~riI,'"
.Joan, Gra8t 'Tiverton,
, 'Lake"ille
LARGEST GRADUATING CLASS IN 38 YEAR HISTORY OF
Prelate Provides ' Catholic Hospitam :'" Chaplai,ns,' GIJ,~:de . '
CHICAGO (NC) ,,--,--,' John Cardinal 'Cody' ,of Chicago . , 'bas ordered cO'!lles', of' the' manual "The ,Apostolate to :',
tile Sick" for all chaplains in hospitals arid ,homes, for" the aging in' the Chicago archdio ftSe. "The Apostolate to the Sick'" 'Is a guide for Catholic chaplains in all health care facilities. In addition to chapters on the vari'7 ClUS types of chaplaincies, the manual deals with the theology and challenge of the hospital Zlpostolate, the structure of ill hospital, and glossary of medical terms, and common medical ini tials and abbreviatio,ns.
,:' 'Mu'rlel ~rrlvee Port6mouth
Susan, HardY New Bedford
ST.
NNE'S SCHOOL OF NURSlING ..
Patriar,chWaits Proper
for' Unity
In Close, Constant Contact CJNCIN:NATI (NC)~'P!th~" of St. Clare ,church, he~e, and dox PatrIarc~ Athenagora!l, I ~ ' Father Joseph V. Urbain, pastor Constantinople (Istanbul) told ,of St. Albert the ,Grea't',church; two Cincinnati" .archdiocese lj:ettering, told the storY' ()f the ' priestS in a private' a~dience interview 00 their return.: that he waits only for the prop ,'The bearded patriarch, who , er time "to go tO'Rome' and see formerly was Orthodox Arch':,' my brother, Paul,and set' down' bishop ()f North and South with him a common P.rogram America, disclosed to them that leading to our conunon 'goal of the Middle East crisis had in unity." , terrupted his' plans for a meeting He: received his visitors f()r of. the heads of the Orthodox the unscheduled interview on an Church's patriarchal Sees. island'in the Sea of Marmara. P,urpose of the meeting, which 'Father George W. Gude, pastor may bike 'place this month, is to
Educators Say Co~holic- School Survival Is' Economic Question
Pope diSCUf" preliminary . plans ,for 'reuni 11, ,- ' , ' , ' ' " " , "'T this end I remain in close and' onstant COl1tact with ,Pope paul'~' ' he said." • "We are broth ,·s." " , Ac' nowledging that "there a~e diffe ~ences and problems" in the path of reunion, the patriarch emph sized that "they are no' longe! unsurmountable." Must Have Approval "W must look to the day when ~)I1c,e again, after all these centu les, 'we shall share the same acraments, the same chal ice of Jesus Christ, But I can .000IYfO (to Rome) when I have the a proval of the whole Or thodo Church and its bishops." " Pat iarch Athenagoras asked , his t 0 visitors to "pray for this 'inten~ion', and tell yo!-'r people ' to PI' Y for it, too.'" , 'Fat ers 'Urbain and Gude, whos 'trip toEuropemaEked the 35th n'niversary of their ordi natio', traveled' to Istanbul, Turk y from Belgrade, ,Yugo slaviaby plane an'd 'enlisted the helpf a Christian guide and a Chris ian travel agent (the pop-' ulatio is 97 per -cent Moslem) to arrtan?e fO,r an audience with , the p trlarch. , "
WASHINGTON (NC) ~ Many, "If we are to continue o~r ex" The manual was compiled by Catholic' schools' are doomed to ,is,tence, Catholic, sch901s ,can rio the National Association of fall by the m,ay'sl'de, unless they' ,l~nger be considered someone's Catholic Chaplains, and pub-, ~ , ' 'develop the techniques, of 'l!oun,d, private domain. Limited underJished in June QY the Catholic business management ..and ,long:' sUlnding and ,erratic 'cO;'tr91 can' Hospital Associ~,tion. ,', range "planning, in the, judgmeJ;l~, be the only, result if we fail 1cI . Cardinal 'Cody is 'the first cf two 'Catholic educators.. , , ' , d!stablish strong b~sin'ess' man bishop to' provide copies fpr, all . "There seems to be Jlittle 'agement practices throughout, ehaplains in', his diocese.:' The little doubt that the IfUrvival ti(', :&~r school system. manual, he said in a letter 14> Catholic,sc'hools is fast I:>ecom-, Federal Funds, Archbisho'p Thomas J. McDon ing primariiy an ~conomi~ ques,~ , ough of Louisvilie, episcopal ad::: tion ", Anthony E. Seidl. and.. "The point here is that al visor to the National Association Father Edmund W,: Olley say jII., though there may' be, a 'need for of C th r C l' "h Id '' ,'more money, the 'need' is less a 0 IC ' hap alllll, s o.u, ,'t.he current Catholic H,igh ,Scho91 acute than' the need f()r' better be of great help to, OUI' chaplams, Quarterly. " , ' ' especially those who are bein~ Dr., Seidl is on the education ways, to use what is already available," . assigned to this new responsibil faculty "'t the University of San it " ., The authors give a pointed Buenos Aires Police'
y. Francisco, and FatherOliey is warning' to Catholic educators principal of Pio Nono High 1I)0t ,to count too heavily on the Ceremony , ' Ecumenical Summer School, :Pdilwaukee, influx of federal funds, despite , I' , "It' would' seem, that the qUe8 ,BUENOS AIRES (NC)-Police ° Davenport '. tion' facing Catholic schools is. innovations made since passage fo'rbade a' "eererriOilY organized ,c h00 I ,In of 'the Elementary and Second S DUBUQUE (NC) _ An ecu":' not whether they' should exis~' ary Education Act of 1965. here [ honor the lafe ,Pl'ipe John XXII and ,to 'praise Pope' Paul " I ummel' S' but whether "It, is"". becom,ing' increas mel1lca sc h 001 h all ' th h' , " ,theY .can, " adapt t ' .18, VI's ecyclicai The Develc:>pment ,0 f'eXJ!!.,. e c 'anges'.-necessary 'opened at'the Aquinas Institute7 , . " t"" Id" }'ngly eVI'dent' that under'the or , t,ence' ina eompeLlt~ve Je, ganl'za,tl'onal structure' Whl'ch of Pe pIes. ,School of Theology here in Iowa.', " ' ,The eVel}t, sponsored by the The school is sponsored jointly' !heY 'write. ' currently exists in ,Catholic by the AquinasIllstitute" 'Du~.; ";"1:' ' , "U • ", ° I schools· .... reliance on such aid Chri~iian SOci~,l' Studies cen~e,r blique Theological Seminary and .I~o.tes·' : :i1IY~rsl"ty $ is a, harrowing existence for of Bu nos Aires, was t,o have m-~ elude I a talk by Bishop . Antonio WartbUl'g Theological Seminary, . those ,who must subject them ' " nnlv.ersary selves ,,m'embers of the Association of , .. " , .., 'the' changl'ng cll'mates Quarracino, of Nueve de Julio. _
, Th~ police said that, although
Theological Faculties in' Iowa, WASHINGTON (NC)-A j()int of legal interpretations and the Inc. resolution ihtroduced in the 'vagaries, ()f legislative action," they recognized the event's
noble purpose, they stopped it
House by Rep, Lenor K. Sullivan they state. Father Roland Murphy, O. of Missouri calls upon Congress "to s' feguard public order, s0
Carm., visiting pl'ofessor of Old and the citizenry of the nation cial ~eace and public tranquil
Testament at Duke ,University, to felicitate St. Louis University Ontario Women Hit ity." Durham, N. C., during the com which will observe its 150th an ing year, and Rabbi Arthur Gil niversary'in 1968. Abortion Proposal bert, curriculum research direc Mrs, Sullivan's measure recalls LONDON, (NC)-The Ontario tor of the Anti-Defamation that 'the Jesuits founded the Catholic, Women's League has League of B'nai B'rith, are university in 1818 and in its asked the national CWL to re Il O,intenonce Suppli~ among the faculty members of early years the institution aided affirm it opposition to permis 1lhe summer school. ' ,the government in alleviation, sive abortion' legislation in a SWEEPERS - SOAPS ' More than 100 students, rep of Indi'sn probfems; helped pio resolution passed at its annual , DISINFECTANTS' ' resenting diffel'ent confessional ne~rs, settlers and explorers, convention here. backgrounds - Baptist, United and its graduates founded many Canada,' iike most U. S. states, Church' of Christ, Methodist, other schools ~hroughout' the has recently been under pressure United Presbyterian, Roman nation. from some 'quarters to reiax its Catholic; Lutheran and Church,' The resolution said the first abortion' laws. ' 1886 PURCHASE STRES' , of the Brethren~al'e re'gistered instihitio n ' of higher learning 'I'hewomen's group also passed ,N~W' BED,FORD fol' the three-week session~ They 'west 'of the Mississippi, has resolutionsto' back ,rent supple 'come' froln ffi()re:than 12 'states,' 'grown into 'one' Of' '1hemiti6n'l 'm'ents and', increased tax' exemp ,,,', '993-3786 . 'Uons'!or':tbe' pOor. ';,:: ".' the Bahama" and Canada. leading 'universities; ",/
Sto~
1'SOt'h A'
,0,
,,'..
~o'nstimcie L.' MarteD"
New Bedford'
,
lLeaders Endorse
Project Equo lity BALTIMORE ' (NC) - Law rence Ca'rdinal Shehan of Balti ~ore and other major religious leaders here will join Project Equality-a national program iJ!l which members discourage 1'3 cial discl'iminati<?n through the.. hiring and purchasing power. Plans to join the' national in terfaith movement were com pleted when the leaders met iJlh June to approve and appl'Opriate funds for the program" They have also formed an inte~faith hous ing council to develop housinfl policies and to coordinate activ ities of religious groups sponsor ing low-income housing. The Rev. Fred M. Webbe~ general presbyter for the United Presbyterian. Church, is chai... man of the newly formed gl'Oup here. Cardinal Shehan and Rabbi Israel M. Goldman, head of the Chizuk Amuno cobgl'ega tion, are co-chairmen. 'Proj'ect Equality, begun twe )'ears ago by the National Cath olic Conference for IntelTacian Justice, now numbers 89 reli gious judicatories among ntJ members, including 13 Ca~ho]je dioceses. In cities where churches haw joined the program, those whe supply services and goods ~ member churches are asked ~ agree to policies to p'revent diBo crimination.
