"
lR.eacf'on'to
.The ANCHOR
.faU River, Mass. n Thursday, AugMst 8u 1~68 PRICE 10c V@t 1211 Noo 312 © ] 968 The An~hor $4.00 per ~ar 1[
Humanae Vitae
.bmC3fC~ ica
I,-StudyI
Prayer and Courage WASHINGTON (NC)-The Issuance of the encyclical letter of Pope Paul VI, H~ manae Vitae, elicited widespread and virtual~y immediate reaction from aU over th€Bl world. Predictably, the response to date has been both laudatory and critical-the formell1g stemming for the most pa-r.t from individual members of the Church hiera-rchy in variouS) countries, as well as nation. al or regional conferences of educators and various other pro a ument and its ramifications ~ fessional people. contemporary life. During tll bishops, and the latter, large~ Within the week after, the general audience (..July 31) at hfa Iy from theologians and encyclical was issued, Pope Paul summer residence at Castelga~ priest g-roups, lay associationS, twice discoursed at some length <loUe ,the Pope made mention ~ on problems relating 'to the doca Turn to Page Sixteen '
Aug. 23 ~~5
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G[?C~P
from Dioce~e 'Prepare for' Convention
State Solon Upset Ab,out' Future
A large contip.gent from the Fall River Diccesew:ill
be 'among those attending the upcoming Congress of Religious Education in Bridgeport, Conn., on August 23-25. No less .than four theologians are among the speakeJ1'S' '/Jcheduled to take part in the meeting. They include the Bridgeport Diocesan CCD direc and Congress co-ordinator, Rev. Gregory Baum, O.S.A., tor said the program offers an op professor at St. Michael's portunity to all "to discover the University of Toronto, Canada; Church as it moves and acts in the Rev. John Corrigan, writer OUI' time." and teacher; Brother Luke Salm, ' "Top speakers, alive topics, F.S.C., professor at Manhattan and up-to-date approaches College; and the Most Rev. promise to give participants an oJ'ames Shannon; auxili;lry bish unforgettable experience - all op of St. Paul, Minnesota. Catholics and interested Chris-, Father Baum, especially known tians are invited, to search and :Enr his definite stands on the discover at this outstanding pressing issues in the Church event," Father Grieco added. today, will give the keynote ad- , Questions asked about the cri dl'ess entitled "The World in Our Hands," which is also the sis of today's faith, conscience, freedom and authority, teen theme of the Congress. agers and parents, the new ap Rev. John Corrigan, a mem ber of the National Liturgical proach to morality, sex, social Conference, talks about Penance questions, liturgy, films and I1\nd the latest developments on more than 25 other pressing is sues will be discussed in "open" the sacrament. session durin'g seminars moder Brother Salm, the first Chris tian Brother to receive a degree ated by priests, sisters and top religious and lay persons: ~n theology, speaks on the rest Among speakers during the l<essness of Christians. The Congress, an annual event session will be Richard Cardinal sponsored by the Confraternity Cushing of Boston; Rev. John McCall, S.J. of Weston College; of Christian Doctrine, is eon Gkiered to be a major Religious Christiane Brusselmans, of Ford meeting for the entire eastern ham University; and .Philip Scharper, of Sheed and Ward, half of the nation. Other nationally prominent Inc. Also Rev. Anthony Schillaci, kadel's who will speak on key O.P. of Fordham Vniversity; religious topics,of today are ex .pected to be heard by more than Thomas Klise, a television pro 5,000 participants at the three ·ducer, writer and narrator; 'Se day session to be conducted at oestian' Temple;. a folk singer ~e Univer~ity of Bridgeport 'from Los Angeles, Calif:;' Rev. . Anthony Padovano;'theologian ~ampus. Turn to Page, Sixteen Rev. Nicholas V. Grieco,
esc,
BATON ROUGE (NC)-Loui'siana State RepresentaUllJQ Richard GQidry predicted here that Oatholic schools in New Orleans archdiocese will close after the coming yea~ unless they gain public aid. "It ha-s never been made publi~ but I know it to be J:L fact,\'ll . said Guidry who led 'bhe una ~uidry said Govo John :wr~ ~ ht . h Kelthen "asked me to not t@ successful fIg , to gal'll suc push him to include it" beca~
aid in the recently concluded .
Turn to Page SIxteen
session of the legislature. An archdiocesan spokesman 'Would neither confirm nor deny ~." rlI;o\fI\R<~~ Guidry's statement, but ac~ II bl tJ~t;SlI,rtl.P lFA'JrlfnJElll CONNORS, S.JJ. knowledged that "things are a little tighter" than most people ~®D1lG&~ i::~e~ti@tm suspect. "Obviously there is a very J]®~Q1loli' SOl y f)@[f'~ definite need for aid," said The second phase' of thai Father Lanaux J. Rareshide, as~ O[fi) ~@~o®li')f ,~O~O1l~ sistant New Orleans archdi election for the new Senaw ocesan chancellor and public in of Priests of the Diocese thoo J]Q1l[boO®® M@~~ f{)rmation officer. will oonvene in October hoo Guidry said archdiocesan Rev. J. Bryan Connors, S.J., taken place wi-th 12 Senatom a profe")sor at Holy Cross schools will remain open during elected at-large. the coming academic year be College, Worcester, for 32 This new group wlll ser\f0 cause "they have contracts with years, will be principal cele with the 12 recently elected ac teachers." brant at a Concelebrated Mass of He said the decision to close cording to groupings by ordin~ Thanksgiving at 12 noon Sat down the entire parochial school tion. urday in St. Patrick's Church, system in New Orleans was not Elected in this second and lad Fall River, to observe the' Gold made public "because' the phase are the following: en JubiI~e of his membership Church did not want to black Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, Rt. in the Society of Jesus. Rev. Henri A. Hamel, Rev. Don mail the legislature." Born in Fall River, Father is ald E. Belanger, Rev. James l!"". Supporters of state aid to non , the son o~ the late Bryan Con public schools have claimed that Kenney, Rev. James A. McCa.'!l5l nors and the late Mrs. Mary the public schools would be un thy, Rev. Francis M. Coady. Mal v e y Connors. Following able to handle the masses of stu Also Rev. Edward A. Oliveiraf& gr~duation from B.M,C. Durfee Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill, Re~ dents forced 'out of private sys High School he attended Holy tems by closure. Bento Fra.ga, Rev. John J. Smit~ Cross and contin!1ed his classi Proponents of state aid had Rev. Peter N. Graziano and Re~ .cal studiC!> itt Poughkeepsie, hoped to have it included in a Peter'F. Mullen: ,N.Y. He studied philosophy at special session of the legislature The new Senate will meet fOli' Weston College, ).\'lass., and planned this Fall to consider the first time on the secon~ Turn to Page Sixteen -raising taxes. Friday of October.
STONEHILL VISITORS: Mr. Donald Grimes, seminwrian and Stonehill College student, explains the sacred vessels during the sessions @f the ~hool of Christian Mission of the Uni,ted Methodist .Church to Miss
too
C@mpIT<ete
Wofflrn l2 N@mru®d
Esther Moore, Eastham; Mrs. Ann Mack, Bass River; Mrs. Edwin Trench, Jr., Harwich; Mrs. David Bennett, Bourne; and Dr. Ruth Baker, Wellfleet. The group toured the entire Holy Cross Seminary.
THI; ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs'., Aug. 8, 't'9G1J ,
r' \.
Bciftimore Grants To Organizations
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,', 'Objects .t~ Likening Encyclical To Condemnation of Galilee .
Total $8~,OOO BALTIMORE (NC)-Nine neighborhood community ()110. g-anizatioI)s here have beeJll awarded g ran t s totalling
VATICi\N CITY (~C) -The Vatican City daily, L'Osservatore Romano, has objected to likening Pope Pau( VI's ban' on artificial birth control to the Church's condemmitiori of Gali-
man and "the nature ,of man remains the same." L'Osservatore Romano con tinued:'~It is, therefore, irrele v.ant, from the moral, point of view, that illustrious medical' leo. and pharmaceutical scoolars _With ,obvious, reference' to ·should have· found. a way. -Qf
Father Hans Kueng, the contro- arresting temporarily certain
Yersial Swiss-born -theologian vital functions. . DOW teaching at the University -There is another poi~t, It is ()f Tuebingen, Germany, the edi- a. question of knowing whether. torial hi L'OsservatOre Romano' it is Iawful for: the' free .:and . (. ,.; ,t~o~, exception.:: to:;refeJ,",ri,ng to responsible man to'avail himself " . ~e" present' .ban 36' Qeing ."an- of these means,' irrespective of ,_, " ~~~r q~~ileo case.'" " , . whether they are. harmful or npt, :~ :','. Q;'Father Kueng has been, quoted merely in order ·to be irresPQn ,:. /. ", ~n news stories, as having made ,sible. ' ",., 'the analogy:, The editorial, did :, "TiieP~e say~ no:' 'Th;t pre" not use Father Kueng'so name, '. sumed ,majo.ritie.s, 1.·n t,he, 'laY or, ',c,' . but 'referred to the remarks of.' non-Catholic world are in favor, a German theologian., we can' understllnd . . . ' but that The editorial objected that, theologians should advance sim Ilmlike the Galileo case, in which ilar arguments seems serious, • there was a debate about since the danger' is that they whether the sun moved or not, may favor the alienation on the the ban on artificial birth con- part of man from his own dig ,*,,01 is based on the nature of nity."
