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NEW CHAPEL BEING ERECTED 1'0 SERVE POPONESSETT AREA OF MASHPEE 9N CAPE COD

Osterville Parish Missiolll1

The

ANCHOR

faU River, Mass. q Thursday, August 3 8 1961 VOa. 11, No. 31

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$4.00. per \foeEO' !'RICIE lo. ,

,Chapel Sign o/Area

Growth in Mashpee

At the direction of Bishop Connolly, the first inission chapel in the town of Mash­ pee is now under construc­ tion. Since 1960,' Mass has been offet-ed during the Summer months in ,the Popponessett Community Center as a part of Our Lady of ,the Assumption Parish in Osterville. The fast

Hyannis Curate To' New Bedford

growing Catholic Summer 'PoP­ ulation necessitates larger" and! more permanent quarters. ' The new chapel is located on the westerly side of Great Neck Road in Mashpee on a six-acre site conveyed to the Church by 'the Fields Point Corporation, sponsors of the nationally known New Seabury Develop­ ment. The Catholic Summer popu­ lation of over 2,000 constitutes a respectable congregation for the new mission, while the gradual increase of permanent residents ,. of the area bodes well for the

establishment of a parish in t'he years ahead. The chapel is calculated to accommodate 700 worshipers, being 80 feet in width and 9a feet in length. Construction wiill be of supporting steel girdero with walls and roof of prefabri­ cated and insulated steel panelS\. Light, ventillation, and decorBl­ tion will be provided by mon~ lite Pllnels in the side walls. The mission's facade will he of wood. A 10-foot roof ovel1" hang will shelter the front en.­ trance. Turn w Page Twenty

Stress Autonomy, Freedom re-as- H ' Sh I L" Of Catholic University, ~~~~~~I~r~ :~s~;I~t P~~l ~:' . 0 me, . ,.:' c ',00, Par i s n O' (NC)-':"A on ,the Deve I'o'p "'5 . P' by· 26 . e,xrogram and 2,400­ The Chancery Office'an­

nounced to day

the

" LAND LAKES working paper' Xavier parish, Hyannis, to St. Catholic university, signed Catholic edueationid Mary's' parish, ..New Bedford.', The assignment will take effect leaders, stresses autonomy: academic freedom. ,The on Wednesday, Aug. 9. Word document, "A Statement on the Nature of the Conu­ Family Bureau of Father Connolly, the "son oil temporary Catholic Univer­ ' ...i~y," ha's been sl'gned by' ,,,In the Church ,and should objec­ ,Michael j. and Irene' t. Goeh:' United States Catholic Conference announced here that it -" ..n tively evaluate them." " is developing a se~ ,education program involving the home" Turn to' Page Twenty, " Participants in the July s~mThe statement; signed by, an school and parish. Father, James McHugh, bureau directoJro inar sponsored by the North Archbishop and a Bishop as well ' said the program was being American Region of the ][nter­ as by leading Catholic educators, developed in cooperation with the contribution of the school! lIlational Federation of Catholic notes that administration and and, its teachers, and the leader-­ the Education Depart­ Universities here in Wisconsin: organization of Catholic univerKey recommendations are: Turn to Page Twenty , ment, the National Catholic ship of pastors of souls who wiJIll Turn to Page Two Educational Association, and the "The Catholic university must National Center of the Confra­ Illave a true autonomy and aca­ ternity of Christian Doctrine. AU demic freedom in the face of have headquarters here. authority of whatever kind, lay "The Second Vatican Council," 1M' clel'ical, external to the aClll­ said Father McHugh, "has (ii,ell1llic community itself." strongly urged that every child Theology must be distinc­ ,Three New Hampshire leadem be 'given a positive education in in mental retardation programs ~vely present among recognized Rev• Joseph K. Welsh, pas­ sexuality as a part of the forma­ l!nteUectual disciplines and mlilst txJ>r of Our Lady of Victory will join a faculty of nationally tive process whereby he be­ <engage in constant interdiscipli­ and regionally prominent mental comes increasingly aware of his parish, Centerville, a priest iUlllr'y dialogue with the rest of retardation experts at the New I I personal identity and Christian illl. the Diocese of Fall River· the academic community. England Congress for all Chris­ ! responsibility. tians 'to be held at the Univer­ An recogniZed university for 44 years, -becomes Pastor "This insightful training in sity of New Hampshire Friday Emeritus on Wednesday, Aug. !D. illl'e3S of study must be "frankb­ human sexuality is certainly the through Sunday, Aug. 25 to 27. The '71 year old pastor was and fully accepted and their­ pl"erogative of parents and fam­ They are Mrs. Roger Are1" llnternal autonomy guaranteelll. born 00 Aug. 28, 1895, in New ily, but as the child goes llead of Manchester's Moore Tbell'e must be DO theological 01' :Sedlor-d, the SOD of the. ,late through the process of socializa­ Center, Rev. John Mitman oJ! phUosophical imperialism; (1UlJ. Roberl P . Welsh and the late tion, he can profit greatly from Lebanon and Rev. Gerald Dunn, Elizabeth M. Kennedy Welsh. ilCientific and disciplinary meUn­ the influences of the school and Ch.aplain at the Laconia State <Dds, and methodologies, must be A graduate of La Salle Aca­ parish community. School. [Jiven due honor and respect." demy, Providence, the Center­ Planned by the Confraternity "We feel then,that a total pro­ ville pastor attended Holy Cross '""Jfhe university should carry gram of education in human of Christian Doctrine in consw. _ t:I continual examination 01( College, Worcester, for' two Turn to Page Two sexuality necessarily requil'eJl ~~v. PAUL G. CONNOLLY Turn to Page Five sa asyects and all activities ~

WAsiUNGTON'(NC)~The

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Rev. J. K. Welsh Becomes Pastor Emeritus Aug. 9

ceD

Prospectus For Retarded

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. '.' Develop.· :Sex Program

dmtInUed from Page ~ ; out the mae of such a pro for the entire eommu­ nity; poin

Diocese of Fall River

Du 'ng the past year the Fam­ ·fe· Bureau has sought .., iden fy existing programs in variot.S dioceses and parisheIJ throu'ghout the COWltry; It. ball maiil~ined a dialogue witli in­ teresf.ed physicians, psycholo­ 'gists, ed~cators, and theolo­ gians who havs provided guid­ ance from their own disciplines. ily

OFFICIAL

I

OLERG'fl Af'I"OINTMENTS

Rev. JOseph K. Welsh, p3st0r of Our Lady of Victory Cbu~ .Centerville, becomes Pastor Emeritus.

istence of programs of education fo.r n~DS' and teac~ers, th"e for­

Rev. Paul G. Connolly, DSSistant at St. Francis Xavier ,Church,Hyannis, to St. Mary Church, New Bedford, as assistant. .' Rev. Bernard R. Kelly, assistant at St.. James Chur.ch, .,:New Bedford,' to St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, as ·assistant. ., AppOuitm,ents effective Wedriesday, Aug. 9, 1967. .

·ceD and

Re~arded Children,

ent work,' develop new prob­ . ,'bont,inue~' fJ;'om, Page One' tation .with Mr" James Fenten, lems and discuss hlter-faith re-:­ Director of the New Hampshire ligious instruction programs.. Council on Mental Retardation,. In addition to Mrs. Arel, the special program is entitled Father Mitman 'and Father -Good .News for God's Excep­ Dunn; other members of the fac­ tio~al People" and has been de­ ulty will include Father Gen­ flCribed by CCD Director V. gras, who is head of Gengras Rev. Leo A. Desclos as a "Con­ Center, Hartford, and director gress within the N. E. Congress." of this work in the' archdiocese It wili consist of a· special of Hartford; Sister John, S.H.F.. IIeries of four meetings for an Director' of Mental' Retardation those working with or intereste4 Programs for Archdiocese of Los ~ worki~g with the mentally Angeles, Calif.; Rev. Matthew retarded. M. Pesaniello; Director of Men­ (l) Beginners will meet to­ tal Retardation Apostolate' for J[ether with these resource per­ Arch9iocese of Newark. N. J.; sons.. (2) Those who are famil­ Rev. Francis R. LoBianco, Direc­ iar with religious education but tor Special Education Depart­ unfamiliar with mental retarda­ ment of Newark - Archdiocese tiOn will meet manother group. and head 'of Mt. Carmel Guild; (3) Those who bavebeen :actiye and Donald Tiauristeiri, execu­ bUt want more c:lepth. (4) Prin­ tive secretary New England of.:. eiPa~andadniinistrators whO fiee of the' National ASsociation Want to explore programs in. for Retarded Children. . mw;ic,' '~rts, ,:and crafts, problem The '. COngress 'will feature .olving and cuiriculum devel()p- Bishop'Fuiton J ~ Sheen and 91111 ~t. . · ." cODslst 'of five' "gen~ral sessionS . The' program win begin ~ an a'nd 5O'semimirs.. Pre-rewStra­ unstructured, way :and Will .:be tiOn is $2' and the public is in:'. built on the' .needs of the eon­ vited. . 'Information is av8iJable fej.ee~: The' faculty Will make at the N. H." Couricilfor the . itSelf. a~aiiabie 'to assist accord­ Mentally Retarded, 37 Green ing to their present level of . St., Concord;' Moore' Center, lleeds. Grenier Field, MancheSter; er . Rev. JO§.¢p'h.. C..Gengras, Fae­ 153 Ash' St., Manc:hester"N. H. lJlty .~90rdi~fltoJ;, said: h~,;Xiews

the . three :'days· of .meetings aB

~ s&ies~ of :'d~velopmental'sem';

inarS,ln· .whi~h· everyone,. {nter­ ested ·i.n"~helni.ng. the· retarded. . .,AUG,,~3 . ean participate 'according' to his . ~v. ~ward ;"J.. ,Sheridan; ~wn background.'"It will be il 1896, Pastorj' ,St. Mary; Taunton.' tlOmmon .,effort, ~;.,. he..said,. «to , .Rt·ne .: .v.. · L eonard ' J. .Daley; . ~ature in our ,~prk,.. ~i~it the, 1964, Pastor,.,St, Francis Xavier" ~eta~~~~·;r; '. ::,,~ Y·~". ' Hyannis. ,. ,, , ' , New Concepts .. ' ',; AUG. 'i4" ,: There :,rin:. ~,'a··.:aii;~ussion of, . " " . .,' ' . ' "',' conceptS "hi rellRev.' Rap h a:: e I , . ¥ar~J;liak,. -ion to the mentally retarded, 11 O.F.M. Conv.,. 1947, Pastor, Holy .. Cross, Fall River. B~ri~g, p.rol:>le~s, res~llcrch ,,',' ,', .. '. ' .. '.;.' and experimentation. ParticiAUG. 15 Pants will .evaluate their pres~ev:'cbarles W.Cullen 1926, ; ',' F~.~, ...Boly Famiiy : East . . . ' " .' , ' -Taunton.' .

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NORMAND BERGER

Prevost Alumnus Joins Religious Normand Berger, a Fall River n:ative and an alumnus of Msgr. Prevost High ~chool' in the See City, will be invested as a novice in the Brothers of Christian In­ struction at the 'Notre Dame Novitiate in Alfred, Maine, on Tuesday, Aug. 15. The new 'novice is the son of Normand and' Lorraine Berger, n'ow' of Tiverton (R.I.). He en­ tered the Congregation's junior­ ate when he was a third-year student at Msgr. Prevost High and was graduated from st.. Louis High School in Biddeford, Maine, in June last.

FORTY HOURS' 1

AUG. 17 . Rev. CorneliuS . O~nnor, .. . '1882, PastOr, Holy'Tiinity, west Aug.6-St: . Ther~sa, &nlth . Harwich.' Attleboro. Our Lady of' Victory, Centerville. Aug. 13-0,u r Lady 0 f· LONDON (NC)-A new reli­ Lourdes, Well.fleet. gious .ceremony to include a pro­ Sacred Heart, New Bed­ fession of faith and eommit­ ford. " , ment should.beestablished for young people when they enter adult life, it ·.wasstatedat a lHEAIICJlOI S600ftCI Class Postage Paid lrl Fall ·Rlver, joint meeting of Catholics and lias... Pub lisbea every 'I11ursdiay 'at . 4Ul

Anglicans to discuss Christian t1lflhlano '~venue, Fall Rive, Mass.. 02722

b. the ::&thollt ,Press 01 tile Dloces:.l of Fall Initiation .at .Pigby S~art 001-' Ilive.. SuDscrl!itIOfl price '1lJ mail; JlQStpaJd lege here. . 14·00 pel year.

'D£,VOTlON

Initia,tion Service

mUla~on of curriculum guides for d;'erent llge groupS; and the publi ation of some effective mate als, for use by p~rents: The bureau' will draw uPQn ·:..t hese resou ces, and will benefit (rom the e periences of, sele:eted "par­ ishes and diocesan school. sys­ tems .that have . experimental progr iii process or projected

Ge man Seminary Re ises Training

R (NC)-Trier's Bishop Stein, following the 8ucces of several experim!'!ntal progra established' the Trier 1iocese, has annoutice£fa new fOrmula. for the· training M dioces,n priests. In their first year. of .major seminah life, students will live in the ~;minary and follow reg­ ular classes. In their second year, however, they will live in . Mass Ordo . a locall town and do part-time work in a parish. Third year FRIDAY-St. Dominic, Confes­ sor. DI Class. White. Mass year 'S~dies will be made at 'an area u iversity, while $tudents Proper; Glory; no' Creed; in thei fourth year will' haVe Common Preface. Two Yotive the opt on of living either at the · Masses in honor of the Sacred flCmina or in town.' . . Heart 'of Jesus permitted; Deac ns will spend a year at Glory; no Cre~; Preface ~ .Sacred Heart. Tomorro.w is .the full-ti e parish work and wj·iI. first Saturday of the . mon~. be ord ined to the priesthood SATURDAY-Dedication of Our followi g their sixth year of Lady of the Snow (Basilica of prepara ions. St. Mary ·Major). III Class White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; P!"eface of Blessed Resigns Presidency Virgin Mary. SUl1ol'I>A,Y -'Trarisfigur~tif)n ''Of " Our' Lord Jesus 'Chris(Xll . Sunday'aitet PentecoSt).' n chang~·. Mercy" .College",beI;e .'Class. White. 'Mass .Proper; from a School for 200 girls, to Its GiorY'; Creed; PretaCe. ~fTri~:" present .}status as B.· four-year ·ity. ' . " ',' ,", liberal rts eollege', with .•1,200 MQNDAY-St. ~jet,an". Confes­ students, has resigned, the' ,prest.. · sor.II Class. .'whi,te. .Wlass dency 0 the, institution."., '," ,. I , Proper; Glory; ,no Creed; Sister ~ary Lucille MiddletOn, "Common p,reface, .. . 'presiden .. of Mercy College for TUESDAY-,-St.John 'Mary Vi.,. 15 years was active in' eommu:' anney, Confessor. .Ill. Class. nity 'aft t'il as Wen"as re~ White.· Mass Proper.; Glor'y; sible for the development of'we ; no Creed; Common. Preface. college: . In 1964, she helped WEDNESDAY-'-Vigil of St. Law.:. spOnsor ~ first" Jewish'~Cilth';' renee, 'Martyr. ill Class. Vio-" olic dialogue in' the ,·sta~ «if ',,, ., . '" · let. Mass Proper; No .Glory Micbigari;· '. . ;' . ' . . ... ,.' .; ner ' Creed; CommOJi Preface~

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Commenting _ the overali! plan, Father McHugh addedr, "'We have a particularly cha\a lenging responsibility facing &\ but we feel that the interest, e.­ operation, and expertise of OUI' people are the resources tbaI are equal to the challenge." The plan in formulation by file bureau and other agencies cal. for a series of pDot projects iIll different dioceses - each work­ ing on different aspects of the total program. These dioeesetl will be identified by Aug. II\. so that their efforts may be ape. praised and e\'aluated during.too coming school )Year. .' " Program formatS for parentS" groups' are a ne«:essary part' 'Of the projected'program, and these will be ready for use in the pij.oi eenters. . ' ,,' ". ' .

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Need The Family Life Bureau and its many diocesan units have long recognized the need for' IlUch a program, Father McHup Aid. In view of the general in­ terest and eoncem about sex education that is leading to de­ - veJopment· of sebool-centered progr~ th,roughout, the na~on. ~e various bureaus and depar,t­ ments are particularly anxio. to .Cc?ntribute to their plann~~ ~d development,.. he stated.•

Postor Emeritus , Continued from Page One and then understook 'Ida philoSop1J.ical and theological studies at St. Bernard's Se~ Jlary, Rochester. As a curate, he served at st.. Francis Xavier, Hyannis; st. Lawrence, New Bedford; S1. Joseph, st. Mary's Cathedral. 8iJ.dSS. Peter and l?aul, all ill Fall River. Father Welsh was appointed pastor of St. Patrick's parish" Somerset on October, 1941" where he remained for eight years until his' assignmeni ~ 'the Imaculate" Conception ~ iSh;' No, ,E3$1~~...· ,.' , IJl October of· 1955 the new Pastor . ;Emeri_ was assigned 14> St.' Thomas More parish, SomeJ:Set, which was amissi_ ell. st. Patrlck'sparisb, Somer­ set,· when FatlWr. Welsh' seI:.vfd, ~- the'sJlepherd there from 1941 y~ars,

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Council Ponders Emergencll ~und

'fHE ANCHOR-

Says Pope's Trip

For S~hOOlO~

A~d!i E~~m~~e$m

BURLINGTON (NC) IT.he Burlington diocesan ad­ ministrative council met ~ere to study a proposal for l)]l emergency relief fund for the ¢sis-stricken diocesan second­ 1lIll'Y school system. The plan, submitted by the mocesan school board, roughly parallels the Vennont state aid to education formula, with dis­ bursements based on pupil en­ ronment and a projected figure -. $20 per student. The fund, which will have to ~e out of diocesan resources, would be spread over a period of years.' . The meeting marked the first time the administrative council viewed the. proposal since the school board submitted it to Bishop Robert F. Joyce. The 8Chool board has requested im­ plementation of the plan by Aug. 15, but it seems unlikely that the eouncil will act that quickly. Partial Answer Distribution of the fund over IS period of time is seen as a [)artial answer to some of the problems facing Catholic sec­ ondary education in Vennont. ho schools closed this year and the school board is talking III tenns of maintaining only I! lew quality schools on the sec­ ~dary level. School costs, which have been dsing steadily for a number of pears, went up again on July 6, :!l"hen increased salary schedules for teaching nuns were put into effect by the bishop. Acting on a recommendation of the administrative council and ·the school board, Bishop layee raised the scale for nuns tD $1,200 a year. Previously it bad ranged from $50 to $300 for each Sister. Under the new fonnula, ali teaching nuns wiUreceive a flat $1,200 a year, with no distinc­ tions on the basis of degrees held . . teaching responsibility.

Mear Agreement

On Anti-Smut Bill WASHINGTON (NC) -After Glree years of differences, the Senate and the House neared agreement on III measure which would establish a commission to 4lefine obscenity and recommend ways in which it can be curbed .. the nation. The House Education and Iiabor Committee unanimously approved a measure providing '"' appointment of a IS-member eommission by the President .which would report to him and Congress by Jan. 31,' 1970. The ~ was introduced ~ Rep.· Dominick Daniels of New Jer­ way. I:arlier this year the senate IIPproved a similar bill sponsored· Itt" Sen. Karl E. Mundt of South Dakota for a 2O':member com­ . •ission with power of subpoena.. M the last four sessions the Senate passed the Mundt bill, but the measure repeatedly died III the House committee. .

Detroit Puts Laymen" Nun in Key Posts DETROIT (NC)-The Detroit Archdiocese has appointed two laymen and a nun to new re­ sponsibilities in the educational field. The laymen, one a Negro, have been made principals of two archdiocesan high schools, posts usually reserved for Sisters, Brothers or priests. A nun, Sister GertrUde Marie, I&as been appointed assistant su­ perintendent of archdiocesan primary education, with 263 ele­ lDentary schools under her 8U­ tkoriQr.

3

Thurs., Aug. 3, 't967

ISTANBUL: Pope' Paul and'the Ecumenical Patriarch, Athenagoraa I. of Constan­ tinople, as they appeared during a visit to the Orthodox Church of St. George, during the Pope's recent visit to the Patriarch. NC Photo.

Professor Scores Anti-Historical Spirit \

Students Come C~cse to Despising. Past!' NOTRE DAME (NC) - A Notre Dame University history professor said here. thafan "anti­ historical spirit" is evident in the work of some current stu­ dents of American Catholicism. Dr. Philip Gleason, a special­ ist in the history of the Catholic Church in the U. S., described this attitude as the "insistence

that we confront situations to­ day that are totally new and dif­ ferent, and that history has nothing to tell us.'~ "In their anxiety to be 'with it' today," Gleason told a group of history teachers here, "those who hold this sort of position seem sometimes to come very close to despising their past.

Orthodox Rabbis FavolI" Measure Providing Aid to Private Schools· HARRISBURG (NC) - Two rabbis have come .out in favor of a measure pending in the Penn­ sylvania legislature which would aid private schools. - Rabbi' Abba Leiter of Pitts­ burgh and Rabbi David Shisgal ~ New York said in an inter­ view that the bill, which would Iluthorize the state to pay non­ pu.blic schools for teaching sel;u­ tar subjects, "expresses the sen­ timent of an overwhelmaing majOrity _of Orthodox J~ws." . ."The Orthodox group is over­ wheI,n,i.ingly for aid to nonpubli.c »eho01 education," 'said Rabbi Lei~, executive secretary·. of tile Pennsylvania RabbiJlical Ad­ viSorY Committee 0IIl Religious ~airs.'. ... ''The ra\:)binical group will be aslting the laity to become active and' to' visit the legislatorS 'to in­ fo~ "th~m of their Positlon and their concern." . Ra.bQi . Leiter said he was speak~ng out to show that "~b­ eral" JeVis, who often oppose aid fA» religion-related causes, do not rep~esent the entire Jewish community. . Suffer Financially He said that· Jewish da,. schools of the state have several thousand students enrolled, vir­ tually all of them Orthodox Jews, and these schools are suf­

fering financially, just as Cath­ olic schools are. "Because the schools are suf­ fering hardships, the children are suffering i.n their educa­ tiOlt." said Rabbi Shisgal, asso­ ciate director of the New York State Federation of Citizens for Educational Freedom. . ~'Whether it is to the extent &bat they are in danger of c1os­

"This is making of history a grab-bag of horrible examples which may be used as polemical weapons in the controversies of the present day - an approach that gets us nowhere in the ef­ fort to deepen our understanding

of either the past or the pres­

ent." Gleason called on Catholics to

confront and understand their history, using it "as the normal individual uses his own past to locate ;himself and identify him­ self as a person among persons." He urged history· teachers to Hdevelop Ii sensitivity to the con­ cerns of the present so that we may be better able to bring the knowledge of history to bear in the contemporary discussion during this lively post-conciliar period of the Church.....

GENEVA (NC)-Dr. Eugent Carson Blake, general secretal1 of the World Council oj Churches, said Pope Paul VI'I trip to Istanbul to see Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras I of Con­ stantinople aided the ecumenical movement. Dr. Blake said in a statement issued at WCC headquarters here: "The visit * Q '" by Pope Paul to Patriarch Athenagoras '" '" '" is important not only as a visible sign of renewed relationships between Eastern and Western Christian churches, which have been divided for 1,000 years, but also as a stimulus to the ecumen­ ical movement as a whole, which aims at the unity and renewal of all the churches. . "The member churches of the World Council of Churches re­ joice at the new spirit of recon­ ciliation which this visit sym­ bolizes. Even at such a moment of rejoicing, it is important that all church leaders warn them­ selves that the expectations of the world which are aroused by such visible events must not be disapointed by failure to unite and cooperate much more pro­ foundly than as yet they have seen the way. "The world expects that out of this new ecumenical atmosphere will arise one Church of Jesus Christ, renewed In power and mission and service for the world. The World Council . of Churches is committed to this task and welcomes the initia­ tives being taken by Pope Paul and . the Ecumenical Patriarch both toward each other anei toward all member churches."

First U.S. Mass.

