Hyannis Parish Building Center
'Whe design of the new Parish Center at St. Francis 1t;lvier, Hyannis, was dictated by the needs of usage, the wish to have a pleasing esthetic result without being extravagant, and the constriction of a small aWl, Rt. Rev. Magr. William ]I). Thomson a.nnounces. The choice of structural elements, the pastor's an DOuncement continues, was based on moderate cost and low maintenance In the future. The Center consists of two basic elements: a large gymnasium 94 by 110 feet, and a two-story wing con !listing of 12 classrooms. I The gymnasium is approached through a generous :rDbby from which all other areas, including offices and classrooms, may also be reached. The gym in cludes a main contest basketball court with collap l'Iible bleacher capacity of 558, plus two practice ~urts. It is designed to permit future use for such aetivities as volleyball, badminton, tennis, large dinner meetings, and Masses accommodating III minimum of 00l) people.
Monsignor ,Thomson
Plans Opening'
For Feb·rua.ry
. The classrooms will be used primarily for C{mfra ternity of Christian Doctrine classes. Three of Ulese rooms· are separated by folding partitions so that they may be combined into one larger room for small gatherings up to about 75 people. There are a number of other smaller rooms as fol lows: Coat room, Credit Union office, director's and sec retary's' offices, toilet facilities, a generous kitchen
-The
ANCHOR
.4.. AtNAor Of'. "*I, atN ..., ,.If lit 19.•••
'all River, Mass., Thursday, August 1, 1968 PRICE Uk @ 1968 The Anchor Vol. 12, No. 31 $4.00 pel YelllQ'
Pope Issu.es Awaited Letter
IThe Transmission 'of Life'
,
the use of the "pill" to avoid pregnancy is excluded by the papal document, according to Msgr. Fernand ~ambruschlni of
· ' PHILADELPHIA (NC)-John Cardinal Krot of Phila-' delphia has issued a strong statement of support :Cw Pope Paul VI's encyclical, Of Hurnam Life, reaffirming the , .t}hurch's teaching on the evil of oont'l'aception ·and called · un all Catholics to follow it. ~rdinal Krol said the of the crowd," he stated. Cardinal Krol said the Church 'Church "must proclaim, pro must proclaim the troth even at ~ote, interpret and defend the risk of losing some ~embeJl's. He said that at no time was there a vacuum in Mle official teaching of the Church Oil con traception. Even during the Pope's period of' reflection, he made .It clear that the traditionlllll Turn to Page Twenty .
GILBERT J. COSTA
Costa .to H~ad Serra District
Gilbert J.' Costa, 185 Milford! Street, New Bedfor~, has been elected distriCt governor of I Serra International, a world wide organization of Catholic laymen who encourage voca to the priesthood. . Bishop Jame.!J L. Connony bas appooled fOl!' personaU \..~tions Costa has been active in tM backing of Pope Paul VI "exemplifying in his perSOilll 13,000 member organization foil:'
complete dedication to the cause of Ohrist." Recalling many years. He will serve a
~e month CYf August as the tradhbional time of the ye&ll' two year term as governor for
Serra International District 44J) for the usual Peter's Pence which encompasses the Diocese lI»lleotiJon, BishiOJ!> Connolly City bas grown with t1lle passi~ of Fall River and the Diocese ciE eenturies. One of our priests, IJl .rote: Providence with local clubs in ~nner chaplain, witnessing III Beloved in Christ, Attleboro, Fall River, Kem The month of August brings missionary's work in tine F&" County, New Bedford, Newport, East, 2Sked where his chj.ef sup.. Providence, and Taunton. \!lIS our traditional testimony of po!I't originated. 'l'lne mlssiOXllo' ~ve and loyalty to the Holsr Serra's 30th anniversary oon !Father. We remember him aR"Y'a answer WlIlS, "PeterI'Q vention recently concluded illD. Pence; where else?" Such 2Jllll Portland, Oregon, where more prayerfully. As devoted chil dren, we make our offerings, eu.perience speaks eloquen~ than 1400 laymen f~om 324 clubs hrge or small, as tokens of pero enou~ for tbe' importance o&l .fum 20 nations adopted a change this alms that we place in!. Yw full tine object and purposes 0Jt oonal devotion. Peter's Pence, as we know, De hano'ls of Pope Paul VI. Serra International to conform lInterestingly, he wlll1 be going? more adequately to the mind X€ l ancient origin in the Church, fGut its impact in the mission to Bogota before the end of Illle~ QWii mood of the Church in Une
Tum tQ Page InVill Tum to Page Five
~ ali well as Gn the Ho17
Pe~er's
Pence· Collection In All Churc·hes Sunday
.
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has confirmed .the trad·itional teaching of the Catholic Church of family regulation and has reaffirmed the rejection of everY form . IY.f 'artificial birth control. In 'an encyclical entitled Humanae Vitae, from the two Latin opening words, meaning Of Human Life, Pope P'aul'j.nsisted on the norm of natural law that "each of every marriage . . act must remain open to the Rome's Lateran University, who duty of transmitting human life. transmission of life." Though presented the encyclical at a for which married persons aJl'e not specifically mentioned press conference at the Vatican the free and responsiblecollabo
Church Does Not Seek After Favor
Cbe law of God. 'I'he Church is · aot a mere echo of religious con ~iousness of the community, 001' an expression of the, opin Mons of the faithful." 9I4, can never distort the truth 61) wrry the favor or judgment
and a storage room. There Is a small basement at the rear of the building which houses boys' and girls' locker rooms and another large storage area. .. The .framework, suspended floors, and roof are made of prestressed concrete. Most of this is exposed on t~e interior of the building for its architectur:nX effect. The exterior architectural character is made interesting by the exposed concrete columns and Tee .beams which frame the translucent aluminum anell plastic Kalwall panels which let light into the gym nasium. The front of the building, which faces Cross Stree't at the corner of High School Road, Is faced' witlm. gray Colorlith panels and an ample amount of glass. The -balance of the exterior is composed of painte411 cement block with Arcadia insulated windows. , The Center will be heated by a gas-fired warm aill' system. The lobby and offices will be air-conditioned; however, the system is designed so that the entirG building may be cooled in the future.
press hall last Monday. Pope Paul acknowledged that "it can be foreseen that this teaching wiJ:l perhaps not be easily ,received by 'all:too nu merous are those voices-ampli fied by modern means of propa ganda-which are contrary tn> the voice of. the Church." However, he answered: "To tell the truth the Ohurch is not· surprised 00 be made, like her Divine Founder, a 'sign of con- . tradiction'; yet because of this she does not cease to proclaim wHh humble fi'rmness the en tire moral law, both natural and evangelical." Msgr. Lambruschini said: "F·rom a human point of view the pontifical decision, which makes no concession to popular ity, is an act of grea~ courage an<t an example of perfect serenity." Msgr. Lambruschini' added that "human aspects for tha·t nllit tel', however' important, cannot relegate the supernatural to second place," , . The encyclical was Issued July 29, although' i·t was dated four, days earlier. The letter was ad dressed to patriarchs, archbish ops and· bishops, other' local' Or dinaries "in peace and commu nion with the Apos~olic See, as well as .to priests, the faithful and to all men of gOod will." The letter' begins. with ~e stQ~ment: "T·he most 'Seriow
rators of God the Creator, hM always been a source of great joys to them even if sometim~ accompanied by not a few difi.a ficulties and by distress.'; . The letter took brief note of various problems which have been advanced' by those whG. support artfical birth conWoi methods. Among them, the Pope noted the world populatlolmo which, he said, is "growing more rapidly than the available re so,urees, with growing distress to many families and developin~ ClOuntries." He also referred to argument. regarding the need to better 000 ucate children today and the change that has come about iA woman's place in modern societl1 and lastly that man who haa made so many advances in domo inating and organizing naturali forces .!}Ow "tends to extend; this dominion to his own total being: to the body, to physicail life, to social life and even to the laws which, regulate the tra.nsmission of life." The question asked today, the encyclical "stated, is "whether. illl vjew of the' increased sense of responsibility oi'modern man" the moment has not come for him to entrust to his reason and his will, rather than to the bie ological rhythms of his organis~ the task of regulating birth." Turn. to Page Six .
'2
THE.ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River- Thurs., AUQ:l,1968.
IFAa.MOU1T~
BRIEWSYlCR OUR LADY OF THE CAPE ;MaSses: Sunday-7:30, 8:~0, 9:30,10:30, 11:30 A.M.. and 5:00 P.M. . . Daily-8:00 A.M.
,.
Se@~o~
Schedule for Summer
IHlIEIGHYS
S'll'. TlBIOMAS ClHIAPElL Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00,'11:15 A,M. . Daily-8:00 A.M.
HYANNIS
EAST BREWSTER
ST•. lFRANCllS XAVIER DmMACULATECONCEFnON
Masses: Sunday- 6:00, 7:00.8:00,9:00, 10:00,.11:00\,' lIasses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, li:oo A.M.
12:00 AM. and 5:00 P.M. ,Daily-7:00 and 8:00 A.M. ' MELODY ,TENT BUZZARDS BAY ... :Masses: Sunday-9:15, 10:15: 11:15 A.M. ST. MARGARETt. Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:00. 10:00, 11:00. YARMOUTH PORT 12 noon and '1:30 P.M. '.. Daily-7:00 A.M. -SACRED, HEART
Saturdays and Holiday~:OO A.M. Masses: Sunday-9:00 and 10:00 A.M.
Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 P.M. and 7:00-8:. P.M. Schedule starts May 26 BARNSTAB!l.E VILLAGIE . ends Sept. L BARNSTABLE HOUSE OF CORRE<:JTlON Mass:' Sunday-'l:30 A.M.
.
ONSET
ST. MARY-STAR OF THE SEA 'Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:3~, 11:30 A.M. Daily-9:00 A.M. Schedul~ starts June 29.
CENTERVILLE
.
OUR LADY OF VICTORY
Masses: Sunday-7:oo, 8:15, 9:30, 1&:45, 12:00 noon
Daily-7:00 and 8:00 AM. . "
,
.
;
. ROUTE 6
DAMIEN COUNCllL, K OF C BALL
Masses: 'Sunday"-9:30 and 10:30 A.M.
. - . NANTUCKET , . OiJR'LAlIl~OJr THE ISLE'. Masses: Sunday-.,-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00. A.I\L " '.' .5:00 P.M. Daily-7:00, 8:00 AM.
OUR LADY OF HOPE
Masses: Sunday-9:30, 19:30 AM;' .
Benediction-Sunday: 7:30 P.M.
CENTRAL Vill.lLAGIl: S~.
JrOllllN TJmJE lSAlP'll'llST ·Masses:· Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30 A.M. · . Daily-8:00 A.M. , Confessions: Saturday 4:30-5:00 and 7:30-8:00 Pl\IL . S'll' JOEN 'll'lHIIE: lSAP'll'ns'll' lBIAlLJr. Masses: Sunday-9:00, 10:00, 11:00' AM. .
ST. ANTHONY Masses: Sunday-6:00, 7:00, 8:00. 9:00. 10:00,1Il:CG,' AM. and 5 :00 P.M. . Daily-7:00 A.M. .
~
WEST BARNS'1I'AB~E _,I
.' MAnAPOISETT
CIHIATIHIAM lHI 0 Jr.W ltIE:DIE:IE:M!lElR. :Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12:00 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M.
SOUTIHI CHA1I'IHlAM OUR Jr.AIDY OlF GRACIE: Masses: Sunday-7:30. 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.: Daily-8:00 AM.
SlIASCONSIE:'ll', MASS •
COMMUNlI']['J{ ClHIAlPIE:1L
Masses: Sunday-8:15 A.M.
. Schedule' Begins June 30
OAt{
ST. AN'll'HONY·. . 'JllIasses: Sund'ay-7:00, '8:00, 9;00, 10;00, U:OO,., _ 1 2 noori, 5:0(I.p.lilL . Daily-'-8:00 A:.M.'·; . .
IEIDGAa'll'OWN
ST. lOAN OIF ARC CmrUlR.CIllI Ma~ses: Sunday-'i:OO. 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 ....., "'J>aily-;-8:00 A.M. '" , " . '. .
.
NOttrrH· EASTHAM
A.M.',
.'
' CHURCH OF nm ;~ITATOON! . "~?s~: Suild.ay"':";"7:3o, 8:30,9:3,0,'10:30, 1.1:30
Mass Ordo
Red.
UIJ'iJ ~D@\l'$ (OJlJ'iJtdl [».~. ~@U~<e®® lQ)D$@li'@I~li'$ only carrying. out the goaIS il set for itself. '" ,. ' "I Hved with' them" for t~ years and they told us that their objective' -was to bleed AmeriClll of ItS resources.... ·he declared. D:'ather Dunker,' stJPerlo;r crf ,- the Vincentian 'Fatherii' comma . nity' in Taip~, Taiwan; 'is in the ,tJ~s. for 3' I;iroVinciaI a.i;sembq
LOS ANGELES (NC) - A ..priest who went through five Chinef:e communist "people's '_trials" •sees no evidence that communisnf is -·mellowing. ,:', '. '. Batt:er, said Father.. Stephen': Dunker, ; CM.. 'communism' 'is
. . , .., .',.
~,
UATHEDRAL CAMP . . .' .:' oSiERVDUE'" ;. . '. ' .:.. , '. . , OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION ,CIlIAPBL. ,. . '·'OW' .i.ADY OF'T,m ASSUMPTION .' MaSses: . SuridaY~7:30, 9:00,.10:00. 1-1:00 A.M. Masses: Suriday"":'-7;()O, 8:00, 9:00,':10:'00. 11:.00 AX. . Daily-;-7:30 A.M.' '.' , . Dailj"::"'7:00: 8:00 A~ . .. 'il' Schedule from' June ~pL' 10 , ' ""'Pimt Frfday-5:30 P.M. ., C41nfessicmS: Saturday .:00-5:00 and '1:30-&:30 p~ FALMOUTH . Sehedule .Tune 23 to Sept.. L S.'f.. PATRICK . SANlVIT . \ 'M3sses: Suilday-7:00, 8:00. 9:00, 10:00, 11:1~. ST• .JUDE'S CHAPEL . -. _ 12:30 and 5:30 P.M. . o • . Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00. IB:OO. Daily: 7:00 A.M. Confessions: ~aturday 7:30-8:15 P.M. 'Devotions: Miraculous Medal NoveDa-M<ind~ .. at 7:30 P.M. . Tum flo Page Nineteen J'RIDAY - St. Alphonsus Mary de Ligouri, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of. the Church. OR St. Stephen I, Pope, Martyr.
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VDI1'iJ~®ITil\l'D(OJ1J'iJ $U1l~®I?D©1? ~®®$ (6@lilfjJUiii](!.11Il'iJD$il'~ iJ"lk~
S'll'. IE::ILlI.ZABIE'll'lHI
Mas~es: Sunday-6:45, 9:00 and 10:30 AM.
paily,8:00. AM.
Cqnfe~ons: Saturday 4:00-5:00 and 7:00-:8:00"P,M.·;
.
EAST FREETOWN
Photo.
,
Oall.lEb\NS
. EASYfAlUV10UTH -
SUMMJER IIN THE CE,'FY: A friendly policeman amd IS smiling r~reation leader help the neighborhood kids keep busy. Maybe it was &tman who painted the fence? NO
BU1~IFS
SACRIE:D lHll2AlR.'ll'
AND OUR lLAIDJ¥' STAR OlF 'll'lHIIE: SIE:A
Masses: SundaY-6:30, 8:00, 9:15, 10:30 A.M.
DaiIy-7:00 A.M. Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:00--7:00-8:00 l?.l2f!. Devotions: Benediction-5unday at 7:30 P.M.
,'. .....
'.
",'
:. ' . ; '
SCh.Eldul'e· Religious" "R'enc=wcdWorkshop' . \ . , " . ",.
'. of' his ~mm~ty.,He~rved 20 years In, China before. he W88
'_., NOORE.DAME (NC):-A:re-.
.. JtiPous .Workshopon Renewal
: Throu~:h Community and E:li-' . perimentation will be held atSt. Mary'l! COllege here beginning . Monda;r. The. :workshop is spcID. 1IO:red. by the Canon Law Socie.ty Gf Aml!ri:ea and St. Mary's Col 'lege. Tne w~rkshop will examme 'e:x.ptnizllents on religious, re newal. !!OW being. ~ OJ) inUte U.:s.. Specialists' in psychol:. ogy, s<l'Ciology, liturgy. and the eanonical asPects of commun,ity life win discuss newmeUlodS fu pra~r.retreats, counseling an:d' FORTY ~ . AtJG.13 Other' asp_ects- of' religious life. . Rev.,Edward·l. Sheridan. ~ ,\ . An attempt will. be made to . Pastcr;-St. Mary, Taunton. -. . assess' the implications: for. aD· Rt. Rev. Leonard J .. Daley,." . Aug. 4---St. Theresa, -SOuth. : religious· of recent dim~ ;1964,. Pastor,' St. FranciS XavieJ'. Attleboro. . . menu- about the ex.perimen~ Hyannis. . Our Lady af Vicimy;J' tion . tllat ha~ ariseli. in· the-: UDited States. Centerville.
AUG. If Aug. 11 Ow' Lady 06 Rev. Raphael' Marciniak, OFM 1IlE m:iIoa Lourdes, Wellfleet. Conv.. 1947, Pastor, Holy Cross, second' Crass POS13ge Paid lit Fan' Riller Sacred Heart, ~w ~ Fall River. Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 ford. Htahlalul Ilvenuei-F.aURJ.ver,., Mass. 02722 • rifJ thB catholic r.rcss at the Dlllal$8 at, Fall AUG. 15 · RlveJ~ SUbscriptllllll IIrlca IlJ 1IIllIl.. JCStpald·
expelled by the Chinese communists" after' being ~ ..tried and fined. . .. " Commenting on riots'and discmfer at U. S'. colleges, he eo.otended "if: the' riots are not m ~; ...... bv the communists,. th==rtalnly exploited by·th~
Necrology
SATURDAY - Mass of Blessed .'Virgin Mary (V). IV Class. · White. Mass Proper; Glory; Preface. of Ble~ Virgin. .
SUNDAY-Ninth Sunday After Pentecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Preface of Trinity. ' . MONDAY Dedication of I ' Rev. Charles W. Cullen, 1926. · Church of Our Lady of· the Founder, Holy Family, East Snows. III Class: White. Mass Taunton. Proper; Glory;' Preface of Blessed Virgin. '!'UESDAY - Transfiguration of .Our Lord. II Class. White.'
Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; TORONTO (NC) ~An' inter- .
Common Preface. . national conference on comWEDNESDAY sf. Cajeta~, mu.nications barriers between Confessor. III Class.' White. Christians' and Jews in North , OR.. America will be held at the St. 'DQnatus; Bishop, Ma·rtyr, Glendon Campus of York Urii~d. '. versity here, Sept. 2-6.
HOURS
.' DEVOTION
,.f4.00 per
.Michael C. Austin
!/88~
. '. IiAUGtrlmS. OF ST. PAUI:...:.eombine' a life at
prayer and lIetion:. Bringers. of tile Gospat Mes · . sage to souls evelJW\lere by means of pelSonal Owe. --contact; Pauline MissiOnaries labn.· iii 30 Nations• · MembefS witness to Christ in a ~ mission 1Fl\.DlrniSl1'<aJ~ • propagat'Dn, of. the printed ,Wor'" ,.of, &cd:. The , $iSIro'D«:~ Sisters. Vlrite, illustrate, print and bind their 0WlI· IEdward IF. CClID'nel1 · publications and diffuse .them among people of 549 Coun~ Sbee.~ all creeds, races .and cultures. Young girls, 14-23 , interesteJ ill this vital Mission' may write' to: New Bedfcll'Cl'l ~Cj)9-62~ IWI. ·r..~omm SUPErnO::l Serving the area since 1921 -'. 50 St. Paul's Ave~ Boston. Mass. li21~ •• i
• MYANNIS • HARWlCH PORT
• SOUTH YARMOUTK
Pope Paul Plans Three Addresses In Co~ombia BOGOTA (NC) -
'THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 1, 1968
3
Laityi' Relig~ou$
On
Pope
$c~oo! B(ij)rnlT~.
P3JUI VI wiH make three' rna jQr addresses during his visit
NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Thta appointment of. eight laymen, two priests and a nun to a school 1;0 Colombia for the 39th In board for the archdioces'e has I1;ernational Eucharistic Congress been announced by Archbishop' 'b9 be held here Aug, 18-25, Philip M. Hannan of New Or One address will be on voca leans. Gons and the priesthood when The idea of a lay school board De ordains several priests and is not a new one for the arch permanent deacons Sbortly after dioCese. Under the leadership ox ilHs arrival from Rome on Thurs the late Archbishop Joseph F. day, Aug, 22. Rummel, a lay boara was op The second speech will take erative ,but acted mostly in an Dim by helicopter to a rural advisory capacity. This boaroi community, Mosquera, some 18 had been inactive several years. miles from Bogota, on Aug. 23 1/;0 tell an expected gathering of The new school board, accord <ane million farmers to promote ing to Archbishop Hannan, willl 8arm cooperatives and other as have the responsibility for form GOCiations . for their greater ulating policy for operation o~ :well being. the archdiocesan school system The Mosquera rally is spon within the broad outlines of the OOred by Accion Cultural Popu policy established by the archdi br (ACP), an organization re ocese. I3POnsible for literacy campaigns He noted that the board'a and community development in initi'al efforts would be primarily ilUral Colombia. aimed at preservation of the The same day Pope Paul will FOR BETTER SERMONS:. Preachers' institute being held at the Catholic Univer Catholic school system in this cieliver another important ad sity of America, Washington, D.C., provides student priests with im~edi3ite playback area. dress from the Eucharistic Con "At this time of crisis in the gressgrounds at El Salitre, this of their work for self-criticism and improvement. Here TV producer' BIll Graham photo time reaching far beyond the graphs Father James P. Hayes of LaSalette Seminary, Oheshire, Conn., in action, while Catholic school system," the 4!o10mbian borders, to restate F'ather John Burke, O.P.. di-rootor of the institute, rooord,g the "sermon' for playback archbishop said, "It is essential that a functioning school board iIIlOst of the counsel in his ency and revj~w. NC Photo. be available to consider critical '11llical, The Development of Peo financial difficulties facing the ~es. ' archdiocesan school system." Pastoral Renewal T·he board will set policy con J:t is expected that Pope Paul cerning planning and operations, will deliver some brief guide tuition and entrance standards,
nnes when blessing the head salary guidelines, tenure and re
quarters of the Latin American Back in the 1B20's and 1930's when a young chemist a.t Johns Hopkins University tirement ,and all other related!