$82,000 .by the Baltimore arch diocese through the archdioces3D urban commission's Organiza.. ,tion Resource Bank. The grants, which range from $3,500 to $13,000, went to. gras& roots citizens' groups engaged In various se1f-h~lp programs. The . recipients are ndn"-pr'!fit organi zations incorporated under Maryland law. Urban commission chairman Charles G. Tildon said one sig nificant purpose of the Organi zation Bank-set up last April ,is "to demonstrate that if the ; resources are proVided, the poor caQ. develop organizations which will a'ssist in alleviatin.g some of NURSING SCHOOL GRADUA'i'ES: Doris Ferreira of, the conditions which create and Fall River and Diane Le Blanc of No. Dartmouth receive' maintain poverty." "he community groups are their diplomas from Bishop Conno,lly at .commencement engaged in such efforts as secur exercises of St. Anne's Hospital School of· Nursing held in ing and maintaining better housing for low income families; St. Anne's Church. obtaining improved sanitation, education and welfare ,services _ . . I . :j. P~bli~ation ~. for their ar~as" and promoting establishment and growth of small businesS in the inner cit31 Most of 'the groups"h~ve 'pro-. • WASHINGTON (NC) ~ "L.· CanC?n ,Law); and simple hon~,' Unota_rian Church, Texal; Archdiocese, ,pOsed to use the grants, to iQlooo :Brent Bozell, editor of'Triumph esty, gre~tly. honored in, t h e ' 't:ooperate to"Exp"o'ndl Program \ prove their own efficiency m magazine, conservative Catholic present age, reqUires him to publication here, issued the fol:" knowledge the state of 'schism. " SAN ANTONIO tHC) - The' "tive of the leade~hiP in this , providing and obtaining. service!l 'lowing statement on behalf of "Any priest whose reason is First Unitarian Church of San field. by I) • • Archbishop Robert for the poor, spokesman said. the magazine's editors: not persuaded by the Pope'll Antonio and the Catholic lirch- E. Lucey," he continued.. "In
, Those priests who refuse to ac- teaching should pray fervently 'diocese of S~n. Antonio hilve' taking this action, our church
Family Movement eept, and faithfully carry out in to be among those whom Christ 'joined' forces to expand the" is joining with .many, of their pastoral capacity, Pope praised' because they 'have not Project Equality program, be-' its fellow Unitarian-Universalist Plans. CO!livention Paul VI's encyclical on birth seen, and yet have ·believed.' gun here three rears ago by churchE~s across the country in MIAM.! (NC)-The southe~ eontrol, should leave the Church. "If they will not do this they Archbishop Robert E. Lucey. support of Project Equality, in em regional convention 'of the "Any person who refuses sub- should cease pretending to rep,The new program, Project of particular, and positive pro Catholic Family. Movement mission to an authoritative resent the' Catholic Church. South Texas Inc., is part of a grams to promote equality of (CFM) will be held at Biscayne teaching by the Supreme Pon- Otherwise, they will be persan- nation-wide religious effort to employment opportunity." . College here Saturday and Sun tiff on faith or morals is a ally responsible for widening promote equal job opportunity Archbishop Lucey's statement day. Theme of the two-day IBChismatic (Canon 1325, Code of, - the' schism' and increasing the and raeial justice for all citizens. said equal opportunity to devel meeting is "Peace: In the City. scandal. Churches participating in op skill~ and earn a living is an In the Family, In the World." ''The priest who sanctions dis- Project Equality programs do essential freedom in a Christian .Bishop Ernest L. Unterkoefler o,bedience of the Pope-whether . business only with firms which moral society. .Interradal Council from the pulpit, in the confes-' avoid discrimination in their "The Christian Churches have, . of Charleston, S. C., will be the :Rel'ilews Campaign sional; or on television-is ad- hiring ,practices. Nationally, a moral obligation to point out keynote speaker. Other. speakers , PITTSBURGH (NC) - The dressed explicitly by Christ: more than 150 religious groups the evil of employment discrim- include Archbishop Coleman F. Carroll of Miami, conventiCllll Pittsburgh Catholic Interracial "Whoever causes one ,of these representing all major faiths', 'inationand to use their eco Council has renewed its drive little ones who believe in me to ,are participating in the program. nomic r,asources in the functions host; Paul Reiss of Fordham :against membership by. public sin, it were better for him to .' Announcement of formation of hiring and purchasing. to University sociology department, ',()fficials in frate'rnal lodges have a great millstone 'hung of Project of South Texas Inc. bring· an end ,to discriminatory and Mr. and Mrs. Pat ,Crowley the' of Chicago, .CFM national J'e which have a. "white-only" around his, neck, and(that,'he)· .was made at a press conference ,~mploYJ:llent practices," gion,al coordinators. '. " ,be drowned in the depths of 'the ' by the Rev. William DeWolfe, statement said; membership policy. The convention ·will. £eatul'e sea,.' pastor of, the First, Unitarian The new.program will seek 'to The CIC named the Eagles, .workshops on marriage, encoun Cpurch, aQd Father Char~es 'co,ver th~ ~ntire south Texas· ,Moose and Elks as groups. which ters, cursillos, commu:nicatioD, " r u·ors Aff,·rm· . GraIunann, representfrig Arch- area, with Joseph R Edelen' restrict membership to persons ~x education of childI:en, reli ,bishop Lucey.' , " ' " .' serving .as 'executive director. ()f the "white race. The Eagles Sup.e Equal OpportwiUy" , .. , ., gloW! vocations and.racism. and the, Moose list their' raCial oyalty to Pope The Unitarian clergyman said. M O d policy. on, their membership WASHINGTON (NC)- Pope the project represents the firSt j ass r 0 blank, the CIC statement said While the Elks state their dis~ Paul's encyclical against artifi- such institutional action by' his . FRIPAY-Vigil of St. Lawrence, cial birth control "is of funda- .church.' "We are pleased to join MartYlr. III Class. Violet. eriminatory policy in their con Home
mental importance to the Church . .with the religious communjty of ' OR . stitution. '
and to the world at l.arge" '~m~ San Antonio in working collec-' " St. Romanus, Martyr. Red. 571 Second Street The' interraCial council said priests should "adhere'" to its tively for equality," he stated. SATURDAY - St. Lawrence, tha~, it, believes the' membership , norms, the-Conference of Major "Prior to this time,' all actions Martyr. II Class. Red. Fall River, Mass. r~!1~!eI:tl~J:lts.are· as "odioUS, im :·Superiors of Men has empha- taken by Unitarians in San An- . SUNDAY-Tenth Sunday After 679-6,072' . moral and. <ijsgll$ting~~ .as.. they 'sized~ . " , ·tonio in this field have been,in-' Pentecost.. II Class. Gr~n., ,were a year ago, -when it initi. MICHAEL J. McMAHON A 'sta~eIrleqt, issued here by . dividual. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; :i ated- its protests against.: the ' ,tl;Ie . '.,.orgapizjltion .' p,resideQt, Rf3gistered Embalmer "Our ,church is most apprecia- .' Prefac~~ of Trinity. ' .. ' . lodges..The statep}ent' said that .FatheJ;'Gi.1i>ert Graham, O.P., al- . MQNDA.Il'~t. Cl~re, .Virgin.:~ Licensed Funeral Director '...the- ,council does not deny a so aff~rmed its 'members' "alle- ,Class. Wbite. '. ..' , , p'~bqc offici'alto a, private life, giance and loyalty to the person C~ech Go"ernm~nt 1V.ESDA:Y~~Mass of preceding' . " »ut 'add~": ,!'We deny,. however of the Pope'; as' 'the supreme, R • Sunda;r. IV Class. Green ... ' •", t~a:t this .f~om',e;xtendil ~ teaching authority in the Church'ell11states ,Bi~hop O R ' ., , . ,~ci~ me~Dershi~ policy:·' . on ~tters of faith ana moralBONN (NC)-Auxillary BishSS. Hippolytus, etc., Marlyn., , ity." . op Kajetan Matousek of Prague Red., Glory; Common Preface. ........eraIBotne
The conference represents 250 has been, permitted by . the WEDNESDAY - Vigil of As 550, Locust Street
'religious superiors of men's or.:. Czechoslovakian government to sumption of Blessed Virgin. 'II Fall River.'~
ders.in ~e ,United 'States. 'e:iCercise his ministry after takClass.. Vio!et. Mass Proper; FORTY.HOURS The"l1tatem~nt said they "rec-' iog an oath of loyalty to the ;Common Preface. ' .. 672-2391
ogilize, the,~mplexity and uI'g- cOuntry. ,THURSDAY -,Assumption of DEVOTION " R~e E. SulUvaD
'en~y of' th.ep'roblems treated by , The restoration of Bishop Ma,Blessed Virgin Mary, I. ClaSs. White. Mass Proper; Glory; .. Jeffrey E. Sullivan
Aug.11 Our Lady 'of· ',th¢ Holy Father and we accept ·tous.ek to his office follows'the the principles he has recalled in reinstatement 'of two Czechsolo- ,,' (::reed; Prefaceo~,. Blessed ,Lourdes, Wellfleet. Sacred Heart, New Bed resolving 'this most difficult vkian bishops to their Sees in ' Virgin. ford. question." May. The reinstatement of two ~---'-----""---"'il They added, however, ,that -other 'ordinaries' has been' de- ' Aug. 18-St. Joseph,: Woods . "~rofessional..theologians will' layed on technical grounds"as'" . D. D. Wilfr~d' : . nghtly de~ate and discuss'-thi! 'the' new~ regime" of the ruling;" 'Hole; FUNIl:RAL' HOME;" INC. ,s!-'lIivcl.n . . document. ' " Communist .party in Czechosl~''.' ',', II, Marcel Roy - ~ Lorraloe RllIf "vakiacontlnues ,its' liberalization :/, ': I " , " ' , . . Roger, laFrance , " FU~e~AL "," . efforts. '....; , ., .. -' , /i: i ' " :' 1HUNCHOL1 FUNERAL DIRECTORS Bishop Matousek: was' one of 469 .LOCUST STREET .,'. ... , . .., . Second Class Postage Paid 'at Fall River, A.UG. 17 ' four' :auxiliary bishops' 'batred " , "15 Irvington Ct.
Mass. Published every Thursday at 410,'" , ' , . .FALll !l'VER, ~~SS. Highland Avenue Fall River. Mass. 02722 "Rev. "COrnelius',' O'CoJ1flor: from .the exercise of their min- . . New Bedford'
. ;'.-'. 'D1 the Catholic ~ress of the Diocese of Fall 1882, Pastor, Holy Trinity, Wesi isby br 'the communist regim~ . . ,. 672-338'1 "99~!5'6~ ~ ~,
River SUbsrcriptlon price by mall, POStpaid Harwich, , t .of..the fQrmer Stalinist era. .$4.00 year. .
Issues Statement ,On Acceptance of; Encyclical
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JEFFREY E., SULLiVAN
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A'f£ ANCHOR-Diolcese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
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G'ROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES FOR BUZZARDS BAY PARISH ~ENTER: Rev. John G. Carroll, pastor of St. M,argaret'g Parish, Buzzards Bay, breaks ground for the new Parish Center in the presence of many . parishioners. In the group on Father Carroll's rigM, are: Thomaa Wallace
Dayton Seeking Open Enrollment In Schools DAYTON (NC)-A lead '£ng educator in the Cincin D8Iti archdiocese, Sister Mary Rose Agnes Gressel, R.S.M.,
,
,-
head of the education depart ment of Our Lady of Cincinnati &llege, has been named to a hew post created by the Arch diocesan Board of Education to help end de facto segregation in z;)ayton' area Catholic schools. Voluntary Exchangce :En her position as a staff mem ber in the office of Msgr. Ed .ward A. Connaughton, superin tendent of Dayton area Catholic schools, Sister Mary Rose Agnes Will help coordinate and imple ment directives of the school board pertaining to the "open enrollment" and "voluntary ex ehange" programs to be ini tiated in Dayton area parish schools in September. The former program requires 'ftlat each Dayton area parochial school accept a number of Negro children and provides that the Negro youngsters be given the opportunity to attend the Cath olic school of their choice re gardless of their own parish boundaries. The latter program is aimed at opening St. James and Resur rection, the predominately Ne gro Catholic schools, to white abildren. It encourages a volun tary student exchange. Study PooliD~ The nun also will be the Day 60n office's staff person on II 1lBsk force to investigate the feasibility of a proposal of the De facto Segregation committee flo establish an innovative "mag net" grade school in Dayton and to organize six separate school districts for the area's 28 parish schools in which there would be a "pooling" of faculty and phys ical resources and a consolida tion of enrollment. The archdiocesan school board
&as directed that the magnet
school-consolidation proposal be further investigated by the task furce and that "possibilities and methods of implementation" be eonsidered before any official 4lecision is made.
Aid Farm Families QUITO (NC)-Adveniat, the Serman Catholic aid agency for the Church in Latin America, has approved a loan of' $825,000 119 help finance a Church-spon land reform program in Ecuador. The project will pro~ Ytde land and financial and 1lechnical assistance, to some ;200 Indian farm families.
oored
I·
Sr., in the wheelchair, an original parishioner of St. Margaret's and now its oldest BIt 97; Frank B. Cook, president of the Parish St. Vincent de Paul Society, and on the left, Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, parish assistant. Large turnou't indioates enthusiasm· for project.
Make Recommendations to Rep,ublicans Protestants, 'Jews Submit Proposals MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The president of the National Coun American Jewish Committee cil of Churches, (NCC), testified appearing here before a sub before both the Subcommittee committee of the 1968 Repub on Equal Opportunity in an lican National Convention Plat Urban Society and the Subcom form Committee-recommended mittee on Foreign Policy and the establishment of a National National Defense. . Institute of Group Life on He urged the Platform Com America to coordinate all mat mittee to endorse the report of ters of intergroup and human the National Advisory Commis relations problems in the nation. sion on Civil Disorders, which , The committee's proposal was warned that America is headed for two societies-"separate and part of its testimony to the Sub committee on Equal Opportu unequal"-and called for a com nity in an Urban Society. The mitment to' national action on recommended institute would an unprecedented scale to shape both supplement and coordinate a future compatible with the historic ideals of American so the "activities of such bodies as the Civil Rights Commission, ciety. Dr. Flemming, secretary of the Community Relations Ser vice, the Equal Employment Op the U. S. Department of Health, portunity Commission, the Na tional Institute of Mental Health and the human relations units of the regular departments of government." ' CINCINNATI (NC)-The Cin Dr. Arthur Flemming, the cinnati archdiocesan treasurer has issued a financial report on the archdiocese, published in the Catholic Telegraph, archdi ocesan newspaper. Msgr. Ralph A. Asplan pre VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope pared charts providing a graphic Paul VI has sent a letter com memorating the first centenary representation of two major as of the death of St. Peter J!Jlian, pects of the archdiocese's finan cial position. Eymard, founder of the Congre One chart indicated the 'pro gation of the Priests of the Most portionateexpenditure of funds Blessed Sacrament. available for the· budgets and Pope Paul singled out the agencies supported in whole or saint's special devotion to the in part by the general operating Blessed Sacrament and urged account of the archdiocese. In his followers to devote them 1968, the total amount waS selves to Eucharistic piety. $854,849.04, the report stated. "We exhort you to raise an The other chart indicated the impregnable bulwark against distribution of the eight special new errors because of which, by collections taken up· annually in negations and doubts, would the parishes of the arc~diocese. seem to muddy truths which are These collections support 18 dif more unshakeable .than rock," ferent activities, the report he said. ' . stated, and the total amount for this year is $1,578,000.