NOTRE DAME (NC)-Fathet' Edward C. Krause, C.S.C., 01. South Bend, Ind., son of Ed (Moose) Krause, director of athletics at the University of Notre Dame, will offer his first public Mass in this country at Moreau Seminary chapel here Sunday. Father Krause was or­ dained in· Rome, Italy, last Dec. 17 and recently completed hill theological studies at Gregorian University there where he re­ ceived his licentiate in theology.

ing, I cannot say. Bl,lt certainly, the quality of education of these children is suffering and lagging, and that is the basic question: Are we for enhancing the qual­ ity of education for all our chil­ dren?" CEF is a nondenominational group t~at conc.erns itself with N~wColllncils

school legislatio.n. Its advisory .

committe~ was formed in FebruNOORDWIJKERHOUT (NC)

ary to act on iSSueS affecting. -Sev~nty bishops from 19 coun­ free exercise of religion. tries gathered here in the Neth­ . In Secular' Area erlands to discuss authority and

Under t~e bill the' two rabbis obedience in the Church and the· are supporting, up to '$25 million new. views on· administration of would be provided to nonpublic dioceses. It· was revealed that SchoolS' to ·paY·· for the secular Belgium: h~s, six cl.ergy. councils cour~es they offer. To 'bypass and one pastoral council; Aus­ cons'titutionl' provisions' agaiilst tria has five clergy counoils, one using' appropdilted income in pastoral; England has 16' clergy, sup~ort· of sectarian schools, the one pastoral; Italy has 1'3.5 clergy money would COme from 'the councils (about h.alf the' total S~RVICE! state's cfgareite'tail:·fund.number of dioceses)·· and 167 , It would be apportioned by '':. ·pastoral councils. proposed Nonpublic School Au­ thority. Both rabbis gave Penn­ sylvania . Gov.· Robert Shafer their views on the· bill which is being studied in committee. . "All we' (the Orthodox Jews) INCORPORATED 1937 are asking· is that the state help : out in the secular area," Rabbi Leiter said. ~'Why shouldn't the children continue to have an equal opportunity to choose a

religious education?"

"Our opponents say that secu­ lar subjectS taught in the reli­ gious schools are permeated with • JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Pres. religion," Rabbi Shisgal said. "My answer to that is 'so • Registered Civil and Structural 'Engineer what?' Is religion a contamina- . : Member No" '01 Society Professional Engin~e"l tion that completely defeats and FRANCIS L COLLINS, JR., Treas. completely removes any benefits • • THOMAS K. COLLINS. Sec'y. of the secular course of instruc­ tion that is given to our children FALL RI\lI=D MASS. in elementary schools? Certainly : ACAneMY BUILDING

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Aug. 3, 1967

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~Gu[fO~iro@OL:CJj®wD~Gu ~®a@fro@[fOS) By'Msgr. George G. lHliggins (Director, Sodan Action Dept., USCC) The June 30 issue of this column was devoted to a ~ery frank discussion of what might be called the ecumenical or interreligious aftermath of the Israeli-Ar<tb Waf. In summary, I took js~me rather pointedl'y in that column with two pl"ominent Jewish Rabbis "What I meant to suggest was -Rabbi Balfour Brickner of your apparent identification New York and Rabbi Arthur that. of the political ISFael of the con­ Hertzberg of New Jersey­ temporary world and the reli­

who had sev.erely criticized the Catholic Church in the United States for its failure, as a corporate body, to speak out more vigorously in behalf of Israel during her recent war with the Arab nations in the turbulent Mid­ dle East. I said, among 0 t h er

t h i n g s, that, whether they realized it or not, Rabbi Briclmer and Rabbi Hertzberg were indulging. in a form of ecumenical or interreli­ gious blackmail.

I also pointed out that, while they are perfedly free, if they so desire, to characterize Israel's war with the Arabs as a reli­ gious or "holy" war, they have no right to expect an of their Catholic fellow citizens in the United States-or, for that mat­ ter, all of their Jewish fellow citizemr-to agree with them in this regard. Courteous R,epJies I knew in advance, of course,

that this wouldn~t sit toe well with many of my JewisDl friends, and could have predicted almost infallibly that it would elicit a courteous but pointed reply from Rabbi Brickner al'Jd Rabbi Hertzberg. So it has. Rabbi Hedzlllerg's reply­ which: ]1 must say was eminenUy ·fair and courteous--appeared in his regular cl!)lumn in t,he Na­ tiona,I Catholic- Reporter. Rabbi Brickner's 'equally fair and equaHy courteous (ejoinder took the form-oli a five':'page pe'rsonal leiter, which said, among otF.er things, that if I had read the complete text of his original Los Angeles speech on the subject under discussion, instead' of reJyi'ng on a truncated summary lim tbe New York Times, I neve~' would ha,ve aG:­ cused him I€ f ecumenical .ar in­ tel'reIig1ous blad:rnail. Admi.1s Mistake

RaJDllli BJrili:kner's point is well taken. A careful reading of the full text of his Los Angeles speech mal~es it perfectly clear that, because of the ecumenical­ or iil1.tel.'l·eligfolls crisis' occa­ - sioned by the IsraeIi-AL"ab war, he is in favor' of more, I'ather than less .Jewish participation in Catholic-Jewish dialogues and· is not laying down any pre-coftdi­ tioms as a kind of quid pro ql.l0' for his own pa;rticipation in such dialogues. I must aPElfl!)gize very sin­ cerely to Rabbi' Brickner for my regrettable failure to make this point clear in -my originaL col­ umn'. It was alll! innocent mistake Gn my par1:-tlut a mistake nev­

ertheless. _ In my admittedly incomplete' reply to the rest of Rabllli. Brick­ ner's lengt.hY letter, I made the following points very briefly and 'vel'Y hurriedly; Politieal. R..,ligioltS 1. '''I ceL'tainly did not mean to suggest in my earlier column that you and Rabbi Hertzberg had called for a • holy war" against the Arabs. 'Fhat would have' been utterly ridicwous on my part.

gious Israel of the pL'ophets tended to confuse the issue and, in my judgment, tended to create the impression tbatthe Israeli-Arab war ·had romehow taken on a religious celeratien. "Suffice it to add that, in my opinion, it would be Ui'l-reason­ afile to expect the majority -of non-Jews in the United Stat-es to agree with yourappaFent iden­ tification of Israel as' a ,political State with the religiONS Israel of the prophets. '

. "1 would also - paint. :Out, in passing, that there are many dangers. in such an identification even from the peRnt of view of American Jews. . Critical of Hierarchy

2. "I still think that you and Rabbi Hertsberg (and, to a much greater extent, a number of other Jewish leaGlers) were much too critical of the Amer­ ican hierarchy and much too in­ sensitive in the manner in which you expressed your criti:ci-sm in the public prints-without any prior discussion of· -the matter with your many friends in the Catholic community, who, if you had consulted with them in ad­ vance, might have been able to clarify the situation at least to a cer1:ain extent. "And while, as indicated above, I am pel"fectly willing to withdra'w my use of the word "blackmail" in this context, I still think that, regardless of your intentions, you left the im­ pression (with many others be­ side myself) that the American bishops should have said so-and­ so in the name of interreligious unity and not merely in the name .0£ international justice, Honest Differenees 3. '''I think that you must be prepared for the public expres­ sion of honest differences of opinion on many aspects of Israel's military aJ'ld foreign policy. "Another way of saymg the same th1ng is that,. j f you want chul'ch leaders to speak -out on the specific issues involved in the Israeli-Arab conflid, you m,ust expect them--at times--to say things that you might BAIt like to hear. "I might add, in this ,connec­ tion, that the New York Times has been much I1l{)re critical than the average Catholic news­ paper with regavd to certain Israeli policies. "You may disagree with the editors of the Times, but I -as­ sume that you would not want to question their good faith and certainly wouldn't dream of ac­ cusing them of being prejudiced against Israel as a political state or against Judaism as a religious faith. Promises Cooperat.ion 4. "For my own part, I am

f~rmly con.vinced t.hat the cur­ rent 'crRsis' in Christ.ian-Jewish relations will do m{)regood thaI} ha.J;m in the long run. If nothing else, it will help to clear the air, and hopefully. will also help us to distinguish more clearly be­ tween essQntial and non-essen­ tial differences of opinion be­ tween our respecti ve communi­ ties. "I am. S\lr:e I dfj)<:)'t have to add that I personally stand prepared'

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FAULKNER (NC) -Thirty­ seven clergymen from five com­ missions joined together for two days of common discussion em themes taken from 'Jesuit Fathell' Avery Dulles' book "Dimensions of the Church." Meeting at LoyoIil-on-the-Pa­ tomac retreat house under thGl sponsorship of the Gustave WeD­ gel Society of Washington, thGl priests and ministers also sharetll as far as possible in Eucharistic services celebrated according to Episcopal, Lutheran, Methodist and Roman Catholic traditions. Participants in the retreaa agreed that ecumenism should be concerned not only with ee­ clesiastical issues, but with the secular issues that occupy the minds of modern men.

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Sincere Conversion Not Antn-Ecumenism TIRUVALLA (NC)-The vie­

ar general of .Tiruvalla diocese has stated that it is not eov­ red to say a change of church affiliation is contrary to ecu­

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TYPICAL OF BIBLICAL DAY ing in SOltth India gathers his 'f} tree. In almost biblical simplicity t come from a distance rest with the· ing to their homes. NC Fhoto.

: A Svdss priest work­ k about him under a the people who have pastor before return-

!E.~p~[fQ@nee Ilhidgepoli't Diocese N«llm@$ ~ nncipaL of Public SclhoiCli as New ASSDStQJl711fr tlIperiB'iltendent BRIDGEPORT (NC) - The Bridgeport Diocese for the first time has named a layman as assistant superintendent ,of schools. He is Bernar:d D. Hel­ frich, now principal of a public elementary school in Trumbull. Bishop Walter W. Curtis said the appointment marks "a new dimension of t.he ex.periehce and involvement of lay people being added to our schools." Helfrich will assume responsi­ bility for the diocese's 71 'ele­ mental'.... schools and 14 high schools~ under the direction of Father'Martin B. Hitchcock, di­ ocesan superintendent of schools. He has been employed by the

Favor Ec.umenicaD School Proposed SWANTON (NC) - A ,major Protestant church and an official of the American Civi,l Libertres Union have endorsed the pre­ posed Union 7 school plan f-or this Vermont area, which pw­ 'vides for cooperation .among public and private servi'ces and facilities. The plan calls for an ecumen­ ical school of reUgion to be built on private land adjacent to the public school. The religi.an school wouldbeadmin istered separately, and built entirely with private funds. Delegates to an educational convention sponsored by the Church of Christ passed a reso­ lution "enthusiastically endors­ ing" the project. The confer­ ence, held in New Hampshire, bt'ought delegates .from several denominations, including' the Episcopal, Baptist, Presbyterian and M-?r:avian churches. to work more closely than ever before with you and your col­ leagues in the Union of Amer­ ican Hebrew Congregations." I trust that the other Jewish leaders who have expressed con­ cern about my column of June 30 will accept these excerpts from my letter to Rabbi Brick-' ner in lieu of a detailed reply", their own communications.

Trumb s~hool system for the past 12 years. At th same time, Bishop Cur­ tis an~unced' the appointment of Ms . James P. Devine chance or of the diocese. He succeed· Msgr. John J, Toomey, elected earlier this year by priests of the diocese as vicar general. Msgr. Devine has been a vice thancellor since 1957.

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ST. UL (NC)-The exterior of the <I.thedral of St. Paul here was mJminat.ed, adding a touch ~e~rillil'ance to the ·city'ssky-

Some 300 persons and firms contributed more than '$41,000 te the=i'.}igbtmg projed, which was spons by the St. Paul Area Ch of Commerce. ·:Men -of varWus faiths comprise t8e Cham1ber. committee. m . ati'on will cORtinYe each e ing from 9:3V _til

11:30.

.

Ed ca.tion Gront JERSIJJy CITY (NC)-Fatber Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J., presi­

dent,.of St. Peter's College -be-re,

has anntlunced receipt of a '$2':0,­ 518 grar. t under terms of Title II of th~ Higher Education Act of 1965. The grant will be used fot:' the acquisition of -beekos, periOdic~, documents, audie-' viSual D aterials, and other li­ brary itl ms.

!'.!Isgr, Mathew NedungaU made the clarification in a let­ ter written on orders ~rom Bisb­

Gp Zacharias Mar Athanasios d1

'l'inJvalla. The letter replied to

a note to the bishop from Ortho­

dox Father Thomas Munduku­ mi., protesting against the' al­ leged recruitment of a number of Orthodox Christians from the Thalakkulam and Mundukuzhi parishes of the Niranam Ortho­ dox diocese into the Catholic lltI!alankara rite. Msgr. Nedungatt said thai wbile it was true that a new parish in his diocese was start­ ed in the region and that some Orthodox were recei ved there into the Catholic Church, the Vatican decree on ecumenism does not say that "church trans­ ference" is contrary to ecumen­

ism. Nor has the World Council of Churches taken such a stamn, the priest said. , Commenting later on the vicar general's letter, Father Mundu­ kuzhi stated: "So long as thifl reunion attitude and churclll transference mentality do not cbange, the fruits expected from the inter-church contact and eo­ eperation remain to be seen." The publication of Msgr. Ne­ dangatt's letter has foHowecll eIesely on an interview in wbici:l € > rtbodox Bishop Mathews Mar Athanasios cited a number of families in the South KanarQ district of Mysore state woo joined the Catholic Church aJKl aecused tbe Malankara rite fJI. adopting "dirty tricks" to eo&­ - t members of his church. The Tiruvalla diocese is one of two Sees in the Malankara riie wbieb was established in 1932, mainly for Orthodox ChristiaD!J wbo join the Catholic Church.

Nuns' Honor

CINCINNATI (NC) - M4>ther

General Mary Orner Downing of the Sisters of Charity of Cinein­ nati, will receive the Mi)thelr Seton Medal, only nationall award given by Sisters to a Sis-­ ~ next Tuesday in St. Louis.

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5

Two Are tc Join

THE ANCHOR-

Unit to OV@[l$eer Justice, ~®@~®

Po rish in Oregon

SOUTH ORA~GE (NC)­ A Yayman with a backgroullilrll in business analysis and .lil Jesuit political s~ientist wm

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Thurs., Aug. 3, 1967

PtoIM1;;ng G~OMp PORTLAND (N C) - A group :home for youths re­ leased from :\IcLaren School for Boys, a 'state training

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the Secretariat for WOTlld Justice and Peace established iJra Washington by the NationoJl Canference of Catholic Bishops. 18ishop John J. Dougherty, NeCB committee chairman :!lor ~e secl'etariat and president c1 Seton Hall University here m l1''few Jersey, said James R. Jen­ nings, 43, former director of (lllUalysis and operations for U. S. S~l Corp., who is now direct­ fung a two-parish adult education lltrogram in Louisiana, and TI!'ather William P. Walsh, S..!J.. 3.;1, Woodstock College (Mell.} frfuleologian, will be added to ~ C2cretariat's staff to develop emucational programs on Sept. II oell:t. 'lI'he NCCB Committee 001 World Justice and Peace and its =retariat were established m AprH by the U. S. Bishops as a <rounterpart to a similar Vatican oommission formed in January' f):v Pope Paul VI. l?ool!' of WOll'lllll Msgr. Marvin Bordelon, flllll'­ uner pastor in Shreveport, La.. tmd leader in adult educatio:m lltrograms for the laity, w~ !!lamed director of the secre­ ~riat las~ month. "Our aim," Bishop Doug'he~ ICffiPhasized, "is to create a coR­ science lobby among our e:iti­ ~nrs' M\ behalf of the poor Gi ~ world. We must beec:mle more mature in our commit­ meat to human solidarity ~ fbw includes challenges like world hunger, developmeB~, justice and peace. "The secretariat will coneeD­ \!rate on educational programaJ liesigned to· bring about this tlwareness and commitment," the Bishop asserted. "The staff m being chosen with this in IBimi. MSlgr. Bordelon as a former pas­ b ; Jennings as a busiDeSi lInalyst and Father Walsh as a major in political science."

Gov. Rhodes favors Nonpublec Pll.Ipil Aid. COLUMBUS (NC) - AnCi!' <llOtlferring with the bishops from (Mtio's six Sees, Gov. James A. Rhodes indicated he will ask t~ lJtate legislature to provide up eo $30 million in indirect aid ti@ lIlonpublic school pupils. AIm ~78-million school finance biflil, IS now before the General As­ erembly's Senate Education Com­ mittee. Gov. Rhodes met with Ohio's <eatholic bishops here after re­ ~rtedly suggesting to legislatiw lleaders that they begin considl­ ~ii'lg the inclusion of aid to pri­ ~te school students in the new ~lUlcation bill, known tIS tlhe Ohio School Foundation ~ [liram.

Aid to nonpublic schoo:l sW­ dents, if the legislation is lilt­ @Jroved in committee anell passe<ll f)1" both houses of the Ge'llI.emIl ADsembly, is expected to be iiIiiIl eIlae form of textbooks, remeddoIl lre&cling services, health SSrvice3. Eibrary equipment and criJlllex ceTvices allowed under 'lI'lltle ][ r:mlll lIT of the Federal Elemem­ OIrY and Secondary :m:~lhllca(1;lia:l &m of 19(i\5•.

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(NC) - A 1XM en DSSist in observance ai tl:he ~ Catholic Youth W~ ~~uled from Oct. 29 to NOl7. (j lis W!lW ready for distirlbution. .lYfug.:r. Thomas Jr. ~nard, dJNe­ 601", Youth Department, 11.3. Catholic Conference, amw~ 1Jlle!1'e,

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ONE OF l\fA::.'lY srol?S: Pope Paul greets crowds lin Izm.i.r. Turkey, the city for­ merly known as Smyrna on bis way to Ephesus. Izmir briefly h~Mjj &"l. American Fran­ ciscan Archbishop, the Most Rev. Cuthbert Gumbinger, O.F.M.. Cap., named by Pope Paul' to that See in 1955, but wh-o died on August 31, 1966, NC Photo.

B;~hop 'HitsLawmakers

for Abortiorj Vote

°lessened Public Respect for Life', He Charges OAKLAND (NC) - Bishop JrRoyd L. Begin of Oakland· told !@ s!ate legislators they "1e&­ sened the public respect for1i1e" bY" voting for California'. N­ laxed abortion law. Bishop Begin made the charge ~ a ~ri vate letter 'IIrnich he sent t& each of the legislato~and which included the followingre-­ quest: "Wou!d you please ·take • iitlle ti-lne fmm your busy'scheel­ 1lI~ to i·nc1icate your reasons for: veting as you did.? Was it a. matter of numbers? Or was it II matter of principles-prinel­ ~3es y~ can explain?" The bishop also wrote in his letter that many of the people 00' ~~ diocese have asked him w~y the legislators voted as they did. . "As bishop of this Catholic COllnmlJlnity, I feel lowe them aD answer. And I will give them 1m answ~r. But I think·it would be unfair to answer without first giving you a chance to answer." The bishop wrote that he was "not worried" that the legisla­ tion would be "harmful to the CathoHc community, for I feel! tiilat the committed Catholic win li ve by his moral principles. "Eut I do worry," he ro_ Itintl!lem, "about tile new 1nw being harmful to our communit:v as a whole. For the people who law as their moral guide, vow. ~ave lessened a respect fiDE hlUlffial!ll life. To the general pub­ llt<e v= inave said 'that it w legn'i Co ;xm 1ime unborn child. Ytm illave, D.1Ill fact, lessened the ]ll)Ublltll IreS~ fer life." The controversial bill tll> rellm! ~e state's abortion law cleaml the ~egislature and was si~ by Gov. Ronald R.eagan ll;lll Juoo 115. lIt provides abortion w ~ Gl birt~ would endanger ~ pluys1cal or mental health G2 t!lri:a ertilPectant mother; tba p:rers­ nancy resulted irom ra~ G? UlIlloem, mnd when the pregn~ 1reSt.!lltam from s~tutory ~ G:7 o gD.IrR W'l.der 15. 'Iillao~ Mc.ron 'W:nlhIDe8' ~ ro iw passage, B ~ ~!lII. semt Dilorethan 80,000 }d.. ~ to tJle IDeOplcl of .bW dioc:e8il ~MeS~ t.!lley urge t!llefrJr Statl!l G0Zlurorn and assemblymc£l • Ilf:a!Wllt the measl.m'

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Whea the abortion biB eame t>3- 11 vote, 1(). eut IlIf the 11 legis­ lators fnml· the counties of Ala­ meda and Centra Costa-1hetwo counties within the dioeese of Oakland-voted in itl! favor. 'rbe one excepti'l)B 'WIllS Sen. George MUler. !a- Sacl'amento,

Sen. Lewk Sherman of 'Berkeley issued the jfol!o~Rg lIiatement in rep17 .. Bishop Begin: "l[ regret' ,that Bishop Begia J!ee~ it necessary for him ~ ex­ plain mv action in -voting for-this biU 'to fJhe members of biB di0­ cese. I freely admit his right to ~ own apinions and feel no 9Wigation to explain biB inflex­ ible stand to my constituents. My vote was based upon what ll: consider to he the highest cd lJi1IMal values."

Conduct Survey

On HNS Parade NEWARK (NC)-The pastoral ministry' ccmmittee of the New­ all'k arehdiocesan senate o:f ~ries~ is conducting a survey of l!I'riesw to ciletermine their opiJll­ fOOl. OO!I. the continuation of the anmnal Holy Name Society pa­ rodea. Ccntroversy over the conthllu­ ance olf tfu:e parades broke out in Jrw.ne when the executive com~ mittee cf the archdiocesan Fed­ ralZ'~tiG:rn. of Holy Name Societies =cll ~..<! priests' senate 2dop~ oontr&!lY resolutions. T&lle lay group adopted 0 reso­ lluti<m favoring continuance of fQ1r.e demonstrations, annuaUy ll1eld in eight 10catioI1B 001 the second Sunday in October. The senate adopted a resolution ask­ mg Archbishop Thomas A. Be­ lllmd of Newark tQ abandon tbG parades. lIJn the survey, priests lilro being asked if they believe ~ men of the parish want the pa­ rade ttl» continue,' whether the ]!llarade Btl 1Il true indication ox the vitality mf faith iml the parish, mull whetlner they beliew too paradee should ~ continued. Dose who answer no to the iinall <iuesUon are asked tll> suggest oome other form ofl &I publk 9lI'ofession of fal t&

Sen. Nicho!as Petris of Oak­ land replied that the bishop had argued· agai.nst the bin before it Wwi passed: "1 considered the..--e IWgllHJlent5 ann I respectfully dis­ agree with- the bishDP." Sen. Clar-k Bl'alllley of SaD .lose sam the bishop's remarks "lead. to- the- question Wi to when humau. ilife begins, and I say- that it aoes not begin with concep­ tinn. . . . We are not killing aD unbona chiW, but . . . a cell, which it uninterrupted would lead- • the birth of a human being." The- san Franeisco Chronicle, meanwhile, accused Bishop Be­ gin- ()i exerting "fairly strong political pressure" by writing to the l~is!ataro. -"While of COUl'se the Catholic clergy may settle this or any other question within their own mornl framework, they are not 'entitielli, under American tradi­ tion, to insist upon a secular legislature's following their eliicts;" said the Chronicle.

Church Services

For Riot Victims

NEWARK (NC)-Two Cath­

olic churches in Newark's Negro

ghetto hel:cl' memorial services

lOT the 23 persons killed in the city's five-day race riots. Msgr. Thomas J. Carey, ad­

ministrator of Queen of Angels

parish, and Msgr. Vincent P.

Cobum, pastor of St. Bridget's, called the services to offer prayer for both Negroes and whites killed in the riots and, they hoped, to help create UD.­ derstanding and dialogue.

institution at Woodburn, Ore., is being plann~d by an Oregon par­ ish conference of the Society of St. Vincent me Paul in Portland. The group home, to be oper­ ated by Vi ncentians of St. Thomas More parish, will pro­ vide a residence and guidance for boys leaving MacLaren School who may not return to previous home environment or have 110 family to whom they can return. . The plan developed from the conference's first charitable project, begun shortly after the parish unit was formed in Janu­ ary 1966. At that time, the con­ ference made assistance to boys in residence at MacLaren its pri­ mary work. The VincentianD "adopted" boys in one of the liv­ -ing units at the institution. They made informal visi ts to the cot­ tage throughout the year. "As a result of our experience during the first year, it became apparent there was a real need for foster homes for boys dis­ charged. from MacLaren. Our inability to provide foster homes led us to explore the possibility of establishing a group home," Russel Niehaus, president of the conference, s&~d. The Vincentians now are interviewing a;;>plicants rrom whom a married couple wHI be employed· as house parents.

Youngest Archbishop In Difficult Post ASABA (NC)-With his ap­ pointment as metropolitan of Nigeria's W<lIll' threatened Eastern Pre:vince, 35-year old Archbishop Fll'sncis Arinze h35 become oille of the Church'. youngest archbishops. He may also be one of the most harassed because the area to which he has been appointed has unilaterally declared itself independent of ~e rest of the nation. In turn, Nigeria's centra! government bas promised to bring its province (Biafra) bach: into the fold. Leaders on both sides have insisted that they will maintain Ulleir positio.oo by force.