Bishops' Council (CELAM) here. named Francis Owen Rice was pioneering in an area called f.ree radical readions, some matters. It will have free inter He will, however, deliver a strong appeal for pastoral re things he thought WQuld work wouldn't. His scientific curiosity unassuaged, ~rancis change with pastors and princi pals and will be guided in an Elewal at the opening of the sec Owen Rice is returning to Johns Hopkins after 30 years and at the 'age of 78 tofmd out decisions by information sup ond general assembly of the why. "Some ideas I had at plied and advice from them. l.atin American bishops. omenon. In a day when most ing chemical evolution similar Detailed arrangements for the the time just didn't. work, top-flight universities have to that occurring on earth. and now I think I know Pope's visit have been com thrown over football, it m\lnages Doubtless, living matter occurs Drive For Needy pleted by congress authorities why," he said in an interview to excell in both the athletic and on some of these planets - in SYDNEY (NC)-The Austra and Msgr. Paul Marcinkus of in his home at 1704 Bader Ave., intellectual life." He and his some cases a far higher state of lian Catholic bishops' Lenten Chicago, an official of the Papal South Bend. "I think it appro wife, ;Dr. Katherine K. Rice, are development than we have at Project Compassion, Secretariat of State. The Pope priate to return to where I also converts to South Bend. tained, 1n others far less so. appeal, aimed at helping the needy will spend some 60 .hours in started my work in free· radicals They will maintain their home There are billions' of galaxies in throughout the world, is ex eolombia from Aug. 22 through to finish it." the universe; there are millions in South Bend while he com pected to yield donations total .4\Ug. 24. For the last six years, Dr. Rice mutes to Baltimore on alternate of stars in our galaxy. It would ing $400,000 when final returna He is due to arrive at EI 00 has been a visiting research pro be . strange indeed if our sun have been made. Sydney Cath weeks. JlIQdo airport at Bogota shortly fessor at the University of Notre Rice received his doctora·te were unique in having a planet olics have already contributed before noon on' Aug. 2;!. He will Dame, doing work in astro from the' University of Liver Oil' which conditions obtain that $93,000 and. ,those in Melbourne ride seven miles in an open lim chemistry in the. University's pool in 1916, and from .that time are cOmpatible with the chem 8uslne to the cathedral, where Radiation Research LaboratorY. until the end of the World War ical transformations leading to $110,000, record totals for the two-year-old fund drive. he grant 'a general audience The span of his scientific years I, he held important positions in production of intelligent life·... '!io the bishops imd clergy at,;, Is seen· in the fact ..that ·the di . England's che}l1jcal plants. He Modern chemistry has' changed '!lending the congress. rector of the Laboratory; an came to Princeton University in much in the more than half lie will then bless ·those gath Atomic Energy . Commission 1919 on a postdoctoral fello~ century since Rice received his ~ in front of the church at supported organization comp'ris ship. and then jo.inE!d the facu~t,. Ph.D·. His' own early painstaking Maintenance Supplies pJ.aza Boliva from . the balcony ing the largest radiation' .chem of New York' Unlversity as an .t the archbishop's house. The istry: . research effort in the asSistant professor. He .left i~' attemptS to observe free radical .• SWEEPERS - SOAPS piau Can hold 40,000 persons. world, is Rice's- second.. Ph.D. 1924 for 14 years 'of teaching at reactions~which'occur in a few hundreth~ of a second-are now' DISINFECTANTS . Deacons Important student - Dr. Milton" Burton; Johns Hopkins,with the excep routine. But .the refreshing thing who received his doctorate' in FIRE EXTINGUISHERS tion of a sabbatical year in 1931 , Pope Paul will then ,proceed physical chemistry. under Rice spent at Heidelberg University. "about him, a'bout a man who; in tit the apostolic nunciature, 10 the words of one. of his peers, 3ated in a well-to-do residential at N:ew York University·. In 1938 he· joined the faculty In accepting a position as a' of The Catholic University in . "rclormulated a chapter in inodGCCtor of the ci,ty, for some rest. . 1886 . PURCHASE STREET principal research scientist in Washington, D. C., where he el'ri chemistry," is that when he Earlier warnings that the resi the Institute for Cooperative spent 21 years on the faculty and takes you on a tour of his home's NEW BEDFORD dence did not offer enough se basement laboratorY he talks Research at Johns Hopkins, Rice headed the department of chem curity facilities have been re like a scientist for whom learn .993-3786 is beginning what one might istry. 'In 1956, the Chemical So jected by church authorities. ing is ~till the basic excitem~nt. call either his sixth career or a Some sources say that the ciety of Washington gave him Pope will ordain 70 men as oontinuation of his second. its Hillebrand Award for his 'Native of England priests and 28 as permanent trail-blazing work in free rad <ieacons. Several of the deacons The elderlJ' chemist is a na ical .mechanisms and the kinet cue married and their wives tive of England, but he doesn't ics of chemical reactions. An .,ili be present at the ceremony. need to tell anyone this. Phrases other adPlinistrative term was The ordinations will highlight sucll as "by the by" creep now in store for him, howeve~, when one of the most pressing prob and then into his conversation, he left The Catholic University lems of the Church in Latin and to watch him reminisce in in 1959 for a three-year term.88 America, where the average his living room-hand in pocket, head of the' chemistry depart mtio of priests is one to be coat drawn back revealing ment at Georgetown University. ~een 6,000 and 10,000 Catholics. watch chain and suspenders, lExtraterrestdal Life? . Permanent deacons are regarded glasses held like a memory Rice's original work on free by many bishops as relief for probe-is to expect tea served many areas where priests can at any moment. "I can go back radicals - transitory chemicall visit only once every two to England and still pass as. compounds detectable only as fleeting intermediate products oil months. British," he says proudly. But that is not to say that Rice chemical reactions-has aided him in his more recent work in fa an incurable Anglophile; the chemistry of outer space, ex Urge ReducticR11 some very American things PITTSBURGH (NC) The such as football- attract him. plaining, for example, the colors of Jupiter. "When I first accepted the posi American hierarchy should grad tion at Notre Dame," he said, "I An astrochemist is sooner or aally reduce j·ts general educa tion effort and substitute excllJl- . felt a little sorry to be going to later faced with the popular lJively religious education for what I thought might be a question: "Is there extraterres football college in 11 small trial life?" Rice's answer is this: all Catholic students, the Pitts burgh Conference of Laymen Middle-West town. I couldn't "It seems reasonable for us to proposed at a membership have been more wrong. Notre assume .that in outer space there Jm!me is aD. ext&:ao.:~ ___ . . . ~ Qf planets Wlder~ meetin~
Astrochemist Thinks Extraterrestrial Life 'Reasonable to Assume'
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Irish l~issi,oner Asserts' Airlift Only.4'nswer to 'Biafra Plight·
THE ANCHOR-lJioce5~ of Fan River- Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
Can WeFa~eJud~m~ntS~at
, NEW YORK (NC) Risky other is that the giving of 10M! nighttime, airlifts are the only traditionally signifies authority way to meet the famine crisis and its acceptance friendship. now spreading over embattled Thus, . said Father Byrne, llt Biafra, the director of Catholic would be tantamount to SUY Social Services in Biafra mainrender for the Biafrans to accept By Barbara 'Ward tained here.
supplies which came by land The death rate from starva through territory occupied ~ An agricultural 'revolution is now possible in the de,:
tion is rising rapidly and now tederal troops. The federal gov veloping world, thanks to new hybrid grains and new totals at least 2,000 a day, ac ernment is aware of this, 1M methods which mutiply harvests many times: and otfer cording to Father Anthony added. hope that food supplies will increase much more' rapidly Byrne; C.S.Sp., an Irish mission.,. lPlans to Help ary who haH served as a social than the' word's growth of Father :Q.yrne came here afl worker in ,?'i'igeria for 10 years. population. Without this Other less prosperous' nat-ions the invitation of Catholic Relie! "I' was iii. Biafra last week, Services, the U. S. Catholic hope, we, might face the are likely to follow the Amer~ an<:l you!d weep with me if you ican lead. Aid is falling in grim certainty of famine by Fran'ce and Germany. It is static saw what I saw, there," Father overseas relief agency, to discuss plans for stepped up assistance. the end of the Seventies, of in Britain. And the rich nations' ,: Byrne said. "Thousands, many A Catholic Relief Services deepening malnutrition, of stunt of them children, are starving to present wQrries over the work spokesman noted that the agen ed minds and death. Some, of these children ing of their international finan- , cy bas been working througb ,listless bodies,'
get only on,e good meal every cial system means that ,almost Caritas Intemationalis but wants 4lf children li t
three weeks. Many are diseased flO attention is available for' the' . .to do even more. erally starving
as a result of malnutrition. They d,esperate needs of the poor. in Asia and Lat eat flies and scrape the, ground " CBS plans to send an airlifll Buf can we as Christians ac of 20 tons of goods shortly, in America and for worms." cept this dead end? Can we say while a shipment of 6,500 eases parts of Africa. SPEAKER: Secretary of Directs Airlifts that far from feeding "the least of baby food is enroute by ship. But it is only a Agriculture Orville L. Free- ,- The children, he noted, know The of these little ones," we really latter supplies will be dis hope. Grain man will address the national noth,ing about the political and tributed do not care very much if they to the needy in sections does not har social issues which caused the actually starve? For this is, in under the control of the federal coiwention of the National federal government of Nigeria vest itself, fer essence, what we say when we government. Within two ween tilizers -,do not Catholic Rur:al Life Confer- ,and Biafra, the secessionist for do not know ,the facts about the grow ou t of the ence to be· held in St. Cloud,- -mer'Eastern Region of Nigeria, ,the' agency will ship another needed scale. of investment in ground', water Minn. NC Photo. to' be locked in armed conflict $250,00 ~orth of goods. world agriculture and I do not must be conserved and piped Father Byrne said Biafra now for' the ,past ;year. . 'and pumped. To achieye ,this ask; ourselves whether the need has some 680 refugee camps anell Since February Father Byrne ed financing, can or cannot ,be resolution in agriculture, some has directed 34 emergency' air 4.5 million refugees. The differ , p'rovided. ' thing like $6 to $7 billions more ence between refugees and or lifts carrying food, medicine and Can We Afford' It? / mUst be invested each year. ,other relief s:.lpplies inland from dinary villagers is slight, be Self-Help 'an island off the coast. He ,1)as' added. With the harvest not due Then'let us ask the question. The bulk of it will, of course, flown' on most of· the flights, for six weeks, food ~s ordinarily Could we, the post-Christian be provided by developing peo ,which have been under the aus in' short supply at this time of 'peopleS of' the Atlantic w6rld, 'ST;' PATRICK; ples themselves who, today, pices of Ca~it~s Inte-mationalis, ,year, and thl: current fighting afford an extra $4 billions a' y'ear WAREHAM'" provide 80 per cent of their own the international· Catholic wel has made the situation drasti for investment in - the farms of .. , st. Patrick Circle will spon investment. But in the early cally, worse. fare~ agency. The International the developing nations? '" ,sor a concert at S' tomorrow stages-say, for the next, nve Red. Cross and the World Coun 'We must remembe'r, first' Qf night at Wareham· Town Hall. years- a· rather larger share cil of Churches have also spon all, that we are lik~ly, short of - Titled "ehristian Love," it will would need to be a\~ailable in sored airlift mghts. violent economic catastrophe, te be given by seminariaris of foreign currencies since the de OnIJ' Answer' novitiate, in. J~ns veloping continents wOl!ld still go on growing by at least three Sacred" Hearts The flights are extremely per cent a year. So the increase Wareham. Proceeds will benefit u:r<=HFIELD (NC) The lack the means to produce a lot dangerous. T.) avoid fi re from in our income each year will Aot a. scholarship fund with which Rev. Otis Charles, an Episeopal &L ,the needed fertilizers 'and federal' trooP!:, they must be at be less than $60 billions, It is circle' members yearly aid a priest, will join the staff CII· machines. night..The planes must land on d'ifficult to argue that we could girl of the parish. This year's re Monttmt House, an eeumenieal We can perhaps guess that a a tarred road, Four,'planes have not earmark one-twenty-fifth of cipient is Laureen Bu'rrell el center recently established here fully financed strategy for end alreadY been lost. . this sum to counter the coming Marion, who will attend Stone in Cennecticut at the former ing the risk of famine 10 years . Desp~te the, risk. thetJights risk of starvation. ' h i l l Conege. . major seminary 01 the Montfort from now might add $3 to $4 are the only answer to the pres Or'look at the problem from Refreshments will be sen'ed ' billions 'to the present flow of ent situati<m, according to Father Fathers. . , Father Charles wfll join the economic assistance. It would ,the angle of ,what ,we spend our ,~t the ,conce;rt in.termission. l;lyme. RespOnding to pressure, - money on 'now. The,English and then be, say, $10 billions instead "the' Nigerian ,federal government staff sept. 16, according· ' .. French-spe<lking citizens o'f ,the '&f the $6 billions available today. Father Clifford Laube, S.M.M.. has' agreed to allow relief sup
North Atlantic countries spend MT. CAlt.MEL, Present Impossibility plies to Biafra to pass through direct4lr of the center. ·$;;0 biilions a year on alcohol .NEW Jr'1)FORD' ,~ Let us be clear 'at this point. a landcorrid()r, but Biafran of
Father Laube said authoriza and tobacco. If we were ready , The PTA 'Will hold Olmystery tion for the addition fJl the At this time there is no chance ficials have re~ted the plan. to pay just 10: cents more with ride to a catered buffet and Reasons for the' rejection are Episcopal priest to the staff 4lf secu,ring' this increase. The every dollar that goes on dr·inks dance from 8 to midnight .Satur United States, which accounts several. One i~l a traditional fear came jointly from Archbishop and smokes,' we could s~l,I.re day night, Aug. 17. Attire will ,of poisoning by the enemy Henry ~. O'Brien of Hartford for 4e per cent of the combined more than the whole of the ex be informal. Cars will leave the income oj. the wealthy North which antedal;es the war. An and Father Eugene Lynch, tra sum needed t6 ward off fam ,De Valles School area at 7.
Atlantic states, is cutting back S,M.M;. director of the center.. ine in this generation. Tickets are available from Ar
its assistance - which iii any Father Charles has been rec Or consider an expenditure thur -Vasconcellos and Mal'ianna case is not more than' 0,4 per tor of st. John's Church, Wash Raposo. we pretty well take for granted. .cent of the American gross na ington, ,Conn., since 1959. At Each year, the developed na ,tional product. - TURIN (NC)-The bishops of Montfort House, he will par tions, including Russia, spend OUR LADY OF ANGELS, ,the northern Italian region of ticipa.te in the planning and ex upward of $150 billions on a de FALL RIVER ecution of a variety of interfaith Piedmont hav,e rejected a pro fense which seems incidentally Parishioners al'e, requested tel programs, including conferences posal to sanction attendance at to leave us as vulnel'able as bring chairs if they wish \0 S.aturday' night Mass in plal:e of and workshops for clergy anclI ever. Can anyone suppose the sit on ,the grounds during the the Sunday obligation except Jaiiy of all faiths. 'protagonists would be less se 'OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho feast of Our' Lady of Angels, in three small resort to~ns in cure if, between them they lic bishops of Canada in a m~s Aug. 7 through -11. An apprecia the Alps. agreed to reduce this horrifi'c sage notjfied the World Council tion night '-f'or all feast' workers The bishops :rejected a request sum by one thirtieth and de 4lf Churches assembly in Upp will be neld at White's restau by several priests of the region voted the saving to food and sala, Sweden, that th'ey had rant Sunday, Sept. 15: Also hOI1 for approval of the Saturday fertilizer'! Such a reduction ealled on all Catholics of Can or.ed will be Catholic Charities night privilege for the: entire . made at this time could; in fact, ada to' join in a prayer crusade solicitors, CCD teachers, ushers, area. Instead" 'lhe privilege has ,'be part of a widel.' effort to con':' .for the assemblY's success, altar boys, choir memb.ers, lec ,been, allowed only 'for Cour 'vince the non-nuclear powers Bishop .Alexander Carter -of tOI'S and sextons. mayeur, ,Yaltouranance, and that America and Russia have ~ault Ste, Marie, Ont., president , ,Cervinia. :not a desire for nuclear monop': of the Canadian Catholic Con, announcing their decision, fel'ence, in ,a message to the -oly but a serious intent ,of dis':' ,Obta~ns, SYll-'llag'~9ue , "theIn bishops stated that "the 'a'rmament behind thei r recent 365 NORTH FRONT STREET MOSt R,e " , Dr, Gunnar Hultgred, week's repose must benefit not signing of th treaty restraining To' Aid Community a WCC president, said: "The NEW BEDFORD only the body but also the spirit. nuclear proliferation. main issues which have been eAMDEN (NC) B ish 0 p Freed from his committments, Lazarus Unhelped outlined for discussion al'e mat George H. Guilfoyle of Camden 992-553-4 man can dedicate to God a little ters of concern to the whole It is no use ignoring all has announced the diocesan of his leisure time." Christian people and the re these figures of available and pur'chase of a five-building sponse, to them affects all usable pressures wheil, as' Chris complex formerly owned by humanity." tians' and citizens, we ponder Beth-EI Synagogue for $175,000 FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU The bishops called on alI Ca what should be done to count~r He -said the structure will be nadian Catholics to offer prayers the risk' of famine, of a new used for' diocesan projects of for the success of the, assembly,' '·massacre of the innocents" 10 servke to the ~ommunity. especially on July ,14 and 21 oit years from now. When we come-, Located in the city's Parkside Sunday Masses. as individuals and natiens, be section, the complex includes a , fore the Judgment Seat and be synagogue, a school building, ' fe're us rises up, as a symbGI of' two residences, and Oln audite P Off our rejection, the image ef Laz~ dum. The Beth-EI congregation Of TAUNTON has moved- to a new, site in an GLASGOW· (NC) Reflllie aruswhom we did' not help, )tcOwan, a .35-year-old convert;' 'shall' we ery 1'0 the seFaphim other part of the city. . Norton, W. Main St.-. .Y....., Ite. "4-Tauntall. MOM SL he ' ,has' been appointed full-time ' that we thought 0.4 ~er eeflt or" . Bishop Guilfoyle Said North Etigftteft, Spriftg Sf;, Main St. press officer for the Catholiic our superabundant wealth was hgpes the "undertaking wiII be Church. in Scotland and will "generous" enough? AFHi ""ill CGme a vital part of the Churcb~s Menib.r Federal·Depoeit Co.,..,..... "pen offices here in September. they ,lister" commitment to the, pe.?~le.· .
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Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968 1
I See
I
CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)-Pope Paul VI, observing modern man is in seal"ch of himself, has asserted ~Qt he will never find his true self without penance. As he himself noted, this address at a general audience was one of a series examii1l ling man "as the Church poshion in the ideal image of ronceives him." At the pre the new man, of the real man, of man in search of perfection. vious weekly general audi Athlete "It can hardly be impossible or even difficult for modern man to understand this need. The athlete, for instance, offers to St. Paul an argument that moves from physical to spiritual and therefore cam shift frem the spiritual to the practical and to life as lived: 'Everyone in a con test abstains frOm all things.'"
Baltimore to Aid Biafra Victsms BALTIMORE (NC) - Law rence Cardinal Shehan of Balti more has announced that a spe cial collection will be taken thl"Oughout the archdiocese, Sun day to help the starving vietimi . of war in Biafra. Cardinal Shehan urged Cath olics here to be generous illl their gifts, which will be made available to Catholic ReliefSer vices, overseas aid ageoc)" of American Catholics, to help p£& vide needed food amd medicine. The cardinal contnbuted funds to Biafran relief efforts last OCtober, when eonditi~ had already become serious, ~ Coadjutor Archbishop Arinze, of Onitsba, Biafra. Tbe]' both attended the Synod. .. t , Bishops in Rome last ran. "The plight ol, the lPCOple iii Biafra is desperate," Cardinal Shehan said. "Archbishop Arinze made it clear, even at ~ time &f. the SYIlOO, that 'his people were facing starvatiol:l. "Conditions have become worse since then.1t
RELATES EXPERIENCES: Father Vincent Ferrer, S.J., Spanish-born missionary who recently left India at the request of the Indian government, talks with Martin Work, executive director of the National Council of Cath olic Men, about. the priest's expel'iences. NC Photo.
Expelled From India Jesuit Missioner Arouses Opposition While Serving Others .
5
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once, he had defended religion against the charge of weakening man's natural sense of justice, IiInd at the audience before that !lie had emphasized that reli gion's essential God-centered ness does not weaken its neces IJQry interest in man. Awareness Now, describing man's seorch for himself, he said: "He wants to be aware of himself; he wants flo give his existence an expres aion of its own, which he always describes as new and at times describes as free, full, powerful, original, personal, authentic 0< * 0 "Some spoke of a superman, of a ",an of heroic life. Some Qiefined him mainly under the biological and zoological as peet." (Here the Vatican press office lICCount of .the Pope's speech re ~rred to Desmond Morria, au tbor ()f ''The Naked Ape.") The Pope a-sserted that aD . tbropology-the study of'inan ""is' being discussed at aU levels," and is "the principal subject of -eientific, philosophical, social, political ,and <even rellgiow dis lIliS6ion."
THE ANCHOR-
DETROIT (NC) - Numerous chadlable, social service and community action divisions of the Detroit archdiocese have been consolidated into a new Department of Christian Service, Archbishop John F. Dearden has announced. The department will be re sponsible for spending more than $1 miliion raised especially to meet urban problems during the 1968 Archdiocesan Develop ment Fund campaign. The funell total is currently over $2,240,000. Divisions of the new depart ment will. include Catholic Charities and Social Services, Catholic Hospitals, Human Re lations, the Urban Parish Apos tolate, the Archdiocesan Oppor tunity Program, Housing and Urban Development, and Cath olic cemeteries. The new department is exo pected to carry out many pro postals from the upcoming arch diocesan synod, which has been in preparation for more than Q year. Among the resources avail able to the Department oil Christian service are more than 900 sociai workers and sociall scientists employed by Catholle Charities, Catholic Social Serv ices staff and offices in eigM counties, 12 general hospitals, . two special hospitals, three homes for youths, and 10 insti tutions for invalids and the aged.
WASHINGTON (NC)-Span ports that the Indian home min ish Jesuit Father Vincent Ferrer, !8tl7 is considering not granting stationed in Manmad, India, un /I visa enabling Father Ferrer ti! he was expelled from that to return after the month's ab country in June, fits right into sence because Home Minister a Christian tradition that g~ Y.B. Chavan does not want to back to Calvary-that of arous clash with the Maharashtra state ing opposition ill the service oif government. '. Father Ferrer, who has had others. Rural politlcialWl and Bind'lll several invitations from Indian 1M a ties, angered b,- the sacceSi groups to work. ill their neigh of Father Ferrer's work to im borhoods, hopes to go to Gujarst, prove the lot of Ute poor farm ~ state in India. Difficulty en ,of the Nasik distriet, influ 'I :Lo?elDdia' He then pointed to ". difficul enced officials of the Maharash Re~ that he Wall to be de .,. that derives from our Chris MIAMI (NC)-Father Ral~ wa state government to pressure tian profession in the face el the Indian central IOwmment 'pwted stirred UP. protests, not V. Shuhler, O,S.A., has been ap. lIhOdern self-idolatry ,and seU into ordering the priest to leave onl1' from the priest's followers pointed president of Biscayne amoAg the farmers of the Nasik .enteredness." College here by the college'. India. llIi.skict, but by sueh diverse board . o~ trustees. Father Shub The spec:We element' of the However, the Incl1aD govern voices as the leftist newspaper ehriBtian profession wbich the ment has stated 0!fieiaDy thIN Blitz, the Bombay daily Indian. ler, 55, has been treasurer of the ~ contrasted with "the all after a month Father Ferrell' Express, and the right-wing college since last March. He will succeed :Father Ed manistic and profane" idea Gl will be welcome to retum to March of the Nation. ward McCarthy, O.S.A., wh. man· as the center of things was, India ~ work ''in a suitable In an interview here the w~ry, has headed the college since i~ be said, "the penitential atti plaCe outside Mabarashtra." bearded priest singled out the founding in 1961, tude." Despite this offreial statement, divergence ,of opinion expressed Father ShuhIer, from Salina, Such a, penitential east ~f bowever there' have been ll\tIKan" studied at Villanova Uni about him by the press and peo mind "stands at the threshold Gl versity and at the Catholic Uni ple of India as a striking exam participation in the 'kingdom oif versity of America, where he ple of that country's -democracy, GOO and is called metanoia, Continued from Page One took his Ph,D. while teachina 'and be pointed to the govern oonversion." month to preside and Pl'll7' all ment's decision llllowing him to canon law and .moral theology Conversion the Eucharistic Congress. That at the nearby Augustinian Mo!!o WASHINGTON (NC) - The return as an example of social astery. He described this as "a' pro- \ the Church in Latin Ameriea justice. l10und and effective -change of needs help is beyond dispute. National Council of Catholie Father Ferrer repeatedly Women has begun distributioll1l. ~-------_ _~ That our Holy Father's ability to lUtinking and feeling IUld be voiced his love for India and of an ecumenical kit for chil illaving which compels one 10 Ii! help personally will be aided. his esteem for the Indian peo immeasurably by whalt we give dre1ll. that "tella it like it is" ple. Clertain denial of oneself...· about religious beliefs, includ next week is also beyond dis a ye;r The penitential attitude "su'g "I really love India," he saiell. pute. One, of our great sain~ ing Judaism, Mormonism, Quak ~sts renunciations that at times "' l I: am one more Indian among ers and others, NCCW national TERM DEPOSit' CERTIFICATES IM'e grave, such as religious used to say, "It's easy to give headquarters here announced. ' them. but a true one. I love India what you have. It's hard to give Daily Interest 'rows, and instills in the faithful The kit, prepared by the because of its people." lIIlan the sense of sin, to his great oneself." Units of $1000. He expects that the Indian church communities commissioll1l ~ugh salutary discomfort." Our Holy Father goes Q 000 Year Maturity of NCCW, is entitled ''The More government will grant his re Later in his address, the Pope Bogota next month exemplify We Are Together 'the Happier qQ.!est for citizenship. declared: "always, where the ing -in his person complete ded We Will Be.~ It works on the Gospel is understood and lived, ication to the cause of Christ. Ji)remise that "children are bom The least we can do M to make penance holds an irreplaceab!.e ecumenists, as they are born io !)Ossible-,in a generous sense- Cegrationists lmd the unjust the ell:pression of his concern ~ prejudices that mar their later Bank by Mail
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CHiurclt 1ft. Latin America wheml Anhorn," aceordlnB tc NCCW Prescriptions called for
Continued from Pap ODe ~UiOft1be~~ emd deliverecf
lI)Okesmea. IlO6t-Vatican n era. De!egatN !tV <MU" genef'OUll oJIferinp fm lOFT
• SOOTH YARMOUTH • HYANNIS ]!a describinc the eoDtentl 01. Pe6E!r's Pence. lIldopted the following: *'e ecwnenical kit, Arlene Swici CHOCOLATES • Y~RMOUTH SHOPPING PI.AlA (Q) "to foster and pIOmOte :Rerr, church comJDtmit1es com 6GO Cottage St. 994·7439 lJ'aithfulir' 7~ iii ChrW, • D£NNIS PORT • OSTERVIlLE .tions to the ministerial priest Mission nlI'tional ebairman and New Bedford IIli JSlmeo L. CoanolJJ'. IIIood of the Catholic Church Ijli managing editor of the Journal! Bus!llo» cxr Fall Bive& of Ecumenical Studiea, ,and Bar tl particular vc;>cation to service ~ to develop appredatiOll $ll bara Brunton, commission 9taff Qbe ministerial priesthood and oil program di~ect~r, said: IIlil religious VocaUOIUl • tb0 "None of these ecumenical ift., , @alfuolic Church, and BeNN (NC) - Efforia M...a ~rests can' be a one-time ven" beelIl made recently • renew ture. Just as the study of OUll' ~) "to further Catholicism. blf lllegotiatioWi between Hungall7 religion deepens a9 we mature, INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC i'Mcouraging its ~embe~, in lte1\ llnd the Holy See, KNA, the the child, too, must begin with oowship, through education, b ,fullfil! their Christian wocatlcfll . Germ.alll Catholic news agency, :Di«le externals and later draw reporled from Budapest, ~ insigh·ts and wisdom from the ()o service.", ' serra was founded in Jl9S5 11@' JllIWlgor~1Il eapital. The repcrt' ~her fal ths around him. The ibm- Seattle businessmen WM said that Hungary't\' comnuinil;¢ youngest child can be told de !reCognized the need for a dw.. (iOvernment wan1G to name b~ ~ils from any of these books, opa fQIl' vacant dioceses in a ~ a:ool adults will El1~ find tlullt ~nctive organization of llaymelll tftley can. gain insight and under men~ with the Holl)" See l.lIll1ll wino would assist the Church aM 312 Hitlmall1 Street 997-9162 New Bedford encourage mutual underotM~ ~qw til» oUa)' unrest 2lml>Dg ~ standing from reading throug~
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese
olio" Riv,er-:' Th~.,Aug.