Archdiocese Issues financial Report
Pontiff Commends !Eucharistic Piety
Priests Purchase House for Poor PITTSBURGH (NC)-The As sociation of Pittsburgh Priests, in an effort to make its housing p·rogram for the pOOP:' . a reality, has dePosited mo·ney on one house and expects to begin pur chasing a second house in Au
gust. It is expected 'the first
low.;.incom'e family can move in
by Sept. I, spokesmen for the
group said. Members raised more than $10,000 among themselves and· friends to purchase the . first houses. The effort is similar to others under way here by ·sev eral dozen small religious, civic and business groups who have incorporated f?r .the, purpose.
Education and Welfare during the Eisenhower administration, called the commission's report "the most significant document issued by any public commission
in my lifetime." Dr. Flemming told the foreign policy subcommittee that NCC believes the U. S. should halt the bombing of North Vietnam and should be willing to partici pate in a cease-fire accompanied by supervision of the United Nations, the Geneva Conference or another international agency.
Most Europeans Believe in God LONDON' (NC)-Most of the people in Western Europe do n~ believe in the devil, according to a public opinion poll publishoo here.
Only Greece had a majority (67 per cent) convinced that the devil still exists, and only in that country did a majority believe in hell. Most Europeans, however, still. believe in God, the poll reported.
School Sisters
Ninety per cent of Catholics said they believe in ·God and 56 per cent in hell. Among Angli cans, 78 per cent believe in Goo and 17 per cent in hell.
ST. LOUIS (NC) - "Profes sional Competence" will be the theme of the 14th annual educa tional conference of the Schools Sisters of Notre Dame, to be held here next week.
The countries polled were Britain, the Netherlands, Swe den, Switzerland, West Ger many, Norway, France, Finland" Austria and Greece. The poll. published in the Sunday Tele graph here, was made by Gallup.
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More Housing ENGLEWOOD (NC) - A $2 million housing development for low -income families, sponsored by the Mt. Carmel Guild, social welfare agency of the Newark archdiocese, is under construc tion here in New Jersey.
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Exiled Bish~p. Sipo~,ich .'Des,cri.bes . ,. Conditions in, White Russia
THE ANCHOR-bi,~e~e Of,fall River-Thurs.; Aug. 8.1~68 "
Is Total,World Dev~lopment
Ec~ntimically" :'Feasible?
By
Barb~...a
Ward
'Perhaps this is a good moment to sum up some of erne arguments thus far put forward In this column. Three main proposals are PJ.lt forward by Pope Paul in Populorum Progressio in order to lessen the great gap between the affluent states ' and their poverty-stricken" institutional changes, are a trin still under-developed neigh- ity of policies which' spread OO1:S. The first proposal wealth, stabilize the market sys eh~llenges citizens of wealthy
tern al).Q, enihire steady gJ,:owth. B~t'Pope Paul points, out that these civilizing strategies and institutions are simply lacking at the international level. There the world market is supposed to do what it has never done at' home-act in such a way that all gross inequalities and obstr;uc tions in some magic way disa'p pear by themselves. The Pope's reason for insist ing on the three reforms-taxa tion for economic aid programs, better balance in international trade, and the World Fund for Development-lies precisely in his realization that without such civilizing reforms, the worlCl's wealth will continue t.o pile up in the post-Christian North ,Atlantic corner while the WOI;ld's miseries pile up every where else. ' Is It Feasible? • What can ,be done? The Pope knows-as every' citizen should' know-that at the world level (as at the domestic level) there Na.tional to International are no economic reasons for The significant' thing about saying that his triple policy is these proposals is that to very impossible. The "world tax" wnsiderable extent they mirror agreed to by the governments at policies which. already ex,ist inNew Delhi-an annual one per ,side our aUluent societies, and cent of the Gross National Prod have lessened the enormous uct (the nations' sum of goods 'G:hasm which once used to gape and 'services) -will not bank between the small wealthy elite !"Upt nations grow~ng by three and the mass of' the people. A per cent a year. To increase the hundred years ago, as an eadier share in world trade going to G:olumn pointed out, the novelisttwo-thirds of the world's peo statesman, Benjamin Disraeli, pIes from 19 per cent to, say, 25 . spoke of Britain.as "two nations per cent, will not bring down -the nation of the rich and the the wealthy world any more lII'ation of the poor." than it did in 1952 - when, the 'Indeed, between a Duke 0(' poor nations' share was 26 per Westminster or Manchester with' cent. And if economic ruin does ail. annual untaxed income of not flow from a levei of spend fOUl' million dollars and a docking on arms which I'eaches $150 worker in the port of London billions a year, it certainly earning $100 a year-tile aveJ·· would not be the result of age today for about half the spending ,even half that sum on human race-the differences in on the works of peace.
life and opportunity did' amount No, the reasons are not eco
to a banjer as .wide as "the fronnomic. They are political' and' tiel'S of, a foreign state. moral and we will have to look Over the last century, the disat them more closely in the tance has been steadilY' de- comiilg weeks. creased. Progressive income t~x
has not only scaled down in
Form Missionary
~me measure the, overwhelm-' iilg wealth of the richest citi Society in England zens' but' transferred to educa":
'LONDON (NC)-A new Cath tion, hospitals and public hous-,
fug, it has increased the health olic society, Lampades Chl'isti (Lamps of Christ), has, been 4nd s~ills 'and hence' the pro COl'med in England to train lay ductivi,ty and earning power of people for work in t.he missions, ~he people' as a whole" This, in
1Iurn has increased workers' It was announced here.
ability to bargain for higher
lts fii'st three-week residence wages, for insurance, holidays course opens this month at Cor': with pay, pensions and other by Hall, Jesuit retreat house in fringe benefits. Sunderland, northeast England, ! And t.heir rising wage bill which will be its headquarters. in other words, their purchasing Father Guy, Brinl,wol'th, S.,J., power-has been a key factor supel'ior at Corby Hall, is spir in enabling governments to keep itual director of the new society. the whole economy out of the Father Brinkworth said that old alternatives of boo'm and Lampades Christi seek perma slump. Enough "demand" nent members who will give wages, incomes, private invest their whole active lives to full ment, government spending time work in the missions and has been pumped int.o the econ also temporary members who omy to secul'e steady' growt.h, undertake missionary work for modemization and innovation. a specified time., This will usu Checks and Balances ally 'be two, years" includil:Jg a '. All this is 'another wilY to say , training period. ing· that inside our 'national The society will also have ~conomy we no longer rely, a~ 'members working for it at home in the 19th century, solely on ~including former missionades the workings of the uncorrected ~and auxiliaries who will, help market.' Taxation," collective by prayers, gifts aod fund-rais bargaining; full emplciyrnent, ing. All members may be mar each supported py appropriate J'ied or-sinli:le a,nd, of either sex. wuntries '''to tax themsel,ves" and to make rest>urces avail':' able in' this 'way " for investment" in 'schools and he a 1 I. h, I. h e farms arid ihdustries of the d eve lop _ ing world. The second proposal is to reorganize 1he world's pol' icies for interna'tional'trade in such a way as to 'increase the economic strength and bargaining power of the poorer nations. The third is to set up a "world fund" or ~ome equivalent instru-, ment, financed in part by savings on' armaments, which would hav'e the task of ensuring and directing a sufficient flow of funds to make world modernization not an impossible dream but a growing reality.
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AuciLAND : ('NC) ~ Th~re neVer Polonized," Bishop. ~ip. . ate still ,79' ,parishes f~nct~oni»g, " vi.ch said. , . wit,h. ,pries~ in. Byelorussia "Byelorussia ,comes, thi·",d in (White Russia),' one of the 15' "importance after Russia and the Republics of the Soviet Union, Ukraine in the list of 15 Soviet but there is no Catholic bishop, republics and is a member &f the seminary, school or Catholic United Nations, the bishQJ) newspaper, and the cathedral in stated. ' Minsk, the capital, is closed. The most important problem This is the picture painted by for Byelorussian catholics today bearded Byzantine-rite Bishop is' the reestablishment of the Ceslaus Sipovich, M.LC., aposhierarchy there. When a priest tolic visitor for the Byelorus- from Byelorussia visited Pope sians in exile and superior gen- Paul VI last year, it was sug eral of the Marian Fathers. His gested in press repQrts that the J'esidence is now, '-in Rome., '. - -: naming of a new bishop might" He arrived in..Auckland to, ha·ve been discussed. ' ". spend 'a:few 'day,; visiting ,fam~' Bi'shop Sipovich said the Holy Bies here and in Wellington be-" See would probabiy, like· to fore' going on 'to, Australia. name a bishop now. It certainly; A squat, 'frier:,dly' ,man. who' hopes the Soviet goVernment smiles easily, B::shop Sipovich>.' will accede to the ,needs ,of the' , said there are 2.fi million Cath--·' people and allow the hierarchy olics in Byeloru::sia in a total" to be restored. population of 10 million. Except for a small percE'ntage of a the';' ists or people of no religion, the rest are members of the Russian Orthodox Church. • Both Catholics and Orthodox CHRISTCHURCH (NC) suffered, under ,:he regime Q.f Bishop Brian P. Ashby of former .Premier. Hikita Khrush chev, - Bishop Bipovich said .. " Christchurch is, giving ,a ,c,oPY, Things -were b,~tter for the, of. Pope, Paul VI's Credo of the churches to~a~d the' end of t.he· pe.ople· of; God to every C~th,o]jc';~, Stalin era. :Khrushchev eased family in, his New Zealand up in.,other diree:tions, but was" diocese., In a pastoral letter Bishop ,'particula.rly sevel:e on religion.' "The Byelorus:;ian 'Orthodox' Ashby said'that the Pope's June 30 Credo "emphasized anew the Church is nearly totally depen dent on the Mos,~ow' patriarch-, t.ruths of our faith because of ate," Bishop Sipo',ich said. "The his anxious concern for the world-wide flock committed .. last Orthodox sen:jnary in Zyro his care. vicy 'was closed about five ~i.I have made available' to you , )'ears ago," but ,there is an arch copies of the Act of Faith so bishop in Minsk and the Ortho t.hat you may read it, think: d<>x cathedral is open to wer 'about it, and.pray. shippers. . Biual'cby Jl'roblem "Faith is a gift of God which
, Today Byeloru::sia is becom makes the believer eertain ill t.he knowledge that he is al ing increasingly important be ready possessed of supernatural cause of its natural resources tn oil and fertilizers" Ii\. the latter t,ruths which are .divinely guar anteed. it'\ holds second place in the world, he said. '~At the same time faith ill a continual search for God. It is Minsk, which clJrrently has a population of onll million, was not simply the knowledge of a rigid set of truths, which he, totally destroyed during the last war. Before the war, part of' must believe. It is an unending Byelorussia was under the quest to apply revealed truth t. Polish government "but it \i'as his own life, seeking a greater commitment to Christ, finding more satisfying fulfillment as Warns of V{orkers' t.he Spirit moves him to deepen his involvement." Outbreak a1~ Mines Bishop Ashby emphasized that, SANTO DOMINGO (NC)-A "Pope Paul makes it abundantly Canadian missionary, Father clear that this development of Francisco Geerts, has warned doctrine js to be encouraged. No government , ... authorities. ,that la':' dool's are closed to' the mar..; bor conditiOns' at the" salt and velous n;vival 'of ,theolo'gical g)'psum mines at Barahona are study, with which our age haa ne;:lring the exploci:ing point. been blessed." The priest is recwr of the par ish at Duverge, :in which the government-owned mines are located. Father Geerts :laid that the Dominican Corpor.ation of State Enterprises has failed to pay the workers' salaries for three' months or more. The ministry of labor told a committee of miners WYman' that it would take action but 3-6592 workers' are still 'waiting for their pay. CHARLES F, VARGAS . "The patience 01 the Domini 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE can 'workers is not inexhaust ible," the priest told the corpor NEW BEDFORD, MASS. ation officials, "and no matter how Christian and submissive he might be this terrible situation of 'hunger" is liab:,e to explode into violence soon. '
Families 'Receive' Copy of Credo
BISHOP SIPOVICH
The
Parish PaJr~de
ST. MARGARET BUZZARDS BA~ SS. Margaret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will sponsor a cake sale at St. Mary's Church, Onset following all Masses SWlday, Aug. 18, begin ning with 8:30 A.M. Mass. Chairman is Mrs. William Brady. ST. PATRICK,
FALL RIVER Sunday, Aug. 11 a cake sale will be held, sponsored by St. Patrick's Women's Guild, after all Masses. Chairmen are Miss Madon Proctor' and Mrs. 'Wil liam Kwarcinski. Cakes may be brought to the school on Satur day aftern~n from 2 to 4 or on Sunday morning. Coffee and doughnuts will also be on sale Sund;JY. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER The parish feast celebration began yesterday. Today the feast continues. A penny sale and vaudeville acts will be featured from 7 to 11' tomorrow ,night and kiddies' day .will take' place from 5:30 1.07 Saturday, with the feast continuing until 11 P.M. A feast Mass will be celebrated at 11 Sunday morning with Rev. Luis <::ardoso of Espirito Santo ChUI'ch, Fall River, as preacher, with a street procession to fol low at 1:30. The procession route will include Tuttle, Dwel ly, Kilburn, Globe, Globe Cor ners, South Main, King Philip, Tripp, ,Dwelly and Tuttle Streets. . The annual procession honor ing Our Lady of Fatima will be held at 7:30 Saturday night, Sept. 7.