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• THE ANCHOR-Dio,eese of Foil River-Thurs., July 20, 1967
11
.-..,-------""'1'
;~
....
\
I{'
ADn Mayher
. Taunton
Judith Jr. MClGaBIlll
... TauntGlil
LorJralne MClPartllanl1l
Fall River
·Dolores Mello
Fall ,River'
)'lltCl~eJe
1[. Morin
Fil>1B River
Sasan Normallltll , New 'Bedter£!
Marlla Nunes ·S9merset
GRADUATES START CAREERS Wll'Jl'Ji PRAYERS AND BEST WISHES OF ENTIRE DIOCESE
Group to Meet Minor Crises Of Neighbor,s
Sees Priestly Vocations Increase Seminary Official Discusses' Dropouts
I
CcUfie9le Notes Gift!o GIl'etJ)nll's R~ceived HONOLULU (NC) - An iJillo> crease of just over 30 per cent in the total amount of gifts and grants from private and federal sources was noted by Chami nade College here in a develop ment report covering the 1966-61 fiscal year. William H. Shea, Jr., assistanS io the president for develop ment, who prepared the report, said iChaminade received a totall of $160,180 during the fiscal yeaz which ended June 30. Donations from finns, founda tions and .private contributions- students, alumni, friends of the college - accounted lor 60 pel/' cent, or $95,900 of the total fig ure, Shea stated. The remaining ~ per cent, a total of $64,280, represented federal grants undel!' Titles H, HI and VI of the High er Education Act of 1965, ~ said.
PERRYSBURG (NC)-A sea dents for nine years, freshman At the major seminary there soned seminary officiaf envi-· year would' bring about 6(J boys'" may be two or· three dropouts sions a growth in vocations to' as compared to about '25 'now; in a class of 18 or 20. the priesthood for the futme ;rhe Perrysburg pr~partory"sem':- ' He explained: "We don't notice American Church.' " n~ary has, had as many'~ 160 the dropout there because by Aware of the dropout ~itu8 ,lIngh school boys; last year M that time the young men have friendly aid from FISH, a newly tion ~nd fearful it might get had 125; next year some 110. gone through, the self-question~ organfzed pl·oject. worse, Father Paul Jacobi; ing 'process' and are rather S.V.D., nevertheless spe·aks with FISH defines itself as "a group , stable." ' of Christians living in the Pot~ optimism. But there is no simple expla , He has just unpacked his· bags mac area who have banded to nation, for the dropouts, Father gether to provide neighborly to serve as rector of the Soci JJacobi added. help to each other as members of ety of the Divine Word prepara ,WASHINGTON (NC) -The ConfUsion ihe community in meeting the tory seminary her(~ in Ohio, after Georgetown University Schoon minor emergencies all seem to three years as' redor of the so of Medicine will soon offer stu"I think the seminary reflects ciety's majDr seminary in Tech lace at one time or another." dents an integrated course im the confusion that exists in The assistance might be sim ny; m. buman reproduction, making II some minds about the Church "We must ~et more positive ply providing a lift when the first in medical education. itself in these days. The fact writing and a more positive family automobile is broken "The purpose of the cou·rse,'" that the priesthood is under fire down or supplying clothing for press if we are to come back to said Dean John C. Rose, "is to in many Catholic periodicals is a family ;'burned out" ()f their the balanced picture of happy, :2cquaint medical students with bound to affect the boy who has home. A FISH volunteer stands dedicated priests who are an ill1l'7 ' :2 variety of human re'production' been thinking of the' priest:.. by on a 24-hour alert to be spi ration toCathol~c boys au problems that they will face hi hood," he observed . available to respond t,o all re .someone they may want to !De private practice." ," '''Children aren't specifically like," he said. " . ~uests. , To be offered for' the first time ·aware of the problems as '·adults Father Jacobi k;'lOWS abOut t~ , In addition to this "neighbor llhis ·Fall; the course will be 'are but they do reflect the' rest to neighbor" program, FISH has dropout picture. supported by $44,440 of a $75,000 ' "]essness of adults they' come jn . Dean Where A alsQ organized clothing and food, In the early 1960s'at the pre-' 'grant from the Esso Ed'ucation coonta'ct wIth," he· continued. depots to meet the needs of peo Foundation to the National' Fund'" "Sist~rs used to be neady 100' ple in the lower economic sphere'. paratory seminary in East, Troy, for Medical Educatfon hi' New . Per cenl behind boys entering ,Wis., where he was deal). of stu of the community. FISH also York. the ~minary in highschool. 'I will provide informatiOn for Means A Under terms of the, ·one-year 'don't 'think that's true any more. area residents who may be en grant, the medical school has" Mimy. Catholic parents also feel Pion Race Isolation titled to health, education or integrated' into a 25-lecture 'that the boy is too' young. Dis welfare services but who are, Boston: lCOurse subjects normally ,taught' 'contented priests get most of , perhaps, ,unable to fiiid their BOSTON (NC) -.:.. The Boston only in non-medical schools. the publicity and this casts a' own way through the maze of archdiocesan commission on hu Included are biology, statistics, shadow on the priesthood in federal, ~1ate, county and pri man rights has called for forma sociology, anthropology, religion ueneral," be asserted, vate organizations which pro tion of an ad hoc diocesan-wide and sexology, as related to prob' vide specialized services in the committee to consider what role lems of human reprod\-,ction. social assistance field. the metropolitan Boston paro Different aspects of the Bub The sign of the FISH was se chial school system might play . jects are being taught in various lected bec,Hlse it is one of the in reducing' racial isolatiori : ways at other medical schools, oldest symbols of Cnristianity. Catholic schools. . . Dean Rose noted. But he said In Greek, the initial letters of Father Paul P. Rynne, the no other school has included··a "Jesus Christ, Son of God, Sa commission's executive director, special course of lectures on" viour" (IHS) spell "ichthys" said that "plans call for the con human reproduction in its,regu Hwy. which means "FISH." 'vening of an ad hoc Boston arch lar curriculum. diocesan committee on" racial NEW isolation by mid-September of Morianists to Open German Paper Aids .this year. The committee will include representatives' of the in Philippine Weekly Open Evenings The Falmouth National Bank 'CINCINNATI (NC)-A' 'group' MANILA (NC) - The Essen, diocesan school system, public FALMOUTH, MASS. Germany, diocesan weekly school officials, civil rights lead of Brothers from the Cincinnati 8y the Village Green Since 1821 newspaper, RlIhl'wort, has do ers, Catholic laymen and mem ·province of the Society of Mary bers of other faiths with an inter will open a secondary school nnted $7,500 to the Philippines this Fall in Loughlinstown, Ire Catholic weekly, The Sentinel, est in the probiem." "We believe that racial isola jpublished here. land. RESIIDENTIAL The school will be called The donation is a contribution tion is harmful to all children living in today's world," Father Marianist College. Classes will of the German newspaper's SCHOOLS. CHURCHES ll'eadel's to mass media in under Rynne said, and the Catholic be held in prefabricated build school system must be involved INDUSTRIAL • BUNKER ings until permanent structures developed countl'ies. Ruhrwort are ready for occupancy in the ll'ecently conducted a campaign in meeting and solving today's problems and ,challenges." among its readers for that pur Fall of '1968. D ADSON OIL BURNERS Opening of the new Marianist )lOse. Complete Heating Installations ReseCllrch Grants establishment in Ireland is part The Sentinel, semi-'official 24 lHIour Oil Burner Service of an international expansion publication of the Philippine WASHING'rON (NC)-SeveJ!l program of the Society of Mary hierarchy, was founded in 1951. grants for science and engineer Despite financial difficulties, it il1lg research" totaling $203,864 which has been accelerating in has never missed an issue. The have been awarded to the Cath recent years. U. S. Marianists Ruhrwort contdbution will be olic University of America here hav.e esta,blished foundations' in· ased toward the construction oll by tile Nation,a(Aeronalitics and Lebanon and Australia and have, New BedfonU 640 Ph~asant Street II ,permanent building for Tbe cJtpanded. operations ··in Africa· Space Admini.stration and the during the last. few years. . Sentinel. ~2tioJl)al Scien,~" foundation..
POTOMAC (NC) ---;-When faced with a' ,criSIS, resi dents of this Washington, D. C., suburb can expect'
Georgetown Has Medical First
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12 ' . -THE
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Thurs., July 20, 1967 .
.'..... ". -: . ~
Austria Honors Moth-er Dengem
ANCHOR"
.
.,
lllJJf1'h'~lT~U\lS 1B@~lk
Private $chc(Q)~
~'
FedetlaO Aid NEW YORK (NC)-Fed
eral aid for parochial and
private schools has been en
dorsed by the Lutheran
Church-Missouri synod, which
has been hesitant about -accept ing such aid in the past. .
In a resolution adopted by dele
gates to the synod's 47th reg4lar:
oonvention here, synod officials
.were asked to coordinate efforts
of the synod's districts and in stitutions to obtain federal funds.
The resolution said there was
"considerable merit" in a pro
posal from eight Detroit area
congregations to establish full
time executives whose job it
would be to inform district and institutions about the possibili ti~ of aid. . Several participants noted with approval the fact that Lutheran congregations in the Detroit area had· joined. :with Roman Catholics and members of other .faiths in 'a successful
APOSTOLIC DELEGATE'S BROTHER: Pietro .Raimondi and hi family smile at their Pittsburg suburban home on hearing the news that Pietro's br ther, Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, has been named Apostolic Delegate' to the United Stites. Pietro, 38, is the only member of the Archbishop's family living outside Italy, With his wife, Sara, are, from left: Jo Anne, 5; Joseph, 10; Paul, 3; and Albert, 1. Maria, 9. was away when the photo was made. NC Photo.