1, 1968
llock of .Ages.
Take and Read and Do
It is basi~ to Catholic Fiaitth that the authentic teachers in the Ohurch are the bishops of the Church and chief Qilllong these"":" n<Yt alone in honor but in real and unique tiuthority-is the Holy F'ather. . He has issued an encyclical setting forth the Church's teaching on marriage and asking tha:.~ this be taught with-, Dut ambiguity. " , From time to time the Pope writes Ml encyclical of this type. Why'/ Well, there is such a thing as absolu te right a~d wrong, as the moral law of God, what GOO expects .of H~s ehildren. This is unwavering and unchanging. SometImes it is Irelatively easy for people. to apply this moral law to a eoncrete situation and to come up with the correct answer. At other times the situation is so intricate, involves such' , tlubtleties and difficulties, that it is, not this easy to apply : the moral law and to come ,up with an answer. In this case a' Oatholic asks the teachers of the Church to help him, to give him the Church's teaching in the m,atter. The -teachers in the Church do not pull the answer " from a hat nor have'they any magical formula for provid ing an answer. They listen to what theOlogians have to say, 'they consult Church teaching in this and other related 'm'atters they investiga·te to see if the situation has ehanged so m,uoh that it is no longer the same situation that they applied the pl"inciple to in a previous age, and then 'guided by the graoe of state, they give the answer. Sometimes, people do not like the answer. Sometimes, in the present instance, some theologians express shock art; and even disagreement with the answer. Perhaps they have forgotten that they are not the Church's teachers. They have the rightful role of doin,g rimch. of the spade work for the bishops, and the Pope, they examine matters Mi,~sionary 'PriestDescribes Plight O'f faith and morals and investigate implications and rami , Of ~iafra' Refugees
fications. But when it rome,!; to being the authentic teacher , in the Church, the bishops, and, especially, the Pope, have DUBLIN (NC) - Refugees' in weak to stand up. "There Is this office.,-i,ts right, its duty, and the grace that goes along at least one camp in Biafra are ' dreadful ' suffering 'in the with it. ,"'near the ,breaking: point" as camps," he said. He said the . People reading the recently-issued encyclical must ft- ,fatalities f r () m malnutrition' missionary priests, are liying , member ' that they' are J,"eading t)le Church's teaching f.~ · mount; an Irish missionary 'priest : frugally 'themselves. Father Kis· told the Lisbon; Portugal, '001'- c sane was one of the' missionary the Church's most authoritative and authentic te~he~.11)ey - resPond~mt of ihe"-lrish ·Iode- . p'riests, ,who greeted Bishop must read exactly what he has. said. Not what they think · pendent., . - '. " " , ' Joseph, P.: Whelan" (::.S.Sp., of Father. " Richard. "Kissane, (}werri, ,on the, prelate's return be said or wanted him to say or think he should have said. C.S.Sp., a native'of Ballylong- from, Ireland, where he spent , But what he has 'said. , , " , Ireland, who bas been ,~o weeks Sl)liciting funds for . They mus.t take and read. And, prayerfully, ~ithGod'a , fOrd,' working in the. OWerri diocese 'the relief of the civil 'war vie l1elp,accept and put into practice Nt their livres and help , ill the secessionist, republic of "tims.in Biafnl. others to do the same, the Church's ~aching inthe matter. Biafra, . arrived in' Lis~~ en., 'Blafra seceded from Nigeria
,as
Near" Breo'king IPoint
,Papa'" ~ncyclical .Continued from Page One Before giving 'his answer tlio Pope paused' to point out th~ he was speaking out on b subject by vi-rtue of the power entrusted by Christ to Peter anell the Apostles and their succes sors. When Christ ,entrusted th(j C'hurch 'to these, Pope Paul said" "he constituted them as guar<Jj.. 80S and authentic interpretetr.! of all the moral law,not onl~ that is, of the law of the Gospel but also of the natural law, which is also an expression oR the will of God, the fai thftlll Ifulfillment of which is equallll necessary for salv-ation." In drawing up his answer, the ,Pope acknowledged the work of the special commission establish ed by Pope John XXIII in 1963 and later expanded' by Pope Paul, . as well as the views sent "by a good number,of our broth er bi'shops." He noted, however, that the conclusions of the com mission did not' "dispense us from a 'personal examination of this serious question," since the commission was, not in fun agreement -on .various points. The Pope devoted much Moo tention to the demands of con , jugal love and responsible pa;r.. enthood which have been ad vanced by supporters of a change in past teaching. Conjugal love, -' said the Pope, "reveals its true nature' and nobiUty when it ,is eonsidered in its supreme origiDp God, who i6 love 0 0 0
"Marriage is not then the ei\ feet of change or the produCil . of the evolution of, unconscious natural forces; it is the wise , institution of the Creator to re alize in mankind His design .. love." , MeauiDg
of
ReSpOnsible' Pare~ hood
The exercise of responslbJit parenthood, the Pope continued" implies "that husband and wife recognize fully their own dutieS towards God, towards them selves, towards, the family ami to~ards society in a correct hierarchy of' values. . "In the task of transmittln. , lire, therefore, 'they are not free w proceed completely at ,will, as if they could determine in • Wlholly au-tonomous' way the honest pa'th to follow; but they must conform their activity ., the creative intention of God, . impressed in the very nature of marriage and of its acts ani.! manifested by the constau& teaching of the Church." ,
· JlOute to London and Dubhn.. . ill May, 196'7, and civil war , He, told, the Independent"B broke out in July of that year. , eorrespondent, Des Mullan, that., .. There ~,~OT l~lsh ~)Fl_estB Conscience i6 not a feeling about an act's· rightDel98, th~ bigh death rate 'in ~ '~~p Dear Owerri is expected to in~ ~ 40 n:1S~ ,SISters working in er wrongness. If it were, imagine the feeling of, a man- who ~ erease because of the adV1Ulced Blafra DUSSlOllS. bad just relieve!f a Brink's truck of ,its haul, of ,a man 00 .tages· oi malnutrition' of the Bi~hop Whdan returned, wi'Ul joying a vacation with an~ther'8 wife, of ,a man who 'bad children. . contributions to Biafra relief by brought low his enemy with a one-two punch, of a. young ,The camp is a Mbieri, :where ~e Irish . gover:nment" the 'couple doing as they pleased in the back seat of a car. The Father Dan O'Connell C.S.Sp., ,Church and tine IrIsh people. A feeling would be quite ecstatic. 'Would this mean ,the con- of Dublin is in charge. The refu- ' collection initiated by the' Irish gees are crowded into the Cath- • bisho~s bas, ~)taled about $90, science approves? ' , olic mission school and adjoin- OOQ, In addltlon to $10,000 re So conscience is not a feeling. lot is a judgement, an ing buildings. All the refugee ' ~eived by Bishop Whelan from , act of the mind. What does the mind do? finds out what · camps in Biilfra center around other sources ;for fqod and medGod has to say about the matter, it compares what it is the 'Catholic missions, he said. - icine. The Irish government has Father Kissane said that donated, $300,000 for the relief Developing this theme, the going to do or wants to do with this, 'and it makes the many of the children ai'etoo of needy Biafrans. iFope stressed that there are judgement as to whether there is agreement or disagree 'two inseparable aspectS in the' . ment. Agreement with God means the act is morally good, conjugal act, union and pro disagreement means it is morally bad." creation. While not" every con jugal aot is followed by a new Conscience, then, doos not e~islt in a vacuum. It needs IHe 0 "' "' nonetheless the Church, knowledge. In the case of a Catholic, it. gets its knowledge NlugeFl'D«ll1rd MDiTIlDsteli' Rejects calling men back to the obsero from the Church which Christ has set up for this. A man vance ofthe norms of the natural lioah«lHI1l C~«llrSleS Ag«liinsf/' H,DS Gcver~meltlt!' may n'9t like what the Church teaches, he may find it ha'rd. law, as interpreted by her oon But if he believes in God's graoe he cannot say a hard UNITED NATIONS' (NC) ence May 30, 1967, civil war stant doctrine, teaches that each teaching is impossible. An offiCial of the federal Nige- broke out two months later. and every marriage act musfl
rian government has denied The Ibos are the domina;:!t eth- ' remain open to the transmission
As the Church has always said, and as Vatican Coun eil II reiterated, a man must follow a conscience rightfully charges of genocide made nic group in :Biafra. Many are of life. against' his government in its Christians. They have accused ,"That teaching; often set form formed. This is what the Church exists to help hiin do. attempt to end the secession of the federal government of gen by the magisterium (the Biafra, its former Eastern ocide in'its efforts to suppress Church's teaching authority), t:J Region. the rebellion. founded upon the inseparable Biafra d~lared its _independ.,Chief Anton:, Enahoro, Nige- . connection, willed by God anell rian minister of· information, - unable to be broken by man on said at the United Nations that his own initiative, between the 50,000 Ibos are living peacefully two meanings of the conjugal' A$~ IF<<ll<<:IJ.!)~fry in !!.agos, the federal' capital, act: the unitive meaning and the PRETORIA (NC)-The Cat~ and tnat three N{gerian ambas procreative meaning, Indeed, b;v., olic bishops of South Africa: sadors are 1001:. ' : its 'intimate structure, the con OIC~,r' '\L NEWSPAPER OF, TI:iE DIOCESE OF FAll PiVER have petitioned the Holy See, Ch'ief Enahoro said it is diffi ,Turn to Page Sixteen
cult' to determine how bad the
'ublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River asking that individual Ordina " 410 Highland Avenue ' ries in this region be granted situation is in Biafra because War Oct.oms
published figur,es on deaths and ' Fall 'River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 the fac~lty to aliow mixed, mar starvation disagree. He accused NEW YORK (NC) - 17.& PUBLISHER , riages before a priest and min the' Biafran leaders of' poor Catholic Relief Services an Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. ister of another Christian de planning, addin,g that mass star-, nounced here that those wish ASST. GENERAL MANAGER GENERAL MANAGER nomination as joint' witnesses vation is one (.f the aspects of ing to aid victims of the Nigeria 'lb. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. ,Rev. John P. Driscoli" "without the obligation that the - war and declar-ed that it is en- 'Biafra civil war may send their MANAGING EDITOR Catholic priest put t~e q~stioJlll , tirely legitimatE, to try to starVe contributions to: Catholic Relietl , enemy troops at the front" Services, Empire State Buildin-, Hugh ~. Golden eliciting' cons~nt.to : make 'them ,stop fighting. . ~:New York, N. Y.
Following Conscience .'
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,
Denies, Genocilcle @f R~fol\"matDclrD
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese Of Fan River- Thurs., Aug. 1;1968
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7
";;~:f:,;~ J
SISTER MADELEINE
Director
I1jlCIlAUE'iE L. BANY'ILIlIE
SiSlI'l£Il MIUiilUll;1 lFairolJveo,
o
, MAUillEEW l. BARREIRA
Fall River '
17i£RomCA i. 'llEl\llflD Newport
, IF<JII River
I?ATRICIA A. BGNtllEK
~mma,r<I
J. 'lOllsQ.:.:a , IFill! Siver
lFairllavem
GRADUATION EXERCISES OF ST.' ANNE~ SCHOOL OF, NURSiNG JlN WAlLlL IRlIVER FRIDAY EVENJING
Priests to Elect, Personnel Board TOLEDO (NC)-A five-mem !ber personnel board will be elected by the priests of the Toledo diocese. This is one of the decisions reached by the' Priests' Senate rand approved by Bishop John A. Donovan. , The decisions, which Slre offi eNIl regulations in the diocese, were announced by the, senate ,m I:l procedure agreed. to by ,bishop and senate representa-' tives, though the ordinary meth ods 'of promulgation 'COntinues $0 be through the clergy bulle-. ~ from the bishop's office. , ,The report on the bishop's ~sponse to the senate resolu~ion c;3id the bishop sees the person lllel 'board as a place where both ll1e and the priests may go when e problem arises - mostly a grievance committee. The board, said the report, :mould be keenly interested in ~e individual' welfare,' happi bess and competency (if each' ~riest. It should also, the report edde'd, be creative in lookirig fur new roles for the priest m the mission of the Chur<:~ •
'.
Describes Sufferi'ng's in ,
'
Red Prisons' . .
Ex,iled -Cardinal Held 18 Years PHILADELPHIA ( N C) - . il,al recalled about lOO-major ill"ThirtY.:.seven times J[' was con.. nes3~ during his confinement im demned ,to death by the Bol':" prisOns and'labor camps, includsheviks and ~he'nervous anticipa lng camps in Siberla-Ca.rdinal tion of my execution was at Slipyj said that he' was able to times so great that, when I put offer Mass every day. my band to my head, my hair Since he knew the prayers of the JI)i~ Liturgy by heart, he came out ill tufts." That is how exiled Josepb needed only 11 small piece of· Cardinal Slipyj of Lvov in the bread and a few drops of ''mediUkraine described some of· his cine" .ism a tin cup to offer Masl! most difficult experiences dur,;" without being notioed. ing his 18 years as a prisoner in, 'Although privacy was noo the Soviet Union. ' possible, sinee he was often conSpeaking in Ukrainian, Polish, fined in barracks with,S!! many Italian and English; the rO as 30 other prisoners and had 'bust, '76-year-<old prelate .re 'to ,sleep on his side. 'in the '!ated' for dinner guests at 'the 'cramped quarterS, the' cardinal 'residence of John Ca~din31 'Krol said' he was nloved periodically of Philadelphia his seldom men froM one prison to another:':'" abolrt every six' months'...:.... pre-" tioned meIrioriEis of impriSon ment and forced labor. sumabiy so that he would not , In the United, States' fOr II be able to become friendly with month during a world tour to ute guards' or' with other pris'visit'centers of Ukrainian Cath oilers. " olic population, CardiriaI' Slipyj NG nesei:h~Me .When be was taken to" ~ came' here from: Canada where he spent five weeks. moved, he ru>ted, he never'knew While conditions in the' Soviet whether the time had come"foi' .", prisons were' harsh--th~" eardi- ~ executiQri.
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VATICAN CITY (NC)-PoPi Paul VI, for the opening of tht While in prison. he sna'red' Laniheth Conference <9f the An with the other' prisoners in all .glican Church, has 'sent a hand work tasks--fr-om cutting down, written letter to Anglican Arch trees to cleaning latrines. He bishop Michael Ramsey of Can noted that he was often shown te1'bury, A~glican primate wh. ~nsideration by feiIow prison heads the conference, express-' ~ ers out never by' camp officials. log his gladlness that sevell Although he was not taken Catholic observers were invited prisoner until April 11, 1945, to, attend. ,Cax:dinal Slipyj said he. had been ,The l.ambeth meeting, sched warned as early as 1937 that, ifl 'the communists came to control. uledl from July 25 to Aug. 25, is all 'of the Ukraine (then divided normally held every 10 years. ,between Poland .and the USSR),. SOqie 500 Anglican bishops frOID ,be, would be, arrested. ,(His See all over the world will make cltr ,of Lvov was part of Poland reco~dations to help align 'M.til World War- 'n,) : " the Church's policies and activi ties with current world situa In speaking of his prison ex periences, Cardinal: Slipyj be:' tion.s. trayed no resentment,or sadness. This year's conference tho Instead, he smiled and tried to change the subject, with a joke fi~t to which official Catholie or' with a comment on some and Orthodox observers have 'other 'topic. been invited. In his public utterances, he
rarely mentions the past; but.it " 'Po~ Paul expressed the hope ,is the past about which ,'his fel low Ukrainian Catholics know that the meeting could help ad which' leads 'them: to 'eamE! to vance the cause of Christiaa hear him speak about the future. unity.
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THE ANCH0R-Diocese ofFall River- Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
MADELEINE L 'BRODEUR Fall River
BOERlY A. BlOULA
taunton
SUS~N
nell
l.CAFFERTV,
Bedford
JOANNE I. CONWAY
Hanson
'PATRICIA
A~
OIAS
,North Tiverton
CAMILLE
JEANNE C. OuPONlJ' Fall River'
L~
FARIIl
Fall River o
B][SHOP CONNOLLY, TO PRESENT DIPLOMAS, AT NURSIN(fJEOMM:E:NCEMENT EXERCnsES
Fashions in 'Homes ,Equally- Sister~ of M~rcy . _' ,Name New Head ',eg'u.-m;ng as ;n" 'Clothes B By Marilyn Roderick
NORTH; PLAINFIELD (NC)Brooklyn Diocese; City Department Mother Mary Charitas Marcotte J is the new mother generalDf the Sponso,r Day Care Center Fully as much as women enjoy talking el,othes, they Congregation of the Religious WASHINGTON (NC) - The gjo~ vocation," the, two-n1lil:i . Sisters of Mercy here in New' Brooklyn diocesan Catholic team has been visiting variooo enjoy talking home decorating. A~y a1,>ode from '3 one-room Jersey. Charities and the New York religious' eonimunities haviD{l apartment to a $70,000 dream house ~rings out the creShe will direct the, work of City Department of Social Ser affiliation with the lkoi>kl~ ativity of the individual that dwells within; and all ·that ',the Sisters, of' Mercy in, the ,vice (formerly the Department' dioc,ese, seeking' this "inten/:d.' 'most of 11S find' hampering" , Camden, and TrentDn dioceses. of W~lfar-e) are jointly ,sponsor,,:, community involvement." this creativity is our budget. 1lll0l'le ~sl1 new designers ~, In the latter diocese, the Si9ters ing a day care center in one of Dominican Sister from Obtf! TuSt .. a our financial,si,tua- full of.,bot air., but' certainly one, of Mercy admi'1ister two col-'" the city's principal' ghetto areas. is Aexpected to join the cente~ wi AO f th ti Id k leges, two academies,six high " o "~ bl·t , 0conversation elr crea ons ~ou ma ell, Th t to be 1 t d at staff in September, they said, , ..: ..o~ k eeps . us d . wn piece In your home; schools and 28 grammar schools. :, ': 'e ~~n er, ,oca e , from competmg WIth those gals providing" of course, Do one, Mother, Charitas succeeds St. Joseph's Hall in Brooklyn'S Since affiliation with, ~ woo yea~lr make the best dresse~ came visiting armed with a hat, Mother Mary Patri,ck McCailiDn, Bedford-Stuyvesta~t section, is financing by, the Department cr(jJ , Jist, t~IS s~lf pin. who held t,he position for the s~e?uled to open m September., Social Service classifies the eeJlPl, earn.e finanCllal One, nice thing about most of last 12.years. Itw1l1 serve the ar~a on a non- . ter as a publicly supported pro;" t a a so ' d e n o m i n a t i o n a l basis. pIC u~e c n the extremely modern- furniture ect, it was stated that the ren,., ~ said to keep desiins is that' they are quite gious participating in its' opep.. Focusini~ on '~complete family Criticizes Demands 118 out ofo f ~~:~ rugged in construction, easy 10 service," the center's program ation will ""ear habits modifioo pa~es 00 keep clean and all but childwill involve both children and to a form of contemporary gee., For Brides Dowries ~ank. ,me proof. It is very difficult in any their parents in its operations. ular dress. KAMPALA (NC) Large ~Hagazme&s G' as house where children are al~ It will p:rovide- full-and part ,dowries demanded here by par ouse ar. "It d 't lowed to live as opposed to ents of prospective brides are time day I:are for children from d en., Aid Catholic Camp§ oesn merely exist to keep your fur- . scaring away many eligible thr:ee to six years of age, includ mean, however, , 'tu 1 k'~g Hk ing, balanced. diet enrichment, VALLETTA (NC) , - Furthei' that we can't' m re 00 I e new. bachelors who cannot meet the American aid to Catholic SUJDoo mject our own If J7Qu'.re anyt~ing like me, price, Archbishop Emanuel K. medical attention and a compre hensive "h.ead start" kind of ed personality into ,by the ..time you ve completed Nsubuga of Kampala told Cath Iller camps for children in MaltG ucatiDnal Jlrogram. d~ratmg a, room one. of the •ur dwellings and truly make olics of his archdiocese.
has been received in the form Ihem a' reflection of our own children or one of· theIr ~ts,
Parent involvement is regard"': of a gift presented to Malta.'eJ In a special letter read over personal tastes. has stamped some of the f\l"st . Radio , Uganada,. the' Ug,anada ed as central to the center's op archbishop by the U. S. Amba$<> items that you bought with their ' prelate asked parents to stDP eration. 'rhrough information I'm sure you'll agree t~at, "markS of approvoal. 'Vinyl wall sador Hugh Smythe. and co'unseling on child devel demanding' costly dowries for IIOme ,of ~he ~qst charm~ng paper, formica topped tables homes you ve VlsIted were not arid scrubbable sofas are now their daughters because this' opment, parents will be bclteT necessarily those of rich people being produced to"'look as good might make them lose a chance' able. to understand their chil dren, spokesmen for' the day but rather those of people w~o as they act, and while they may ror successful marriage. "We want to see that marriage , care division of Brooklyn' dioc had more taste than money. ThIS not be as elegant as oriental last Sp~ing I beg~~ a. furniture rugs and Ming 'vaseli, they, last is a success and we shall do all esan cathe,lk' Charities said. Aluminum or Steel decorating and reflm.shlI~g course ,.much longer in a child-centered we possibly can to see that mar
Thrc~e Nuns Assist riage in Uganda is well honored
that I found faSCinating, not" home. ' '944 County Street They added that adult dis
only because of, wha~ I learned Accessories play a major role and loved," the archbishop said. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. cussion groups on current social
myself but beca.use It gave me in making a house not only z Young girls who would nor WY 2-6618 Cl chance ~o watch others crehome, but your own personal mally have no trouble in !'inding and cultural problems are also
planned.