K of C Award Honors late Walt Disney
, NEW (H;AVEN (NC) - The Knights of Columbus will make a posthumous award to motion picture producer Walt Disney for his long dedication to the ideal of wholesome motion picture entertainment, Supl'eme Knight John W. McDev!tt, chief executive officer of the 1.2 mil lion-member organization, has a'nnounced here. The K of C Walt Disney award will be made in Disneyland, Calif., Aug. 19, during the 86th annual meeting of the Supreme' , Council ot. ,the Knights of Co )umbus in An:ilieim, Calif. It will be the first award by the supreme officer~ of the fra t~rnal society for outstanding work in the motion pictu!'e in du);tr~
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THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 8, 1968
Prominent Americ~ns Urge Nigeria Peac'e, U. S. Air~.ift
LegaI 'Abortion
Threat. Gr.ows .
NEW YORK (NC) - Fifteen prominent Americans
~uding Catholic, Jewis,h and Protestant leaders have
joined in an appeal for an immediate truce and a lasting peace in t·he Nigerian-Biafran conflict. In cable to Nigerian and Biafran representatives state appointed by the Organ meeting in Addis Ababa, of ization of African Unity, meet Ethiopia, the Americans also' ings between the contending asked agreement on the mini parties have reopened in Addis
a
mum arrangements necessary !or adequate relief shipments of Ilood and medicine for "starving people on both side of the bat tlellnes." Nigeria has been engaged in _vil war with its Eastern Region -Biafra-since last July of 1967. Biafra had declared its indepen dence in May. Starvation in the region is causing as many as 1,000 deaths a day. Leaders of the Arnedcans Joining in the plea for peace also wired President Johnson urging the United States to undertake /I massive helicopter airlift of IWpplies to Biafra. The wire to Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and to the heads of the Nigerian and Biaf NR delegations' meeting in Ad dis Abababa was signed by Bishop Edward J. Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Relief Services, and Bishop John J. Dougherty, chairman of the U. S. Bishops Committtle for World Justice and Peace. Both also signed the wire to President Johnson. . . Text of the cable follows: "We who join in this message' ~ YOUI' Excellencies represent, millions of American people' who share a deep commitment' to work for,the welfare of man kind. Ris-bt to Lite "'The human tragedy caused by the conflict has become a most desperate one from the point of view of simple survival for the entire population of non eombatants. Tragedy of vast di mension has already occurred no matter' which measures may now . be taken to arrest th~ , course of events. "The political merits of ·the' war aside, continuation of the «:onflict with its attendant streams of refugees and the al-' ready devastating rate of star vation among the civilIan pop Ulation, is intolerable to con cerned world opinion. The first h~man right is the right to life, yet the war and hunger are an nil"tilating the lives of. tens of thousands of civilians and po tlentially of millions. Tragic Problem "'We have been greatly heart ened that as a result of the Ni amey meetings of the consulta tive committee of African heads
Wealthy Parishes
To H~lp Poorer
BRISBANE (NC)-Well-to-do parishes in the Brisbane archdi ocese will share Catholic 'school oosts with poorer ones under a new' plan based on the principle that education is a diocesan rather than a parish responsibil ity.
Any surpluses in parishes that have met their own school costs will go into an overall fund that will help other parishes meet salary expenditures or building payments. A second fund, for school development, has been set up to finance additional class rooms for existing schools or to build new regional schools, and to re(inl!nce existing school loans on longer'terms. ,', The new school plan cove~s' all GChools except those. owned by religious orders. It has been es;': timated that ~he Australian arch~ diocese will have to expend $7, 250,000 in the next 10 years to keep up with elementar,. and ,aecondary. aehool ,Deeds. .
Ababa and the possibility of peace is brighter. "Foremost in. our minds is the tragic problem of bunger and impending starvation on both sides of the battlelines, which .has stilTed such international concern. "So long l!lS war continues, eveH though some relief sup plies are sent in, it is impossible to centrol the conditions that al'e creating famine and to find a permanent solution. Especially fol' the sake of suffering chil dl'Cn who have no part in war, we pl'ay that agreement may be reached" first for a truce, and then fOI' lasting peace. Recognize Red Cross "We have been encouraged to learn that already there is some basis for agreement be tween both parties on measures for the relief of famine. Both have agl'eed on recognition of' the Intemational Committee of the Red Cross. Both have men tioned the possibility of opening designated..-lqnd and air routes' solely to provide relief for starving people on both sides of the battlelines. On our 'part, we pledge our' strongest efforts to secure mas sive relief supplies and full co opel'ation in supervision and all technical details of delivering food and medicines. At the pres ent time, delivery in adequate quantities is virtually impossible. "We ul'ge that the necessary agl'eement be reached at the earliest possible moment by the contending parties on the mini mum arrangements: designated roules by land, sea, or air, and preferably all three; 'acceptable identification of means of trans port; and mutually satisfactory inspection procedures. ,"W~ shall be following devel opments wrth' the greatest con cem and d~'epest hopes for your, success,"
Award Scholarships
To Negro Students
NEW YORK (NC)-St John's University has announced the awards of 10 full tuition, four year scholarships to Negro stu dents, in-memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Father Joseph T. Cahill, C.M., St. John's president, said the memorial scholarships will ge granted each, year to 10 Negro students as part of the univer sity's continuing effort to assist disadvantaged youngsters and to seek potential Negro leaders in the UI'ban communities. Nine students from New York City and one from Washington, D,C. were selected to receive the fll'st scholarship this fall. The selection was made by a sub committee of the President's Committee on Programs for the Disadvantaged, including repre sentatives of Haraya, .a black students' group on the St. John's campus.
Ask and Receive Upcoming at Our Lady of Angels Church, Fall River, is the annual celebration of the parish's patronal feast. So this week's bulletin r~uests . parish ioners to pray for suitable weather. Leaving nothing to chance, they're told: "Please pray fOl' fairly good weather for the feast days. Not too warm, F10t too cold. A doudy day, a sunny day."
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MILWAUKEE (NC)-An alert to Catholics of the Milwaukee archdiocese that there is a "steadily growing insistence" in the country toward legalizing abortion has been issued by Archbishop William E. Cousins. A letter by the Archbishop, read at all Masses Sunday, warned that bills aimed at re laxing anti-abortion prohibitions must be anticipated in WiSCon sin and that such bills would be re-introduced in the coming ses sion of the legislature. "With the incl'easing publicity given to activities aimed at re laxing abortion legislation andL . with a specific group already" having met in Milwaukee, it is .. timely and desirable that we face facts and be aware of the trend of the times." The Archbishop was referring to a San Francisco based group, the Association to Repeal Abor tion Laws, which held a seminar recently in Milwaukee explain ing abortion methods and wavs to work to abolish abol'ti~ laws. ' Efforts to liberalize abortion laws, the Archbishop said, are . attacking "the inalienable right . of the unborn child to life." He urged the people not to overlook the fact that they have another' right-to "fight against abortion '.. as vocally and as effectively those who favor it."
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TELLS OF SUl.. . FERING: Pope Paul VI, speaking specially at general audience at Castelgandolfo, told of his "spiritual suffering" during the past four years as he worked on his recent encyclical upholding, the traditional Catholic view of marital relations. NC Photo.
Grave Responsibility Pope Paul Ci.tes Spiritual SlLIffering in Pre-Encyclical Study' CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)"': Pope Paul VI's sense of "grave responsibility" caused him "no small spidtual suffering" in the foul' years of study prior to issu ing· his encyclical ,on family regulation' and birth control, The Pope at a general audi ence concentrated on the ency;' clical letter, Humanae Vitae. After delivering as usual a longer talk in Italian the Pope spoke in other languages, in cluding English, which served as a summary of his longer dis course. In English he said: "Today we wish to speak to you of the feelings that filled OUI' heart during the long period of preparation of our encyclical letter, Humanae Vitae. The knowledge of our grave respon sibility caused us no small suf fering. "We well knew of the heated discussions in the press, The anguish of those involved in the problem touched us also. We studied and read all we could. We consulted eminent persons. "And we sought in prayer the aid of the Holy Spirit in inter preting the divine law which flows from the inner needs of human love, from the essential structure of marriage and from the personal dignity of the wedded couple. Hope for Understandin~
"We were guided also by the. feeling of cbarit,.. 'of pastoral concern for married Christians. For this reason we gave to love the chief position in marriage and added pastoral instructions to the doctrinal teaching.·
"Finally, our labor was ac companied by hope: hope that this :document will be accepted for its truth; hope above all that Christian married couples will understand that its teaching is but the manifestation of their tl"Ue love, ,an imitation of the love of Christ for the Church."
New· Jersey School
To Remain Open
UNION CITY (NC)-Insteat.1· of being phased out, St. Mi chael's hi~h school here will be come a diocesan high school for girls, the Newal'k archdiocesam chancel'y office announced. St. Michael's, a parochial school maintained by the Pas sionist Fathers, was due to clos~ its doors next June and had not: accepted any freshmen students, the last two years. . But now, 110 girls will be ad mitted to the fl:eshman class im' September because of the desire. of parents in the area that the school be kept open if at all pos-' sible. The school attached t@, ,St. Michael's Passionist Monas tery, is in an area which has' had a heavy influx of Cuban ex. i1e~ in recent years,
ELECTRICAL
Speaking in Italian, the Pope said that the encyclical "is not only the declaration of a nega tive moral law, that is to say, the exclusion of any action the pUl'pose of which is to make procreation impossible; but it is, above all, the positive pres entation of conjugal morality in relation to its mission of love and fruitfulness. • • ." Burden, of Offiee
In speaking of his sense of grave :responsibility and of the "' suffering it caused him during the development of the docu ment, the Pope said "never as at this point have we felt the bUI' den of our oUice." In talking of his work, the Pope said, "We have studied, read and discussed all we could. We have also prayed much ¢ ¢ 0 We had to give an answer to the Church, to all mankind. "We had. to assess, out of obli
gation to, but also with the free
dom of, our apostolic duty, a doctrinal tradition which is not only centuriE.'S old but also re
cent, the tradition of our three
immediate predecessors. We were obliged to make our own the teachings of the council 'which we ourself promulg'ated." ,
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Missouri Diocese
Ponders Problem
Of News Medium
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
Mass Will Be More Appealing Perhaps nowhere in the Church do we, feel im~act of Vatican Council II more than we do at 'Sunday Mass. You have already witnessed many innovations and more are being readied now. y'et there are some who enter, attend and leave the church as they did ten years ago - vaguely uncon cerned. . Perhaps there is a basic reason. Most American. Ga~h olics have been not a little like the 19th century sCIentIst who ceremoniously announced, "We have exhausted the totality of scientific knowledge." That is to s'ay, most of us unquestioningly assumed that the Mass and the Sacra , ments "had reached their definitive form; that there was no room for improvement and any suspicion or questions to the contrary 'was highly un-Catholic and probably he retical. Gradually, what came to be. known as "the liturgi~al movement" did begin to ask questions, unfortunately wIth, little effeCJt upon the general laity and celrgy.' By the time that Vatican II was convened, liturgical scholars had collected more answers to their own search ing questions, than any other group in the Church. This is undoubtedly why liturgy 'became the first major item on the council agenda. ,The Counc:il appraised Catholic riiual and i"eacted very much like Christ who said of the reguJ.ation-ridden Jewish Sabbath: The Sabbath is made for man, no man for the Sabbath." In effect, the council said that liturgy is made for the people, not the other way around, Laymen are not meant to "endure" the M,ass for some forty-five minutes on Sunday. Rather they are meant to enjoy it, yea, with the accen:t on joy, It must become an attractive human experience. That is why Pope P.aul at the recommendation of the Synod of Bishops last Oc,tober approved the formulation of, three new eucharistic prayers, corresponding to the present Roman canon of the Mass, along with a series of new prefaces. Each of the new canons will have' ~ts own particular emphasis of thegre~t myste~y of the Eucharist because no single set of words can adequately express it. These three new eucharistic prayers should serve to enrich and enliven the celebration of M'assto such 'a, de 'gree that Catholics wiil "Enjoy Sunday Mass, not endure
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WIJ/llJJ &It/STICE IM!D P£A4~£ ••• Uppsafa,Swedet1,1968
KANSAS CITY (NC) ....... The board of diirectors of the Kansas City-St: Joseph Pub lishing Society, Inc., publish,.. ers of the former diocesan newg., ,paper here, are continuing to explore the possibility of dioe-. esan-wide communications on (} regular basis. "It may be in the form of a newspaper, or through some other means of communication,III said Msgr. Richard J. Schu. macher, board president. He said the board held a two hour meeting recently and that the executive and finance com mittees have been holding ex ploratory meetlngs. The society formerly publish ed The New People diocesan newspaper which had a circula tion of over 10,000. The paper ceased publication last May be cause of "financial conditions." Msgr. Schumacher said he hoped that, by the Fall, the Board would have concrete pro posals for consideration by thea diocese. Favor Newspaper
In the last edition of the newspaper, a questionnaire on 'reader" reaction to the closing drew more than 2,150 replies. ,More than 80, per, cent of those who replied said they felt the diocese should have a newspaper of its own. ' , , Most of the replies showed ~ preference for the individual ,Rev. John F. Moore, 51. Joseph's, Taunton voluntary subscrip~ion plan, but a majority of these felt the vo),. 'B.A.,M.A., M.Ed. untary plan should be supported if necessary by diocesan funds Political, Campaigns, , to assure a wide circulation. To a question whether several Electoral College media of communications should be used, 23 per cent favored the uSe of tele,vision, six per cent the use of radio, and 61 per cent it." were in favor of 'a ,diocesall Although the Latin text of the new canons will be newspaper. ' ready for use on Aug. 15, the American bis'hopsstill have ',' About two-thirds of those re to approve the offical Englis'h translations for use in, our plying said The New People did The recent elections 'in Canad'a and F;~ance point out a good job and they want' the ,ehurches. Hopefully this will be accomplished. early in the , Fall.' , a glaring flaw in our election process. Our eledion campaigns next paper to be' similar. How. ~ver" in ,com~ents. accompan3l"" If the Mass is made for use, then lets become intent are too long, too expensive and too demanding on the candi dates' Other countries elect their national leaders in half ,~ng. the questlOnnalres, t~e, ma. 00 enjoying it. If Sunday Mass is less than an abtractive : '. . .. JO(lty expressed a deSIre fop the tIme. AmerIcan preslden , ' . more news of local Ca'tholie human experience, perhaps the introduc,tion of new eu are forced to terest. groups. ThiS shatters the events and more general news charistic prayers and canons in the Fall wili enrich the tial candidates . d Amencan dream. ·th I c I gle Some urged! ex h 'aus t th elr persons an In addition to these pitfalls' Wl 0 a an s.