::;~:~r:n ~~rp:~::efO~fa~:d~_.'New Apostolic. Deleg ate Kno.ws. ~merica lary school services, including. I textbooks, sChool lunches and . Archbishop Rai~'ondi Travels 'Extensively , bus transportation.
Encourage Dialogae PITTSBURGH (NC) - In the posure to U. S. life and people In other action, the synod grassy yard of a Pittsburgh sub- has not been confined t<l chan~ ananimously endorsed a reselu- urban home last Fall ~he arch- cery offices and embassies. tion in' which members were bishop' who ii' the newly nained : .. The ·a~chbishop, named by "encouraged to continue their . apostolic delegate in the United : Pope Paul, VI to su¢ceed Egidio ,interest and participati00 hi ecu- . States irtrolledback' and forth, Cardinal Vagnozzi as apostolic menal dialogue whenever the reading his breviary. deiegate in this country, has opportunity presents itself with Behind him in a disorderly visited his brother yearly durno injury to our confessiOllai file trudged a half dozen yeung- ing the .last decade w~ile serving commitment." sters, turning when the arch- as apostolic delegate to Mexico. For the past few years, t.t.e bishop turned, maintaining sol':' The archbishop came here in .Missouri sYnod has been in- emn silence. 1956 and officiated at the marvolved in ecumenical dialogue, The children didn't quite com- . riage of his brother in St. Paul's sponsored by the Lutheran prehend what Archbishop Luigi cathedral. The bride, Mrs. Sara World Federation, with RamaR Raimondi was doing-but, they Rli"imondi, is a native of Pitts.:. Catholics and the Presbyterian know· that when he was done . burgh. Alliance. he would' play with them.. He It has also named representa- did. ~ves for talks with Eastern Or~ It happened. at the home 'of S·' lUlodox churches. Discussions Pietro Raimon.di, one. of the II 'W are expected to start in Novemhb' h ' b th th 1 . arc IS op s ro ers, e on y; COO· I l'aer other family member living . T'he 'convention's action, itl ts'd It I . A l' ou I e a y. ADELAIDE (NC)- ustra Ian effect, endorsed a resolutioa Pietro· Raimondi, .his wife and. . independent secondary schools submitted by synodal officials five children reside in the Penn will receive $5.3 million in gov stating that "it was not the in- Hills suburb of Pittsburgh. He . ernment sCience grants in 1967tention' of Martin Luther to came to the U. S. in-1948 as a '19- 68 t · th t'd' - wlce e amoun pal In 4ivide the church but to renew year:"old student. Except for . previous years. it." brief trips home, he has been The additional federal grants, This was in reference to tile he,re since. . announced in Canberra, the fedRefor~ation, whose 450th aruaiHe lias lived hi Pittsbul'gh eral capital, by the Science and versary is being observed t:ltis since. 1953, and· has worked. in. Education Minister, Sen. John year. research here since 1951 :when. G. Gorton, will not go to all True Spirit he wa's graduated from Carnegie independent and state schools. "The Church must .be oon- Tech with a 'doctorate in Chem-' Government schools win get eerned not merely with COlR- leal engineering. $7.2 million. nremorating an event . . . but, Recalling that. backyard proAs in the past years the _ above all, with an ever contiOlI- cession, he laughed. "Some were grants will be for science'lab<ling process' of reformation and our children, some were neigh- ratories and facilities for proj. renewal," the resolution said. bors'. My brother has a g<IOd ects chosen by the state educa"The true spirit of. the Ref<lr- time with the kids when he's tion authorities. . mation is carried forward pri- here." ·The first quarterly payments marily by relating the' eternal Visits Brother are due to be made to the states Gospel of Jesus Christ to the The incident offers evidence in July. Early next year, ex:' specific needs of men within tbethat Archbishop Raimondi's elr>- plained the minister, the fe.eeral framework 'of the particllIIN' parliament will be asked to exsituation of today," it stated. P h- - N tend the program for three more Pastors of synod churcltes SYC IatriC ursing years at the present level (}f were encouraged to' enter inte G $12.5 million-$7.2 million fOl' discussions with the Catholics rant for College state schools and $5.3 million fOl' in their communIties "in the SALINA (NC) - The nursin~ private schools. spirit of. mutual respect, intel- department at Marymount Collectual honesty and personal i8- lege here in Kansas has received tegrity; on the basis of the Go&- a $14,435 grant for an under- Bridgeport Openl ~L" graduate psychiatric nursing Summ.er Center'" project. The grant, renewable .. for a five-year period, was made .BRIDGEPORT (NC) - The . Vermont WomelJl by the National Institute of Bridgeport diocesan school of.. STOWE (NC)-The Vermont Mental Health, a division of the fice has opened three Summer Council of Catholic Women met Public Health Service of the De- centers under the federal gov for two days at New England's partment of Health, Education ernment's Head-Start program. The centers, all in the city of famous ski resort and voted to and Welfare. The purpose of the grant is:to Bridgeport, enrolled 235 chil support federal anti-poverty ef forts, called for extended civil improve· the teaching· of psychi- .dren from economically de atric nursing to better prepare prived areas. Parent advisory rights legislation and enforce ment . of existing laws,. and nurses to work with the emo- committees have been set up in warned that the trend toward tiOIial aspects of sickness' andeaeh" center to assist teachers. . more relaxed abortion laws "is to assist the mentally in. The community service pro fraught with grave dangers flit Marymount College is oper- gram is financed jointly by the personal digniq and. hUlR&l ated by. the Sisters of St. Jese,pR. __ ;Bridgeport diocese and. the Ofkeedom." IJi. Concordia. £ice of 'Economic Opporttmit¥. .
'D'ouble· Pr.·yQII.,a S h I A-d
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VIENNA (NC)-Mother Anna Dengel, foundress of the Med ical Mission SisterS, has received the Golden Cross of Merit, one of the highest awards of the Republic of Austria, for her ac: tivities in the service of man kind. vDr. Theodor Piffl-Percevic, minister of education and cul ture, who made the award, said that it was a symbol of gratitude and recognition by the people of Austria for Mother Dengel's work for the sick. Born in the Austrian Tyrol in 1892, Mother Dengel began her ·work for the sick as a lay nUs sionary doctor in India. In 1925, in Washington, D. C., she founded the first religious con gregation (. women to devote themselves exclusively to the medical mission apostolate. The Medical Mission Sisters at present staff hospitals and health centers in 14 countries and aISo direct a network of schools where the' people of de veloping nations can receive training in the professions con cerned with the care of the sick. The. international congrega tion's general headquarters are in Rome. The U,S. motherhouse . is in Philadelpnia,
Name· First Layman Dean of Students
Raimondi said bis brother ST. PAUL .(NC)-WiUiam ':8; traveled ext nsively throughout the United $tates while serving Malevich of Minneapolis is the as a secretaf' then auditor at first layman to be named dean of students at the College of St. the apostolic delegation in Wash Thomas here. Father James M. ington. , Lavin has been appointed direc "He know~ the oountry," Rai tor of student counseling. mondi assured. Malevich, 34, a graduate 'CJl , I St. Toomas, received a master's GeDial Intelle4l~ . degree in guidance and counsel As they tIk about the arch .bishop, Mr. nd Mrs. Raimondi ing from the Catholic University invariably g~ou.t a collection of 91 America, Washington, D. C. photographs - the archbishop He succeeds Father Robert A. with Preside· t and Mrs. 'John F. Vashro who had earlier beeIl Kennedy in exico, with Prime appointed to pastoral work ill Minister JaWaharlal Nehru ia ",Minneapolis. India, with .olther world leaders.
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From their conversation about the archbishop there emerges the. portrait 1f a genial intellec tual with a d p concern for the unfortunate nd a remarkable memory. "He's alwa s after me about ways to appl the chemical re search I'm involved in to bene
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fit some.of th poor areas where he has serve ," Raimondi said. . Because. the. gap in ages betwe.en Pletrp, now 38, and the archb.lshop, 54, the two h~ less meanmgful c?ntact as chddren than as grownf.UPS. ''To give yuan idea of the gap, I made y first Commu nion at his fir t Mass," Raimondi ~aid. "He was away ~t the sem mary most 0 the tIme ! waa growing up...\. . . . _ ~_..........",.-,~...._ ..........",.-'t
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Norris H .Tripp . SHEE METAL J. TESER Prop.
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RESIOENTIAlJ INOWSTRIAl
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fan River-lhuf5., July 20, J981
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Weverny lW. onovefi!!'a Somerset
lEnminne M. Onoven!!'!!. IF'mnn Riivell:'
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1?~lRSONS
Vermont Catholic BURLINGTON (NC) War;ning that the Catholic Church should. not be allow ed to "shrink to a school yard," the' Catholic school board has urged the Burlington dio cese to "recognize the impossi bility of maintaining more than a few high schools," and to cut back elementary schools to the point where parishes can sustain. them on a "quality level." "A parish which expends 60 to 70 per cent of its entire budget on schools, where priests' and Religious' entire effort is· de voted to .staffing schools, frus trates a pervasive extension of Christian service throughout the community," the board said in a four-page policy statement adopted here. The statement called on the Vermont diocese to take the following steps: Maintain only those "few" high schools which would appear to give promise of compliancj:! with state standards.
Mmn'gmll:'et Ollovefili'llI New IBIellllJ10rllll
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Tnierese A. Onllvellm !Fa]n Rovei!'
