The
ANCHOR
1-' i
1966 The Anchor
,
$4.00 per Year PRICE lOe
Pope P,aul Again 'P,leads for End Of Hostilities
Bishop Medeiros Seeks Farm Labor Peace NEW BRAUNF'ELS (Nc)-Delegates to the annual @{)nvention of the Catholic State League of Texas voted 3 to 1 against a resolution supporting striking farm workers iib. Rio Grande City. Frank Gittinger of San Antonio, who served on the resolutions has been conservatJvely ori eommittee, said the resolu it ented for some years. tion was turned down on the Gittinger said the resolution, oonvention floor by "about which he described as a "pretty 00 to 20." The resolution was introduced by Father Joseph Wahlen, M.S.F., of Corpus Chris ti, chairman of the resolutions eommittee. The Catholic State League is tift organization representing pri Marily rural parish societies in tIbe state. Observers noted that
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Jewish Autho'r ~ays Tribute To Pius XII BONN (NC) - "Why "ould a devout 'Jew waste lIis, time to defend the r~pe ?'; This is the most fre-'
~ood o'le," would probably have passed had Father Wahlen de leted specific reference to Rio Grande City, site of a two month-old strike by farm work ers demanding $1.25 an hour. The strike was organized by the National Farm Workers Associa tion. Father Whalen refused to comment on the resolution, say ing, "I do not speak for the Catholic State League of Texas." Gittinger said delegate/l raised objections to singling out Rio G'rande City, located" in the Brownsville diocese,' because similar farm problems exist iii. other dioceses in the state. In a not her development Bishbp Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville named Father Ro berto Pena, O.M.!., ll$ his repre sentative in promoting talks be tween ail. unnamed grower and the l"fational Farm Workers As sociation. The grower, in a letter to NFWA head Eugene ,Nelson, re portedly indicated willingness to negotiate with the union. Nelson turned the letter over to Bishop Medeiros. In San Antonio, Father Wil liam A. Killian, executive editor Turn to Page Eighteen
In another strong 'appeal for peace, Pope Paul' VI stressed that there can be no real peaGe in this divided world without "the help of God, the wisdom of the Gospels and the grace of Christ'" (, *"
important meeting. The result of the meeting, besides enlightening and inspir ing individual members, was a "message" or reports issued to the various member churches which will serve as a basis for further study. They. are not de cisions, guidelines or any type of legislation. Among the reports, the f01 lowing was outlined: REVOLUTIONARY SPIRIT: Considerable tension .is to be expected for some time withim the Christian community be tween those who believe 1m "quiet efforts" and those who take a "more radical and revo lutionary position in promoting social changes. It stressed that "at the present time it is impor tant for us to recognize that this radical position has a solid foun dation in Christiim tradition." Such a radical position has "its rightful place in the life of the Church and the ongoing discus sion of social responsibility." ANTISEMITISM: The contin ued existence of Antisemitism among Christians is deplored. DISCRIMINATION: ChurcheiJ are urged to "insist that no dis erimin,ation should be' mado Turn to Page Two
It is only these that can give men the virtues needed to insure a real and lasting peace, the Holy Father stressed in a Sum mer audience at Castelgondolfo. The virtues absolutely' neces sary to maintain a real peace were outlined by the Pontiff: "the sense of the brotherhood of men so much demanded by mod ern progress; patience, perse BISHOP E. B. BOLAND, O.P. verance, forbearance, which will not allow the desire for and hope of peace to be extillguished; a love -For justice and liberty (since there cannot be a true peace without liberty and jus tice) '" " *" The virtues outlined must be practiced by' every individu'al Most R~v.Ernest B. Bo 'human person, social classes and lanet. O. P.,41 years' old, each nation. "These are' exalted and ex'.' Providence native and latest acting' virtues," the Holy Father : ST. PAUL (NC)-The Sec"' Am/'riean prIest to be raised concluded, "which 'make a pro' , to the Episcopacy, has not onl1 found demand' on the good ond Vatican Council, which many cousins in the Fall River of everyone individUl:llly, But has been accused' of sacrific-' area, but also has a sister, Sr. only' the help of God-we shall '{rig devotion 'the Blessed' Nolasco, R.S.M., who taught fifth ,go further:.-only the wisdom of 'Virgin for the sake of ecumen grade in St. 'Joseph's School, the Gospel and the grace of 'ism, instead accorded her a Fall River from 1939 to 1944; Christ can really· obtain them "place 'without precedent"', in Turn to Page Five for us. For this we pray." 4istory, according to a French' theologian. The chapter on Mary, in the constitution on the Church says mbre about her than' ever was said previously in ecumenical councils, Father Rene Lauren tin stated. Father Laurentin, professor of For the first time a clubwoman from the Fan River theology at the University of Diocese has been nominated for the postion of a national Angiers, France, is lecturing this director of the National Council of Catholic Women. She Summer at the University. of is Miss Margaret M. Lahey of Fan River, a past president Dayton in Ohio. He came to St. Paul to address 9 group of of the Diocesan Council of priests at the St. Paul seminary Catholic Women. Mrs. James and an audience of seminarians A. O'Brien Jr., pre sen t and Religious at St. Catherine's
R. I. Do min ican
Missionary Joins Church Hie,a,rchy
Theologian Says Counci'l ,Stressed Role of Ma.ry
win
"'ent que/ltion asked of Phichas 1:. Lapide, according to an arti eie he wrote for' Die Welt, a .est German newspaper. Lapide is' the author of a book, "The Three Last Popes and Jewry," to be published by Herder Publishing Company. In Ute book he defends Pius XII, especially against the views pro moted by Playwright Rolf Hoch buth in "The Deputy." His answer to the question is: ~f fairness and historical jus
tice are the main foundation of
lewish morality, then silence in
the face of slanderous attacks
uPon a benefactor is an injus tice.'" , Lapide, who is deputy chief
~itor of the press bureau of
I6rael's prime minister, claims, BELMONT (NC)-A so council president,' reports that more than 700,000 Jews members are "enthusiasti ciety of nations with the that "ere rescued by the Catholic, cally supporting the' nomina ability to enact, enforce and . tion.... Elections will be held at C.:mrch during the pontificate of interpret world laws is the the 33rd national, convention of XII: "A Jew," he wrote in the ar only hope for worldwide secur the NCCW, to be held Wednes
' tkle in Die Welt. "must also ity in the nuclear age. day throUgh Saturday, Oct. 5 to loudly defend a great rescuer This message was at the heart 8, in Miami Beach. ~ Jewish lives." of a plea for peace made by Prospective delegates should In an article he also asks: , Saturday Review editor Norman registel' 1;>y Thursday, Sept. I, "'Didn't Pius' speak out clearly Cousins at a World Peace Sym':' and women may obtain further posium at the College of Notre information' from Mrs. Michael in his ,any radio appeals, pas Dame here in California. J. McMahon; Diocesan vice toral letters, messages, and let The United Nations, Cousins president for Fall River, or from
ters' to his bishops against Naz ism, for equal charity toward asserted, is the first organization Miss Kathleen Roche, vice-pres in the history of man to offer ident for New Bedford. aU ,victims of persecution; doubt real potential for a worldwide Theme of the convention will lessly also toward the Jews? "Did the Ten Commandments community of nations founded be "The New Pentecost." Some
5000 delegates from affiliated and the Sermon on the Mount on law and order, but as pres n:equire reiteration by the Pope? ently constituted it cannot cope organizations will attend ses with the enormity of the task,' sions at the Hotel Fontainebleau, "Would these neopagans, who The present structure of the where hostess unit will be the lIIl1Aamelessly disregl.lrded the da- United Nations may have been Florida Council of Catholic 'l'urn to Page FoUl' Turn to Page Eighteep Women.
Peace Requires More Effective Unite'd Nations
A two week conference of Chri~tian leaders, sponsore<l! by the World Council of Cl-jurclles, predicts increased ten sions for the Church in the M'jdern world. The World Council, which has memhers of most of the world's Chris tian Churches, except the The Holy See sent a large Roman Catholic C h u r c h, delegation of experts to not only sponsored the meeting which be official observers but also brought to Geneva, Switzer to address and take part in the land, 400 theologians and laymen who are'experts in various fields of social and economic life.
IFaU Raver, Mass., Thursday, July 28, 1966
Vot 10, No. 30 ©
Ch'risti'an Lead'ers:, Expect Increased Church Tensions
to
{';
Nominate Diocesan Woman For National Directorate
C~llege.
'ius
HISS MARGARET AI. LABEY
A coun~i1 peritus, or expert, Father Laurentin worked on the chapter on Mary of the consti tution on: the Church.
, The council "invites us to turn our attention less to the new than to tradition and dog ma" about Mary, to see her "in relation to Christ" rather than isolated, as Mariology has tend ed to present' her, the scholar said.
"As excellent as Mary is, the most Marian thing possible is to actualize her role, her position to Christ," he said.
"The Mary of the future will be more ecumenical, patristic, Chri[ .:mtric and liturgical ::0 $ .. The Virgin will be less disasso ciated from the rest of theology," he explained. Turn to Page Eighteen
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2
Requiem Friday
For Mr. Hurll'
THE ANCH0R-Oiocese offall River-Thurs., July 2&, '966
Expect Increase Church' Tensions .
Bishop Connony will attend Continued from Page One NUCLEAR ARMAMENTS: No.
the Solemn High Mass of Requi meeting scored the policies of specific condemnation of the
em to be celebrated tomorroW' Rhodesia and the African na use of atomic weapons was pro
morning, Friday, at 10 in St. Jo tionals. . nounced, although it was stated
seph's Church, for the repose of. MARRIAGE: The report urges that nuclear warfare "goes be
the soul. of William F. HurD, Churches "see in .the Biblical' yond all bounds" of military
who died unexpectedly Monda,. teaching the sanctity of .monog means which might be thought
morning in Fall River. amous marriage. But we have to lawful in securing justice. "Mu
The celebrant of the Mass win face the fact that pre-marital tual nuclear suicide can never
be Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Dioc and extramarital intercourse is establish justice because it de
esan CCD director and chaplaill not uncommon in any country." stroys all that one wants to ,de at Bishop Feehan 'High, Attle MINORITIES: Churches should fend or achieve. We now say to
boro, the foster son of Mr. Hurll. support research that will "help all governments and peoples that
powerless groups achieve social nuclear war is against God's will '
Assisting Father Powers will and political change" because and the greatest of evils. There
be the Rev. John ,J Casey of No. the churches' "continuing bias fore, we affirm that it is' the
Easton, as de~con,' ,and Rev. should be for those, who are first duty of governments and
James F. Lyons of Dighton, sub powerless and deprived." their officials to prevenLnuclear
deacon. . POPULATION: This section of war."
In addition to Father Powers, the report, put together princi RED CHINA: Churches should
Mr. Hurll is survived by his pally by economists and social "endorse unequivocally the seat
: wife, Mrs. Rose Haran Hurll and scientists, took a hands-off at ing of the;?eople's Republic of
sister Mrs. Mai-y' Doherty of titude toward questions of fam-. China (Communist China) in
, Fall River. ' ily planning and birth control the U. N. on the understanding
Mr. Hurll is a past president· since not all Christian groups that a solution be found for the
.. of the Fall River Serra Club and are agreed on the approach to question of Taiwan (Formosa)."
'the Clover Club. He also served these problems. VIET-NAM: The U. S. military
as parish trustee. . However, the church "must buildup and bombings of Viet
Burial will be in St. Patrick" always put its work in this field" nam were criticized. Escalation
Cemetery, Fall River.. :, .. in the context of responsible . of the war "aggravates the feel parenthood and not simply on ing between races," the report Church Support the limitation of families." Since pointed out, because Americans population is not a problem in and other non-Asians are light NOTRE DAME (NC), ~ The some countries, It was never ing Asians in an Asian country. A first Institute on Church Support theless recognized that in, some telegram was sent American and will be held at Notre Dame Uni situations it may be necessary Vietnam' authorities asking that~-,' versity 's Cen~~ for' Continuing "to offer subsidies to medical trials of prisoners be not used Education here n~xt Tuesday. ·personnel to encourage them to as an excuse of escalation. Panel. discuSsions ~d talks wiD work in rural areas and to the eover the theololPcal basis for CARDINAL MEETS REGENT: Richard Cardinal' recipients themselves to encour Cushing of Boston made his first publit~ apPEiarance in Church supPort; its history, and Mass Ordo age wider and more rapid ae various' ways' to eonduct fund eeptance of proper devices and FRIDAY-St.Martha, Virgin. IlII sevel.weeks at a receptivn for delegates to the 31st biennial. raising drives. techniques." national convention of the Catholic Daughters o:f America ,"We note with interest and Class White. Mass Proper; Glory; Second Prayer 55. when he met with Mrs. Margaret J. Buckley of Cht~vy Chase, gratitude," a report stated, "the Felix and Companions, Martyrs; Md., supreme regent of the C D.A. The Cardinal entered Necrology forward looking work done at the Second Vatican Council in no Creed; Common Preface. ,the hospital on June 4, was discharged June Hi, and has , AUG. I the chapter on marriage and the SA~RDAY- Mass of the been recuperating at his residence since. NC Photo~ Rev. Martin·J. Fox, '19n, ,._,' family" (of the Constitution on Blessed Virgin for Saturday. Founder. St. Paul, Taunton. the Church in the Modem IV Class. White. Mass Proper; , , Rev. Thomas A. Kelly, !9~«l., World). _ Gloty; 2nd Prayer SS. Abdoll SS. Peter and Pllul, Faii and senneri; no Creed; Prefao UNDERDEVELOPED AREAS: Churches and the WCC should of Blessed.Virgin. , AUG. 8 "urge their fellow citizens and ' OR Canadian Centers Are Trying to 1)0 TCl~o Much: Rev. Joseph P. Lyons, 1l9®llo governments to increase their SS. Abdon and Sennen, Mar With Too 'Few People t~ Handle PI'ogra~ Pastor, St. J:~~~ :all RiveIi'. contributions' (to Wlderdeveloptyro Red. Glory; 2nd Prayer ed countries) 'preferably through Blessed Virgin for Saturday;' VAll COUVER (NC)- Catho- .Lo~g~;head' of the. i8,..~onth-· .Rev. William Bric.,_ ~OO~ ,international' , chann,els '. t& at no Creed; Common Preface. tic Ce,lters are growing in ,west- old V~couver .center. ,"Our job" ,. ,I.'ounder, St. Joseph. Fal, m",V(-''ii'a least one per cent of their gross SUNDAY-IX Sunday after Pen national products." tecost.1I Class. Green. Mass. em Canada, out 'they may be is,notto lecture on :religion but -., I , It is also recommended that Proper; Glory,; Creed; Preface try'ing to do too much with too ,toi motivate a, man: "~ change. J.ewp~ple. ' his life." " ,',." . the WCC, "possibly in cooperaof Trinity.. . Din in9, tion with the :RomanCiltholic' MONDAY ~ ,Mass of Previous ,Tha';. is the consensus 0'1 dele '," IN'THE'" . Church" promote thedevelo~ Sunday. IV Class. Green. gates from 'six' westem,Canada -----,~-~--. . . .: , ment of worldwide inStitutions Mass Prope:r; Nq Glory. or , Catholic Centers. ' 'JOLLY" "WHALER . . ,. . . .' '", . , to work on all levels for Creed;.2nd. Pray;er Holy ~ach-. 'The Centers: Which coni :"nomic and' soCial justice. for the abees; Common:rreface. -,- AND ...-'.,. '. paratbrely newt<> Can , ,FUNERAL HOME.tNC. "tr~~!lfer .of re~o\1rces from armOR
' : R.\I'8rce, R~' ~ Go LO;'';'Irn; '~GJ ada,"were be~n to conduct con' ,"SPOVlER . 'INN : aments to development- aid ,and Holy Machabees, Martyrs. Red.
", Roge,r 'LaFranc,! .~ for the' institution of a system Glory; no Creed; Comon Pref" vert instruction butiater moved , .,', RESTAURANTS,,' ",FUNER.AIL DIREC:TQR,S into the fields of adult education,' of international' taxation for in, ace.
communications and public re, lStn'ington Ct. ternational aid. TUESDAY-St. Alphonsus Mary latiom. Always Free .Parking , '. , " . NON-VIOLENCE: "It cannot Ligouri, Bishop, Confessor and· M'5·S1~1 The;, find an official, 'place . be said tl'iat-"the only position of' Doctor of, the Church. III ~ew ,Bedford the Christian is one of absolute Class. White. Mass ", Proper; , a~ "an extension of the' teaching non-violence. Whenever' it is Glory; 2nd Pr!ly:~rSt. Stephen arm of the Church," through , " used, however, it is to be lis an I, Pope and Martyr; no Creed; convelt instruction, adult edu 'ultimate' recourse' which is jus'o": Common Preface. cation, and use of ,radio and r:'I_~_D_~~~.-o-.D_D_'O_~D_II_D""D_lI_II_D_D""'" r " ~fied:,on,IY ill, .~xtreme ,situa-~' "WEDNESDAY-Mass of precioWl TV•.. "We have to assess how et '" " :Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass tions.. " :proper; No' Glory or Creed; fectiv€-ly . we are reaching the'
,··~'Role ,of Paper adult mind," said Madelei~
,'Common Preface. '
ATLANTA (NC)-An interim THURSDAY-St. Dominic, Con "Summer Meetings board 'of communications has fessor. III Class. White. Mass "PIUlblicClamboil has been.set up here to survey Proper; GlOly; rio Creed; Com..,.' ' ~'9t£·£Et!i:r.lolll:»0.I8 Hyannis: 775~37~ the probiems and the role of the mon Preface. One Votive Mass The CYO of Our- Lady ,of Dedham: :326·36:B9 Fall River: 672·67:2121 Georgia Builetin, archdiocesan in honor of Jesus Christ, the Angell: Church, Fall, River, will ,. New 'Bedford: 993-4993 newspaper. The' board was rec Eternal High Priest, permitted. hold a public clamboil Saturday,
ommended by the archdiocesan Glory; 2nd Prayer St Domi Sept 10 at. the church hall,
All meE!tings I)pen to men, women, and teenagers. l.ay congress. nic; no Creed; Common Pref Tickets, which are limited, are ace. ' ' . Call for fUlrther information or free literature. availahle from members.
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St. Pau,' Laymen
JiHE ANCHORThurs., July 28, 1966
Qrganize Group
3
A~g~rncr;~ms Plr@~~~
'Fog' Renewa!
Pope
MINNEAPOLIS (NC)
.:A lay group has been formed
m the archdiocese of, St. Paul to "take the initiative
p~us
XJl
MELBOURNE (NC) - Angli can Bishop T. JB. McCall of Wan garatta praised Pope Pius XU: at a ecumenical meeting study ing the Second Vatican Council's Constitution on Divine Revela tion. "It would take too long," the AustralIan bishop emphasized, "to pay tribute to the tremend ous work of scholars in com munion with the Roman See, but of one we must speak for it is he who, inspired by the Holy Spirit, saw clearly that reason must play its part in rev elation and that faith in the living word of God today clears a~ay all fear." "I refer to the late Pope Pius XII, whose greatness is only now being understood and whose championship of scholars has opened doors." Bishop McCall spoke on the third day of a symposium on the council documents organized by the Ecumenical Affairs Commit tee of the Melbourne Anglican archdiocese.