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Mass Permission

,Paradoxical Church Simeon told Mary, as related in the Gospel ~ccording

to St. Luke, that Christ was destined for "a sign that shall be contradicted." And' so it was with Christ, and so it has been with the Church-Christ and His members. The Church is a contradiction, a paradox, .and the Holy Father, in a recent weekly audience, brought out this aspect most clearly. He said: "The Church is not a ghetto, a 'closed society, though it is essentially a self-sufficient institution." As the Pope succinctly put it, "The Church is in the world-not of the world but for the world." , The Church is Christ and, therefore, holy; but.' the Church is also men and, 'therefore, filled with the weak­ nesses of men. The Church is an organism, Christ and those united to Him; but the Church is also an organiza­ tion, with all the features, both good and ba<;[, that organi­ zations are likely to h~ve. The Church is in the world and must thus be always' involved, in the world arid ne~er, ac..; eordingt,Q Pope Paul, "'anti-social, anti-state, anti-cultural, anti-modern;" but the Church sets: her eyes on Gijd and the. things of GQd and is not content to bein the world alone but is for the world, to uplift. the world. The Cpurch is re­ forming and renewing; 'but,' to quote the Pope, i13 nof "rev-' olutionary" in the sense hating ,and killing. ' The Pope called upOn each 'Christian to have a mis­ sionary desire which effects. two things: it strengthens the . Church by making it aware of itself and r~inforces the Church's faithfulness to God, and "it also leads the Church' to pursue the world, to draw closer to it, to understand it, to serve it and to regenerate it in a Christian way.'" ,

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labor Sunday St tement 1

§ttlht

SUPERIOR (He) - BishOiJ George A. Hammes of SuperiOJ' has received the faculty from the Holy See to grant permission to pastors, under certain condi­ tions, to allow Catholics in their parishes to anticipate the Sun­ day Mass obligation on Saturday, evening. The privilege extends to visitors within a parish, and also applies to holy days. The possibility of obtaining this privilege was enunciated in a Vatican instruction on the Eucharist issued May '25. When-­ ever the privilege is granted. pastors must explain to the peo­ ple that they are to keep sacred the day of the Lord's Resurrec­ tion, even though their partiei­ pation in the Holy Sacrifice 0c­ curred the night before. ~~ the Superior diocese, the first in Wisconsin to receive the faculty to, act on this privilege., Bishop Hammes will" ·grant • for the Summer months, from Memorial Da'y to Labor Day, to' pastors who say they need it. A , pastor who does not have a sui- . ficient' number of priest' assist­ ants, for example, might wish t­ use the' privilege. An extension beyond the Summer months m~ 'be granted in individual cases.: The privilege was granted to'the bishop of the Superior diocese for five years.

While the Church is always the light in the world, the' D®~®m1d$ S'fr[f~k.e, ,leaven in the mass, the people of God, it is never "a ghetto ~ or a closed society, it is not a body which cares for itself, NEW YORK (NC) - When "Publi employes should not «:flnDIJ1l~$<e [)=o@9d Sly(l'iHI»d, alone and isolates itself absolutely from the human envi­ does the "national interest or be deni d the right to stri~e ~ /Flit. the "general welfare" justify solely b virtue of the public ' ~01l@j@®$(/' \\::llflJ@fJ'iJ,@j<e$ :ronment in which it finds itself." curtailment of a worker's right employmbnt. In areas such' as TAIPEI (NC)-5uggestions for to stx:ike, a right which has been fire, pOlIce or other services, 'integrating Chinese customs in­ a matter of legal protection where a strike would seriously to the liturgy were made at the ()l1JJ,fl~.[f'W' JIllTJ, Our Sflreefls since 1935. J endanger the public health or first synod of the Taipei '(For­ Every day, all over the world, the Church's priests The National Council of ,safety, other alternatives must mosa) archdiocese. 1 and deacons and' subdeacons and other men and women Churches has attempted to issue be found. Voluntary (no com­ 'The suggestions, which will be . who have willingly assumed from ner the mission to pray some guidelines on this in- pulsory) arbitration mediation submitted to the Chinese, region­ creasingly-important question in and 'continuous negotiation' are al bishops' conference for stud3lo in the name of the Church and thus fulfill man's basic its annual Labor Sunday mes- among sJ,ch avenues.", ',urge that: duty of praising God use the psalms as the backbone of sage issued for use in churches ' , Rare Cases 'Genuflections and kissing of that prayer. In the psalms are found all the ~motions of . across the nation Sept. 3, the" , In its concluding paragraph, the altar and missal be replaced the heart,' all the reasons for praising God, the very words d~y before Labor Day. the mess ge states that "only m by bows according to the Chi­ . H'1m an d .&­ "In seeking the answer.to this the rare cases when genuine 'nese customs,' incense be us-....

that best express. man's 'longing to be Wlth I'll • l ' te th .,.. e damage to the general welfare in the Chinese fashion; the "01'-: erucla questIOn, we no, serve Him. following 'considerations;" 'said clearly o¥tweighs the values' ~ ate Fratres" be changed tID At times, the wording of :the' psalms is frighteningly tl:te message: ,,' freedom lit: .. is the d~nial of ~ "brothers and sisters". accurate., Only a few days ago, while new~papers and,tele­ . "Workers strike when man- right to ~t.rike justified." ' . It was also suggested that .. d l' d agement refuses,' what' they 'The question posed by the yestments for a Requiem,' Mass f I vision "depicted ,.ter.rib e ,scenes.o '.l1lOtmg ~:n",Q.Qt,~g .~n '. strongly feel are justde~anqs-"-' statementIis.increasingly i~~:r:-" be white, because white, is, the violence . on the streets of many -AJ!leriean eities, -thos~ and they may be right. Manage- tanto it says, because of' the eustomary Chinese 'Color !far

praying ill the name of the 'Church were readi~g these lines ment must be seen as sharing growth ofilarge corpw-atioDs and mourning, and red for 'Nuptial

.from' Psalm 148: "May there I?e no breach in the walls, no the. blame for strikes when its the increasingly-fr~uentuse Of '~~SS~Il, for red is ~e traditional

'exile, no' outcry,iri our streets." . " , rejection of the wQrkers' cle~ ,industry-*ide bargaiing.· ." .... , rolor for joy or' festivity: . .

" " A s a ~s':llt of such change,s,'" mands is inflexible. Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts­ There has been outcry in the 'streets: It steins from a , R~pOnsibllitr . , it says, ."~e convel1tional, s!p~~ b~rg 'attended the closing cere­ sense' of frustration; from, a· feeling, of 'educati'onal' and' "Concentrations of economic weapon ;ssumes, so to sV,eak, monies- of, the synod in, widell

,vocation'al "inadequacy ,from ~espair 'born of pov'ertyand 'power in either union or man':', ~lUclear p ten~ial ~it.1?- th,e p..u~)j~ ,250 Jilriests, '50 sisters' 'and, .. pa tience strained beyond the breaking' point, from, fear, ii1 agement hands req'uir~s respon~ often cau ht 1D the fallout." , .. laY'people, had pa~cipated." ' . of a fiercely compoetitive world-and ·:from sheer'· sl·bl'll·ty as a corollary of freedom.' ,The also th'cautions the face ... t statement ·rifll ti th t' ~ "Where J' oint responsibility is ,agaIns 1 a ng erea_ hoodlumism. " labor strikes. " ". ,Ba', Strikebreaers, adequately accepted, contracts Time Idst from strikes since The causes are so· intertwined and all so very inuch are usuallYI achieved peaceably; \ At. Texas' Farms ' present that the problem must not ,be over-simplified. To only where'responsibility is ab­ 1960. "has been less tllan two­ WASHINGTON (NC)-Secre­

, .. dl'c~ted l'S b1'ttern'ess', VJ'olence tenths of one per cent of total .. say that the Negroes are simply stirrin,g up anarchy is to, 'and' public injury the result. ' king ti me, "·t ' tary of Labor W. Willard Wir1ll

wor 1 s t a t es. miss the terrible injustices too, long practised u}Xln them; "Strike damage to the general "In 196~, the time lost from has moved to prevent ,strike­

to blame everything on sOcial and economic' causes is to welfare requires careful assess.,. strikes w~s only one-tenth that, bound farms in the lower Rio

Grande Valley of Texa~ from

overlook the breakdown of moral values' and respect for ment. The highly public~zed 1966 lost from industrial accidents." using Mexican workers as

law that is an indictment of present-day society. ,Prayer airline mechanics' strike actu­ J- . ' alone will not solve the problem. But along with serious ally affected less than three per oint tu y ommltte, strike-breakers.

WiJ·iz designated six farms bl

cent of intercity travel; Labor D'· I 0 r ders the, area as strike-bound, an Be­

and intensive action it may help hasten the day when the Secretary Willard Wirtz denied Iscus$es words of the psalm are not a pray.er but a realization"':":""May that its inconvenience consti­ BRIDGl!lPORT (NC)~A joint tion which prevents farm own­

there be no outcry in our streets.~ tuted a 'national emergeJlcy.' study combtittee of clergy of the ers from hiring "green card'"­

, "Government intervention may Catholic diocese of Bridgepo!1 holders to work at a struck farm

lead to undue reliance on gov­ and the Episcopal diocese of unless they were employed tbe.

'. ernment, destroying free bar­ connectic~t has recommen.ded .when the strike began. Green cards are permits issued

gaining; Recent bargaining· in 'to theU. S. Catholic, Bishops' the railroad industry illustrates Committee 'on Ecumenical and to aliens--in this case mostq

the ,dangers of such precedents. Interreligi us Affairs that "the Mexican nationals--to enter the

U. S. for work. Thousands ..

"In its legislative function, whole quertion of Anglican or­ card-holders have been ~

government must guard both the, ders ~e repp,ened and re-exam­ muting daily across the border

freedom and responsibilities of ined at the highest level." the collective bargaining parties " The st~y committee Doted to harvest melons since the

.and the needs of the general that "the sPiriiual. vigor and. United Farm Workers Organi»­

OI:FICIAU: NEW~PAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF, FI.\LL PiVER 'welfare ing Committee called 8 striIIe

in the broadeSt contex't holiness of the Anglican commu­ against the Rio Grande fa. . .

Publisned weekly by The CathC?lic Press of the Dioces,e of Fall River of advancing social policy. Its . nity reco ized in various waY' last year. ' ', role goe:,; beyond the neutrality by Vaticanl Council II witnesses 410 Highland -Avenue

of a catalyst in the labor-man­ to the existence of an authentic At' Enthroneme'nt sacramenta~ life and therefore agement equation to larger na­ Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151

tional economic policy whose genuine ininiste'rial activity." 'MELBOURNE (NC)-Twenv­

PUBLISHER

The COn1mittee said the' re­ guidelines must deal with wages, two Catholic bishops from an ..

prices and profits, . uDl'!mploy- sources o~ modern historic8l Australia's states took pari Ia Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. ment and taxes, and fiscal and scholarshi~1 "are consideraby 'su": the enthronement of Archbishtilt GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER monetary policy. It must balance 'perior to those of the last decade James R. Knox 'as the new'Or. It. R~v. Dc;mh:ll F. Shalloo, M,A. ,R~v.John P:Dri~col\ corporate needs and' i'Ddividual ' 'of the' 19thl century" 'when' PoPe' 'n'ary ,'of Melbourne" Sundall­ ~A.NAG'NG EDITOR ~~,~itemen.ts f,or t.fl~ w~ll-be,in' . _Le~ XIl~ i~~u~ 'h~s decr~,~~-. 'Archbishop Knox is' the '9'­ Hugh J. Golden -.&. iDe AIlili ord,ers, a~e ~v~d. , a~~tolic 'nunciQ,~ ~d.i." ,.' . "

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@The· ANCHOR

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,Texas 'Ordinaq Warns Studen'i-S • " ".'.:: ,,:." .­ ,. f .IIPh'"onles

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THE AMCHOR-

Thurs., Aug. '3, '1'161

7

Asserts Renewal PIGn Prejudiced

0'

SAN .ANTONIO (NC) ,­ Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio told 600 young people at the Summer

MILWAUKEE (NC) -Father John R. Maurice has branded! an urban renewal project on Milwaukee's South Side as a prejudiced attempt to eliminate "the one area where a minority group lives." The priest, direet<>i" of the Spanish-speaking center in the neighborhood, was referring to a colony of Spanish-speaking fam­ ilies who lAve in an area desig­ nated for industrial developmen~ and expansion. Called the Bpys Tech project, the development plan' would' up­ root some 3,8M t>ersonswho .live in the neighborhood. ,Although the city has not, yet ,approved, the project, it is 'included in the pro­ posed community renewal plan. Fatheir Maurice is' helping people o!£ the al.'<!a to' form united! opposition to the project. He told som~ 70 persons' who had met at Holy Trinity-Our Lady o~ Guadalu{*! Ch.urc11l that they should demand a voice in the planning oJ!' any project.. Arthur Cahn, assistant direc­ tor oi the inner city developmen~ project, warned against organiz­ ing citizeEJI groups along ethnie lines. "Th is is not a Spanish­ speaking problem," he said, "but a problem for /lU of the people who live in this area to unite together." The group organized a six­ man committee to prepare It petitioa and! to represent the neighborhood at city hall meet­ ings.

School of the Christian Aposto­ late here that they must apply the dynamics of Christian love to avoid becoming "fake and E'hony" Christians. "If we could get our youth to be both militant and alert fOi"' ~e truth, it would be a gi"eat boon to the Church and to so­ ciety, and .we really would build I /)' better world," he asserted.' , The young people' were' at­ tending summer school s·essl.ons whose theme was "The World, "No Better Than you.'" .'. ;' The ge'ssions accented the 'mes­ sage of, Vatican Council IT, as ~Pl'Jlie~ to: routh. .' "We have been teaching moral troth but we didn't teach ..:... at least not very successfully - ' the dynamics of moral truth," Arch­ bishop Lucey stated. "In the new era-and it ,has atarted already - phony Chris­ tians will be recognized" as phony," he said. ', "~ou see," he continued, "in the past we've had millions and milliens of Christians who' are able to hate and hold in con­ tempt their neighbor - lots of, neighbors - members of minor­ ity groups, col{)red people, Span­ Ish-speaking people out here in the Southwest-they were able to hate them on the weekdays lElP'lHIlESUS: Standing on the very spot where the Ecumenical Council of Ephesus met and on Sundays receive the sac­ mment of love. in 431-the Basilica of Mary Theotokos (Mother of God)-Pope Paul addresses these "Only a phony Christian does words to the world hierarchy and all Oatholics: "May the intereest'lion of the Blessed that - only a fake," the arch­ Vii:'gin- Mary, saluted at Ephesus by the Fathers of the third ecumenioal council and by PlUblii$!h [New Book bishop emphasized to his teen­ all the faithful as "Theotolros"-Mother of God-ob~in fOIL you-the abundant bless­ age audience. To A$:5~st Youth ngs M the God and Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ." lItaise Standards W ASHrNG'1l'ON (NC) - The '"Now in the future," he con­ United States Catholic Confei'-­ tinued, "we are going to raise youth department and the Na­ the 'standards of Christian'life' tional Cou~cH of Catholic Me1!l 00 that the phony Christians 'will· lI"" pUblished. "Ch~lstiaitity in be i"e~gnize~ because the stand- . WASHINGTON (NC) _ An" :B~t neither the authorities' nOi" grou.ndS to be the judge of his have Renewal for Youth..! The 49­ ani Will be higher; and if a man"· ,," '-' . . Is 11 fake he'll be know so b .. ,,·A~sh ~armer flOm Kansas has the K:ansas 'coutts were satisfied, duty to obey {the school law)." page book was written to hel" """ius nei hbQrs" . ~ y asked·the U. S.Supr«;me Courtllo~d"i~.u.phol!linghis cOp'victioD. ' The' ',C~stitutioo, 'said the' post-Vati<!lan U youths clariiy ;no . ,Undertake an .'. evaluation of., ' the Kansas 'Supreme Court held cou.... nrJ.o.·J.o.c·~ .....ligiqus' "bell'.., ... ·· .. ·A·rch'gb.. " , \!''h'op: L ucey., 0'b" sei"Ved' :oo ' •• , . .' .. • , ' ...., , . ' . ... ~.,,""" .... ~~ •• --r their attitudes and expectationll ." ''"If the social doctrine .oi!' : the . '.:~' rl~h~s" o~ rehglous mmori- ~a~. ~o matt~r ~o~ slncer~ he. abs.olutely,"l '!J~t .it'ehglOus prac... regarding . fu~lveS,' . the ,... Churcli has been taught hl'"oui""'. tie,!' i~' America. . . ;,mllY,. be, }he. IqdlvIdual <:a~not" Moe ill "on!y a l~ite.d rigbt." Church and .society. . . ' , aebools;' itS·implementatioiJ.:'has~":"·L·eR()1·Ga ..ber ·of 'Y9d~'has:, .. ~ ,~.l"Rl,l~d upon reh~Iotu , . ' Garb&'s.stdt;charges, that the , The bool~: designed for ~se ia .... been ig.Rored. In other llVords;:: asked.:-the ~ourt to strike do~:; .. ',' . -. . ,. .. .' .1a~ it,sel,f;,:and 'as,ai?~lie~ to. the week-end 'l'ekeat ,~ro"'rams at. contains a fermat for~B.ibl~ ser­ we llave failed successfully' t,othe Kansas school "laws, as un- "· ...0""', 1lJ1'..' be Amish, is unconstitutional, be­ "teach the'dynamics of religiOn _ " '-ool1sti'tlitiOflal' on the grounda" M~' 1r~\T1I" em r cause it restricts his religiotu' vices and hymns. • cio.in~so.It:'~~'.hingabout i~"" ,;:' .::·:.t~t. tti~jo infringe' on pis rights Monsig nOr ~~'" tba~: re~tP(i)U8 practice "In our country, since rellgioa '. to· reUglOus f r e e d o m . ' , , ,as well as .hehef .~ protected bJ" White"s' Farm Dairy

~. not· bee!1 . vigorous and' 'vi_;1 ':' ~ti.e·.suit 'was filed, Garber'li, W ASH~GTON (NC)-Father, . ~ C9iJ{;titu-tion! 'and titat, ia brilnt enough to persuade all bebali by the American.' Civil ' ,John,. P. ,Donnelly, member cJt effect, t~1aw· discrimiftatea 'IISPEC8Al MILK

people or nearly all the ~oopl~Y'~ibe'ryiesVni.on. 'It is also beitlg,:eROm~~t'eau :taff. : : the. Nq: cKlly against bhe Amish. Testad .Herd"

flopcactice the law of love, the' sUPPorted by a number of law­ ~~ ~I;e' ;: I ..::- ap-., 'The Suit :was filed. less' than a :ilederal government has, Nt re-:r.ers throughout the nation. pol . 'loT 0P7 a~ ,as a month aftei" the Iowa Legisla­ Fram Our, Own

~nt years, been enacting moral ',-amORg th,em Father Robert Bri­ chamb~d~n WIt~ the title ,t1,Ire resolved a simil,ar problem Acushna't, . Mass. 993-4457 laws to. control the conduct 01.' nan, :S.J." dean of the Bostoa V'eQ" reveren mons gnor. kl that atate: ~ partially ex­ 1a£gely Christian people," Arch:.; , ·C9U.ege Law School, and Wil~ 'MSgt-. Donnelly bu devoted empting ttae Amish from ita • Speciol Milk bishop- Lucey said. ' Ibm :&Ball, general counsel t. vii"twillJ" ait of his priestly career lICho<tl law. • HomOgeniied Vit~ ID Milk Noting that the moral legisla... the PeI\Rsylvania Catholic Con­ tit theca4se of Catholic journalIowa wted to allow the .&oish • Buttermiik 11011. has encompassed such!U"e8li ference. . isnt.. He was ordained in 1958, , to their,own schools ill • 1l"ropicana Orange' Juice 818 civil- rights, voting rights, ·imGapber,a member of. the aid then attended the University C/fl their -n: man~r, and to cease • Coffee CI41d Choc. Milk mi!fFation and the federal.miniOrner Amish - the strictest 01. Missouri school cJt joumalisllL fonRai educatioo with the • E99s - 15uttlo!r mum wag!;" the archbishop de-· ·the- so-called .Mennonite sects ­ He served for three years as edi- eighth grade.. elared: "The federal government was; c60-victed under the KanaM tor 01. ~e Inland Catholie Regis­ ~ ~aching religious people, how school' attendance law for re- ,t.eJ:', llewspaper ot. hill natiw: 00 be reVgious." ' ,. . fusing to enroll his daughtei', Spoka,ee, Wasb., diocese. 'W iJd W·d Ch'··' ." ShavGO, illl' an accredited W~ In 1002', be ~as named director . .,: oJ'~ - Ie. OIl'8ftl.· '.'~Mol. ' .' , 'of'.the Bureau of Information, Going to Races. ''', ,,', . ]Limited Right. 'National: Catholic Welfare CeoN' ,'. " .. ' .l~ keeping with the Amlstl . ference (now the U. S. Catholic .B~ N (NC)-Charlty wiU. go, dil;ldain foJ[' worldly distractions,' Conference) /Uld held that pOsi­ t» t e .race~ when an ecume~call. Sharon's formal schooling ended tioo 'until April, 1964, when he oollechon IS. taken up Aug. Ci at w,ith ~he eighth grade. But Gal'- was appointed to the NC News I1Il au.tomobl~e race here. bel' had enrolled her in a cor- ServiceEitaH in Rome. Members of .the Catho~ic and' . respondence' high school course" Protestant parishes in .A:denau, as have other Amish fathers iii' . a small village three milefi 'nortb:f,rae.·h~ that this -would satWT SOLD - RENTED - \EXCHANGED af the ,famous auto race tracfi:" the, state authoritieS l':J.ere, will take up the collectien . . , ' •

STEEL AND WOOD IlIIESU' among those' attending the' evene: .:

OHAIRS • FlLIIU. Ulllni fur Misereor, German Catholic [f~1I' !Racial Peace

'ORLCOMPANY TAlLES,. SAFES • SnR SHlU· =rs;:~:~~torganization, and .·'Crn:CINATI (NC)-Prayers aM ,. .1. • BOOI OASIES, nCo .' . Bread for the. set'liDODil OIl interracial peace' World eampaIgn ,, .. , ':. " l~~" and charity and, on re­ H~ATI~IG Use 0... Budtd IP~~ 'R I ... " 110 ... .~ io!;" la'9\'. and order were . '.11; . ' II.... fl P .' '. 90ns ep aCemell'h':·. heard i~ churches throughouft . . . ' 1LOS AN.GELES (NC)'- S~ ,the Cincinnati archdiocese Sun:::' ··Sa!J;!ltfi' 6D Sea Streets Vincent"s, Hospital ~re,b,!18 an;;;'.': ;day" .'in'·re;p~~se to Presideni ..... " , ::OFFICE EQUIPME.,. SilLIES: .~nced:, plana for.. ~ new .$12;li..::.:LYR<ioo-a. J'ohns~m'~ designati~':'.. ; 'Ii:i'~ .... Tel. 49-81 .Ulton.. 256-Qed 'acIlity fo 1»:"': ~ 'J'l,I~y :ro ~s a natIoRal da.Y 1JIf· q ~y.a~;~,.ft~,. ]~ JAMES S1'., ~ UniM, 'NEW ilR:iDfoRD, MASS. !)lwlinhe present·struet~ """"lPr~'for racial ,pea_,;<

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Aug. 3, 1967

Humifity Sisters Vote Revisions

letter to New Grandson Starts ,Fami~y Tradition

VILLA MARIA (NC)-CoJDC!l September, :eupils in schools op­ erated by the Sisters of the Holy H,umflity o~ ,MarYm~y' have to be reintroduced ' . theii" 'teachers, Not' oniy -wii ma~y' of the nuns' be wearing

By Mary' Tihley Daly Show-stoppe;' in 'th~ ~p~l~r musical,- ~Fiddie~ on the Boo!" is, the song, "Tradition," per-haps because fondness "for traditiori'~iB'built:'in equipment for most hUlnan.'bein~s. Certainly' there is a ,value placed ~ "a CU8'tom which has prevailed, from genera­ about this occasion, ,Bdan, and tiOJi to gen~ration," as,Web­ mer defines tradition. At hope we live long enough' iQ enjoy many birth anniversaries your house a:ri~ at OUl:S tl~ere with you, start~ng the, celebra­

new'hab~ts,'.b~t 'so~e

NuU1l at Regis College

is Awarded Citation

WESTON (NC) - Sister M. Leonarda of Regis College here in Massachusetts has been awarded the President's Council Youth Opportunity citation. , Sr. M. Leonarda, coordinator of the Mathematical and Statis­ tical Institute of Regis College, is a 'long-time member of the mathematics department. The certificate credited the' Institute with "advancing the welfare of the Nation by helping young Americans help themselves dur­ ing the 1967 Youth Opportunity , ~ampaign/'

tions a day ahead of time with fireworks and Roman candles. So, Brian, all' the -Daly&--and the McKaig&--join me in wel­ coming you to the two clans. You are of good heritage. Also you may take pride in being the fifth generation -Daly born in this city of ours. Oh, yes, you are the 17th of our grandchildren. We hope, naturally, you SIre not the last. With that thought i: sign off, wishing you bon voyage as you set sail on this. wide old ,ocean of life. Good luck and God bless yOtL That is the wish of your ma­ ternal grandfather. John J. Daly So, now this letter goes into Brian Daly McKaig's baby book, along with the vital statistics, the lock of hair, finger and foot­ prints, congratulatory notes and telegrams, pictures cf young Master McaKig when he was two hours old, twelve, twenty­ four, of his homecoming and the fond memorabilia of his chris­ tening.' , "Gee, Grandpa, I wish ::J'OU'd written me my first letter," one' of the older grandchildren fligb­ ed.

Well,that's the way CIl!l ba­ dition, never Iretroactive, al­ ways ongoing.