Mass for all. their f A ' . . ' what they called better balanced
resources • And, I+-hen i 0 mencan~ampalgmng, we' '.. ' ,
efforts could be in vain with the still are' burdened with the ar-, news coverage.
electoral college lurking in the chaic electoral college. This system might have had
background. Of the thous'ands of words written in and about We ~ecome more aware of value in the constitutional era of
the new Encyclical, one phrase stands out .and that is these fucfors as the television our early history as a United
to be found in the Encyclical itself. In the last paragraph camera pokes its all seeing eye ,States. But modern America NEW YORK (NC) - In re of part 1, His Holiness wrote that he is answedng the into every phase of pre-election with all the ccmplications of a and speculation. progressing civilization has re sponse to an appeal from aD: grave questions on birth 'regulation and answering only campaigning The, candidate is scrutinized duced the electoral college to a Irish missionary, U. S. Catholie after study, reflection and 'ASSIDUOUS PRAYER. from his waking moments to the, historic relic. It is simply ridic Relief Services (CRS), the ovell-> The 'reams ,of news releases that have been to the hour he retires. The expense of ulous in tw.mtieth century seas relief agency of U. S. Cath running a campaign haS reached America to have the President olics, will airlift 56 tons of high world in his last week explaining- the depth studies and re ridiculous proportions. It I)ow _and Vice-Pre,ident of 'the search. made on the part of teachers of theology have one seems that a poor man could United States the only Federal .' protein baby food destined for starving children in Biafra" common characteristic-how many times did you read never be president unless he had officials elected other than by the Nigeria's secessionist region. the backing of large private in direct vote of the people. any phrase that resembled that the conclusions drawn were CRS received a cablegram the results of PRAYER, AS WELL AS STUDY! from Father Anthony Byrne, ? : C.S.Sp., an Irish missionary who Must Be a r8etterWay - - Let's Fi";d It is the director of the airlifts to Biafra from the Portuguese These men are the leaders of vivec;l over 100 attempts to island of Sao Tome. These air their party and the .focal point change or abolish it. The philos lifts are sponsored by Caritas of the people in any campaign. ophy of 'sectionalism and the Internationalis, the international Yet, the will of the majority has political theories of states rights Catholic relief agency. little meaning if the electoral has been its survivaL This ques The cablegram said: college fails to elect a president tion is of a constitutional nature and vice-president and the na but it again should undergo a "For God's sake, please airlift (\1:1C't:"'J.\l ~EWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL PiVER tional House of' Representatives complete and relevant study. more baby food to Sao Tome Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River has to tl'lke over. In a growing America of over immediately. Thousands of chil It is about time that some re (hen are dying daily. SituatioB 410 Highland Avenue 200 ,million citizens we must forms were made in our system find a ~olution to these impor appalling." Fall River, Mass. 02722 '675-7151 of 'national elections. We must tant complex problems. The In answer, CRS has sent 5G seek some means to accomplish saturation PUBLISHER point has been tons of high. protein baby food abbreviated campaign. from John F. Kennedy Interna. reached. To continue the pres Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0" PhD. By November most of us wi Ii ent system of national elections tional Airport here. .' have had it. Maybe a national reduces our historic heritage to GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER CRS is purchasing these eme.. primary is the answer. It is a carnival and drcus. Rt. Rev. Dan'ier F. shalloo, M.A. Rev, John P; Driscoll gency commodities with dona worth sincere investigation.' tions received from 'individuall!l ,There must 'bE' a better way. . MANAGING. ED.lTOR ,The '~lec,toral l::Ollege, on the and foundations for, use in tbit Hugh J, Golden ,'.: ." ,other' band, has' already , sur Let's find it. Biafran relief program.
the
moo~~'ln(j
Time for
Ref~)rm
Prayer'Is Still Necessary
Sends ,Baby Food To Biafra Needy
®rheANCHOR
.Father Berrigan 'Scores 'Silence' Of Jesuits
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 8, 1968
Pledge Harmony With Negroes
ST. LOUIS (NC)-Father Daniel Berrigan, S.J., speak ing in a Protestant church here after two Jesuit institu
WASHINGTON (NC) -: Two priests representing the Detroit Archdiocesan Priests' Confer ence ror Polish affairs presented (l resolution to Negro U. S. Con gressman John Cony~rs of De troit, pledging to establish greater racial harmony between Negroes and Polish-Americans. The resolution,. which Con yers later introduced on the floor of the House of Represen tatives, stated: "Our prime con cern is the dignity of each ~an, the unhampered exercise of his rights, the. promotion of Chris tian love and understanding." Specifically the' resolution called for open parishes, schools and neighborhoods, and the pro tection of the rights of all, indi viduals within communities. The priests promised to work with lawmakers for legislation in the areas of fair housing, aid to edu cation, and social welfare. The two priests, 'Father Daniel P. Bogus, 'pastor of St. Theresa of Avila par~sh; and Father Fa bian B. Slominski, pastor of Corpus Christi parish, said the resolution was passed unani mously at a meeting of the priests' conference. Fathers Eogus and Slominski, representing 128 priests of the Detroit archdiocese, said their group would call on their parish ioners "to join' the fight with them >:0 >:0 0) in an unprecedented move to struggle for civil rights."
tions refused permission for him 11 Mass on their Grounds charged that the order' IlS an institution "prefers silence to courageous speech." The Jesuit pacifist invited .Jesuits in the audience to oon 3ider with him "whether we can lllve in the Society of Jesus." Father Berrigan, who 'will £ace trial later this year for al legedly burriing Selective 'Ser~ vice files in Baltimore; was' brought to St. Louis as' pa·rt of a 'Program of support for 'Brother David Darst, F.S.C., who faces trial here for refusing, to report lior induction. Sponsors of the program, the ~he Christian Experiment,' had' initially planned a Mass to ·be celebrated by Father Berrigan, and a homily by him eXj)!oring . the question of war and con science.
to celebrate
St. Francis Xavier parish, staffed by Jesuit priests and 10 4lated on the campus of St. Uouis University here, the university i,tself, 'and Webster College, Webster Groves, lVIo., a private college for women formerly' ad " .' ministere4 by·the Sisters" of Loretto and now lay-coritrolled : and' operated, all 'refused,. perI. mission for the Mass. The general objection wa,s that the Mass or the ins\itution. would be used to support a par tisan cause. . A spokesman for'the Christian Experiment-a group of priests, " Religious and laymen here-said other places had also turned , down requests for a Mass.' The program was then changed to a prayer service at the Protestant cllurch. ' . ,., ., ,Father Berrigan opened ills .1 talk' 'at Berea Pre'sbyterian Church with a challenge lo' his" . iellow-Jesults. "If I remain (in the order),' lit Is because of the Jesuits who are here tonight," he said. . Beart of Problem
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Named Honorary.
Poet Laureate
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SEMJNAlUAN'S SUMMER: Kevin. Horrigan, theological student at Boston's St. John's Seminary, serving as an orderly in the city's Long island Hospital, helps to make an elderly patien,t comfortable. During the Summer the seminarians of St. John's have been assisting ,in' ,a ,'pastoral apostolate involving parish. programs, hospital w9rk, court cases, inner-city projects and other socially significant' oPElrations. NC photo. .., ., .,
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ArchbishopCookeL'a.Lid~.,Puer_to Rico'ns Cites'Willingness to W~rk, Fa:mU, Feeling SAN JUAN (NC)-Archbish op Terence J. C.ooke of New'
York said here Puerto Ricans in 'New York are "definitely en riching life in the city." . Archbishop Cooke spoke at San Juan City Hall before Arch bishop Luis Aponte of San Juan and Mayoress Felisa R. de Gau tier. ,Also present were Aux'n iary Bishop Juan de Dios Lopez of San Juan and Msgr. Theodore McCarrick, president of. the Catholic University of Puerto Rico. After receiving the symbolic keys of the city, the archbishop said during a press conference that "the Puerto Ricans have brought with them to New York their willingness to work, their wonderful family feeling, sense of humor and brightness of spirit. They are definitely en riching the life of the city. ''This is not to say that there is not a period of adjustment they h·ave to go through," he continued. "There are problems,. and they are being worked on." Praises Training Archbishop Cooke stated that the New York archdiocese is CGlritas "using anti-poverty funds effec HONG KONG (NC) - The tively to' give remedial work to first Asian Seminar assembled those Puerto Ricans who need it by Car ita s Internationalis, to qualify 'for admission" to' worldwide Catholic charities or New York universities. .ganization, will be held here on' "On a much lower school the theme, "Christian' Involve:. level," he 'added we have excel": ., ment in Human Development-- -lent Head.Start programs work Mobilizing for Involvement." ed out, and are giving much re:' . " ., caritas-Hong Kong will be host . medial aid to students with lan . " to 30 ·participants from 15 Asian ' guage problems." eountries expected' to attend. During the civi'c' reception ac- . Later, Father Berrigan said he Identified strongly with· the Jesuit community and tradition,' and did not "want" to leave the order. He said "it is very diffi cult to lead the Christian life in religious orders today, and there !s a strong feeling that if the Jesuits don't make it, no one will." , The heart of 'the problem, he went on,' "is that our perform ance is at great variance with our conception of our moral tra dition. We have become highly institutionalized, and when the ~hips are down, this is the' deepest thing. "We think first, of our posses .slons and the 'gut' issues tend to become peripheral," he said. Central theme of Father Ber rigan's talk was peace-making. He told the crowd of 400 per sons - mainly Catholics - that America for too long has "ac cepted without question the enormous cost of war."