~te1 somethmg lovely from very abode. Paintings, _originals, re a husband are forced to enter litt e. ,.... productions and prints not only illegitima,te unions because of
The center will be adminis pne very creative woman add to the, decor of your'rooms, - the dowry ba~rier, he said. tered and staffed by both reli managed to unearth the mDSt but convey a little bit of you Some parents,· he added, refuse gious and lay personnel. Thus beautiful finds imaginable in to your visitors. Originals are even to discuss marriage with far, three nuns have been r'e such unlikely places as the Vol- hard to come by for their 'prices the young man until the dowry leased from Dther, assignments unteers of America stores and are generally quite ,high if the is paid. The archbishop claimed within their communities to de really decrepit j~n~shops. She artist has any merit; but once that the heavy dowries'demimd:" vote'full-time and effDrts to the had s~c~ an artistic bent and in a while a budding graduate ed by some parents have in work of the center. such, VISIon that she was able to or student artist will sell his creased prostitution in the Sister Marie Lucille Colin of see great possibilities in a piece work on a reasonable basis. If country. the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brent tha~ had i!-& good points almost you enjoy his work and you can' wood, L. I., N. Y., and Sister entirely hIdden .bY layers anlt afford what he ,is asking for it, Kathleen Mary Newell /of the layers of ugly pamt. then by .:Ill means 'purchase it. ,lEast Africa MissioU'lls O~L 0Sisters of Charity of the Blessed A class of this type not only Picasso he may not be, but the Observe Centenary , Virgin Mary, Dubuque, Iowa-G gives you a working knowledge pleasure from hanging ,his work VATICAN CITY (NC)~Pope certified teacher in the New of the fine art of furniture re- in your home and the warmth it Paul VI has sent a message "of York: City public school system furbishing, but also gives you adds to your decor are the im felicitations and good wishes to --8aid in an interview here that the opportunity to meet people portant considerations. ,/ Laurean Cardinal Rugambwa of the new center is expected to be like yourself who find this an Lending Art an "inter-religious-community Bukoba, Tanzania, for the cen South • Sea Streets intriguing hobby. A great deal . '"
,
of love and labor goes into doing A umque serVlce,18 bemg ,of- tenary of the missions in EaSt project."" , a piece over but the pride ,you ~ered . by a few of. the libraries, Africa. ' Tel. 49-8-1 , Stressing the "relevancy of Hyannis feel when you look at it in your In thIS s,tate--lendmg, art. Any The Pope said, that during his of this apo~tolate ,within a reli home more than compensates. adult with • library card may own visit to Africa he had seen 'borrow a work of art' for a "some of the magnificent Home Trends month or two and enjoy, its achievements realized by the Just as there are trends, in ,beauty in his home. Sculpture, 'zealous and self-sacrificing mis fasl1ions for your figure there paintings, woodcut and prints sionaries during' the past een are trends in fashio~s for your are thus a,ble to find homes for, tury." home. Pop art has found its way a few months and if you really into, furniture designs and ac feel that you can't part' with eessories. 'Natur~ly, some of them, the originals are; often this writing 16 Massachusetts at these "way out" ideas cou~dn't for sale. What better way to libraries have this service' and be used in the main rooms of a bring art into the home and ex six' more' are considering it. It traditional or colot:Jial home, but pose your youngsters to the also is noteworthy that these they coul,d be a lot of fun for a beauty Df creativ~ty without a libraries "'are not located Dnly in playroom or teenager's bedroom. tremendous, expense. I person the richest communities but also Inflatable chairs, inflatable pil ally think it is a marvelous idea in larger cities such as Lowell, ~ ] 5 Wn.UAM S'U'. Io~~, a~d inflatable tables seem and I certainly wish my own city Springfield, NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Worcester and to IndIcate that some of the Hbrary had suoh ~'policy. .AB, &f ' Quincy, to name a few~' • II
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II
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ATWOOD
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1lfE ANCHOR-I)iocese of filII River- Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
DORIS l.F£RIWBA Fall mVeI.·
PAQlJCIUII. ,IANNOJlI 1e•. ·.lffllJiit
mm .T....
JA&QlIJRltlI L·1iIEBDI' New Eadfo~ . '...
BERNICE .LeBlANC tIortIIOartmoutll
ItAPPIW.
New Bedford
9
,KAREN D. LOPES
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IDIANE •leBlANC .
Ilortll Dam,ouOl
35 YOUNG :WOMEN COMPLln'E''.FRAINING:AT.ONLY CAmOLIC HO~PITAL <IN FALL RIVER :DIOCESE
Meryl Embarks. on Cooking, Reli·gious Statue Recounts Successes, Trials c2~~~~) C~~~:~·
Staff Assistant Sister of MerCYh dScores T~iplle first
staWeG have experienced LI sudAt Met 0 ist Hosplta
..f l·t d th u=t ~ Q popu an y an e CLEVELAND (NC)-A Sister· The nun said she win make
One of the showiest flowers we have seen is the e1em- drop in sales has forced the of Mercy from Detroit has be- a special study of the hospital'_
. .# statu A~-e the fi-~ outpatient deparbnent and wiU
'"'tis, and we havedee~ded to nmpori a coupIe .Lor 'our closing of a 92-year-old h ""'" ."'. woman, the first .. 81T company ere. Cathou.c and the first registe.red ,.try to .find; out how a hospital. garden next Summer. In this a~ ~lematis may be planted ·.Tille. KaJetta StatUal'Y Com- nurse to be appointed adminis:- with such a large out-patient Hl.. FalJ ,for;: a good 8~r~ to'Ward the Sprint. Meat pany has more than 1,000 statues, traiive asSis~nt to the MethOd- service manages to keep "fioao these striking p l a n t s , . a r e . . . ; ,.. at·the tfactory., but the present ist-eifiHated Sl Luke's Hospital ei8l1y' above water... , ita~f here and altho1,lgb this first meal. She taugM nne' owner expects few to be sold... h e r e . ' " "."'. While at Sl Luke's she will' w1Ren..... N1'N'l.nsed·.. frOm. 'tb,e how· to . boil the potatoes. in·' John, .J." Senosky said .·he has· Sister France8"Marie Gerhard" continue to wear'the nabit of '.' r-"'v~ water with a little salt and.l eut'\pnees in half and Wllllisten ....wiU·SpeD<ll·a year at the hospital. her order and will live at a spe Jlurseries .they are tiny ,they. learned wliat to use ti)'maketile . to offers. but"do:ubtsthat the workin'g 'aB an assistan,t to·the· cia!. residence maintained by
tukkly grow inOO talIl specimens. meat; more tender. This ~. .staitues. ~ll go. st:· Luke' administrative staff,' in' the hospital.for .,nu~ses. and ~.
Clematis is ~ about '1bcia- came out very weB. I lElDl'becl "Tibe.. Kaletta Companysolci, ordertJO· complete. thesis for . staff members.
tin.'For one'thing, it shoUld 'be that if you use pot holdecithat. statues.m 38 states. and, ~lIee'" her master's degree in hospital'
planted· whi!re its base will be have'litue',holes in th~ nlways fourths of the churches In' St. administration from,the Univer..
in' the Shade. We bought One' fold them before trying topWl'" Louis have some product from siq .Gf. Minnesota. Committee to Study
two or three years ngoOl1 ~ somet:hing out of the.oven. the firm. A1thoug~ the co~ . . bl md although it· wasn't a partieFr ' d _. I ~_..lI seUs to· 'all faiths, Catholic Int A ' Ct· r PopulQti~n pro ems aa alarl,. 'gOOd s;pecinwi .to begiA .:~=n I churches have been ita chief er- mencan en e WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi with, I think we lost it because easy to make but I didn't lftke eustomers.. . Has New ·Director dent Lyndon B. Johnson hasaP.It was planted in nnexposed it that· mum. My father dlill "They don't bke ~ur style PONCE (NC) - Father AI- pointed a special commi·ttee of. position. However, this does Il'tOt though any more," Senkosky S81d. "They phonse 'Schiavone, M.M.. · bas private citizens and government ~ to say that clematis s h o u l d ' 'don't like the traditional and been named director of the La- officials to assess the total fed be planted in the shade. Like ~~~ I~ :~a:~r~i' most. say they don't want the rain Inter-American Center Gf era! role and responsibility ia' most flowering vines it is a sun liked it but my lather wasn't mode~ ~treme. The! waDI; the Catholic University of Puer- population problems. lover so it must be planted m too crazy about it beCause he aomethmg m between. to· Rico. Wilbur J .Cohen, Secretary 01. . tile sun. with the preenut!Qn of doesn't like hamburg. With the Father Schiavone has served Health, Education and Welfare. llbading its b3se.. casserole we had baked potatoos Archbishop to Addres~ as assistant direcior of the ceo- and John D. Rockefeller Srd of .Need Support with a sauce. peas an1i a salad. 1Ier fw the past four years. III New York are co-chail'DUUl of. For' dessert we had a chocolate R.h;'eat Conference announcing the apPointment, the com~ttee. Experts on pop BecauSe they are vines dem-' pudding (bmnemade) that was 'Ms? ~o~eE, ~cCarrick ul8ti~ problems from governatiB need some SON of S1J,W)Ort. deUci"''''. ., NEW . ORLEANS (NC)-Co-. UnIversity premdeJllt Bald·he had, ment private life will make ( .._ . . . . . . .
adjutor . ·Archbishop Leo Co been .h appy to oJ. ,n. !bey Lill w grow vi gorous1y..... rr :_.•..:...... Nana and Grond.... . f 0 11ow the ,..ro-:," , up the committee membership, )0 feet and mOle) DO they need lL AUVMCU . ..Byrne ,Olf Sl Paul-Minneapolia recommendation 01 the Latin •.planting location where·~ Ray my Aunt PhylliB tolQY will give the keynote address at . America Bureau of tbeUnited '.l'he committee will be asked un reach upwanL They do uOot next menlo We had lobster saute the 14th national congress of the states Catbolie Con1erence.ia to find ways to educate the flower heavily at the base but with·1t salad, baked pota~ ami . Nationlli'Laywomen's Retreat this ease as well as his own ,"ap American public on POPulatiOil preciation Olf ,a most generous' problems. It will define the IIPProximntel,- ilbree 10 four fleet 11 cheese cake for dessert.- I made Movement here Oct. 25-27. &om the ground. Pilant :three to the cheese -cake the tllay.....befo~ Tbe'~etmg, sponsored bt" and dedicated missiOl1\ry.'. 3Ovemment's direct role in reo lour inches deep in alkaline soil 91) JI wou1dn~ have to go "",roug"" the. Religious of the Cenacle in Father Scbiavone halJ worked search and training related .. (add n handful' of Hme at plant the rUshttne next day. Eve;ry New Orleans, will have as its in. Africa. Latin America and population problems, including ing time and one eaCh yea!' if thingeame out wen exce~ . 'uWomen Renewed -:- New york CitT_ Chinatown. fertility control and the deveU when I I was the lobster World' 'Renewed." More than opment 'Of new contraceptives. ,our so il is acid or neu.tral) . Q nd . 'around! ran passing into Grandp::l RaY's . wait at least two years before elbow and. everything hit the %,000 persona are expected to Urges Ordell' Promote The President asked the com rou can expect heavy bloom.' floor. Grandpa QDd I scooped it· attaTr.m. l f V' ' M mittee also to define the federal But when clematis finaIiy ove 0 Irgm ary role in supporting research,and eome into bloom they bloom like up and no one seemed ~ mind! VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope training here and abroad. and e no other flower in the garden. at all. Mommy said tlllat Wl yourself; and Daddy said that Paul VI, writing the master in cooperating with local agen h 'tth_tth. In'recent years there has been price of lobster meat w a I 10 I'm just like Mommy, I enjoy genernl of the Mercedarian Or cies to assure that all AmerillBll ~ greater variety on the maritet, a little dust could be put up my own cooking. der on the 750th mmiversary of families have access to informa !Deluding the new double vari with. This is the chocolate pudding its foundation, urged the Mer ,tion and serviceo 1m famiJ.,y eties which are especially showy. This week I made the strudel that Meryl enjoyed making anm cedarians to promote the love Of planning. One advantage to growing clem cake that Mommy had in last all the family enjoyed eating. the Virgin Mary. atis in your garden is that they week's column but because. Infallible Pots de Creme Reflecting Upon the order's need very little care. Except fOll" there are a lot of raspberries _1 cup milk, heated to the boil original work of freeing slaves, OOdition af lime and n little growing out in our backyard I ing point
he observed .that once slavery mulching, there really isn't much used them instead of blueberries. 1 egg
was abolished the very reason that has to be done to them. I didn't think it was very good, 2 Tablespoons sugar
for the order's existence was Paint and Wallpaper 'lihey need very little pruning, I guess' raspberries taste better. ¥.i teaspoon powdered coffee called into question: Dupont Paint altbough some varieties need to when we eat them right off the 6 ounce package chocolate bits But you gave yourselves new cor. Middle St. be cut back llfteJr the bl00.mi.ng bushes. % cup heavy cream Whipped laws and channeled your origi l:)eriod. TJ:1e .things I've learned from ll) Place. ,all ingredients, ex nat fervor into multiple works 422 Acush. Ave. my Summer cooking are cept ·the heavy cream in the of charity, into preaching the In the Kitchen G.c.t..., New Bedford H Wash your bands before blender and blend on· low for word of God to infidels, into the 'll."bere comes 0 time in evely PARKING one minute: Pour the mixture education of youth, into helping woman's life wilen she must face you start to make a recipe. Rear of' Store 2) Tuck a towel in your into, the. pots de creme pots (we abandoned boys and refugees~" the reality of the kitchen: she oo1Wt sink or swim. OUlr young shorts to wipe your hands on use4 tiny casseroles that came· woman cf the house, Meryl, (it'a not as handy as wipiJng your with.a be.an pot set). ~llillllill:lIllllmlllllllllllllllllillllllllllllilllllllllllmllllillll"!lmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmlll1I111111111!J1~ 2)' Chill for. at least 2 hours. aged g, has been cooking 11 meal hands on your shorts but Mom my seems to like it better). 3) . Serve with, whipped cream. for her father once a week now 3) Get everything out of the four weeks and has been G;9ing quite well, s'o we tum this c~oards and refrigerator that 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. ~ article over to her. What follows you're going to use before you Plumb~n~ tJ in her words and our spelling. start to cook. ~ TtWR. FR!. .SAT. ~ 4) Cleanup as you go. along My father asked me to make (~. _ 9 A.M. to 5:~O P.M., so there won't be such a mess IJl meal for him once a week be
Over 35 Years GlDuse he wanted me W know afterwards. CLOSED ALL DAT SUNDAy .of Satisfied Service 5) When you use your mea: , llww to cook when I grow t'3;P.
I )For my first meal we had suring cups always level the Reg.. Moster Plumber 7023 broiled steak, mashed potatoes stuH in them with 0 knife. § . JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. § § rand peas. ThW W<ilS much easier 6~ Jr also learned that it's 806 NO. MAIN STREIEV !Ulan I 'thought it Wa3 going to mo~ Jlun to make things that S UNION WHARF. FAIRHAVEN' Tel. 997.9358 § Fan River' 675-7491 YOlll'!I'e going to enjoy eating ~ My mother helped me with ~III1lIUIIIII\llIllIlIlIlIlIll.IIII1I1I11I11I11I1I11I11I11I11"lIli11UIIIIUllllillllllllllllllllliIllIlIlIJllllW!WUU1WllWIIDfii
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THE ANCHOR"':'Oiocese of Fall River..;. Thurs.,·Aug. 1, 1968
Priest .Shortage Calls fQr ,Tra'ining Chang'es, Seminary Rector Says
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NEW YORK (NC)-The'rec tor of a delayed vocations sem inary 'said here that a massive effort by Church officials in "professional 'updating of the clergy" is required "to clear up the bad image the public sees of the vocation to the ministerial priesthood." He also suggested that mar ned men be. accepted as candi dates for the priesthood, .and that candidates should acquire a profession or other means of earning their living prior to the ordination so they would not be dependent on the Catholic com munity. Msgr. George A.' Schlichte, rector of Pope John XXIII Na ~onal Seminary for Delayed Vo 4:ations' Weston Mass" told some 200 pe;sons at Fordham ,Univer sity that the guidelines now ap plicable in delayed vocations lSCminaries probably should be used in "our major seminaries,. where entering students are usually 18 years old." Freedom for Students , .T'he monsignor told an Insti tute for Religious and Sacerdotal Vocations that it has been un fortunate' that changes in disci pline and freedom for the young students of major seminaries . have been "made very slowly." "Most often it required that authorHies be relieved of their posts and this only after a dis play of bad feelings, charges and countercharges, and an air- . ing of' woes in the press," Msgr. SChlichte said. . -"Add to this-the sharp criti eism of priests about their Sem mary training, and the distress d ~hose who no longer see their We in the ministerial pdest ~~od. To al)yone watching the' picture from 'the outside it looks, .h~peless." . . ,; The seminary .directed by' Msgr. Schlichte was founded by Richard Cardinal' Cushing of Boston at the request of the Holy See and' opened in 1964. Its first class of 42 students were men 30 years of age and older. 'He said suggestions given by the Vatican's'· Congregation of Seminaries .(now the Congrega tion on Christian ,Education)' when the seminary wa's planned . eall.ed for less rigid discipline and greater freedom for stu de.nts than was found in the· g~neral major seminaries. Suppression of Personality "I think it is safe to say 'that the 'Pope John XXIII National Seminary would have been U-';lo:
able to survive had the theo~ogy, of the Church and .the Prl:st hood not undergon~ a radl~al change," the monsignor said. "The men from the practical and professional world of business could never have withstood the suppression of personality and lack (]f challenge which would have been imposed." Laymen' who read about priests leaving the ministry, seminarians on strike and other signs of dissatisfaction obvious to ever.yone, he, said, n:ed" "to know these are sl,gns of hfe. _ "The Church is not collapsing; it is shifting gears and he:lding for a grand new era," Msgr. Schlichte said. "This shift means that vocation qualifications, methods of development, and the' functions of the priest in socie~y must· likewise shift gears.'! Lists Proposals '.Dhe monsignor's address cov ered, a, wide range of proposals -the need for recruiting and training candidates for the priesthood in the light of I re vised concepts Of the Vatican Council II theology of·' the priesthood; the chan'ging of con ditions of the clergy'in contem porary society, and the distorted. image of the priesthood'depicted in press reports··of priests' )~av ing the active ministry. . Msgr. Schlic~te' propos~d: Candidates for the' priesthood should' not be lKlcepted fo1' the semInary unless they have a college background; '. , . . They sho~.l1d -have acquired a skill or. profession which ,would allow them to be economically independent of the ecclesiastical community.arter ordination; Married men who wish' to pre pare fur' the priesthood should be accepted among candidates; 'Greater' flexibility in Church structures should open new ave nues for preaching the Gospel in complex, technological 10-' ciety. .
By Patrieia Franeis "Is this. still New aedford 1" the little boy aske~ look1ing at grass, trees and open space. It was hie first trijpl to the :~orth End of New Bedford. He lives in the South End, in what a half century agO was Il"isn town in th'3 city and now numbers main ly Puerto Ric,ans. The' young neighborhood. Otherwise, they!;ilJ ster is one of the many chil never get swept." After lUIlCh is project, educ~ dren ill his neighborhood tional and recreational time.