Appeal EducatioU1l Case To Supreme Court WASHINGTON(NC)--seve~ New Yorkers seeking to keep federal funds from benefitting parochial school pupils, whose suit was dismissed by a three­ judge federal court last month, have appealed their ease tiD tbe llJ. S. Supreme Court. , The lower court threw out t1lle suit on the ground that the seven complainants had no standing to sue. Nqw the group has asked the Supreme Court to rule that taxpayers have a right to sue the government when they believe the Constitution is being vio­ lated by the spending of funds ClIl. parochial school pupils. The suit, backed by the Amer­ ican Jewish Congress, New York Civil Liberties Union, United Federation of ',reachers and United Parents Associations, charges a violation' of the First Amendment to the Constitution in the way of Titles I and 1II of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of -1965 are being , administered.

Cathoric Nuns to Aid! Episcopalian Rector

" CLEVELAND (NCh-A group The local center, which pro­ cf 18 nuns from the Ursuline ~des datareductlon for research convent in'nearby Pepper F1ke Kience for the Air Force, em­ ,have volunteered to assist the' ',ploys. be~ween: 25 and ,35 Regis . Rev: William R. Cook, rector of students according to Sister 'M. St. James Episcopal "hurch here, Leon~rda: The program aff~rdB in his work with ,the poor 'this Summer. . income & well as valuable' stu­ 'Gen.t trai'~i!1g., Considerable,~r~' 'The 'Duns, will eanvass the. ,lIearch is done in studying winds neighborhoOd,.. providing infor­ arld'in ,hu~ricane i>a'tterns," ~ation' about religious ~nd ]Tec,. ,Sr. Leonarda noted that II reational programs to be con­ ducted at the church, beginning eOurse, is being planned in con­ junction with the Institute for III this week. , IIUrvey of mathematicS which Sister Margaret Clare of the will include numerical methods Ursuline Order is in charge of in fortrr , the Summer project.

ilav~" ,

new mimes as well. " After, '23 days of .deliberatiOil

here in Pennsylvania, in their

own version of Vatican II, the

Sisters' have' decided to shorteJII

their title, their habit and' the..

'rules. ' Freedom of. choice, more pel'-' sonal responsibility and a share ' in decision-making character­ ized the most sweeping revisions : ever made in the 113-year-olcl ' order of nuns who operate ho~ pitals and teach in the Pitts­ burgh, Cleveland and Youngs.. town, Ohio, dioceses. '. The Blue Nuns chapter, com­

posed of 66 of the 590 Sisters,

voted 56 to five to change the

community's formal title to

"Sisters of ,the Humility of

Mary." Their initials will be

H.M. Another title change affects' the order's general superior, Mother Mary of Lourdes, who" voted with the majority to be':. addressed only as "Sister.'" " Sisters will have the option of dropping their religious': name&--many of them masculine . -and reverting to their bap';" tismal and family names. The change, recommended by 75 per 'cent .of the nuns in an' opinion" poll, will make names confonml" to those which appear on driveni I licenses, college records, voter" registration and insurance forms. .

as

are family traditions, built uJ) gradually' and naturally over the years. A

Dew tradition,

seemingly, was

established at

our house when

the Head of

the House wrote

II Birth Day

Lette~ to h,is

newest grand­

child, tied into

the natural

feeling of "joy that a man is born into the world." , Since the letter's recipient will not be able to read it for' many years to come, this minor's parents, Markie and Brad. ~c­ Kaig, have given us permIssIon' 'to reprint it here: ' July '5, 196'1 , ' Dear' Bria'n: Your father telephoneq here announcing your arrival at 7:30 this morning. Your mother call­ ed at. 8:30 telling what a hand­ BOme fellow you are. Hooray for you! Sort of celebrating this an­ Beuncement, the New Y~rk Stock Market went up fIve points shortly after the open­ ing. That is a good omen. Also your weight at ringside-eight pounds, three ounces-seems to indicate you will be a mighty man. Your maternal grandrri6ther, :Mary Tinley Daly, and I hope to pay you a visit at your tem­ porary residence this afternoon at about eight bells, as they'say in the Navy. We were kind-a wishing you'd make your debut on the FourlP of July-Independence Day. But, on second' sober thought, we know you did the right thing coming into the world on the fifth. That gives you a day for yourself, instead of splitting it with your Uncle Sam, a fellow you have yet to meet, but a grand old man. We are all mighty happy'

win

,

Chinese Dictionary NURSES' GRADUATION: Tama a Fernandez of New Bedford is congratulated by Bishop Connolly during the graduation exercises for 49 ne\\, n rses at St. Anne's Hospital School of , .,Nursing, " Fall .'Ri I er.

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The first Chinese dictionary specifi­ cally geared to high school stu.. dents in the United States has been published by the Setolll Hall University press. The pock­ et-size dictionary was compiled by Fred Fangyu Wang of the uni­ versity's department of Asian studies.,

~

~ By MAlltnlLYN lltOIDERIflK: , ~

FALL lFORECAST Along about, this part of the Summer our fashion thoughts start straying toward Fall and Winter clothes. Paris and Rome 'are having their showings and daily bulletins from these pace­ setting cit i e s ue published for the fashion eurious to fol­ low. The latest women's maga­ zines are hit­ ting the news­ stands, slickly filled with ele-:­ gant fresh new clothes ide a s a n'd suddenly the paled down Summer cottons look a bit limp in comparison to the firmly knitted sweaters and jeweled knits of Fall. Even though it isa bit humid to cast aside" your sletveless linen (that at this Point you're tired of ironing) and slip into a doublebreasted wool coatdress, you can appease your longing by shopping for Fall fabrics, and. sew now for a fashionable Win­ ter. The pattern books' for the new season have already' arrived and the only difficulty a smart sew­ er will encounter is' that she· has too wide a range' of pat~ , terns and fabrics to' choose from. . She' may find herself ordering., patterns by the dozens and buying more fabrics than she ean possibly 'sew in two seasons, never mind one. Never have I 'seen so many goodlooking, wearable, un kooky, -elegant looking designs as those 'being offw:ed

f~r the

Jome sewer in the Fan and wi~fer patterns line. Beautiful MateriaBs Along tvith the tQP ideas from' the d~si*ner's drawing boards, this com 'ng season will be dis.,. tinguishe by the collection of beautiful materials that will be availa Ie. Plaids, particularly diagonal plaids, tweeds, ' and textured' wools. For elegant evenings soft velvets' will be among t p choice; but grainy crepes anII deep twills will also be pOPul~r. The so histicate will find that paper fa ric is on the market this seas to help you coordi­ nate you party tablecloth and napkins ith your party gown. Personall~ I feel that this is a waste of your sewing time (un­ less timej is something you're blessed wtth lots of), I've never been abl~ to Whip up a dress overnight'l 'therefore I feel that I want ~ore than a couple of wearings out of those outfits I do tu out, Paper fashions are fun· out' certainly not dur­ able. I . Take aJ early peek at what the sewiDr,departments iii your city are 0 ering right' now for Fall wea' ing. Then you'D be' tempted to rush back tci your sewing m'~chines, or sign up for some' 'less6ns, ifn'either' 8p-' peals' to y,ou, 'your third choiee, . will be to ~oerce your friends in- ' to disclosi g' the name of tbeh­ little dres maker. The latter, JJ:' must warn y'ou, is about as eas,­ as trying 'to get tickets to the' Sox games if they keep up theh winning ays.

t

or

Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL J. TESER,' Prop. RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St., New Bedfcrdl 993-3222

SAVE MONEY ON

YOUR OilHEAT!

~

_.-/J~

~c;..

WYman

3-6592

CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE A VENUE ~IEW

BEDFORD, MASS.

fttfll/d,"""

'~"

''4:7

HlEATIN'G OIL


August Is Month for

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 3, 1967

Spi~e

O.f Change ~n Routine By Jil)sepllil uai MariUYIll Rooel1'nc~ This w ihe time of yee:r when the annuals which WiS ~rted from seeds in ooldfrmnes or on windowsills are ~8ginnirig to bloom. It neV'ai" cea.g~ "lin be a source of wonder 'ilo: me that ~ little se~ J[ p~anted in March have so lIUickly beco~ bloo~ing. days. The little jobs that we at­ plants. At the same tlme tacked with eagerness irrl the IlWme of the perennials are Spring have now become irk­ fading, having filled our some tasks which somehow get overlooked. But if you do ovel!"­ look any .jo.b .don't let it be the o.ne of gJ.~f1ng yoW' annuals. a litt~e J1l0UrIshment ~ they ~egm. theIr more productive period. lin The Kit4lben There comes l) time, 2lbout the middle of the Summer, when we long for something different. The heat may be depressing you., this year the rain could be catnS­ ing the doldrums, even the beach (Dr you've been able to get there) has lost the allure fit had in June and early July. What we all need is a change. If you're not in a position to journey to Expo, fly to Colorado. or even take a jaunt to the Ca~ look within your own area for something a little different. August, particularly, is Il month for country fairs and auctions, both of which are quite charming BDd inexpensive. At least, the fair is. The auctions are fun, but tempting, and the best thing to do is sit on bands ()I' leave your checkbook home. The first country fuir I ever attended was held in Dutchess County, New York. This was truly a country :!lair in the old­ est sense of the term for thitJ is an area, near llIyde Park, that is noted for its rich farmland and well kept livestock. '.!'he women of an area that has ail annual fair carefully guard recipes for baked goods and pre­ serves and many walk off yeau­ after year with blue ribbons for theim coking Mhievements. A gooo fair is not too ea-sy to come by. But if you're in an area that is having one, .visit it, and you'll find Americana at itS best. 8 0 _ EliltertailDment We in this area can enjo1' many musical Summer theaters, 0ne year we experimented with playhOUSeS, and other forms of two beds of perennials and an­ entertainment that are offered. .uais and found that fertilizing at vacation time. This year we flloes make a big difference. In took a chance and with the Iltoth beds we planted zinnias. children went to a Saturda1' marigolds and petunias along afternoon workshop at the New­ with some mum cuttings. One port Folk Festival and found it Ilted we fertilized every tW<l to be· an absolute delight. Ob, :weeks with 11 gallon or two there were beatniks and pro­ .a: soluble fertilizer. We 'left the testers, but they all minded their second bed alone and the differ­ own business and the music was ence between the two was sig­ well worth t1nle sights that lIli~icant enough to convince 119 paraded before our eyes. It was ... the desirability of expending an opportunity to s it on the llA little effort in mixing solu­ grass a couple of feet from Joan tions of the fertilizer. Baez and Pete Seeger and listen ll~ is difficult to get out into to the beauty of folk music. ~e garden on these hot, humid ][f at this moment you haven't the time or opportunity for any type of trip, may I suggest that Olb~OJ~e PI7'DeS~ HeOJds you bring a 'little bit of beauty into your life by acquiring a iiEiOJchers' fedell"Ol~iol11l record titled Joy Is Like The OTTAWA (NC) - Father J. Rain. This is a collection of orig­ lE!arold Conway, O.M.I., has been inal folk songs with religious ~lected president of the Cana­ overtones that were written by a dian Teachers' Federation-first member of the Medical Mission clergymun to head Canada's Sisters, Sister Miriam Therese, ilargest teacher organization, and are sung by her and 10 of lImunded in 1920. hel' fellow nuns. Father Conway, principal of I first heard this record when eatholic Central High School in I visited a friend who was play­ lLondon, Ont., has been a mem­ ing it to keep her company while ber of the CTF executive board she did her kitchen chores and I ilor the past three years. He is haven't been able to get the f.ormer president of the Ontario haunting melodies out of my il'eachers' Federation-the larg­ mind since: The voices of these ClSt CTF affiliate with almost 00 mission· Sisters are pure and pelt" cent of the total national beautiful, as lovely as we could IlDembership. imagine any heavenly chorus·to The priest said his primary be, and the messages that Sister IBsk nn the coming year will be . Therese weaves· into her lyrics ~ ·strengthen the union of the are well worth listening to and Yal'ious provincial teacher asso­ thinking about. The record ia ....ations fer their mutual bene­ available from several· religious . at, while recognizing their llt'&­ gooos storetl iIlIl the Fail River *-ciw. liifferesacea.· Bieceae.

prdens with color in Spring flDd early Summer. Roses are preparing for t~eilr lieC:ond push of bloom in earIr September and October and! fllllaoy of the lilies hav:e passed iheir peak. The groundcovem which are so colorful in Spring ~ now spreading out and some (Dj( their seed w taking hold S9 filat we may expect new plants Ilext year. Now is the time to think abouf; fertilizing annuals and preparmg perennials for the long WinJ€ er ahead. I have a standing rule 6>r fertilizing: Never fertili~ lllnything which 1fl expected to ~erwinter after Aug. 1. FerlUizer at this time will promote aew growth which will be suseaptible to winter kill from freezing and changing temperatures. On the other hand, anlllUals are in need of as muc~ lertilizer as they can get so that ebey may produce their quota .-: flowers and foliage. The easiest and safe way t9 ll!ertilize is to use a soluble fertilizer. I use a dry type whicll Alas a compositiOlll of 20-20-20 OIl an my annuals about once eve17 6wo weeks in July and once II month in August and SeptemIter. This type of fertilizer may be 4lissolved in water (mine calls lor one tablespoon to a gallon) ed then administered to the plant after the soil around it has been loosened. Six or seven plIons is enough to do my :whole garden and serves the plants in good stead. They get lIeadlly available chemicals in ltOod proportion when they n~ed It most. Provecl Valuable

9

I

i Holts Walkout Of

Nurses

NEW ORLEANS (Ne) - ~ walkout of nurses at Charity Hospital here was averledl through last minute negotiations conducted by a citizens' commit­ tee appointed by Archbishoi» . Philip M. Hannan of New Or­ leans. Archbishop Hannan s~nt'l more than 14 hours in conie£'­ ences the day before the walk­ out was scheduled to take place. This was the second nurses" walkout which the archbish~ has helped to !lIvert in the p~ two months. The current protest walll:ou~ was first scheduled for May 31.. The archbishop and a 10-man citizens' committee attempted t@ mediate the dispute, and heIdi. several meetings on the prob­ lems in the last two months. When a solution was not found. the nurses planned the walko!.!i PEOPLE THEME: Posters relating '00 brotherhood, for July 19. peopl~, faceein the crowd and the whole family of man Tne interim agreement, whim oaught the eyes of more than 200 teenagers and young became effective Tuesday, WlUl adults attending the Summer School of the Christian Apos.­ accepted. by the nurses for a trial period of three months. Al­ olate, a one-week program of varied youth aotivities. though the agreement provides described by c>ne girl attending as "informative, inspiring for an increase in salaries, it and fun." Seen here, left to right are: Maureen Conlin, will still put the nurses' salariea Williston, N.D. and Cad Petrick, Youngstown, Ohio. NC below tbe aveJtage paid in ]!tri­ vate New Orleans hospitals and. Photo. also below the recommended. civiil service S(:ale. • The new salary scale must btt approved by the state civil serv­ ice commission and signed br the governor. There are also 11 Three Nuns Hope to Reach Non-Catholics number of points concerning poor working conditions thai Through Friendliness, Example must be settled during the threlt CLEVELAND (HC) - Three activities also will be under- month trial period. Holy Humility of Mary nuns are taken," she added. spending the Summer working The centers program invlove:J Schedules $50 Million and living in an apartment in an !iun-type activities, arts and all-Negro area in the inner dty crafts, organizations of pigtail Development Program here. and city league baseball teams SANTA CLARA (NC)-A ~ Their project is called Cedar and Friday night canteens for miUion development prograna Center. The center is an old store' teenagers. and title nuns live in n six-room Besides coaching the sports has been scheduled by the Uni­ apartment above it. and supervising other activities, versity of Santa Clara over tile next 10 years. The center bas JllO holy pic- the nuns visit homes, tutor, ar­ tures or Bible clasSes. The Sisrange field trips and counsell Father Patrick A. Donohoe, families. S.J., university president, said ters believe in reaching nonThey also jnduced the city to Catholics, most of the residents, lealre a vacant lot behind their the total includes fWlds for land. acquisition, new buildings and. through frienulineSll and Chris- apartment-store and turn it intG endowment. Approximately $2!i tian example. a playground. million will go into endowment. "After persons get to know mI When neighbors saw the Santa Clara will begin U.· and the mystery of our dress is swings and other equipment, 1l17tb year this Foll with an ~ gone, they start asking questions they usually bad a similar com­ about the faith. No one likes to ment: "My GOd, I don't believe peeled enrollment of 5,OHt be pushed into something," said it." Sister Mary Joseph, one of the The nuns have worked in ~ nuns. general area for two years, but "We are here to serve the hu- only as day-time visitors to man needs of the people; to be carryon and dh'ect student­ witnesses to the concern of the volunteers in carrying out tutor­ Church for the poor. If the need ial programs. This is the first for instructions is seen, those time they have lived in th~ neighborhood: Besides Sister Joseph. th<a !Legalize Sunday SOl~es other nuns are Sisters Marie de Montfort and M. RaphaeL

Live

~111l

In

Inner City

l?ennsylvaniOJ.

HARRISBURG (NC) - Penn­ lE>lEfO~E YOU sylvania has a new law which suv - 'T{1'tl' permits a businessman to keep his establishment open on Sun­ days providing he closes another day of the week. The new law became effective immediately after it was signed OLDSMOBiLE by Gov. Raymond P. Shafer. It 4 O!dsmobile-Peugot.. RetJauBt culminated a lO-year effort to i G7 Middla Street., Fauhawo enact legislation which would permit businessmen who observe some other day of the wee~ than Sunday as a day for worship to remain open on Sundays with­ out. fear of arrest. Jews, Seventh Day Advent.... . . ists and some other Protestan~ denominations observe· Satur­ ·AND . LOAN A~SOCJIA'Il'JION OF ATTLEBORO days while Moslems observe Fridays as days for worship. The legislation, backed by the .4 ~ % on Savongs Accounts Pennsylvania. Catholic Confer­ ence, the Pennsylvania Council <jf Churches and other religious 4% % on Certificates Gl"ganizations, passed both houses Attleboro - New Be~ford (}f the legislature by wide margins.

PARK

MOTORS

First F ederal ~ Savings an rome


THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 3, 1967 --r-----~-----

K

@~

(:

S;~&u®cdJQlJ~®

New Bedford Franciscan Missio er Brings BOlek BaCf1lndidates ~U'DmO!fe Chrast flo Remote J([Jj,p([JJ!!TleselsUand Cvtry C~)clDD1lCS~

A'rnJIJl)M@~ M®eli'DI7]g)

~n

Mog-atg'eal

MONTREAL (NC) - A f3trengthened fight on crime is,~proposed in a resolution to.. be considered by the Knights of Columbus at the 85th lBnnual meeting of -their supreme eol;ncil here Aug~ 15 to 17. Submitted by the Ohio dele­ ~at.ion, the resolution calls atten­ tion to the' rising crime rate, Illleged judicial leniency· toward eri'minals and the increased dan­ mer of attack threatening people on'·the street. . It declares that the Knights of Columbus oppose "the indis­ eriminate freeing of criminals and the handcuffing of our law enforcement agencies." The proposal also urges "more Iltringent laws and sterner pun­ ishments to offenders as a de­ ~rrent to this rising crime rat~." The resolution is one of almost 200 which have been presented .by various delegations for stupy by' the delegates of 'the 1.2' inil- . lion-member fraternal society of , Catholic men. They cover many phases' of public life and. also eperations wit~in the order.

By Patricia Francis He speaks Germa'n, Polish, Russian, Czech ana "a little FrencI"-in addition to his native English-but "on the job" he normally converses in fluent Japanese. 'He' also is a carpenter,' electrician.' stone mason., auto mechanic, radio' and elevision technician, plumber, and general jack of all trades. That's Brother Albert Kasz nski, O.F.M., 44, now· . horne on leave· ai- his family home at 130 Eugenia Street, New Bedford, where his two brothers, Chester and Cas­

imire, still live. In September' Brother Albert

will head back to his "home"

.for the last 10 years, the Fran­

ciscan Mission on the Japanese

island of Oshima, "about 16

hours by boat from the south­

ern tip of Japaq and 'about 210

miles north of Okinawa," to be­

gin his third voluntary five­

year tour of duty,

Meanwhile, he is luxuriating

in a host of "modern" con­

veniences-like water that does

not have to be boiled, easy trav­

el,. air-conditioning and good

food~that most Americans take

for granted,

Static Menu , ". Since. Brother Albert arrived' here "several months ago for his every-five-year visit, he has expanded visibly-from a 36 to a 40 inch waist. Wearing his brothers'clothes, . he expl::iins . the diet here is "different." , I .. Aid to Schools On· 'Oshima-"an island that A recommendation froJl:l ~he . Maryland' delegation urges the hasn't changed fo,r. 100 'Ye ars . and won't, for anoth'er' 100;''':'':'' .

fraternal society to sponsor'-Ii tile daily menu is 'pretty static, · program to help retarded chi\~. . '~"'says... . I

resoluti~~

" ••. "

,

....

BALTIMORE (NC) - A'ffJ alliance of some 115 churc1lil congregationl;l, including tw@ Catholic ones in four largely Negro voting districts, will en­ dorse candidates for the Sep­ tember councilmanic elections. The Interdenominational Min­ isterial Alliance has endorsed candidates before "but not tc this degree,'" said its president.. the Rev. Frank L. Williams, pas­ tor of the Metropolitan Method­ ist Church. The alliance is active in fomi' councilmanic districts. In the 4th district are St. Peteii' Claver and St. Gregory Catholic parishes, which have recently, joined the alliance. Father Henry J. Offer, 8.S.J.. pastor of the former parish, ill one of the alliance members par­ ticipating in the screening ~ candidates. Rev. Mr. Williams said the alliance's first' all-out endeavoll' ~as 'to support candidates foll' Mar)'land's Constitutional Con­ vent.ion Commission. "We backed seven candidates for this districa (the 4th) and six won," he sahli. Have Leverage "Some of these appeared eJli other organizations' slates" be pointed out, so the results of that election are not necessarily "rep. resentative' of what influenee we' had." ."We ,.do know that· in 0QlI'!l' c~mrnullitythe churcheS .repi·~ slm!the' .largest· assemble~ body so.w·efeel 'iri"a way, have some leverage," he stat'ed.: . The candidates that· the aID­ ancebacks' 'for 'the' upcomin,r electioll; he ·l!aid,· "do not: ·have to be Negl'oes if they are people with a total' concept of 'the com. ·munityP . '" "

;

i1t:other calls fO;' :iln··· "Our 'main dief'vp 'untiltwe' ' ent)' to discrimination 'a·gain·st"· years:ago;"when a·meat·mar-ket.'· Children 'in 'r'eIigiously-oi'ieTited' opened: in NllZe;·th.e capital, ~as .. : ON. LEAVE FRQM: J APAN:' On le ye from his' mi8sioJl IIChools: . . . ' . rice and·pork... Now ~omet!~e~' ~ignmentto the island of Oshiro off ·the· Japane8e Describing the denial of tai w~~n·. get".chick~n-:-,"o~· ?eel. ooas·t;- Brother Albert Kaszynski,O,F.M. ,Conv. shows' Jap­ benefits -t·o. these children. as' . on,,~ II. yea~\. he grms... . . . . anese folder. at his family home in N~\V Bedford. .' . . . 'Worse than ."taxation without' He ~xplams the FranCiscans---: n!presentation/'.· the' resoluti'o'ii . priests a?d brothers sca,tt~red ill " eaHs on the Knights of Coluiri-' '. small.. " -YIUages. throughout the., when, asked how one gets from '. of eJ110ti nalism-Iove ,for his bus' to make "the greatest pos_65-mde . long Island that has one village to another. fellow m,n spelled out in action. Meanwhile .. conferences witli Ilible effort to enligh~en Catho­ about· .12,000 Cath?lics-can't In Naze, the capital, there are . It probably comes naturally. candidates of the four district!J lics about this great injustice" keep c~.~ckens of theIr 0vrn be- bring' your own bedding' to Two .of lis sisters,' infected. by are in progress, he said, ,and. the and ·to show them "the solution' . eause If you have chIckens, two hospitals, be' reports. "You the same orne '!virus," are. nuns; aJliance will announce its en­ iV. this situation _ fair, just,· you have rats, and if you. have them." . .' '. both· members of the Bernatdine dorsements soon. peaceful-already operative in rat:. you have snakes_an~ the Medical attention elsewhere Sisters of Francis; other free world nations." sn;l~es, habu a~d. mamuSI,. ·on on. the island .-.:.. "and in Naze, Sister ary Virginella, O.S.F.. Oshima are pOisonous." . too," he admits-leaves much to is station d at S1. Ann ·Hospital .Reelect Superior Coliege Councils Water is obtail'\ed "from in- be desired. . _ " in .Watert wn, S.D. Sister Mary ROCHESTER (NC) - Fathel!' dividual wells and is salty, and However,' be says, Hthe island Andrietta, O.S.F., is at the. or­ .(number of delegations. have der:s mot erhouse in Stamford, Joseph C. Wey, C.S.B., has beeD pr~sented resolutions aimed at .. brackish. It has to be boiled,· bas a' number ~f important 'in­ re-elected to a six-year tel"m as before you can drink it." stitutions."· Conn. strengthening the K. of C. coun-. general superior of the Congre­ Vegetables are' few a'nd far There is a leper colony, once Both ca e home for the fam­ eHs. at various colleges and at gation of Priests of 8t. Basil at between for. the. missionaries, staffed by religious and now ily's eve y-five-yearreunion· using the leadership abilities of a general chapter meeting at St. eollege council members when' "because there's no' place to under the control of the gov­ . .last mont . grow them. All flat land 'ill ernment, which the Francis­ Also pr sent for the big event John Fisher College here. ihey leave the campus. taken over for rice. That's what cans "take care of as far l1lS' were anot er sister, Mrs.· ·Casi­ The supreme council meeting. the people eat-with fish,'if they maintenance is concerned." mil' Sroek of New Bedford; his is' being held in Montreal to have any, and' with seaweed." There is a school for retarded brothers hester and Casimir eommemorate the 100th anniver­ The climate? Brother Albert . children - "It handles 50 now and two other brothers; Edward, IJary of' Canadian confederation DISPENSING

2nd the 70th' annivel'sary of the . laughs as people complain about and we hope. to build one for who lives f..n Lakeville, and, AI­ OPTICIAN

ho now· makes his· establishment of the fi rst council the hot; humid weather of the 150"~operatedby Franciscan exander, Prescriptions

early Summer here. . Sisters. bom-e in ochester, N.H~ in Canada at Montreal. for' Eye~lo..el

"Starting in April on Oshima," There are two orphanages Brother JAlbert admits to thor­ A highlight wIn be a concele­ FiII~d ' . he says··.~the temperature doesn~t' staffed by Japanese nuns-"For oughly" enjoying his home,-Yisit.