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corded-him, the archbishop noted that mimy of the priests and Sisters working in Spanish neighborhoods in· New York have received Spanish-language' training at the Catholic Univer sity of Puerto Rico. "By studying here, they get to know the island first hand, so they can better appreciate the Puerto Ri.cans they will be working with in New York," he said. Recallillg his predecessor, the late Francis 'Cardinal Spellman. Archbishop Cooke said "Cardi nal Spellman's 'love for 'the Puerto Ricans was certainly great. He felt as if he were part of the Puerto Rican family." During his Caribbean visit the
archbishop, in his capacity as military vicar for the U. S. armed forces, will visit person nel of the naval base at Guan tanamo Bay, Cuba.
PORT ARTHUR· (NC)-Di', Lorena (Mrs. Samuel) Simon of Port Arthur became honorary international Catholic poe't lau reate at ceremon~es conducted by Bisho&> Vincent M. Harris of Beaumont at S,t.J.ames church in this Texas community. Dr. Simon' succeeds Francis CardInal Spellman of New York in receiving the honor. She· was chosen over a number of, other nominess by United Poets Lau reate International. Dr. Simon was chosen for her· literary and 'musical achieve ments and religious philanthro pies. The Simons have built and furnished four churches in East and ,South Africa.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, "
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19~8
'Schedule' Socio" 'Actiol'll Meeting
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Bright ·BoutiqlU·es Specializ$"'"
CHICAGO $NO) - The Na-o tional Catholic Social Acti01il 'Confetenee" (NCSAC) will ho~ its 12th annual convention ~ By Marilyn Roderick ·St. Xavier College .here, AtJI, 22 to 25. :Boutiques are the coming rage if' they a-ren"t al'l'eady ,Speakers will include Ms~ 1!lO. ·T,hese are those cha-rminglittle g.hops that eaJter tf) Jobn Egan of the Chicago arc*, diocesan office of urban affahIJ ·the young at heart and adventurous in spirit; "Boutique~', and pastor of Presentation p~ in fact': haS- come to m~~n i'ildividOO'lism to those' in the ish, Chicago; Msgr~G'eorge . ' fasbionknow. In world '' Higgins, director; division of where 'everyone is striving , ment and un~arih some old, but ban life, U. S. Catholic COllfe.. lovely fab'rfc: enee;,' Msgr. AloysiusJ. Wels~ . to reac-hhis or her potentialI~ your "fabric fin!!" happeJ.ls head of the Urban Task Forel> . t as an individual, ·it was ,to be too fragile to work on, of tl!e U. S. ,Catholic Conferenc~ , bound '. to 'follow that stores" Miss Colle has detailed instruc- " Father Robert Reicher, CathoBll would begin' catering to n~n- tions in her bOok on how to Council on Working Life. , eonformists. Perhaps it started bond a stronger piece of fabric . Also, Rabbi Arthur He.rtzber.Ql in, Lon don' s to it so that your finished. cre ,Temple Emanu-el, ;Englewo~ Carn;;tbY Street ation will be durable. Also in N; J.; Mathew Ahmann, recent~, or in the alleys this chapter there··are dr~wings retireq director of the Nationa1l of Paris; but and instructions on piecing to ,Catholic Conference for Intep.. wherever it be- make a finished garment ,from a racial Justice; ,Wipiam Clarlfi;, gan it has caught too small piece .of material or, director of information, Intern;!> ofJ. like wildfire as she cleverly puts it, "Making t!9nal Bank for Reconstruction and these little More From Less." · and Development; and COIJlo> s hop s are Basic Styles gressman Henry B. GonzaleE!b springing up in However the best part of 'the .,'
.San Antonio, Tex.
every' area that book are the basic patterns and
; Piscussion topics will include young people instructions that are given s~_ "iThe Future of Church-Relat~ . frequent. Even that t.IJe reader can create her SQCial' Action Organizations'~ the major New own' boutique fashions. The York department stores have authoJ;-designer shows .15 basic " , . , '.'. ' . ; ' , , "Clergy Activism:. Are Theile recognized the boutique's possi- styles from which hundreds of ,'CONGRATULATIONS: GIrls Nab.:)n OffIcers. con- · Any Limits?",; "Unions in Publici
and Religious Institutions"; ','V...
bilities ,and have incorpOl'ated 'outfits ca'n be developed. Most·. gr8ltulate,-each ,other after their eledion in Washington. them into their large clothing ()f the designs are tent styles so' Aini'801omon,Jeft, 'Coeur d' Alene, Idaho, is president and ,olence, the Terminal Decay !ID : departments. . tha~ the worry: of fitting can be Marla Anne Holyoak, Burlay; Idaho, isvicE~ president. Girls' the United States;" . Also "Spanish-speaking' AmeP-. Mostly, however, th:ey 'are the" aVOIded, but they really look as N t" d b th A . l' A '1' ereation of the' young an'd !!~' if they' would t>ean awful' iot 'a Ion 16 sponsore 'y e merlc.an .egwn UXI Iary.. ieans' Civil Rights"; ~'The Urball Whj.~e Poor"; "The Urban Cri9i1i\ such are housed in 'tiny' stores, of fun to make and wear.' . a Political Imperative" and without a great deal of atmo:': Reversi'ble jumper coats, wish "Economic Progress and w{)r:m 'sphere other than their bright bpn~ jumpers, jiffy ,evening, Pe~e." and, original ciothes.Many ,of, w rap ~ and sandwich-sign them specialize in antique cloth':' dre,sses area few of the clever Interracial Council' Asks AU,g'ustinians, ing ,and these have the look' of styles that can be made by' fol"; \ ' Santa Fe Archdioc'ese grandmother's attic but q\Jite lowing' MisS Colle's instructions. To. Clarify Racial Stand
evidently this is what their cusTl'!e' copy of Miss Colle's book q; Plans Celebrations
, '. tomers are looking' for ' I've been reading 'came from t.he CHICAGO (NCh-The Catho- leaders said,: "have inevitably , SANTA FE (NC)-Three sl>& ehance ,00 play'a game of make- public, library, but I intend to lic Interracial Council of Chi- raised seriouB questions in the believe.' ' order one from my favorit~ cago' ,has asked the Mother, of' minds o~ many, people~Catholic cial events will" highlight the first week of October for the 'Paris bookstore. If' you love clothes Good <;::ounsel Province of the and non-CatholIc,' about the posSanta Fe archdiocese. S~ch.sharp young design~rl! ~nd especially .if you ,enjoy 4ugustinian Fathers to "issue a ture and policy of the Augus Rededication of St. Francbl like Mary Quant and Ken Scott sewing and creating your own 'stron'g and clear statement of ·tinians with regard to 'race 'rehl Cathedral here on Oct. 1, cele got their' start designing for this 'fashions, then you will want to the commitment of Augustinians tions, tile principal, moral and, bratio~ of Santa Fe Archbishop type of shop; and' now, even the have a copy of this book on your of this area to'the principles and social issue facing our, commu , James Peter Davis' 25th annto eream of the Paris crop such as, ()wn bookshelf. Boutique, comes practice of racial j.ustice ' and nity., versary of consecration on Oct. 2 Givench, .Ungaro, and Sa~nt 'from the French w.ord 'meaning brotherhood." - ' , ' ' ' A strong s,tatement 'reaffirm and dedication of new facIlities ,Laurent 'have opened their own shop ~nd if you want to look as ' The, request was made in a "'ing an9 clarifying t~e commit-' boutiques as an addition to their' if, you frequented sOme of the letter to Father Leo Burke, ment of t~e 'province to the' at Montezuma Seminary nea!' '. ~\i~t~n:i ' d-;sign ,bU'si!!~ss. 'fJi~Y.. JlI0.r~ ex,clusi"e ,ol)es, ': get 'out, 6.SA, 'Augustinian provinciai, 'Christian i,de~lls of racial Justic~ Los Vegas on Oct. 1 w'illcom,. ~ recognize the buy~ng ,power your ~eedle and ,thread 'some of : ' by -Paul Q. Twin, Sr.'; CIC pre~:- and brotherh.:xxl seems, in our priSe the week's aCtivities. of ,the 'young an'd want 'to caso' Miss Colle's arid your 'o~n fd~a;;' ident,' and John A. McDermott,. jUdg~e~t, ':bol,p. appropriate and'
iJlon)t. Also it's a ~rEiat'o~por:': . the mOst 'exciting bolt 'of 'fabri~' CIC executive director. necessary. WE' note that the're , -m.nity ~. let' their: .. ciealivi~y ... 'you can find '(ma;~;:be you have': ~ They told Father 'Burke' that " cent cliapt~r i)fthe"provirice ap':' '
. Where A .. '; ·.bu~ble' :?,ver ,f()r,' a ,w.~d~): :a~d~~ :So~ething'.in ~hato~d: ti:uilk' i&i' ,t~e 'cre4uest w~s 'm,~de ,~'in', ~~e pa~eJ?~lY,d~~, '~Iot:addr~ss: itself ,io ' , ,~nee th&~. the eoutuner cus- 'y~u've been'saving ,for. some- ,lIght, of cer~m events. ~hlch ' thIS vI~1 ;!SSlle."", ' .. tomers. .":. " ',. _ ' , . : ' ' ' ' tlii~g' e~~ra' ,sPeehil)" h~v:e .taken ~lace in this c0":l~u'lfthere )sn~t a \)ou,~qUe alllY- you'rself Ii "ooutiq'oe fashion:' ",D,I;ty ~nthe last yearlln~ ~hlcl,1 " Daughters' o~ '~oiy , Where, ,iii your vicinty, "don't " ",. ~':'<' . ' ' , ' . ' '-l!lffected the' image'.and ' r e p u t a - , , ' Means A, .. '.d~spair. I just cahle 8Cross"a ; '.' . ' '. ":" 'tioJl of,theorder on the'issue of, Hold.qenteral Chapter " fascinating' little 'boOk' titled" Immacul~te, fieart Nuns"" rliee relations!', , ' " '." ' . . CRAGSMOOR,: (NG) -:- Sister G~lAT Vivienn~. Collt!'s ~a~e-it-Your-' " Teach in' LA Sch'l ,.The!, cited incidents at Men- An?mlli'ie, C?iUsano' ~a!> electf!d self Boutique by VIVIenne Colle .' , ' , PO S ·del HIgh School where 2Dblack, ,maJor coordInator (mother gen and MarjorieP. 'Katz; published,' L~S A:NGELES (NC) - Sis- .. students threatened· a walkout in eral) of the Daughters of Mary, by M. Evans and Company, Inc., ter~ ()~ th~ Immaculate Heart of' December to protest alleged dis:-, ~ealth of the Sick, at a general New York. Miss Colle runs II Mary, who were locked in' con- crimination and the aCtivities in chapter held here in New York well-known Manhattan boutique" tr'ov~rsy with, James 'Francis' the area of' Father' Francis X. at' Vista Maria, the' congrega freqllented by the .jet set and Car91~ill, McIntyre over a' pro- Lawlor, O.S.A., who has contin-, tion's motherhouse; She' 'will .. " abe beautiful people. gram' of. ref?rms in the Sister-'ued to organize blockclubs to serve a' three-year ,terl~. In tier tiny information-, hood, WIll administer and help' work against iI,ltegration apparThe develo'oment of an ex packed book the designer offers staff nine sc:hools i? the LosAn- . ently in defiance of his transfer perimental c;;nstitution was a such .unusual tips as using lace geles .archdlocese m September. by Father Burke. major undertaking of the genfor seam binding, antiquing new. "The .group of, Immacula~e "These incidents;" the, CIC eral chapter, which placed em velv~t, an~ dyeing such, item& Heart. SIsters? who have been phasis on the responsibility of
aszlpper~,I! y,o~ can't find,thE; authOrized, bY,t?e .Holy See toDioces~ "Gets Property' each member of the congrega eolor you r~ lookm~ for. She en- contract to remam mthe s~hools tion to share its government.,
~ourages .Hie creative woman to ?f the Los Angeles archdIocese 'for Community Center A change ,,vas made in the
kn~w thyself" and ~ress,ac.. ,mtend earnes~l~ to, uphold the" CAMDEN ,(NC)-Bishop George' 'community's habit. It is now
'eordmgly and speaks q~ite hig)1-' v.alues of religIOUS life' as de- H.. Guilfoyie has announced the ,a blue 'suit and white blouse,.' ~y·of the. woman who IS able, to fm~d by t}:le Church and up,to be worn ·on occasions when .1001 I(;ngs sew'and keep' her wardrobe dated.,by Vatican Council II," Camden: '~i~ese h'l'!s purchased the' group decides, At . other , highly oI:iginaL " . ' Siliter EUeen· McDonald said;, . ,.' . ~ ,foll,r-buJ1~I.J;lg, ~mp~~*, ~or u.se times, .each member'of· the comThere ~s one .wh'ole :chapter on " '''Th~" ~rou,? . is, relatively" ,as a Cat!'t0hc Commu?I!~ Center., "mul)lty' may, wear, ordinary bow to fu'ld thl;! unusual in fab- 'small, " s,ald SIster Eileen,' "but ,The 'property, .whl~ used t~ dress. ' ' ric. and trimming and you put its~ quality 'is . distinguished. Ev- "belon~ tQ, .,the· Beth-EI syna-. the book; down, with the fe~ling ery Sister assigned 00 adminis';' : gogue,·· includes, the synagogue, that you just can't wait to 'rum- tration and 'teaching has at least,' a c 1 as s roo m building, two, UYOQ mage through your attic' br base- her bachelO1;'s degree and the residences and an auditorium', t? " appropria,te California' State . The parishes in the neighborPenn Sale t~ach!,ng, cr,edential for her hood will continue their present fIeld.. . . .programs, Bishop Guilfoyle exMother Cabrml Circle DaughAs .. a~dltional. "professional plained while the center will ters of Isabella. will sponsor a 'qualifications" 'Sister, 'EileeJi offer ~ore varied communi,ty pen,ny sa~e. Thursday night; Aug. noted 1-1 Sisters hold master's de- ,service. He said: "It is not in~ at Yf;)UI1' . 1· .,
15 ,~t Kmghts of Columbus Hall, grees, and three have doctorates.' tended that the Parkside Cath , F:O.R ,HOME DE~IVERYCAll :998-5691 . '
Buz~a.rds Bay... Proceeds 'will ' ~he add~d:, '~All others engaged' olic Community Center will be , . ?e~eflt the Kmghts. The event m teachmg have done graduate come a typical parish but a cen ]5 Q.pen to th~ pu bli.c i1nd a wide ~ork in their area, of specializa- ·ter providing social, welfare a.nd varIety of prIzes WIll be award- tlon. ,and many have' had the, "educational' services as, well as ,ed:,,~n charge of arrangemen1.s' is, broadening, educational, ex·peri- ',relig!ous services to the j;)e(>pJe DA,RTMOUTH"MASS. MISS Margaret ~anfor~ , ence of Eur()pean~avel," ; ' '()f the' surrounding . , _.- area.,j
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Feast of Assumption Day ot ~Cure i,n ':the, 'Water' ; .•• ;
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D of I Conclave ('Attracts 1,800. "
By JO~Jllh' '~~ 'Marilin Roderick
, Paranoia is a state of mentatimbalance ,in wh'ich the paranoid devel'OPS a persecution oomplex, i.e.· in which he reels that the world is against him and he imagines threatB ,aga'inst bim coming from every di1'eCtion. I have now en bered the early stages of . ' paranoia, characterized by uninhibited screaming, rock. . ed tmrowing, and unrestram
fl·
ANI..HOR
Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
ST. PAUL (NC)-The Daugh... ters of Isabella-an organizatiom of some J20,000 Catholic womem seeking to unify their efforts ill working for the Church and in ternational charity programs will hold its biennial one-week international convention here ill Minnesota starting Saturday. .' r,
lri river, ocean or lake on Au gust 15 to obtain ·,01" preserve good health. It was believed that ·through Mary's intercession on her feast day all the water ~n nature was blessed.