'SPEAKER: Whitney M. Young, Jr., executive direc tor of the Nati<>:nal Urban :League received the honor ary degree of doc,tor of laws· .from Xavier University Sun day, July 28. Young was the principal speaker at a special convocation, held at Xavier in New. Orleans as the Urban. League opened ·its first na tionai' convention ever held in the Deep. South. NC Photo
Approves Hiring ' "eU:gl-ous Of R U II
who is ;getting a new' look at his city 1hanks to all. ecumenical "Summel:~In" at the Regina Pads Spanish Center at Rivet and South First Streets, a center heavily subsidized by the Fall River Diocese. The Hev. Coleman Conley, SS,CC~, an' enthusiastic "new breed" priest whe believes so cial work is part of his apostol ate, generated the spark that re sulted in a new .type education al-fun p:rogram that now ser vices roughly 100 c).1ildren a day. He went out looking. for ,help for his ehildren and he found more than he bargained for. . Two weeks ago, the Regina Pacis Summer-In opened its five-day-a week program' that teaches, preaches and· entertains. The Center is a third of the "trios" sponsoring the Summer program. Cooperating is the YWCA, through itS Y-Teen vol unteers; and a group of high school volunteers recruited from St, Mary"s Church. PClople Who Help "We have 15 St. Mary's volun teers a day and 10 Y-Teens," Father' Conley says. "Then we have three seminarians" three Mercy nuns, Sister Celina and Sister Luth of the Sisters of the' Love of God; 17 . teachers, six' women who work in the kitchen
SANTA FE (NC)-N~w Me:idco state Attorney General 'Boston "Witt has declared that a"" *" public school'systein can hire a' 'He scrutches his head and is· members of a' religious order to ready to ntart off again' on a 'list ' teach non-religious subjects on' of other people who help witIJ· Q part-time basis. the program. Witt also said the teacher "Fernandes Super Markets could be paid out of funds pro are'suppllling canned, goods, po vided by Title I of the Element-' tatoes and other fo04 items for ary, anc:l Secondary' Education the hot lunch we serve every Act of 1965. day," he says.' "The Kiwanis . ,])he' opinion came as a result. Club and the Exchange Club of a request by Richard Gon-: are helping. Twenty other stores zales, president of the Penasco are supplying other food items Board of Education. on a regular basis." Mrs. Grace Young, director of ~ Witt nOted .that the purpose -g of Title I is to provide funds for the Y-Teens, Rev. Michael Mc. llhe special educa:tional needs Partland anc:l Rev. Paul Con LONDON' (NC)-Three .Cath of' children from low-income nolly, bOt!l o~ St. Mary's Church, olic Members of Parliament' families, regardless of whether planned the Summer ,school with !forced Prime Minister Harold . tney attend public or private Father Coleman. Wilson to disavow a family-plan-·. ·schools. . Set up originally, on a ,one Ding speech made 'by a leading . The allocation of funds is de volunteer--to-one child basis, member of their p~rty, termined by the number of' low the "staff" of the Center now' The three MP's-James Dunn income families in the various. runs at a ,(me volunteer-to-three and Simon and Peter Mahon, counties and the 'children of children basis because of the, brothers- threatened to resign some of those families' attend overwhelming participation in fl'om the governing Labor 'Party parochial schools. the program. There is one following' a' much-publicized at Members of religious .orders teacher fo,r approximately every· tack on big families. by Douglas . teaching in New Mexico public five child:ren.· Houghton, chairman of the p,arty schools cannot, however, wear Religion is part of the pro in the House of. CoqlmoJ1s. "religious' garb or insignia," ac gram with a Mass scheduled , cording to' a recent ruling by each Thursday and a "Bible "With about" a dozen. other School" ea,ch Tuesda'y, the State Supremc Court. , VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope members of (their parfy they The Bible sessions' are based Paul VI has explained that his signed a parliamentary mqtion. on active participation by the forthcoming trip to Bogota, Co to go before the House of Com Histoll'ic· California
children with young ones read lombia, for the, Intlirnatiorial mons "deploring and regretting" ing the E:;>istle and older chil Eucharistic Congress, is 'inspired Mr. Houghton's affront.to the School to Close
dren explaining what the par by the hope of helping his fel family life of the nation.. . FRESNO (NC) -St. John's' ticular Epistle means to ·them. low man. . Mr. Wilson, hardly able to 31 Cathedral elementary school A· five~minute open discussion Speaking to thousands who !for4 another rift in his govern here, will not reopen in the ·Fall follows. had come to st, Peter's Square mentin its cuttent phase of un because of lack of stud~nts from .The sessl.on opens with a song for a regular Sunday noon popularity; eventually had to, the parish and teaching Sisters. . and "intermission" also js song blessing, he said: intervene personally. He wrote Enrollment for. September, time. "Human problems-and today . the three Catliolic parliamen 1968, had dwindled to 169 stuWork Time everything is a problem-should tarians'/l personal letter, assur dents for eight grades. Most of Then there is a Gospel reading spur the growth of love in Chris iri'g theVl· that Mr. Houghton's the'students were not members by a child, followed by a five tians instead of diminishing our :views ,of . big families. "do not of St. John's parish, but were minute .diseussion of the Gospel faith and our courage. The needs in any sense represent the views attending the school because by one of1he te·achers.The reli of our brothers instead of. push or policY' of Her 'Majesty:s gov they were unable 'to get into gion session closes with a "quick . ing us to selfish flight, should-' ernment nor 'are they in any way their own parish schools. .benef:liction.-m~re ,a: blessing,": n. inspire us til compassio'n, that party policy." . The decisive factor for closing SaYS the' dynamic Father Cole attraction tpat was in .-the h~art . Mr:.Houghton· ·had· 'made It the school was a letter from man:" .'. ": ,;' o~ the Lord. It should give us.. qui,te .Clear;;- Mr: 'Wilson added;' Mother' M. Maui"icihi;: c,S,C~'F.rom_lo.:to <DOOn ;is ,work time: . .. . heart to. try' remedies that seem· . t1~~t whl1t ,he ha!l,s'aid had, n~ver provincial superior of:' the Sis- ~fthe; ~.el!ter. Pr.ojects. engaging . Est. 1897 to: go beyond the measure of been:intended-to'commit 'any tersof the Hoiy Cross;:who,stafi alt yo;ungsters ,anc:J·,~taffers· Jp- . . '.' ~'S~p- p"lies reason .and of ordil\3ry 'possibil- . O"il.e:'bu~ ,himself:,"i 'fuHyii~cept· t1ie....··school. ·to Bishop' Timothy clll~"e, 'Cl~alting. a South; Front-, that/'·.the pri~e minister added. Man'ping of, "Fr.esno, asking ;'10 '.' StreeJ ,m~lti. for ,a ,play area" ,2343 Pu~c"as~"Streei '. . ·.~That is .the thought tha-t will '''And'la~k you to do the same~" withdraw ,our SisterS"from"St.· cl~~nirig'and making :,mi{lot; .r;~-. .... ,,' 'New BedfOrd" lUide .. our. ci>mi.ng 'journey ,bD· : He saiil.·he hOpes:,tl1at;ttie'mat.. ~ ',Johh's . school.; . : because" of .' pairs;' -.to, -1he ; Cente.r: 'b\1ild,itig, ~ : cr "'996-5661 .' Latin. America" '. ' .:, ". " , 1ercaihioloi:bcdeftto' 'lack of'persoIlIleL'" . :,' H.·" "aJldswee;ping streets iiJ." I..:;,.',j,,;_.'.';.._.". .'.';;.'";''':......;._;,,;.,__,
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There are movies, tutoriDf3l sessions for non-English spealll-. ing youngsters and for th083 who need special help to keep. up with regular classes, a cook ing school for girls, sewing and needlework classes, also foo girls, and art, drama and danCe .i11g sessions in which all tbl@ children participate. Along with "regular" classcw" the children also are introducecll to the cultures and traditions ~ the various ethnic groups th~ make up their city. "We tell them about BlacLZ history and Puerto . Rican an~ Portuguese and Cape Verdeam. and 'French customs and his tory," Father ·says. . Special ~ours Tours of the city and poln1ls of interest in Southe'astem Massachusetts are among t.bQ "specials" 'on the Summelr schedule. The children. are transported in a bus suppli~ for the Summer by Father COlt? nolly's father-Who also' takl52 care of gas and oil expenses. ,Since the Summer-In firs!l started, about 20 women of tb€l neighborhood who never hMl been involved ifi conUnunity ae> tivities have volunteered thei8 Services wherever they can ~ utilized. . "They help the kitchen anti. in the Center, they do whatevelf we need' done," Father says. 'The mothers of chiidren ~ rolled now are planning a varn.. ety of sPecial events to hei~ raise money for, the Centeli'o "T'hey are thinking 'of havintl special nationality meals, thew. are going to run a rummagG sale'" '" "'" Father Conley's mind, whldi runs faster than his tongue, pauses for a moment and it .iro possible to inject a question. , "Where does the money conw from to operate the program?"" .' He looks surprised. "From people," he says, as though th~ is the mos~ obvioiJs answer the world. He 'admits, however, th~ more needs to be done-like. replastering the outside of too Center, which is cracked from age. "Somehow," he says, withowtl doubt, "we'll mariage to g~ that done, too." , Federal Aid -Last week, Father Conley W38l. notified the Center .has beem' awarded a Federal.grant of ap. proximately' $10,000 for educa .tional programs for children 0l1'I non-migratory Puerto RicaJl!l parents. . That will help provide some of the special educational mate rials' he already has ordered. With the help of God - and! people working in His name- Father Coleman hopes to make the center a model of what caD. Qe done to help people in loW income areas 'help themselves. The preliminary results aft) encouraging.
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THE ANC.I:fOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ,of fall R,iver- Thurs., Aug.. 1# 19~ .
Donates$lO,OOO 'For Biofrons
Marc' ~ffi~olier6s Port-Royal Has M~~neading Subtitle
NEW YORK (NC) - Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of Washington has donated $10,000 to the U.S. Catholic Relief ServiCe:! (CBS) emergency aid program to hcl.p srem the widespread starvation in S2CeSSionist Biafra, Nigeria'. fDmner Eastern Regioll1, CBS of fleials announced here.
~ Rt. Rev. Me;""". JohnS. Kennedy
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A lengthy and intricate .new book by Mare Escoiier, published ~y Hawthorn (70 5th Ave., New Ym-k, N.Y. 10011. $7.95), has a title and a subtitle. The title,· PortROyal! is more or less appropriate.T'he subtitle, "The Drama (!)f· the JanSenists,"is nriis. Reading. Port-Royal was the t.beir ~ eomrilanded ~ l.0yDame of a convent of Ciater- al?, and. the Pens. {Jf ibJ:iDi.ant .', ....:...;h.. I ' wnterB like Pascal and Raeme. 0I:1n Duns, W.u.n; was· eee-" . . Battle ofWorils. .
,!Grated'andcOntroverted throu:g~~ ., A 'ferocious, and often 'brutal, QUlt.:F'ranceduringth'e l'lth, ~~ .. battle .ofwordsbroke oat and Wry';Of its ' , .. " , ' long contmued. Were the 'hostii ,hiStory-iIi .'that . '.. ities confined to verbalcliarge period, the au- . :and eounter-charge, it wolild tho~' gives a have been bad enough. But .in 'WiJipathetic acthose_ days of close association eount: But·· b Y " b e t W e e n Church and State, 1llO"'means does . throne and altar, a political dilllegive a mension was ineVitable. plete or imparTbe doetrines of the .cTansen -tial reading of ists were said to be not only the Jansenist heretical, but also subvemive, ",elrama. IDs is a and the polieepowerwas ~.cated a n d b r o u g b t tobearag~ them. weIghted . ver. ., Not only ,that. Lows XIV was IliOn.. In 1599 a· dauPter..of. estabtahing FraMe as the 'dUet 4Ihe' Arnauld ' family" reeel:ved: ,. power in' Europe and eoWd put from King Henry IV the.:asnu.r- .. severe pressure. on 1be. Pope,
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diocese of Washington, Cardinal O'BoyIeinformed CBS officials tbata special collection iDan the Catholic dhurohes of tbe archdiocese would be eonducted ,; Sunday" .July, .28,.~, further aid iDe'" agency's ail' and. ,sea ship-. • menta ctf,acutely needed food;" , clothing and ·medicine ,to the . war~eeted'.areas.
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liGHT HAMILTON (NC) Thirty"':tbree ·Catholic .semk1ari .ans anf125 Catholic priests are among a group currently at tending fhemne-weekOhaplaia ;Officer Basic ,Course at the 11.S. Army" .Chaplain School here ill Bew.' York. ' ., ."lbe, ·Catholic. semmanansare.· _ ..~nd such ;BrOQP.io 'en~
the mation:releaSedin Lisbon by 8 'representativE: of the Bia,.:. . . D-an government. Caption information supplied by the same . . . ' , ' . ' ,. . • ,. ,:'~ mdicated the. woman was,killed m a Fec:k~ NigerIan : 'lW'l'aiId·.OIl Umuahla on .Mareh. .,18, ·1968; SuPl~1ies ·of ·.food . . 'andmewcineforthe .starring.populatioo of Biafrihave; ' been, offered by various .government and priV'a~ .~gencie8f· ·t~_Ann7th·. eo'~~~C: =-_t..• ~:":'I"-~J.--.l· '"D~1;' f Se ;·N.C 'Dl'L.""-_ . . .:IU~ ~ .
_'£v ~ was mvolved m the power poHeutside Paris.· . . ' '." ,. .." tieS' of' the eontiDent. ThiS '~l.Nlljg ~lillV 1C~JlE rV1~ '. . .u~w. . , "to ,1lbemili'tary ehaplainqbe- " On this ~ she was ~~., King did not hesoitate to do, in ' ' !ore their -o.rdi.nation•. :TheT :at-. , with ,.the.habIt ofa noVice. She .,. the interest of the enemies' of tend ,the "sehoo1 as.commisSioned was ,not yet ,eight years o1d.8~, . the Jansenists. , ,., seccmd.lieutenants .in the Staff.,·, wasinstalled.'as abbesswhen~ ,,' ThePopehad.somethiDgeJsetG :, . " ., ( . ";" , :s~ .Branch.. Azmy•. , was ·11. WIth the. name etl., bear in mind: namely the .swe1i lt~"expected they will enter Mo.ther.,Angelique, .a,nd on the '.: ing Gallican tendency which Director .Deplore.5 S,parsity of Ner'lro the ~y as chaplains after« same day made her .first ,C(ml:- . aimed at weakening bonds 1:1 dination, or .at least remain ill DlunioI4 '. between the Chun:h in Women atCDA Convention the u. S.A:rmy Reserve. All. this had been ammg:ed.br !U1d the Holy See.J1 he gave o f _ O r d a i n e d p r i e s t . s and other llIe.r. family. She was aware. o;f tense 1lO Louis,' Gallicanism CLEVELAND (NC)-A diree- tei-,ou.r national,conventiota· ~ergymenm the :seboolwiB DO . vocatio~ to the religious life, . wouid . inerease, but, on 1be - for the Catholic Daugh'tera wolild not be the almost li17:'~r theArm,y e~plainq CIa and, ,grudging],y endured ~ing other hand., every concession he ·of America broke the calm at ita wbitething.t is," lme said. ac'ti'¥'eduty as captains. cdO'istered. But at 17 she ?eard made would have • eomparable 32nd. biennial. national COIlvenIn her opening :remarks Mi:&. a sermon which radiel:llly effeet. tiOllhere by stating that the Trabeaux Stated: ., '. changed her attitude, and She DisgraeeIo) 'I'aet.hla .lI:p8I'Sity of Negro woinen in at"We a.reindeed )jiving in times i ~alouslY set about the reforma It is this UJiholy tangle, ,and teDCianee .made·the affair Gal_ of greatehange. nut,.·· lam ...._ dilemmas " . " . " . , . , . a -hl'ch most lily-white."· two of her community. . . -concerned'with OIIl"OIle -at
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" -DUBLIN '(NC) ":"'Over 100 Sbe succeeded in this, and WH accounts 'for the oorry, and at Mrs. Winifred L. Trabeawr:: of· change in'this :p11!Sl!n'tation. If ill IriSh .members .of the LegiQll 'flJ6. ealled' upon to reform oth~con t1imesel"enSOFdid,. histm7 .of 'Plequemine, La., who had just . the· new andperlectedmle ':Mari' are .~ their .Sum Yeats. A seoondPort-Boy was' what 'purportedtobe ClCiJ'1tention . been. re-elected as one of the ..W!hieh the layman is .called upoa . mer . v.aeations helpingmissioD- ' established.in Paris.·~~···over ·theologiealol'thOOoXy.·Mr.· group's nine directors, .madeher, to play in thew-om .ofGod'• . mes in:tlheAfrlean'.eouttWieIoI. eelebrated and admired. , and' E5c0lier makeS mueh .of the un-' .tatement· while discussing the·, ChUl'Chul our. day.. Kenya .and Tanzania. wWi reason, for shil nHlted ~- seemly, not to say' disgraceful. . areaofinv<llvement meivil "&1 'addressing oursell"ell to' After· .•.ClODceIebrated 'MaSa ityand abuse,refusedBll appl~ 'tactics '1owbicb 'ehurehmen re.;. • rigbts.' . • . any :singlephase·of social action, attheDublln 8i......- ."-flew· eants save those who,' of.. th.etl'· .....-._.., -~".he --ot be ......... '""Perhaps if we, as Catholic .it .;a of ...-LC ....., ....... · 10....- - ·that . _.. ., ......" -~....... ......... """"" - ... """".... - . 0 . - - ~-...~ . • Nairobi, KeDya,wbere ibey
~ill,chose toenter~1igion, . exaggerate tbeirindecenq: ; Daughters, tried to understand, , 'we·undet'$tandw.bat we are Yisitedthe P'aveof Edel 'QUiDn, and lDdueed therel1g1ous to· However he is lesstiban. ex- ~athiu and loveallttle·bet about. N~ only .tllat, ~ut ~ . the· '1risb girl who Apentsevea plJll'suea life. of prayer in an' llt haustive ~ hisPreaentatioii ~ iw.t .can.pot get .$OCialprobleuu . years 'as" • Legion envoi _ mospbere of seclusion;·lIDd the .Jansenist phenomenon.. HiS" solved .simPly·1:I7 W,itiDgcht;eks Africa and whose cause for be lIilence: . . . ., foCwi is' on Mother Angelique . of am. as all but hQpeless, .de "We .can no longl~r watch the . atification has been introdueecl Securmg spIntual dIrection . and' the nuns of Port-Royal. 'manding an excessive' austerity in Rome. for the nuns:was DOt~y.· st. That theywe.re virtuous women of which only the most heroic . battle bf·life .go on below' us H F an is d 'Sales gave some d'llc are ca-~;h.le, Jausenism :repre we safelyob'-..erveitfromtbe Plans .arebeingmade iosend r .c e.. . , . . , . and. model religious cannot.be.......
,brow of some .~ 'highabove at leas1190' more .Legion mem mg rar~ vlBlts..But~ avail denied. Nor can :it be gainsaid ::~;st~~ry:m-eatto authen 1;he fray. We must eome down bemto West Africa intbe FdL able pnests had no high order that they suffered excruciat and :take ,part in it.. <Iri: competence. When the A:b ingly. bot of Sain-C~oap~ared 3D The lcin,g regarded their eon . MOVement Continues Mrs. 'l'rabeau (l()Ilduded: "Un tl\e scene, he .unmediatelybe- vent as the center ;andthe sym Port Royal was not, in other tile ,one gets to slowly grasp the came amaj~r influence ()nbol. of Jansenist intransi,gence, words, Jansenism in little, as pain of being treated with such Mother Angeliqueand her fol- and he was cruel .In venting .his Mr.' Escolier would have .,US indignity as aperscn and what lowers. displeasure on it bud. finally think. Nor was it the root of the it is like to know file hopeless-, Sets Off Row . forcing its dissOlution. movement, as Louis XIV was ness of ·b¢ngbom. black, not until then can one begin to shed Saint-Cyran was a longtime '. .spreads Over France persuaded. What has often been called ~he friend of a Flenrlng named Jan ~,f ti ' Had Jansenism prevailed, :the .r:U:> course 'oae on~as rutih, whiteman's mentality.' • . result would not have been the lien, whom' be had met in uni Ie and ptib I. ss l i 'contero She ~'d 'such a ml.ntaII°ty.. .d.o4D versity days. Together tihey E ' dIe. But 1\111"." triumph ·of ,the pure spirit .found . ~ ....~made an intensive 'study of the t. sco ..,eerthgIVest not af equate th ... pic '-Port-Royal.. And . ,theking's not seek ...... " unde~,staand' "..... .."... , ' , writings of St. A-ugustine. Willh V~ e exten ItO h ed .. ansen suppression·of the conventfai1~ . grinding agony" ,of being dis'. ' , " . i ! I I. their findin."", they intended to movemen.· . 'a . many, utterly la' bring about the ,sup ,qualified .f1'Omman,Y.tbingsla - - the dispute eon many a . pression of . the . movement. ':It . life -.-n,. ~l'" ·.because """ .... ·the color . I , 110 enter upon h moret adheren:ts 10 th andtbe ~ ' ; ~I\'.: ~ . __... __ 'n ,mue grea er ; .rce , a n , .·......,\to cause trou'ble' for genera' .of...:one'lISlcin. . ',IL,._ _...;....;. ..... cemmg grace ClUU ;u·.".,Wil· ..person whose knowledge of it .. _ ' '" . _ _ which was t:b.~ ;raging. , is' d~rivedon1yfrom this book, Uons thereafter. . Ultimately as bishops.,of ,Ypres, would ever suspect. , l \ I 1 r . Esoolier recites ..t he-,qeis-. : Jansen' publj.sht;ld ,J.)ot?k 'entitled . It spread all over' France .and situdes which beset the Jesuits, Augustinus, wbicpwas.. ·to· ,set·. ~yond.To Louis,.it represented France, and,themonarchydur off art·. ecClesiastical-political political dissidence and the seeds ,ing the eighteenth century,sug row lasting 1ior :many ,decades. of revolution, ,of which an abse- gesting that the mortal Jilows The so:"caiJ.ea \Jansem.sts· ,took lute monarch could not be -ex- .strUCk at Pori-Royal 'led direct ~heir name',indtheir.1,ead from 'P£icted to be tol~ant. I ly to the disbanding of the Jes J~~sen.Theif,\Yiews "were a.t, Moreover, Mr. Escolier; mini- ,uitll,to the Revolution, and to odds with those .1:1£ .the Jesuits, 'mizes the doctrinal error-implicit . the dIsposition of the Bourbons. whom they' .accusedof teachin.g aride~plicitin,Jans!:kism..SaintBut the sequence of cause and watered-down 'dOctr.ine and jax c:yran, for example, once said, .' effect is .:far more ·compliCated morals, and whose' casuisti-ythey "God has made it known tome than that. The Church was made
found scandalous. .' that his Church ceased to exist to suffer grievously and pay
'The Jesuits were. aPGlitkal . five or six hundred years ago"" dearly for its mistakes and .fol
power in France. One .of their (One might suppose that God lies, but, in the perspective of "
number wasc .0 n f' 'e s s 0 r to . could have been more precise history,.it c~nnot be said ·that
the "Sun King," Louis .XIV,and· .about .something sosignificaIit). opposi,tion to .Jansenism aDd ,de
others hadon],y less impol'tant Rendering God all but iliac termination' to scotch it:was
eGnnections. The Jansenists, ·for cessi-ble, rendering man'. state W'8S either mistake or folly.
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OPE'iN DA·:ILY
'[FOrR ITH!E :SEASON,
Education Office
fM ,1ft'CIO'TO'R
. Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
Sch~o~ ~8@] ~®ffi~ ~fr~
Reports>
WASHINGTON (NC) The U.S. Office of Education bas reported to Congress the $1 billion Title I progTam of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) provided extra educational anq person~ services to 9.2 million young sters in the. nation's. schools in the. 1~-67 school year. Some 466,000 of them-about 5.1 per EeDt-were children in nonpub lic schools. ESEA was hailed as a major breakthrough in federal rod to education legislation upon itS passage in 1965. Congress speci fied then that the Act's eight titles (broad categories of as sistance) were open to partici pation by eligible children. in both public and non-public schools. The Title I progr~mwas de signed to provide financial ag..· sistance to schools serving areas with large concentrations of children from low-income fam ilies. The programs are admin istered by public school authori ties who are required to enlist the active participation of non public school officials in their planning. . Programs in the 1966-6'1 school year concentrated for the most part on remedial reading, math, the social stiJdies, and cultural enrichment. In mallY , instances, the programs also in eluded' food, health, psycholog ical and social services. Per Pupil Expenditures
C@t~@~D'!:
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[}{]®0f9>$) rn5O@~[f@NEW YORK (NC)-The Cath<> olic Medical Mission :aoard h;w announced the shipment bJ7, ocean freighter of 8,796 poundo of medical supplies for war' ref~ ugees in Nigeria and Biafra" The shipment, due to arrive il:l Nigeria about Aug. 7, is the.lat-> est in a series of special con~ signments of medical suppli~ forwarded by CMMB to help the victims of Nigeria's civil 'war. Valued at $13,258 wholesale, it consists of infants' nutritional products, vitamins, pain-reliev ing tablets, bandages, dressings, soap and enrichment waferS-I! food supplement for protein-de-> ficient diets. Already on the high seas liJ tl CMMB shipment, which WW!l expected to arrive in Apapa, 0;0 the Nigerian coast, July 19. Val ued at $87,654 it also contains ina fants' nutritional products, vHa--•. mins, banda,ges and dressings, ill addition to antibiotics, anti-tu-o berculosis, malarials and parasi tical d'nigs. REFUGEES STILL COME: Housing conditions ma.y be deplorable in Hong Kong, The board made four special as seen here, buot the stream of refugees from rnaiTlland China, including one million shi·pments of medical supplie. illegal bnmigrants, has swollen ·the population to an estimated 3,785,000 people, packed earlier this year to the area, via Lisbon, Portugal - one Dl into about 391 square miles of the city proper and the New Territories, including Kow January, two in February an'! loon and the new satellite city of J{wun ~QnB' ~here':Maryknoll pr i es t s are forming one in June. These supplies, val three city parishes. NC Pho-to. . ued at $88,906, included mediCld and surgical instruments, ho~ pital goods of all kinds, and dis. ease-fighting products such' all tclanus toxoid vaccine, antibi~ mics, sulfonamides, v,itamins ant! iron preparations. With its July 1'1 shipment. The Rev. Ernan McMullin, head of the Unive17Sity Notre Dame's department of CMMB will have forwarded worth of medical }ll9filosophy and a.n expert on GalHeo, has voiced reservatio-Ds about the r e c en t I y an $406,817.62 supplies since the beginning of nounced plans to "retry" the 17th century I taHan scientist, oonvicted of heresy for teach this year to assist the civil WQ.1I ing, that the earth revolves around the sun. A suggestio-D thaJt the Vaticail. maw aJPpoint Q refugees.