Wfiwfilllnnnne .:v. Parent WestpolI:'t
.l1aCGll1lllelnnnc lP!!.1IIIR New llllellllJi'OO'all
Maureen ll"nOllllll'lI1l111 Fan] lRi Vell'
lFROM SERVlICES l{])lF 4I:Sl NEW GRADUATE NUlRSES
lecomm'ends lDuccese Maintain fewer Schools
throughout the whole commun ity, of which schools are but one, if currently imbalanced, ele ments," it said. The board's recommendations were immediately uiticized by
some members of the Catholic community here, including Father Graydon Robinson of Rice Memorial High School. He charged that implementation of the recommendationtl 'Woulcll
tend to deny priests and. Reli gious their rightful role as teachers of the fai thful. To this, Dr. Fairbanks replied that even the priests and Reli gious whose primary Wk it! ie
staff schools cannot be exorilo' erated of "the wider civic in-> volvement which devolves upon every citizen, be he teacher. worker, doctor, lawyer 0;00 bUtd nessman."
HAVfYOU READ PARAGRAPH 45 of Pope Paul's new enoyolloal POPUlORUM PROGRHSSIO?; "TODAY o.oINl·WB-ilOlE CONTINENTS COUNTLESS MEN AND WOMEN ARE RAVISHED BY HUNGER, COUNTLESS CHILI?REN ARE UNDERNOURISHED ••• MANY DII! IN INFANCY •••"
eQuality lLeven
Cut back elementary schools to a kindergarten through grade six opel:ation so that parishes might be able to support them on a quality level. The board warned that higher standards for the schools might require an increase in tuition and a cor responding decrease in enroll ment. Encourage such innovative ap proaches as th~· Union District Seven project devised by Father John R. LaBrake, S.S.E. Father LaBrake's plan calls for closing existing separate schools and building a junior-senior high school for three Vermont com munities. The plan also envi~ sions an ecumenical school of religion on private, adjoining property. The' policy st"atement,· .drawn up by a board member, Dr. Henry Fairbanks of St. Michael's . . • . . . ' JI College, was approved unani- The Holy ~ather asks each Christian: "Let-each one examine his conscience, a conscience that conveys a new'message for our tImeS! mously by the board, and for-IS he prepared to support out of his own pocket ... the most destitute? ....• Mayall who wish to belong to Christ hear HIS APPEAL, warded to Bishop Robert F. - -~I was hungry and you gave Me to eat, thirsty and you gave fv1e to drink, a stranger and you clothed Me'." '. Joyce of Burlington. " " .Expanding its. basic ~ointl?, WIIi you Who live" on this side of the world show the depth of your faith by aiding Ohrist In a 'poor man like t~is? When you give the stateme~t saId t,~e dlO~es~ to this fund of the !Holy father you help 300,000 missionaries to provide hospitals, leper homes, dispensaries, schools, orphanages/ nnu~t re~o~l1lze the unreahty breadlines for the world's poorest people. of IdentIfymg the school per se as the principal instrHment for l1ulfilling the Church's teaching mission. Propeli' Pell'Spectfive HOW II..ESSElO I AM TO BE ABLE TO) IHIElLP ~1rIHlERS INSTEAD Of H1AVBNlG TO BE HELPED "'Reorganizing t!te school sys tem on a' less materially ambi tious foundation, therefore, Is 'ADDRESS,..;;iio·_·...· ~_tz_NiIiI-,., --~-.."..,
less a confession oJ1 failure than D long-delayed step to set edu.
THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HElPl, ... t
ati"; ~~:~ =~:;c~;e·wm liberate priests and parishionere·
ill direet their efforts toward'
t:brhJtilm :wl~ aIliIl . .~_
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RIV.IIDWARB'f.O'MflARA. NATIONAL DIREC.TOR. THE SOCIETY FOR THE P"ROPAGATION OF THE FAITH. 366 FIFTH AVil:NUK. N •.~_'?~.tl
ilIO PAi,i, RIVER YOUR' DIRECTOR
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THE ANCHOI-DiocleM 01 Fcii 1i~e,~Th"rs.,·July 20, h t 6T
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'Leslie Rogel'll Fall River .-~
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.Joanne Simmons
New Bedford
Kathleen lll. Spero Middle¢owo
Claire, I. S.te.Marie lFall River
VARIOUS SECTORS OF DIOCESE ARE REPRESENTED AMONG GRADUATES AT S • ANNE'S HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING
Initiate Progll'cm On Inte9ra~gon
in U.S.
Asks Establishment of I
Sees Need gin Mnssionary
OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) AIf'<e<Clls aorhirty Families" - a program and keep it going. 'ATLANTA (NC)-Archbishop would to 'have" . aimed at getting wRllte .families "The money can be secured," pe~anent deacons ill the arch w move into a well-to-do, pre Paul J. Hallinan' said' he hopes . . dominantly Negro residential that the National Conference of he commented. "It's the shortage dioc se. "I suspect that many of our section of the city-is reported Catholie Bishops· will approve of priests and the widely scat peo Ie are familiar with the making headway here despite the pernianent diaconate so it tered pockets of few Catholics oome obstacles. Purpose of the can be instituted in missionary which impedes the Church's Ne I Testament. They recall growth. In this large area there Stephen and other deacons or':' ]program is to preserve good areas of the United States, in cluding parts of the archdiocese are only nine priests, including dainfd by the Apostles for other lIlleighborhoods and education. our Redemptorist, Glenmary and ChUfh duties .so that the 12 Father Edward Kelly, who of Atlanta. Ib.eads a diocesan poverty pro coul· devote themselves to In a statement to the press, the Verona Fathers. gram here, said the program is archbishop said: ''The archdio prea hing and prayer." lP'eQple Approve . ciirected toward having 30 white Cese of Atlanta, in harmony . A hbishop Hallinan said the The Pope's regulations rees ll1lmilies move into the city's with the New' Testament, the tablishing. the permanent diac cust m withered and the diac';' well-kept northeast section... onat is usually thought of only Second Vatican C{)uncil and onate in the Western Church de step in the priesthood. "We want to prove it can Pope Paul' VI, would welcome . pends the decision of the as' . work and show that a neighbor- . this new arm of the. Church. I ''Thr'e years ago, the archdio'" competent national or territorial llnood can be stabilized," he said. sincerely hope that our episcopal . bishops along with the consent 'cese put our deacons, who are Father Kelly stated that five conference will approve it so our riests-to-be, to work. In of the Pope. ~rofessional men--all whites- our parishes they preached, that hundreds of scattered In discussing the diaconate, have moved into the area, and Catholics will have the services bapti ed, distributed Holy Com the archbishop said it was en that several others are now of these. devoted men." . m1.!ni n and worked with the couraging to read that nearly 70 househunting." He said the poor. "For example, in upper Geor per cent of the persons who re group hoped to show that there gia we/have only· 15 churches lP'ermanent Rank plied to a poll in the Georgia ' iii no need .for panic and quick and temporary chapels in 23 "BIt Vatican n and Pope Paul oelling in a neighborhood where counties," Archbishop Hallinan Bulletin, Atlanta ·archdiocesan· went way beyond that. The Negroes are beginning to move Said. "North of a line runnin'g coun il restored the diaconate in. ( as a permanent rank in the P«lllJ'ff$~es AD'\lIl'll~\lJlIl'il«:~ from Athens, Ga., to Rome, Ga., "We know the whole burden there are 14 counties in which hiera chy along with priests and of integration has always been . the Church is' unable to make bisho s, and on June 27 the C@<O>IJll~trll:ilR'D'lfe PDQlIiil put on the Negro family," Father her presence felt because there Pope spelled out their duties, MECHANICSVILLE (NC) .Kelly said. "We thought the are just not enough Catholics in Two churches here have an prep ration and sustenance, white community should take anyone place to build a church nounced a cooperative plan for 1eavi g to the episcopal confer BOrne responsibility. the Catholic' school education ences of each country the deci "White families," he «Gntin sion n whether to use the per and religious instruction of chil oed, '!could move into some. Directs' Formation dren in their parishes-the first mane t deacons in that partic 81Chool district in the process of . ular gion." such venture in the Albany dio a ~hange, take a real interest in Of Parish Council$ The archbishop said the U. S. cese. Both parishes are con it and encourage others to LAFAYETTE (NC) -Bishop ducted by the Augustinian biShO~' led by Bishop Ernest stay." Unter oefler of Charleston, S.C., Maurice Schexnayder' has di Fathers. rected that pastoral councils be St. Paul's has a school with discus ed the diaconate. "At first formed in parishes of the Lafay kindergarten t h r 0 ugh eighth only issionary areas like Puer PlI'opose Interfaitlm ette diocese. Such councils are grade, conducted by the Sisters to Ri 0 and Alaska where the recommended in the Decree on of St. Joseph of Carondelet. shortage of priests is critical Center at Purdl1lle the Apostolate· of the Laity of Assumption parish has a convent were kiiscussed. The bishops of WEST LAF AYETT~ (NC) u th and Southwest began, of Franciscan Sisters of the the Bishop Raymond J. Gallagher of the Second Vatican CounCil. to poipt out that large sections The Louisiana prelate empha Atonement, ~ho conduct an ex Lafayette and Indiana Methodist of th~ United States were just· tensive instruction program. Bishop Richard C. Raines have sized that pastors should not de Under the plan, one school as In ssion-oriented as Latin announced a 12-member study lay in forming the "councils. Ameri a or Asia." In the same letter, Bishop will conduct the catechetical eommittee to explore the possi The archbishop said according bilities of a joint student center Schexnayder 'also 'instructed program for public school chil to the ecumenical council and or church on the campus of pastors to begin nominating lay dren. Pope Paul, there will now be men and women of their respec ~rdue University here. two khlds of permanent deacons. The center, if built, would be tive parishes as deanery repre':' Young men over 25 will receive ~@'W'fJl lLegasDcnltcll'$ sentatives for the forthcoming co-owned by the Lafayette dio three years instruction and cese and the Lafayette Method-' diocesan synod. There will be ~OBB ~l\.!I5 ~D~~ trainin g. At present they will be two lay representatives from ist District. DES MOINES (NC) - The requin d to. remain celibate. each of the 13 deaneries of the The proposed structure would provide a campus church for diocese. The bishop advised that Iowa House of Representatives But m ture men (over 35) may Methodist students and would representatives of Brothers and has killed a Senate-passed bill be aIr a9Y married. Their in structi n and ~raining will be supplement facilities of St.. Sisters be selected at a later date. to pe,rmit parochial school stu .. , dentS to ride public school 'buses. more exible~ Thomas Aquinas parish in La The House vote--70-42-came fayette for Catholic students Irll""quesfed Sh....<>MR' on a: motion to release the bill at Purdue. It would be located IA.... "'" w.,. on six acres owned by the La NEW YORK (NC) - During from committee for floor action. M~lrnt~e The state Senate passed the bill fayette district of the Methodist. the month of July, the Catho 35"-26 last March 8. Church at the west edge of the, . 'Hour will present a series of The bill would have permitted Purdue campus. repeat performances of those Over 35' Years
pupils in non-profit private The project is a Catholic- five programs most often re Satisfied service
Methodist undertaking at this quested by listeners in the past schoolS' to ride public scheel buses on thei'l' regular reutes, juncture, spokesmen explained, year. The radio program is pro R~. jMaster Plumber 7023
although representatives of ottie~·· ,li\iCed by the. National Counctl but, would not have allowed the JqsePH . RAPOSA, JR. faiths will be invited t~ sit in, '91 . Catholic Men and 9roadcast public school buses to leave ~ NO. MAIN STREET
lH\ the year-:-Iong study· committevery Sunday on the N'BC 'radio these routes for the convenience fall ~. ~75-74'"
'tJee' meetings. . " .aetW\jeL . . ~ttiepd'vate school chilcil'en.