Mrs. Anna C. Walsh, supreme ooimosity. The reason for my regent, said delegates will 'rep BUdden mental aberration is the perSfstence' With which' dogs I use' . 'resent circles in 26 states as we·lll ... my lawn" a's their' ''Waste'' 'land~ '. Street Proeessions as Canada, and the Philippines. ' I feel like Aunt Polly ih Charles'" c· Over 1,800 -are' expected to at.. " Dickens' David Copperfield Who' in Europe the feast of the As tend. waited' for donkeys to cross her'" sumption was generally a day Convention 'speakers will in~ lawll. .' ..\ of great religious processio·ns. In clude: Bishop Glennon P. Flavin We h'ave never really had this France Mary's statue is carried of Lincoln, Neb., supreme chap partrcular trouble before, but· through the streets as a sign of STARVATION IN BIAFRA: An emaciated child lies lain of the organization; Auxil- " suddenly we' fi~ ourselves un..: ,ven~ration and even in parts of able 'to 'cut the lawn without the' United States people . of in his bed at Queen Elizabeth HospilfJal, Umuhia, Biafra, iary Bishops Leonard P. Cowley and James P. Shannon of SI;, first doing a thorough cleaning, European extraction .keep up weakened by lack of prQper nutrition. A world Council' of Paul' and Minneapolis. which makes an irksome job this custom. Ohurches doctor said in ~neva, Switzerland (July 31), that unbearable. Up until this SumThis year Mary's feast of the as many 'as 30 to 40 per cent of the children trapped in mer we had no aversion to Assumption falls next Thursday the famine are~s of mafra by Nigeria's civil war will die. Marriage Encounters> man's best friend, but if this and because this is Melissa's day Oatholic Relief Services i.g shipping high-protein foods, /For Spanish-Speaking continues we will enter the for swimming lessons I know medicines and dothing to Biafra.. Ne Photo. !Janks' of the' animal haters. I'll 'make it .to the beach with CHICAGO (NC)-A group 'of" " ,,' 'the children. However, even 150 'Spanish laymen and' priestS .. ,. Why My Lawn ',< : ""though' my grandmother's ideas have arrived in the U. S. to con Vf~y' ~y ia~?' ~ keep 1lSkiM' :: :a~ou't" 'this day may not. be as duct "marria'ge encounters" foi! myself this and cannot com~ I ~o, ,poPoo}'ar a~ th 7y ~ere In' ~y Spaiiish-speak.ln~ couples' across' a re~o,nabIEl ,answe~. CertainJy"" youth; I stlll.thmk It ",:,ould gIve the country, the general coordi-' Professor Cit~s, ~.ei.i.gious ....,. :Educational the~e ,are !l'ny number. o~ la~n!i., }~e ,c~lebratlon pf ~hls ~E!a!i~. it. naot6rs of t~e 'Christi.an· Fa~ili . ,... in ,t~e, nelghborhood ~piR~: ' "ht!le deeper meamng 1~ my Movement said here".· Link to R\tIds~' ,... " 1"1' wo\l,(~, be ~ual1y acceptab.l,~.,to·. ,children were a~are of. thIS old MI'.. and 'Mrs, Pat Crowley 'eK-: . the: 49gsJ anp ~r whi~h:th~ ~.1liI'~~,....custom. And ,perhaps 1~ ye~rs NEW ORLE:A~,iS (NC) -The lng thaf wtiite .America is basl~' ers have nothing but disdain. "to come they 11 tell theIr chll- failures of education and reli- cally ignorant of the culture of' plained that a marriage encoun- :' .tel" is a.meeting,designed to help.. , . Some lawns are not cut fro~' , 'dren about it. gioD are largely r~sponsible for the 'other peoples. She' called for married couples examine thei'r' 0ne month to another and their 'This is a' '~uperb di~h, fit the rad;;'t attitudes in the United a sy-shim that "would foster" iri' lives. together, as ·weli' as their·.~' owners 'brelllthe a sigh of relief ,.r' celebrate any feast. It shouid be . ,States, ap. English teacher from youth an 'under~tanding Qf the joint relationship with God.. The· cultures of others. . . when they bum up in August so .served with homemade biscuits Mississippi 'said here. encounter consists of a series o£ that they don't have to think and heaps and heaps of fluffy Dr. Margaret Walker Alexan"The preseI)t educational sys talks given by laymen-mostly about cutting them until the mashed potatoes. del", a professor at Jackson State tem," she added, "poisons the married couples themselves _ Fall. I have gone out of my way College, addressed the Council mental development of both to check these lawns and it' goes'· Chicken Fricassee of Urban League Guilds during black aml white children" and and a priest who acts as a spir.. itual director, 'they said. without saying that they have 3 chicken legs and thighs the National Urban League con- leaves them unprepared to . live ,. mot been touched. I have come 3 small chicken breasts, split vention. The Spanish lay people and! in a multiracial society. ()o the conclusion that there Institutionalized religion in priests will be arranged in 15 must be a status symbol attached % cup butter or margarine the United States has- lost its teams. During their three-week ~ a dog's selection of a' weed- . ~ ~:=~~s ~~ed marjoram meaning, Dr. Alexander claimed, High School Gets .First stay here, each team will visUl free, well-groomed la'!\'n on leaves and "when the religion of a peo-' L P . .. I one or more .of 30 cities at which . Wh~~,h. ~~ de~t bis :excre~~~~' ','.% t~a,sP09n ,freshly g~ound pep"; ·pvll'Ste.~inS.,!dead, .'they are' without, arman' ,OS. r1ntCI~. . encounters, ;will be conducted;' Certamly mY nelghbolji ,,,-ave ,. per • v W."'S~ING:rON (Ne) , - John the CFM general coordinat6lilli" rems'rked, a change. in .·xW.~tti,-, ... % :tiour' "Anything , done in the ,name "L. ~o'ylaq" 35 ,hll{l beenapPQint- said. tude. The" once amiable maR 1 1)81' lelilf . of religion is used as a drug-.toed ..p'ri~~i'pal.o!:DeMat~a ~igh
who had a good wo~ .for pass-:-... 1 ~iind'.~all onioiis .peeled' ~r" soothe- the' conscie.nce~ .olr ,~ose .. 'Sc~t 10, supu;ban HyattsVIlle,
eniby now sits sulking on' his " 3' 'medium onions. qu,anered' '''who have lost thell' VISIon,' .,she , ·Md.,.~he firs~ ~yman to helld .•.
~nt stairs with 11 little ~i1e of :, 1 ~~l~" 'ce~e~, :~ut' .in .i lOeb 'said'.· I'Groups like' the Ku'Klll][hig~ .~hool in, ,~e 'Washington,
~ks at.h1s, side and a ~tl~k.in ;: pIeces . . ., . 'Klan ,have too:"].ong claimed"to· 'aFC~4f9Ce.se.. .;."