the council asks of laymen" in the renewal of the archdiocese. Dennis Landis, a research sci ootist and the group's president, ,said it is not trying "to create controversy," but "to create an iH"ganism through which all ,news can be presented." , Named the Association of ehristians for Church Renewal fACCR) , the group has four major goals: establishing parish study and discussion groups; fc>rming parish planning com mittees~ hotding a lay congress; and' seeking convocation of a diocesan council. "If renewal is going to occur," l.andis said, "the laity-not just this group but the whole arch,. diocese_must have responsible participation." '~ature Attitude' Although ACCR is not an offi F AIRHAVEN MISSIONARY: Bishop W. Regan ministers to the needs of Filipino par. eta! archdiocesan organization, ishioners. The prelat.e was expelled from China by the Communists. Landis said it also is "not a lib era:l splinter group trying' to work outside the structure of the • archdiocese." ' "We want to work'with exist Approves ~n(:rease ing struc,tures and with the arch- , In Housing Loan bishop We're not ,trying to set precedents . , . They have been WASHINGTON (NC) - The ret by the € o uncil and by' ac U,S. Department of Housing and Mons in other dioceses." Urban Development has ap ~ Landis said the organization proved a $100,000 increase in has informed Archbishop Leo Senior Citizens Housing loan Binz of. St. Paul of'-the group's The Most Rev. Joseph W. Regan, ,lVLM., of Fairhaven, has accumulated a ream of funds for a senior housing pro formation and its goals. It is now memories from China lind the Philippines in a missionary career which goes back to ject in Deming, N.M, contacting leaders of major lay his ordination in 1929 for the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America. Shortly after The increase brings to $738, organizations in the archdiocese 000 the amount approved for the '~hRS ordination the Maryknoller set sail for China where he engaged in missionary activity to explain its program. project, cosponsored by Holy f()f almost 22 years until he Dennis Robb, ACCR's execu Family Catholic church, the the Catholics in Laipo, because sion, including a rosary. During tive secretary, said the. group was expelled from the First Methodist church, the Chinese barbers are almost as 'month-long impnsonment he is concNned not with parochial Lions Club and the Deming country by the Communists talkati ve as their American "used to walk back and forth problems, but with presenting a 'in 1951. During his years of Luna County Chamber of Com in the cell saying the rosary, counterparts. The barber brought !lesponsible, mature attitude service he combined dedication many into the Church from his usually 15 decades at a time. merce. toward conciliar renewal. ' The original amount was to aid to the salvation of souls with' a chair. After sitting down for five or journalist's eye. A frequent con Once the missioner broke a 10 minutes, I would say 15 more. C'onstruction of seven one-story to Maryknoll's FIELD filling in 'a tooth, and forthwith "For a month, I said 60 ros . buildings with 57 housekeeping Have',Wide wibutor AFAR (now called MARY ,began havil;lg painful toothaches. aries a day. They weren't too , units and central living facilities. The increase will provide the KNOLL).' he managed, on quite He was fairly near to Kweilin at good, perhaps, due to many dis Range of Projects
~me number of housekeepinl HONG KONG (NC) .;.... The a number of occasions, to· catcb the time so he went to the city tractions, but at least they 'kept units in 12 one-story buildings, • man biting a dog. seeking attention. Before he got me occupied and helped me to ..-ojects of the Catholic Women's plus, central dining and related Taste of Exile relief he 'had quite an adventu retain my sanity." 'League, here include a wide . facilities. ' , ill 1936 he was assigned to rous time. First, the party who Philippines Assignment
IOnge of activities, from helping • young man, ~ get married 110 found a mission in Laipo in the made an' appointment for him,
On May 27th he was released , and given a pass to Hong Kong. triding the bishop's seminary province of Kwangsi, China. made it with an ear doctor in Shortly after h~ arrived he was stead of a dentist. ''Tem~r is so' good a tllitle He arrived there in the latter "nd and \'Oeational reJlabilita approached by, three venerable Reds March In . part of June, 195L' At the end Mon for an ex-Buddhist nun. . tllatWe shollid never lose it." gentlemen from an 'outlying dis When he finally located Ii den of the year he was assigned as Through parties, wes, and per: trict who, wanted to study Cath:tist it turned out the man had no the. superior of the first group lJlM\al appeals, the CWL raised ' material for a filling, but sug of MaryknollerS dispatched to lIbout $11,900 intbe past year olie doctrine. This is the fourth' ill • series gested another dentist on the the Lipa diocese of the Philip IDr their programs. eI. stories of diocesan natives other side of town. When Bishop pines. He has served in the When the fiscal year was at':' ..be are serving around the Regan arrived there, the dentist Philippines since that time. • ost ~wer, the CWL still had a ..orlt! with the Maryknoil was on vacation. But he finally In 1958 Bishop' Regan wrote, balance of about $3,500. The missioners. The articles bave got the filling fixed by a watch "Today I preach my first sermon ieague gave half that 'amount prepared aDd written by maker' a roadside stand. in Visayan. This is the fourth ~ward purchase of a ''begging Maryknoll's publie relations In November of 1951 the Com time I have preached a first ser Yen" for the Little Sisters' of the llepal'tment. munist armies marched into mon in a new language. In China Poor and the reSt toward build When he pressed them for Kwangsi.. At first they caused I began Cantonese; then I was iIIlg cottages for two families. their reasons, they explained only a minor nuisance by taking assigned to a new section, and that the government had just water from the mission well and' had to learn Mandarin. introduced a new system of by loud singing and talking. President Honors
"Here in the Philippines I money and that they couldn't 'They even put up signs which began Tagalog; now at the age tell the big bills from the small proclaimed "freedom of reli Catholic Athletes
of 53 I am trying to learn some Ones. In brief, they were willing gion." NEW DELHI (NC)-Two Cath thing of Visayan. The Tower of Soon, however, they bEigan to Babel certainly placed a huge olics 'A-ere among 15 Indians to give God a hearing on Sunday provided they could also learn impose restrictions and create . obstacle in the path 0:': mission honored here by President Rad hakrishnan with the "Arjuna to distiguish the bills and avoid red tape. In order to go into, the ary progress." Hitches Ride award," the eountry'!! highest being shortchanged on Monday. country the missioners had to In September of 1944 the mis obtain passes from the police, In February of 1962 the Mas-' -decoration 1« sports achieve sioner got his first taste of exile. and a later order completely sachusetts missioner was named ment. The Catholic recipients were He was forced to abandon prohibited them from leaving Prelate Ordinary of Tagum in the mission compound. Kenneth Powell, 26, India's Kwangsi for a year ,by the Jap northern Davao. Two weeks Month in Jail fastest sprinter, who last year anese invasion. This time,on later there were severe rain Next, mission money had to storms and flooding in Davao. was awarded a certificate of his return, little or nothing had be put in a local bank. Police The rains continued off and on merit by Valerian Cardinal bee" disturbed. Unorthodox Methods permisGion was required every into April. Gracias of Bambay; and Elvera Bishop 'Regan was not above tI"me a withdrawal was to be The And on 'the 24th, the day be Britto, captain of the Mysore using unorthodox methods or made. Finally, in April, they fore his consecration was to take IIl&ate women's hockq team. ehoosing unlikely apostles for were completely out of money place, washed out roads forced his mission work. In 1949 he en and the gatekeeper was sent to the bishop-elect and his party to Fall River Savings Bank listed the aid of a blind man the police to get permission to hitch a ride on a logging truck 110 help him locate prospective withdraw some. He returned headed for Tagum. 141 NO. MAIN JACKSON (NC)-The Com Catholics. He said at the time empty-handed. When Bishop Bishop Regan attended ses mittee of Concern, an interfaith that his guide seemed able "to Regan went himself, he was sions of the Second Vatican FALL RIVER organization, has contributed lead me by instinct to 'people thrown into jail. Council in Rome, and is sched $1,000 for, rebuilding St. Joa 'who needed help." Bishop Regan managed to, get uled to take part in the fifth 873 COUNTY, .j ehim's mission in Carthage,
At another time he baptized some medicine for one of the General Chapter meeting con Miss_, which was totally destroy a b,arber and his wife. This was guards, who in turn brought him vened by Maryknoll next Mon ed by fire on June 24.
«MISe for muchrejoicine amonl . a num?~r_'lfJt;e!Us~~r~m th~mi~.:- cia7., -,-,.. __. __.
Fairhaven's Bishop Regan, M.M.
Said 60 Rosaries a Day in Prison
Expelled from China, Serves in Philippines
'Wom,n
'
been
at
MORE Time' for 'rour ,:'familv '1 t;)
Old Red Bank
Aids Rebu,ilding
..::.::...--.J
4
Schedule for Summer ASSONET ST. BERNARD'E Masses: Sunday-7, 8:30, 10:30 AM. First Fridays-Evening Mass 5:30 P.M. Holydays-8:30 A.M.-7:30 P.M. Confessions before every Mass'
BREWSTER OUR LADY OF THE CAPE Masses: SundaY-7:3D, 8:30. 9:30,10:30,11:30 A.M.. and 5:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 A.M. Confessions: Sat. 4-5 and 7-8 P.M.
EAST BREWSTER IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Masses: Sunday-7:00. 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. Confessions: 7-8 on Saturday
BUZZARDS BAY ST. MARGARET'~ Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12 noon-7:3G P.l\::. Daily-7:00 A.M.
ONSET ST. MARY-STAR OF THE SEA Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 Daily-8:00 AM.
CENTERVillE OUR. LADY OF VICTORY Masses:' Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 Daily~7:00 A.M.
WEST BARNSTABLE
OUR LADY OF HOPE
Masses: Sunday-9:30, 10:30
CENTRAL VillAGE ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST Masses: Sunday- 7:30, 8:30, 9:30 and 5:00 P.M. . Daily-8:00 A.M. First Friday-8:oo A.M., 5:30 P.M.
ST JOHN THE BAPTIST HALL
Masses: Sunday-8:30. 9:30, 10:30 AM.
CHATHAM
HOLY FEDEEMER
Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,'
12:00
Daily-7:30 A.M.
Sea!i~'fI1
w
feel obliged to address the
VATICAN CI1'Y (NC) - Fol rulers of that nation' a heart1elt
lowing is the English text dis and res'pectful prayer so that
tributed by the Vatican Press they would extend to those pris
Office of the plea of Po·pe Paul OAK BlUFFS
oners the safety and the treat
VI for the American prisoners Masses: Sunday~:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:30,
ment provided for by interna
in North Vietnmn. The Pope Daily-7:30 A.M.
tional norms, giving in eve~
w.as speaking to :a general audiBenediction: Sunday-6:3C
case the more favorable inter
.1!flce at his Summer home at pretation and application which
Castelgandolfo. EDGARTOWN
"And now permit us to open the sentiment of a 'generous and
OUR LADY STAlL OF THE SEA
merciful humanity can suggest.
our heart so that you too may ST. ELIZABETH
"And to all those responsible
share'with us the profound anx Masses: Sunday~:45, 9:00
we renew our sorrowful appeal
iety of our spirit before the new ORLEANS
for peace and concord, and we
and more serious threats to the ST. JOAN OF ARC CHURCH
ask that every means be taken,
peace of the human family. We Summer l\lasses at Orleans Theatre
every road followed, so that at
are very much concerned about Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 long last that just and honorable
the events of these days., known Daily-7:30 A.M. solution can. be achieved which
certainly to all of you, which Saturday Confessions-4-5 and 7:30~8:3~ P.M. have had great ·r.epercussioI'lS in is so ardently desired by aD
humanity. .all of the nations of thE' world. NORTH EASTHAM "May the Prince of Peace, to
"Recently we have received CHURCH OF THI: VISITATION from one party to the hostilities , whom we raise an incessant sup
Masses: Sunday:-7:30, 8:30. 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 plication, prevent that our' voice
in Vietnam assurances of good Confessions-7:30-8:30 P.M. Saturdays be muted by the din of 'aTJDs,
will ana a sincere pledge to put OSTER" Ill.lE . an end to the ruiin that has be-': but rather may He cause that it
OUR LADY OF THl&: ASSUMlPTION fallen a people already so tried find aft echo in· the hearts· of an
Masses: Sunday-6:00, 7:01) , ' 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, by continuous and harsh suf- . men."
.t 11:00 AM ..and 5:30 P.M.. . ferings. We would wish that an Daily-7:00. 8:00. A.lVI. equal pledge of good will would Holydays-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 and 5:30 be soown by all.
P.M 'Love for Peace'
Offi~e . SANTlIIT
"One special fact that seems ST. JUDE'S CHAPEL
, MONTREAL (NC) ....... The
f,o merit, on our part also" special Masses: Sunday-8:oo, 9:0(1 10:30, 12:00noOll
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of interest, because of the very Holy Day-8:00, 10:UO. A.M.
North .ant' South Amer~ca ·.w~)l grave oonsequenc,es that can de establish an office in WasniDI POPPONI:SSET
rive from it, is trnlt of thE! Amet':" ten, D. C:, ..
COMMUNITY CENTElt·
lcan prisoners in North Vietnam. . . Funds for the new office were
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M'. .. Only because of an impartial H()ly Day-7:00, 8:0), 9:00 A.M. love for peace' and because d .a voted at· the archdiocese's 1&.... desire to save 'humanity from . biennial convention here. The PROVINCnOWN W$hington. center ; was reeom even more serious: calamities, we ST. PETER THI~ APOSTLE mended by A,rehbishop lakovOfl, Masses: Sunday-:-7:00, 8:0(', 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 primate of the 'archdiocese, whe A.M., 8:0} P.M. said: ' . , SIASCONSET, MASS.
COMMUNIT1' CHAPEL
Masses: Sunday-8:15 A.M.
Orthodox to' Have' Washington
SANDWICH
Pius .XII· ITrihute
>
CORPUS CHRIS'fI CHURCH M.asses: SUlld~y-7:00, 8.ll0. 9:0r.. 10:00 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. ConfeSSions: S3turday 4:00 ·5:00 alJd 7:30-8:30 P.M. . First Thursday 7'30-8:10 P.M.' .
SOUTH CHATliAM
SAGAMI)RE
OPIl LADV OF GR.-\.CE
ST. THERESA'f: CHURCH Masses: Sunr.'ay-6:30, 8'30 9::l0. 10:30, 11:30 Confessions: "3aturday 4:(111-5:00 a"e{ 7:30-8:30 P.M.
Masses: SundaY-7:30. 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.
Daily=-8:00 A.M. .
EAST FALMOUTH
ST. ANTHONY
. Masses: Sunday-7:00. 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,
12 noon. 5:0(1 P.M.
Daily 7:00. 8:00 A.M.
Confessions Every Saturday: 4-5 and 7-8 P.M.
EAST FREETOWN
VATHEDRAI.. C·\l\fP
OUR LA))Y 0F THE ASSUMPTION CHAPEL
Masses: Sunday-7:30. 9:00. 10:00. 11:00 Daily 7:30 A.M. Ber\.ediction at 5 P.M. Confessions: ~efore every Mass and ·Saturday evening
FALMOUTH ST. PATRICK Masses:' SundaY--'-7:00. 8:00, 9':00, Hl:OO, .11:00, .' 12 n9un Daily-7:00 A:M. Miraculpus' Medal'!'fovena: Monday-7:30 P.M Eenediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M.
. FALMOUTH HEIGHTS S'I THOMAS CHAPEL Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 11:00 Daily -~H:OO A.M. Benediction: 8:~0 P.M. Sunday
POCAS!iET ST. JOHN'S CHURCH Masses: Sunday- 7:00. 8:31), 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 Daily 7:30 AM. (as JX .July 4) Confessions: ::,alurday 4:0[1-5:00 and 7:30-8:30 P.M.
SOUTH DARrMOUTH
ST. MA.RY
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00 9:00. 10:00, 11:00, 12
noon, 7:30 P.M. Daily-7'00 AM. and 8:00 A.M. on Saturday'
SOUTH YARJIAOUTH
ST. PIUS '1ENTH
Masses: Sunday-7:00 8:00,9:00, 10:15, 11:30 A.M.
Daily-7:00 A.M.
VINEYARD HAVEN
ST. AUGUfiTINIE
Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:15, 10:30 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. R()Sary and Benedi<:tion of the Blessed Sacrament on Sunday evening at 7:00 P.M ' Confessions: Saturday-9:3C-I0:30 A.M., 4:30-5:30 P.M., 7:30-8:30 P.M.
HYANNIS
WAREHJ\M
ST. PATRICK
Masses: Sunday- 7:00. 8:0(;. 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,
12:00 noon and 7.:30 P.M.. Daily..:......7·00 AM. Our Lady of the Mire culous Medal Novena' Monday-7'30 P.M.
SACRED HEART
"lasses: Sunday-9:00. 10:00
Confessions: Saturday-':"'7:30-8:30 P.M.
MATTAPOISETT
ST A:-JnioNY
llfasses:·Sunday-6:00. 7:00.8:00.9:00. 10:00. 11:00,
5:00 P.M.
Daily-7:3u A.M.
ROl.'TE 6
DAMIEN COUNCIL, K OF C HALL
!lasses: Sunday-9:30 and 10:30 A.M.
NANTUCKET
OUR LADY OF THE ISLE
l5asses: Sunday-7:0lJ 8:00. 9:00. 10:00. 11:00, A.M.
5:00 P.M. Daily-7:00. 8'00 A.M.
Benedicti2n-Suliday evenir:g at 7:30 P.M
"Because of the extent of our Continued from Page One responsibilities and· role as a vine law and the basic com major fafth, we need a eenter mandments of Jesus, have heed in Washington to be in direet ed an appeal from Rome? contact with the nation and na "And could Pius. lacking all. tional politics.'" military power, have opposed Hitler - and at the same time continue to rescUl~ Jews secret ly?" . LONDON' (NC)-Two 15ttlQ
In the article Lllpide declared: century paintings were sold her~
"Pius would have ..been the last . for' a total of about $33,600 001
person to claim that he had . <1rder to supplement the admin
done everything he could. He istrative funds of Westminister simply did what he considered cathedral. The paintings, by 'the
po~:-:ble and up to his d,;ath he
Italian artist Bartholomew MO:1b->
was painfully conscious of his tagna, had hung in the cathe inadequacies." dral's sacristy. He also explained that in
order to evaluate Pius: XII's
pontificate correctly, he had to
include both his prprlecessor
and successor in the boo...
Sell Painting!
6%
Nun on C:oundl
BASS RI'/ER OUR LADY OF TIlE HIGHWAY Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, ~0:30, 11:3() A.M. Daily-unscheduled
ST· FRANCIS XA VTER
Masses: Sunday- 6:00 7:00. 8:00.9:00, 10:00. n:oo,
12:00 A.M and 5:00 P.M. Daily-7:0C 8:00' AM First Friday-7:00, 8:00 and 5:30 P.M. Holydays-7:00 8:00 12:10, 5:30, 7:30 Confessions-4-5;30 and 7:30-9:00 Saturdays, 1st Thursday and before Holyday.
YARMOUTHPORT
Ii
Pope Paid ·A~ppea.s for American Prisoners .in North Vietnam
THE ANCHOR-Diocese. of Fall River-Thurs., July 28,1966
ADELAIDE (NC)-Sister M. Campion, headmistress of St.
Aloysius' Collegl~' here" was elected to the council of the new Flinders University herE'.· It· is
believed to be the first time that
a Religious has been elected to a university council in Australia.
--------famous for
QUALIY" ol1ld
SERVICE!
MARION ST. RIT/\. Masses: Sunday-7:00 8:30 10:00 and 5:00·P.M. Daily-te be announl:ed
CATHOLIC CHURCH. AND
INSTITUTIONAL BOND$ In Units of $500 or More
Keenan· & Clarey, Inc. Minneapolis, Minnesota for detailed information write to
CHARLES A. MURPHY
WEST WARI:HAM
ST. ANTHONY
Masses: Sunday- 8:30. 9:30, 10:30 A.M.
Daily-to be announced
'nterest on Your . Savings Invested In
:..._------- .
Registered Representative 145 Pona Street Winchester, Mass. PA 9-2696 Anch Name _ Address
_
City
_
.
BllSAILLON'S
WELLFLEI:T
OUR LADY OF LOURDES
Masses: Sunday~7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00
Daily-7:30 AM.
GiARAGE
TRURO
SACRED HI:ART
Masses: Sunday-'-8:00, 10:00
Daily-8:00 A.M.
24·H4:>ur Wrecker Service
NORTH TRURO
OUR LADY OF PERI'ETUAL HELP
Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30. n:30. 10:30, 11:30 A.M.
Daily-8:00 AM. Turn to Page Fivp
,',
653 VVashinlgton Street, Fairhaven . WYman 4-5058
................................................
"I...
"'"
•
..._~.
• .... •
'
THE ANCHORThurs., July 28, 1966
Urges Catholics Join Campaign for Housing BALTIMORE Catholics of the archdiocese were join with 19 civic
Building to Honor Fall ~ River Priest
(NC) Baltimore asked to and relig
fous groups in a campaign with the prime target of obtaining apen housing legislation here. In response to a request from ehe Archdiocesan Urban Com mission, Lawi"ence Cardinal She han. of Baltimore addressed a letter to his people urging them 00 register eai"ly and vote in the Fall elections. The letter, read in all churches of the archd'iocese Sun day, JPOinted out that the "important matter of calling a constitutional convention for enactmen~ of a new state Constitution" 'will be at stake in the coming election.' The urban commission is ask~ ing for volunteers from parishes to encourage early registration, the letter said. Mrs.. Agnes Magrogan, Com mission sec l' eta l' Y. said the miited Voters Campaign has three phaSes-voter re,pstratiori, education and assistance on elec tion·days. She said the progl'am'~ pur PQse . stemmed from defeat·&I. open housing legislation in the Baltimore City Council. She added that th.e campaign also is to encourage restdents to re~ fleet their' views by electing rep resentatives who will support .em.
Bishop Bofand
~
Desautels Hall will come into formal existence on the Assump tion College Salisbury Street campu~ in Worcester on Sunday, Sept. 11. The building, constructed in 1964 and known up to now sim ply as Dormitory C. will be ded icated to Very Rev. Armand H. Desautels, A.A., a Fall River native, who was president of the school when the tornado of 1953 forced it to move from its de stroyed campus to its present location. Father Desautels is credited with having been the force be hind t~e relocation move as well . as with the erection of nine modern new buildings in what was an open field only 10 years ago. He was mimed Provincial Superior of the Assllmptionist Order for the United States, Canada, and Mexico two years ago and sllcceedeo as president by Very Rev. Louis F. Dion, A.A. Alumni Homecoming. Dedication of Desautels Hali will be a highlight of the school's Annual Homecoming September 9-11. Rev. Aime Des champs, A.A., director of alumni relations, announced that while the dedication is a formal part of the homecoming program, the general public is invited to attend. "Father Desautels has so many friends in this area who would like to be part of this ceremony that they are most certainly in vited and will be welcome," he said. He added that Father Desautels himself, an alumnus of the school, Class of 1930, had accepted an invitation to attend the ceremonies.
:iii
IN MEMORiAM: Requiem Mass for six ~ost comrades, offered by Father (Lt.) Rob ert A. Flanagan, USN, brings Marines of the 1st Recon Bn., 1st Marine Div., to the bat talion chapel on the beach at Chu Lai, Vietnam. NC Photo.
Calls on Nuns to Join Vocation Effort .--'
Says Religious Must. Adapt. to Needs of Times CIN.CINNATTI (NC) - Reli ltach~s at Our Lady of Angels' t1ious communities that are "un . High School, St. Bernard, cited ~illing to adapt to the needs one good effect of the current of the times" will not be able shortage of priests and Religious: to attract modem women to "It's putting a greater responsi the Sisterhood. oility on the laity to share in That is the opinion of Sister the active work of the Church." Teresa Avila, chairman of the "The laity have to step in and Cinciimatti J\rchdiocesan Vo help with jobs that formerly cation Endeavor, which some 30 were done only by Religious," communities of nuns have form she asserted, "and they're find ~d to improve vocation recruit lng that working together is 'ment among high school and col helping them form a more mean lege girls. ' ingful Christian community." To the Franciscan Sister, it is "The modern girl," says Sis ter Teresa Avila, "sees that her important that Religious and laity come to know each other. mission is to the world." both as friends and as co-work Laity at Work ers in the Church. This isn't a reflection of world "It's important for lay people liness," but rather of the girl's to know a nun as a person, not concern with "serving and im just as a teacher," Sister said. proving the world," the nun ob
"And it's also important for a nun served.
to know that she lives her Chris She commented that even tian life with the people she when a Sister is unable to go out serves as well as" with the nuns and directly take care of a need, who live with her-that she she can be "sensitive" to the won't 'lose her vocation' by talk world's needs and can try to in ing with students after school.~' "01 ve others in the work of Lay people, moreover, can enmeeting them. Sister Teresa Avila, who
Continued from Page One and taught in Holy F!lmily Grammar and High Schools, New Bedford from 1944 to 1962. Bishop Boland becomes the third Bishop of the Diocese of Multan in West Pakistan where he has served as a Dominican missionary for the past eight years. • Most Rev. Russell J. McVin ney, Bishop of Providence was t'lle consecrator at ceremonies eonducted a~ the Cathedral of 5S. Peter and Paul, Providence, on Monday morning at 10 o'clock. The co-consecrators we r e Most Rev. Bernard M. Kelly, D.D., Auxiliary Blshop of the Rhode Island Diocese, and Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D., Na tional Director of the Society of the Propagation of the Faith and Auxiliai"Y Bishop of New Yor, who also delivered the sermon. Among the Bishops present was Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of KERKRADE (NC)-Philadel Fall River. The new Bishop gave his phia's Cardinal Dougherty high first episcopal blessing to his school band won the top prize parents, Mr. and Mrs. John III the marching band category Boland of Providence, and his :\t the World Music Festival here In the Netherlands. seven brothers and sisters im mediately after the ceremony. The La Salle Academy and Providence Col i e g e graduate will return to his Diocese in West Pakistan' in September. fUNERAL HOME The Diocese contains 37,oeo Ilquare miles or area larger than 469 LOCUST STREET the State of Maine. fALL RIVER, MASS. Bishop Boland will serve as. shepherd to tbe 20,000 Catholics OS 2-3381 in a total population of seven Wilfred C. James IE. million persons, most of whom Driscoll Sullivan, JIll'. are Moslems.
Top Band
D. D. Sullivan & Sons
Stay in Cassock .
MADRID (NC)-The Spanish bishops have ruled that the cas sock, rather than the suit, wi![ continue to be the official dress for priests.
courage religious vocations "by setting an example of generosity and sacrifical love in the home," the Franciscan nun suggested. "By showing their children that God is. important in their family i:.fe, they can create the environ ment in .which vocations can flourish, and engender the spirit of giving what is needed in re ligious life." Life of Faith Sisters themselves can encour age religious vocations, accord ing to Sister Teresa Avila, by "being full of the love and ser vice'" which characterize such a vocation. "Religious must see their lives as dedicated directly to God the F'ather through the work of Christ and thus they will see that in a very real way they are spouses of Christ,:' she said. And Sisters must be willing to gww with their communities, to live the life of faith t.o which they have been called, "hang ing on" When things are diffi cult, she added, "for ours are tImes that need the faith that iV.l 0 s e s had in his journey through the desert." .