TOrated Rontifical'Mass at which Offic~ . HOUri drop below 100. Nothing in "ule young children 1 to·2 .and for '. How'eve~, he 'explains his in­ . . 9:00·5,00 · Paul Emile Cardi~al 'Leger o{ old~r ~)}}es,Pl!-rents ~nknown, albHity to rsettle down in one'· except' Wed. Montreal will' be the prjnci~al States, car, compare with it." Frl. Eve.' by Appt. Asked about Hirriprovising~ whICh mcludes ·the chlldr'en of . spot for ~re than five seconds releb'rant and will· deliver the Saturday~9·3 lepers.'" 'Because "children' grow at a time a forecast of things . homily:The Mass will be offered air con'ditioning; he laughs. Roo!" , "Like taking the ocean' and up," there now i1G' need for'" ~ . eome. ,'., Aug.· 15 in the Cathedral of 7 No. Main St., Fall River 678·0412 "'I keep. thinking about· the, Mary' Queen of the World just . trying· to pour it through' a separate" facilities for boys and girls up to HI. ' 1lhings tha will be waHing ,for.': .... stra,iner-," 'he says.' prior to the opening of the offi­ eial sessions. From' April to November bis "To build a new cne will cost ,me to do hen I get back," he . first five yeaJ;s on the island; about $100,000, he says. "Where Days.. 01­ e SYSTEMATIC Town Forms Boa·r..JI_ he says, "r had prickly heat. are the Sisters going to get'that Biggest froblemof the. Oshi­ ,ear SAVINGS U Once you get used to the climate kind of 'money?" lIJla MiSSiO~' however, is not the MONTHLY DEPOSITS 'To Ru Ie on Movnes' it's all' right. You can stand it. Army CllIreer backwardn ss of the island, its But it takes at least five years." Brother Albert is realistic. l8le_ ~ck of mo.ern conveniences.

01 a IHVESTMENJ MIDDLETOWN (NC) - The P <- N Two Year Car spen t 2 lL r~ years iIm. the Arm'y ee d c d

• 10 year' .SAVINGS Middletown'Township Board of d . llt is the lack of priests. . . 'h . P 1 Two years I'S the longest y~' unng World War n and then NOTICE ACCOUNTS ~ th 3'L aft S upervlsors ere In ennsy vu­ ilia has approved an ordinance can hope to hold a car to­ ano. er 7': years er the war, "Countle groups on the is.­ AI REGULAR 0 1­ ,a which provides for establishing gether there,he says, ."because ~urln,g WhlChh he went to Army ]and keep asking for priests," .,.. 10 year SAVINGS . of the wea·ther, the roads and' anguage sc 001. Brother Al ert explains. "They a f Ive-member review board to. H detennine the fitness of films to the salt. e spent a year lilt home fun know abo t Catholicism. They' New Bedford before he eiltered' want to ow more-but we be seen by persons under 16 "You'·re driving. along. one of th e F ' N·ti ranclscan OVI a t e ·m a n.. . send priests, because we years of age. 'the dirt roads," that stop at the Beckett: Later, be spent three (jon't have any." '.. The ol'dinance directs theater ridge of mountains crossing the•. Years"at a Franciscan mission The stor of the missions m·· · operators to present filmS slated island, "and suddenly a fender in Ellicott, Md. essence. .p ople. who want ~~. - .Bank By Mail

10 'be shown to the board, which falls, off.. That's. the way it is." Then, he went to .the .JapaneSl2 hJJo.wmor and there ill, 00" ,!e Pay The...Post~ge

will havr. two days to determine ­ . The.' mountains also ·create . missions, ·spending two years _ . &lIe. to ,teae them.· ,whether they" ·are unobjection­ other: difficulties; like'·problems a . language ,school, imTokyo-- . So Broth r Albert voluntertlly ... "!GUllI YARMOlJlIt • "VA_ lable . for viewi!1gby 16-and­ of cominunica-tion between the . ':'Also run:byFranciscans"~be- . 'sees .back ·an island" 100 yean ~·w~~lit"iHOp.til~ PlW

lJl'ider a·udiences.The .board win .:scattered ·villagers- and··the ..mis-,· ,J!ore being, assigned. • . Oshima. ,- behind· the times because· there· ',: <:bave no jUI:i"ti.i,,!.;nn. o,;er ..filroB.. sionaries;" ......' ... , " ..', ". :.•. "'., '.' " ·]But,'..··along ,·with realism, ,.~ ·can..hel in· his own "way 141 . " ·6)'.NIIS' POll'. OSTERVILlE . ,. . '. ,. -,;. .. .. ~¥ ou'" walk,'~·he. Ila)'B calml;p" . Brother-Albert ·has a ·1woad·eteiili, , 1I.Vinc.. peop elotier ie'.·:·.Chris¢., ...'Ili.-"';;';';~';";';';'';''''';'~''';'''';'''''''''''''' · lor· ad ult audiences. .' ... ' . ,

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"'Il"IH'!: ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n Rover-Thun oo Aug. ~ 'I9S

COl.J]~EGIANS MEET: tOne of series of discussion meetings for col­ ]E'ge-age youth is held at St. Mary's Church, New Bedford. Left, Rev. Michael McPartland of St. Mary's, his sister Miss Lorraine McPartland, St~ .William's' parish, Fall RiveJrp a;nd Miss Nanc.y. Ryan, St. Lawrence,

~i.enmary· S'isters' ~~on

New FQrm Of Life, Work'

Be

New Bedford, prepare agenda. Center, group enjoys guitar break. Right;, buzz session occupies Donna Mello, St. Mary's New Bedford; Kat 1 "rin£!

Hargas, guest from :BrOOklyn, N.Y.; and 'John Mona.ghan, Sacred Hearlv 'l~aunton. . '

Law School Students. Aid Roxbury Help Residents ,Rectify

~nlUlstice

Report .PrOpOSe$ .Moljor Reforms

BOSTON (NC) -The Mass8 Advisory Committee io ClHIESTNUT HILL' (N'C}-Another war is being waged on Blue Hill Avenue, the.. , chusetts ihe U. S. Commission on Civ~ "CiNCINNATI(NC)~The' ~ene of Boston's Roxbury riotbst June.. attack is being.led l,>y.a team of .36 Bos­ Rinhts says..only major reforIDrl Glenmary Sisters announced, ton Co))ege law school students who are engaged in a legal intern· program in poverty . in housing, welfare, employmen~ ·'a· siIDlif~cant number" ~. b.w. The struggle involves findjnga home .for· a welfare family with 14 children; check- and educati,en will pr.evont mOFe their members plan to ·move 'img a defec'tive l~partmeJllt ,violence in .Boston's Neg..., . into H a new form of life and neighborhoods. and ,instructing the tenant- Mve the executiOD' ordell'l'! m ooncern' about poverty problems work." In 'The Voice of the Ghetto," . They are asking for a dispen-' »Ow to withhold rent:1ega))y; ~viction cases brought to FDnr ibey encounter ,in..their work: Ii 53-page 'rei>~rt just complete~ sending out a tester in all Housing. As a result be ill pre- . "We're only here until Septem- the IE-member committee criti­ Nltion from their religious vows paring pamphlets "~r soci;nl ~r; but we'd like 'to leave 10 work as a lay, Chur.ch-affiii- . !l]]eged discrimination ease; tak- workers and clients explaining oomethirigworthwhile behind." cized "the deplorable' condition!' Ilted organization. which have bred anger anell nng depo'sitions from witnesses eviction procedures: Poveriy Law Sister Mary Catherine RUDr­ of II riot; and helping a man who alienation." It urged the Federall uhlag, society superior. and l:l .bought a used car which turned .Discrimination This Summer's program is the Government to start a "massive member of the group that. will out to have been in a wreck; second-year stUdents PhiDip initial phase of a three-pronged campaign against group preju-. leave, said the new organization The second- and third-year 18erestecki of Boston and John program on poverty law at Bos­ dice." will be known as the Federation Jaw students,· ·wlder the supell'- Forrest of Newton have been in- ton College. During the academ­ Father Robert F. Drinan, S.3'.. of Communities in Service. visiol1l of attorneys from the 1lerviewin : witnesses and setting ic 'year an honors program will dean of Boston College Law Members will live in commu­ lI:Om,mission on Law and Social· lllIp'tests such as sending a white be developed involving an in­ School and chairman of the ad­ nity and will be "committed ~ Action (CLSA) of the American person of the same economie depth reform project based on visory panel, said it was "im­ I\~rvice for human development Jewish Congress; are combining background to rent an. apart- the most 'promisin~: of the Sum­ possible to over-state the indjg~ with a focus on religious and liield work and research to recti- . merit refused 10 a Negro. They mer experiences. nation and 'despair" expl'essecll social needs," and at least for' J!y current injustices as well as are preparing a manual to train The honors group will be ex,.. by persons who testified last the' present will continue to to proyide the basis for legisla- 1lesters in alleged discrimination peeted to make a serious contri- year at four days of hearings m serve particularly the people 'of tive reform. &ases. ' bution to law development. The Roxbury and the South End. Appalachia, 'she said. Scope third phase is a second-semester Those remaining as Glenmary The scope 0;' the problem hi 18leraty summed .up tine group'l!! seminar on "Problems in PovSisters, it was announced, "de­ i1nustrated in the work of five erty Law" conducted by mem­ 1L011!\l9l1l.la.ge Grants sire to continue in the rural mis­ students assigned to Fair Hous- '. I!il bers of the honors program. !Jion areas to which they com­ SOUTH ORANGE (NC) ­ ing, Inc., a nOl).-profit organiz;n- "This program is the basis for mitted themselves, with the tion in Roxbury supported b y ' :Iiurther development in upcom- Seton Hall University has re­

prospect of renewal in the reli­ private grantS and individual' .ing programs in urban renewal ceiveq two grants totaling $SS,­

gious life as called for by the contributions.' . and poverty programs," accord- 211 from the United States Of­

Second Vatican Council." "Although t~ emphasis is em PEORIA (NC)-For the first ing to the associate dean of the fice of Education. The grants

housing,. these students are ellI- time in the history .01. the Peoria Jaw .school, Francis J. Larkin, will be used for the education

Undecided on Uniform who is' campus' administrator of future teachers of Chinese

Whether the members .of the' pOsed to all tt)e probl~ms of the diocese, prie~ts ~ .8 • de~n.ery aDd Japanese. Dew organization will wear 11 poor," Mrs. Sadelle Sacks, Fair .have ~en asked .by.tlnelr bIshop of the program. Housing's director, said. '!They. '. • noml~a~e a candIdate for Ute flpecial garb or uniform is un­ get -involved. with poor families' Voleant. office of dean. . decided, it was reported. Bishop, .John. B. ,Franz ea]]ed College Grants

The change is expected to take who are pI'ey' to every rorm of' WEAR place by the end of August, at' n>etty fraud because they' He' OIl eJergy of the Peoria· deanery

lDOBBS FERRY (NC)-Mercy' unable to do such things as read ~ .JTIeet· at Cathedral Hall and Shoes That Fit which time new officers for boUt Mercy College has been awarded ~ documents they sign lor ill!l-" lOOminate a candidate .for the four separate federal grants to­ "TIHlIE fAMilY SHOE STORE&>

IJfOUpS are to be elected. 'cfJlice that was held by Msgr. A spokesman for the proposed maUment purchases." taling $132,810, Sister Mary Since most 'of' Fair Housing's· Jr. lB. Reidy until ·his I1lecent Et.heldreda Christie, RS.M. col­ organization said "we expect to be working in several dioceses, clients ;nre welfare recipients', iilleath. lege president, announced here According to eanon law, '0 in' New York. The grants were and always with the approval CIIIl John Heraty (1/. Dorchester Ml preparing two guidebooks _ Clean is appointed by the bishop approved by the office of educa­ the respective bishops." 43 fOURTH STREET

"What structure we establish, welfare with Dan .Cronin, 00lIl Ol!l :;md his term may be concluded tion, Department of Health, Ed­ FeDi Rover OS s-ssn

Boston's welfare director. at My time at the will of the and our way of living and what ucation and Welfare.

RigM Peo)]llJe bishop. The dean has general

we do will grow out of what .we "'One is a procedural lII1lanual supervision of a group of par­

are now," she added. ~ ~ Approximately 90 Sisters are for social agencies," Heraty said. iahes known as a deanery. There members of the community, "'The other explains the rights 1Ilre six such deaneries in the which was established in 1941 and programs availaple to wel- Peoria diocese. by Father William Howall'Cl :Ihilre recipients. "Some people According to the rules estab­ Bishop, founder of the Gl<em­ wait ~rce GJI." rour weeks JIM llished by Bishop Franz, the win­ INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC mary Home Missioners. illheir papers to be transferred to ning nominee will need a two­ .~ right 'office, and fun the Ulirds majority except on a final meantime they. have nothing lCl . mn-off ballot with only iwo

Convention' llDve OIl. We need· to show them : llIominees, when a majority

DAYTON (NC)-U. S. :Rep. tbe IRJructuresso they e311'1. meet' would suffice. The bishop's aUl­

a-arles W. Whaleft Jr. el Ohio the right people right .away." .;. lllouncement spoke of the final Diick Griffin, II tbird-year·Btucltoice as being a "candidate" .,m be the featured. speaker . ­ the· 54th nationai Knights· flit Meo:1 from Nor.wood Ms negoti-· . Jror the post· appa.rently. meaning 997-9162N~~B~dfor~ Lithuania eonvenii~ ~ft &ill aiM! .with lan!llords; t<enants, IIlt-: . ·thebishop would -not· be bound • :n ~ .HiUmclI'; S,~eet . weciiend --:f&l and tbe"OO!l!stables 1RfM> 10y 'f!be nomination•.' " -. ~ ' ' '

4

.'

The

P.

ft.equests rlests Nominate' Dean

John's

Shoe Store

....

ANDERSON & OLSEN

Set

HEArING-PIPING and AIR CONDI'TIONING CONTR,ACTORS,.

..

....


Urges Action To EUminatce Slum Evils WASHINGToN (Ne>'::'" ltt would be a "faW mistake"",

THE ANCHOR-Biooese,of 'fait River-Thurs.,.Aug. 3, 1967

IPrr®~@re® S®Jw~ [Rj@tf ~ [f\~~@ffillIffi [f@;ffGu ,C@rrf)(f,;[f@U'@ T®st .@~ DETROiT (Ne) -Archbishop, John F. Dearden of. Detroit, issued the following statement on the city's rioting end pillage: "Sick at heart, I feel ,as anyone must feel when' his family is struck with tragedy. This is our own 'family that has been struck. Who in oor community is not our of ans must begin to ask himself questions. brother? Who in OUJr com­ these "Have we ignored for too long munity can suffer and we the conditions of slum dwel­

I1lOt suffer 'witb him! Never bave words' written two yearn ago at the Vatican Cowlcil come' 00 close to home: ' ... the griefs and the anxieties of the men of ~is age, especially those wbo are poor or in any way af­ flicted, these . • • are. the griefs and anxieties of the $Io11owers of Christ.' We are «aced with a concrete test of Gur faith.

, "Can the griefs and anxietiea @f the countless victims of this '. 'riolence really become our own griefs and anxieties? Can we ~ut aside resentment and fear? Can we see all of this, not with 001' own eyes, but with the eyetl ()f Christ? . "If we can--and we must if we BII'e to bear Christ's name-there Qe only one road open to us: to iilIeSpond with the heart of Christ. • is time to translate ou£ faith Ikom words into deeds; to Gffer <Jur money for shelter, clothing. 'food, and other necessities W ~ose who suddenly are in need. Only a' Beginning '"There is surely a place for this IlInmediate response. People are auffering, are in need. Love--­ 'lrue, Christlike love---impels till 00 help' in this way now. But the , (rragedy will be compounded un­

tess we think of this as on1¥ •

fteginning. , "Prayerfully, with the love of ehrist in our heart - the loVe ~at knows no limits-we IDllSt ttegin to ask ourselves the harder iluestions. Why did this happen? "Certainly' many things we':'2l <lone that were frightfult7 :wrong. But what family, whea.. \HI.e of theirs begins to say, 'Did I do wrong,' does not begill to t18y 'Was there something I could IJave done to prevent this?' Eacll

Ooctors Ouestiolll ichool Bus 'Safety EVANSTON (NC) - , The American Academy of Pediatrics itas called for strict safety stand­ ards on school buses in the wake eM: a 75 per cent increase in mjuries on the buses in the last ill.ve years. .., The academy's biweekly [:lew&­ letter published here in Illinois lllIrged pediatricians to become acquainted with school bus otandards in their localities and to seek to upgrade them if the crtandards are lax. The news­ lIetter said 3,700 students were mjured in school bus accidents f:n 1965-a 75 per cent increase cince 1960. The academy's urgings came Jess than a month after the American Medical Association' cronvention in Atlantic City, ~here a group called Physi­ <aians for Automotive Safety first spotlighted the problem.

lings?, The slammed doors in the faces ofjob Seekers? The ghetto schools where learning is' bandi-: capped by inadequate faculties, facilities and funds? The count­ less humination in every day eJiistance for the poor who see the products--and the rewards­ of American middle class pros­ perity, but can attain neither? UJrgeD~ Reforms

,"When we have begun to search our hearts for answers to· these questions, we may find ourselves ready to heed and ap­ PIT in this situation what Pope Paul urged upon us a goal im finding solutions to worldwide problems of poverty and unrest and violence. "'We want to be clearly 1IR­ derstood: The present sItuatioa tRUst be f~ with courage aRd the injustices liDked with it mUst be 'fought against and overcome. .. 'Development demands. bold. transformation, innovations that ge deep. Urgent reforms should be undertaketl without delay. .. 'It is for each one to take his 'share· in them with gener0sity, particularly those whose educa­ tion, position and opportunities, afford them wide scope f&rac­ tion.' "

lNIaminsf of Laymelnl

Breaks Tradition' LAFAYETI'E (NC) The who operate the 1OO-bed Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital here broke with tradition by naming four laymen to the Lou­ isiana hospital board. In the past all board members have been nuns and physicians. Clyde L. Tougeau, president, University of Southwestern Lou.;. isiana; D.S. Young, real estate and insuranee broker; Welton P. Mouton, attorney, and Paul H. ·Declouet, investment broker, were named to the board. Two other laymen will be appointed later. Mother Agnes Marie of the Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady, who own, and operate the hospital, said the addition of lay­ men'to the board insuresthe hos­ pital is "truly community ori-­ ented" and in keeping with the "breath-taking changes in all phases of Catholic life." RUns

(Q)1i'@~I7'ilU2Z«!IfrU(Q)lJ'il ~«!I<elk$

N~w 5)~[hi@@O [BoDO

PHILADELPHIA (NC) -The Pennsylvania Citizens for Edu­ cationai Freedom organization has voted to back a bill now in in the state legislature which would create a state authority to purchase "secular educational services" from non-public schools. The bill, would, in effect, give the agency the power' to sub­ Ilay,me~ Get V@D<e0 sidize the secular education of HONG KONG (NC}-A new pupils in non-profit private <n'a in toe administration of the schools by ."buying" their ,in­ <!iiocese of ' Hong Kong was struction from the school. ushered in during July ~hen Its sponsors say the measure three Chinese laymen, .Gne ~ ,avoids: the church-state separa-­ ilhem a Protestant, were. given t:i.on issue by specifying "secular an official "voting voice" in its e6tlcational services" whick financial affairs. They will serve "shall not include any subject lIlong with three priests (l>n a matter expressing religieYlil six-man diocesan financial C9m­ teaching, or the morals or Wl'Rl sUttee recently organized bT cJti. worship ,Of any sect":' . , . . ]I ish 0 p Lawrence '"Bianchi, The autoority -would be il­ !,.I.M.E.. and his consulWI'&. RlmceCi by cigarette taxea.

fOi" Americans in the wa.ke .of the Newark and Detroit race

riots to "settle, in a mood of bit­ ter hatred and cynical frustra­ tion, for an uncertain and 'Wl-' easy 'stalemate and a state of pennanent martial' law." That warning was issued by Washington in a letter read at aID. . 'Masses in 1 the archdiocese' Sunday. "We would be better advised to'look for signs of progress and hope on the darkened horizon of urban America," 'he said. "'I see at leaSt a glimmer cd hope in the fact that so man~ Americans, instead of pinning the blame on someone else as a kind of sacrificial scapegoat, are now willing, perhaps for the first time, to examine their own conscience and to assume theilZ' own' full share of responsibility for the disastrous events of the past few weeks. The letter was read as churches tbroughout the nation responded to President Lynd_ , EL TEATRO CAMPES'iNO: 'The 'arm Workers The­ B. Johnson's proclamation of • ater from Delano, Calif., ~rformed in the courtyard of the "National Day of Prayer fer Old Senate Office Building on Oapitol for the benefit Reconciliation." of Senators ~md their staffs. Left to right, Louis Valdez, Blames 80ciety director and founder of the Theater; Joe Otero; Danny Cardinal O'Boyle condemned V:-aldez; and Felipe Cantu. The group appeared as the guest the yiolenee and lawlessneS8 Bf Sen. Harrison A. Williams, Jr. of N~w Jersey, chairma.n which swept the nation's large M the Senate subcommittee on migratory labor. NC Photo. eitiess. But, he added, tbe riots -are the frenzied cry of alien­ ated people who are trying 1» tell us, out of a sense' of ener­ vating despair and utter hope­ lessness, that they want to be heard and want to participal0 father Founded· Society Restorat;on as full-fledged American citi­ zens in the econoimc, social and Of Ancient Chll'istial1l Sites cultural life of our cities and our LIMA (NC)-Two Ohio busl- late GeoJge W. Quatman of nation." ftesSmen went to Ephesus, Tur- Lima, fo';~der of the American "We are obliged, as followers key, to be there during the visit Society ~ Ephesus, established fIf Christ, to 'be ambassadors of ~ Pope Paul VI. to work f r ·the preservation of reconciliation," he said. They are George Quatm!lR and ancient C ristian sites in EpheHe laid the blame for the .JoSeph Quatman, sons 6f the sus. I - , riots' eallSes at tbe feet of society . The society, founder initiated 10 general. "Our efforto to eliminate seg­ the work ~on restoration of the Cardinal Baptizes tomb of S . John the APostle in regated slum housing bave beea Ephesus nd made provisions feeble. Our support of desper­ Senator's Son HYANNIS (WC) -,-A capacity for this u 'dertj1king in his will. ately needed programs of joe IJe also planne~ building a training and job opportunities congregation witnessed the baj­ tism of Patrick Joseph Kennedy church d .cated to the Blessed. for un~mployed Negroes in our second son of U. S. Sen. Edward Mother on the site of the house ghettos haa been far less tb8.ll in Ephes where, according to adequate." M. Kennedy of Massacb'usetts 'and Mrs. Kennedy, in St. Francis ·tradition, s e had lived and died. The :elde Quatman became in­ Xavier church here. Richard' Cardinal Cushing of Boston . terested in the restoration work . after he nd his wife visited

officiated. "Gosh, this is a good boy," the Ephesus d ring the 1954 Marian

. cardinal remarked as the infant Year. Mrs Quatman said ber Est. 1897

'remained quiet throughout the husband h} a special devotion ceremony. The ,senator's father, to the Bles ed Mother.