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Plumbing &
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CUoses Diocesan MtClIj~r Seminary LITTLE ROCK (NC)-Bishop Albert L.. Fletcher of Little Rock has _announced that the theology department of St. John's HOrne Missions Seminary here is being closed, ending 56 years of service to Catholic mis sionary dioceses in this country. The announcement came some eight weeks. after it was dis closed the seminary's college de partment would be closed. Bishop Fletcher assigned three reasons 'for the latest action inability to obtain qualified fac ulty members to teach the essen tial subjects, inadequate enroll ment (only 50 major seminarians had been registered for the 1967-68 school term), and grow ing financial deficits with' no prospect of future relief. The bishop said every effort will be made to retain the minor seminary-the high school. de partment. He pointed out that only three students are enrolled! for the' 1967-68 term and they will attend classes at Catholic High School. The Arkansas candidates for the priesthood will take, college courses at Holy Trinity Sem inary, which is on the campus of the University of Dallas, Tex., and take their theological stud ies at various seminaries outside the diocese.
-ltmJ
Vmce-P'reside~t
SPOKANE (NC)-Dr. William O. Perkett, associate professor of economics and· business at Gonzaga University here, _has been appointed vice-president for finance and planning, Father John P. Leary, S.J., university president, has annoimced.· He becomes the Jesuit':run univer sity's first lay vice-president.
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'Rendr{es
Muclhael .C~ .Austin BRC.
FUNIERAL SERVICE
NEW BEDfORD, -MASS.
549 COUNTY STREET
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ANCHOR-Diocese of FaN River-Thurs., Ju Iy 20, 1967
1S
MASSACH USETTS
USS
Official State Memorial to the 13,000 Bay State heroes who lost their lives during World War II, now anchored at Battleship Covel Fall River /,-----
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.Set aside one day c:hJHl'ing the Sum mew fro ViSMti' t·his Gr®@!t Ship. I
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An ideal one-day projeet for the various playground groups throughout New England.
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"Big Mamie" did II'Icfr lose OVie iMlfil as CII result o~ enemy caJcI'ion. The Massachusetts earned ~ ~ lba~~lle staro for the following <tIttions:
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Wesfre~n New iGr.Jlill'leCl - AIP'~i~ 'i 94~ Wes. (\';tm~oline fis. - $ef.G~.- ©Il:~. '9~ I.ey~e- .!Jan. ]945 llulZOD'il -
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Thirc!l Fleet Ctaids -July-Aug. 194§
This Message Spol7Jso,ed by The Fo';owing Individuals and Business Concel',ns In The Diocese of FaB River Fan River BRADY ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. CASCADE DRUG CO. EDGAR'S FALL RIVER - BROCKTON GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO.
IN'1l'ERNAT80NlAL LADIES GARMENT
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IL A. McWHIRR COMPANY §OBILOFF BROTHERS §TERIl.ING BEVERAGES, fiNe. §ULUVAN'S iE~TILE WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA AFL-CIO
North Attleboro JEWELED CROSS COMPANY, INt.
taunton MOONEY AND COMPANY, INC.
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tHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs., July~20, 1967
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Belen Sullivan Fall River
SheilaVicke1'8 Taunton
Su.aooe M. Trudean
S&me'rset
SUSaB Zyek' New Bedford
Dlaua L. WIsniewski' Somerset
Norma White Taunton
49 YOUNG WOMEN COMPLETE TRAINING AT ONLY CATHOLIC HOSP TAL IN FALL RIVER DIOCESE
Discuss Catholic~ Jewish Re~ations ~n Philade~phia PHILADELPHIA (NC)---':" The executive secretary of the Philadelphia Archdio eesan Commission on Human lRelations urged Catholics to re lilRember the "common r-eligiolls patrimony" of Christians and Sews, and the director of inter ~ltural affairs for the Anti Defamation League of B'nai jB'rith praised the Second Vati aft - Council at a dialogue on en Catholic-Jewish relations Il!ere. Msgr. Phillip J. Dowling and Dr. Joseph L. Lichten were key note speakers at the session, Bponsored jointly by Holy Fam .D.ly College and the Philadelphia a4visory- board of B'nai. B'rith on the campus of the Philadel phia women's college. .. Msgr. Dowling asked the au dience to achieve a real friend Ghip with the Jews by seekin~ ~a re-:Judaizing of our faith by llooking back to the origin of it. Mow do we look at Mary?" he asked. "As the most beautiful 'young Jewish woman one can nmagine? If we di!i so, we might build a closer bond to the Jews." Continuing Effort . In, the face of a growing Christian:'Jewish split over the Middle East, Dr. Lichten said that "now is the time when we llhould increase dialogue, not abandon it. Our continuing effort of mutual love and understand ing still has a long, long way to go. It is of first importance t.t. keep this glorious spark ali ve among us. This is the. spark ig lIlited by Vatican II." Dr. Lichten praised the "in tensive attack on the anti Semitism within the Catholic Church," conCluding: "Despite the somber conditions which en mesh the world at large, we :li'<e 1lItriving for a new ecumenical ...ision of man." , The main speaker at one ses lIIion' of the two-day conference was Louis Zara, national chair man of the Intercultural Affairs Committee of B'nai B'rith, who q:alled for both Jews and Cath olics to forget the "old wounds" of the past. "Only present aims q:an be examined and furthered," he said.
Introdt\Ll{;e~Wl$
BiU
DOVER (NC)-A bill to ap propriate $250,000 for busing- of private and parochial school ehildren has been introduced in Deleware Legislature. It ....ould go into effect for the 1966-69 school year.
the
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Retired Priest Remains Acti 'ForSJet ~ar, Ride Bike', He DAYTONA BEACH (NC)-It ,31, 1891, in the Netherlands, .could be said that Father Ger where he was ordained to the priesthood on July 15, 1917. He ald W. Lutyens, after a half centuI'yof work, still is active in taught' Holy Scripture and lit the apostolates of peddling reli urgy at the diocesan Wemhout gion and peda~ng a bike. ' Seminary there. In 1930 he be A hale and hearty 75 years came chaplain in the Royal Navy, serving old, Father Lutyens celebrated Netherlands his 50th anniversary in the through World War II, and at priesthood July 15 at Mater Dei tained the rank of commander.· NUl'sing Home for the Aged here. Plans Vacation His advice to newly ordained He came to the U. S. in 1944. pI'iests - "Keep up the good He served at St. Anthony's in work. Persevere, and forget your Questa, N, M., retired in 1964, cars. Get out and walk and ride 'came to Florida, and became a bike." chaplain at the Mater Dei Home. Father Lutyens rides a bike He still assists on occasions at every day. He pedals from the parishes in Ormond Beach and . Mater Dei Home to the public DeLand. library where he spends several Astride his bike, the Dutch hours reading, then pedals home priest is a figure familiar to resagain, He claims there's nothing' like bike riding to keep itt ISlind Contribute shape. Father Lutyens was born Oct.
Vahned
ltx~mple
VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Bomb ~gn!i [BloSi!1l0P's blind make a special contribu tion of example to today's world, Sisteli' DlJ'il MD®~li'O~ Pope Paul has told the National LAGOS (NC)-The sister of Civil Association for the Blind a Nigerian bishop was killed in of Italy in an audience. a time-bomb explosion here.' 'Ehe Pope declared "you, 'with The prelate, Bishop Lucas Olu silent dignity, give a real lesson, Chukwuka Nw.azeapu, is at pres a worthy instruction to the men ent in the United' States. . amid whom you live, to these In addition to 'the bishop's men of our times often feverish sister, Felicia Ogbogu, her hus and discontented, anguished and band, Patrick, and their daugh pityless both toward themselves ter Were also killed.' The couple and others and for whom there were members of the Legion of now see.ms valid the serious Mary. words of criticism, of admoni The bomb was in a car parked tion, of the Lord, 'They look in a gas station beside their about with eyes' open but they home at Obalende, in central do not see.' Lagos. It was apparently in ''The great book of the uni tended for the national police verse, which opens itself before headquarters across the road, their eyes, remains closed fGr where tlJe car had been refused some of them who fail to find entry minutes before. The house therein the traces left by the of the victims was totally de hand of God. molished. "Beloved sons and daughters, we must say that, unlike many unhappy persons who no longer mdaho Prelate Asks . know how to see, you are in the Penitentiary Reform light and you give light by your wonderful example. The world, BOISE (NC)-Bishop Sylves ter W. Treinen of Boise has therefore, has need of' you" .. 40 joined the Idaho Council of precisely because of this missiOft Churches in urging Gov. Don of bringing light, of which the Samuelson to adopt reforms at world today has real need." Idaho state penitentiary in Boise. Father William K. Weigand, Boise chancellor, told Gov. Sam Fall River Diocesan Council uelson, on the bishop's behalf of Catholic Nurses that the reform recommenda tions "have great merit and de serve full consideration. The Council of Churches has asked the state to upgrade re MARSHFIELD quirements and salary .for the penitentiary's warden and· ex July 22, 1961 pand educational and rehabiii.,. tation programs.