273 CENTRAL AVE.
'NY
2-6216
Complete
BANKING
SERVICE'
for. Bristol County
(""'1'1"'~
Bristol County
( Trust Company
CDEBROSS OIL.'
,
BLUE RIBBON
LAUNDRY
Build Hospital FREIBURG (NC) - Catholics of the Freiburg archdiocese have given about $85,000 for the con struction of a modern children's hospital in Bethlehem, Archbish op Hermann Schaeufele. of the German diocese announced.
CO.
~ Heating Oils ~
and Burners (
C365 NORTH FRONT STREET { ,
NEW BEDFORD
-.
WYman 2-5534
(
TAUNTON, MASS. THE BANK ON
TAUNTON GREEN
Member 01 Federal Deposft
Insuranee CorporatioD
{""""",.... ~
NEW BEDFORD
Schedule for Summer Season Continued from Page Four'
WIEST HARWICIHI
5
~
HOLY TRINITY Masses: SundaY-7:00, 8:15, 9:30, 10:45, 12 noon' Daily-9:W A.M.
DENNISPORlI' UPPER COUNTY IROA1Ill OUR LADY OF THE ANNUNCIATION Masses: Sunday-6:30, 7:30, S:45, :nO:OO, 11:15 Daily-7:00 A.M.
WOODS· HOLE ST. JOSEPH
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15, 9:30, 11:00 Dail)'-7 :00 A.M. Benediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M.
MANUFA£TURERS
NATIONAL BANK
of BRISTOL COUNTY
NORTH fALMOUTH (Megansett) lIMMACULATE CONCEPTION Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12 noan DaiJy-8:00 A.M.
tHE AREA'S MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK
I
NORTH ATTLEBORO • MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO FALLS
6
tHE ANCHOR"'7Diocese·ofFan River-Thu!'s., July 28, ~966
'. Two Priests Aiel Episcopc;d Fundi
Emphasis on Home
WASHINGTON (NC) - ~, Washington priests contributed' to the inner-city mission pro. eram of the Episcopal diocese cd Washington after an Episcopal parish halved its donation _ protest the d.ioceseis. social actioD programs. . .
The two priests were Fa~ Geno C. Baroni, executive. sec> retary 'of the Archbishop's Com There is no point in disc 1.1ssing a survey that has not mittee on Community Relatio_ yet been released in its enti':'et;v and with all its conclu arid Father Andre Iiouchard, as sions. sistant pastor of 55. Paul ana Augustine church. , But what has been said ~o far reaffirms a basic idea Father Baroni said he had • -that the home is the first sehoo!, that" the home sets long and close relationship witti the foundation of a spiritual life; t}1at one should not rol';~ Suffragan Bishop Moore, whose pect school or Church or commu'nity to step iTo and do activities were the basis for 1be well and without a missed sti:>P the work that the home t'Jriticisll'. and the reduced dona is supposed to do. ' . tion by All Souls' Memorial Episcopal church. The bishojp A certain conclusion froTII the survey will' be to put i~ a strong supporter of the civil . 'rights movement and' baelal even more emphasis on the nome than is already being home rule for the 'District . Clii placed. Columbia. . ' "I never thought I would be . ' making 'a contribution, to 31'1 . Episcopal mission fund," said Father Baroni in a letter aCoo Monsignor George C. Higgins diJ'ector of the Sacred' companyi'ng his check. "Neve.. , theless, I wish to show my sup-: Action Department of the Na'jonal Catholic Weltare Con port for the progarm and policies ference, has said that while those. who march anf demon of the diocese because they at strate for peace may be commended, there should be even feet us and promote the comrilOD: more solid praise directed toward Close who are working By. Msgll'. George C. Higgins ',good of the entire community." , in an unsensational fashion to build' up in;.,titutions to (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC) He . praised Bishop' 'Moor~ preserve peace. In the last release of this column reference was made work as "a witness to the se.... vice of the church of Christ fo!' The worker who demons:rates, who lashes out, who to the sad plight of American farm workers, a large per the first citizeilsof the chur~ condemns, who makes his POInt ip a dramatic fashion al-' centage of whom are Spanish~speaking. This week we' the poor.'" . ways garnishes thl:: headlines. New!:\papers prim news, and should like to say a word about the responsibility of ,the . Father Bouchard said he seRIi news is associated with the dr8lmJ.ltic: t;he· unusual, the federal government to' come arid y."orking 'conditi!lns ot' do- . his contribution as .a token' GIl Christian' brotherhood. inflammatory, !',he :1ard-hitting. Al"d there arE; many times to the assistance of these dis- mestic farm workers. advantaged' 'workers. AmerExempt from Gains when issues need to be highlight.ed by such spectacular . icanfarm worke.rs-especiMoreover, government 'n ~eans. . , at .B1l Wlu vote this year-a t 'I'on g:"":" ~1 ally migratory' w,orkerB.are ,ev~ls has. seen, fIt to exempt.,' :....to·include farm·workers.undW among the least privileged any' of agncultural labor from .most of· tit' . . f ih f d' 1 m»i: But little :.\ttention is paid by the newspapers to the maJ'or Occupa- . the great social imd labor legis-.· ". ,c ~overagelo, , ,e . e era >I, st~ady and undramatic and' .ditfk~J( day-1;>y-day work of , · ' wh"ICh h'as 'been enac'ted : . Imum wage aw. .' 1at I?n tional group in ' Th···· ot likel to hap~ doing good. In tlle nature 'of things, tllis is so, and-perhaps the Nation. Any- durIng the past 30 years. ' ~ I~. n , y ~ '"--- however, 1 e s s substan........
---"should be·so. Work done. in serl;mityand qUiet is surely. one who has seen I noel' th words, J"t h' as....,.".. ,. ',.IS un ht t 0 b' ear lbJPfllU ...: 1 'pressure broug publi.c poli cy f or t 00 ong II ' ." ." motivated by the highest of .impulse~ and is being advanced' the cond'itions time to perpetuate the substand- the. Copgress by elty-ba~ed ~ in slow and measui'ed and eertaiin·step.s to a worthwhile un del' which b ' d't' th t ·st· gamzabons. The reason ,for th~ , in 0 s t of these ard I a o~ con I IOns a ron is that .farm work'ers; ,who '~ eompletion. worke,rs 1 i v e on Amencan farms. . ' , , 1·et eI'y unorgam.........
'''...d , If ' t h th' Ji almost knows that it is . we are 0 c ange IS po cy, . . . comp . . . d not necessary one of the .most important stepS are llot In a poslbo~ to exe., to go abroad to ,that must be taken is to ~xtend ,~u~f pressure on theIr own beobserve human tuth~e.min(~mum wage to agricula. Decrease Labor Foree beings Ii ving in At the consecration in Pr()vid,~nce Monday of Domini I1t is true, of course, that so~, abJ'ect poverty. Hiring Practice' can missionary Bishop Boland, Bisbop Fulton 'J. Sheen, . farm workers would be di&io The question that must be 'deAt . the present hme, . the placed 'if the minimu'm wage, . Natio:lal Director of the Propagation ,of the Faith, mention cided on all levels of govern- AmerIcan farm labor force. IS a were extended to agriculture. ed that SQme people think thl'lt in thE Churc}-. today there ment, but especially on the fed- casual" u~structured ~ n tIt Y • Farmers would be forced to seek isa crisis in authoritv-prieRts opposing tb?ir bishops, eral level, is-"Shall we make it Farm .employ:rs have lIttle wr- wa s or' using labor more effi . . .
, lay people taki'lg issue with priesti" questioning of Church , a matter of public policy to per- sonal Interest In the performance '. . Ytl p~tuate those conditions, or shall of their employes. During peak Clen y. ,
doctrine. and practice. But,- head~led, the crisis is not we attempt now, to eliminate seasons they will hin~ anyone, . They ,,:ould,no ~onger be willi
erisis. of authority but a crisis of love. this social blight from, the whether he be an efficient or In- Ing to hIre all who wan.ted ~
'American scene?" effiCient worker, on a piece.,.rate' work during~eak seasons; ra~her
..LoVemeanb ,i1ervice-of God a"ld men Alld if a priest basis. they would hire only ,those 'Y~ Public Policy rises up in opposition to a hishop or, if lay people oppose The fact that there .is a pool .were efffi~i~nt workers. Mo~~ There is no way' that, this of underprivileged and/or so- oY,er, a m~mmum. w~ge~ by.JDo:' their priests the answer is obvious--t:r.e critic does not yet understand and lovt: completely the Church the extension problem can be rationalized out cially maladjusted work e l' 8 creasing mechamzatlOf;l' w~u", , of existence: :The basic causes of availal-le for employment on this probably, decrease the sIze of .~ of Christ in the world, :lndt.he clc:ric who. by the Will of the farm labor situation - low basis tends to hold down wages farm .labor force; . Christ, bears withir himself the wlJrk of preaching and wages and underemployment for all farm workers, regardless' ,ThIs would not necessarily. ~ , a bad development. Oversupp~ due. to labor surpluses in some of their skill and efficiency. . sanctifying and serving. . , a n d the casua:. nature of· farm of our rural areas - must be As long. as thiS ~ur~l Ja~or labor' employment 'have alwa~ . There are those writing in th6 Cburch today who have eliminated once and for all. It SUrp~Ull eXISts, there IS little m- been the bane of those who labelli' said that the first duty ~f the C~I1;holie is 'w critiCize the should be public policy to adopt' cenbve for. farm emploY~n: to·. for hire on American 'faimS. Church. These nave not. learr-ed the very first lesson of those measures which' will attempt t~ Increase the' efflclen- , Minimum wage legislation; if • achieve this goal. , ey of theIr .employes. As a ~- 'had the effect of helping to ere Vatican Councr II-that the Jirst duty of the Catholic To put it in a more positive sult, farm workers are consld- ate a structural rather than • is to love the Churcr. and to rtllleW ~limself so that this re manner, it should be public pol ered, b?, many.who employ them, casual farm labor force; :would newal of all IDt!mbers in and oftht: Churcr. may make the icy to accomplish in agriculture. to be, In th: IIt~ral sense of the be fulfilling its primary pur~ Church's beauty and truth 1l'01"e evident tr al· men. what we have already largely word, a commodIty to be bought Action Necessary . accomplished in other sectors of at the l0:-vest'possible price. If however a' substaJltial our economy-the restoration of . Unorganized, Unrecognized nU~ber of wdrkers were'dip. respect and dignity, based on The ~tension of a minimum placed as a result of minimum. ' good working conditions and wage te agriculture, by setting wage legislation, there' would steady employment, to the men a "price" below whicb labor have to be an expansion o~ s~~ and women who labor for hire cannot be bought, WOUICl help to programs as rural development, on American farms. eliminate this anachronistic view occupational training, vocational Up to the present time our of the value of human labor. rehabilitation, mental and phY9 lawmakers h a v e compromised If the minimum were' set at ical health, therapy, and othetr OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIIOCESE OF FALL RIVER on the issue o~ fann labor., Not $1.25 an hour, it would result matters related to job opporl" . Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the'Diocese of' Foil River , only have our institutions failed 'in' a .substantial raise ;n wages 'nities and occ'Upationalcompeoo to adopt policies that would as-· to' many farm workers who now tence. Al0 Highland AV4!nUe . sure an adequate supply of farm' receive considerably less· thaJI .' ·The expansion of ·such· p~ Fall River, Mass. 02722' .. . 675-7l51 labor at decent standards of em-, that., And this raise would, iJl ' grams; of, course, .sheuk ' .~ ,PUBLISHER' , . ployment, but, until, very re-'· tum, exert an, upward,pressure' place at once-:-indeed, .shou~ Most.. R~v. James L.. CO'1notly~ D.D.;·_phD.~ eently, they have' also been' used . on the ·wages of, those few .fannhave taken place yeaFSago-~ . GE~ERAL MANAGER .ASSlr. GENERALMANAGEI . to procure .foreign' labor in a, 'wo*ers who now receive more·'if. minimum wage legislation ~' . Itt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. ,'", Rev. ·Johr.P; .DriscoU ' . .. .anner which..in many; eases bas' "than.$l.25 an, hour.,"" ":"<' '" -.. ' ... ····exte~lded to" agriculture, . s~:. :-::.. ::., ..•. MANAGiNG>eDITOR .. ' . . ' ,.', :,.,. bad' 'an"advel'se' effect on' ,the'· '.:' Iqs'to bepoPed,·then,.lba~the .. ~tio:a wiUbe absolute~Jlee'" " ;,H.~:'J~·.Gold.., .' .'. employ~e~';0nditio~Si,:'~a&~':,~.9nif~,,'of~t~~· ¥~ited.. ~. sa.~o: " -_.,', -.,"-,,-, ~ .·"i·i~1: :',. " Advance stories about a sociological survey about the effectiveness of Catbolic schools indiCate' that th(.' survey itself is going to provide food for argument and discussion and thought and debate for .') long, time to come. There seems to be a serious questioning- of :how much worth while result thp Catholic School ean accomphsh if the home is inadequate along religiouslinef1.. '
"
Quiet Work
.Seeks Minimu", Wage Law Coverage for 'F'arm Labor.
Crisis
a
@rheANCHOR <..
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Editor Explains' Catholic Press Role in Unity
7, Member of, St. lean Baptiste Parish 'WiU Go nte Thurs., July 28, 1966 To New Mexico as Extension Lay Volunteer Traditions Blend ,~m:.'HOR-
Corne Sunday, pretty redhaired Lorraine Gaudreau 'of St. Jean Baptiste p·arish, Fall NEWBURY (NC) - In formation abo u tot her River, will be off to fulfill a dream she's had since she was a freckle-faced schoolgirl churches is "the essential ransoming pagan babies for the Holy Childhood Association. "I've always wanted to go first step to filrtherunity,"· to the missions and 'help people," she said. So as an Extension Lay Volunteer she will serve for one year at St. many girls were so ~nterested in the assistant editor of the Ver mont Catholic Tribune told a Anthony's Hospital, Las the idc:a and ha,? heard. nothing · A about It before, she said. four-day Protestant workshop N M V egas,ew eXlCO.. s a A W to 1\1 1 here on theological develop • d t'cal f ay e p 1lcense prac I ments and current problems. nurse or She added a comment that un
years at Our Lady Robert W. Chambers told an the past· sevenH · t l 'In North alma OSPI a t Informal conference at the of F'd sh e WI'11 bn' n g a workshop that the Catholic press . P rovi ence, wealth of experience to her new bas a role to play in the ecumen .: t "V 1 t rs already ical movement.. assl~nmen . 0 un ee , servmg at St. Anthony shave "'We· go beyond merely cover to me," she said. ''They ing. e'lents in which Catholics written 'd I would be d Oln '. g ,e v e ry participate to select materia! sal thing' in the hospital, working that sheds light on the progress shifts and, in all depart toward Christian unity, includ';' on all ·" ing . developments within' other ment s. At Lor Christian bodies," he said. , ' . 'Our Lady of Fatima, . "i think this approach helps to' rame. was an ,?peratll~g room euitivate an atmosphere withhi. nurse, but she IS lookmg for ward to 'her more 'diversified , the Catholic, community hospita· hIe to ecumenism. At the same work at St. Anthony's. ''The girls said there is an old bar time we have a limited circula tion among non-Catholics that . racks where some of them live imorms them on our Church and and there's also an apartment ·its activity. Information like 'fol"' two girls. The rest of the this, to my mind, is the essential living arrangements they said firSt step to further .unity," he they'd let come as a surprise to , us new girls!" said. , Eager Anticipation The workshop, at the Vermont Congregational Conference's At-·, 'Obviously Lorraine is looking kinson retreat house here, in forward to the "surprises" her Itluded nearly a dozen Vermont new, life will offer. She dosen't ministers and one Catholic priest, kno\y any of the girls with whom Msgr. Edward G. Murray, pastor she'll be working, "but I know of Sacred Heart Parish in Ros I'll like them. We'll all have so llindale, Mass. much in common." . 'Examine Everything' Her constant companion these M s gr. Murray commented, dayisis a little Spanish phrase "'Maybe the only way we can book which she's counting on helping·' her along in contacts ever come together is bY, ,exam ining everything we do .:in our with the inany Spanish-Amer cllurches, and repeating >that iCa'ri .patients who come' to St; Anthony's: ' process again and 'again." , Lorraine will go· to San An One of the ministers, comment-, ing on liturgical change, said the .tonia, Tex.' for a three week independence reflected in Prot-, indoctrination period before re estant autonomous church gov-, porting'to St. Anthony's. There ernments is demonstrated "whert she'll' meet the other four girls it looks like the change is being wl'lo wm be with her at the
dictated' from outside the church hospital. . The new 'group will
replace the five Extension Vol
body." "I presented a proposed Order unteers 'who have been serving
of Worship,'" said one minister, a:t' Las Vegas for the past· year.
"that Was printed up in a glossy , Life won't be all work for the
booklet, and the deacons rejected 'g,H"'Is; L'orraine is a member of
it., A few weeks later, whell I the Allegro Glee Club in Fall
passed, around mime<>graphed . River and' she hopes for oppor copies I'd turned out of the same tunities to continue choral sing liturgy, they accepted the ing in· Las Vegas. Other interests include playing the guitar, "lischange." , Chambers said the reverse seems to be true of Catholics, adding thllt many are uneasy about.liturgica! change until they are certain it has the sanc SAN JOSE (NC) - San Jose tion of the Church and has won merchants have criticized the wide acceptance. establishment of a center for indigents, claiming that the cen- ' ter will merely draw down-and out transients into. the business district. , J.ohn Marrek, director of 12 ff,ARRISI;iURG (NC) -:- Penn sylvania Veterans of Foreign day-old St. Francis Shelter, Wars, ~eeting here in their state pI;qmised that steps will be eonvention, unanim.ously a'p'~ tak.en to prevent loitering. Mar proved resolutions seeking the rek ,sp~cified that a patrolman would J:>e hired to keep people abolition of civilian police re view boards and the restoration from lingering, that office hours wjll .be Vmited, and that only of prayers. and Bible reading t~os~ referred by Catholic par public schools. ishes will be accepted. The resolutions called for re The ,shelter, intended as a re view boards made up of police": men rather than civilians, and' source. for parishes often ap for· adoption of Senator EVerett proached by indigents, will pro Dirksen's proposed constitutional vide meal tickets, job opportu amendment permitting prayers nities, and some limited volun and Bible reading in publiC teer' counselling to those need ing help. Organized and spon schools. sored by a group of Catholic Other resolutions sought strict laymen, the shelter is supported enforcement of laws banning b;' local parishes, Marrek· said. draft-cara burning, and the es
tablishment of· a cabinet office
devoted to· veterans' affairs.
COLOGNE (NC)-The Ger' Ihalt Catholic Workers' Move rneIri"'has urged the' ·German .. MORRISTOWN (NC)"'-Arch': gdvel"n'n'lent to pass' a law estab';' bishop' Thomas A. Boland of Iillhing an eight-day study· pe.. ~ewark dedicated the new $2.8 tb,d"with pay, 'every three yeaI's million monastery ahdehurcli 'for wO,rkers. During this· time, for.> St: Mary's 'Benedictine lib~,. W'brken woilld·· studysub;feeta IIe&'e iANew Jene,. ;', Iela.ted ,to their 'OCcupatiOnS.'
Say Charity Center
Bad for Business
P,ennsylv:ania Vets
Back Amendment
in
, 'Urges Study Days
,.' Dedicates Abbey"
At Meeting
GEORGETOWN (NC) - Rep resentatives of three religious traditions gathered in George town for Guyana's first Inter Faith Conference, meeting at the Hindu College. Organized by, Hindu Swami Pumanda,' the con fer e n c e . brought together leaders of the derlines. the reason many volun Hindu, Moslem, and Christian teers give a year or more to the . , E~tenslon ,p~ogram or to Its faiths, as well as civil leaders overseas eqUivalent, the Papal and government authorities. The Volunteers for Latin America. ecumenical' meeting was the "M " I d b tIl' k th . any '~Ir s an oys. ~n .ey first in Guyana to include non Christians. might lIke to, be. mlsslOnanes, . but t~ey., .aren t sure that t~elr Because of the brief program. vocation is. to be a pnest, little was dooe ,that was more Brother or Sister. When you go than introductory. Bishop Rich t th .. f 0 , e miSSIOns Of a year or ard Guilly, S.J., of Georgetown two, you can help and at the pointed this Qut, and added, "It same 'time find out if that is . . " has seemed better, in this short the lIfe you want for yourse~. time, for me to indicate the good In charge of both ExtenSion will there is among us for those Volunteers and ~apal V?luntee~s of other faiths." for the Fall River DIOcese IS Racial differences strongly af Rev. Ja~es W. Clark, ~335 fect the religious makup of North ~am St~eet, Fall River. Guyana, with people belonging More mf,?rmatI?n about b?th to Hindu, Moslem, and various programs IS available from him. Christian churches. About 60 per cent of the population is Christian, with Hindus and Mos lems sharing the remaining 40 per cent. There, have been fre;' GREENDALE (NC)-Anglican quent religious squabbles, pri Archdeacon A. E. L. Caulfield, marily between the Christian rector of, Trinity Church, St. majority and the Hindu-Moslem . John, and Bishop Alfred B. minority. Leverman, Roman Catholic bish op of St. John, were keynote speakers at'the second interre ligious meeting' of' Anglican, EISENSTADT (NC) -Eisen Protestnnt, and· Roman Catholic stadt's Catholic Office of Educa clergymen and laity of the St. tion conducted an educational John district here in New Bruns- pilgrimage to Cracow and Czes Wick. ,: : "" tochowa, where Mass was cele The 'first such meeting was brated in German and Croatian held in, .Febrl;lary, 1~65, in the at .Czeso~~01il'a's . grE;at .Marian Greater St. ,John area when shnne. Eight Australian priests Bishop Leverman ~as host at and 59 lay people made the trip, Villa Madonna" re"treat house, experiencing no h a r ass men t ,from the· Polish. government. Torrybum. .'. At the meeting here, Arch deacon Caulfield said: "God ex pects this day our physical pres-, ence and action wherever in the world there is tension to be rec onciled and human need to be satisfiE!d; fo~ we are bearers of the peace which 'God intends for his: beloved, everywhere, al ways."
Anglican, CathoHc
Keynote Speakers
LORRAINE GAUDREAU
tening to all types of music," tennis and skiing. She is a Fisher in St.. Jean Baptiste's CCD program and expects to continue CCD work in her new surroundings. . " What ,did' family and friends think of, her decision to leave familiar ,surroundings and give a year, to qoq.? "My family will mIss but they're glad I'm do ing what ,I want to do," she said. She' is the first nurse to leave Our Lady of Fatim:l for the work of an Extension Volunteer, she said and she thinks that others might' follow her. "So
'mp
Youth' Give Views On Dropping Out BROOKLN (NC)-Over 1,000 Brooklyn ,teenagers will get a chance to act out their views on dropping out of,school in a play being sponsored by the diocese of Brooklyn's Catholic Charities office. The play" "The Winner," pre sents the conflict of a boy who wants to leave school to be a boxer. After the first act, mem bers of the' audience are asked how they think the play will end. Then some are asked to join the cast and act out the ending they suggested. ,. , Written by television actress Florence. Anglin, the play has been presented at schools and institutions. for over a yeall", and is endorsed by the :r:ew York City Youth Board and Board of Education.