The 'fo nder's sons were Joseph P. Kennedy, former Am­ 2343 Purchase Stll'~

bassador to Great Britain, and scheduled' to meet with the Gargan, a cousin, were the Turkish co mittee on the resto­

New BedfolTd

ration du iug their visit to'

godparents. More than 1,200 va­ 996-5661 Ephesus: "

cationers, friends and relatives packed the church.

Caroline Kennedy, daughter of

the assassinated President, at­

"OURSl11'O LOVE ANJD) 11'0 GOV!E!

tended. Her mother and brother

the,life at DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL Love God were not at the church ser­ more, and ve to souls knowledge and love at vice, but a'ttended a reception God by serving Him in a Mission which uses the

1 Press, Radi Motion Pictures 3n!! TV. to bring later at the Kennedy home.

His Word t souls everywhere. lealous young girls 14-23 years interested in this unique N«!II7\1i)@<d] 5)fP>@~Ik@1i' Apostofate IT\ay write to: SAN FRANCISCO (NC) ­ RE~EREND MOTHE!! SUPEIil80('J Msgr. George G. Higgins,direc­ O~UGHTERS Of ST. PAUL , ·tor, Socii:ll Action Department, 50 ST. PAULiS AVE. BOSVOrJ 30. MASS. U. S. Catholic Conference, will

bes a participant in·the 11th an­

·nual National Catholic Social

IF VIS CONVENIIENT OIFIFGCES TO SERVE YOU Action Conference here, Aug. 2~

-. to 27.

iJ:Iill

I

SOnS Visit Eplesus

fOr

Sturtevant 6­ Hook

Builders SuppOuers

Ann

1

ONE-STOlP BANKING

CENTER lP«llint and, Wanpapall' Dupont Paint

~

cor. Midd10 Si. . ' . 422 Acush. Av~ ~.." New BedfOt'd

PARIKING Rear of Store

F RST-MACHINISTS _ ATIO'HAL' 'BA N K I

Of TAUNTON,'" -

'

1JIerto'" W. Ite. -....-Taunton, Main I Main St.-1a'fnQlam, , , ' ~h Dighton, Spring St.-NortIt Eostoft, Main St. Me.hber Federal Deposit lInsuran~ Cor~

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Presbyter~an

ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug: 3, 1967

Minster Cites Six

SAN ANTONlO (NC)-Papal lIIIi1e 10 Jesus Christ." Prior to listing the six obsta­ infallibility, Mariology, priestly eelibacy, apostolic suceession, des tG Christian unity, the min­ ieter said: "I am not criticizing. nansubstantiation, and monM­ cbial Church·· government wen 'I"tHs is not.hing. personal. I have cited. by a Presbyterian minister ~ uked.1o ~tate theobBtacles here as the six major obstacles to Christian unity. . Dr. Robert Bullock, pastor ..

Northwood Presbyterian Church,

addressed 50 persons attending

the first in a serie!> of eight ecu­

menical "Bridge to the Future"

discussions at St. Pius X Church.

Of the six obstacles, he sahll

Mariology was "perhaps the

greatest."

He told the inter-faith audi­

ence: "I accepted this invitation

to speak with a great deal of

enthusiasm, to deepen and

broaden the dialogue going em

bet'veen the Protestant churches

and the Catholic Church.

"I'm committed to the union oil

God's people on earth and ex­

~ited about this particular proj­

. ect of St. Pius X parish and be­ lieve it is in the true spirit oil Pope John XXIII. Church iGoverBllllJ1leJl1l~

"You've adopted a wise course

in 'aslting us Protestants to speak

positively about our faith," he

declared, "for we need to really

listen to one another.

. Dr. Bullock said that the Pres­

byterian Church is governed. b;y:

elders - roughly equivalent kl

parish priests in the Catholic

Church. He said these men are .

all elected officials of his church

and pointed out, "I, for instance,

must be elected by the people of

a given church, I cannot be sent

to a Presbyterian church.

"Our church government em­

bodies representative form 011

government, as does our nation,"

he said.

"What is distinctive in our be­

lief is really minor," he stated,

"as compared to what we-Cath­

olics and Protestants - have IE

common. We believe in the in­

spiration and authority of Scrip...

tUI·es."

In the final analysis, he ob­

servp.d, "we have a right to in­

terpret Scriptures to ourselves.

We also believe in Jesus Christ

as Saviour and Lord. We feel

that faith is the condition of our

salvation. We believe in the

Lordship of Christ over Chris­

tian conscience. We are respon-

and we must be frank about it." During a question period, the visiting clergyman was asked if there'· are fewer obstacles to inter-Protestant unity than there are.to Catholic-Protestapt unity.

Obstac~es

"There are theological differ­ ences and differences in govern­ ment which separate Protestant from· Protestant," he replied. "Some, of the most difficult ob.stacrles, howeverj are not theo-

to Unity

WASHINGTON (NC) - Four­

teen Catholic University of

America students, members oil

the "Cardinalaires" vocal ensem­

ble, will entertain U. S. troops

in Newfoundland, Labrador, Ice­

land, and Greenland on a USC

tour from Aug. 21 through Sept.

22.

ill 1963.

.

School Committees SYDNEY (NC) Catholic

..mool oommittees comprising

priests and laymen are now

functioning both federally and

iIn New South Wales on a state

basis. The committees were set

111> as a result of decisions by

the Australjan bishops at their

IlWlUa! conference here in ApriL

COUlntless men and women appeal to 300,000 missionaries for·

hel·p. Here is my help.

name

address

THE' MISSIONS N:EEDYOUR HELP! RIGHT REVEREND EDWARD-T. O'MEARA, NATIONAL DIRECTQR THE HOLY FATHER'S SOOIETY FOR THE P"ROPAGATION OF THE FAITH, 366 fiFTH AV~., N.Y.~N;Y.10001

Nll FAILL RlliuR YOUR DIRUCTOR '8 AT. R!lV. RAYMOND CONSIDINE, 968 N. MAIN ill!.

.

logical. It breaks down to «m;r.. erning-a more thorny questi. . than theology. In fact, Presby­ terians divided in 1860 and haven't gotten back togethef yet."

CU Vocal Ensemble

Plans USC Tour

The 'seven men and seven

women, all music speech and

drama undergraduates, will be

directed by Msgr. Donald Jr.

Reagan of Youngstown, ·Ohio.

He will also be piano accompan­

ist and if arranger of many oil

the "Cardinalaires" numbers.

This is the second tour to pro­

vide entertainment for American

servicemen overseas by a Cath­

olic University Music School

School group. An earlier versioEl

ef the "Cardinalaires" per­

formed wiQely in the CaribbeaJil

13


,

, .' -.

!"

"

.,.

"

THE ANCHOR~Dipce~ . :,.;".

.

.'

.'

. ... i ·

Stud<ents Unite '. O'n" "'rR~'d'i'~&'I'ilnt,::,

of. FotIR'tVer-Thurs., Aug. 3, 1961'

',,::·~.;:;!:j;·::il.i!;::: ~:.~I:<:,~:,>·':,' ~.

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Catholic Efforts for Negro 'Feeble, Fabian/l Sectarian

BERLIN (NC)-Catholic stu­ dent groups in West Germany are planning closer cooperation with their Protestant' countell'­ parts in view· of the growing radicalism at some of the uni­ versities. Prompted by recent leftlst­ inspired disorders at the Free University of West Berlin and other activities of leftist stu­ dents, the Catholic and Protes­ tant student federations will un­ dertake joint slates of candidates in student Partliament elections to strengthen conservative and moderate representation. The CarteUverband (student union) of C~holic students, with 33,000 members, is the largest academic federation on univer­ . sity campus~~ in Germany.

ll

, By Rt. Rev. Msgi'. .John 's. K~nnedy , In the Segregated Covenant (Herder and Herder. $5.95. 232 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016), William Osborne, an historian and sociologist, sets out to determine whether there is consistency or contradiction between ' American Catholic pro nouncements, the' one of the' citizen. The Constitution hand and practice, on the grants him those rights; let us othe;, concerning relations be loyal ~~Dth;u~~n~it;:tion."

on

between whites and· Negroes. He went on, "If the education The book has its origins in a of the Negro does not fit him to doctrinal disbe a voter and an office holder, sertation done let us for his sake and for our more,' than a own hurry 'to enlighten him. I decade ago, and would open to the Negro all in­ a report to the dustrial and professional:.3ve­ . Fund' for the nues - the test for his advance Republic done being his ability, but never his three ycars ago. color." . .In 1958 the .' . There, were few echoes of this O{ff.~[f$ ,~~nBowships American bishsentiment in Catholic circles. A , .. .' 'DETROIT (NC) - A spokes­ .ops issued an . ,s.eP'ar;tte church, for Negroes be­ 'WITNNIPEG': Pan American: Games man, annOunced that three i m 0 res s i ve came the custom. Missionary statement' on endeavor among the Negroes wei'e, up' ,early' to attend Mass in the Ft., .psborne '-chapel. . teaching fdlowships are avail­ -race relations. .' was not highly regarded or gen- Men in' the foreground are Peruv au basketball stars. NC . able at Mercy College of Detroit Photo. . , . , urider ane:w grant for a two­ This clearly set forth the· moral erousIY supported. And the mis­ year program. The fellowships obligations of Catholics in t~e , sionary ,was often treated wiU!

are in computer programming matter. . eon'tempt even by his felloW'

in Medical Record Science, In­ But does it square with what priests, ,llIS Mt:. Osborne demon-'

structional . Media and Social­ Catholics actually have done imd strates in some shameful exam­ Educational Psychology. , are doing? How much effect has pIes. The fellowships are for $6,500 it had on the attitudes of Cath- ' In the cities there was often !ii@U)'f (ClfO$$ Brotheli' .Plre~«ll l1ll1t of Benedictine with an allowance of $400 foX' olics? This is what Mr. Osborne antipathy toward the Negro on ~ 8 Ii'" each, dependent. determined to discover. the part of Catholics who were ~Ii$frelf$ regon 'two-., <wM .«1ft-Dona. 0 ege Mercy College, founded iill He wou~d try to find answ,ers nnnlr". The Negro represented ..~~. ",.".. ANGEL (NC) . Brother exte sively on business admin­ '1941 by the Religious Sisters of. . bv examining what is gomg on competition for'J"obs, and he had DU. , ­ , . d'JU t LaSalle Woelfel, C.S,.C.. now istra 'on and economics and is Mercy, is the city's youngest in Catholic dioceses m lLLeren to be fought. A little known fact "'arts of the country: in the is that the section of Harlem still exeCutive vice-president of St. natio al president of the Cath- college for women. ... " th Edward's University in Austin, olic usiness Education AssociaSouth, rural and urban; m e known as San Juan Hill got its ' ,t t ast d t Texas, will become the first tion. ~ D"Irectors border sa es,. e an wes; name of the battles staged there ftlJ'lllJ'BOlllllJ'BCe along the Northern Atlantic sea... between Irish and Negroes. ' male president of Mt. Angel Mo~unt Angel College is a c0College here in Oregon on Tues- educ tiona!, four-year liberall b Iboard, <Dhristia.n Obligation arts h ' 0\11 trn W urban t t and subur ani on day, Aug. 15. 00i ,WIth an enrollment }/ ~uuc:atlon e es coas. But that is the past. What o/l The college will eontinue hi of a out 360. It was founded as ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop Historical Sketeb the present? the control of the Benedictine a W$en,s teacher's college, ex" Fulton J. Sheen of Rochester has But before going into his As was to"be expected. differ- Sisters, wh~ have operated. t& pand its academic offeringu announced that Father Leopold findings, he gives an historical ent Catholic practice is found UI since 1888.. and ame known as Mt. Angel- Protomastro, O.F.M. Cap., and sketch of the Negro ,~nd t~ different parts of the country. Brofl:i:er' La Salle, 44, succeeda Wo n's College in 1947. It was Father Cyprian Rosen, O.F.M. Church in America. ][t is esti- In general, the bishops are cred- Sister Alberta Dieker, O.SB.. mad,e co-e,dUCati,O,nal, in 1958. . Cap., will direct' the lay educa­ mated that mid-way in the Civil ited with trying to bring about who ~ign~ in June after ~o tion program in the diocese. War, in 1863, there were seven desegregation. There are excep- years as president. She will lieEft The program will function million Negroes in the country, tions to this observation, and the turn to teaching. iRl.e~e,"!~;, oon un throughout the diocese in con­ ef whom four million were io degree of success has been falr ~ .".. C II junction with the religious edu­ tile South, three million in the from uniform. ' Brother La Salle ~as ~du- waDII' IJ WO 0 eges cation programs of Father Al­ ,:.~. ':Nodi(: Ofthe;,seven.! 'mitUo~f; ;;"·:~vet. th . "," in .. ·eit 'ej#' ,~~ from the Umver,llty. ~ W'. HING'OON~,. ~NC),....secre.., ,be.rt."sni)I1I()!1o",aio~~saQ.' lyi,car of !;""~lr 'iOO,OOo'W'e~"CathOtic:".,.... "'I"'U~ wh~th;~ :~;:;:e ~~ge'" '::~h~=einhi:~~~ ~~~ ~'RO~'tt'''C~'''Weil'verof' 'the "~iigto'ils'"'e<Iii'~ii~iO'ii:I"i:ti"WiiI- iti­ '1-,: This minority was kept segre- has been effected in'the minds or the' Congregation of Holy Cross. U. S. parbnent of HoUsing and elude days of recollection for ;,' gated when attending service ill hearts of white Catholics. Have Urb Development (HUD), m. married couples, teenage pro­ ed j!. Catholic churches. Catholic pcac- they been convinced, persuaded. ~=a:::~:yd=~ . anno ced approval of a $2,865,- grams, clergy renewal in' the '( aice, that is, confonned stricUy that recognition of equality for si"-,' Indianapolis ill 1949, be- ,- 000.". ~a~0,4' ,~i college hollS- spirit .of ,vatican Council II,' and 00 the prevailing social pattern-. the Negro is a Christiallll obliga-I ing 108Il fw'tds',fQio, Canisitis Col- iUl' ebimeniC'al. i iprogram aimed :'. It is interesting to ~ that tioo"and have they been williD~ came a certified public account.-~ lee. B uffalO, ·.and a $1,945,000 at bringing tOgether priests· anell i~ when the Second PleiIlarY C~~, :·tA,..~~andpron1ote this? Here ::v~T:X~95~, ~ ~ ieSe tion for the' University of ministers OR' an informal level. :i' dol of Baltimore brought all the fa the vital question. ' . :' . /":'. ".,' " A library will be opened at American bishops together just Racial attitudes are. ingrained. degree in business administraUniY;~~~ 'of inthe Capuchin friary in Geneva" :: a year after the close of the in penonality, Mr. Osborne COR- lion from too University aft tends 1» buil~ a new ll-stoIT N. Y., where the latest books, _.a toIT an.d ~·~ilin~'.~clUtiea ' :.pe '. riodicals, newspapers and tape Civil War, the H?Ior See ...... tends. They are reinforced br Tex8111 in 19M'. Be ball wriUea d 0 dressed to them •. strong ~ 'lOCal custom. Jaor • students. recordings win be made avail­ minder that work for the weiAnd even where a bishop emnJ federal fuRd reservattoa, able to 18it,., ReligioWl and iare of the newly emancipatell phat!caJ.ly asserts that discrimiastabUshed. tJIl· the bas.. fill. aerO' withEmt charge" Negroes was "of the utmost : rtatioo or unequal: treatment is II ~ pre:uqww,., ap.Pli.·catton .. the neCessity." ID9nl problem, it has beea PITTSBURGH (NC)-A. PbB- CoHeir H~n« Program, .eCI Bttt neither in tIlla' council mo- 1Jo: be not amendable tG fp Randolph, labor and dd iIIe ~ ·asicJe"for the eollegel

Dor in the Third Plena..,. Coun-, ,mora! :iIolutions. That is. the rights leader. has been named" .I'f Pl'Ojeeu Me ap.p.roYed

cit (1884) was anythiftg effec- mere pointing out of II mornl receive the 196'1 Labor DQ. 1JF. " TIle, C1011~g~ supple­ Aluminum'« Steel tive done along these ~ 'rhe.. ,dub' does not guarantee that i.t award of the Western Pennql-" IDeIlt the fedei1ti loaM wic. 9'" County Street ~i8h&pS were, at course, pIilg,lied.' ,"If be performed. vania Committee for the Greater iuDdlt (Ii their OWL INEW' IaEDFORD;·MASS. then and· later by many other lLaek ., Leadersbi.. Pittsburgh Labor DaT Sbse§..

" viY 2-6618 acute problems. lliIl'. Osborne i8 Bot satisfied vance. t..4 Wall of Se..aratioa with such practical steps as the Bishop Jrobnl 3. Wright ~ :, ,1..-011 :. '. Curiously, the mission to the ChUM has taken: for example. Pittsburgh will offe!' • Labor ~ (NC)-Miami'll Bis~

Negrees was taken up by the the desegregation of facilities Day Mas3 at the Civie Areoa ~ ~ lP'. Carroll ,'bas beea

Enghshman, Father Herbert tmder Church control - schools here Sept. 4. The award. a stat&- :'::JAn"Maa <rI. 1IIe Yetii' . .

':"V:a~ghan, later to bec;a~Q,~ ",.~'~p'.itals. He' ,190ks ~ ~.,~' af St. J'oseph the Worku,; ~teI'.. '., ·CclU,l ... ~atioos" . . .' . archbishop of Westminster. He desegregation of ·these which has will be pcesented following tbe the· 'tei'.;,AMeriCM'''· Alliance ," .

~ame here, studied the condition occurred, North and South, and Mass.

hent. of the Negroes, was appalled by finds it to be rather grudging. Randolph, 'JS, Is known lIII a­ it, and founded the ·orgaQiza,ttoQ. belated, and minimal.. " "])ean iof Civil )tights" ~ ~

known as the Josephite Fathers. He faults the Church for lack half-century fight 'against' rocbil

IESOlDlENTnAl which has· been working with . of foresight, leadlilrship. and ·inequality. In 1983 he seryed _

and f&r Negroes ever since. : :,-' 'planning. He has some g004 dh'ector of the march on' WasIr.-

SCHOOlS. CHURCHES' Archbishop John Ireland', of things to say about CatholiCingtoa. which brought IA quarter

§ St. Paul, far-sighted in this as in steps in New 'York City, but 6f ii: million people to the na­

mNDUSTR~Al . . . .•, .BUNKER == much else, said in 1871, ":1JV1!/it,,· criticizes. not .only their piece- tion's capital in support of ci'ril

== do I claim for the black man?" meal nature but the failure to·, rightS,for all Americans. In 19!5

D·ADSON 011 BU'~ERS " ... That which I claim for the white look to the future, perceive the h~ organized the Brotherhood fill

== Complete Heating Installations man, neither more nor less. I,! shape ~ things to come, ,and': Pullnmn'and Sleeping Cl$r Por-'

". '.F '.'24 .HoUr, 01' IUnier· 'Seniice would blot out the color line. ".';-, plan accordingly. ters, which he still serves 1-,' : f i, ' .. ~:' . ., ..][t is not possible to keep up Besides,: he declares ~i,lat ~here : '. WJ;!.1.~tiQnal president.

!l ~!ill C)f separati9D. bet~~ , ,and elsewhere there has been a '

blacks and whites, and· the at:': fai-lure to become involved· with, - - - - - - - - - - - - - ­

,;!tempt to do this is a declarat.kKi:'; the community as • wboie.· ~ ·T~',:cl:i.iholiceUo~·:iD.Gitli8r

()f continuous war. " . Let the. ,prod- its conscience, te join'm, w~rWi, ,I!as, in the mai·n, beeD.~

'Negro be our equal in th~'etij()y::'; " overall projects calculated ~',M . ()nlY:::fe'eWe· and fabia~ bat ilK

ment .• all the political rigbu achieve social justice and- peace., '~narrowly sectarian.

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c@nn@~~;'!{f@Lf Women

first Male Head 0

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 3, 1967

1S

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primary concern of train­ I!d and understanding

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$8050 per week July 3 -Aug. 21 TRANSPORTATION TO

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!6

THE ANO' ~ - ')iocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 3, 1967

'Mutual' Confidence

RetorBn® [P@~t@tr Urges PlfDte$U'$

To

!Be

UnderstCllIJ'illclsB'Ilg f@~~~wDn9 Dosfl'llJlI'lball1ces

V ©~@tg<Dni'U",CO>!l"llS~fl©M$

ATLANTA (NC) - Before Illeading toward the green pas­ ~re of retirement after 34 yeal's hi the priesthood, a veteran in the work of priestly vocations left his prescription for over­ eoming the growing shortage of priests. Msgr. Patrick J. O'Connor, re­ tiring pastor of St. T~omas More parish here, gave this simple formula: "If every· ,priest' can get one young man to follow in his footsteps there will be Ilmough vocations:" The 65-year-old monsignor,' lZormer director of the N aiional Shrine of the Immaculate Con- ­ ception and onetime professor at ihe nearby Catholic University of America, both in Washington, D. C., announced he will retire Aug. 15 because of medical rea­ IlOns. He said he plans to live in retirement in his cottage on Tubee Island near Savannah Beach. "I think I am correct in say­

ing I was instrumental in bring­ ing 38 priests to Georgia-10 in Savannah and 28 here in At­ lanta,". said the monsignor who' also estimated that he taught some 3,000 young. men 'who be­ came priests. Overcome Current Ideas To overcome the crisis in vo­ cations to the priesthood, Msgr. O'Connor said there must be "much prayer" and an overcom­ ing of some of the current "ideas that are being batted around which are dangerous to the fu­ ture of the priesthood." Msgr. O'Connor is a native of Savannah; where he received his early education. He was gradu­ ated f!'Om the Catholic Univer­ sity in 1924, studied for the priesthood at St. Mary's Sem­ inal'y in Baltimore, and was or­ dained to the priesthood on May 25, 1933. Two yea'rs later, he joined .the Catholic University faculty. He taught ·theology, homiletics and later served as dean of men.

~MLWPort !Penna.

Co1'nnecticlllt C~ergymen Urge, Community

MeCllStl.Sli'e.

Grows

to Aid Non-Public SccthooOs

GailMls Double-Barreled SUPPO!l'fr PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A double-barreled program of supRtOrt has developed for a bill pending in the Pennsylvania !Legislature which would provide .tate aid to non-public schoels. Philadelphia's Mayor' James H. S. Tate conferred with city dele­ /l3tes to the state House of Rep-. II'Csentatives and asked them to. IIUpport the legislation. In all parishes of the Pbiladel­ n»t\ia Archdiocese, parishionel'll blave been urged to undertake lit letter writing campaign ta .tate legislators, urging support 01. the bill.

The Mayor said the bill willi. affect some 166,000 students i/ll non-public schools in Philadel­ phia, about 39 per cent of alll students in the city. Statewide will effect some 660,000 ehil­ eren, about 22 pe'r cent of aU students in the state, Mayor Tate sil·essed. .