.
Open House
,.
Pope Encourages French Youth
Pedaling' dvises
VATICAN CITY (NC)-In • television address to approxi mately 50,000 Young· Christian Workers of France, Pope Paul told the 40th anniversary meet ing:
ts of this resort town, famed for its beach and speedway
rac~. A ter celebrating his golden jubi ee, Father Lutyens will tak~his first vacation in several yea.T' He will go to Expo 67 in Mo~treal, then back home to Amsterdam. . H became an American citi zen seven years ago, while he was stationed in New Mexico. Afte a three-month vacation, he will return to Mater Dei Home and is duties as chaplain.
"Your iIJ:tmense assembly ill the sign of the people of God Olll the march; it is the Church, ai ways young, which, through you, calls to the young boys and girls of the working world to discover that they are brothers in the love of Christ, and to say to you: 'We want to go with you, for we have learned that God is with you' (Zach. 8, 23) . . . . "See how great and elating your responsibility as young people and as Christians is for the integral and interdependent development of peoples. So many men live in injustice, so many others are victims of war, and all nevertheless have 0 thirst for justice, a thirst for peace. In the image of Christ, be witnesses of justice, messen gers of peace, sowers of love."
Af lican Missionaries Seeking Brothers T~NAFLY
(NC)-The Amer the' Society of Afri an l\:lission will begin next Sept mber accepting candIdates for rothers who will' be des tined for service in.West Africa. Fa' her S. John Murray, s.M.A., here in New Jersey who' is in char e of recruiting, said the socie y is seeking candidates who ave at least a high school educ tion and an interest in such fields as teaching, bUilding, agri cultu e or community develop ment.
ican~prOVince of
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Joseph Hayes 'Deep End Is Big Book - in Length .
•
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. KenIlledy Some years ago Joseph Hayes wrote a novel caned The Desperate Hours which was a signal success. The book sold well. It was adapted for the stage. It was made into a movie. The theme was one of suspense: an American family trapped in its own home and threatened with dark glasses; an Apollo-like per death by a group of desper vert. Obviously he is edueated, adoes. One could readily obviously he knows how to talk identify with the family and share their terror. Now Mr. Hayes has written another novel, The Deep End (Viking. $6.95; Madison 625 Ave., New York, N.Y. 10022). The publisher tells us that it "goes far beyond t hat (earlier) book, Il:oinbining 11 taut, exciting story with a profound search for values. A big novel in every way, it should bring Mr. Hayes into the front rank of American writers. It is a big book in 'only one respect-length. The telling re quires (or at least gets) four hundred pages. It certainly will not bring Mr. Hayes into the front rank of American writers, although it might do something toward his placement among rank American writers. It is a 'very bad novel, and not the least of its demerits is its pre tentiousness. Safe and Secure' Its principal character is Adam
Wyatt, aged 50, a successful New York lawyer. Adam mis been
mamed for 21 years to an En- .
glisbwoman named Lydia. They
have one daughter, Anne, lately married to Glenn Spangler. The Wyatt marriage has been a hap py one, and Adam has never been involved with another woman. He is virtuous in other re spects as well, is aware of his probity and worth, and is at least a touch of self-righteous. He is a man safe and secure, beyond the reach of evil or trouble. Or so the thinks. He is in for a nasty surprise. His wife has gone to England to be with her mother, who has sent word that she is ill. His daughter is living in the country. He is alone in New York.
properly. But his speech is the jargon of the beatI\ik: weird words, weird grammar, weird verbal punctuation. ("click click"). Wilby is probably mad. Those eyes, when rarely, he doffs bis glasses. That talk. Those goings on. He is crafty and cruel, hu miliating Adam, fiercely enjoy ing his battering of the poor square. He causes self-doubt in Adam, self-scrutiny such as Adam has never yet indulged in. How searching is his insight into bis victim, how intuitive his obser vations about him, how unfailing his anticipation Adam's every move, every thought! Adam is really in a sweat-box.
.It is because of the strange spell which wily Wilby weaves, rather than because of the frame-up, that Adam seeks no outside help. The frame-up, of course, is bad enough. Does Adam think of going to the po lice? Fine, the hippies would welcome it. They have nothing to lose . But what of Adam's reputation? his career? bis loved ones? Devilish! Loses Self-Respeet
But more devilish is the breaking down of his self respect, almost his identity. Has his and Lydia's lave been as ideal as he has always told him self it was? Has Lydia always been faithful? And what of Anne? Has there not beeR some thing incestuous about his atti tude toward her? Is Rot this why he has never been able to get on with Glenn?
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., July 20.1967
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ReeO~B<nlUS Leoderrs SUP~Qrt B~n 1"CiJJ [j2)(j'@~~ct FOlrm W€N!~@[],s) WASHINGTON (NC) - As farming becomes a bigger and bigger business, the agricultural industry must learn "to deal with its labor under the same conditions are other industries," a Senate subcommittee investi gating the condition of migrant farm workers was told. The testimony was given on behalf of the National Council of Churches by the Rev. Luther E. Tyson, director of the Depart ment of Economic Life of the Methodist Church's' board of Christian social concerns. The Rev. Tyson was joined by Catholic and Jewish representa tives in testifying before the S,enate Subco~mittee on Mi grant Labor on the second day NEW DIRECTOR: Father of Washington hearings on a biJl to include farm workers in the Richard Steinhilber of Buf collective bargaining - provisions falo is the new director of of the National Labor Relations the Columban Fathers in Act. North and South America. Father John McCarthy, speak He had been national V()ca ing on behalf of the National Committee for the tion director and coordinator Bishops' Spanish Speaking, the National for the foreign mission soci Catholic Rural Life Conference ety. NC Photo. and the social action department of the United States Catholic Conference, reminded the Sena tors that Catholic bishops in California and Texas - where farm strikes have focused t.he nation's attention on the migrant The eighth annual luncheon worker's problems - have re and fashion show sponsored by peatedly stressed the rights of Our Lady of Victory Guild, Cen farm workers to form unions terville, will be held Thursday, and bargain with employel·s. Aug. 10 at East Bay Lodge, Rabbi Richard G. Hirsch, di
Osterville. Mrs. Richard Pessa rector of the Religious Action will be chairman, aided by Mrs. Center of the Union of American
John Eckert and a large com Hebrew Congregations, 31so
mittee. Commentators will be backed the legislation.
Mrs. Norman Boucher and Mrs.
It is needed, he said "in order
John McGuire. to conform to the new conditions New guild officers are Mrs. of modern agriculture. In the Stephen O'Brien ·Jr., president; last generation, the a\'erage Mrs. John J. Pendergast Jr. and farm has more than doubled in Mrs. James Murphy, vice-presi size, and the value of assets dents; Mrs. William Rockwell, used in agricultural production on the average farm has in treasurer; Mrs. Charles Mac Aleese, recording secretary. creased tenfold.
Centerville E~ectsl' Pians Style Show
"The small family farm," ~ said, "is giving way to an agri cultural industry characterized by all the problems inherent in big business. Not the least of these are problems of labor management relations." By permitting farm workeJ11l to organize unions and by mak ing union and management bar gain in good faith, he said, bitteli' controversies will be avoided and both labor and management\ will discuss their differences iill a mature fashion. Witnesses for the Farm Bu~ reau Federation and the Na tional Council of Farmer Co operatives both testified against t.he legislation, claiming tha~ harvest-time strikes would de stroy farmers, and that increas~ wages would drive many farm ers out of business. Rabbi Replies Replied Rabbi Hirsch: "The vel'y fears now agitating growero
were expressed 30 years ago by
the closely allied food processing
industry. But the unionization
of this industry has not resulted
in crippling strikes during har
vest time. Similarly, the unio," ization of the dairy industry and of field workers in Hawaii hav been benefiCial to both labor and management." Mrs. C. J. Schroeder of Roclr Valley, Iowa, who testified 0I:l
behalf of the National Council
of Catholic Women, the Nationall
Council of Jewish Women, t~
Church Women United, the Na tional Council of Negro Women. and the Young Women's Chris tian Association, also attacketJl the farmers' fears.
••
Elect Provincial
RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)
Father Bernardo Catao, O.P., 4f),
has been elected provincial ofl
the Dominicans in Brazil. BoJ'Kl
in Rio de Janeiro, Father Catae
studied at the Pontifical Uni
versity here and in France.
And it goes back beyond Anne and Lydia. It goes back to his father and mother. His father was a minister who hanged him self. His mother was a big cheer ful woman who was slowly ruined by cancer. Dreadful mem ories which he had suppressed rise from their graves and lacer 'ate him. He has frightful dreams.
Caught in Net
One evening he returns to his handsome apartment to find that he has uninvited, and indeed unknown, guests. They are a pair of hippies, bizarre in dress, speech, manner: Wilby (a male) and Jenny (a female). They have taken over the place and made themselves en tirely at home. They quickly catch Adam in a net through Jenny's animal allure and aban don, to which Adam succiumbs. , They demand hush money and declare that they will stay on the premises until Adam hands over $3,000. Procuring and pay ing this must wait until the next day, and so they remain. But this, remember, is a "big" novel, with psychological, even metaphysical, dimensions. Adam is tormented by his quick, mind less yielding to Jenny. Isn't he a man of respectability? Isn't he strong-willed, self-controlled? He had always supposed so. But now? But this? It gives him furiousl,. to think.