:Third Order SANTA CLARA (NC)-"Re newai in· the LH~ht of Vatican U" will be the theme for the· 13th provi·ncial convention of the Thi~dOrdeJ[' of St. Francis, to be held Aug. 14 to 20 at the University· of Santa Clara here in Califomia. '
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NLins'10 tristruc;t" Mexican Orphans'
'8
Pleasant 'Part of Summer C'hat' With Friends OJi Porch, Patio
, PALOS VERDES (NC}-Three Religious of the Sacred Heart ,of Mary have agreed to give up teaching assignments in Califor nia to help an American priest raise the level of education at an orphanage for boys and girls ncar Mexico City. Sister Barbara, of Moth~ Butler High Schol, San Jose; Sister Wilfred, principal of St. Francis de SaleS School, Sher man Oaks; and Sister Bernadette of Marymount College, PaloiJ Verdes, accepted, the invitation (])f Father William Wasson to help improve the educational oet"-up at the Hacienda, a home gor almost 600 Mexican young~ oters between the ages of three and 23., "' The orphanage began 12 yean cage:> ,when Father Wasson, ,'who bad gone from Arizona to Mexi';' co for his health, took in a, 12... , ~7ear-old boy who had tried to rob the' collection box of hie, ('hurch in Cuernavaca. , During its first five years the, home took in ,only boys-or 'phans and some Juvenile' delin- ' 'luents. When a woman 'died at the Mexico City Cardiology Hos , J;ital, leaving two pays and two girls in Fathe~,Wasson's ca~" the priest declde~,'to Start " 'homefor'~Uttle sisters" as weD.,
, By Mary Tilllley Daly "When the glass is at nillety, a man is a fool Who directs not his efforts to try to keep coo]." Right? Right, and well put, author Joseph Ashby lterry. During this mechanizEld Summer of i966, when homes' and offices, churches In those days, nobody in bis and stores, factories and the- right mind would have dreamed aters are air conditioned al- of sitting in the backyard, re most to the point of frigid_served for laundry, vegetable My, those "efforts" are reduced ,gardens, trash, cans and the like; considerably. You can work and you couldn't "see people." ehop, pray and If you had a front' porch ,you play in coo I ' were lucky and you couldn't , eomfort, almost possibiy be .lonely, During the ~ though it course of the Summer, practical ,.. ere Winter, '13' the whole town would pass in Aut u m nor rllview. Dad's bank customers S p rj n g, but would be invited onto the porch t. her e is the
tel meet, the family, sit for awhile ' sense of being
'and have a cool drink; same for eut off from the
Mom's sewing circle ladies and spirit of Sum our parish priests. Even our own mer. that "good
school teachers, those formida ' old Summer-"
ble creatures who knew' all there time," when windows and doors w,as to know about arithmetic PLAN CONVENTION :As more than 2,000 wome~ must be kept shut. 'and geography and who held ~ prepare to attend the biennial convention in Miami of the , The 'blow from the vent or tiltht rein on us from September Daughters of Isabella, Aug.,' 8'-12, supreme Regent Mrs. ducts or whatever you call them untn June,would often stop by Anna C. Walsh of St. Louis,' ,right~, discusses last minute :may be more,efficient as a cool-. to rock on our front porch, laugh. details with Miss Virgirlia B. DeCristafaro, 'Miami Regent. lng agent,'but w,hat can compare ,with Dad and Mom and even Theconventioilwill be keyed'to, the D. of I's interest,in with a natural ,Summer breeze, telll jokesl ' 'intermittent and uncontrollable ,Worst punishment meted out llelping solve Latin American problems. NC ,Photo. . but, oh, so welcome! Catching WllS to be' banished from the "A E: I'd" that itinerant breeze is probably porch for a whole evening, made ,Wome", mp oye , " one"reason whyp~ople "sit out"" us mind, our manners in the face " After Training' Course" in the Summer though, to our 'of daily temptation with siblings., , , ,0 f thOInki ng, a more powe ' r LANSING,' (NC)':"" Nine area, way " ~rhis is' another day,: another tui motive is mali's innate w~,y of life. In our automobile Congregation of the 'Humility of Mary Ends; ,women began new ~areers as, " . .' hb li ' eashiers here after graduating Outdated Customs; Useless Re$trictions, "from the l'.nc~gan Catholic Con-,. g8nousness, a neIg or ness en ,oriented society', people don't do 'genedered 'by the very relaxed tht) evening Strolling of that ". 'f~rence job training c,e,n,ter. " ,'t' " f th s ' na ure 0 e eason.
'eal'lie~, less sopl1isticated 'temp~. OTTUMWA (NC)-The Con- "many outdated customs', and ,The' women,' most of wholiiil , All Around
I" rt t'l h' , t h ' gr'egati"o'n of' the Iiumilit,y' Of 'useless restrictions that hinder~ ~ " On' apartment house fire es, !o una e y,' owever, " e were unemployed when they e~Q same Summer-induced camarad"; Mary 'hali adopted sweeping ,ed adult, living, personal and ,opes, on the, front step of row . ' '1 .' , ,chang~s ra'naing' from an exte'n"- communal, development, p'ray'er 'tered the, training center !esli 'bouses, on' balconies, ,porches ne preVaI s myour town, and ... ~ November,' ,found jobs with ~Jl'o .. °g'hbor ca 'lls out':81'on of the' com"munI·ty's ftp','osto'_,'andapostolic,service."·' ,ticipating stores who "felt the)' , ' . nel 'and patios, Summer evenings ,oulrs, I V " ,find folks "sitting out," talking neighbor; friends' "drop by" even .late to the elimin!ltion of "out~' Ease Restr:ictioDB 'were doing us a favor,'~ said 8!'o with, people they 'scarcely 'see if 1~hey h~ve to drive riiiles to do dated customs' and useless re on public eating, :s!sta'nt program director Joel Restrictions :lrom September until 'the 'fol so; 'families to a distant 'degree strictionso iJ , home visiting and recreation, Ferguson~' ' , lowing June. o~ Jdnship ,get togeth~I more', Meeting for the, first time along with requirements of tra But after the women worked~' The "in" bit for the young0ft<en-:-ail psychologically good since before the Second VatiCan 'veling with a companion and in the stores in their on-the-job marrieds who can ,afford it is, therapy.' Council,' the' general chapter returning to the convent before . training, 'he added, "they were of course, the ,patio, or patio 'Summer evenings cast' their which convenes every six years, ,6 p.m., were eliminated'. unanimous in expressing the and pool if budget extends that hypnotic spell as people abandon voted to extend the community's ~e S*sters were freed, from 'fceling, we were doing them 'll far. their TV sets, their closed-house apostolate to work in the mis':' their obligation to public prayer fnvor and several firms have air··conditioned comfort and "sit sion fields, especially Latin except ,Mass" Lauds and, Ves At our house, we're the in told' us they'll take all the cash pers. Restrictions on time, place ,ierswe can train." between generation, as it were, out" for a spell. America and'to begin social ser 8PO rtin g neither' the patio of tt? I:n spite of the heat, yes, even vice work in the U.S. as soon as' arid length of meditation and day nor the front porch of our humidity, wouldn't a, year Sisters can be trained for the sPiritual reailing were dropped. New Superior parents' era, but a side 'porch, without a Summer be dismal? work. Any Sister who wishes may of 'all 'things, once considered Expand Program now ,use her baptismal-family CLINTON (NC)....:,-Sister Mary avant-garde, now just out-of The community will also be name instead, of the religious Martin Birmingham is the new date, !'feverthelesl!. that ,small Nuns Win fellowship gin fulltime religious education name she received as a novice. superior general of the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Fran aide porch serves our "sitting work through the Confraternity out" purposes,' ~s a mecca for fOlr European Study of Christian Doctrine and hopes 'cis of the Immaculate, Concep.. , Vietnam Director tamily and friends, provides a , WHITE PLAINS (NC) _ A to enter the Newman Apostolate WASHINGTON (NC) - Mrs. , tion of the Blessed Virgin Mary, commonly known as the ClintoD breeze-catching, 'confidence-in Catholic' nun who is a student at on University campuses within , Patricia K. Krause of the Na Sister Mary Martin, FD·anciscans. , sPiring locale as' dusk deepens Columbia University is one of the next decade. , tional Catholic' Community S~r Already committed to educa ~to twilight, thence into dark11 scholars selected for a coveted vice has been appointed director a music teacher at Mt. St. Clare Sainuel F. Fele Dissertation Fe!.. tion and hospital work in the six 'of public information for USO College here in Iowa, succeedl IlCSS. Sister Mary Leona Griffin. ' low,ship. states, the community's move 'Front Porch' in Vietnam. O I'ttl ment into the new fields will T hrough the years, th IS 1 e" Mary ConsUcla. associ d 'ateSiister depend to a large extent on 'the euI - d e-sac 'has b cen l an e en arg professor of English' at Good · number of incoming Sisters. f ddl ( 1 t d p aypen or 0 a fl' Isas~ ,Counsel College here, is the first •Building Contractor, ... . d forersthe, The general chapter released •• ous perlO ower nun to 'win this fellowship., Pro ' )'. d I t ' ,b oxes an a er on as cou rt'm~ ',fesslDrs at Cohunbia University, the community's more than 400 , .Masonry , earner (a period when the Head 'whe,re she' is a candidate for a Sisters' from what it termed ef the House .and i' took 'our doctorate in Engllsh,nominated New Ha'bit chairs out: in' the backyard). . 'her fOr the honor. ' " , Tha~ was en()u~h ~ackyeat: sit NEWARK, (NC}-The Fran Commercia" '. indu$tri~t ting for, us and we don't exactly The '$4,000 Fels, grant win ciscan SiSterS of'St: Elizabeth' of , Institutional. ' , )ream for It patio, What we' do enable ,the nun to spend a year Newark' have a new' habit. it ,remember nostalgically is the inl~urope researching her dis 'features'a one-piece ,oxford gray Painting, and, Decorating Iront porch, of our parents' gen sertation topic of !'Spain" Cluny' ' dress with white peter-pan 'col-, i, jEAN~E STREEt , flUn River, OSborne 2·191\ " lar, tucKed, sleeves, 'dickey front _ration, when' having a front and the Holy Grail." porch was the "in" thing, status ' , :, and swept-back veil. The length FAIRHAVEN', WY 4·7321, 7.4 Williamson' Street BYmbol'if you will, but more'S·' f C'h • remains the same and the tradi SiS>; .S~SiSSSSSSi%;SSSi than that, a link: with the world. Is1ters 0 artty , ---rtionalFranciscan cord-sash is Eled Mother Gen'eral still 'worn but the habit is sim Help Start Industry Nl~W YORK (NC) - Mother, ~::~e ~~~~~he previous: twoMiriam Eveline Schneider, ad In Irish Community mi~jstrator of St. Vincent's Hos NEWPORT (NC}-With help pital, Staten Island, was elected from local businessmen, four mother general at a general Mon~~e ~~ijmbBng nuns are establishing a woolen chapter meeting of the Sisters goods and toy-making industry (If Charity of New York. He(W~iBtl!m (0", ~n1C. in this Irish community in an She will 'direct activities for , Reg. Master Plumber 2930 effort to end emigration from the thc next six years of some 1,500 GEORGE M. MONTLE area. Sisters of Charity who conduct Over 35 Years The nuns, members of the Re- colleges, hospitals, elementary 'of Satisfied Service Jigious Teachers Filippini con- 'and :secondary schools and child 806 INO. MABN STREET Bl'egation, were sent by their care homes here, in Pennsyl Fall'River ",~, :'~~" 5j l"1'7, v, ~ ~~.;,.' ~~.,.(.!" t:••.• ··7·~· .••..: :J . 0;',. '; '. .' ' wpe!Wt,.,~t:,~ec;lste~,~ ,Englaliji~,,.. .:..v.~""~ci,,,t)le-'.B~~,Js.land&~ ~
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Lammas)-Day ,Is 'Good Occasion To Join Itread 'Bakers' Society
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By JoSeph ..4 MarilYn Roderick On the little calendar which I keep for recording in f9nnation ,about my garden, I came across a note early in June which was meant to remind me to write about the annual day lily flower show given at the Unitarian Church in Dighton. For ~ne r,eason .or have health of body and soul another, I never dId WrIte and that they may be pro about the show and last week tected against all sickness I received a note in the man and against all snares of the
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l'eminding me that the show was scheduled for July 1'1. I am' truly sony that I did, not Jet more of you know about'the MOW in advance 'so that you, JDi,ght have, made the trip to, !lee ,it. . This is by: far the best flower show we have ,seen, bar ,none., TobeginWJ.th, the setting 'for the show is excellent, an 18: eentury church.in the fine~N~w Engl,md tradition. The dignity and simplicity of this particular ehurch makes it well worth, ~ fng in itself, The title of this year's show was' "Old Glass, New Glass ,and Mirrors," and the displays' did •justice.to the title, E!.chdisplay featured the' day, lilies, cut glass and, milton 01''' Somp. other form' of, glass." ,The hundred' or :10 displays ,are arranged 'so that' elich, '. display receives individual: attjmtion; There are, no prizes awarded and lh~r,efo~E7 ' ~ere .•~: .no~e, of, ,~~ pre'tentiousness' ,'. or' bitterness wh!ch often accompanies COrn':' petition. The whole thing i,s done iii such' good taste' and simplicity that one comes ' away' withtbe feeling that the parinshione'rs are truly proud of their church and of their flower show. In addition to ,the' disp-lays, Individual day lilies from the gardens of Mr. Elliot Hathaway and Reverend Wayne Philbrook' are' arranged in the rear of the' church to allow viewers to identify blooms by color and, name. Each day lily is named and arranged. .sepl\ratelY. TiiIs exhibit numbers well over 100 varietiet; and' is an invaluable aid for anyone desiring to 'add to his stock' o~ day lilies. No flowers' are for sale at the sho~ "nhough Mr.' Hathaway of Segregansett does sell soine .ori • limited basis. All in all this' is 'a show too I09d to miss. My wife was fas cinated by the fact that aU, dis plays must be arranged the day of the show since the day lily laSts only 24 hours. Needless to lillY, we have had day lily ar rangements in the house an this week and I think we will have no respite until the p~ants finally stop producing for the . Summer. Ia the Kitchen Bread ma,. well be the staff eI. life and an indispensable food product but the soft, gluey, 'taste less substance that is sold. to the public as bread today Is a far C!I'Y from the nutritious, aromatic leaves that were baked in our grandmothers' ovens. It is aw fuifydiHl.cult to find Dreadoa the market that even slightly resembles the thick, crusty, finn slices 01 perfection that emerged from' these ovens and in my OWl) opinion only one company-, started by a woman who was Ilerself disgusted by tt"e poor products she found on the mar ket, even comes close to dupli eating homemade bread. On August 1 Lammas or Loaf Mass Day is celebrated, because this is the time when fhe new grain was ground and baked in k; special offerings to our Lord and the following prayer was offered: "Holy Lord, almighty h ther, eternal God, gracious ly deign to bless this bread with Thy spiritual benedic tion that all who eat it mar
July 28, 1966'
COLLEGEVILLE (NC)-SOJne 160 clergymen representing 25 I:ftates, Canada, New Zealand and the Bahama' Islands have regis tered for one or more of three workshops planned this Summer at St. John's University's In stitute for Mental Health. Psychiatrists conduct the wdrkshopS which aim to increase the clergymen's understanding of the emotionally disturl;>ed, on, \he theory that a dergyma.n is oiten the first source to wJlpm: such persons turn. . This year's semipars at the: Institute for Mental Health deal with ,youth and family ~ounsel~ ing, and advanced work in group problems. "
enemy. This would be a good day to initiate yourself into the society of bread bakers and perhaps,re ('ite the above blessing while your family is enjoying slices of your own homebaked bread with currant or blueberry jam and served with hugh glasses of ice cold milk. It' even the thought of at tempting bread bakiIW makes you fainthearted, just think of Eastham Guild Slates the hundreds of woman who baked daily loaves, but of neces ,August Schedule sity, in bygone days in ovens Auditions will be held to~ght that couldn't come close to the for a talent night and dance con mQdern perfections of today. GOLFING NUNS: These Sisters, enrolled in a physical te.!!t ,to be"spons9r:ed at 8 Thurs~ I myself had avoided ~ing' education class, are, members of 'the Most ~(\ly 'Sacrament day night, Aug. 4 in Eastha~, yeast as milch as' possible, 'cer congregation. Miss Reverly :Tr~han. instructor ,at the Uni Towp IiaQ by, Vi~itation Guild, tain that it reqUired a great North Eastham., Dances for all , knack that' was beyond me, and versity ofSouthwestel1l. L9uisiana, Lafayette, ,shows the ag~ will ,be featured and cash, ,proper grip to' Sister Mllri~ de' Chantal and. Sister Mary pJ::~zes '\'Vill be ~w~rded. Also, 1, viewed my mother.,.in-Iaw's skill wjth sweet bread with awe. ,Daniel. NC Phqw. ' " " ' planned for August by the guild. Finally I, was forcel1 into' yeast is 'food Sale for Sunday, Aug. 7, baking when I planned a 'Sunday fo.lIowmg all Masses, with Mrs. brunch to celebrate Meryl's Kenneth White in charge of ar,. :' first Communion· and include41 rangement:i. '.. . rroissants; tiny French' break The, A\.Igust guild meeting 1. Johnson Hails Humanit'qrian Achievement~
fast, crescents in the menu. Sur se,t for Thursday, the 11th at the prisingly I iearned that all it home I;)f Mrs. Robert Deschamp~f Of Catholic DQ,ughters, of America
takes to work' with yeast is and 'the annual Communion and BOSTON (NC) ...,.. President young American women." practice and confidence., Now I breakfast will be held Monday~ translated into living action as Aug: 15 with Mrs. Lero) Babbitt Johnson, in a message to the na ~l).joy the feel of mixing the ' dough, ,:the appearance of the tional convention of the Catholic you continue to challenge and as chairmafl. ... risen dough and most of all the Daughters of Arne ric a, has" shape the lives of millions of /I.. lJenny sale is scheduled for Thursday, Aug. 18 at Eastham lovely aromas filling my kitchen. praised the organization's "tra Mystery Ride dition of inspiring humanitarian Town Hall under direction of . Brioches sound terribly diffi Ladies Guild members at St. Mrs. Leon Allmon; and the an cult but I found the following accomplishments." The President said: John '"\aptist Church, Central nual banquet will, be Wednesday, recipe quite foolproof and awful "The biennial convention ,of Village, will sponsor a mystery Aug. 31. . lY, good. ride starting at 7 Thursday night, Brioches' the Catholic Daughters of Amer : ' . , ,,', lea perpetuates a tradition of Aug. 6, from the parish hall.' Mrs. 1 package dry yeast or 1 cake LDspiring humanitarian accom~, Sally Baldwin, chairman ,of pro yeast " , plishment. Jt reiterates an ~~' gramming, requests that' mem" ,'% 'Cup lukewarm water ' swerving faith in God, matched Qers Wishing to attend notify INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
2 cups flour only by an undying faith in this her. ...>ress will be casual. Also '~ cup butter nation ~der His leadership.' planned by the unit is a meat 96 WILLIAM STREET
1 Tablespoon sugar " "And its theme-'That Thq 108£ supper Saturday night, Aug. NEW BEDFORD. MASS.
1 teaspoon salt May Know Thee'-is more thaa 13, at the haD. Tickets are avail , 3 large eggs Nat the theme of one organiza- able trom members or at the YfY 8-5153 ¥fY 7·9167 i egg yolk " ti(Kl 'or creed. It ,is Ute theme rectory, according to announce 1 Tablespoon milk of every God-fearing Ameri~an. ment made by Mrs. Mary Aze PERSONAL SERVfCf , 1) Dissolve the yeast 10 the "I am "certain that it 'will be vedo; chairman. ' lukewarm water. Stir, 'and let !!lIIIHHlIWHIHHlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII""HIIII""""t111UIIIIHIIIIIIII/IIIHllllllllllllllllllllftlllllllllllllllllllIIIU,,"llIlItm rest about 10 min. Union Head PrQises 2) Add the yeast mixture to cup of the flour in a sman Chicago Ordinary bowl and stir with a spoon until CHICAGO (NC)-The regional it forms a stiff ball. Tum out director of the United ,AUto on a lightly floured surface and Workers, AFL-CIO, has praised s lrnead until you get a smooth Archb;shop John P. Cody of surface on top. Yeast dough, un Cllicago 'for hill "courageo~ unequivocal like pie dough, seems to respond forthright and " better the more it is handled stand" on civil rights. ' . Robert W. Johnston cited spe and kneaded. , 3)' Cut halfway through ban cificallY' the, arcl.lbishop~s ,state-, 'WIth, a l!harp knife in the shape' ment a~ a civil right!> raJly and of an "x" like a hot cross bun. .. :letter, from ~e prel~t~ ,~ad Open each of the four petals a 1It.u ..rchdiocesan ~asses. little and drop it into a 4-eup' ~tcher half filled with break the rise, recover and place . warm water. Lo and behold, ill. Ma.the retrigeratorovernlght,or ftom 3 to ''1 minutes it will ilIIHIIRIIIIIIIHlIHIlDlfIllHlIIIII"HIH""I1H""INIII"III"IIIIIUllllltlmlllltlUllltltllltllltllltllIIlII"II"1II111U111i. ja, the freezer 2 to 3 boUrs. to the top of the water and tbilI T) Remove dough, from J'e 18', what you want it to' do. frigeratorand working quickly, '4) Tear your eyes away &om: the drowning dough and _ _, • dough gets sticky, place oa a, tloured surface and shape %,13 large mixing bowl beat the but-:.' Ol the dough in balls a little WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBLEMS ter until' it is light and flUffy. smaller· than the' muffin, pans Remove butter from the bowl you wiD use. Place the balls in at the and clean bowl. Well-buttered muffin tins. Form 5) Now place the remaining lIII equal Dumber of small balls flour, the sugar, salt and eggs in from the remaining 1,13 dough. the clean bowl and beat with Shape one end into a cone shape. SOMERSET, MASS~ an electric mixer until shiny. With one finger made a depres Add the fluffy butter and the sion in the center of the large The most friendly, democratic BANK offering yeast dough, which you haft baH and insert the tip of the temoved from pitcher and drain cone pressing it gently in place. ed. S') Cover loosely witb a towel 6) Mix aD. together wen wiih Club Accounts Auto Loans
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~ Brush lightly with _ mix ptastic wrap and cloth put into At Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St. Bridge a warm place to rise until it .. ture of egg yolk and milk. double in bulk (about an hour). 10) Bake in a 'W· iDr Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ;~.' ... :··~·n , .. , " ! ~-~ ... ff-"\' ",.,'1' I' :..i'~"·' ;'~ . . ~"f",,,, Whell risell, ~tb fin&eG .'1 i . , "~.- -- --~~-: ~:- ::i'.:~:_r;.~. ~~, ~_-':"-u~~;~
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THE ANCHOR- ' "::_'---_ _T_hu_r_s_.,_,.Ju_l_y_2-'-S,-'--1_9_6"6' ....