NE BRITAIN (NC)-Cler­ gyme of this Connecticut city have ppealed for a greater ef­ fort t ward community under­ standi g following two days of . distur ances in the city's pre­ domin ntly Negro Hartford Avenu and North Street area. Sev ral incidents of rock and bottle throwing were reportedly touche off by a family quarrel. Rev. Clarence Tyson, pastor of th Union A.M.E. Zion Churc , said I the majority of the people in the area "do not en­ dorse iolence and will not sup­ port it They do not approve of what appened but are trying to seek p aceful solutions to their grieva ces." . The incidents "were not so much. a question of racial

NAMED COADJUTOR : Bishop George J. Biskup of . Des Moines has been ap­ pointed Coadjutor Arch­ bisl10p with the right of succession t 0 Archbishop Paul Schulte of Indianapolia. NC Photo. \

Request laymen On School Board

SPOKANE (NC)-The priests" senate of the diocese of Spokance has voted unanimously for the establishment of a diocesaa. school board with lay members.. T~e present diocesan school bOard consists· of six priests anci no laymen. . The diocese alse mainta'ins the office of superim­ tendent of Education, a post now held by Father Charles D. Skok. Bishop Bernard J. Topel, wbe CAMDEN (NC) - Construc­ attended the senate meetin& tion of a new Camden diocesam said he favors the "principle ~ House of Charity complex, ini­ tially involving a child develo~ subsidia>rity" in regard to dioce­ Cut Enrollments ment center and monastery, haa san school boards. He defined! this principle as one whidll begun 'in Deptford Township. The legislation would estab­ keeps policy-making decisiOlllJ Ilisb a special non-public school Archbishop Celestine J. Da­ OR the lowest leveL authority empowered to pur­ ·mians, bishop of Camden, said This policy tends toward low ehase services for instructions in the buildings being constIVcted Jlt()n-religious subjects for pri­ on a 27%-acre site will cost costs and avoids "maD7 other problems;" he said. vate schools throughout the about $1 million and are ex­ Bishop Topel said the diocesau. .tate. pected to be completed in Sep­ school board· should work ill The measure provides that tember, 1968. areas where it could aid tile l!unds to support the authority The new day center is ex­ Church. A parish's inability ... would be derived from a pro­ pected to double the present support its school might be em­ RtOsed state cigarelte tax. ca pacity of existing facilities imJ.' amined by the board, IM~ ~ Haddonfield. It will bring txa> Affects Many gested. The Philadelphia Archdiocese five the number of day centers The priests' senate left 1m1l'l&-> already has announced it will for exceptional children in the solved the question of how muelil. diocese. Others are located here cut enrollments in high schools power the school board would An the Philadelphia area next in Atlantic City and in· Vineland. have. The monastery is planned txa> . ]Fall by 1,000 in order to meet achool budget deficits. Large accommodate 22 Brothers of the Order of Hospitallers of St. John. . SchedlUDEl Illumbers of students denied ad­ mission to Catholic high schools of God, who have' administered and developed the. diocesan pro­ Commwnication

will have to enroll in public . . achools. It has been estimated gl'am for exceptional children. WASHINGTON (NC)-PriesbJ that the annual cost of educating involved in pastoral work fll'om II high school student is $800. lay all over the U. s. win meet. Kansas City, M9.. Oil Aug. 20 aDl!i Mayor Tate emphasized to the 21, 001 the eve (Ii Liturgicai llegislators that enactment of the Week. to discuss "commun.U~ aid to private schools legislation ST. LOUIS (NC)-A layman tion in the Church." would. save some $350 million a has been hired to assume all ad­ year througholit the state. . ministrative duties at St. Mary The two-day meeting il:l ~ Magdalen parish in nearby organized by the pastoral ecm= Brentwood, Mo. mittee of the Liturgical Conff~ ence, ~th headquarters here., Rowland Nenninger, parim Father J. Paul ByrOll1, ~ business administrator 'fortine. toral committee chairmllll1; m!Po past six months, carries respon­ nounced that this year's sessiOGii sibilities which are unusulll! will focus on "the renewal oil Slil r&T• .vos ElPmI,

among laity in the St. Louis aspects of parish life" and.w!llll !FALL HUVIER

archdiocese and much of 'the begin with .an exploration (Ii ~ The parish children's Summer U.S., but he has counterparts in historical perspective Gl!l ~ program closes tomorrow. The s eve r a I Protestant churches 'munication." final excursion, made yesterday, where ministers h·ave. hired lay- _ .. . was to Myles Standish State men to take over time-consum­ Pr~ncIp~ spe~ei'D ~ i2Jl:j Park. ing administrative duties meetmg WIll be BIshop VIcW J!. , . Reed of Oklahoma City-~ HOLY NAMIE,'

Msg!:". Thomas ~" Du:r:kin, paw­ Okla.; Msgr. George w. C~ IFALL R!VlER

tor, decided to hire a lay admin­ columnist for the Pilo¢, ~ A cake sale following Masses istrator after consultation witm archdiocesan newspa~ SlllIJ;jl this Sunday will be held at the , l~ymen in. the parish,. and m Father Johi& ThOmar3, ~ school and'will aid in the pur­

VIew of hiS own expenence oi sociologist ClIl the i'aculQ' <ViZ 1lS!@ chase of equipment for the parish "feelin~ that pastors are to\) Massachusetts School mt ~ baseball te.am.

busy With non-pastoral t.a.slm... StUdies, Cambridss>

THANK YDU. INDIANA 'I'H& MIlDLY FATHER'S MISSIDII AID N 'ITlI6E DIlI9ENTAL CHURCH A 17·year-old boy in Indiana writes:

WlSM 1MIS

BOY

WERE

Builds $1 Minion Child Care Center

lOURSr

w

w.

o

pom.

pans; Ilnfves" forks. etc.,-88 wen as a small

"camp stove." Talm care of one family ($10)

at lead? '

[] $lC'siws Ii f8mUy one month's SIlIppIy of

food. GMt $10 fNfJfY month during this em. .

IJ~

. 0 $2 b' a blanket keeps a babt wann. Call ~~

Admanistratoll'

At Missouri Parish

~

.

or morel

·On

r.:

Dear Monsignor No8an" I am 17, still in sdtooi" and I don't have to ask myself questions C!ke: <Can my child see? Hearl Learnl Grow? -llut a «hint.: I can under­ stand such poverty lind a wish there were more I could do. This summer I didn"t.get a chance. work or the amount I send would be Ilarger. I must admit that lunch for. refugee dliid for a month ls'weII worth $L I ... the aIdest or 117 li:IbNnm ao I guess I'.. -Jinc thanks for their he8ith .. 'welt~s·my own. I ACIW end by sayin& l1IJII .we·my prayers for your wort·'" ChFlst. 8igMd: Jony He ' , The days .... hot m Jordan, the nfgllts .... cold, bttt the Holy Land's new refugees haw no way to escape. Morethaft ·that. they're hungry•••• "Where Is God''', • CI.J1hoIic Arab lt5Ics Mon­ signor Gartland. "'The birds have nests. Doesn't God care at all about my chitdren?" ••• God cares, but you are His hands and feet. ••. ,tnfants will freeH to death this winller, OC" die of disease. unless we do sometiling l.1OW. find • stamp and envelope. and walk tD your comer mailbox: C $1,000 will buy.1Bnts anough ($300 per tent) tID shetter 240 babies. Will you give one tent, . ID $750 wiU give thnae families huts liYe ill this winter. Refugees wiD build the 'huts if can provide materials. $5OO·1s nearty enough f.o set up II small cnnlo

for babies. We'" ten you where It Is.

EJ $100 wiU 'D'eplace for ten families the

Discussion

Th.e Parish Parade­

trouble, but rather one of low­ income, class trOUble," according to Father Eugene H. Ciarlo of St. Mary's Catholic Church. He feels communication must be improved between the people in the area and community leaders and agencies. Rev. Mr. Tyson cited forced relocation because of highway construction and welfare admin­ istration as two specific prob­ lems which are causing resent­ ment. Both clergymen praised the efforts of Mayor Paul Manafort and other city offiCials in trying to find solutions to the problems. Father Ciarlo called for "mu­ tual confidence, built and worked at by all people in the city." '

'1THJIN( OOD YOU

miElH~

{tllk! .. ~tmI&'~ ,_

~.

IIJVE /IN OOMfOft'iil: HELP .

~ ~ i'OICD $~~

CO

'J

fi'1W

'l

Innfij1'!

.1 I

~=========~=---=...!"

,


THE At'-,r Thurs., Aug. 3, ] 967

New Profession of Faiith S~bstrntute f@[? l@mJ® ~rnifC~

m5~~rru@[Q> ~a@!JU@~a~

VATICAN CliT1{ ~NC} - A considerably abbreviated profession of faith to substitute for the len~jhy oath against modernism has been sent to the world's~bjRhops by the Doctrinal Congregation. The formula, like its predeces­ sor, is required of clerics, The new profession of faith, Religious and some others at various important steps in was sent to the bishops in late July, reduces this oath to one their ecclesiastical careers. short and generally worded'

It includes a profession of be­ lief in all the truths contained in the Nicene Greed as well as an expression of a~herence to all that is defined by the Church infallibly or taught by her "or­ dinary magisterium" ~teaehing authority). 'The oath against modernism,' which was prescribed iID ]~IO by the motu proprio Sacrcrum An­ tistitum, was intend~ as a safe­ guard against the eliFElrS of mod­ ernism, a heresy which in effect denied Revelation, the supernat­ ural and the divine origin of the Church. It was condemned by Pope Pius X, in 1907 in his encyclical, Pascendi, and also by ~e Doc­ trinal Congregation's (then the Holy Office) decree Lamentabili of the same year. One Paragraph The oath itseJ1 spelled out these errors specifica]]y and re­ quired that those ~ho take it "adhere with" * .. the whole soul to all condemnations, declara­ tions and prescriptions" con­ tained in these two documen~. The text of the oath ran slightly under 1,000 words.

paragraph, coupled wit.h the rec­ itation of the Nicene Creed used at Mass. A Vatican spokesman noted shortly after it was mailed out that it contains all the essential elements of the old olJlth, includ­ ing anti-modernism. The text, in unofficial transla­ tion from the Latin, reads: "I, (insert name), with firm faith, believe and profess all and everything that is contained in the Symbol of Faith '(the Creed), that is:" (Then follows recitatien of the Nicene Creed, after wbich is added:) "I firmly embrace and accept all and everything whicb has been either defined by the Church's solemn deliberation (Latin words: solemni judicio definita) or affirmed and de­

clared by its ordinary magiste­

rium concerning the doctrine of

faith and morals, accordingly as

they are proposed by it, ~pe­ cially those things dealing with the mystery of the Holy Church of Christ, its sacraments' and the sacrifice of the Mass and the primacy of the Roman JPontiJtf."

Baltimore mnte'rfaith GrOUp$

Cooperate to Prevent Riots

BALTIMORE (NC) - While racial rioting afflicts cities throughout the country, at least two interfaith groups here are meeting - to talre pl'eventive measures. The city's Community Rela­ tions Division uooer director David Glen has already held two meetings between clergy and the Police community relations bu­ reau. Another is planned' with south Baltimore clergy at the Southern DistriCt Police Station. Both the Maryland Council of Churches and the Catholic Arch­ diocesan Urban Commission are cooperating in the meetings. "The general idea is w alert the clergymen to signs of tension and-to do what they can to ease those symptoms," said Dr~ Fur­ man L. Templeton, representing the Maryland council. He is a1sQ executive director ef the Baltimore UFOOn lLeague. A representative of the ei~

Co-educational Plan At Florida Colleges MIAMI SHORES (NC)­ There will be "'a new look" at Biscayne College for men and Barry College for women neJl't semester as studlents born Bis­ cayne enroll at Ba.rry anCl vice versa. Junior and senior level courses at both oolJeges will be offered on a coeducatiEmal basis, Sister Mary Dorothy, Barry's president, SlZlid, but the separate identity of each institution wiD be maintained during the p.ro­ gram designed to "share strengths of the C()llegell." The Augustinian Fathers opened. :Biscayne College i~ 1962 and the Dominican SisteJ'S of Adrian, Mich., have conducted. Barry College for almost 'Z7 years. "We're in business t&getber," Sister Dorothy _plainEtll. "A noolution has been passed ill both boards of tIrusteetl tbaS en­ ables us to elilchange students And faculty with as mueh etfil­ eiency and economy all ~bUe..

police said the meetings alse» serve to brief the clergy "on how they might utilize the police ~e­ partment in the event of dis­ turbances." Current Tensions Father Henry Off,~r, S.S..J., dli- . rectot of the Urban Commission, addressed clergy at the first two meetings held in west and north­ east Baltimore. Rabbi Morris Lieberman, bead of the Baltimore Hebrew Con­ gregation, invited Protestant, Catholic and Jewish clergymen tbis week to discuss current ra­ cial tensions and "what can be done in the present situation." "The thought behind the meet­ ing was to see if s contributiolll could be made by churchmen," Rabbi Lieberman said. "We have certain COUJr8eS h\ mind," be said for the nine cler­ gymen who attended, but iosuetll no statement after the milia!' get-together.

Canadian Dioceses Formed for North VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI bas raised the apostolic vicariates of. northern Canada to the rank of diOf~, dividing ­ them into two eeclesiastical provinces. The DeW metropolitan Sees are the archdioceS4~s of Grouard­ McLennan (former apostolic vicariate of Keewatin). Suffragan to the Grouard- Mc­ Lennan See are the dioceses ol! Prince George (formerly Prince Rupert), Mackenzie-Fort Smitb (formerly M & eke n z i e) and Whitehorse. Suffragan to Keewa~~-lLe Pas are the di04:eses of Churchill (iormerly Baie D'Hudson), :M90­ lllODee (formerly Baie de .James) and Labrador·· Scheffemlle (formerly Labrador). Former apostolic vieal'1l be­ come the bishops of an new di­ oceses save Labrador-Scbetfer­ ville. Father Henri Legare, O. M.I., has been named. Ordinary .. that QiOCeBe.

17

[B3@~[ks IF@[f

[]=Q@M~O[]'i)~

fP@©O'

WORCESTER (N C) ~

Bishop Bernard J. Flanagmll

of Worcester has thrown hi8

moral support and the ecOJloo

NEW SEMINARY: Venezuelan leaders attending the recent dedication of a new "adult" seminary included, left to right: ArchbiRhop Luigi Dadaglio, apostolic nuncio to Venezuela, Jose Cardinal Quintero of Caracas, and Dr. Jose Nunez Aristimuno, Minister of Justice. NC Photo.

Xavier Gets Bequest MiUiion-Dolior Residue off W<aJOsh Es-tote

For UnnverrsDty Sch<l»g@(j's!l1ips

CINCINNATI (NC)-An old friend and neighbor of Xavier University who died in 1961 left the $1 million residue of his es­ tate to Xavier. Thomas J. Walsh, who Ulsed to attend St, Xavier church jn downtown Cincinnati when the university was located tbere, died Jan. 17, 1961, at the age of 93 in New York, where he had lived for more than 40 ;years. University officials have just

been informed that he had di­ rected that his estate, after cer­

tain lifetime provisions 10r two nieces, be used at Xavier to es­ tablish a memorial to his de- ' ceased wife, Mary Manning Walsh. Mr. Walsh directed that ..the income from this fund be used for scholarships for worthy stu­ dents to pay' entirely for ~heil1' education." At the time of his deatb, lMIl1'. Walsh was residing at the Mary Manning Walsh Home for the Aged in New York. When Mrs. Walsh died in 1951, she left her . $5 million estate to· the New York archdiocese, which pUl1'­ chased a group of buildings and remodeled them into the home named for Mrs. Walsh. Railroad Worker The Walshes met and marrietll in New York in 1921. Fer SO years tbey li ved at the HObel Gotham and attended daily Mass at St. Patrick's eathe6ral. Among their close friends were Francis Cardinal Spellman, vio­ linist Fritz Kreisler, and other leading figures. Mr. Walsh made frequent vis­ its to Cincinnati, where De was bern on Dec. 3, 1868. He had· worked for the railroads wbich eventually merged t6 form the New York Central system, and it was an executive job with the railroad that took him • :New York in 1920. Xavier officials oaid the be­

Fordham Appoi,nts Grad School Deon NEW YORK (NC)-Dr. Ar­ thur Wayne Brown, former pres­ ident of Adelphi University, Garden City, N. Y., has been ap­ pointed dean of the graduate school of arts and sciences at Fordham University:. Dr. Brown is the first layman tG head the graduate school m. Fordham's 127 years. He replaces Father Joseph F. Mulligan, S ..Jf., dean since September, 196o!1, who bas been named director m studies for the New York Prov­ ina.. of the Society of JesWll.

quest was the largest in the uni­ versity's history, though anoth­ er $1 million ca'me to Xavier re­ cently from the living children of the late Mr. and Mrs. Andrew oJ. McDonald. The Walsh fund is expected to _produce more than $40,000 a year for scholar­ ships.

Parm$hes to Cut Op~rrQt~ng Costs

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - To offset increasing costs in the operation of chUI'ch and school facilities in the New Orleans archdiocese, Archbishop Philip M. Hannan has announced a pro­ gram of economy and increased efforts to raise parish rcvenues. In the past year, operating costs for parishes increased by almost $2 million, the archbishop told priests at a clergy confer­ 'ence. On the parish level, the fol­ lowing measures will be effec­ tive immediately: Only emergency repairs win be snowed; purchases of new equipment, furniture and other such items win be suspended; a temporary moratorium will be in effect on all new construction; DO increases wiU be made in salaries; certain schools that :are unable to meet their expenses will be closed in the fall. Archbishop Hannan has ap­ pointed an advisory committee of diocesan and Religious priests to work on fund-raising efforts with the archdiocesan fund de­ velopment office. The commit­ tee will work on increasing par­ ish revenues through a tithing plan: The archbishop said he be­ lleves economies and curtailment of certain programs in the pall"­ ishes can save $1 million in the current fiscal year. At the arch­ diocesan level, he said, adminis­

trative costs were reduced by

$20,000 in the P~lSt year, and will

be cut another $80,000 this year.

nomic help of the diocese behinell

a new Worcester venture to se­

cure adequate housing for thti

poor and oppressed in the com­

munity.

]n a letter to area priests th]1!J

week, the bishop urged that eacbl

parish buy five shares of the

stock of Micah Corporation anell

that "every family which cal!l

afford it" buy at least one share.

The Micah Corporation is as

organization recently formed il!l

Worcester. Its aim is to pur­ ~hase run-down but basically sound housing units, repair anlll alter them, and rent them to families and persons of low anlll moderate income. Its name UJ taken from the Old Testamenil }'lrophet and also stands for Mas­ sachusetts Individuals Concern~ About Housing.

N eeessall'Y Now According to the corporation,

this approach is being made iill

the area of housing "'because

'something needs to be done now,

but government-financed pro­

grams often taken an overI37

lon~ time to get rolling."

The body' claims "flexibility"

as a reason for its existenCe"

stating that "a private group

working in the open market caE

purchase dwellings of varying

types in many parts of Worces­

ter, rather than build a large

uniform housing project."

After a building has been pur­

chased and rehabilitated, Micah

makes it possible for low te

moderate income families to ap­

ply part of their rent toward the

down payment, if it is a single­

family dwelling, "until such

time as they may qualify for ;)

conventional mortgage, arranget1J

,by Micah. CompBex Problems "In some instances," the cor­

poration said, "additional worl!

9n the dwelling by the family

anticipating occupancy may be

contributed and credited towanll

a down payment."

Micah in Worcester has al­

ready sold some 1,375 shares ~

common voting stock with a $20

par value, for a total of $27,500.

It was incorporated under the

laws of Massachusetts last Dec. 1. Bishop Flanagan purchased il:l

t.he name of the diocese 25 of the

first shares of the private cor­

poration after they were put OIl

the market,

In his letter to the priests the

bishop said: "The housing prob­

lems in our community are com­

plex and varied. Families with

many children find most apart­

ments closed to them; color~

people are barred silently, yet

surely, from many of our neigh­

borhoods. I' a word, segrega­

tien by number of children anell

by color is a fact, not fiction, Un

our midst."

<'

OPEN DAILY FOR THE SEASON AFTERNOON

AND NIGHT

,.....


18

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of

~an

River-Thurs., Aug.

~,

ArmjY Privateu Turned Objector, forrm<.elf Monk at Geth~emani

1967

Lat;n Bo~[k)@p$ Great~y Ne~d :Good ,'S@(lJJ[f~e of Cr~d~~'

WRIGe~TSTOWN

(NC) - A , 25-year-bld Catholic Army pri.. vate, ,w~ was recently ordered to Viet am, has been temporarily l' assigned to Fort Dix, N. J., p ding review of his request f l' discharge as a, conscientioJs objector to war;

From "Social RevolutIon in the New Latin Americal'l> Edited by Johll1l. .IT. Considine, M.M. ' , Regarding future material, as-sistance, notes Oardinal Ricketts of Lima, Peru, perhapS the greatest requirement 'Utat the bishops of Latin America have ~t the moment is a'source of good and inexpensive credit. The governments in Latin America are ob­ sure that what happens in the 'QIaining such credit from Latin America of the future many international financial will depend significantly on the mstitutions, but the Church Church there and here; that is

bas no such credit source. To, build a school for the poor or a new parish in fin,a shim district, M- for any other kind of large ~pital outlaY"a b ish 0 p must pay fifteen or iwenty percent '" biterest to borR-oW the money llocally. One of z'o s t helpful ~'h i n g s the North American Catholics could do, for the <Church in Latin America would i»e to devise a program for rea,80nable credit. The Church is, tiie Mother of the poor and will aiways strive: to meet directly ,'abe needs of the poor, but in Latin America it is of extreme !Importance to aid programs that :will help the people help them'gelves, even though the results might not be seen within this eeneration. This, then, draws to a close Ilhe brief four-point analysis of ftle Church in Latin America today: her progress, her problems, North' American aid and her future needs. During the past .....0 thousand years ,the Church lif, Christ has survived many Cl'ises more violent than that ,which now confronts her in Latin America. But perhaps Dever' beore has there' been so' m.uch at stake. Our 200 million Catholics represent one third, fit, the Catholicism of. the world, end by the year two thousand i4emographers predict that our population will triple. 'This ineans that Latin America's 600' million population could repre.ent fifty percent of the world'.

to, say, it. depends greatly on 'those' whom we represent, an of us alike chosen by our Lord to be his workers in the world of the present. Tide lIs Turning Perinit me to offer' a number of thoughts as to why it seems to me that the tide is turning and will turn more in favor of the preservation and future flowering of Latin American Catholicism. In the first place, a reason can be found in the wonderful changes and new insights that are be~ng experienced throughout the universal Church in - our times; changes and insights which show prom­ ise of being far more than a passing vogue. Certainly these foilowing thought trends are rooted in fundamental Christian philosophy, and· theology. ' Recognition of the unity, 'the equality, the dignity and the nO'bility of the human Christian obligation. Recognition of, cul­ tures other ~han our own, such:, as that ()fLatin America, de­ spite physical handicaps it may suffer through political and ec­ onomic weakness, is appreciated a matter of elementary intel­ ligence. The second Vatican Councll has given great impetus to the kind of thinking and action so sorely needed by those who wish their helping efforts to go ,be­ yond, niere good wishes and gestures. For us who are the bishops' of the Church, our col­ legiality involves' each' of Us at the national level a joint re';' sponsibility with each other 'for ,the proclamation of the mind of Cht:ist on the' ,subject of the regard fol', the; human person and assistance to those in need. ~atholics. ' In, union with the Holy Father, Confident Tomorrow 't~ Apostolic Col~ege as never' ,If, we can continue the adbefore understands how it is re­ .ance that is already underway s'ponsible in a collective way for til Latin America, the Catholic the welfare and growth of the' Church of the future 'Will be 'whole Church .on a world scale, iitrong indeed. And iii. my heart 'in the same way that the indi- ' confident that Church his-' vidual bishop is responsible for I lOt:ians of the twenty first the diocese to which he has been ,":) ~ry, will 'write that,' despite' . ~igned. long yearS of 'already generous, StrOilc' i"arisb,' Skone WOll'Ic1, !living, and despite a multitude" For ~is theory-to becomed-, ~ 'problems at home, the' Nortii fective, in practice, ,each of us" :Americari hierarchy played . ' , who8re bishops must ,recognize' ~cisive'role in the rebirth of' that" our' responsibility is in­ the Church in Latin America,' V()lved in, the direction of those ~Y' will' -praise the imagina- ,members of the -clergy who are Uoo, the,' drive, 'the generosity,.' (HJr co-laborers in the Lord. The, tile capacity for sacrifice and the majQr structur3I entitieS, *.'aternal charity that have'iIi' the world Church are the marked, North American inis- 'j)arish, the diocese and the Holy, '.oners,' men' and women, where- See. Of, these' three the' parish ever they are found in this 'is by far the most important So ' :World: " far' as reaching' and 'teaching Cardinal JUtter the faithful is 'concerned. The In addressing the Catholic ,basic working unit of the Church Inter - American Cooperation is certainly the patish, to which Program, the late Cardinal Rit- often in the United States the tel' said: There are some who' parochial school is attached. It ean see Latin, America reject- is the local community of fam­ ing entirely her Christian past Hies from which will come the to embrace new structures, perhomeland heralds of the Gospel, haps communistic in form, or Ghristian leadership in public perhaps godless and amoral in affairs, as well as the vocations Iiome other way. However, it for the foreign mission fields. as my judgment that this wiU not In order for our people to be the final eventuality, for rise up as a body and labor there are already many signs for the world apostolate, they that the tide is really turning must be informed on the world in favor of Christ and the 'apostolate and inspired to par­ Church, which is to say that ticipate in it. This idealogical the tide is really turning' in 'formation cannot take place for favor of Latin Amer~ca's peoples. the mass of our Catholic people Further, ,we can be absolute1¥. at ~e ~atiollal or regional level;

am

Cardinal Stresses Role of Lo'ymelJl' "MONTREAL (NC) i'aul Emile Cardinal Leger of Mon­ trElal said here that the presence of, the Church is assured by c<;>mmitted laymen who, by their attitudes and acts; uphold its -social doctrine. Cardinal Leger" guest speaker at a banquet of La Corporation des'Instituteurs Catholiques de Montreal - an' association of Catholic teachers - said the Church still has a role to play in publi'c affairs, .but this role must be played more by laymen. The cardinal insisted that the 'Church must ever remain up to date, and not stick to concepts that are 25, or even 10 years out of date.

'NOMINATED: President Johnson has sent to the Sen­ ate the nomination of Msgr. (Brig. Gen.) Francis L. Sampson, ·famous asa para­ troop chaplain in World War II, to be Chief of Army Chaplains with promotion to Major General. NC Photo.

as

cen-

three'

~

his official request for discharge, ''1 came to realize what I had believed. and tried to practice since I was a monk at Gethse­ mani actually prevented me from taking part in war. I found that I could not accept war as III means to any end. . . '. " "Though I believe the limfted useo{ force is sometimes neces­ sary, and permitted, I personally would not engage in the use of force because I believe my per­ sonal vocation is not one of viC)­ lence but of love and healing." Although there are legal prC)­ visions. for discharge of indi­ viduals who be~ome conscien­ tious objectors after induction into military service. Army au­ thorities are said to have denied virtually all such applications in the past 13 months. 'Gagrier ies a graduate Of St. John's University, Collegeville" Minn.