Causes Self-DowW His fleshly failing is flOt the worst of it. The worst of it is brought out by, Wilby's treat ment of him. A strange one, this Wilby. Long, lon~ hair; dark,
Novel Is DeDi! He drinks, heavily. He even goes back to cigarettes. He for gets to shave. He forgets to put on a necktie. Crapulous, chain smoking, unshaven, tieless, he goes to the office. People there are surprised. He snaps at them. He quarrels with his partner, Henry Brant. He eyes Henry narrowly - what about Henry and Lydia? Anything there? He really looks at his secretary for the first time, and discovers that she is infatuated with him and wants to be his mistress.. God is dead! Get· it? And the one who learns this is named Adam! Get it? What you are more likely to get, should you read this book, is the impression that the novel is dead if Mr. Hayes's absurd concoction is at all representative.
Exciting new electric refrigeratoll'S make enterta,ining a "cool" propo sition for teenagers and grown-ups, too. Even if ice cubes disappear like magic, new refrigerators make new ones like magic.
It is about twice as long as the material warrants. ·The plot is incredible, the suspense mini mal, the characters ersatz. TlH!' airs it gives itself al'e insuffer able, and the philos<OPhizing is mere flatulence. The ordeal 9l Adam Wyatt is 21S nothing alongside that of the reader un wary enough to blunder into this sloppy, sophomoric bore.
Best of defr:osting.
an
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0
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)8
St. Paul ,School
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 20,1967
..
Official Retires
Pope EI'evates' 1(Q) Priests Continued from Page Six
Monsignor Sullivan
Msgr. Hurley's first pastorate :was at St. John the Baptist in «Central Village, Westport, 'from October 1935 until J'anuary 1941 ~hen he took charge at Sacred Reart ,Church, Oak Bluffs until Feb. 25, 1949 when he, assumed fthe ',pastorate at '8t. William's !l!:hurch, F.all River. Three years following his iiune 12, 1951 assignment to St. iloseph's Church in Taunton, Msgr. Hurley manifested his in Qlerest in Catholic education by directing the establishment of '~e parish school.
An oft-cited member of the Chaplains' Corps of the United
Monsignor Levasseur
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Ordained 49 years ago by the lJate Bishop Feehan, Father LeV18sseur was 'born in Fall River, <the son of the late Napoleon and Georgianna (Marchand) Levas&leur. After graduating from the Notre Dame parish school in Fall River in 1905, the New Bedford llIastorfor the past 27 years then attended Assumption Prep and :Assumption College in Worces,\leI'. He was graduated from the ~orcester college in 191Z. He continued his studies at 1m. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore and then went on to Cath':' 0lic University in the nation's Ollpital before he was ordained 110 the priesthood in St. Marys Cathedral by the late Bishop Feehan. . The new monsignor had four IlISsignments as a curate. He' served St. Anthony's Church, ~ew Bedford, from 1918 until 1923 when he went to St. Jean
,
ST. PAUL (NC)-Msgr. Roger J. Connole, 67, has retired from his post as superintendent of Catholic schools in the archdio cese of St. Paul-Minneapolis. The priest had directed the largest school system hi Minne sota for the last 3() years.
>
States Army in 'World War'II, Father Sullivan served in both the European and Pacific thea ters, attending to' the needs of thousands of servicemen who were engaged in major battles. Especially in the European theater of operations, Father Sullivan, went ashore with the troops which battled their way from the tip. of Italy until they routed the Hitler' allies. Cognizant of his feats with the servicemen" veterans organ izations have bestowed many honors upon the Fall River pas tor whose "parish is located in
the North End of his native 'city.
The son of the late John P. and Mary (Kenney), Sullivan, the new monsignor was born in Fall River on Feb. 8, 1900. He attended the" Lincoln grammar school and B.M.C. Durfee High .School, both in Fall River. He then graduated from Holy Cross College fn Worcester before he 'entered St. Bernard's Seminary in Rochester. 0rdained 42 years ago-on June 6, 1925:-by the late Bishop Feehan, Fatlier Sullivan served as moderator of the Berchmans and Epsilon clubs of Fall River . and more recently he has been
diocesan director of the Guild
Msgr. Connole was instrumen in guiding growth of the Diocesan, Teachers' College that for years produced some 80 per cent of Catholic high school teachers in the archdiocese. He is credited with bringing about the standardization of archdioc esan schools, a'nd with keep.ing the growth of schools abreast of the post-war population ex plosion which has made the Twin Cities suburbs among the fastest growing in the nation. The priest will continue to be curriculum consultant for the education bureau and will be on the education department faculty at the College of St. Thomas. He is currently writing a new teachers' manual for the "Christian Inheritance" series of religion texts, a series which de veloped from the religion pro gram he devised for the arch diocese. The new superintendent of schools is Father Raymond Lucker, who will also retain his post as Confraternity of Chris tian Doctrine director.
tai
Eng ineeringSclhooD Receives Grant
for the Blind.
After a three-month Summer
assignment at St. Mary's Church on Nantucket, immediately fol lowing his ordaination, Father
IN lBIOLY LAND: Outbreak of hostilities cut short a tour of the Holy Land conducted ~y Brother Daniel Sul livan, O.F.M. for his brother, Sistji- and niece. Standing the Baptiste, Fall River, for one b~fore one of the altars in the Shrin of the Holy Sepulchre rear. He was tranferred in 1924 t9 St. HyaCinth Church" New in Jerusalem are Mrs. W. Arthur Leary of Fall River; Bedford, where he continued Brother Daniel; Rev. Leo Sullivan pastor of St. Ann's, antU 1927 when he went to St: ~igned ~ lioly Name Church ~thony of Padua Church, New ;l~l Fall River where b~ serve,d ,Raynham, and Miss, Ruth Marie teary. Brother Daniel , :." {lve,rea.rs, ~f~r~ ll,! w.a~ trans:,;. is'stationed at Tetra Sancta Gone~e;Amman; Jordan. Bedford" in 1927. Sullivan served three years as an assistant at the parish which he now heads. ~hen, he was as';" sociated with St. Patrick's Church in Falmouth for the Summer of 1928 before he was
WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr. John S. Jeris of the civil engi neering department at Manhat tan College's school of engineer ing in New York has been awarded a $30,823 research grant ,by the Public Health Service's National Center for Urban and Industrial Health, the U. S. Department of Health, Ed ucation, and Welfare' announced. 'The grant, awarded by the national center's Solid Wastes Program, is one of 17 research projects totaling $78.,000; aimed at reducing pollution' from solid, wastes. It Will enable Dr. Jeris to study accelerated· decomposi tion of cellulose. ,Manhattan College is. con ducted by the Christian Brothel'll.
Six years later he was named ~~tr~ to. St. Mary ~ Cathedral Il1ldministrator ,'of St. Hyacinth III Novembe,r, .1~33. '. " ; , . , € h urch in New Bedford; a posi.:. ., T~ Fa~l, Rlye.~nati~e.s flrs~,. , Uon he 'held for seven yearS lin- "appomtment as, an ~dr.nJ.~}Jstr,ator Ul, in 1940, he was named pastor w~ a~ Corpus ChrJstl lD, Sand .t. his present parish, St.' Anne's ",.WICl~ ~n, N'ove,~~r ~.946" a par-, '" ' Holy Name Societies for 'Continuation ~lurch in New Bedford. ' ' ish he served, f~r 10 years ~ fore he was aSSigned as pastor , , Of 60-Year ·Cr. tom , &f St. Dominic's 'parish in Swan- , MonsignOr Stanton sea.' The new prelate was named .Eig parades are held annu NEWARK (NC)-The execu ally in key centers of the arch Born in Taunton on Sept.: 10, pastor of St. Joseph's ' Church tive board of the ~ewark Arch diocese' on the second Sunday in diocesan Federation of Holy i'917, the rector of St. Mary;s in Fall River-a parish he serv ed in his early priesthood as a Name Societies has reaffirmed Octobe ~ practice dating back ~athedral in Fall River, ,is the its stand in favor of continuation more tian 60 years. lIOn of the' late Daniel A'.' and cu~ate-in September 1961. Chewing Efficiency Last month, after the board of annual Holy Name parades in Dorothy (Lynch) Stanton. Monsignor Thoonson adopte.d a resolution urging con Increased up to 35% the archdiocese. After graduating from the Clinical teats prove you can now At a meeting in the chancery tinuanc of th~ observance, the Immaculate Conception parish The 61-year old pastor of chew better make dentures aver age up to 35% more elYectlve-lf you liChool in his native city and Cape Cod's largest parish, Fa- office, the board voted to send Archdiope~an Sena,te of Priests sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your asked t~at the parades be aban .. then the public high school in ,ther Thomson is one of the more a letter to Archbishop Thomas plates. FASTEETH Is the a1kaUne doned of, the grounds of expen.se (non~aclil) powder that holds false A. Boland stating the society !l'aunton, Father Stanton then prominent members of the di teeth more firmly so they feel more will support any decision on his and dectining interest. attended Boston College for ocesan clergy. eomfortable. No gummy. pasty tBsta. Subsequently, a Holy Name Doesn't sour. Checks denture odor. UJree years before he studied A priest for the past 35 years, part to continue the parades. Dentures that fit are essential to official~lcritiCiZed the senate for philosophy and theology at St. the Hyannis pastor. has been health. See yoUr dentist regularly. acting ithout consulting society Qei FASTEE'nI at aU clrugOOlAlltel& Bernard's seminary in Roches- active in both the educational in 1938, he was assigned to St. officers. " , 6er. He did additional theologi- and charitable agencies of the Mary's Cathedral' where he re 4:31 studies at St. Mary's Semi- diocese, and, is recognized'as one ,mained "for 10 years.'