'Dirksen Pledges ~ongress to Act On Amendment WASHINGTON (NC) A showdown on Sen. Everett Dirksen's' proposed school prayer amendment ,has been temporarily averted but the Sen ate minority leader pledged he would "not see this session (of Congress) end without getting a vote." The Illinois senator said after a meeting of the Senate Judi ciary Committee that he had not entirely abandoned plans for by passing the committee and call ing up the amendment on the Senate floor. But he indicated , he would' wait to see how sub ~ommittee hearings on the pro posal go before deciding whether to take such action. A,j u d i cia l' y subcommittee headed by Sen. Birch Bayh 'of Indiana is scheduled to begin hearings on the amendment-to permit voluntary prayer in pub lic schooll1-on Aug, 1. Mr, Bayh has set eight days for hearings, while' Dirksen wanted them limited to two days. Senator Dirksen said he had not pressed for a vote by the full committee on the amend mimt because "it's rather diffi cult, even for a full com~ittee and a chairman, to discharge (a measure from) a subcommittee chairman when he's already set ~earings."
Repo'rt -Disclose~ " .Crime Increases WASHINGTON" (NCj - MQJl'E) than 2.75 million serious crimeiJ were reported in the United States in 1965, an increase of sm ,per cent over 1964, Uniform Crime Reports-1965, issued by the Federal Bureau of Investiga tion, discloses. All city population groups had crime increases last year. The sharpest dse , eight per cent, was in the suburbs. The rise· was seven per cent in cities of less than 50,000 inhabitants, foUl: pel!' cent in cities of 250,000 and over, and three per cent in r'!ual areas. All geographical a~.~~1l showed crime increases, 10 Iier:, ,cent in western states, eight per cent .in the northeastern states, and four per cent in ea~h the nortJII central ·and southern states., Arrests of person under 18 •. years of age made up 21 pel' cent of the total police arrests, nationwide and increased three per cent in 1965 over 1964. They were 32 per cent all arrests in suburban areas and 19 per cent in rural areas. It is noted. 'GETIING TO KNOW YOU!': Getting to "feel free and easy, with Anne Cecile Leon- however that "a relatively small ;l,td of Abbeville, La., is little Pedro, one of Anile's students in a special class in English percentage of the total young at Tlaxco, Mexko where she is one of seven students teachers from Spring Hill College,. ~ge popula,tion become involved criminal acts-less than five Mobile,Ala., this Summer. The 'Confel'enc~ on Inter-American Student Projects (CIA in out of 100."
of"
SP), with headquarters at Maryknoll, N.Y., has 830. U. S. and Canadian members teach ing in 83 similar projects all over Mexico; they represent 129 colleges and universites. NC Photo. .
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.More Religious Enter' 'Peace Corps
UTRECHT (NC):'-The bishops ,of this country a,re informing parish priests that they can now :ask permission to celebrate ','S~Il(lay Mass" on Saturdaw. •• • • I.' ~vening. . "Theposslblhty of }osm'L .... The Dutch hierarchy receivoo se~inarians iS,a real fear,"ne· perlliissio~ fro~ the Holy S~
said. tv allow Catholics in this coun-
_ Brother Ryan doesn't believe try to fulfill their Sunday MaSs
there .are any real 'grounds for I)bligation by attending a speci2lD
these fears, howev:er.' In fact,- "I Mass on Saturday evening.
',wouldn'ibe'surprised if people ·In a few parishes near RotteF who, had not trained for the re':' dam. this permiSsion' 'had been " ligious life' return 'from their granted several montlis ago. The ._~' Cor'ps work and ,enter seminaries liturgy of the special Saturday and novitiates." . t~vening Mass must be that of the "Right now," he said, '''65 'per 'Mass of the following'Sunday. cent of' all volunteers return to .. school to complete work. for a degree or to do graduate work, after their tour of duty. Many who return to college are so af SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Some fected by the time spent in the Corps that they switch from the 200 Extension volunteers who traditional majors, like science, will be assigned to home mission math and business, to fields 'of·. posts in the Fall will begin a new three-week training pro social and human relations, for gram at St. Mary's University eign affairs and teaching. "I strongly feel," he added,' here Sunday. The volunteers will be giveJl, "that j n a matter of time m'any will also be moved to try the a concE'ntrated course in dog rrlatic, moral and sacramental religious life." , theolog.f and Scripture. They will also attend lectures ,md workshops .and practical aposto I!C work.
•' Brother S,tresses Actua I Experlence
Insists on Action CHICAGO (!'o!"C)-A Brother Still open to Senator Dirksen' who took a leave of absence is the option of calling up on to serve in the' Peace Cprps said the Senate floor a resolution re here more' Religious should do lating to the United Nations 'the same. . children's. fund - now on the Brother. Leo V. Ryan, C:S.V., Senate calendar-and substitut w;as the first Religious to· re ing his prayer amendment for it., · spond to the Peace Corps' appeal Dirksen said Bayh had given 1a:>t November' for Religious to assurances of speedy' action by "put aside their clerical clothes I, his subcommittee on the' pro ~o:r a two-year citizens" sabbat posal. "I said there better, be or iClil in the Peace Corps." I won't wait," he added. With .permission of his supe " - Senator Bayh said' he felt · riors, he took a .le;;lve of absence obliged to hear testimony at as chairman of the department least from representatives of the of management at Loyola Uni major church groups or "I will versity here and ~ent into be in the position of gagging tnlining to be deputy director' witnesses." and administrator of the Peace Corps program in Nigeria. It was no new experience for him, because he was a coordi naltor of Peace Corps activities and director of three of the COLOMBO' (NC)-A definite Corps' training projects in Brazil role' has been assured for the · from 1961 to 1965. laity at the first Provincial The main valUe of the pro Council of the Church in Cey gram, he feels, lies in its ability lon, said Thomas Cardinal Coo ,to give "many more religious ray, O.M.I., of Colombo. The council, planned as a follow-up · trainees experience in actual social' situations." to the Second Vatican Council, is expected to convene in 1968. The cardinal made his an nouncement following talk by the Italian Jesuit, Father 'Ric T(t cardo Lombardi, founder of the NEW YORK (NC) - Brother :1~tter World Movement, who Thomas Spring, S.M.,. a student made a stop-over visit on his at Yeshiva University here for way from India to Malaysia. the past four years, expec~s to. Fathel: Lombardi said that the bec,()me the first Roman Catholic new period ushered in by the to recive a Ph. D. in math from Vatican council is "the era of the Jewish institution. ' the .layman." Originally a rabbinical school wQich later became a liberal arts college, and in the late '40s C'dd,ed graduate school of ed ucation, Yeshiva is operated un SINGAPORE (NC) - More der Orthodox Jewish auspices. than 30,000 persons attended ,the "I was inte):ested in a doctoral crowning of a picture of Our program not involving extensive Lady of Perpetual Succor, original l' e sea r c h," Brother The five-pound gold 'crown is Thomas .said. Yeshiva filled the ornamented with many 'precious bill--"heavy in math, light in stones donated by the women of straight education courses." Singapore. ' Archbishop Michael' Olcom endy of Malacca-Singapore pre sided over the ceremony, at VATICAN CITY'(NC)-Rose wi'>.ich the crowd 'consecrated Conway, ·former private secre thl"ir families to the Mother of tary to U. S. President Harry S. of God, recited the rosal'Y while' Truman, in a private audience ",'alking in procession and sang , with Pope Paul VI, conveyed the hymns. The archbL~hop: then. of- elder' statesman'S15reetings .... . '. fil'iati?d at Benedictio.n..., the ]~ope. '."'.~ .
Promises Key Role To Ceylon's Laity
a
Allow Sun,day Mass
·On Sa,t.urday Night
Jewish University
Award Degree
30,000 Attend ,Rite Honoring Our, Lady
T'ruman Greetings
. Brother Ryan said the secon'! appointee in' the program, an Episcopalian minister, is now ~ompleting training, and 12 seminarians are scheduled to begin training this Summer. Biggest
Obsta~le
- If the program can get 25 re
ligious' volunteers 'into the field by the end of the y'ear, he feels, it will be making tremendous progress. But there are major hurdles to be cleared, he said. "Perhaps the biggest obstacle to this program is that many bishops dislike the prospect of seminarians interrupting their studies to run off and serve in the Peace Corps. They consider this delay.a threat to the young man ever completing his train ing.
Favors Partnership In H'igher Education TRENTON (NC)-Public-pri vate partnei'ship in the field of higher education was hailed by a bishop in testimony before a legislative committee here. "A strong system of public ed ucation helps strengthen 'private education, just as s t ron g independent institutions he 1 p strengthen public institutions," Auxiliary B ish 0 p John J. Dougherty of Newark told the committee. Bishop Dougherty, pn~sident of Seton Hall University, was testifying' on behalf of 'a measu're to establish a separate governing body for New Jersey's public in:" stitutions of higher learning. Currently they are. under the jurisdiction of the State Board of Education. An· independent board. the bishop said, would. strengthen public higher educa tion and further planning by private colleges. '
Volunteers to Train '!For Mission Posts
Voc·ations Program
In Britain, Ireland
LONpON (NC)-Father God-. frey Poage, C.P., director of the' Pontifical Work for Religious Vocatic,ns of the Sacred Congre gation of Religious, will open a program of prayer for an in crease in vocations that will be held ,simultaneously in Britain and Ireland from Aug. 20 to 28. Bishops of both countries have promised to lead all-night vigils of prayer during the' period.
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HOSTS AND GUESTS: Christian' Family Movement members in Attleboro are entertainhlg Brazilian college students ~hismonth. Here's a cross-section of guests and hosts~ From left, Antonio Boucinhas, An tonio Almeida, Marie Cristine Pereira. Students on sofa are Mariza Ferrari,
Polish Press
Rejects Plea
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,
Antonio 'De Andrade, Eneida Dorsa. Also On sofa, Mr: and Mrs. Samuel C. Pino and their six children, from left, Thomas, 8; John, 5; 'AnthoJ.li':, 7~ Samuel, 4; Paul, 2; Beth, 9. Mr. and Mr:-.. Sam Pino of St. JoseJ.,h's parisllp Attleboro, are in charge of the program.
Eleven Brazilian Students Guests of Attleboro Christian Family Movement for Month of July
Op'en Industrialist$' Union Headquarters
LISBON (NC) - .Goncalvoo BONN (NC) - Polish news:", Cardinal Cerejeira, Patriarch o! papers rejected the German Lisbon, opened tbe new head Katholikentag's overtures to rec By llorothy Eastman quarters or the Union of Catho onciliation between the two na lic Industrialists in Lisbon. The As part of the Christian Family Movement's "International Life Program," 11 coup tions, and accused the German lay organization 'seeks to put int4) les in the Attleboro area have as their gue sts this month a group of college students bishops of mel'ely following the practice Christian teachiJ~gs OJ) from Brazil. The students-four boys and seven girls-are from ten different colleg-es social justice. official line of the Bonn gov ernment. in Sao Paolo. From the fourth largest city in the world and the largest in South America. In his address, Cardinal Cere..: Otto Roelege, a German Cath to a small New England city jeira commented that industry olic layman, read the declara Brazil," he says, "even in our visit to Washington, D.C. 'needed a soul to make it Chris is Quite a change. The stu tIOn of the Katholikentag on the cities." Mrs. Pino says Speaking for himself and the tian. He also said that he see!! dents are getting a taste of largest Jast day of the meeting of all that the girls seem to be most other "tudents, Mr. De Andrade better days ahead for all man New England life-and New l,erman Catholic groups at Bam delighted by our stores and, are .says "We'd like everyone to kind as technology, and man'm Englano food-that they'll ,never touring all within reach in true know how much we appreciate berg. use of it, progresses. forget, They say that lobster is feminine fashion. The resolution called for a this opportunity to live with quite common in their part of recognition of boundary differ It's been a month fully packed these families and to get. to ences involving the Oder-Neisse South America but cranberry with the "best of everything" in know them. We've had a won line, and an awareness of the sauce! Now that's something l'! New England summer. The derful impression of life in the they've never had in Brazil. traditions that bound the two students have enjoyed tours of United States and we will not PLUMBING & HEATING. INC. In CI13rge of the program in Harvard University, M.LT., Cape' forget this visit for a long, long peoples together. fOf tlomestic Besides its own offer of peace ' Attleboro are Mr. and Mrs. Sam Cod, Plymouth, Fourth of July time." ~ aM Industrial and reconciliation, the German Pino of St. Joseph's parish. The fireworks at an amusement Although all the host families '~ Sales ana Service group thanked the Polish bishops Pinos have been with CFM for park (where they had their first are not CFM members, the pro Oil Burners for their overtures last year. six years now but this is the taste of clam chowder) and even ject is being conducted by that WY 5·1631 first project of this type they've the Red Sox at Fenway Park. group. Other families, besides ever undertaken. Along 'with 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE One night they were guests the Pinos, and their guests are: . Native Vocations their six children they seem to of honor at a party given for Mr. and Mrs. Kenne'th Palmer' NEW BEDFORD be enjoying every minute of this them by Dr. and Mrs. Fernand Antonio Carlos Almedill, Mr. and Please Missioners particular CFM action program. Girouard where they had an op Mrs. Leonard Silvia-Antonio ST. COLUMBANS (NC)-Co Group Leader portunity to meet' American col Luiz da Costa Boucinhas, Mr. lumban Fathers returning here Their house guest is the group lege students. Another day they and, Mrs. William Crowley to Nebraska from Burma. wh.ose leader for the students, AntQnio were feted at a swim party by Miss Eneida Dorsa; Mr. and Mrs. government is gradually expell iii De Andrade. He is a second year the Catholic Young Adults Club' Victor Vaughan- Miss Maria Da ing all missionaris from the of Attleboro. Gloria Eboli; Dr. and Mrs. Fer country, say they are optimistic ~tudent at Esco-la De Engenharia "'onderful Impressions nand Girouard - Miss ,Mariza about the fact that 10 young, Malaua an engineering college The tour of this country is Ferrari; Dr. and Mrs, Francis men have entered the minor ,n Sao Paolo. Mr. De Andrade, SO. Dartmouth : seminary in Bhamo and five who speaks flawless English, sponsoled by the Experiment in Curran-Miss Beatriz Goncalves; : others have graduated to the fays that almost all young people Interm,tional Living, a project Rev. :md Mrs. Ray Martin : and Hyannis : in his' country learn the lan of UNESCO. The students flew Jorge Herrmann, Jr.; Mr. and major seminary in Rangoon. from Soa Paolo to Miami and Mrs. VIctor Gulino-Miss Ana In a recent intervie~. Father guage ir' elementary school. The young ,engineering stu came by bus from there to At- Oliveira; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph • So. Dartmouth WY 7-9384. Hugh O'Rourke, a' Columban missionary fro m Providence, dent was most impressed with our Ueboro. They will return by the Murray-Miss Marie Cristine : Hyannis 2921 : R. I., said, "Burma is not anti beautiful expressways. "There same route with a four, day stop Pereira: Dr. and Harold Thom ~eligious, she is anti-foreign!' rare DO, four lane highways in ill New York and ,a hy~ ,-day ... son-MISS Bel'el)iCe ,Schl'aiber. ·tw••••••••••••••••
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New 'Rynne Book', 'Reviews Final Session' of Council
By Most Rev. rultOllJ.8heen. OJ).
I
Fields, mines and roads can be helped with technical 8lIllIlI& ance but a person cannot. SO long as our relationship to other persons is that of a specialist to a layman, a technician to a "know- ' nothing-about-it;" we can never help.. "Foreign aid" is "outside aid"-alien to the problems of the heart. When a priest hears the woes of a sinner, he must see himself in that sinner. Until he knows his own weakness, he can never bring strength to another.· To pentrate the failure of another, OIlle must see one's own failure.· This is what Scripture means when it Sl13'S: Our Lord '''was made'· sin fot us." He identified Himself with the sinner.
By Rt.· Rev. Msgr. Jobn S.Kennedy· Four years ago this'. time the Catholic bishops of the world were making, plans for their journey' to Rome to attend Vatican Council II. "No one had any clear idea as to what the Council 'would be like or what it would accom plish, if anYthing. There this self-estimate is established' se.emed to be nothing 'for it by what occurred in the fourth to define, but it might an session. . Notes Major GaIDs athematize a variety of er..; rorS. In' any case, its proceedings would be secret, imd the 'world' woulG .probably. ' pay it little heed. How different' from 'such ex~ pectations di d ' the··new histor~'
ic 'fact prove to
be! 'The differ-·-·
ence i~ account ,ed for princi pally by the
influence of the
Holy Spirit
acting through
Pope John and the bishoPs,one of . whom, then' Archbishop of· Milan, was to'succeed to the' "1~" . the counCI papacy d unng a.I\&' to . direct the Johannine renewal to fu,lfill,ment. . ,, .' . ,ft.. lesser, but very infh,tential" ft\ctor in the differ~ce betyleen. expectation. ,and ultima~:~act was the. p~blicizing . of. wbat; went on in the council cha~~r. and' also ill meeting roo~, ~bere; leadeI'll shaped policies arid. pro;-, The council "fatherS were,' brought under the scrutiny '.and judgment of the whole Church, . and. the whole world, and pub- . lic ,opinion, ca~e to. be!lr on them. Who is to say that the Hoiy Spirit did not have a part iit· that too? '. . . . . Candid Account One of the piOneers.in 'pre septing a candid and criticai 'ac.. f th, e count .. of thethworkings d 0 '. counc!' was e pseu onymous R h Lett · X BVler ' ynne, Cit w osesented ers an f rom Vatlcan y. pre, . · d Innova t lon, an ca use d a sen sa · h d to d·t t lOn, ar ere I now; so quickly have we come to take for grar.ted what' Ryrine accom
,;,
Of revelations there are few in'this work. One concerns the Frailco go'vemmEmt's attempt to secu;re' changes in the final draft of. the pastoral constitution on the ,Church in .the Modem World. Another deals with cer~ tain' bishops' remonstr'ance ~'" FJ\THER KOLBE the' Holy Father after his parti cipation in a liturgy.of the word. alonl~ with non';'Catholic observers, at St. Paul's basilica. Per haps the most, interesting has to do with the agonizing formula tion of the council's pronouncemeni on marriage, The affirmation Of epis~op,d:' PADUA (NC)-The beati c()lle,giality is held to~ be the' fication cause' of Father' most, important-fruit of. the ,', CQl1n1eil,. but otQer, majoI: gains ' Maximillian·Kolbe, whO gave are noted: as, for example,' the' his life -to sl:l.ve that of a
biblltlal' emphasis in the doCU- ·fellow prisoner in a Nazi con~
ments,' the acknowledgement Of . ,~Iltration camp, has taken . a,
pluralism in theology and diSci . major . step forward' with' the pline" a changed attitude toward 'oPeohig'of the apostolic process those outside the Church. of the cause here. " " This is an excellen'~, generally Father Kolbe was born in jl:adidloUs re<:ord,with '. several Zdunka-Wtlla," p,o I an d "and: appendices containing' addresses' joined thE;, ,Conventual Francis-, of th,~ Holy Father and some of cans in. 1907. He was·a semina,.. the council texts. rian at the Franciscan house in HirosblmaNow . Padua. and as a result both the ordinary and 'apostolic processes Rafael Steinberg has put in a' were conducted here. number' of ,years as Tokyo cor-' The apostolic process is con: respondent for Ainerican news ducted' directly by officials of maga:~ines, becoming thOroughly the Sacred Congregation of Rites familiar with the Japanese scene, and is begun only by authoJiza people, and, language. In Post- tion. ,of the pope; .." script from Hiroshima (Random ,.ordained in 1919,·Father Kolbe House" New York: $3.95). he 'de-' returned to Poland, .wh,e,rehe scribes that city 20 years afte'r founded .the Militia of the. Im the atomic bomb fell on 'it. . maculate Conception, a pious· as~ . It ·is now a city transformed',' sociation .dedicated to spreading bigger than ever, bustling' and' clevotioll to. Mary Immaculate prospEirous, with very li'ttle' ap ", the press, ' radio and, thro,ugh parent· evidence of the horror h' h I d f other publications. A Second w IC p ummete rom a bright niilitia center was establishect Summer sky in 1945. 'Business is through his efforts when be wai' plished, flourl·.c:hing, as are bars, .cabarets, a.,missionary , in Japan from 1930 Th k b R A ynne 00, e and d~lDce halls. Everyone seems. to 1936. .. . . ' . new Fourth Session (Farrar, Straus fanatie~ally interested -in the for ". ' and Giroux, New York. $5.50), tunes of the Carps _ the local He J;'eturned to Poland in 1939 is p~esently at hand. AS the title profes:;ional baseball team. Much and was arrested by the Naus p,roclaims, it' reviews the Coun of. the population comprises pea-, less than a month after the out~ cil's final session. from mid-.· pIe who came to Hiroshima after break of World War II. Sept~mber to early December, the war, and they pronounce it He was released for a tIme but 1965. In tone, .it much resembles I t 1 h th l' was rearrested in February, its immediate. predecessor, The a p ea:;an pace, were e IV 1941. He was held first at the Third Session, so .much and so ing is comparatively easy., Pawiak concentration camp and ~.deservedly.admired when it au..' These people declare that the then 'later transferred as 08 . past should be forgotten, as do WleClm , . ,(Auschwitz). pe'ared a 'year ago'. It begins by setting the stage' ~any IJurvivors ,of the bombing. When' a prisoner escaped frOID But .un d er thi s bland surface th e for the fourth session, suinma ri'zing .what had been aeb,ieved, llrober, discovers. re~entment, the latter camp,' the' German what remained' to be done, and ""tt ul erness. h a t re d '. not geI)e~aI commandant ordered 10 men to
wh'at then seemed to be' the but fairly prevalent and .stJ:ong. die by" starvation. One of the
likely . outcome' o~ conie~tion men chosen, Franciszek Gajown . Illedru,ction of Hearl . " " iczek, wa~ .the .father of a famUy:- , eoncerning some key i~t.ies.· The ravages of the bombing Father Kolbe volunteered to die
....,.. ' Pope Paul ~ero, c~n. be, seen in, the badly in his 'placeand was permitted
..There follows a successioB' of scarred, and the toll,:continues to do so.
in.' the' higb of leuk:e ' were shut up chapte rs Whl'ch, gl've, the sub " incidence .. . . . The' 10 p!isoIiers stance' of deba~, the outcome of mIa ant. cancer and the liriger_ in a'windowless cell. After two v,oting, ,the maneuvering ..and ing fea:r (so far, not really. war'; weeks, Filther Kolbe, who 'had agitation, the discusions in some ranted) of injury to th9Se yet to ' led his fellow prisoners in Ros':' .bonl.·Mr. pic~tires, . ••, ission meetm'gs, the l'oter-, be •. t ' .. Steinberg '.. .' .' . , anes,' hymns and ,prayers, ... and co m...... ventions -ObVI'OUS and no'"• so no ticrudely bu·t impressiveJy, t~e '. ." three others survived, They obviQus-of the Holy.Fatber, ..the cOl'! numg physical damage and were ordered killed with an in.... shifting mood of t,I:le assem~ly, 8~fferitlg. . , jection of phenol. All this is sensitively and sen_Ev~n more striking' is' th~ sibly reported. testimoll) to what one survivor If Pope John and the progres-' 'speaks of as the destructioh sives were the heroes of previ of ~he human heart. The bomb ous volumes, with Pope Paid ing did not bring out the best WHEELING (NC)-Fifty Vis scoring ever more heavily in in its victims. Rather, it drove itation Sisters from throughout volume three, it is the latter people 'to ruthless selfishness. . who emerges as thE' hero of the Not surprising, either, is the the United States are expected concluding volume. He is quoted fact that in Hiroshima, with its to attend the order's first reli gious institute at Mount de as saying. "I read in the news .tragic experience, pacifiSt senti paper:> that I cannot make up ment is 'overwhelming. This city Chantal academy here in West my mInd, am restless, timid, and cannot forget what the extreme Vir~nia,Aug. 8 to 13. torn by conflicting advice •• * effect of modern war is. None . The institute is scheduled to 'I may perhaps be slow. But I of the rest of us should" and update the order and to build know what I want. MteI all, it reading Mr. Steinberg's taut an "esprit de corps" among tlte is my privilege to think about book i:. a P9werfll' meana to Ststers, said Sister M., Hele~ . matters first." The accuracy of that higbly desirable end: .. . " ~n~w~~tJQe~,.fl5i\~~,'i-! J:,-". ,w1 ,.".,,;, ~·':::i·~~:,:,i1,;~JI~[H(hWlti(ft~~!lUfi{llA[[llltl{i;m;{hlll{!I[E(iuUi,lt!(htmGhtiill;,alilli.1\{@liTfl,{lt.