.DEBROSS OIL

.. , co. '.

ra'ther~ it ,has to take place at, the n~ighborhood or parish ley~, el, and ~ven indeed in great part a.t the family level. This is why' asa bishop I must see that' the message through" our pastors' reaches this level. People' must ' be trained from childhood kl understand that devotion to the world apostolate, dedication to genuine respect and concern for all men regardless of their race, color or creed is a foundati()Jll stone of all Christian life. It seems to me today that III bishop must constantly remind hims~lf that simple appeals w individuals will not secure re­ sults. There must exist a form~ lated directing force, education­ al in nature, clearly accepting its mission in and from' the Church, fired with zeal for this mission, working through prop­ er authoritY', possessed of a care­ fully designed program, reaching down to the local comrlll.Ulity level, the parish.

.

',HeQ'ti~g Oi'~" and, Burners 3~ NORT"

'-tONY STREE1' NEW BEDFORD . 992-5534

at

,NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET , , ,fO-OPERATIVE, BANK 1'15 WDU8AM ST.

NEW BEDFORO; MASS.


THE ANCHOIt-

Attleboro Catholic Young .Adults Plan Emphasis on Vatican II

Growth m God and Progreoo ill the . apostolate have remained the eo.nBtan.t mark of the Attiebon> Aretl CathoUe Young Adult Organization since Its formation in J'une, 1962. Under direction of & newly appointed officers, the youn.€ adult council is DOW forming pl8JlS for • year totally Ii e d I c a te ell tID furthering the teaehin.gs of Vatican. Council mr. With the continued ideal for 1D1ity and charity Ie Christ, the £roup bas chosen to direct i'W program under the theme: "Love Is An Unending Search and .A Constant Finding." Serving lIS officers 'under' this year's theme llre; 'president-Eugene Lallier, st.' Joseph's parish, Attleboro; vice-president-Susan Fontaine, St;· 'Joseph; Attleboro; secretary -'-Carol'McGee, St. Mary, North AttIebo:ro; treasurer Frank Speeckeart, St. Mary, Seekonk. Layman's Prol'rBm In 11 recent address to the members, the council's presi­ dent quoted ~ Documents of Vatican C~lUncil n, Section GD the Laity: "The layman's relig­ ious program of life should take Us ,special quality from hbl etatwl all • • ... one who is un­ married • •.• He should not cease to develop earnestly the qualities 'and· talents bestowed on him in accord with these con­ ditions' cd· life, and be should make use' of the gifts which be haS received from the Holy Spir­ it." ." Mr. Lallier then insisted: "This preceding quote means us. We bave' progressed in the past few years to a poiDt where we can and will do mmy great things together for the development of true Christian spirit in society.

I· am. quite confident and sin­

cere in saying this because of the past actions of the C.Y.A.O." The program committee under the leadership of Marie Guertin of Sacred Hearl Church in North AttIebol"O, will give serious con­ sideration to these thoughts in formulating. the program of ac­ tivities of;the 1987-1968 season. The lim special activity of the year will" be'. troup retreat 0

Oiders:.' ·Association T,,"'Admit School ·~~w

·.ORu:Aifs

(NC) -

A

ff:d~ral. district judge. has ruled ~tlt all-Negro St.. Augustine ~ool here be admitted·, to

11mb

membe.l:'ship in. the Louisiana High School Athletic Associa­

~Wl." ...

Judge Frederick I. R. Heebe . enjoiped· the associatiOD ~D\ . ,refusing. membership .to IIDY, .bigh· schQOI in the· state; whether atten.ded by only Negro or only white students, which ateetilall 'bf the" ·other·· reqUire:­ ments. ~ntain~d in itli constitu-'

tion. . . . " .:

': st. Augustin.e,· dedicated tm:

1951 as the first Catholic high: tchool. in ,New Orleaus for Negro:,

bOyS;' hl :cOnducted bY': the' Jo'-. ~phite Fathers.. it has won nu­ merouS . tcholastie and" athletic il.ooors.

"

"

",'

..

Catholic' . Deaf' Share Episcopal Facilities' ,IJALTIMORE (NO)-A center for some 600 Catholic deaf per­ lIOns has opened here in parish facilities owned by the Episco­ pal Di~ of Maryland, b~ ehared by the· Catholic Arc~ diocetle of Baltimore. ' Lawrence Cardinal Shehan presided :;rt the Mass markirig the opening of the St. Francis de Sales Center for the Catholic Deaf of All' Saints Episcopal Cilurch. The, Mass, said in sign language by Fatber William Hiskey, ebaplain for the deaf 8inee 1960, was tbefirst offereCl hi &he lftpiscopal ehurch.

which m the past two years bas contributed in. establishing prop­ er ideals and the needed spirit to enrry the spiritual goals of the group to successful heights. Serious consideration will also be given to broadening the hor­ hons of apostolic action. The first Fall business meet­ ing of the Attleboro Area C.Y.A. O. will be held at 7:30 Wednes­ day night, September 6, in Sa­

ered Heart Hall, North Attie­ boro.

NewU~.S~Delegate

Sends Greetings MEXICO CITY (NC) -The new Apostolic·' Delegate to the United States has sent his "warmest greetings" and "pray­ erful good wishes to the hier­ archy md the members of the Church in the U.s .... · . "In all humility," state4 Arch­ bishop Luigi Rai11J.ondi, "I have received the . appointment 118 Apostolic Delegate to the .united states of ~erica, fully aware of its significance and of itt! overwhelming burden for me. "! am deeply grateful to the Holy Father foli' the undeserved eonfidence' placed iF.Il me. "Knowing the respcinsibilities facing mY' task, I am confident of the help 'from' God, through the prayers of 'my greatly es­ teemed brothers iii the episco­ pate; of the ~a~ous clergy anG Religious, as well as the exem­ plary faithful 'of the U. S. "My' only' desire is to be at the service of them all, for whom I feel great affection BnG highest esteem."

Conn. Cou'ple Sees;

'Dream Come True o DANIELSON (NC) - Father Etienne .Guiste, 36, a Negro, has been ordained to the priesthood on his native j.sland of' Dominica, British West indies-due partly to the assistance and encourage­ ment of a Connecticut. Catholie couple. . " . 'Mr: and Mrs. Paul Bouthillier ­ of Danhilsoli;' the .young man's eponsoI's . siriCe' shOrtly after his enrolment· at·· Holy Apostles Seminary, Cromwell, Mass., ac-' companied him to the island for the ordination. The couple,

benefactors' to variouS charities,

aided W seinina'ry in' its earlier

years." " .

Father Guiste' wa's ord8in'ed at Grmd Bay': ~y' .Bishop Arnold Boghaert of"Roseau, Dominica. The new priest decided to work in' his homeland beCause of the area's general' poverty anell' the lack of priests to 'minister to the needs of itS people. ..,.... \.,.

. M·ISSO";i,. t'u'f~herans ' A$k flas.t!Qr. Date

"

,NEW YORK, (NC)"-The Lu"" tberan..· Cburch-Missouri Synodr the., nation.'s ..second-Iargest and m 0 s t eonservative Lutheran body, marked the halfway point in the 47th convention by join.:. Ing. the. growing ranks of Chris­ tiamt· calling.· for worldwide agreement on,a fixed ·date for Easter. But, with the exception cd ~ .resolution calling for the use of newer techniques for teaching inner-~ty children, the Synod's 850 ,delegates bad so far failed to come to grips with proposals relating to other social issues. A resolution on. the Vietnam . war had not yet reached the floor. ~,mother,'condemning prejudice and acknowledging . the Synod~s. "fai.ure to be sensi­ tive to the attitudes of membel'1l toward people of other religions, . races and ethnic gtoups," Wafl iemPorarily tabled.

I

Th'1fs., Aug. 3, 1967

19

Lnttle Interest In Celibacy pon WASHINGTON (NC) -Onl1 23.5 per cent of priests contactetl replied to the National Associa... tion for Pastoral Renewal's lat­ est celibacy poll. Slightly more thall 5f) per cent of these said they favored a ehange in the Church's current discipline.

The poll was conducted in the Bl'ebdiocese of Baltimore, Phila­ delphia and Washington,.. D. Co;> and the diocese of Wilmingt<m. The National Association "for Pastoral Renewal (NAPR) is"an organization of priests who' have' been' campaigning since last t:m' for a change in the 'Catholic Church's tradition which pro:­ hibits Latin-rite priests from maryYing. It has conducted sur­ veys to determine if tben!' 'is widespread clerical sentiment LAY ADMINISTRATOR: Bishop Walter W. Curtis of fer ehange. Bridgeport greets Bernard D. Helfrich, the first layman In May, NAPR polled priesbl .., ever to hold the position of assistant diocesan l!Chool SUpeF- of 1f) dioceses in. Connecticut, New .Jersey and New York. intendent.· NC Photo. .. Priests were asked three ques­ tkms: DG you favor a change ~ ',', . optieaal celibacy for the dioce­ sail clergy? Do you favor a' re­ Quest to the synod of bish~ps, in September in Rome World Jcn"bQr.ee o opening by the National Conference' of Catholk Bishops to intro'duce: i.lIl~nited StGte~.,. et>tiEmal celibacy in. the United­

FARRAGUT STATE, PARK materialistic aims and puJ.i}Oses. States? Do you favor the ~

seeing' in persons and happen'-' admission tb active ministrY.f,)f (NC)-Pope Pa~ yIsent greet­ ings the· admirable ways of'Di­ ings to. the 12th ll11111ual, eight­ th68e married priests who wish day world Jamboree of Boy vine Providence ,md the· 'work­ to l'eturn to priestly work? ". . . Seouts which opens today' here ing' wt, 'of God's will." Some 63 percent of the prie~Ul' l I". He 'added: did not reply. Better than 5£J in Idaho. "Froin true friendship' the per cent of those who did 'said Some' 13,000 scouts and their Catholic scout naturally and they favored II ehange in the leaders from all parts of the niles. world are attending the meeting simply turns to prayer." . The Pope expressed' confi­ which is being held this year for the first time in the United dence that "the youthful gen­ erosity of the Boy Scouts· at­ HGlI1lors states. tending the 12th International Bishop SylvesterW. Treinen. Jamooree, and of all the 'scouts of Boise conveyed the Pope's m flhe world, will find the wayll BOSTON (NC) - The youtkl message to the Scouts. The Pon­ and means of fostering friend'­ eouncil of the Milwaukee bran.chl tiff ealled the meeting a "mar­ snip .among all peoples,' 'and 01 of the National Association ~pr velous manifestation of· brother­ helpiDg all to the full develoP­ hood, inspired by love o1l all meRt 1 of . their' hliman 'digriily ~ Advalwement of ColQxed' Peeple, an,d.. its advisor, ,FiltheJ;.. men." and personality." James Groppi" were award.~. Pope Paul told the Scouts that the national NAACP'!! 'y.QutJn friendship, the theme of··the award. They W~re Holici~y~",': a£hievem~nt. jamboree, "is born 'of' respect, Ilelecte<i from. among 550, sut:l1l . esteem, the recognition of the ~ff,ect::': ~upci~s ,throughout the nation.' virtues and' good qualities Of Tlle ~sq~l Long Strick;lJID~. others. It is made strong by 1\ WASHINGTON (NC)":""Feiiet­ ~~ard was. ;lceeP~ed at a dinner, spiritual visiono~ lH.e; rejectmg ali guidelines Were .put· int~ 'e'f­ here by ,tbe .secretary ot"tbe.. feet- 'here" to foree' an"empl()yfn' lIIilwal!kee wUJ;lcil, substitutinr;, to 'Bonor reiigio,us holidays' 'of' for Father Groppi who w.~. in his, workers unle.sS he tan' )jt"4>~' eeurt. (The. priest was found iteauses undue hardship' Gil multy pi obs~cting a polieE

p'ay' business. ' of:f.ieer but acquitted on a chargll·

ALBANY (NC) ~ The" ciiniil(/ . ·The·SleW guidelines were"an"­ ef J'esistin( arrest.) .' hall at the Shrine oJf:Our Lady nounced'by the Equal Em'ploY'­ The. aW<lrd is named . f~ Of Martyrs, AuriesVille, N. y~, ill ment € > PportunitT 'CommisSion, NAACP work~ who diE\d. ill not . tax exempt;' Montgomery whieh .had' first proposed 'theiii 1006.. County Judg~ WilliSlmi.·J'. CraDo' early":in' May. Under the'''new

glehas ruled. .. .,. . 'I standard, the eniployer hag t~

" uh-due The epinion has been ..given burden of proving that " , in 2 review of tax assessnients hardship ,. prevents "him . 'froU! iotaling $430,00() levied by the . making' a reasonable ~con'iiDo­

. . ' .•1 · · · · .• " Town' of Glen ontbe 'dinirilr haD, datioil' to·the needs 'of employeS. Tbe'~ommissiOn said tbl.S'\Vas-'iJi guest house facilIties and' lanq , Co.,hit~' used and associated with them: line with'a' provision of fue:Ci'ilill' ,'. t.,· ' • .::.. Rights· 'Act· of 1964."':" . ":,,," for parking. . ,The ' '~'ew guideline!:! al'~:' 'fbi.:. , The ·Jesuit· Fathenl who'·eo&' STREet'. duct the shrine dedicated' to t~ .pected' to affect mostly OrthOd'ett .Jews; ,. whose ' Sabbath "be'glliii "$OM~RSET ~ North ArRerican"Marlyrs'bad' .. ".' , argUed that· the ·four..:year". old' Friday'" at' sundoWn" and" ~ndj . properties should be taX' exempt saturday at sundown. Tbe)""a1~ obsel'Ve '.special religiouS' hf)~ as property used' fOr religi0wJ aays'during the year arid missionary work: t, • TELEPHONE 675-7992 woFk'~ forbidden. . Oi . .Judge. Crangle 'held \l;Iat ';non:­

religious facilities at thfi! shrine

are a convenience ~tlt not.a nec­

essity" for pilgri.ms. atten~UDfl

the religious 'services and activi-

Year Booles' Color Process ties. .

Boy Scouts

'ope Paul Hails Annual Ddaho Conclave First

Milwaukee. Council

Youth

Relig'ious Gu,ill'elines in·

Shrine Dining ,Hall ' Must Taxes '

..

an

t

"

•• "

GERALD L· McNALLY'. ,.Cc)liSf'u(tion '

.454 MAiN

~::

0

MASS•..,:',

on:' wiildi

••

..

~.

,j

",1

Street Mission SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The

voices of a bishqp .and two

priests rang. through an a11­

Negro neighborhood. here. during

a five-night missiQn qesigned to

help tht: Church reach the heart

of the inner city.. Auxiliary.

Bishop Steven A. Leven Qf San

Antonio conducted a stree~ mis­

sion set up through t~e joint

dforts of parish~s in the .area. '

Brochures

Booklets'

American" Press, Inc. OFF SET -

PRINTERS

1-17 COFFIN AVENUE New .Bedford, Moss.

LETTERPRESS Phone 997·9~21

-


20

Catholic Schoo~1

~n Bus Program

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 3, 1967

IPre~(I]fr®

Asselrts

BOSTON (NC)-=-The Rom3I.iJ Catholic archdiocese of Boston has announced that it will joia a program of busing Negro stu­ dents to 'suburban schools. Father Paul P. Rynne: execu­ tive director of the Archdiocesam Commission on Human RightS, said Negro parochial school stu­ dents would ride on buses ~ndl in private cars with students im the privately run Metco progra[ll!l for public school students. The commission's program will 'be called Catholic Metco. "The commission seized thin program as a way in which the Church can be of service to botbl the inner city and suburban communities simultaneously," said Father Rynne. Many inner city parents want their children to be educated outside of the ghettos, he explained. Father Rynne said the arch­ diocese will make 300 seats im some 60 suburban, elementary and high schools available thifl fall to Negro students on a tui­ tion free basis.

C~fr&:il@~D~ ~<elhooh;

IN ®®cdl

~®~@~ms

CINCINNATI (NC) - A widely known priest-educa­ tor asserted here that Oatho­ Dic schools are more nec­

....

essary than ever but their ad­ ministration needs radical re­ fOI'm. Msgr, C. O'Neil D'Amour, lhead of the Marquette, Mich., diocesan school system, a fea­ tured speaker at Xavier Uni­ versity's 15th conference on business problems of Catholic institutions, discussed the future of Catholic education. Msgr. D'Amour, a former of­ ficial of the National Catholic ~ducational Association, warned against "phasing out the Cath­ Cl)lic school system." Present . conditions, he, said, demand Catholic schooling even more than those of the 19th cen­ tuQ' in which the system was established. "Catholic ed'ucation as devel­ Cl)ped in the United States pro­ vides a viable and 'dynamic pat­ ROSELLE (NC)-An exchange for the Church universal as internship ,of principals, vice­ ahe confronts the, world," 'he principals and other administra­ aaid. ':, , tors' of schools conducted by tlie 'Failure iB. Leadership' Christia,nBJ,'others and Marist Catechetica"t progl:ams are no Brothers ,was' suggested at ta ilubstitutes for Catholic schools, here in New Jersey. STUDYING PLANS AT NEW CHURCH SI.TE: Jeremiah L. Oallahan,. Rev. James' meeting, tie declared. Shortage of funds , -;rhe' suggestion was made by, fB not' the major problem, he, F .. Kenney, pastor of ASSUml)i;ion Parisli, Osterville; Robert Sims, architect . Frank Shea, Chri§ltian Brother Anthony Wal­ lidded'. " Richard Gannon, and ,Rev. Ronald A.T.9sti, assistant at ,the Os erviile Church, stud;, lace, associate 'secretary of the " "If' generations 'of poverty­ ,the ,plant; .at' the site of the new mission' chapel :t:or Catholics in Pop onessett area on pape. '. secondary schools department oll IJtricken" immigrants could build the Natiomil. Catholic Educa­ IIIld maintain the Catholic school tional Association. gystem from out of their poverty, Brother Wallace gave th~ key­ 'can it be ',that comparatively af­ note address at a five-day "ad­ fluent Catholics of today cannot ministrators, swapshop" held at <lio more out of their affluence?" Roselle Catholic High School Continued from Page One rent The'versatilthe g contractor, with he asked. The chapel be built on a . ity, and compal"aNew Erecting Company under the sponsorship of schooll ~'Ourpresent crisis rises from supel'visors of the two religious a failure in leadership. It rises concrete slab wlth a fc:mr-foot tively low costs of pre-fabri- of Coch~tuate, New England rep:.. communities. Administrators oil brick dado along the ,side walls, cated steel' construction has· resenta 'ves of Butler Steel Cor­ from a defeatism on the part. of schools staffed by the two com­ Readers who 'would abimdon the and red brick elaboration.s at the opened interesting opportunities poratio, providing the steel munities in five states attended. front corners of the buildmg will for many needed parish facilierection. ' atruggle even before the forces Brother Wallace cited the nec~ ' , consttuction is under the su­ bave been marshaled and the add a decorative effect. The ties. esssity of in-service education in bone-white color of walls ,and Robert Sims of Osterville, a pervisio of Rev. James. F. battle truly joined," the mon­ roof will ~e accented by blue in member of the pastoral council Kenney, administrator of Our his ,talk and then suggested the aignor said. internship as one possible way It is the task of leaders not the monollte panels. The chapel of Our Lady of the Assumption -Lady of the' Assumption Parish, of filling the need. ' ()nly to demonstrate the need will be topped by a. slim spire PaI'ish, a pr~minent business Ostervil e, and his assistant, Rev. and cross. ' . man and architect" has been' re- Ronald I' Tosti. Rev. Mr. George ~at exists but also to "create Fund Dl'Ive Started sponsible for the design of the Harriso~, a deacon, assigned to the structures for fulfilling the . Provision for future, expan- building. Karniala Construction the pari~h is also taking an ac­ llleed," he said. ' "I believe that a most urgent slOn has been made in the cur- Company of West Yarmouth U? tive part in this' major project WASHINGTON (NC)-Secre­ of the pr~is~. " task confronting Catholic lead­ . tary of State Dean Rusk and <l!l"ship today is that of reform­ · The bUlldmg fund,drive is in its initiai stages, having realized Patric)c Cardinal O'Boyle of!. O ing radically the policy-making , $15,~OQ ~f its preliminarygo~ Washington will be cited Satul!'­ lind ,administrative structures so day, Aug. 5 at the 32nd annual Co~tin'ued"from Page One In a section devoted to under- ,of $:10,000. Members of the pas­ lIS to make them' conform to the structural graduate education, the state- toral cOlfncil have been ,vitally convention of the Catholic War realities of the times and of the !!Uies, will ,: need Catholic people in' these times," changes to, 'Yiden support and ,ment urged presentation ofa ,concernefl in assessing the 'need , Veterans 'here. ' Highlighting the conventiOlll s!lare the responsibility ,of direc- collegi,ate education that: is' ..and, dev~oping the' plans for the

'Msgr. D'Amo~r continued. . tion. '~'truly geared to modern so- , new facility. ' wiUl be the' dedicatjon of 'tbe , Reflect 'People group's new national headquatr­ Archbishop Paul Hallinan ',of' ,ciety." It stressed that this means, . The old 'structure' is' that of 'ters., " ' ,,! ' , y"0' 't" "'the Catholic! :ghetto;" he said, ,Atlanta: ,and Auxiliary Bishop that the intellectual campus has . " ' I , " ..... . , Auxiliary .Bishop Edward JI. ,with its community ','clustered John J. Dougherty of, Newark, no bou!,\,daries and barriers, with Conti~~~d from Page One Herrman of· Washington wii! ,about the church it!. an, attitude 'president of: S~ton Hall Univer- ,"no, outlawed; books, or ,subjects.',' bless, the building.', ' ,sity and chairman of ,the U. _S. Integrated' with the intellec-' C0l1ll0ll;,I was' ,~o~' ,Oct. M self-defense." , "Now, swiftly changing times Bishops' Coni.mittee for Catholic "tual life of thl'!'; updergraduate 1929; in rorwood.' " ' " Following graduation from' have made 'both 'structure and Higher Education, signed the should ,be a community which &turpose anachronistic," he .statement. Other signers' in- places the student,jin a social Walpole High, Scho\>l; heattert­ Mad:knoll . Seminary, New' added. A more" mature Catholic' chided presidents and' ranking 'situation in Which he can ex- ded' officials of the Catholic Univer- :press ,his Christianity in a va- Y9 rk , anl stu~ied theology at <l'Ommunity' '''rightfully is de­ manding that the -.:!tructure of sity of America, St. Louis Uni-' 'riety of ways and live it experi- St. Mary' Seminary" Baltimore; Followi g ordination, Father the schools accommodate itself versity, Georgetown University, entially, and experimentally." the University of Notre Dame, ,This would entail a concern with Connolly was assigned to the 00 as to continue to reflect the CITIES SERVICIE

Fordham University, Laval Uni,- ultimate questions, stress on in- Immacula e Conception parish, people," he said. DISTRIBUTORS

"No longer can we the cler.gy versity, Boston College and the terpersonal relationships within Fall Rive , where he served as 'the community, and an emphasis a? assi~taint for 11 years until Glnd the Religious think of these University of Sherbrooke. Geared to Society on pressing social problems of hiS assignment to the Hyannis IlChools as 'our schools.' Not even our era, the paper said. parish in Feb. this year. the Catholic community can Both autonomy and academic Rev. B~ard R. Kelly, assist­ consider them to be its schools. freed,om are vital to the survival _ The signers noted that their' 'ant at St James Church, New

The schoot must remain the of Catholic universities Seminar statement is not,meant as a com- Bedford, as been assigned to

agency of t,he entire community participants agree. Theological plete description of the Catholic St. Franci Xavier Church, Hy­ O~LS that is, of the family, the explorati<)l1 of all human rela- university an<~ that it represents annis, as assistant. '

OIL BURNERS

ChUI'ch and the state," the mon­ tions and the elaboration of a only their thinking' as indi viThis appointment is effective

aignor said. Chl'istian anthrop\>logy were duals, not as :I:epresentatives of Wednesday, Aug. 9.

!For Prompt Delivery

called "particularly important." their institutions or the Inter& Day & Night Service

I Every university serves as national Federation of Catholic "the critical intelligence of its Universities'. ASHEVILLE (NC)-Amateur G. E. BOILER BURNER UlNlns ndio operators have been' in­ society," the paper said and :' ''Zh~ forward also endorsed, DNE STOP vited to attend the fifth, annual urged Catholic universities to "the presence, of and active par­ lIural ,Bottled Gas Sen_ SHO\PPING ceNTER . <l'Onvention of the International fulfill this role for the ChUl·ch. ticipation by persons who are Mission Radio Association, Although the Catholic university not Catholics" on the Catholic 61 COHANNET S1J'. • Television • Grocell'if lICheduled here Aug. 6 to 8. The of the recent past has not played university campus" and noted' • Applibnces • Furnitull'8 TAUNTON

association aims to promote in­ this part, "it may well be one of that the statement does not Attleboro - No- AttlelbCllN

ternational goodwill, especially the most important functions of cover the nature and role of the 104 AII~~ St., New Bedford by providing service to people the Catholic university of the smaller Catholic universities and Taunton

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