:expert Says Reopening of Galileo '8 Trial Would ReMere Legal Technicality
The 466,000 nonpublic school children who participated in Title I programs in 1966-67 rep resented a decrease from the of ficial 1965-66 figure of 526,000. Office of Education officials attributed the decrease to statis oommissiO'in to retry the tical efforts in the reports of two . GaJililO case was made earl large city sch,ool districts for ier this month by Oardinal 1965-66~ which showed 40,000 more nonpublic school children Franz Koenig, ArchbishoP of Vienna, in an address w a participating than actually did so, and to a decline in Summer meeting of Nobel Prize winners at Lindau, West Germany. The projects than in any others. Although fewer nonpublic Cardinal expressed hope that school children participated, of clearing Galileo's name would ficials said more money was "heal one of the deepest wounds spent on those who did. Per between' science and religion." , pupil expenditures for such
In a discussion following a children increased from $57 the lecture on Galileo to an audi,;, first year to $75 the second. ence at Notre Dame, Father Mc Mullin, who is a specialist in the CmGlver philosophy of .science, based his res~rv.ations on two. grounds.· MeetDng "My main reason is that I am NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The very doubtful as to whether the Knights of Peter Claver Frater- trial can be shown to have been nal Order will hold its 53rd legally a miscarriage of justice," annual convention here starting h'e said. He argued that the 1616 Saturday. Some 2,000 delegates Decree of the Congregation of and visitors from throughout the the Index, which declared the United States are expected to Copernican heliocentric theory attend. of the universe to be ,heretical, Auxiliary Bishop Harold R. was clearly violated by Galileo's Perry, S.V.D., of New Orleans Dialogue on Two Chief World • and Father Francis Theriault, Systems so that "from the pure the order's spiritual director, ly legal point of view, there can will be in 'charge of religious be little doubt that there was activities for the convention. enough evidence to convict Ga Willie Polk of New Orleans is lileo, even though the manner general chairman. in which the trial was actually The. Knights of Peter Claver carried on left much to be de sired." is a fraternal organization with CJ a. large Negro membership, al-' He w~ strongly opposed to a though not restricted to Negroes. retrial. "This is to get lost hi Its constitution opens member legal technicalities that are no ship to "any good Catholic." The longer of any significance," he order, which has councils in 18 commented. "What is of interest Iltates, engages in ~vic, char": today is not whether Galileo itable and educational activities; was guilty according to the laws of his time, but whether the laws of his timeougbt to have Honorary Degree been what they were." WASHINGTON (NC)-Joseph Cardinal Slipyj, highest ranking Father McMullin's second ar Ukrainian Catholic prelate and gument was thllt reopeni.ng the head of the Lvov archdiocese in Gallileo case in this way would the Soviet Union, who was re accomplish nothing significant. leased by the communists in "Everyone knows that the 1616 1963 after 18 years of imprison decree was erroneous," he said. ment, will receive an honorary "Everyone knows that Galileo doctor of laws degree from the has been vindicated. Such a Catholic University of America declaration would accomplish here tomorrow. litUe. Bince it is hardly neces
Knights of Schedule
15
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sary to say in 1968 that the trial, Father McMullin favored tl Church does not stand where it positive approach by which the did at the time of Galileo. If Church would formally recog someone feels a tension or even nize the pioneering importance an incompatibility between reli of Galileo's writings on the na gious belief and natural science ture of Scriptural interpretation. today, it is not likely that a for He suggested that this approach mal admission on the part of the might be coupled with an ac Church of its ancient error in knowledgement that the. 1516 declaring Copernicanism con decree was an erroneous one trary to Scripture would alter which put Gali.leo in an unten able position. his attitude." Father McMullin said his re Fr. McMullin, an Irish priest, action was shared by many of the scholars who attended the. holds degrees in phYsics, theol International Galileo Congress ogy, and philosophy ,and was at .Notre ,Dame in 1964 at the president of the AmericanCath olic Phflosophical Association in time when a petition to the Sec 1966-67. His Galileo, Man of ond Vatican Council to exoner ate Galileo had been widely Science, a series of authoritative essayS by leading scholars on publicized. different facets of Galileo's work Instead of trying to rehabili tate Galileo by reopening his in science, was published earlier this year.
CC!thedrevO Fore ST. BONIFACE (NC) - The destruction by fire of weStern. Canada's historic St. Boniface basilica was termed a "tragedy" by Archbishop Maurice Bau-· doux of St. Boniface. "The whole of western Canada was proud of this cathedral," the archbishop said. He estimated the financial loss at $2.5 million, with most of the contents :re garded as beyond replacement.
EILEClRICAL COB1ltvClIECtorll
Set Consecration "Oans in Boston BOSTON (NC)-Bishop-de80 ignate Daniel A. Cronin will be consecrated auxiliary bishop o:Y Boston on Sept. 12 at the cathe dral of the Holy Cross here witb . Richard Cardinal CU!l,hing cxf Boston as consecralor, it was 811P. nounced by the Boston archdio cese. Assistant consecrators will 00 Auxiliary Bishops Jeremiah Minihan lind Thomas J. Riley of Boston. The announcement was made after Bishop-desig-' nate Cronin virned Cardinal Cushing ~t his home a Bri-ghton.
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Open in' England
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
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S;®[f\70~® ~~@m1' WASHINGTON (NC)
'A $2 million service and ex pansion program that will include a national center to serve private education will, be launched by the National Cath olic' Educational Association Sept. 1. 'It will be the first such drive in the organization's , history. Bishop Raymond J. Gallagher '@f Lafayette, Ind., NCEA presi ,dent general,' made the ,an, Illouncement in conjunction wi,th F.atherC. Albert Koob" O. lPraem., 'NCEA executive seere :ii8ry. ' "Bishop Gallagher said the ne~ , NCEA Educational service Cen ter to be constructed in Wash 'ington will have a dual fundion: it will be a 'focal center forpri vate education, and n 'profes Gion'l center for all of Catholic: Itducation. ,.,"It has become ,increasingly dear," the bishop said, "thllt a ,eooperative effort.in both ~hese areas is essential if private ~u ,eation is to continue its, ,vital \fQntribution to the over-aUcedu ~tional welfare of the nation. ,"It is fitting that a profession lid' organization such as the NC~A should be' in the.van ~ NCEA PROJECT: ~uCational Service Center, seen abov,e in archivect's drawing, ~ard of efforts for coo~.rati~~ ~1l be built by the Natiooal Catholic Eaucational Association on ,MacArthur' Blvd., camong the, private sectors of :WashingtOn, D.C.,.. where (in lower photo) Fa~her C. Albert Koob, ]~CEA Executive ,~ucation.:' , '" '" " ' ': "" '" F.ilther Koo» sai~ t~e qriY~.~ ,pirector, flli~ws the' s.ite ~ Si8te~' EI!zabeth' M~rie Reckert of th~, Unmlin~' Academy, )IlFti~ $2 miHion, wjU ,b~gin~ith 'Bethesda, Md.~ and 'Paul O'DOnnell, sQn of Joseph O'DQri,riell, NCEA BusinesS' Mamiger. . . . ' . , <!.:he association's, membership, but will also embrace buSiness 'tM.d industry, 'found!ltions" ~and other groups arid individuals in:.. Cerested iIi the betterment lit o ' monpublic education. ' ,!Q)ifj'®<e1I'~ h~o>~ep~Bu, CardJi~al The "constituency"' di~Uy', oorved by the NCEA, he'pointed BOSTON (NC)~Richard Car Lally, editor of The Pilot, Bos state and municipal agencies to out, includes some _14,000 schooli! dinal Cushing has commissioned find ,a way of organizing educa ton archdiocesan newspaper. with more than 200,000 teachers an in-depth study of exfsting In its planning phase, expected tion into a .3ingle interlocking and six million students. conditions in Boston' 'archdioc to end in October, the study will and more el1fective unit. The' Cites Court Decision esan schools along with a pro Ii'ne up areas to be', surveyed, possibilitity (J,f pooling religious The center's services to prl jection of what conditions' will possibly including such ques- . congregations. of team teaching' vate education will include Ii- be in the nex,t decade: ! tions as educational' problems ,iii and elfchangE! of lecturers, will brary and research facilities, The studv will be cioitducted the inner city, and',suburbs, the be investigaJted, along with \fQnference rooms, interpretation ~ sharing of facilities. effects of population shifts OIl cDf lefpslation pertaining topri- by the New England Catholic hther 'McHugh' said" hlii: the Schools, ,and,' the ,feasibility vate" 'iind fndePeD(lent schoo1s;'Education Center at the Boston' '. af niaintain'hig 'Church':run, group's respolilsil;>ility'is merely, assis~ance in the prepaI!ltiotl of College SchOOI-of Education. schoolS in 'view of rlSi~lg costs. to gather and examine the factsi' proposals for _ support from Father Pa'ul F.,McHugh, head of not,to recommend :policy or' PooRirig 'Possibillities foundations, and the organiza- the center, will .direct the S¢udy~ ' 'make decision&. ' tion,of workshops of interest to, COd Problems The secOnd, or study .phase. private education personnel. Working with Father McHugh will involve the opinions of par Noting ·the need for such as-· will. be, Dr. George Madaus,'di-: ents and' other interested per aistance; Father Koob said: "As' rector of, research of the'region-: sons on ' sChool problems and , the difficulties in 'regard to fi- 'a1 Education' Center; Msgr. poss~ble future plans. llI:anCing ,and' defrni:~ion of pur~ . Comelius Sherlock; ,former Bos Simultaneously, the study will TRENTON' (NC)-New Jer~ pose mount, all in private edu~ton archdiOCesan ,!uperintendent· interview ~ligious teaching sey Gov. Richard J. Hughes haS eatiori are b'ecoming more united .of schools; Msgr. ,Albert Low, communities and offici!1ls, of signed into law bills ending the cDn the value to the nation of n present· superintendent; Dr. John' man-in':'thei'housewelfare rule <!Iual, rather than a monolithic, Walsh of the Boston College ed and providing for state takeover $ltIT@$$ 1J(1ii)@'W~@<dJge l3ystem of educat!pn. 'ueation faculty; Msgr. Thomas of most welfare costs in pro "The decision 6f the U. S. Su- Finnegan,' archdiocesan chan grams noteligilble for federal Of Ul7iloti"@dJ N@]!to@[!U; preme Court the past June in . cellor; James Dunn, financial assistance. \ UNITED NATIONS (NC) the Greenbush case, permitting and busiriess consultant to Car The .man-iul-the-house ru1f~ the lending of textbooks to non dinal Cushing and Msgr. FranciD The need .to give elementary.. and seCondary SChool teachers II kept welfare payments for de public, school pupils in New thorough knowledge of the pendent children from going to York State, is an indication of gnh~ll'lTl!Ed«!lB United Nations and especililly of families where' a man was pres- growing awareness that educa eDt. The rule has been criticized tion is being considered primar i.... ~Ae'.,."' . . B of the Universal Declaration of as' leading to 'the breakdown of •• w~ w .... u Ii\. Human Rights was stressed in a ny from the standpoint of .NEWARK (NC)-A series of memorandum to UN Secretary, f~~ ~e ~long the poor by benefH to, the child." making it necessary ,for the small group interracial dia General U Thant from the per father to desert so the fam:117 logues has ~n started in this' manent mission of Italy. would be eligible for additional city's NorthWard, where racial ' The Italian ~~morandum , ' tensions have been 'running, high quested that the UN General assistance. .. Under the ne'w legislation,. the LITCHFIELD (NC) _ The as a result of the activity of mil Assembly add to its agenda for , former major seminary of the itant groups. the fortcoming session: an, item state ~ pay '15 per cent of alll Montfort Fathers here in Con Tqe area ill predominan~ entitled "Need to impart to the welfare costs iltlcUrred in assist necticut will ,become an ecu w:hite,but there has been II teaching staff of primary and ance programll where' federal menical center, according' to steady influx ,of blacks and secondary schools a knowledge funds are not available: Father Eugene Lynch, S.M.M., Spanish-speaking people 'in re 01. the Uni~ Nations and its provincial superior of the reli_ cent years, ~nd rioting in New specialized agencies, with par_ gious congregation." ark: last Summer created suspi- ticular reference ~ -the Univer Father Clifford Laube, S.M.M., cions and hostility., ',sal Beclaration of Human bas been named 'to direct the The dialogues are 'being held.' 'Rights." ONE STOP , eenter, whicl- will be known as under the auspices of ,the United • In its explanatory n~te, Italy ,SHOPPING CENTE~ Montfort House and will have Clergy of North Newark, II pointed out that lack of knowl _ Television _ 'Grocery an 'ecumenical staff and ,board of 'group 'which" includes prieste edge and understanding 'of directors. from sev~ral parishes. People UN "inevitably has an unfavor- , _ Appliances _ Fumiture The center will provide week- from 10 Catholic and Protestant able effect, on the political,- 'eco 104 Men St." New IecJ.ford end retreats and midweek pro- '. 'churches attended the first in nomic and social life o,f nations, ; , grams, lectures, and courses 'for the series af Immaculate 'CoD-. and on relations 'among the ~ 997·,9354 cJelgy anlilaymen of all,fai~ eeption church. pIes of different coWltries."
A'[fcchdDO(eSan /S~~(O)@~' '$l{~dy
wn
Cushmng
Jeney_ l'erminates , Mrmlm-an-tlouse Rule
BIRMINGHAM ·(NC):....A mo saic memorial to the late Presi dent John F. Kennedy was opened in a garden here within the shadow of St. Chad's Cath olic cathedraL The mural, 40 feet by 10 feet, .depicts the President surround ed by people of, all races with hands outstretched toward him. Among them is Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The mural, paid for by the city's Irish commuliity, was un veiled by the Irish Ambassador hi London, o!ohn Molloy. ' Giant flanking ,tablets of stone are inscribed: "In tribute to John F. Kennedy, President of the United States, 1960-3" and: "There are no white or colored signs' on the, graveyards of bat tle." The memorial, in a garden of flowers wi-tha 'waterfall and pool provided by the city corporation, was dedicated by Archbishop , George Dwyer of Birmingham. Ambassador Molloy said that the mural a' fitting tribute by Irish men and,' women of Birmingham to a fellow country man and world ~teil1~an. ,-
was
American, College Stays at Lou,vain ' I:.OUVAIN (NC) ~ PlaM 'to shift tPe French-speaking ~ec tion of the Catholic Universi.ty of Louvain wiIl not" affect the American College hete. , Father Anthony Deilaneve, sPiritual director' of the .Ameri .'can unit at the university, silid that·the operatlonof his hlstitu tion is tied closeiy to'Louvain's , tli'eOlogy faculty, which is to main here despite any other re alignment of the university. The American college' houses U. S. seminarians taking theology courses at Louvain. J/ At a mee~ng of the, Belgian bishops at Malines,' it was de cided that further expansion of the university must take into account the existence of the two sections, Flemish-speaking and French-speaking. Strife between the two groups has led to riots h~re ~nd ~ a,political crisis OD a national scale. '. ' • .
, : The: bisliops picked a site at
,OUignies,'.in a French-:speaking 'district near Brussels; for an ex panded ,French-speaking section of r.ouvain University.
re
ANTONE S. fE.NO,:JR. ~ISPENSINe
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Former Seminary • IC E_cumenlca enter
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~ 1FaiI' ~... 671-5677
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15
Senate Comment
mE
On Smuggling By Pope Paul
Catholic Hospital P~ans E~~a~$~on
WASHINGTON (NC) The U.S. Senate was chal lenged to match Pope Paul VI in his recognition that ~eople are more important than politics:' by Sen. William Prox mire of Wisconsin. Sen. Proxmire referred to a :report of Pope Paul's statement on the plight of war victims in Biafra. He quoted the Pontiff QS saying that Catholic relief agencies had sent aid to the beleaguered Biafran people de spite "difficulty, risks and much expense." Sen. Proxmire, who had asked that reports of the Pope's speech be inserted in the Congressional Record, called the Pope's words "a brave statement fOJ; the Pope to make." , Charter Member "For," the senator said, "if there is s.uch a thing as an 'in ternational establishment,' the Pope certainly is a charter mem ber. Yet he recognizes that peo pIe. are m<>re important' than politics. He realizes that in the ilace of mass starvation and death, one must put aside the trappings of propriety and the niceties of international Politesse and do what our very na,ture ealls upon us to do: to help our brother who is in need." Referring to the Pope's state ment that supplies from Catho lic relief agencies have been flown into Biafra clandestinely "with difficulty, risks and much expense," Sen. Proxmire said "what we have here 'is the Pope of Rome,and chief of state of the Vatican, confessing that be, in effect, is financing smug gling."
ANOfOR-
Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
CHICAGO (NC)-St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital has purchased its across-the-stree+ neighbor, Lutheran Deaconess Hospital, in what the administrator of St. Mary's called a "great spirit of ecumenism. Sister Mary Edelburg, C.F.S.N., St. Mary administrator, said the Lutheran hospital wdll be tom down and a multi-million-dollar ·health. center and hospital will be built on the site. Founded in 1892, St. Mary's Js
a 280-bed hospital operated by
the Sisters of the Congregation
of the Holy Family of Nazareth.
Lutheran Deaconess is a 70
year-old hospital with 183 beds.
Plans for the new complex win be released in about four months. Sister Mary Edelburg said the purchase was part of St. Mary'," growing role in extending more comprehensive health service ro the northwest community f:tl Chicago.
...
The purchase was endorsed by the governing bodies of both hos pitals and approved by John Car..; dinal Cody of Chicago and by the Church Council of the American Lutheran Ch.urch, parent body ~ L~theran Deaconess Hospital. .
Names Director AT FAMILY CENTER: 'Msgr. Clement J. McKenna, pastor of St. Patrick's church in downtown San Fra~cisco south of Marke: Street, ~greeted at, the Family Center be has estiblished at the parish to help' the' children of· his mixed population. In addition to a Head Start program, the parish has a gym and recreation program for the neighbor hood youngsters, many of them Filipino and Negro. 'Ne P,hoto.
SAN JUAN (NC)-Archbisbe
op Luis Aponte Martinez of San
Juan, chairman of the PuertG
Rican Episcopal Conference, ba!l
announced the appointment of
Father Edwin T. Collins of the
Buffalo diocese, port chaplain of
San Juan, as director of .tae
Apostleship of the Sea.
Feast of Our'Lady of the Angels Church
Parish HalL Tuttle Street. Fall River
.
AUGUST 7-11
,
.• Wed. A\llg. 7 - Thurs. AU!i. 8 - Fro. Aug. '-/Eddie Zack ~. hi .Aug. 9 - Giant Angelola
EVERY NIGHT7-11 P.M.
*
.. Sat. Aug Uli - Kiddies Day 5:30 P.M. - Band COl1lcert 7-11 P.M. • Sun. Aug. l1-AAass 11 A.M., Preacher Rev. Luis CQlnlloso, Procession 1:30 P.M
VAUDEVIU ACTS ON FRIDA", SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
BAZAAR
*
*
·fOOD GAMES REFRESHMENTS families· Welcome!
*
MUSIC
*
BOOTHS
*
PRIZES
Fun lor-Young Clnd Old!
" 6.
nfE AK~· ~ ~-Diocese of Fall ~iver- Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
, f~'·;7. e:~;:-~~ ,\ , '/ ., .F
Cardinal Slipyj To Visit Chicago
?
Holy
If@tH}\He~,os
latest Eml~W~~O~@~'
- favorable'to chastity, particular Continued from Page Silt 21ngal act, while 'most closely .ly in the educational and enter tainment fields. To public au 1lmiting husband and wife, ca thorities, the Pope said: "Do not pacitates them for the genera tion of new lives according to allow the morality of your peo ples to be ,degraded; do not pel' the laws inscribed in the ver)' mit that by. legal means prac being of man and of woman." tices contrary to the natural and T·o use "the gift of the conju gal act" while at the same time divine law be introduced into that fundamental cell, the fam IlleSpectjng the laws of the gen ily. ' erative process, the Pope added, "Quite another is the way in "'means to acknowledge oneself which public authorities can and lltOt to be the arbiter of the oources of human life, but ratlier must contribute to the solutions of the demographic problem: ehe minister of the design estab namely the way of a provident IliBhed by the Creator." policy for the family, of a wise ~epeating condemnlltions of education of peoples in respect *liberate abortion and of ster IlUzation, the Pope stated the of the moral law and the liberty k'aditional stand of the Catholic of citizens." The e'!cyclical called for so Church that also "exduded is overy action which, either in cial and economic progress ior both individuals and for the IInticipation of the conjugal act, ... in its accomplishment, ·or in whole of huma'n'society, and de 'tlbe development of the natural clared: "Neither can· one, without eonsequences, proposes, whether grave injustice, consider divine 1M an end or as a lJleans, to ren providence to be responsible for 4ler procreation impossible." what depends instead on a lack The encyclical likewise re Bteats approval of non-artificial of wisdom· in government, .on means of regulating family an insufficient sense of social fIl'Owth, the rhythm system and justice, on selfish monopoliza tian or again on blameworthy ~riodic abstinence, but always )ndolence in confronting the ef \With good reasons. forts and the sacrifices neces Grave Consequences sary to ensure the raising of liv lIn rejecting artificial birth ing standards of a people and -ntrol, the Pope pointed to of all its sons." /lOme of the grave consequences To doctors and other scientists of the use of such means, among Pope Paul repeated the appeal them "how wide and easy a road of Pope Pius XU that "medical would thus be opened' up toward scierice succeed in providing a eoojugal infidelity and the gen sufficiently secure basis for a \tN1 lowering of morality. Not regulation of birth founded on auch experience is needed. 1n ·the observance of natural rhy _der ~ know human wealrness thms. In,this way, ,scientists and -.d ... understand that men':"':" especially Catholic scientist-, .-peciallY young who are 9G will. contribute to demonstrate ...lnerable on this point-have in actual fact that, as the Churcll wd of encouragement. to be teaches, a true contradictiOn taithful 10 the moral law • • • ·cannot exist between the divine ., "It is also to be feared that laws pertaining to the transmis ~ man, growing used to the sion of life and those pf;rtaining employment 01 anti-conceptive to the fostering of authentic (H'aetices, may· finally lose re conjugal love." , -lIPect for the woman and, no Need of Faith of Rope IIcHtger caring for her physical lind psychological equilibrium, To married coupleS· the Pope DaT come to the point of COR said let them "face 'up 'to the eidering her as 'a mere instl"U efforts ·needed by the· faith and Mentof selfish enjoyment and hope * * • let them implore di lIIO longer as his respected and vine assistance by persevering beloved companion." prayer and above all let them . Another danger the encyclkal draw from the'source of grace pointed out was that "a danger and charity in the Eucharist. hS weapon would thus be And if sin should still keep its ~laced in the hands of those ·hold over them let them not be public authorities who take no discouraged but rather have ll1eed of moral exigencies ~ ~ co recourse -with humble persever Who could stop rulers from fav ance to the mercy of God which Gtring, from even imposing upon is poured forth in the sacrament ftleir peoples, if they were to of Penance." consider it necessary, the meth To doctors and other medical od of contracepti6n which they personnel Pope Paul said: "Let. judge to be'most efficacious?" them also consider as their proper professional duty tfie Pastoral Directives The third and last, section of task of acquiring all the knowl edge needed in this delicate «he encyclical deals with a se sector so as to be able to give ~ies of pastoral directives ad dressed to a variety persons to those married persons who <lo encourage them in following consult them wise counsel and healthy direction such as they tllhe dictates of divine law: "Our words would not be an have a right to expect." To the Church's priests,' Pope adequate expression of the atought and solicitude ~f the Paul addressed a very personal ehurch, mother and teacher of and pointed appeal. "Be the first to gi ve !n the exercise of your til peoples, if after having re i0811ed men to the observan'ce and, ministry the example of loyal internal and external obedience Il'e8pect of the divine law re trarding matrimony, we did not to the teaching authority of tbe strengthen them on the path of Church "You· know too that it is of the bonest regulation of birth even . Mnid the difficult conditions utmost importance for the peace which today afflict families and of consciences and for the urii tv of the Christian people that in peoples." Pope Paul acknowledged that the field of morals as well as in Ute teachings of the Chufch OR that of dogma, all should attend to the magisterium (teaching this subject, seem difficult and appear to many to be impossible authority)' of the Church and all should speak the same lan ~ _adhere to. Ho.wever, he an . I)wered: ''The honest practice of guage." The Pope also urged the ,bish regulation of birth demands first ern all that husband and' wife · ops to 'Iwork ardently and in cessantly for the safeguarding acquire and possess solid con victions concerning the 'true ,and the holiness of marriage so -values of life and' of the family that it· may al~ays; be lived in and that they tend toward se ; its entire human· and Christian ooring per{eet self-mastery:' fullness. Consider· this mission In addition to cultivating · as one of· your most urgenf re IIlelf-mastery the Pope called. for sponsibilities at the present tIlle creation of an atmosphere · time."
the
of
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CHICAGO (NC)-Bishop Jalr oslav Gabre of the St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic diocese in Chicago headed welcome cere monies for Joseph Cardinal Slipyj of Lvov, Major Arch bishop of the Ukrainian Cath olic Church, who is spending ~ve days in Chicago on bis ~ur of the United States. Cardinal Slipyj-who was re leased by the Soviet Union i~ 1963 after 18 years of imprison ment-celebrated the Divine LI turgy in S1. Nicholas Cathedral Church here and then visited with the young people of the Ukrainian Catholic diocese. He also attended a solemn religious concert in his honor, which fea tured Ukrainian-Amercian solo ists. The Ukrainian cardinal con celebrated a Pontifical Higln .Mass with the Ukrainian bish ops of the U,S. and five Ukrain. ian bishops from Canada. Here ceived an honorary degree from Loyola University here in a pri vate ceremony. , . Before his departure for De troit, . Cardinal Slipyj' visited John Cardinal Cody of Chicago and also met Chicago civic of ficials.