Advance .Cause Of PlI'oest Killed In Nazi Camp
grams.
Visitation Sisters. To Update Order
When you read of the pove",., of our· missionaries. ale bunger ,of. the little ones., mink not, .."H~ .fortunate am ·1 uulI, bow well-fed!' Ratber say: :''They.~n my .companions in misery, excePt mine " Is WOI'lle-it, is in the depths of. my, souL, Knowing wha~ they are,. I know what I am. Since I need help, Im_ help them.:" ' , This takes you off the stepladdell" of technical assistance, where you hand out to those below you. You are now below them or at ,best. even with them. TTl1eir bodies need food but oh, my: soulll .' , GOD LOVE YOU to Christopber '8., .,' for'lge sent"beeause other cbildren Deed , . It ,more thaD I do." ...,' to A.8; who earned $80 for GOd's poo . by ·carryin&" mail. overiime· •. ·•·• to,tJ-year~Ic1' Kathy for $5.36. "For 5· months KathY has ·saved her.' allowanee' and has 'done elOra Jolbsto· make money for the Missions•. :Tbis' has ~ •. sacrifice for bel' because ber two sisters aDc1, two brotber. have 0" 'becDable-to buy all the things, wbjch she can'~buY.'r •.• toMrs.;;J W.M.· ,for $10.. ''I am', a . convert. Wleb': five cbildren 'ID sehooL ; my"busband's salary as ' a post!&1 clerlX Ir:aves very little for so..· called 'American luxuries' but ,we are llruly' blessed. Our Catholle faith is our most treasured' blessin&", 80 we send ibis sacrifice, , in .order to sureU witb' otbers." . , ; . to '·M.D., for $120. '''I IIIIl enclosing tbe dividend I, received from shares in 'a credli unloa, : In thanksgiving for so many blessings!'
. In answer to innumerable demands the recorded talks' of Bishop Fulton -J. Sheen, whIcJt he bas 1,lSed privately for over 40 years to help people of all f.aiths find meaning and deeper happi-. ness in life;. are now available to the genet'al public em 25 records TI;IELU'E' IS WORTH LIVING SERIES In 50 talks of, about 30 minutes ,eacb,. His Excelle~cy offerf> .wiSE'.and inspiring guidance on ,problems affecting all age groups,' such as love, marriage. an~ . raising children, suffering, anxiety and loneliness, alcoholism and death, as well as principle~ of the ':::hristian faith. Priced at $57.50" for the complete set and manufactured by.-the, RCA custom clept., the LP high-fidelity album can be ordered from Bishop Fulton J. Sheehan at his office,366 Fifth Avenue. New York; N.Y. 10001.
'Cut out ibis eolumn, pin your· sacrtHce to it anel mall It ...' Most Kev.Fulton J. Sheen, National DirG!ctOr of The Society for the Propagation of the Faitb, 366 Fifth b.venue, New York, New,' Yor:k 10001. or to your Diocesan Director, Itt. Rev. Msgr. RaJ:- ' m()~d T. Considhie, 368 North Main Street, Fall River,.Massacha set~ ,
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Polish Scholars, Scientists Internationally Kno"Wll
The foundations of cultural one of great advancement. born kings were largely indif life in Poland were laid by the
Most notable elements were:
ferent to Poland's welfare.) 14th Century King Kazimierz the achievements of the Educa
Right to Veto Wielki, who truly "found Poland tional Commission appointed in
Democratic extremism in Po in wood and left it walled."
1773 as the first Ministry of Ed
land -gave birth to the liberum In 1364 the University of Kra
ucation in Europe: the educa
veto, the right of one member of kow was founded and by the end tional and other reforms of
the Diet to veto any legislation. of the 15th Century it was held Stanislaw Konarski, one of
Nevertheless, this requirement in high repute as a school of which was the development of
of unanimity had a beneficial both astronomical and human
the "Collegium Nobilium" - a
aspect in that it served to make istic achievement. The polish as
school for ·the. training of states
compromises acceptable to the 1ronomer,Kopernik (Coperni
men: the Constitution of May
minority while keeping the ma~ cus), entered the university in Third, 1791.
jority from abusing its power. -4 1491. Two other outstanding fig
At this time also the first device that circumvented thl. ures of that era were Jan Dlu
Polish national theater came into liberum veto was the "confeder gosz (1415-1480),' Poland's first existence, 1765: historical writ ation" formed by Diet members leal historian and· Wit Stwosz, ing and poetry experienced a for immediate action in the pub~ whose wood carvings, chiefly new life and literary periodicals lic interest. Often the Diet as Ii the altar piece in St. -Mary's also were founded. Advances whole confederated to reach Church, Krakow, are among the were made too in such areas as decisions by majority vote. most notable in Europe.
philosophy, economics, political The liberum veto came under Tidal waves of discovery, in science and pedagogy. powerful attack by the ablest ventionand interest in learn
National Spirit Grows Pole of the 18th Century, the ing brought new levels of civi
The 19th Century was r mere educator· Stanislaw: Konarski, lization to the Western world carry-over of the last part of the equally famous for his founding . during the late 15th Century. 18th. Along came men who play of the Collegium Nobilium for They reached inland and ed great roles in the formation the education of futur": states brought about the ."Golden Age" of the growing national spirit men. This priest's ideas and of .:roland's cultural life, affect Mickiewicz, Slowacki and Kra those of other leaders of the ~ng architecture, art, literature-, sinski in poetry and drama, BEATIFICATION SOUGHT: The causes for beatifi Polish Enlightenment went into education,. manners and every whose works each in a particular phase of life. ' . way sustained the Poles during cation of a Polish mother and daughter who jointly founded the Writing of the model demo 'cratic Constitution of the Third, . 'Goldea Age' th' darkest years of despair; the Sisters of the Resurrection in Rome in 1891, have been of. May, 1791.' . The Age established for all ,Fredro, a writer of the classic introduced in the Sacred Congregation of Rites. The found .Rises Again
·time th.e type and tradition of comedy; the historian Lelewel; ress, Moth~r Celine Gludzinska Borzecka, left, died in' Cra- This Constitution, the 175th an
intellectual life in Poland. The renowned painters such as -Ma cow in October, 1913. Her daughter and co-foundress, Moth niversary of which is being ob
two currents of .humanism, the tejko, Brandt, Wyspiansk~ and 19()6 'at the age served this month, was adopted
Italian Renaissance. and the the Gierymskis; and reaching er Hedwig Borzecka, right'die4 in Poiand by the Poles after the first Pll!:-' Protestant Reformation,' w ere our present day such writers of of 42. NC Photo. .tition of their nation 'by Russra, the agencies which produced the great power- as Sienkiewicz,' "Golden Age" and influenced an Reymont, ,·Zeromski, .. Kraszew Carta," the Pact of Kassa, was .introduce legislation without Austria and .Prussia. This docu eultural development. . ski and Prus. . . .._ . drawn up in the year 1374. It . the cons~nt of.the people. ment laid groundwork for the .f . curbing of the gentry's feudal· In 1580 King Stefan Batoty
Under the pen name of Joseph . placed limits on the power 0 Social ReforJIUI founded the University of Wilno · Conrad,Jozef Konrad Korzeni . . - f thO b ·f·t f th . po:we.rs by extend.in. a the right. e. Cr'edit' .f·or' the em'anci'patl'on' . to the townspeople and '" ' . or e ene. 1 0 peasan and in ·1594 Jan Zamoyski esiab';' owsld . became a· great English· the, kmg fromijle then widely held rev~ try., " ·lished his famous Academy at novelist. The _work of. PollUid's CODunUlllty: Poland pioneered among Eu- erence for· royal· power must' go . lthe Constitution was short -Zamosc. The flow of'· students first great wQman poet, Maria d h owever, as two more par. abroad was increasing to a .point Konopnicka, expresses a sympa - - ropean nations in civil liberties., 'to the gentry''. On- the o·ther h'and, . l'lve, the landowners' did not realize .titions wiped Poland from the : of about 150 a year and these thy for the poor and oppressed. In 1430-two and a half centu v!~nt to Padua and Bologna ei The poems of Poland's most· out-· ' ries before England's Habeas "that the extreme liberty they en ·map of Europe· until the'end of . lllecially. standing philosophicallyrist, Jan Corpus· .!\ct-a law' was' enacted J·o·yed was· a danger to the state's W orId W ar I, when the nation The first Polish printing press Kasprowicz,possess' strength and in Poland safeguarding person 'future. Their exploitation of the_ rose again under the -leadership The Polish citizen peas-ants was sc·athl'ngly' de . 0 f M ars. h · , a iJozefPilsudski and was set up in Krakow in 1474. 'have . as their main 'theme the and pI:operty. had unlimited freedom to' form nounced by the JesuI't Peter " s t . . . b planl -patriot Ignacy Paderew• . Libraries and public museums struggle of a heroic human -spirit Skarga, and 'also by Andrew ski. ' began to grow, the forerunners Of · against an apparently perma'nent associations and express In pu 'lic meeting or in print the most Fryca Modrzewski, whose The the great Polish libraries of later' power of evil.· .' Refo'rm of the Republic (1551) days - the Krakow University· Since World War I arid World' .. daring c~mvictions. Survives ReformBtlo~ . was written in Latin and trans Library, the Zaluski, the Za War II, the literary and artistic These civil· libertie$ made, it lated into Spanish, German and moyski and others. ~ . · achievements are 'less known possible for Poland to survive Russian, as well as Polish. Such a change of life naturally and valued by the rnass popula .the Protestant Reformation with Modrzewski pleaded for social brought on new problems - re t~on due to the preoccupation of WARSAW. (NC) - Wroclaw's ligious, political, literary, artis both the artist and his audience none of the civil wars, massacres . :-nd political- reforms that came and burnings of dissenters that only much hlter. He devoted Archbishop Boleslaw Kominek tic and social. These in turn with political ·and· social prob extended . throughout E.urope. great space to the education of urged that priests and people . stimulated responses from such lems. stay away from a government Leaders of the Unitarian and children, emphasizing the train . Literary Heritage' men as Zamoyski, a scholar, statesman, true Christil;m, and Still, that literary heritage 01. other church groups .found ref . ing of character and intellect. sponsored memorial· to Pope ." one 'of the leading men of this the 19th Century is remembered uge in Poland and established His call for "caretaking of the John XXIII. congregations and publishing poor" .foreshadowed modern so Warning that the 'memori~l hi epoch, and Piotr Skarga, priest, and loved as one of Poland's politically inspired and seeks to cial insurance. reformer and court preacher. greatest cultural achievements. houses. The Pacta Conventa of 1573 discredit Stefan Cardinal Wys Poland, Jhough five centuries It has become the common prop proclaimed for the first time in . Elect Kings zynski, Prim'ate of Poland, Arch old. was like a youth arrived at erty of the entire nation and has Europe constitutional religious Modrzewski's reference to the bishop Ko~inek stated that ".this assumed the dignity and glory of freedom for all citizens. In spite . "republic" was accurate for Oid . manhood. Century of Centuries a great- national institution to . of this tolerance, Catholicism in Poland was so called despite its event has been organized with out· knowledege of the Church' In the first half of the 16th this day. Poland emerged fr~m the Ref kings who, after i572, were even hierarchy and outside its juri&. Century, Latin was the medium Great are the accomplishments ormation. victc;>rious. The .intel elected. The 'formal title "Repub diction" 0:': writing and conversation-to in the other arts: lectual ferment created by the lic" appears in the Pacta Con In a letter circulated among the extent that it was said there -in music with Frederic Cho were more Latinists, in P~land. pin, Poland,'s greatest 'musician Reformation stimulated the ~enta, whicQ made the king priests of the dioCese; the arch';' growth and enrichment of Polish swear obedience to the right of than in Italy. . bishop pointed out that repeate.d and the. musical embodiment of literature. the nation to rise against him if requests to build churches dedi Standard literary Polish had its the nation's spirit; the pianists Earlier, the Jews- had· found he tried to. b,oldlegisl.ative ~_. cated to Pope Jonn had bees beginnings in the speech. of :the Jozef Hofman, Igna'cy Paderew semblies. .turned down· ·by government
Polish upper classes in the mid ski, Artur Rubinstein, Wanda refuge ,in Poland. from persecu (The right of the nobles to authorities:
dle and later decades o{ the 16th Landowska, the violist Bronislaw tion suffered almost everywhere Century. It was during the Re Hubermann, and. orchel;ltra COn - else. The Book- of Jewish Knowl - elect their king .was. later to "Th9usauds of people' were edge says oUhe Statute of ~alisz bring the downfall of·the repub formation Period that both Prot ductor Artur Rodzinski; . w 0 r s hip pin g in makeshift estants and Catholics sought to . ~ in scholarship and science issued by. Boleslaus the Pious in lic. Austria,' Saxony, Sweden, ehurches .- . . but the office of ..., . , France .and 'Russia all pushed religious affairs not .only does reach the people .byproducing v.·ith .the scientists Wroblewski , 1~64: . Proteets J<:wB their, own candIdates and won .not give permission for new ~eligious works in the native and Olszewski ·who succeeded in tongue. Simultaneously, 'there iiquefying air in the .1880's; Na .'nn this celebrated cbarter . followings !lmong the various churches, but has even ordered was also a fioweringof secular tanson; Ii famed mathematical -. the only Ol).e of its ki~d in the eliques of Polish lords. With the that a church under constrtiction history Qf Christendom ane one . exception of Hungarian-born . be dismantled to its foundation;" literature in. Polish. Mikolilj physicist; Raciborski who con Rej is credited as being the tributed to botanical research; , which .had 'beenpl'Omulgated . Stefan Batory, these foreign concluded the archbishop. Father of the Polish language Professor L. Petrazyski and his with the consent of the nOb'Jl'. . and Jan Kochanowski is known original work op the evolutIon and burghers - the king ma~e !!IIllIIllIIlllIIlIIlIllIlIIllIlllIIlllllIIllllllllltnlllllllllll"UlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111111111111111111111l' as the Father of Polish literature. of law; Malinowski, renowned plain his resolve to give the ~==-Your ;==;; Thus was the 16th Century the_ in the field of anthropology, and same protection to Jews as to Maria Sklodowska-Curie, who Christians and to guarantee century of centuries, the period which established the nature, with her French husband did them full freedom of worship. Moreover, he forbade Christians direction and the intensity of the research that led to the dis on pain of severe punishment Polish culture. It was not until covery of radium. The international recognition to desecrate Jewish synagogues, 11764 that anything notable was edded to thii. side of Polish life. given to these outstanding Polish religious schools or cemeteries." scholars and scientists is a source Great Advancement In 1493 Poland became one o~ the first countries to have a par In that year Stanislaw August of major pride to Poland today. Pioneer iD Civil Liberties liament of two houses. The first
Poniatowski ascended the throne and started his 31 years of reign. Polish Americans point with formal constitution-the Statutes §_. §.
Indeed, ~his period was dark on pride to the Poles' illustrious o. Nieszawa - was written to Tel. 997-9358 § < the political side: but consider history of devotion to freedom 1454 when the king was depriv-. § UNION WHARF. FAIRHAVEN ing the c~tural !'l5P,ec:t, it w8ll- and democrac?y.Polan~'8·~Magna. e:.. ..~ th~ right. to declare war 01' .iuIllUlIJIIIIIJIJIIIllllliUlWIIJIIlBllmllIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIUIUIUIUIIJIJIIIIIIIIUIIIIHINIIIIIUUlHlUI!WM5
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HAVE A
HOME
CLAM BOIL
Maclean's Sea Foods
'fish on Fridays'
THE ANCHOR-Dioc~. ~ FCift "iver:-Thurs., July 28, 19.66 ". ';.'
Binds 'in' Taiwan
Catholic Organizations Supp'ort Demonstration Cities Program WASHINGTON (NC) - Pri
.ate agencies are giving enth\l~
eiastic backing to a measure ~~
fore, Congress which provides
'101' the most comprehensive at tack yet proposed on poverty In urban centers. , The bill contains more than "'brick and mortar" proposals, and aims at improving the qual ity of city life on a broad scale, the ,National. Conference of C"atholi<.: Charities has adviseQ, dio~esan directors of charities throughout the country. .' Tlte Conference's interest st~~s in part from the fact that tl;te bill•. for the first time, uti:-: lizes, "all types of programs for the',comprehensive rehabilitation. of ,city-social and cultural,' as well as physical improvement." The measure "emphasizes total
rommuniiy planning in improv':'
ing the quality of urban lif~
a critical . domestic problem
facing cities all over the United
States today," the National
Catholic Coordinating Commit
tee on Economic Opportunity
has stated.
. Local Programs Despite that it developed from the 'message President Johnson , sent' to Congress on Jan. 26' of this year, the Demonstration Cities'Program seems not to have attracted the national attention its scope and possibilities me.rit. The bill providp.s that a selec tion. of "demonstration cities" , wUrbe made, based upon 10calIy pr-epared and scheduled pro grams for rebuilding or restoring' entire sections and neighbor hoods' of slums and blighted areas designed to· bring to bear upon:' ,the project all the aid available from Federal and local private and government sources;' . In addition, the Federal goV'.i. E'mment will: make a grant' 6f 80 per cent of the cost of devel oping the comprehensive pro
l1I'a~, and a grant of SO. per cent
of' the cost of admiDistering it. Requires Matehing As it would work, grants-in
aid, {yom programs of various Federal departments and agen des for housing and urban im provement, for anti-poverty ac tivities, for education, vocational rehabilitation, health,' weUare, etc., would be focused in a com prehensive demonstration pro gram. Each of these grants requires l'ome non-Federal matching, and under the Demonstration Cities Program the matching require ments would continue.' However; .it would be deter mined what the totai' amount of the non-Federal matching would come to when all the grants had been brought together in one program, and the Federal government would make a spe dal demonstration city grJlnt equal to 80 per cent of theag gregate of such non-Federal matching.
Plans Congress Of Young Adults ATLANTA (NC)-Arch,bisbop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta has announced' that a Congress of Young Adults will be convened in September so··th-at the "furic tiOl'is; .talents and charisms 'of (lUI' young adults, can, be, recog nized and utilized within the Christian community." , The, congress, set· fof sepi. 24 aria 25, will consist of elected delegates proportionate tl;l' ea~h p~~h as dete~n~. by . the
Y~ung'Adult COlpmitt~com~ pQ~ of' .person~ betw~~*" t~
AID BY AIR: Brother Aaron Camilleri, S.V.D., 26, from Lin :oln Park, Mich., has been assigned to fly all 'supplies ~ nd personnel to remote mission stations in New Guinea, v here the Society of the Divine' Word maIls the four dioc ~es of Alexishafen, Wewak~GQroka and Mt. Hagen. N:::: Photo.
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ages ·()f 18 and 30. :.' .... ., Two, pri~sts alld a,l~y, c~ngr~ committee acting .~n ~he -rol~1 qf - '. ST.' ,AU :;UStfINE ,(N.C)"·~ Jiatson' assis~ . the, Xoung ; ~·perman. nt :cross commemo AdUlt' ,Congress;in ~ma~g' i.~' "rating the j lr'stknowlIl iaisingof voice he'ard in the pI'ogi-~of re-' the cross j rl the United States :-rri:"Faith Project
newal in the archdiocese;' The haS' been' installed' .here. The :S~eks 7,000 Jobs, renewal program will, c;\llmina\e 208-foot-st; inless steel cross is : CHI€ A GO (NC)-Leaders. of in an archdiocesan . synod next at the Mi: sion of Nombre' de Chicago's. major faiths have. es-, Fim;' .Archbishop Hallinan s3ld, 'Dios, the I ldest mission in the , :'The young adult congress 101- . country.' . •ablished a Tri-Faith Employ lows' convocation ,of'8 lay.' con.Dedicatic :t ceremonies w:i1l Qe ~ent Project to help find jobs for some 7,000 adults during the gress . and a religious 'cong~ss . held inOc ober. parlier'this ,year. The lay con"This' g eat croSs," Father toming year., " The,project is sponsored by the gte$s, recommended that" the Michael V Gannon said; "has ~icago Conference on Religion CongreSs of Young Adults be . been raisel! to mark the site ' .where the ~ross. of Christianity and Race in cooperation with the beld. Office of Economic Opportunity.• ~jn a 'directive, the archb,ishop was first . ,lanted in our land It ,has received' ~ $154,423 gran( 'tlrge,d that "o,uryoung, people : fourcentui ies ago, on Sept. 'iI,. from the' federal . government ~ seek in. the memory. of young St., . 1565," ·stt. ssing its 'spiritual rather than its Bet up seven nefghborhoo!i em~ John the Apostle and the saintly significanCE , ploymeht cen~ers in , Chic~gO, Pope John. of our time, that' physical si: e. On that Ii lY, the St. Augustine eommunities where the problem' blend of, the old and the new, ~f unemployment and underem~. of experience and new insights, mission di 'ector recalled, the 'Spanisll C~ p~ain-General Fedro ployment is gravest. Thl'l'cen~e~ that our :world needs.".', Menendez Ie Aviles landed on ....ill be staffed by neighborhood, the Florida shore to found the ~sidents. ,', .' , f 't :' The Chica'go' "(;:onference on on erence 0 ar orst Christ an settlement in the New World It was in St. Augus :lteligion and Race,unites Roman 400th" Anniversary tine aJso, he noted, that the Catholics, Orthodox, Protestants;, 'Jews and Adglicans ,in'attacking DUBU~UE. '(NC) 'i- Leading first' Cat,hl lic .. parish and the, racial problems. ' authorities on Bartholomew de first Indian millsion were found I' .' :' Las '.Casas, the "apostle of the' e((.by"~pal ish ,priests. :KC Clambake, Slated Indies;" will mark the 400th ·"We' do not wish,", he con-, anniversary of his death with an. tinued, ,"to ~mphasize the height ;In Fairhaven
international conference here in of the erc ;s, though towering : McMahon Council 151, N~w Iowa· 'On his relevance to modern,' it is. We dl not wish to empha :Bedford Knights of Columbus; times. ,;ze' t~~ WE ight or the material, ,will sponsor its annual clambake The conference will' be held or the en~ ineering. features of at 1 Sunday afternoon, July 31 from Sept. 29 to Oct. 1 at the . tb~... cross, though impressive at, Brown's Pavilion. Arrange Aquina'! It'lstitute Scbool of,The:- tb~se are., rhe purpose of the mehtS, under the directiolt of Ology. , , _ cross is nol simply monumental. ' Grand Knight Antonio Gomes, Las Casas. whose father ae"" 8l'e being handled by Ronal~" l'OlTlP.ani~ Columbus on his sec~ O'Barry, general chairman and,: ond t~ip to the New World, spent. O'~OURKE William N. Whelail, co-chairman. 'most of his life'iil the West, Iii charge of tickets is George., J~eJ~s and Central America trt ~ral ~mieux. Games andcsports will ing to Ilbolish Indian slavery ~ on the day's program. and .better the life of all Indian.s~ ~?,l. ,~ e'~o.~d "Str~et
r.-- ,In additiop ,to Gomes, other ,Largely;, through his efforts th~ 'FaIr ~iver, Mass.
hew council '. Wficers include! , NeW" LaiWs of 15.f2were adopte<l . ' "::~ 'j:)) 9-60ti~'
y/alter J. Chase, deputygr~~ :'. t~ prq~ Indians in the Spanish ~Ilight; George Lemieux, chan~ ,. l'Olonies; 'He was later co~: I,,~~ ;~tdrie~cM~~",. ~llor; William. A. Bartpn, :~,': ; crat~,~.p~hoP.·of Chia~as b~ !Ilqrder; Raymond -1. 'Lebarge, ~them MeXICO. He died :.m Re~., d ·Efttb:J.!.:..':"-"· .