Dary in Baltimore before he was of the more forceful orators of
In 1948, he was named direc ,ordained to the priesthood on, the diocesan clergy. ',' ' \ ' w' w , ' tor of Catholic' Charities 'for Nov. 27, 1943 by the late Bisb'The son of Mrs. Mary (Curley)" Greater New Bedford and Cape -. Cassidy. ' , . Thomson imd the late David' '¢od, during which tiqIe,he ser.vAfter a' seven~year curacy' Thomson, the' new monsignor eel as chaplain for' ·St. Mary's St. Mary's parish in North At:' . was born in Taunton on April Home in New 'Bedford,' and Ueboro, Father Stanton was.next 14, 1906. He was graduated from chaplain at the Bristol County essigned to the Immaculat~ Con- the Immaculate Conception par 'JfouSe of Correction in New oeption Church in Fall River' is~. sctiool in Taunton iiJ 1920 , Bedford. where he continued until. he was and was graduated from St. After 18 years in New Bed Damed as rector of the Cathe- Mary's High School, in the same ford, Father Thomson ap d.ral 011 May 20, 1964. city, four years later. pointed administrator of St. A U. S. Navy chaplain for' , Father Tliomson, who holds , Mary's Church', Norton where he S.OLD- RENTED- EXCHANGID ' three years during the Korean, a' master's Degree from Catholic continued' until three years ago :War, the Cathedral rector served University, attended Boston Col STEEL AND WOOD DESKS when be was assigned to St. as a Commander in the Chap- 'lege for two years before he Francis' Xavier, Hyamiis. DHAIRS. FILING DABINETI
lain's Corps of the Naval Re- entered St. Mary's Seminary in .. 'TABLIES • 8A~ES • STEIL SHELY· ~'
While at Norton, he served as £Jerves. Baltimore. He was ordained to. .. INI • BOOK CASES, no. moderator for the fund raising In addition, he serves as mod- the priesthood on May 2i, 1932 campaign in 1959 ,<for the new erator of the Fall River Cath- by the late Bishop Cassidy. UIIG Our Easy' Budget P l a n · · olic Nurses and is a teacher at ,After a five-year curacy at Bishop Feehan High School in St. Anne's Hospital School of St. Lawrence's' Church, New Attleboro. The new, monsignor, Dean of Nursing. 'He is also a professor Bedford, he pursued graduate at the Dighton Novitiate of the studies at Catholic University the Cape Deanery, has also Dominican Sisters of Charity of in Washington for a year. He served as a philosophy instruc tile PresentatioiJ, of .the .Blessed served at Holy Name Church,' tor at Sacred 'Heart College in 10~ JAMES ST., near Union; NEW BEDFORD, ,MASS. ;Vingin Mary. Fall River, for' one year and, Fall River.
1"0·· Parade-Jri~ot ....
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 20. 1967 ',, ,q
,Pope Paul To Visit Turkey
Ephesus Site EphesUs became one of the most important centers for the spread of Christianity under the bishopric of 'the Apostle John, who is believed to have written there at least the Book of Rev elation (Apocalypse) /)Jld biB three epistles. The same traditions strongly support the belief that he took Mary there to live with him after llhe was entrusted to his care by Christ on the cross. Some say Mary died in Ephesus but BOme link this event with Jerusalem's "Upper Room" which was probably the earliest per manent place of Christian wor ship. Ephesus is now in ruins and there is little there of the an cient Basilica of St. John except its pavement, under which the Apostle is believed to be buried. The council there was held in the same basilica. Orthodox Patriarch In "anticipating" Patriarch Athenagoras' proposed visit to Rome, the Pope said, "We should like thus to make an act of hon or toward the illustrious and venerated Ecumenical Patriarch, to exchange the gestures of cour tesy he has often made toward us and the Roman Catholic Catholic Church by sending his representatives both as obserV ers and personal delegates in various circumstances." The Pope said he wanted to bring personally to the Patriarch "the announcement of the year commemorating the martyrdom of the' holy Apostles Peter and Paul and with this announce ment the invitation to eelebrate spiritually its inspirational his totical commemoration in a united way with us." The visit would also invoke, he said, the "forever stirring memory of that encounter we had the fortune to experience at the beginning of 1964 with the Patriarch at Jerusalem 0) .. *" Archbishop Chrysostomos, for 'mer head 'of 'the Orthodox,See of : .. ~ ' ' ' }
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Athens, Greece, was one of the outspoken crities of all eeumen ical attempts between Rome and Constantinople. However, he was deposed by the, new Greek military regime a few months ago and the new Greek Patri areh, Archbishop Hieronymos, has already made several public statements which indicate his favoring of eeumenical progress between the two ehurches.. Two religious feasts will be especially meaningful for the journey. July 25 is the feast of st. James the Greater, the first Apostle-bishop of Jerusalem;
this feast is, as the Pope noted, obviously-meant to attach signi ficance to the fact in relation to
the proposed discussions with the Patriarch on the status of the Holy Places iIll war-torn Israel
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Cardinal . Cu:shing· of Beston' Att1vo~ate5l
Untern'atoonol Status' forr Je!l'u$a~~rn
S PEe I A L: Sr. Martha Marie, SUSC, of the Sacred Hearts Convent, Fall River,
is attending an institute on
the non-graded schooi and culturally disadvantaged be ing conducted now in San 'Juan, 'Puerto Rico.
BOSTON (NC)-~Richard Carhope for peace among men," the dinal Cushing of Boston'believes Cardinal continued. "For Mos "nothing less than a tl1lly 'inter- .lems, the holy Mosque has been national enclave cim satisfy the a place of prayer, a retreat from conscience of the·wQrld in re,. 8 world of turmoil and strife." gard to sacred shrines an·d· their "Altogether, Jerusalem, ·even environment" in the Hoii Land" In a world of wars, is a' haven and· especially in ~he city of of peace," the Bay State Cardi Jerusalem. ' nal emphasized. Cardinal Cushing said· "the city of Jerusalem is ;l city of "The Holy Land - and .espe , peace. It was rrlad,e holy for cially Jerusalem," Cardinal Cbnstians through what was ac:: Cushing declared, "should be complished there by One whom above politics. It should be out of the range, of political power we call the Prince-of-Peace." "For Jews, the ancient Temple and the changing iortunes of was a monument. to God and a states."
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, '" Off,ic:e. in Inclia , BRIDGEPORT. (NC)-~Father Herman D'Souza, of the ,Bombay archdiocese in, India, will leave this ,country shortly to assume his new duties as national direc- ,. tor of the Pontifical Mission Or lIanizations in India. Father D'Souza, who has been ' residing at' St, Raphael's rectory here, has been serving as visiting lecturer in education at Fairfield (Conn.) University and at St'. Michael's College, Winooski, Park, Vt. For three years Father D'Souza served in the national office cd the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in New York when Bishop Fulton· J. Sheen was di rector of 'the office. He was recalled to Bombay and served as general secretary of the 28tht Il)ternational Eucha ris~c . Congress there in. 1964 when Pope Paul VI made his his-: toric visit to that countrr. . Father D'Souza was named to his new post by the Congrega tion lor the Propagation of the Faith to succeed Msgr. Joseph Fernandez, who resigned from the office. Father D'Souza plans 14> take over the office about Aug. 1.
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Honor Cardinal BALTIMORE (NC) - Law Cardinal Shehan of Balti more and Archbishop Iakovos of' the Greek Orthodox Chuicli of North and South America win be given awards by two Greek Orthodox churches-the Church of 'the Annunciation and St. Nicholas-at a dinner here on Sept. 9 fOJ\' their e1forls in menism.
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THE ANCHORThurs~, July 20, 1967
!Bi$[}l)@[p M~ l1d)on@~d IP~~[J'\)~
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C lL!J ~®~U' N~Vo WASHINGTON (NC) Bishop William J. McDonald will "not to continue in' office (as rector of the Catholic University of America) beyond the period. of my present ap pointment." His second ~ive-year term will expire on Nov. 9. Only one rector at Catholic University of Amer.ica has sel"ved more than two terms. He was Bishop Thomas J. Shahan,' who was rector from 1909 to 1927. Thus, Bishop McDonald's an nouncement was not completely unexpected.·Last Spring·a group of faculty members announced formation of a committee to sug gest possible successors to him. . • Bishop McDonald said his de cision .was "made many yeal'S ago." A successor to Bishop McDon ald will be. appointed by the Congl"egation of Seminaries and Universities in Rome. It is be lieved, however, that the Con gregation will ratHy the sugges tion of the board .of tn~stees which, in turn, can be guided by the 'three names subl}litted to it by the 'academic senate.· Bishop . McDonald was choseR lI'ectorm this way. Born in' Ireland, Bishop Mc Donald, 63, was ordained in 1928 for the San Francisco Arch diocese. From '1928 to 1930 he. was chaplain' of the Newman Club at Stanford University and' f('Om 1930 to 1932, assistantedi tor of The Monitor, al'chdiocesan newspaper. After a term as an assistant pastor, he did graduate studieil at Catholic University and joined its philosophy faculty in 1940. He was named vice rector in 1954 and rector in 1957.
HOLY FATHER EN.JOYS VISITS WITH CHILJ)REN: Pope Paul, in two candid scenes, outwardly manifested his enjoyment in meeting children. The lad· (at left) indicates
e by using liis fingers.· A .Venetian choir boypresentlS el gondola to the Supreme 'Pontiff in the other meet-C Photo~ . .
Varied IExperienlce l;lishop McDonald served two years as director of studies for ecclesiastical schools and was editor-in-chief of the recently published New Catholic Ency elopedia. He .was appointed a consultor of 'the Pimti'fical Prepat'atory Commission of Studies and Sem inades of the Second Vatican Coun.ciI.· ~
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