Ma..icinist Offic'ial Visits United States Predicts More C.iversified Apostolate DAYTON (MC) - The post conciliar Church is at once pulsing· with new life and ener gy and undergoing severe anti tumultuous trials, according W Father Paul J. 'Hoffer, S.M" su perior general of the Society (}f Mary, In an interview at the URi Tersity of Dayton, where he was a featured speaker at a national workshop on Catholic education, the Marianist leader indicated that the Church's serious "tur moil" and vibrant life aren't necessarily contradictory, I Althougp' no one welcomes turbulent times, "when .yota have life you also have errON arid exaggerations," Father Hof fer said. , Perhaps unsettled timell wul even intensify in the immediate 'period ahead, but "in the long I run we have great confidence because of the presence of the Holy' Spirit" the French-born priest said. . The Marianist leader saicll the. turmoil may even be accompa nied by a loss of faith by manv, but eventually the vibrant spir it of the Church will prevaii o yo e r today's uncertainties. Father Hoffer expects .condi tions in the Church to be mOIl2 placid by the time the Marian iats· hold their next aenerall chapter i:ft 1971. Renewal ill the Chure1!l !Ill eausing tbe 3,400 members oil the Society of Mary 10 re-ellam ine their apostolate ami priori ties, according ~ Father Hoffeir. CloM
to
YoatIl·
PerhaPi tho future Marlanlat apostolate, now largely centereOl on education, will become more diversified, he said. But lite suggested that Marianists works will always be close w tine younger gel'leration. The Ma~ ianists, he pointed out, have been trained in the' educati~ of youth and have contact with . and an understanding of yout~. Of the 13, Marianist province;a scattered throughout the wor~ the 600 - member, Cincinnati. province, with headquartero fa ; Dayton, is the largest. The Uni versity of Dayton is the largefJ4
-
Marianist institution ia the Dayton the appointment of -. Marianist to a postiB the Vati world. Society of Mary programs hi ean Congregation for Catholk the U.s. and ill Spain (where, Education. Brother Albert Kess the Marianist median age is on17 ler, S.M., the superior general'. assistant in education, has beea 3Z) are "the most developed and influential, ·Father HoHer called by Pope Paul to head tbe said. Perhaps Africa, wbere the Office of Catholic Schools in the· Marianists are steadily increaa ooogregation,' .ing their Cc,mmitment. will be The congregation has super the continent where the greateM vJ.sory competence o,ver all insti ad vances bJr the society wiD tutions and works of Catholic ed Occur, he added. ' ucation. It carries on its work Heads School Office through three office~emi~a
Father Hoffer will go from ries, universities and schools. A.
this country to South America SwisS Marianist, Brother Kess where he willI visit Marianists ill - :ter, .formerly was supervisor for
Peru, Argentina, Chile and aU, Marianist schools in the
Colombia and attend the Inter world. national Eucharistic Congress....ia
Bogota. Tiwn he will go to,
Japan and Korea, perhaps stop ping off at Hawaii on the way.
NEW YORK (NC)-A Father Father Hoffer announced ia Andrew M. Greeley, noted soci
ologist and author, will repeat
his Catholic Hour series on re
IPla~ NeIW' ~ystem cent changes in the American
Church on the four Sundays ilIl
August on NBC radio. ,LOUISVIL:LE (NC)-The sys tem'for lay r(~treats at the abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani in Trappist, Ky., will undergo a change begiDllling next Jan. 1. Retreat gr.l>ups win be lim ited ~ 20. m,~n or less and tile
emphasis will be.OIl Individual
participation in retreats. In tile
past retreat ,groups have BUIlD
bered 40 or tiO mell.
Abbot M. 'I'lavill BumIi. O.C.s.O', aaki, he feela the pri..
Cat"olic Hour
for Lay Retreats
LEARY PRES!S MONTHLY 'GlUICH BUDGET ENVElOPES
YQte
retreat .. "more .. __
NINftD AND· MAILED
bmitT" with tbe moDb' wq
.riIe .Phene 672·1321 of life. He alldecl that faeiHtie.
lit tile .. monastery were beln&
.wined by tbe iDIltut e« lal1lll 1M s..tMI SIr... - Fall Ii". ~ol~ph,
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'If HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River- Thurs.,:
ROSE M. MARTIN Fall River
SUZANNE Eo MAYNARD lTaunton
MARGARET A. POTVI~ fall River
RITA M. PELLETIER Somerset
JEANNE C. RIVARD fall River
LYOIA A. JlOSE MasioD
17
_. 1, 1968
~AT"LEEN
E. RYAN
Cummaquid
VARIOUS SECTORS-OF' DIOCESE ARE REPRESENTJED AMONG GRADUA1.'ES AT ST. ANNE'S HOSPITAl. SCHOOL OF N1LJRSING
Observe Catholic Education Week Nov. 10.. 16 WASHINGTON - (NC) The 1968 observance of American Catholic Educa tion Week has been sched
Ask HOllsing 'Authority M'embers Resign Dio(:esan Paper Charges Defiance of Law SAVANNAH (NC)-A Cath olic paper here has called on this city's administration to de mand ,tine resignation of four out of five members of the Sa vannah Housing Authority..
uled for Nov. 10-16, coinciding with the celebration of American The Southern Cross, Savan Education Week in the nation's nah diocesan weekly, in an edi public schools. torial charged that the Housing The week is an annual event Authority, by refusing to accept designed to .focus public atten-' an order from the U. S. Depart Mon on the' achievements and , ment of Housing and 'Urban De needs of the schools. This year, velopment concerning tenant for the first time, Catholic placement in Savannah's public schools will use the same pro housing projects, is "in defiance motional materials developed of the law" and is placing in for use in the public schools by danger "the needs and hopes of the National Education Associa . thousands of poor people to get tion (NEA). out of the slums of the City and The change reflects "a new into decent housing." clima~e of cooperation develop The ,Housing Authority of ing between public and private .Savann;m claims that its present school education," according to placement policy, under which Msgr. James C. Donohue, di eligiQle persons are permitted rector of the Division of Ele .to apply for living quarters in ';incntary and Secondary Educa anyone of the city's eight low tion, United States Catholic Con rent housing projects, provides ference. "'freedC'm of choice," and is in This year's education week ~ompliapce with the provisions theme is "America has a good of the Civil Right~ Act, of 1964. thing 'going .. .. '" its schools."" 'Says Order Illegal The-NEA promotional kit high lights the' importance of the But a directive of the Depal·t schools in 'stimulating moral ment of Housing and, Ur.ban De and spiritual values, and sug velopment, issued July 1, 1967, gests increased cooperation be r~uires that public housing tween educators and the na agencies place tenants in pr'oj tion's churchmen. eets which have the most vacan des on a "first-come-first In addition to the planning served" basis. The HUD order guide, booklets, posters and would allow three refusals be-" leaflets in the promotional kit, a brochure suggesting_ ways to use the materials in Catholic schools has been prepal·ed.
fore the prospective tenant's name' is placed at the bottom of the application list. Savannah's Housing Authority has branded the HUD order "ilJegal" and "unconstitutiona1." "No city can tolerate defiance of the law, whether by rag-tag hoodlums or by police officials," said the Southern C,ross editorial urging the city of Savannah to "demand the resignation of all (Housing) Authority members who refuse to obey the law." Sworn to Uphold Law The Catholic weekly de nounced the Housing Authority's recent vote to defy the HUD placement ruling "in spite of the fact that BUD is not only em
powered but directed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to issue orders of compliance with the non-discrimination provisions of Title VI, Section 901 of that act." The paper discissed the Hous ing Authority's charge that the HUD order is iilegal and uncon stitutional, declaring "The Hous ing Authority ¢ '" .. is not a court of law and has no authority 10 render decisions concerning law and the constitution."
The Authority, eontinued the editorial, is an official govern mentaly body whose members are sworn to uphold the law, and "in the absence of any court ruling that the compliance order issued by the Department of Housing and Urban Develop ment is illegal and unconstitu tional, they are duty-bound to obey that order." "If they feel they are faced with a crisis of conscience which will not pennit them to comply, then, rather than dishonor their i>ath of office, they should re sign," the paper said.
Alexian Brothers To Close Hospital
MILWAUKEE (NC) - ' The Milwaukee archdiocesan super intendent of schools has an nounced that Francis Jordan high school for boys here will be closed next year. Msgr.... Edmund J. Gobel said the decision, based mainly on economics and, need, was reach ed following an extensive two )'ear study of Catholic second ary education in the Milwaukee area. Francis Jordan whose current student body n'umbers 470, is owned by the Milwaukee arch diocese and operated by the Sal vatorian Fathers. The closing was mutually ngreed upon by archdiocesan school officials and the Salv:1torians, with the ap-' proval of Archbishop William E. Cousins of Milwaukee.
Brazil Missionary VATICAN CITY (NC)-Si](.:. ty-four-year-old Bishop Renata Luisi 'of Nicastro,' lIlaly, has asked Pope Paul VI to relieve him of his See so that be 'laD become a missionary in Brazil and the Pope' bas eonsented.
,
I
STEUBENVILLE (NC) - 'i"be threat of a strike by some no general-duty nurses at 276-belll .Ohio Valley Hospital was avert ed when representatives of the quarreling sides met and signe«ll an agreement to negotiate. At issue in the communj~:9 crisis, which brewed for a weef;[ while nurses and hospital all\ JJ)inistrators refused to tanl:' across the bargaining table, w~ the . administrators' insisten~ ,that'the Ohio Nursing A~socia HQn be denied the right to 00Jl0 gain for the local group. 'fhe nurses, satisfied with n? Il:ent .salary raises and fringe benefits, said they would DOli .t'Onsiger discussion unless they t'Ould be represented at the balr iaining table by the associat~OD. The strike was to have begun Monday. The nurses formally approached the city eou~" which volunteered to arbitrate "for the good of the eommt) Jlity." Following a four-hour ~ ing, an agreement was FeaebeCl t:'aUing for recognition 01. the nursing association Upoll 1be n~lrses' "presentation of signe..d meml)ership cards covering JIOt le/is t.han two-thirds Of the ~,; e,ral-duty nurses.'" More th~J;I 120 nurses have so far signed to join the association.
CHICAGO (NC) - The order of Alexian Brothers, who came from Gennany and began their first settlement in the United States in 1886, have announced they must close t.heir 72-year old hospital here. Brother Flavian Renaud, C.F.A., Alexian Brothers Chi cago provin~ial, said, the hospi tal will close Aug. 30 because of insufficient numbers of 'Brothers to run the hospital "in more than, name (.nly." Another reason for the deci Of sion, Brother Flaviansaid, were two separate reports from the SYDNEY (NC) - Pope Paul VALLETTA (NC) - Maltese Chicago Hospital Planning VI has perwnally given his ap seminarians have undertaketll Council and a private consult pl"Oval to the ordination of a free manual work in a voluntary ing firm which said the hospital former Anglican clel·gyman. to project to improve the homes flf1 was outdated and should be the priesthood. needy workers. phased out. He is Peter Rushton, 41-year Both reports said, in effect, old father of three children, who that eight other hospitals in the is studying for the priesthood lre~al'1ld and is scheduled for ordination area could take uP' the patient load in the resulting close of next year by Archbishop Guil
ROCHESTER (NC)-Bishop the Alexian Brothers Hospital Fulton J. Sheen' of Rochester dOl'd Young of Hobart, Tasmania. by adding five per cent to their has left for Ireland to recruit Rushton's wife, Helen, is a intake of patients. I Per Annum priests to help offset a shol·tage psychiatrist at the Little Com in his diocese. Ask about pany of Mary hospital in sub urban Ryde and a convert to The bishop will meet with the INVESTMENT Catholicifm. The Rustons reside heads of 27 Sees during, an ex in Hyde. tended visit. SAVINGS When he is on1ail'ted it is be Next June, only seven men r:ERTlFICATES lievC" that' Rushton, an Austra will be ordained for diocesan Han, will become the first mar service in Rochester. This month , SkFETY - Savings Insured safe IIJ III l'ied Latin-rite priest to serve in Bishop Sheen ordained 10 c:gern:y 01 the U. S. Government. priests, but during the same. an English-speaking cou!'!try. CITIES SERVICE JlVAILABILITY - No 'notice requii'. month eight pastors retired. At DISTRIBUTORS 110l1r fund~ ava:'able when needed. present there are :384 diocesan H~"h SAVE bJ MAIL - We process promptlf; priests and 163 priests of re EMMETSBURG (NC) - Em-' and pay Dostage both ways. ligious communities working in m,"tsburg Catholic High School Assets lI"er $41,000,000 the diocese, but many of the lat will not operate this Fall, mark ter al'e engaged in educational ing the first time in over 75 work. ~rEDERAL years this Iowa community has The Rochester diocese has 97 OIL BURNERS been without a Catholic high S.cvings and leon Associat. parishes with schools, 62 parish ~"chool. , For Promp, Delivery es without schools and 28' mis of FALL sion churches att3l:hed to par & Day & Night Service ishes. Also, some 80 of the 384 -----------,-------------'-'---~-~ BEFORE YOU , first Felleral sa~lngs • Leu ' , dioeesan priesas are working hl G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS : I .erUJ Mzin St. FaD li'm...... fJ "speeial service" ar~as, such as BUY - TRY , II,: 02722 1"_ .7404111 . ~ the inner city, ,the diocesan Rura' BoHied Gas Service , Mal. application b' llltOM if '011 .,.. , newspaper, Catholic Charities; , 0 indiVidUal ~ccount 0 JOlllt AccIl4llll , and are available only for par 61 COHANNET ST. : ",ease open a savi",s account. [lICieeH: ish work on weekends.
Approves Ordination Former Anglican
Work for Poor
Rochester Recruiting Priests in
Milwaukee to Close Boys High School
Avert Nurses' Strike Threat
Higher !Earnings
ON YOUR. SAVINGS
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Close
School
Gasofine Fuel and Range
OILS
FIRST
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MOTORS
One of the rea SODS cited for
the expanded ne~d for pastoral work in the diocese is t)lle "~rowth o.f s~bul·bia."
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'18
. . - .
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River- Thurs., Aug. 1, 1968
Roots of.:Disc:ontent
Jesuit University Head f«8yors Greater RoBe
Favor§ Objective Appro~~h
To In$tatut~onal ChMr~h
hi' Student Ded$B@1l'll
By Msgr. George G. Higgins
Some months ago I was invited by the editors of
Catholic periodical (which, for present purposes, can
be identified as XYZ) to take part in a think-session on
the changing role of independent Catholic journals of
'
Qpinion in the post-Conciliar world. I was asked specirical- proach which' tries to keep
Jy, as my contribution to the ,things in focus and in balance seminar, to prepare a brief and is not too easily "scandal 11
working 'paper on the question: Should XYZ be closer to rather t ban 'further from th.e institutional Church?
:::ctVi~'i:'atOf t~~ ,.
.
~
same question · k eeps croppmg IllP in many o the r con- texts (in the deliberations, for l3l'x a m'p I e of Dew .; sty I e Oatholic organUzations such as the National Laymens Association and the National Committee on Catholic Concerns) perhaps my offthe-cuff reply will be of at '!Eiast a passing interest to a somewhat wider audience than the one of which it was originally address~. It reads in part as follows: , It strikes me that, as presently phrased, this question (Should XYZ be closer to rather thap. fUl'ther from the institutional Church?) may be irrelevant or, at best, peripheral. By that I mean that it probably doesn't matter too much whether the XYZ is closer to or further 1irom the institutional Church. Over-All Stance
ized" or bored or discouraged, disgusted or angered by the dis.,
concerting but inevitable com plexities of life.
In tl!is connection, let me quote two pertinent excerpts from Francois Houtart's new Sheed and Ward' book, "The Eleventh Hour: Explosion of a . Church:.'" Prophetic Rolle
fo' resA.tflI[l:J~ PII~1;l'IIi 1.1 \iii i:!I l:Ju I
Bftstooo~. M.. eet
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'V
Delegates from the Fall River Diocese will be among attendants. at the 38th international conven., tion of the Catholic Order of Foresters, to' be held Monday, 'through Wednesday at the StatleI' Hilton. Hotel, Boston. Cardi nal Cushing will preside and preach at a coilcelebrated Mass' at St. Paul's Church, Cambridge, which will open the meeting. Celebrant will be Cardinal Cody of Chicago,. High Spiritual Di rector of the order. A requiem Mass Tuesday morning at Our Lady of Vic ,tories Church, Boston, will be offered for deceased members. State Spiritual Director Msgr. Alfred ,R. Julien, J,C.D. of Low ell will be celebrant.
"The Church is an institution. Some reject this fact as somehow unworthy of the Kingdom of God existing in mystery on earth ttll the fuliness of time, and would prefer a more mystical. and 'uncontaminated' mode of existence. , "And it is easy to share their desire somehow- to be free of all the, depressing and discou'raging examples from past and present history that witness more to human folly and intransigence than to God's message, of love and salvation. "However, it must· be faced that this desire has more in common with Platonic philosophy than it has ,with the doctrine of -the Incarnation * * * "Now if * * * I seem to leave no room for the prophetic voice, that "we" should refrain from one which is not 'structured' in criticizing "them" whenever we an institution, it is not because deem it necessary to do so. Quite I underestimate its importance the contrar,y. What does matter/it seems to in the least. The prophetic role, All I am saying is, that "we" me, is _XYZ's over-all' stance for eXl:lmple, of the National should do so--and should give (theological" sociological, and Catholic Reporter in the United the' appearance of doing so--as psychological) with regard to States l'S l'mportant, . 'ders, 1'f you wil, 1 ra t her . InsI the institutional Church. "But there is an even greater than outsiders, As time goes on, unless I ntIs h' .connec. t'lon, I wou ' Id ' . I ' am need for the prophetic VOl'ce to badly w1'th1'n the l'nstl'tutional - a dd that, within the limits ' , mistaken, the editol's may. be .~;sed of ~elI Qe tempted-understand- structure. It l'S ·the whole I 'ts own dIstinctive ' . pUl'pose as a ' ably, if you will- to ignore the' Church which must speak as the, lierious journal of opinion which prob,lems " of. the institjltion!ll Church w1'th a prophetl'c vOI'ce'IS mean t0 t l t 0 a l'I mIt ' , ed ', appea ehur~lt" which can get to Pe ter- especially in the, world' situatio~ number of, educated CatholiCs, ably boring, and toconoontrate tOday." , XYZ should tl'y.to avoid becom~' 'or less exclusively on the :~piop'hetic" or "ch.arism,'a,tic" Not Like *be. Rest· ,. ing ."gnostic" in its approach to -A 'd' I l'k XYZ' I tak . the.' problems of the institutional witness o~ indi.vidual Cnristiaris ' peno 1ca 1 e ,. e
...... groups_ofChristi~ns (the' so- it, will not want to get too ex-' Church, '
~ . Reflect Universality _lIed. Underground Ch,uroh, f.or, cited about· the day-to-day 01', , . t' 1 'bl" f th' .By that I mean it should trW .exam,pIe) as our only, h,o. at gamza 10na e In.. . keep ' . the <ihahnels of commu:'/ '01 . I C'. pro ems 0. ' , to t ·t·U t"lOna Jl8aet Jar.: the immediatef,uture. S.l ' h~rch and:"ce.rtainly, . Will not want to overplay' the,. riications open within the Church I am inclined to think. it stril,ctural . problems 'of tlie' not only': between laymen and' be a mistake to'do so. ' Church to" the neglect of :itS clerics, but 'also between vario~ it seems' to' me that a sophisti- charisJriatic or 'prophefic role in' segments of the laity, and /0ated periodical like XYZ, witll' Society. •. 'should, In so far as possible, reUs 'envia'ble 'record of civUized In - other wordS, it riot flect the, universality of tile discourse,:· should approach the want to be l!- "churchy" period- Church in iis' 'treatment of the institutional Church with the icaL But being "churchy" would institution. same calm, which has generally hardly be more out of character What Father', Houtart has to characterized its approach to for XYZ' than being utopian or say about the Eucharist may other complex institutions. platonic or just plain peevish or also be meaningful mutatis XYZ' has' ne~er succumbed to cranky or hypersensitive or dis- mutl!ndis, in the present context: the 'temptation of over-simpli- dainfully self-righteous ahout "It would -not be normal for fying; or running' away from, the real or alleged failures of the 'Eucharistic celebration or .rti:!e, complexities of the political the institutional Church or of dinarily to take place for only order by ignoring its nitty-grit- • the Catholic hoi polloI. OIM:! specific category of people ty institutional aspects and conFinally, I would suggest that and not be open to all others. eentrating exclusively on the the editors, when they write The Eucharistic community charismatic insights of the ex- about the institutional Church, must refl~t as far as possible eeptional political prophet. ought to lean over backwards to the universality' of the Church, Political Institutions avoid leaving the impression open. to all men, witnessing that ' d . all people in the world' are in In other words, it has always th a t th ey are some h ow JU gmg ' t't t' I Ch h f vited to this assembly." th taken the political order serie . Ins urc rom t II1 u t lOna I 'to This strikes me as being sound oU,sly, not because it wanted to an 10 e ec ua' Ivory wer as 1 d t 'd advice not only to liturg",,~. ',~_. be closer to rather than further comp1e t e 1y unmvo ve ou Sl ers reformers but also to Catholic from th~ agencies of political w h 0, so t 0 spea k , are glad that 'k th t f editors, theologians, the leaders no t . l 1 et' e res 0 ' o f avant garde Catholic organ po'wer, but presumably because th ey ' are I th ell' .it felt that to do otherwise ess percep 1ve and less d f 11 C th l' izations and, for that matter, to · ht would be to contradict its own en119 ene ' e ow- a 0 ICS. all the rest of us as well. stated purpose of being a serious We and They, journal of opinion, concerned If we really believe that the Plan lD1lstaUataclI1l " not only with life as it might be Church is the People of God~ in some Platonic order, but also and not a clerical bureaucracy COLUMBUS (NC) - Nearly with life as it is. we shouldn't think exclusively all arrangements have been I think XYZ ought to take the in terms of insiders or outsiders completed for installation on same appropch to the institu- or in terms of "we" (editors) Aug. 22 ot' Bishop Clarence E. tional Church-I.e., a calmly and "they" (-bishops), for ex Elwell, former' auxiliary bishop objective, sophisticated, cour- ample, of Gleveland, as ',the eighth teOWl and even-tempe.r4illi ap1· ,am not suggesting, of course bishop of the Columbus diocese.
more
p e ',
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CARJI)JINAlL CUSHING
...
'will
MQki~g
PD'oGesses
CAMBRIDGE (NC) - Father cals comprise only h\1o per cent Paul t, Reinert, S.J., president of the current student popula of St. Louis University, believes tion, the Missouri Jesuit asked: students should be more deeply "If there are no roots of discon involved in ':he decision-making . tent among' ,the general student .processes of their institutions. body how is it that they (cam pus radicals) are always able to Speaking cit the Advanced Ad ministrative Institute at'Harvard win the support of such a large number of their fellow stu University :3.ere in Massachu 'setts, Father Reinert discussed dents?" the theme "Education1968: The He told the educators, legisla Realities of Power." tors and executives "Effective Concedipg that campus ra~i- governance of colleges and uni versities must assimilate the thoughts, the ideas, the motiva tions and frustrations of the stu Co~ ~eg4i! Presidell'llfr MIAMI (NC)-Father Ralph dents, for which the institution V. Schuler, O.S.A" for 20 years essentially exists. "To go one step further, the a member oJ: the faculty at the Augustinian College, Washing institution exists for the benefit of society and these students re ton, D. C" has been named pres ident of BiBcayne College for flect that society, for better or Men here. worse."
GIV'E! 'VOU,RSELF
A'NUN HB HaLY IIATHER'. MISSlaN'AID Ta THI DRIENTAL DHURDH
YOU
CAN'T GO YOUR~iElF,
SO T1RAIN A smTER
Have you ever wlllhed your family had 'a nun? Now you oan have a 'nun of your own'-and share forever in all the good she does•••• Who Is she? A healthy wholesome, penniless girl In her teens or early twenties, she dreams of thll day she can bring God's love to lepers, 0 .... phans, the eging•••• Help her become a Sis ter?"l:o pay all her expenses this year and next. she needs only $12.50 a month ($150 ayea!'t $300 altogether). She'll write you to expresll her thanks, and she'll pray for you at dally Mass. In just two years you'll have a 'Sister of your own'•••• We'll send you her nama on raceipt of your first gift. As long as ,8ha IIveli YOU'll know you are helping tha pitiable peopls ahe cares for. '• •• Please write us today 80 shll oan begin her training. She prays someon. will help.
''WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT INDIA!"
a
The' parIshioners lath~r the stonel and do the oonstruction free,of·charge, under their pili'" 140W I.h prIEltt'. direction. That's how In Indlill • TO, ohurch, sohool, rectory arid,' convent Oilin be _IcIILP built for only $10,000. _ •• ~ame the parlllh . TiilM for your favorite saint, we'll .rect .'Permanent . ,tdlLP plaque askin, prayers for your 'loved onea, If THIMIII.YII' you build a parish In '68' as your ~nce·ln... lifetime mission gift. • • _. Write Monsignor Holen'for details. C Arohblshop Mar Bregorios will wrtte person ally to.ll8Y where he'll looate It It you enabl. him to buy ($978) two aere.,of land as a model farm for a parish priest. Raising his own food. the priest oan teach his parishioners how to In orasse'thelr arop production. (A hoe costs onl, , $1.25, a shovel $2.3!5.) In the hands of a thrifty nat!ve Sister your gift In any a'mount ($1,000, $750, $500, $200. ,$100, $76,. $50, $25, $115, $10, $5,·$2) will fill empty stomachs with milk, rice, fish and vegetables••• '. If you feel nobody needs you, .. .... help feed these hungry boys and glrlsl -oel!S
a
Dear
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INOLOSBD PLIlA8I FIND
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Monsignor Nolilim FOR:_~~_~~_=~_~
Pleu!) return couJlon with y,Jur offering
NAMIJ,_ _..... 9TRlIft;....~
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N&·AR IIABT WBLFARI AIiSGalAflDN
N,EAREAST
MISSIONS
.MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National Secretary Write: CATHOLIO NEAR EAST WIlLfARI Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue· New York. N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840
19
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River- Thun., Aug. 1, 1968
PilRl&lA, E. TOHItT Tauatn
MAH STm£NNE IJartDtautll
BlEL SOREW Instluet
Nllrtfl
ROSAHNA L YEN11IU
OONNA M: V1RGINIS
HllrtbFairi:avea
Tauntnn
GRADUATES START' CAREERS WITH PRAYERS AND BEST WISHES OF ENTIRE DIOCESE
Schedule for Summer Season, , Oo:dinued from Page'~
WEST WAREHAM
MASHPEE
MaDses: Sunday-7:OO, 9:00, 10:00, U:OO' A.r4. COnfessions: Saturday 4:00...5:00 P.M. First Friday Mass:-!l:OO AM..
PROVINCElOWN ST. PETER THE, APOSTLE S'lmday'-7:00.. 8:00, 9:00. 10:00,
U:O~
AM.. 7:30 P oM. lDaily--7:0D A.M. Sdledule-June 2r-Sep(' 2l9'
.• '
SANDWiCH!' CORPUS CB1lUS'I][ CIfUJ!tcml
I "
~: Sunday-7:0D, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. , , ,J;la.ily-7:30 A.M. " I" :Ccmfess,i.ons.: Saturday 4:00-5:00 and 7:30-8:3Q,1?.M.. . ' ' t ..
SAGAMOI:U: S'Il'. TlEIJEUSA'S cmrninC lEl !1esses: S~daY-6:33,' 0:30, O:31l. 10:30,
U:OO
A.M. ConfessiolUl: !Saturday 4:00-5:00 and 7:30-8:30 J?.M. iPl©~A$$~1l'
ST• .1J1(JIl!1lN'§ iDlHlllmCm!
lY'..nsses: Sunday-'Z:OO,. 8:30, '9:30, 10:W~ '11:30 A.ltl Daily 7:33 A. M. (from Jlrly 4 fA> Sep't. 2) Confessions:: Saturday 4:00-5:00 l:l!ld 7:30-8:30 P.M. $(j)::J'il'c-:J
~£)'[11iMO~~
ThllAlItl'l
§'Il'~
'£!r2BSes: Sunday-7:00. 8:00. 9:00,. 10,:00.. ,11:00, ; " noon, ,7:30 P.llIt ' DaiIy-7:00 A.M. , 8:00 A.M. Saturdasr ONLY
., ',"
~,
SOU:Ve-si YARMOUTH}
.
ST;
pros
TENTH
,
'~'~:. Sund~Y""'77:00. 8:00,:9:00.::!'(~:15, n~ A..M. )'. ,
'
5~0
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..
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P.M."
A.M.'
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.-
BASS, RIVER
.
VINEYARD, MAVEN '
-.-
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, ' WESTPORT
Uc;.
I,
ST. AUGUSTINE· , Masses:: Sund'ay-6::30. 8:00\. 9:15, :m:SO' iUJI•. D:tily-"ll:30! A.M:, Devotiims: Smtd'ay Evening: Rosary and, BeIlledJle.. ti011l at '1:00 PM.
ST~ GEORGE
nocm
c:mifeFsfons~'Sattm:l'ay 41:00-5:00
'
1Uld. 'fi:oo.-s..-oo PJL
Dept. of' Justi:ce NASHVILLE (NC) - The United States Department of' Justice has joined in a pri woo suit against the state of Tennessee in, tIhe. Department'Q first case 1!1:lder the Civil Rightri Law of 1964 to seek desegrega tion of a state university system. The Justice Department. mo tion, submitted m u.s. District Court here, argues that Tennea Dee o..~2:t'Zl 0 racially b~~ oystem of higher education. T~ motion notes that Ten nessee Agricultural and Indus trial State University b N~ ville is almost entirely Negro c:rd, ito "cdll::eti~ C9portu::z.i
"IW
Sister Mjil'tin de Porres said:' ' \
'
iiiasses: SUild .. -- - . ClODlpared "The DUns to. conference cannot be ., 037-.," :00,8:00,9:00,10:00. U:OO the Black C1er and' '12:00 Noon BoY l!lally~:30 and 8~ A.M. Clweus because our pUrpose Je
Fan
43 FOURTH STREET River OS' 8~5811
1ar~ 'educational. The clergy
WOODS HOLlE
eaueus was ea1led to eniilile aD bJaek priests to take It united
, ST; .JOSEPH
1daDd, -
NORIH' FAtMOU'IlI (Megansett)
8'Jf~
PATRICK;,
I£am;cs: S ~ '1:00~ a:QO" 9:00;. .10:00., n~
I~Oo. and: 'lI:301 P.:Mo
Shoe Sto'
'r3clal' problem;"
lIIfassel!l: sunday-:-'Z:OOj 8:15, 9:30, U:ac AX Dally-'1:OO' A.M: sehed,*" ~ and August
CHIlMARK SI1". AUG1J&'DNE.'S MlBSION 'MasseS: Sunaay-7:GO, P.M. WAREHAM
:DailY'-7::OO AM:
w.
J
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,." • Olm &AJ)y OF' ,THE mGIIW:AY ,MlJSscs:' Sund'~7:30~ 8;~~ 9:3O'.10:30~~1:30; I '
PITTSBURGH (NC) - R,e..' a positive livina relationship bo. gpanse to the B1a~ Sisters' Con- .tween blaclm and whites." ference, has been good according The Brack Clergy Caucus tc Sistef' Martin de Porres, - the eclled the day before thS opi!~ fAAR[ONi Mercy nun who originated and ing of the National Cathol' has organized. the n&ti~mal meet- ODnference for Interracial Apolt 1ST. RITA ing set £~r Aug. 17;..24 at Mt. tclate, and it reeonveDed thrE* ., ~jmes during that three-day con-. Masses: Sun~ay~:OO, 9:30, 11:00 A.M. ~ §i:O@, Mercy COllege. pi.!!. ' ''in the foUr weeks since the' ference. The Sisters' conference. first znnouncement wept out,. , oonsisting of workshops anj ,_ :' Daily-3:00, A.M. 1.45 Sisters_ have :registered," panel discussions, will last seve-. , . Condession.o: Saturday at 7:00 P.M. Si~r ,Martin de Porres said, days. ' "and ,we have three weeks i~ft ," The final days of the; ~onfer WEllFLEET to go." Originally ill; was esti ence will ~ devoted to disc\JSloo (1)'UR. LAIIlY OF lLOUm.IDlm ,mated that 200 black nuns from , S:OI\. of the formation' of' a per~ . Masses: Sunday-'7:9Q,8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. across the country would, attend, ,manent federation of' Black Sis she explained, but indications ,ten! or a permanent conference. Daily--'7:30 A.M. Confessions: Saturday 4:30-5:30 and 7:30-8:3@!?Et. are that there will be more.. Sister Martin de PorIes sahli Invitations were sent to. ,all that such things as a nationll tt'llIlJ~O Negro Sisters in the United .Sisters exchange program to in- l§AClItlEID lliIlEAlIt'Il' States through their mothers crease cultural understanding general. Sister Martin de Por batween blacks and whites io MasseB: Sunday~:OO, 10:00 A.M. res personally visited two of the Religious life will be discussed. three all black communities-the The 26-year-old Sist~r Mart'ffi Oblate Sisters of Providence in ' de Porres is the only Negro Si~ lBaltimo~ and the Handmaids ter of Mercy in the Pittsburgm ~1lJ1lt lLAllJll'l ~lF ll"lElItll"E'Il'1lJ&JL Illm:ILlP of ~ary ill H~l'lem, N.Y. community. Born and raised iLl SIster Martm de Pones W<IS Sewickley, Pa., she has beeill Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, !~:3~ b...J::;r. the only Negro ~un ~ho atten~ a nun for eight years. She taughfi t'l!'~11 IHIA~WDI1:C'{]
~ th~ ~lack ~nests Caucus IIll grades one through three at St. mr~IL1'l 'l'RllNITIY
DetroIt In Apnl. Mary's school here last yeali' lVlasses~ Sunday-7:00~ 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, L2l~
Ev-z.Rmate RG~~ and expects to work on the dio 12:ro noon and 5:0~ p.M. , k was at this caucus that she c:esan poverty program in tho Daily-g·OO A.M. ' was urged! to "bring, all, Negro Fall. " ~olllfessions: Saturday:' 4,:00-5:30, 7:30-g:C~n?.M. Sisters in the United States 00 »)ENNISPOR1i' , getb..er m order to evaluate the J"Ole c:f Negro Sisters within 'the ' \'VEAR I i:!'PPER COUNq ROAD, ' ,Citureb. and, t:heir respective oun LADY. 0P: THE ~NCIATlON' eommunities, 00 deepen ,their u n - " , :Shoes That· Fit Mi:uwes; Sunday~;30,:7:30,.l!l:45, 10:00, 11:15 A.JlL, cWrstanding of themselves anc! " f"JHE FAMI~Y SHOE STORE" ",'1:00. P~M. ' , their peOple, and to determine' ~ I " D::W!y-liJ.:OO A.M. more' effective ways to contrib-' Onn S " ~~ns: SatuJ,'day 4·:00,-5:30 and '1:30-9:00 pi :' ute to the solution of ~eridll'rl ' , r'~ 8'I".ANTHONY
QUEEN OF ~ SAJlI,,'ll'S
~:
Expect More Than 200 Negro Nuns 'to, Attend C~nference
I.MMA(JI)'IA.TB
Kasses:.
SID1_-7~
CONCEPTION
8:00,. 9:00, W:Oe; M~:tII,;.
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Private Suit Against State
ties and facJJities are DderioFB' ~,~~. d~ Um~~
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Tennessee IIlIlld five other state 1lmiversitieo tb:!1. aN' almost an white. The private ad' that file ,Jus ~ Department baa joined i8 dlreoted at n proposed $4.2 mil ]ion expansion of the UniveESity of T<anneE::lee's Nashville EX tansion center. Bton> ' CDoI:!StnncticliiI '.If.he depBlr'tintmt has DJ"gued i!1'nat the expansiO;ll "will ~rpet W8Jte lIhe system by pri ~ serving white Dtud<2M.s and dlupUcatiJllg :tIacilities 'BIt
exmmg
~CEEee A!5ri~~" ~~'?
dudents. nnd. iaeult7 n!Inam do most exclusively Negro ~ com deeisioIW ruf,ing out .g!'e «atioD i:D: edueaticm,.
The Justice Department's
m0
tiOn asked tbaJt the state be __ dered to take an reasonable steps to desegregatel:.l.nd sub mit to the oourt within 0 reaS0n able time a plan to end 1fue dWlll
flystem. The suit further asked ~ oowrtruction d tt:-e Nashvi]]e center be forbidG:en tmtfll tllne Court has approved 0 pl2:lll that would require tha state to make epportunities SIt the \l¢vernity ~ual to those Blt etheR' ~!n.
racial issue.
ligilo~' -men:. to move forward
..
A-.M.
the
PenD:snent Federation ""D1e- Sisters' CODference hes been ca:lIed to deepen the aware- ' De5II' of tile coqtemporary mood.! elf' black people ,to- be a' support, 110· o:ne'lU1<lther, and: as. black YO
me Dation'S' Ilttempt to
create
~orris
H. Tripp
. SHEET METAL I J. lESER, Prop. RESfOENTIAL
INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL 253 Cedar St., New Bedford 993-3222
F. L COlliNS & SONS
GENERAL (ONTRACJORS
and ENGINEERS
INCORPORATEfl) 1937
.
JAMES H. COLUNS, C.E., !Pires. Civn~ an4\ Structural IEngineer Member National Society ProfCllssional IEngineers ~egistered
fRANCIS L e«>fl.!\.INSi,
JJ~.,
1i'rre<tlll5.
rnCAAAS Et. C(j)l!.lLDINJ$, $<eq.
ACADEMY
BUBlD~NG
F£BJ!,
~~~~,
M~~S;.
,20
Sees Hospitals
THE ANCHORThurs:, ,Aug... 1, 1968
Accepti'ng New ,Need Formula
Cha~~®IT'tl@® ~ennG.
Aid fr@ N@trnu»ublic Sch.o@~, fMrP>Us
CINCINNATI (NO) Hospitals are about to estab lish a "breakthrough" by caring for the health needs
HARRISBURG (NC) The American Civil Liber ties Union has joined forces with 10 other 'Pennsylvania organizations to prepare "the stl'Ongest possible case" against the state's recently approved program to aid children attend wg nonpublic schools. At a meeting here the group laid plans to challenge the new law's constitutionality. Rev. George I. Evans, a Pres byterian minister from Hershey who was elected chairman of the newly formed committee, aaid: "This case will have na tional attention and will involve the establishment of far-reach ing constitutional principles," Henry' W. Sawye'l' III of Phil D-adelphia was named counsel for the" committee. He was counse,l for the plaintiff in the case that resuI~ci in the 1963 U. S, Su: prem't:ourt ruling 'against Bible ooading in the public cshools. ' The groups which joined the, /' ACLU in the projected court &est are: ,Nation's First The Pennsylvania, Council of Churches; the Friends ~ Pu~lic Schools, which Evans heads; Americans, United for Sepal'a tion of Church and State; the Pennsylvania State Education Association; the American Jew-, ish Congress; the Jewish Com-, munity ,Relations' Council, the National Council of Jewish Women; the Pennsylvania Synod of the United Prebyteri,an Church; the Eastern Pennsylva lIJ.ia Conference of the Churches of God; and the' 8hurch of the Brethren. The aid law, which went into effect July 1, would be chal llenged as a violation of the U,S, Coilstitution's First Amendment ban 'on the .establishment of religion. The Pennsylvania law has been described as the nation's first, program of direct aid to non public - including church-re la ted-schools. Under the law, the Pennsyl vania Department of Public In otruction will' enter into con tracts to purchase instructional gervices in secular subjects from Iilonpublic schools.
'of a community and not just
treating patients who come to their doors, an educator in hos pital administration said here. Robert H. Johnstone, assistant director of Xavier University's graduate prograin in hospital administration, said that "as pa tient care has become better because' of its- increased special ization and mechaniza-tion, it also has become more fragment ed and, in effect, less available , to the individual." Joshnstone made his predic tion for grea,ter health needs at Xavier's 16th" annual Confer ence on Business Problems of Catholic Institutions. "The people in need of ca're have greater and grea,ter diffi culty in making contact with ,this complex system so as to find their way to the righ.t place at the right 'time," he said. ,Because of their :concentra
TO BE ORDAINED: A 43-year-old Anglican priest, married amf.the father of three children wHI be ord'ained a Roman Catholic priest next year. He is Peter John Rus,hwn, ~~e:ntht~ ~~edrie:~ p;;ie~~ shown ~bove with his wife, Helen, and their children: Anne, 15; Jim, 1~; and David, 2. " people, "most hospitals couldn't
He will be ordained for the archdiocese of Hobart, ,Tasmailia, by', Arehbisl~op Gilford C. care less about cOnununity,
Young of Hobart, and will engage in academic work rather than pas,to~l duties. . health needs," he said'. "The
very best hospitals are. m~
"divorced from community needs, h..I Fa~#.or despite - or because of-.their 9~, ' " " concentration of the newest fea,/ , ,'... . tures of high quality patient Continued from Page' One ,light of, scientific, social, psythe. scientIfic, SOCial and p_sycho,. .. care." " ' ' chological truths which have logical develQpment of the quesJohnstone who will become teaching was not, suppressed, lately had, new and very extEm- 'lion. Hence at no time .wa~ ~here assist~nt adrinistratOr of Drake Cardinal Krol, said, adding: sive studies and documentation.' any reasonable o~. Justlfla~le Memorial Hospital here on Sept. "The encyclical gives the au thentic teaching of the Church Former Proclamation ' doubt about the offiCial teachmg 1, said a shift in health care which is binding in ,conscience." of the Ch~rch, or sound reason is coming in which "the focUs "The Church has already pro- for departmg fl,om the course ill be th I g" g . d' ted b b. te h' w on e poop e, Ivm' Responsibility to Teach , claimed and interpreted the law mIca y suc ac. mgs. them comprehensive health -care Following is the text of Car- on this subject in the papal en The Church must proclaim services of high quality" con dinal Kroi's 'statement: ' cyclical on marriage (1930) and the truth of Christ's saving' faith venient availabilty and lowest more' specifically in the Sept. 25, "Our Savior Jesus Christ ,es 1958, statement of Pope ,Pius and point out the sure way of ,possible cost." tablished and, unfailingly sus '''The pressure for a shift in , XII. In calling for a study of the salvation. Truth cannot be distains His Church as the visible t<>r~ed for' the sake of secular goals will come from hospital problem' in the light of theoret;. organization' through which He relevancy ,to th~ values' of the planning associations, govern communicates truth and 'gl'ace ical as well as practical scientif world or, suitability to the tem- ment, prepayment agencies; to all. The Church is for all ic, social ,and psychological de per, of the tin:teB. To a society knowledgeable spokesman for , velopments, Pope Paul did not ages 'the pillar and mainstay of whioh insists on options in ev- consumer groups ,hospital as 'truth' (1 Tim. 3-15). It has the 'repeal or abrogate the tradition erything, bU,t fears decisions-' sociations, individual hospital al teachings of the Church. exclusive office and the' respon especially th~se which require leaders and physicians," he said. "On the contrary, he reaf sibility to ,teach and interpret fidelity and' resbict spontaneity "The double standard with re-, firmed it saying: 'We' do not the word of God, and to do 90 of behavior, ,the Church must spect to quality of pa'tieDt 'care have sufficient reason to regard in the name 'of Jesus Christ echo Christ's words: 'He who in 'and out' of the hospital will "He wh'o hears you hears me, the :norms given by Pope Pius does not take up his cross and be disappearing," he continued. suppressed and he who reJects you r~jects XII in this matter and not binding; They, must follow me is not worthy of me' The hospital will be equally con-' me" and he who rejects me re (Matt:' 10; 38), and 'Whosoever' cerned before and, after they therefore be' considered valid.' jects Him who sent' me." (Luke does bear his own cross and enter the hospital" he said. '. 1~ 1~. '. ' "In fact he cautioned: 'No one follownotme, canno',t be my disci "The Church fuust proclaim, should • • '. make pronounce ,ple~ (Luke 14, 2'1). Predicts Dropping promote, interpret and defend ' ments' and terms differing from "The encyclical gives the au the word and the law of God. the norm in force.' .thentic teaching I)f the ~hurch The Church is not a mere echo ATHENS (NC)-An Or~hodox Assumed Too Much which is biqding in conscience. scholar predicted here that· the of religious consciousness of the community, ,nor an expression "At no time -;- certainly not While it does riot preclude theo experience of Orthodoxy in per logical discussion and debate, mitting a married clergy will of the opinions of the faithful. during the interval 'of study was' there a vacuum in ,the offi It can never distort the truth to no one cim either question or eventually 'help the Catholie ,curry the favor, or judgment of cial teaching of the Church. publicly preach doctrines not in Church to abandon obligatory the crowd. Though some' may, Pope Paul made it clear that the conformity with the authentic celibacy for its, priestS. ' ' seek to follow Christ without traditional ,teaching was not teachings of the Church. Speaking at the 19th Clergy suppressed.' It continued to be the Church, history bears wit Laity Congress of the Greek Or "We accept this instruction' ness that such a following of valid and binding. Despite such thodox Archdiocese: of North affirmation s 0 m e mistakenly with the docility and obedience and· South America,' Dr. Savas Christ subtly becomes a follow owed to the Vicar of Christ. ing of self or even of those false assilmed that a study would nec Agourides, New Testament pro prophets against whom Christ, essarily introduce a change. But We thank God for the radiant fessor at the University of Thes example of wisdom and courage warned and whom the Church a study is not, a guarantee of manifested by His Holiness, and salonika, said that this celibacy resists. "Fidelity to ,Christ to change. It can well-as itactu change will be one of the effects His followers demands that the ally did in this case--result in a beg God to strengthen, guide of the "common language" de and preserve hir.ll for many Church proclaim the truth even reaffirmation in the traditional veloping between Orthodox,. years." at the risk of having some join teaching. Others erroneously as and other Christian religioll8. disciples who protested to Our sumed that the study introduced Lord: 'This is a hard saying, in a period of doubt about valid Who can accept it?' (John 6, ity of 'the doctrinal teachings. 60), or ~ven those disciples who But such ,an assumption ignored Color Procel;S Year Books defected-'After this many of the clear words of the Pope; his disciples left him and stopped that there was not sufficient Booklets going with him' (John 6,27). ' reason to regard the norms of Brochures Pope Pius XII as suppressed and "On June 26, 1964, His Holi \ ness Pope Paul announced the not binding. Moreover, tile study study of the 'extremely complex was directed primarily toward ' and delicate problem' which 'touches the source of human life.' Recognizing the manifold LEnERPRESS OFF 5 ET - PRINTERS fields of competence, preemi NEW HAVEN (NC) - The nent among whic;:h was that of Knights of Columbus have pro-' 1-11 COFFIN AVENUE Phone 997-9421 the spouses, the Pope said: 'The Church must also affi,rm her vided $25,000 to help relieve the' . New Bedford, Mass. competence and will have to starv~tion facing the people in proclaim the laws of God in the Biafra. p e s. .
ChtYrch Does
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VIENNA (NC)-The Eastern:' rite Catholic Church in Czecho alovakia h~s regained its cathe dral in Presov as the, reestab':" lishment of the rite continues in that country, it was. learned here. The keys of the: cathedral were turned over to the Eastel'll rite's Committee for Renewal in acc6rdance with an agreement between the' committee and the. Orthodox Ch~rch authorities. An Eastern-rite Mass was cel ebrated in the cathedral for the first time since the suppression of the rite in 1950. An overflow congregation attended the ser vice. In June the newly constituted Czechoslovakian communisi gov ernment granted permission for the reestablishment of the Eastern-rite Catholic ChUl·ch. The action was a step in the se ries ,of moves to ease the dis abilities of the churches in' Czechoslovakia and to relax the Church-state conflicts of, previ ous years~ It followed the· return of four Roman Catholic bishops to their Sees 15 years or more after they were ousted by the communists
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Czech Catholics Regai., Cathedrai . ,
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Of Celibacy Law'
. K of C Gift
Amelrican' Press, Inc.
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