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a site~ ItS purpose is spiI;itual; to' men's .. :, quIcken .,', . heans. ''The·' cross;'~ Father nannon concluded, "will be ,a 'beatcon of faith' by, day ,and, ·nigl'lt. Its, purpose is to ·,·remind all m'en who. pass, or enter St. Augustine, by land or by sea, of the relig ious beginnings of ,our country: Those beginnings, took . place here." .
to 'make
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GOOD NAME
GEO. ,:(J"HARA
CHEVROLET
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95 Brudge St., Lowell, 'i/\aSs. ',' let' 45&-6333: A~xiliarylP'gants 'BOSTON"
1001 K;ngs~Wy.
CAMDEN, i.....
'NEW BEDFORD
OCEANPORT; N.J.'·
MIAMI ."
LONDON (NC) - The hiring of teachers' in 'Catholic schools in 'Britain is noi'being' handled' in· a 'profeSsional' milliner, the ASsociation' of ciluioiic Teacher Training Students has ".~harged here. . . " . , The association, said .a survey. showed that, one-third. of Cath olic faculty vacancies were be ing filled ,through private con tacts rather than open adver tisements" and .tbat one-fourth of such vllcancies were filled without preliminary. interview..
GREAT 'DEAL
,PRiNTE:RS ' Main Office
Criticizes, Me~hods
Of Hiring Teachers
Means A';',
NO JOB TOQ BIG NONE TOO SMJUL
SULLIVAN'
TAlPEI(NC) ...,.. Abstinence from meat on Fridays will be once more obligatory' for Cath olics in Taiwan from Aug. 1'7. The bishops here have dir~cted that in accordance with the apo stolic constitution on fast and abstinence issued on Feb. 17 by Pope Paul VI, abstinence is to be observed on every Friday which does not fall on a holy day of obligation, while abstinence and, fast is to be observed on Ash Wednesday and on Good Friday. Dispensation from the law of Friday abstinence, with the ex ception of the Fridays in Lent,' was granted' the Catholics of Taiwan by the Holy See at the request of the bishops of Taiwan in July, ,'1960. ' . . The bishops, however, have ruled that Fridays falling within the period. starting on the last day of the Chinese or Lunar year until the 15th' day of the first lunar month shall· be excluded from the law of abstinence "in accordance with time-honored custom." The Chinese Spring a~d Auiumn Festivals are simi larly excluded. The bishops cautioned priests, in view of the fact· that most ,Catholics here are new Christi ans, "to avoid maki~g th'e burden , of the law too .heavy, and to be ready.to grant dispensations trom abstinence for reasonalbe causes."
Open IEvenings
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Soys Scriptures Provide -Base For Renewa.
Fall, River.
EDMONTON (NC) ' - A Scripture scholar said here that genuine renewal ill the Church must involve person-
Three times daily, over the flat farmlands of Bryant, S.D., a Fall River'ben rings the Angelus. Although the Bry·ant community is less than five per ~ent Catholic, there is a strong feeling of pride in the bell-and the lovely modern church it overshadows. Church and bell are the result of the labors of Rev . Thomas Connolly, a native of Sacred Heart . h F II R' er and f""r the past anine IV, years. 'pastor parIS, v of St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Bryant. i
THE ANCHOR 1S Rings Daily over' Farmlands ·Thurs.,· July 28, 1966 Of Bryant, 'South Dakota Prelate Pro ises
al commitment to the Bible. Father Stanley Polan, SS.CC., of Queen o:f Peace Seminary, Jaffrey Center, N. H., told 90 Sisters, priests and laity, most. of whom were teachers, that they "The church has the same must develop a "warm and Jiv- . name as Fall River's Cathedral," lng love for the Scripture." he points out. Father Polan made the stateBut how did·a Fall River bell ment at a six-week Summer find its way to South Dakota? eourse on "Recent Trends in Originally the enormous bell New Testament Studies," which hung in the Quequechan Engine he is conducting at St. Joseph's House at Prospect St.reet and College On the campus of the Highland A venue in Fall River. University of Alberta here in Purchased by the cit.y in 1874, Canada. it formed part of a telegraph Must Change Attitudes fire alarm system, but was soon While knowledge of the Scrip- superseded by more modem tures is the basic aim of the lec- means of communication, and tures which run' five days a week . was used, says Father Connolly, for two hours each morning, only "for really big fires and no F~ther Polan warned the group school signals." . againstthi,nking they could reEventually be'] tower and ben turn to their classrooms in the were slated for demolit.ion, but Fall and merely' impart the at about that time Father Con knowledge they had gained from nolly returned to his home town the course; . for a vacation, heard about the He said the course must do bell and requested ~t for his more than this: t.he teachers' at- yet-to-be-built church. titudes . and orientation must Insllires Buiindiing change. He got the bell and had it Father Polan' described the shipped to Bryant, where it course as "practical," using stood in front of his rectory for modem scholarship. The course a year, causing something of a .., divided into 'two parts and sensation in a p.art of,thecoun treats 12 topics, including: The try where there is no tradition Bible in the Church Today, Sig- of bell ringing. nificance of Pentecost, and ' "Somehow," says Father Con Modern Techniques of' Gospel noil y , "the bell seemed to spark Interpretation. " construction of the church. We The priest said there, is evi- went right ahead from then on." ~enc~ that ordinary Catholics The' parish, he explained, was are becoming more aware of, the , 77 years old, and a, new church Scriptures and are reading them building was sorely needed. more than ever before. Today the 55 families of St. Matter of Living Mary's parish, haVe a' church - He said this is One of the re- second to none. Seventy-seven suIts of using the vernacular in feet high, the ben tower stands the liturgy and the biblical besidt:. the church., It is of steer foundation which is now being construction, with an aluminum' given to' religion' courses in . grillwork surrounding the sec schools. tion housing the ben. It is illu-' · "The replacement of the ques- 'minated at night and 'has become tron and answer method with a a landmark for miles around. dynamic catechetics is showing "Visitors, mostly non-Catho children that faith is a matter of lic, are In the church every day,· living, not. learning," Father ,said Father Connolly. Fathel Polan said. ,The Angelus is heard at T :· Another indication of the ever . 1 A.M., noon and 6 P.M. daily and, growin~ popularity of the BIb e, says Father Connolly, there have he added, is the demand by book been no' complaints from nori publishers for manuscripts deal- Catholics' about the early morn ing with bi.blical subjects. ing chimes. "It can be heard five · Father 'Polan emphasized that miles when the wind is right,". the Scriphires provide the only h e not e. d Tbe pne . st est'mated 1 real and common base on' which that use of the fire station bell dialogue with other Christians sllved the parish thousands of' can be built. dollars. Even though he had if renovated by " bell company
wheri he was ready to install it,
the cost of renovations and ~
shipping it to South Dakota
NOTRE DAME (NC):""- Four came far below the' price' of a microbiologists from the ~niver new be)). sity of Notre Dame wilJ: travel Large Parish to Moscow to participate in the' '. Although small in num~rs, ninth International Congress for 'St. Mary's parish is large in area,' Microbiology next week. .' embracing 800 square miles. The four scientists .are Dr. -"It's as if there were a parish in Morris Wagner, Dr. TheQdore J. . Fall River whose area incruded Starr, Dr. Julian R. P~easants New Bedford, Providence. Taun and Bernard A. Teah. 'The con ton, and Newport," illustrated gress, to foe held at Moscow Father Conno]]y. State University on Lenin Hj)]s, . Most CatheJics get to Mass will consist of 10 symposia deal every week,' however, although ing with various aspects of mi erobiology and advam:es in the some drive as far as 20 miles to reach St. Mary's or the mission field. which Father Connolly also serves. "I have about- orie mar~ riage, two or three funerals and BELMONT (NC)-Communi eight or nine baptisms' a year,· ties of women in the Raleigh said Father Connolly. . diocese here in North Carolina All his work cOmes on Sunda)t, , eooperated ill a program 00 he said, and during' the week sigJ)ed t«» introduce eonvent life he's kept busy being his own to girls. Over 90 girls prayed, janitor, caretaker" electrieiaa worked, and recreated for a and . you--name-it. Bis hou~ ~eekend at Sacred ~eart Col keeper is his mother, Mrs; Agnes , lege in Belmont ill a program . ConnOlly, whe is a1s4l with hi.. designed tel Jlive Jlirls _ hiS' one' month' "acation; knowledge of_Sisters', life and all which he is· &pendin,. at I Island. . . appreciation .of, the· saendne. Park. el. ~ .weati-.• ..... :. , , .Who'•. lDiJMiimct!N. ~? 4 >
Americans to Attend Moscow. Congress
· Nun For Weekend
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr.. John C. Knott, who recently left the post of director of tbe £affiod ily Lifoe Bureau, NatiC'cl1al Cath olic Welfare Conference, to be come pastor of a Connecticut parish, was praised in a state ment by the bureau's episcopal adVisor. Bishop Walter W. Curtis of Bridgeport, Conn., expressed his "congratulations and best wishes" to Msgl'. Knott on, his appoint ment as pastor of St. Franci!) church, TorringtOn. He added: "As director of the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference for these past five years, Msgr. Knott has provided leadership tc the various diocesan bureaus. "His writings, talks and per sonal relationships have manl , fested his human insight and con cern fOJ marriage and family Jife. He has also reflected the concern of the Church for the good of the family in a time of great tension. "In the name of the American bishops and' the many people whose lives he has helped to en rich, I offer him our sincere gratitude. Our' prayers and best wishes go with him in his new office as pastor." .
Make Joint Plans For Unity Octave RANDOLPH (NC)-A Catho lic and a ;Protestant gl'tlUP met here 'in Vermont to begin plans for e c' u men i cal observances throughout the state durinar January's Unit;, Octave. It was the first formal meetiDl between the Ecumenical Com mission of the diocese .of Bur~ lingt.on and the Faith and Ordel' Committee of the" VermoJd Church Council.
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. "neighboring" priest, 20 miles away, is keeping eye on the parish-"otherwise, my guardian angel is in charge," and a 'Bene dictinepriest arrives on Sundays to say Mass. . As well. as visting friends while in, .the Fall River area, Father Connolly is catching up on family news with his brotber, Francis Conno]]y of Fall River, and another brother in Connecticut. :aut both he and his mother have become South Dakotans by adoption. "The open space grows OIl you," explained Father Con nolly. "It really seems crowded In the East."
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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28,
Michigan to Aid' College Students
1'166
LANSING {NC)-A bill has been signed into law here by Gov. George Flomney to provide financial assistance to needy students wishing to attend pri vate colleges. The bill, known as the Dzend zel Act and adopted by top heavy margins in both the Mich igan House and the Senate, is. designed to halt a dedine in the percentage of state residents at tending private colleges in the state and to reduce over-enq)ll ment at public institutions.. Under the new law, the State Education Department's Higher Education Assistance Authority will provide up to $500 a year, based on need, for freshmen stu dents beginning class:f$ in Sep-
Jesuit Says .La·tin America Middle Class Con-ti~~nt From "Social Revolution in the New LatillU America" Edited b~ John J. Considine, M.M. Latin America, does it exist or not? We cannot enter into that discussion, which is a very complex one,' writes Rev. Roger Vekemans, S.J.,but when we talk about Latin America as a whole, as a unit, we certainly should never forget that its a highly het- high and intensive concentration erogeneous continent. AnYon extraction of raw materials, indicator we may want to as in the case of copper in Chile. . use to describe the con ti-' and rather poor capacity for nent whether it be an economic manpower absorption. one like, let's say, yearly per This latter explains the unem capita income, ployment, real or disguised, and or a social one therefore, because the. labor like the number market is so weak, the weakness of hospital beds of the labor movement as a per 1(\,000 in- motor of social progress. habitants, those Dramatic Imbalance indicators would Taking this as a starting point, always oscillate and taking into account the 14) times more other basic fact of the population in Latin Amer- explosion in Latin America ioca than within, (everybody knows today that let's say, West- Latin America has the highest em Europe. So birth rate in the world and when we talk, therefore also the highest popu about Latin America, let us lation growth of the world to-' never forget that to some extent day), it's quite understandable we are talking about an .abstr~c- . that we get to a rather dramatic tion, and that the unit is essen- imbalance between population, tiaUy highly differentiated, GIl the one hand, and available A second remark' concerns. the resources, services and goods, GIl term social. In the context of the other. Or in more' dynamic tkis topic I would like to use terms, the dramatic imbalance the word social in its broad today between the population sense in which it embraces aU growth on the one hand, and the the possible dimensions of the' economic expansion on the other. These"are rather obvious facts global social phenomenon, the economic one, the demographic known and accepted to some ex ene, the anthropological one, the tent by almost everybody, Still, cultural one, the political one, we should point out that this and so on. It will not refel' to thesis, which could be called a the social crisis exclusively in, basic one, has to be taken with let's say, sociologicai terms of some grains of salt because it is social stratification, social mo- 'applied to almost every under bility, social change. developed continent, including to some extent Africa and Asia. And filially. the word crisis. In Yet the famous United' Nations this case I would like to take' stereotype of Africa, Asia, Latin the word crisis in two diffel'ent A menca ' . rta'm I y b aS1C "all' IS ce ) meanings. One, crisis as a rup- wrong, Latin America although ture point within a given evolu- . really underdeveloped, although tion, which is a quite obvious poor because of this imbalance meaning of the word. And the between economic development other one, the etymological sense and population 'growth, because of the word crisis, namely of, the scarcity of resources judgment, co.nsciousness, aware- available for today's population ness. I think both meanings ap- is nevertheless a middle class ply to our problem. continent compared to Africa Economic Approach and Asia. . To approach· our topic I Economically Middle Class would propose a rather superfiWe cannot say of Latin Amer cial first step, name)y the eco-· ica, as it has been said, that it is nomic one. I J;Uajored. in sociol-. a proletariat continent. Take 'ogy so in my opinion economics whatever indicator you like, for "is' mainly superficilli. Let us instance, the synthetic one from therefore. take .as a first step the the point of view of economics; ecol1o mi C approach. the per capita yearly income, As you kllOW, one of the main and for Latin Ainerica you'll get theses of the Economic' Conlmis- a level of about $400 yearly per sion for Latin America 'of the capita. For the continents of Af United Nations says that. the rica and. Asia, the per capita main trouble with Latin 'Amer- yearly income amounts to $100. ica is the fact that 'within the This means that if you com world's economy-labor division, . pare' Latin America with the Latin America has been apunderdeveloped continents you pointed as a major producer al get almost four times the per raw materials. Latin America' capita income of Asia and Africa has been reduced to the primary- and only three times less than . sector of the economy. Over the the average Western European last filly years, this fact bas per capita income. brought about a very deep ccoThus, if it is true that Latin nomic crisis in Latin America. America is an underdeveloped A crisis called again by the Eco- continent, still we have te take nomic Commission for Latin into account that it possesses a America the crisis of the dete- starting point for growth above rioration of the terms of trade. that of other underdeveloped \ The exogenous directi~1l of the areas of the world. Latin American economy exThis is true not only from the plains its weakness, anc~ even economic point of view but also in many cases the fact that the in a broader sense, for instance Latin American economy as a that of culture. whole is progressing so slowly. Economically speaking, we It explains also in the opinion should say, I think that Latin 'of the economic commission why America is a middle class conti Latin America stilI stays at. ~ nent and culturally I would say rather low technological level,' it should be termed an area of why its population is character- the Western world although of ized by poor skill. It explains highly m;.xed population. These Why, since it is a continent ba- ~'"" characteristics which have sically dedicated to agriculture to be taken into account. (over 50 per cent) and mining, Taking into account ·this· rer the area's few industrial activi- mark about the existence oi sev ties are characterized by rather' eral levels of underdevelopment,
MOTHER GENERAL: Mother Esther Del Duca, a native of Camden, N.J" is the new Mother General 9£ the Religious Teachers Fiti[l pini, who teach in many di oceses of the U.S. and Can ada. NC Photo.
Bishops Continue Council Reforms PARIS (NC)-France's bish ops have turned their attention to two more matters of reform indicated by the decrees of the Second Vatican Council., A new nation-wide catechism ,is being prepared with special ~ttention . being given. to the problem of scheduling its adop tion. Since the program willi. rtlel concurrently throughout France, the c;ltechism has to be adapted. to children of different economie and cultural backgrounds and yet be so ordered that chilcirel1l. who move from one school to an other won't be missing or re peating material. . Greater effort will be given to enlarging and improving Fr'encn ecumenical dialogue' as well. Meetings among Catholics, Pro testants and Orthodox are being scheduled more frequently and being' given a more deeply the ological orientation.
Sch~dJlliJn®' C@t!m(O)BO<b PlI'eS$
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CHICAGO .(NC) - A special conference on the Catholic Press, focusing on the role of the Cath olic publications and their per sonnel in an age of Church re newal, ~ill be held here next Thursday and Friday. The meeting will consist 0'If work sessions dealing with three major questions, acording to alll advanc~ announcement. TRey are: "1) What does it mean to be editor of a Catholie publieatios t()day? "2) What can the CPA do M develop a more professionlll!l Catholic press? "3) What can we do, apal'll: from the CPA, to cooperate • the formation of a more pr.. fessional Catholic press'!'''
NewCClltechism DUBLIN (NC)-A new si_ volume catechism, integrating the spirit and decrees of the Second Vatican Counell, wiiU be introduced in Dublin primary schools during the next lliree years. let's get closer to the point cdl our tvpic and consider some typically sociai consequences me this starting point. Let's not.'a another obvious factor-the eco-o logical imbalance wit~ LattiIIl. America. '
tember at a college or university with an instructional program approved by the State Dep~rt ment of Education. Assistance would continue in succeeding academic years' as needed. Assistance will range from the fuil $500 a year for students coming from families with less than $2,000 "effective income" down to no assistance for those coming from families with $10, 000 or more effective income. The law defines effective income as taxable income less income tax, standard deductions and'. $600 exemptions for each family member. Students attending some '40 private, ..non-profit schools in the state will be eligible.
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YOU'LL I1nallywe have it, a 'boOklet"wIth the answera ItAVE iibout this Association; For your free copy, just 1'11' drop us aline.••• It says quite f.;a'nkly ttJat the WfrHlN liolyFatber knows where your help Is needed A most in' 18 developing countries where Cath "tEat (tlies. though few, ar•.mostIy Catholics of the l~astefflRites. We try tID find the help the Holy fattier needs. • • • What are these countries? What can you accomplish by means ofsmaff t€ ifts? Ask us today for your free copy of our flew .'blue booklet'.
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From an orphanage m India, Msgr. Joseph Harnett (Philadelphia) reports: "The Sisters' I!(reat problem is to save the children who ara brought to them at the age of two or three days. "he nuns could do a wOllderful job with some (tODd vitamins and milk," ••• $5wiII feed a baby for a month, perhaps save it from starvation.
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cloist~red Carmelite nuns in Harissa. n.ebanon. spend their lives in constant prayer FOIli for you. Their chapel was built by an American YOU who reads this column. Now they need help to ~lnlarge their convent (total cost $3,731) for girls with vocations to the cloistered life. Build tt yourself in your loved ones' memolY? Senol 21t least as much as you can ($500, $100, $75, ~;50, $25, $10, $5, $2). The nuns and those who follow them will pray for you and yours Ilerpetual/y.
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NEAR EAST JMISSIDNS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPEUMAN, PresIdent
MOOR. JmlIN Go NOLAN, National secretary Wait.e: CATIilOLre NEAR EAST WEl,.FARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/yUkon· 6·5840
Two Women Doctors Strengthen Interfaith Friendship in Korea PUSAN (NC)-A Maryknoll 5ister from York, Pa., and a Methodist doctor from Philadel phia have gone a long way to strengthen interdenominational friendship in Korea. The nun is Sister Gilmary Simmons, M.D., superior and medical director of the 150-bed Maryknoll Sisters Hospital in Pusan. And the Methodist is Dr. Roberta Hafkesbring, one of her teachers almost 20 years ago at Women's Medical College In Philadelphia. They were reunited two years ago in Korea, and in that time the bonds of their own friend ship have served ecumenism well. . Sister Gilmary arrived there f:rst, in 1954: At that. time, Pusan was flooded with millions of refugees, destitute from the effects of the Korean War. Cited for Program With 2,000 p'atients at the • 'Maryknoll Clinic, where she was, assigned, Sister Gilmary had a ·tard time. She set up a' home visiting program for a pediatric ('linic which Served' hundreds of tho~sofchildren. She was cited by the Republic of Korea for a pilot program for control of tuberculosis. A year later she received the President's Public Welfare Medal. for her work among the Koreans. Then, in 1954, construction of the 150 bed hospital ~ begun, and the l'hangeover from quonset huts was comnleted in 1961. Sister Gilmary was cited by Women's College and by the Pennsylvania Senate in 1963 for her work. During a short visit tc:. Pennsylvania. she renewed her friendship with her teacher. By this time. Dr. Hafkesbring was about to retire as chief of the physiology department at 'Homen's Medical Hospital. but !'topping her good work was hardly what she had in mind. Drawn Together 001 now was free to go to Korea to g;ve a hand there." she said. But since she was 65. the Methodist Mission Board !'ouldn't accept her. so a Metho d;st church in Germantown. Pa., agreed to act as her sponsor. That's how she arrived at Ewha, the big Methodist university in Seoul.
Government Grants To Nursing Schools
17
111t ANCH"D.~
Thurs., July 28, 1966
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Maryknoll Sisters Hospital and the Methodist institution soon were drawn close together by the two doctors from Pennsyl vania. Ewha graduates began doing internship and residency work at Maryknoll. There are examples of ecu menism besides this in Korea. Maryknoll Sisters Hospital, a presbyterian hospital and a Baptist hospital also share their facilities and personnel. Medical representatives of various de nominations also hold joint meetings each year for prayer, friendship and discussion.
Says Ecumenical Progress Sound
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NOTRE DAME (NC)-An tensive study of "ways of delia ing faculty opinion and commu nicating that opinion to the ad ministration" has been launched at Notre Dame University in an effort to increase faculty parU cipation in university policy making. Tiie study, the resulhl fill which will be used as a basis fo!' revising the university's faculty manual, is being undertakcln by a 16-member committee headed by James E. Robinson, associate professor of English. By revising the manual, which dates from 1954, the university hopes to "constitutionalize" the Tole of the faculty in settfng ·university policy, Robinson el! plained. Topics being considered by the committee, which will pre sent its recommendations to Notre Dame's academic council )J1 the Fall, include: The creation of a faculty sen .ate; appointment and :removal of tJepartment heads; appointment, Fank, tenure and dismissal fJI. faeuIty members: intell~tual heedGm for students; faeulty welfare; and the role oiresearell ;md teaching.
HONG KONG (NC) - Prog ress in developing an ecumenical GREETS CLERICS: 'Vice President Hubert H. Hum spirit in Taiwan and Hong Kong phrey greets Father Louis Lambert, 8.1., left, of Wood has not been "spectacular," but stock, Md., and seminarian Robert Pinkston, C.S.P. of St. it is sound and progressive and gives ~at promise for the fu Paul's College, Washington, at a seminar for Catholic, Pr()... ture, said Archbishop Giuseppe testant and Jewish divinity students in his office. NC Photo. Caprio, Apostolic Internuneioto China. . "Relationships between the Catholic Churc~ and the Protes tants and Buddhists and T&()ists it excellent," he said, "aJMl I ean thankfully praise the spirit ef cooperation and the construe tive attitude manifested by !I'ai wan's Anglican Bishop James C. SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The nped nations to develop a mean L. Wong." . "alarming" shortage of food is ingful attack on the problem. The archbishop urged eaution "one of the worst problems fac Specifically, he urged that the WASHINGTON (NC) - :Rep. in discussing the recent purges .ing the U.s. and the rest of the U.S,: Wayne L. Hays of Ohio urged going on in Communist China world," the chancellor of the Send scientists and equipment . Congress to act quickly to pre and said that "all depends on the University of california at Davis to poor countries to make a \'ent planned picketing of the aim of those who are engineer has told a food technology sem Natiem:J Shrine of the Immac technological study of what ing it."· These are times, he inar at the school of Aerospace crops will grow best there and ulate Conception when Luei stressed, when "hindsight is . Medicine here in Texas. what fertilizers are needed. Baines Johnson is married there much more prudent than fore The U.S.' is spending money on Aug. 6. Hays introduced Q Re-educate the natives so they sight." "hand over fist in underdevel i>iIl to ban picketing within 500 can be taught to use the modern The archbishop stopped here oped countries," said Dr. Emil feet of any church building jn implements sent them. on his way from Taiwan to M. Mrak, "but frankly, we've the District of Columbia. A. Persuade other governments Rome. done a lousy job in helping to group opposed to the war jn to take an interest in the prob settle the food problem." \i ietnam 'has announced plarw ·lem. "Sending a tractor to some to picl<et the Shrine. Encourage the governments oj parts of Brazil, for instance, is poor countries to spend some of like sending a space ship there," their own money,. helping train he asserted. "What good is it if NASHVILLE (NC)-Southern they don't know how to use it'?" tJ-'.eir own scientists to carry Baptists, halfway through a two out their own programs. Unless an attack on the food year study of federal aid for ,.··_.. .shortage is started soon, he FOR YOUNG WOMEN Baptist schools, have postponed warned, "we're going to keep on a decision on the problem until 196 "hipp!e St., Fall River having Vietnam crises all over next June. Conductea by Franciscan the world. People are easy to The 275 leaders at a confer See Us .-I Missiona'ries of MarY mobilize when they're hungry, ·1 ence here agreed that further QOOMS - MEALS and most of the world is awfully About study of the issue is needed. OV-~NIGHT HOSPITALIty hungry." Even then, it was pointed out, --.cJ In<lu;,., OS 3-289' Instead of sending tons of food any decision will be only a rec , t ommendation,' not binding on tc poor nations, he declared, the U.S. should help under-develany Baptist school.
Job~
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University of California Choncellar Says U.S. Losing tnternationa·1 Hunger War
Opposes Picketing
Baptists Postpone S(;hool Aid Decision
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Six of 2J study groups at the WASHINGTON (NC) - The first national conference of the U.S. Public Health Service has Baptist Education Study Task <,warded more than $1 million recommended that the decision In grants to 79 schools of nurs 011 whether to seek federal aid ing. The grants, to prepare reg be left to each school. Others istered nUI'ses for shiff-level po f:itions in the public health field, \ emphasized that quality educa tion takes money and that the range from $2,400 to $104,100. federal government has the The program is designed to money and is willing to give it. help registered nurses complete requirements for a bachelor of science degree and thus prepare Jor a beginmng position in pub COLOGNE (NC) - A crown ;)(' health nursing. Among schools receiving adorning the picture of the in ?,rants were: Boston College, fant Jesus 'in the world-famous painting of the "Milan Madon 51104,100.. na" in the Cologne cathedral here in Germany was returned' to the church unharmed, as sur reptitiously as it had been stolen five days earlier. NEWARK (NC)-The Newark archdiocese will establish a Newman center in a two-story building here. The property formerly re gional headquarters for the YMCA, is be.ng rented with an eption to buy. It will serve stu dents at the Newark extension of Rutgers University, the Uni versity law school, and Newark College of Engineering. PRINTED AND MAILED Director of the center will be Msgr. Patrick D. Mc.Grath, first Write or Phone 672-1322
priest in the archdiocese to be 234 Second Street - Fall River
assigned full time to Newman work.
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Asks Laity Advice WHEELING (NC' - Bishop Joseph H. Hod,ges has asked that meetings be held in the Fall in 'all parishes so that laymen may voice suggestions for carrying out t.he teachings of Vatican Council JI throughout the diocese.
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THE ANCHOR"";()iocese' of Fa'lt· River':':"'r'hu/s:,' ..11:111 28;1966
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KALAMAZOO (NCh-A Jes versity. He has been professor Ulit on the faculty at Western of dogmatic theology at West Michigan University disagreed Baden College, Indiana. with the head of the university's During his years at, Western religion department here about .Michigan, he has taught courses the reason~ for the univl;!rsity's in Catholic' moral theology, the decision not to renew the priest's Catholic tradition, New Testa teaching contract. _ ment, Buddhism, Hinduism, re- Father John A. Hardon, S.J., ligions of America, 'and intro is visiting professor. of religion duction to religion. at Western Michigan University Lawson said that some mem where he' has taught since 1962. . bers of the religion department His contract I expires next De believed that Father Hardon's approach to his course was more sember 31. . The priest charged here that pastoral than academic. They he was forced 'to accept the said the courses iIi the Catholic status of visiting professor after religion as presented by Father he· had already served as a full Hardon involved the implicit time member of the university assumption of tenets. the Cath faculty for three years. He said olic faith. Courses Popular . that this action was taken ill 'order to prevent him from ap Father Hard.on accused the, plying for tenure at the univer uni vers:ty of interfering with sity: his academic freedom. He added " .Dr. Thomas Lawson, head .0£ that religion can only be taught the religion department,- said 'from the standpoint of personal that the university hired Father commitment. He added that he Hardon with the understanding made his views in this subject that the priest was subject to clear to the university before he . recall by his Jesuit superiors. was hired. Father Hardon'said his courses He claimed this was influential in the imiversity;s decision not in Catholicism were popular to grant Father Hardon a long with the stUdents. He stated that the university' was failing to term contract as a regular fac meet the religious needs of the. ulty member. Disagrees. With Colleagues students despite the fact that it Lawson also said that Father offered courses about religion. Hart;lon had not' fitted into his' The pr~est said that his Jesuit role', 'at the state university and' superiors and the university ad ministration had agreed to bad disagreed with his col leagues· in the department of "play it by ear" when he was first hired to teach at Western religion over the correct ap Michigan. When the agreement 'proach to his teaching duties. . In 1962, Father Hardon, ecu seemed mutually satisfactory 'menical scholar, joined the fac after two years, the Jesuits made . ulty of Western Michigan, be him permanently available to coming the first priest to teach the university with a view to tenure, ,he declared~ ~ligion courses at a state uni
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ONE OF THE MANY RECREATlON,~LFACILlTlES AT 'THE,
ADAMSVILLE. CAMP !FOR EXqltTIONAL CHILDREN
Peace Requires More Effective U. N. Continued from Page Qne States go on indefinitely polie among men for r6ligious, racial ing the world. ,
()r ethnic reasons." He,re, the . Future peace-keeping, he con
Spiritual, Educa1tio8n1aJ and Recreational workable ·in the world of 1945,. tinued, must depend on world
he said but it is not in 1966, wide recognition of "human sov
Well-being of campers primary concern of trained and undeF when the fate of the w~rldhangs ereignty" and a worldwide or~
.n the time it takes to pusi!. a ,gaization able to assure by world.
standing directors and counsElliors.·, &tutton. . ,law that the state serves the in Cousins cited the UN's lack of di~iduaI.
.niversality, the paralyzing ef-, ,H~ ,urged" th~ present Jo
.Aug. 1, 15, 22 $8.5Q pe( ~4Mt1k .
,fieCt of the Security Council's ~vocatesuch ~. organization .yeto power, and the crippling' of daily~ prl?Claiming that ''there, iii'
.. the General .Assemply 'by "the, no curtain in .the wOl"ld' thick.:, "
Gne nation-one vote principle. enough to·' prevent ,the. Pene Trans~rt~tiCn ancl From Camp " Beca~se of these limitatiOns kating power of great' ideas." "
be said most of the UN's effec~ "We may not achieve' at once
_---~--_ , tivenes~ in recent years has been , the kind ~f Uni~ed Nations through ,the secr~tariat, and has want," Cousins said, "but ,su'ch depended' on the personal efforts, advocacy, continued day after of me .. like. Dag ~ilmmaI:s~jf:)~d" .day, gi ves 'the' world ~ts best and U Tha·nt. But, he cQutioped, chance for world peace. "the world cannot expect suCk . . :, -14. Ye4:ars oir Age men: to keep running after his~ tOrY with a mop." " types o'f Athletic Events and visit the beach Cam·pers engage in Nor, he said" can the :t!nited.· Continued from Page One Father Laurentin said. the ec -an invitation, to purification of . for Watet: Events. .artificial elements (of Marian Aill opportunity. to participate in Holy Mass is offered daUly. piety) so that the essential pro Continued from Page One found values might be more ctf the Alamo Register, archdioc- . clearly seen.' Dogma is not di A field Trip is arranged once (I weeik.· esan newspilper, said the work , minished." ' ers are gaining confidence as Contrary to Ecumenism the strike continues, The priest "Ideas that Mary can be put . FOR RIEGISTRA.TION has made several trips to Rio ,aside for ecumenical reasons are Grande City since the strike eontrary to ecuinenism,", which began June 1. does not eliminate but. rather He attributed the change in researches difficult points, he the strikers attitude to support said. . from the Catholic Church, par "Vatican II made no choice TelOS 6-8943 41.0 Highland Avenue P. O. Box 'U 470 .. 02722 ticularly the efforts of Arch -between the Virgin and aggior bishop Lucey and Bishops Drury namento," Father Laurentin said. and 'Medeiros; backing from or "It gave her real meaning, as cxx:lO(X~X'lOClO(llOO(~X'lOOOClOO()OOCOOOOOOOOOOlOO(~OOOOOC:lOO()coDOCOOCllOOG ganized labor;, and the "obVious entirely at the service of Re . THIS MESSAGE SPONSORIEID ay' THE IFOLLOWING INDIVIDUALS sincerity" of NFWA leader derription," and pointed out that Nelson. piety toward Mary "is before all AND BUSINESS CONCIEIRN~5 IN G~REAT~RFAtt RIVER else liturgical." . Elect Consultors· Answering a question about ANINI !DALE PRODUCTS, INC. MACKI:NZIE &. WINSLOW, INC.
WICHITA (NC)-Bishop Leo attitudes toward apparHtions Of BRADY ELECTRIC SUPPLY co. MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS
e. Byrne 'has invited all priests the Blessed Virgin, Father Lau:" CASCADE DRUG CO. GERALIl> E. McNALLY, CONTRActOR
in the diocese to aid in selection , rentin pointed out that these ap:.. GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO. SOBILClFF BROTHERS
/l)f members for a new board of pearances are not on the same HIUlCHINSON OIL CO. STERLING BEVERAGES, INC.
level of importance as Revela consultors to advise him on ,ad R. A. McWHIRR COMPANY TIEXTILI: WORKERS UNION OF AMIERICA ministration of the diocese. Four tion, but are not necessarily un INTERNATIONAL LADIES' GARMENT AIFL.CIO priests will be selected by vote important. The devotion sur . WORKERS UNION YELLOW CAB ¢OMPANY .f diocesan' clergy and four will rc;mnding them can be good,for ~ selected· b)' the bishop. : , people, he said.
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THE ANCHOR-D..... of.,an............... July 21. _
Delaware Clergy Plan Discussions On Renewal
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WILMINGTON (NC) Bishop Michael W. Hyle of WilmingtOn has scheduled a series of discussions this Fan with diocesan priests on the pro grams of renewal and reform adopted by ·the Second Vatican Council. "I am sincerely concerned~ as are many of our priests and lay people, with translating the spir it of the council into action in our own diocese," the bishop said in it letter to his priests. "We will begin, with the clergy, to implement this renewal as many other dioceses are doing." . Bishop Hyle set a preparotory meeting for Sept. 6 to program discussions' on pastoral matters. In follow-up sessions, priests will meet' hi small groups, 'with the. bishop' and among them selves. The. bishop expressed hope the council!s directives concern ing the laity will be implement ed". as clerical discussions. pro gress. Generally speakin'g, the directives' call. for increaied par ticipation by,the laity hi Church affairs•. He eXpressed hope that the clerical discussions will improve relationships within the diocesan family. Th.e Vatican council, he said, bas emphasized the need for perfectQ:Ig communication and cooperation among an the people of God. ~
f"IIIew
Quart ers
CHICAGO . '(HC) Loyola 1!YWversity's Center for Liberal' A!i1rJ in Rome, the largest intermetJ10nal center operated by 3ft ~m.(~rican university in Europe, willll move to new quarters tbUl Fall
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. ONE OF THE RESULTS Oil' THE CHARITIES of the donors during the annual Catholic Charities Appeal. APPEAL: A new building at. the Camp for Exceptional Its constant use has certamly brought the sunshine of Children, Adamsville, was made posl'lible by the generosity Summer into the lives' of these children.
Ponder Plans to Restore Historic Detroit Edifice DETROIT (NC)-Parishioners have united to save historic Ste. Anne's church in downtown De troit from being razed.. In a crypt beneath the main altar of the church are the re mains of Father Gabriel Richard, . S.S., pioneer missionary in Dllnois and Michigan, who holds the distinction of being the only priest ever to serve in the U. S. Co~gi-ess. The Sulpician was elected as a delegate from Mich . iBan in 1823 and served in the
House of Representatives. He was a founder of the University of Michigan. For nearly a year the ques tion l'leen debated whether the historic church, eighth edi fice to serve the parish which was estbllshed in 1701, should be completely razed. or rebuilt. A chancery Official said the question still is unsettled, but added if the building is razed a new church will be erected in the area to serve the parish.
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The Gothic style building would require at least $300,000 to t>e restored. This does not in clude necessary repair work on the church hall, convent, school and rectory, according to esti mates. The chancery spokesman said the cost of restoration .eould soar to $500,000 with no guaran- . tee that the building would last another 10 years. The committee formed to· save the building said it will study .
engineering surveys and thetl decide what to do. Committee members wi~ also talk with city officials on urban renewal plans for the area. If the blighted sec tion in which the church is sit uated goes heavily industrial, this eould affect the commit tee's decision. The parish now has only 425 families with 264 children in iii; elementary school. It has been administp.red by the Basilia Fathers since 1886.
Feast of .Our Lady of the.·.Angels: Parish: H:all, Tuttle Street, ·E3ll ,River .,". '.;
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.Wed. Aug. 10 - ' Youth Night'" Thurs. Aug. 11-
Eddie Zack's Ranchers
~riday
Vaudeville Acts
Aug. 12 -
. Sat. Au 9- 13 -' Kiddies Day to 5:30 P.M. 'Featuring Bozo The Clown 7-11 P.M. Band Con~ert and Vaudeville' Acts
Sun. Aug. 14- Solemn Mass 11 :45 A.M. Preacher- Rev. JoOlO' Fernandes, O.P. from Portugal IProcessIon ~ :3rQl P.M. QilllIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIII
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Games ~ Booths - Ref~eshmell1ts - Prizes.
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SUMMER CAMP FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHlLDREN TEACHES COORDINATION: Left; John HLwrte of the ·Pats does no't pass off as well as the quarterback in action at the' Adamsville Camp. Right; An
Assist Chaplains mn Instifutions
'Post Office 'Rejects Jewish
'Protesl~
Pastors Warned
WINNIPEG (NC)-Pastors of the American Lutheran Church (ALC) have been advised by the church's cowicil that' they mas stamp ~ * '" depicted an an lowed for. more than a t::entury should' not· 'participate ,in mar"; gel blowing a tru.n1pet~atheme ; and ,a haif of not commemo';' 'riage cerenionil~s in which the t hat. clearly, religious, rating religious events," ~J!'uad couple promise to raise their children Roman, Catholics.' though arguably .nonsectarian. ron said. Now' we have .. the proposal for"
1966 that is .plainly both reli
gious and sectarian," he' said.
'Work of Art' . Ira Kapenstein, special assist ant to the postmaster' general, in II, his reply to. Rabbi Lelyveld,' said '~no one is forced to use the Christmas stamp" and the stamp "will portray a portion of a work of art" and will identify the artist. . Howard M. Squadron, chair man of the AJC's commission on law and social action, said Kapenstein did not 'counter the issues raised by Rabbi Lelyveld. The availability of other stamps, he said, does not affect the issue' of whether .the gov I' SUMMER CAMP FOR THE IUDS ernment should "participate in a religious activity," ane. the .. SUMMER COTTAGE RENTAL, artistic nature of the design, he added,does' not change the fact' II GOLFIING, FISHING' EQUIPMENT that it was chosen to commem I' SECOI~O CAR ,orate a I:eligious holiday. .. FURNITURE, "Both religious and govern ment will ·benefit if the depart . ment returns to the policy it folsee any' savirllgs teller at ANY FIRST BANK
'Madonna and, Child' on Christmas StCllmp .
FOND DULAC-(NC)-Four seminarians from .the Society of the Precious,Blood are spending NEW O~K (N,C)-The post-' silt weeks of this Summer' help master ~J.1e:t:al's office has re:' ing' Catholic chapiain~" in . cor~ jected an Am~rican Jewisr Con ll'ectional institutions" hel'e in. gress ,protest ,against. the "reli ~jsconsin.., ' . gious : nature" of' 'the' i966 The four, three of, whom are· Christmas stamp, which.. shows . subdeacons, are -assisting Father the "Madonila and' Child'.' by. Donald Moonrian, C.PP.S .. part Hans ' Memling, . the AJC' an time chaplain' at'· the Wisconsin nounced here. home for women at Taycheedah,' , and' Father Howard Johilson, The Congress protested the . stamp in a letter from itspresi- . full time chaplain at the Kettle dent, Rabbi Arthur J~ Lelyveld Morail:e b9YS 'school in Plym- of Cleveland, to Postma.ster Gen M1th. eral Lawrence F. O'Brien. The project is a first for the .future .priests from St. Charles "The celebration of religious major' seminary in Carthegena, holidays, we believe, sh'ould be Ohio ~ first time they have left to the church, the synagogue and the individual conscience. ~.served in correctional h ouses .. and ,drst time they have been It is not the .business of the away from the seminary for this United States post office," Rabbi length of time. Lelyveld said. Three days a week and Sun He called the stamp a "classic. day mornings, the seminarians example" of the way violations go to the Kettle Moraine boys of the principle of separation of. school. Each of the four handles Church and. State "creep into . three cottages with 25 boys in practice and gain acceptance." each, They eat with the boys Until 1962; ·he said, the depart and give c1,ltechetical instruction ment"treated all propos'als· for to those who have not' made the issuance of stamps commem their first Communion. orating religious holidays as , The semiriarians' also sfrive .tQ . violat.ing t,he requirements of re form·personal relationships with ligious :neutrality imposed by the boys who have' been con-' the Constitution.'!. vieted of everything from car 'Clearly Religious' theft to murder. "In groups the In that year the first Christ boys act pretty tough" ,but in inas stamp,' depieting a wreath their individual rooms, on a one and two candles, was issued.' tQ-one deal, they want someone The AJCquo'ted then;"Postm,aster ~ talk' to;" seminarian ROll' General J. Edward Da:r as say , iloenninger, 25, observed. ing the stamp' was' "not com memorative and it does not con tain a' religious motif: "As a matter of information," LONDON (NC)-The provin he continued, "it has long been eial of the English Jesuits, Father the department's policy not to Terence Cor rig an, S.J., an issue stamps to commemorate nounced that the ;tesuit Fathers religIOUS events or ~ubjects." are to be withdrawn at the end During the next two years, of 1967 from S1. Aidan's Col~ Rabbi Lelyveld said, there were lege, Grahamstown, South Afri' also Christmas stamps but with ca, which the English Jesuit "no religious theme." province has conducted for nHmy "In 1965, however, the. Chl'ist ~ ;rears.
Give up College
Olympic gymriast should imitate thE~ determin~tion of thils rope-climbing camper and assure himself of a guM medal at the next Olympic Game.s. This is the. second year of full-time camping.
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JOIN' A.' "FIRST BANK
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ALL·PU'RPOSE CLUB
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(including drive-in windows)!' Member of Federal Deposit InS\"ance Corporation•.
Catholics in· Texas
For Schoo~ Prayer
NEW BRAUNFELS (NC) ~ :;' ::>lutions supporting the pro posed constitutional amendment to permit prayers in the nation's public schools and backing the work of the Citizens for Educa tional Freedom' have been ap proved at the' 68th annual con vention of the Catholic State League of Texas. The prayer resolution amend ment calls on the CSL member ship to support th~ effort to re store "a minimal atmosphere" fill morality in the SCh~Ols. \
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"Greater New Illedford's Favorite" Family Bank"
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Handy" lHelpful Offices All Around Town
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