9~ ,$Tc>it ,,'" . "", bifl band, waiting with bated i:~ pound mushroomS 'b8Ived or',. ~p.Fesent Christianity wit~· such' .. Moylan," a 'membe~' of the
SHOPPING CENTER hr'¢ath for an unwelcome lR- . 9l1e small can mushroom ,ndlc~lous'themes as purIty' of "school' faculty since '1956 and as..:'
~der. Needless to· say, my pa- j; caps (dr-atiled): ' :. ..,," racScoe ... ~ ':~~ 'f' "I' . of' od.' ..• "sistant princiPal since laSt' <>c.''-'
• 'ele'vi;iOPI". Grocery" '1 I at, l' ht nng' W'K:" 81 ures' m -, ti er t waitl ntf', is ,WI·th·t ou a~al ' 7 4 clW" Ig .cre~ :.; ' •. ern .. religion, .'Dr.... Alexandel'".;toboE;r, succeeds,Father Louis •. 'Ap"'i,dn~~,;~ '~rnitUre:':'.,: ";'. Oi1e conS()l~ti~,is that I, aJll fot 2 egg .folks . . " " ., called for a dynamiclaith... The", ,Amt,gQ,.i O.SS:1'.,: who bas been' 104 Allen SII., New Bedford. alone. The other day I llear'd an Z Tablespoons chopped pa~-. h h' . A . ,,' h '0 assigned as' chaplain at the ungodly shout in the back yard I 'l~y" ., ~ UTC ,. In' merIca, k S ~ Bal:, Maryland. House of Correction 997-9354 ' craves a new 'awa enlng 1ft " .. , and dashed to th e d 001" to see . . .... . . Jessup, Md. The appointment what was happening only to d 1) ~thash the cthlckelsn ,anc.d pthat Wh~~hr C:.~~stIan attItudes are was ,made by Father Luke Me have Melissa say "It's' only ry WI paper owe. u t e revI a Ize . 11' 0 SS T .. 1 f h legs and thi ..I.s apart and split Dr Alexander criticized tbe . ne a. . ,., prOVIDCla 0 t e ' .. ......ndpa chasing the dogs. &" • ' . Amar'can p~ov' T' .,...- . the breast. I couldn't' get any nahon's educational system, say- . ':' I • 1Oce ...... ",. .e rIDIn DIe Kitchen breast when I tried this recipe Itanan Fathers who conduct the so I 'bought 5 legs wit;h thighs school. When I was part of the young instead. Warsaw Paper lauds A native of Turners Falls, er generation, I never had to COMPANY . ., Pope's Peace Efforts. Mass: ,Moylan is an alumnus of. worry about going to the beach 2) .10 hot shortening' (butter Assum.ption College, WOTcester, gn IAugust 15; it was just auto or W,a,rgarine) ina Dutch oven BONN (NC)-Vatican policies Mass., and served two years in matic that anyone of Irish , (th~, bottom of it pressure cook- ,under Pope Paul VI aimed at U.S: 'Army Intelligence. He ob Complete line
Catholic origin spent that day :er works well here. if you don't, .achieving world peace were 'tairied his master's degree from Building Materials
at :the seashore. Often we would : have, ,il peavy Dutch oven) sa.ute.. praised by' a Polish daily ZCie the'Catl;tolic University of Amer have to wait until my grand 'the,,"1iic~en pi~ces Ilbout 5 min-, Warsa~y of w.arsaw. . . father r-etumed from work to i,utes ,o,n each. side; don't brown The newspaper said that the ioa .aJ;ld is studying for his doc 8' 'spiUNG ST•• FAIRHAVEN se~ off, but no matter what the ,too ,~~U" Sprinkle with the salt, . "increasiilg engagement of papal toratEi at George Washington hour we managed to get. th~re marj,o,ram, apd pepper. Push the diplomacy 'on the side of real- :Univerisity here. H~ is ~arried 993-2611 ism" in meeting the problems' and the fa.ther of Ifour children. M .at l~ast dip QUI" toes in the chicken over to .one, side. of the waves. pan and gradually stir the flour of the modem world "are greet-' My grandmother insisted that into the drippings. Also gradu- ed and recognized with satisfacthis was the day of the "cure in ally stir in 1 and % cups of tion by 'all men of goodwill and also by Marxists and material.. the water" because it was water and add the bay leaf. Bring mixture to a boil, stir- ists." Mary's Day or the feast of the Catholics as well as Marxists Assumption' and anyone. who ring constantly. Add onions, celwanted to remain well through ery, reduce heat; simmer cov- are interested in the fact that the moral authority of the Pope the rest of the y~ar must go ,ered 40 minutes. and'of Christianity is being used (9Wimming this day. Of course 4) Add mushrooms and cook 'for the' maintenance of world" the fact that my grandmother adored the' water and the bea~h , 10 minutes or until chicken and , peace' and for th~ establishment didn't hurt her beliefs any but vege'tables are tender,' Stir in of the principles of justice in in.:.' ~ BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • 'PARlIES cream; cook covered 10 minutes ternational life, Zcie Warsawy it was still' a very lovely' belief .' ionger.' , said., to' have; and it did get m~ to o ..', COMMUNION ~REAKFASTS .' . the se~shore. . ' . THe paper added that, despite . :5) 'Beat egg yolks slightly. "1343 PLEASANT 'STREET FALL RIVER The custom came to this Stir in a little hot sauce. 'Return the d1fferehc':es in views within'" eountry from England and Ire- . to :chicken, pan, stirring until the Church itself, it hopes that ·993·1780 Iarld (that's where my gi-and well blended. Turn chicken into the 'Church will continue to seek: ' mo,ther's strong belief 'came' serving, dish and sprinkle with 'solutions' within' the spirit of the' . times. ' from), where everyon~ bathed parsley.
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Now. • • Announcing ~ remarkable 'n'ew extra cash hospital Iplan - ex;pe.nse-free, tax~free 'extra cash paid direct to youovelr and aboveanye,therinsurance or M.edicare :Bn~~ '·r~gardl~ss''of 'yo~r or'sDze of your,famUy~:yo~. en.ro~~ for only ·$1.0·Of
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AT .14ASr, .... I5.~E IS A' PLAN THAT ACTUALLY 'PAYS :rC~U~1 . • extra, cash:Jor sicknesses • extra cash for maternit~',. ." • extra c~shJor aC~iden·tsllall in addition' to·any .o~helr insurat1ce or Medicarel .
Now,. during this Lim.ted Enrol.iment Period, you can enroll yourself and an. leligible mep1bers of your' family witb no r.ed tape and without any qU'alifica lions' 'whatsoever- but YOIn must maum . ',oui-Enrollment no latell'thsll'l Mi~nigh~' A~gust1lBp 19~5I .'
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CHOOSE THE PLAN THAT SUITS YOU BEST-
You can enroll for only $1.00!
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Accidental D~ath Benefit :fn the event of the' accidental death (within 90 days of tm accident) of any person covered under the Hospital Plan for
$10,000 MAXIMUM-ALL-FAMILY PLAN: $100 Ii week ($14.:!8 a 'Catholics, $500 will be paid to any beneficiary you name, day) extra .cash income while .you are hospitalized.•75 we,ekly ($10.71 daily) while yolirwife is hospitalized. $50 wee~Iy ($7.14 subjeCt to the maximum (Aggregate Qf Benefits) of your palla daily) for each eligible child hospitalized. · icy. 'You may, if you wish, name your parish as your bene- $7.500 MAXIMUM-ONE-PARENT FAMIL'; PLAN:' $100: we,ekly nciary. ($14.28 d~ily) while you are hospitalized. $50 weekly ($7.j4 dnily) . Special Feaiure For Peace Of Mind And SecuriftW for each eligible child hospitalized; . ' . :i $7.500 MAXIMUM-HUSBAND·WIFE PL'AN: $100 weekly ($14.28 For as IOtlg as you live and continue to pay your premiums, daily) while you are hospitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) while we will never cancel or refuse to' renew your policy for health ·1'his.toiild well be the most important news you've heard i~ . . . ..:' .: your wife is hospitalized. Jeasoos:-and we guarantee thaqve wi!! never cancel, modify' :vear;! Now you may enjoy a speciaUow-cost he~lth protec· , $5,000 MAXIMUM':'INDIVIDUAL PLAN: $1110 II week ($14.~8 III · or. terminate your poliey unless we ,decline renewal- on aU lipn plan that pays "extra cash" direct to you. whe~ ~ suddefl; day) while you are .hospitalized. ' : p<,>licies of this type in your et1tire state or until the maximum If yours is :/. young, growing family, 'then we recommend' "Ilccident or an unexpected sickness hospitalizes you or a mem.· ~ggre8ate of Benefits) of your policy has been paid• ..lICe o~ yout family! . '. . . .. ' . . «be All-Family Plan. You and your wife. are covered'at cnce' Carry As M.uch Other Health At last, a long,respected insurance company '(Mutual Pro- ,. for accidents, for new sicknesses which begin after y~~r P9licY . Insurance As You Wish! . is 30 days old, and for maternity after your policy has been ttective Insurance Company,. specializing in health insuratlee Yes, the Hospital Plan for Catholics pays you ill IIdditiofJ tc . for Catholics for over 35 years) has created a bral1ll,new
in force for 10 months. And alt your unmarried depenc:ent any health insurance you carry, whether individual or group health plap, especially for CathoUes like yourself! It is. called
children between 3 months of age and under 19 are included -even Medicare! Furthermore, all your befle!its fire ta:'C·freel dte HOSPITAL PLAN FOR-CATHOLICS.
tit flO extra cost as long as they live at home. (This includes Of course, you m~y carry only one like policy with MutuaK "Try" This Plan For OnlJ $1.00 . not only your present children but any children you may have Protective. W the. months and years to come.) To make it easy for you to "try" this new plan and see just· If you are the only parent living with your children, we Surprisingly Low Cost how it can benefit you and Y'?our. family, we now make )lOU lIuggest the One·Parent Family Plan. This covers you and all Membership in. the Hospital Plan for Catholics costs COfIF allis no strings "introductory" offer: eligible children living at home between 3 months of age siderably less than you might expect. You pay only $1.00 (Of You can qualify for this new Plan. during this limited and under 19. Under this plan, of course, future additions are your first month's coverage (regardless of your plan). thell\ enrollment period-without paving to see a (ompat~y repre. not included since no maternity benefit is provided in the . · only $7.95. a- month for the All-Family Plan; only $ 5.95 {l .iititative'.i.and without any red tape U!hatJoeverl.'You ca~.. ':.. ;! <One-ParentFamily Plan. . . "~onth for the One-.Parent Family Plan; only $5.75 for' the enroli yourself and all eligible members of your family JM.. If you have no children, or if your children are gtdwn rInd HusbaJ:ld-Wife Plan; and the Individual Plan costs only ',mly' $1.00!- .. ' no longei:dependent on yOl,l, you will Wa.llt ,the Iihsband. · '$3.25; (When you become 65-or if you are 65 or over now~ And, after you.receive your.poliCy; for IJ1/Y ~~~SOIl yON Wife Plan. Or, if you are living by )'ourself, select the In,di•. · special Senior Citizen rates apply; See the modest increase iail decide you don't wallt #, you may returll it w;th;'~.lO· dll11 vidual Plan. ." .. . .. .. :: the box that follows.) And remember, r~gardless of age, S;%8 ,.imd yot#- Jolla; 'willb'e promptly. refunded! . . . On all plans,your cash benefits ar~ paid Erom the very /1;11 of family or the plan you select, you can nOfll emolJ lind gCC .". ....' ". '. ,.' Jay you enter the hospital, for as long-and Jor as maPy times fONr lint nJollth's coverage for 0111y $1.00/ ~as. you are hospitalized,' fight.up tQ themaiimum (:Aggreo '.. ' Why You Need The Hospital Pia" For Cetho ics In Addition 'To Ordinary Health'lnsurance" ' . ;. ' . sate of &:nefits) of the plan you select. ,Because no matter what other insurlln'ce YON now SI Importallt: Here is' another real "plus"=-jE 'you h:lVe . SPECIAL NOTE.IF YOU ARE .OVER 65 limply won't (over everythi1lg! . . . been told that anyone in your family is "uninsurabl,~"! . ., ,E"en Ihough M<:dicare will paY.n;lost of your hospital " ThinIC lor a 'moment~in these days of risingmediC~lcost~' Even if one of your covered fllmily members has suf. expenses-it still will not cover all of your needs. Our would your present insuraric~ cover fill your hospital bills?~erc~d fiom chronic ailments in the .past, the kinds of ..... iog this limited enrollment, you can genhe extra cash All your surgical and in-hospital doctor's bills? All the medi. . conditions that come back again and again or are likdy protection needed during the high-risk senior years cines, drugs, supplies and the many otper extr.as~ Probably. to 'recur, the Hospital Plall for Catholics will COl~er simply by .filling out the Eorollment Form at right
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'And even If 'all your medica~ anllhospital bills uJe,e c o v - ' after he 'has been protected by thepolicy.lor two yearsl It's a fact that people over 65 are greater risks, They eted, wlillt about all your other expense~';';the bills' that keep" . Bu~,whether l?r not y~u ba.ve had a ch~o~i~ ail~ent; :lh~ go to hospitals more often' and have larger hospital piling UP'lt home-the tiemendous and costly upset YOUA'. . . 1I:Iospitai Plan for Cathollcs .wdl cov~r anyaCCldent Immul~ bills than :aoy other .age group. That's exacl!y why budget, your reserves and yo~r family ~if~L:.·· .' . . 41f~ly, Ihell~ry:tlaY?ONr polICY goes ~n/~ ~ff,el-an4 any ~e~ senior citizens need mortJ protectionl And that's why . , . ".,." .• . .. " ~.,.,.J _" sickness.whlcn begll1s after your polley;JS 30 days·old. There some.hospit~l p,lans won't accep~ ~hem or charge' rates i'>' If .yo~, III hNSbtH!J, flllher.'{lnd brett4wmfJ~r·IH'~''JN4'e"I,. ilre only these minimum necessary exceptions: pregnancy or beyond .~heir mfjins. But the Hospital Plan for Cath· .; : . ' ~oJ/tllal,%e', your !ncom~ sto.P9,.Your ex~~!lC~ go up. Eve? . . a,ny con~eque!lcethereof. (unless youhavethe,o!'\ll-FaJil.ily ;1 olics 'not o'nly accepts you regardless of age, it gives yo" if you have some klO~ of salary Jnso/anse It probably ~on.¢ ,.. :; . Plan), war, military service, nervous or mental disease or easy·to·carry 'protection that is. wilbi;, yONr means. If you arc. over 65 now, ot "when you become 65, the {ol. (ome cIC>$C to .re~lactng your. Eul.l:tlme pay. .yo~r w~':e If ' .dis9rder"suieide, alCoholism or drug addictiori~·or if ~Jlrie•. 1 . • . slItlJenl, hOSP'tlllJ'1i~d, wh,;> wdl'I~~~after theJamlly;do thCdiingbapp~n$'"o.n the job.... a?d .~: covered, by Workmen's" : .!' ":. lowing..mqdest monthly"incre1lse applies. (This is the ollly ;nc;etlJe t!!at can ~ver be made as long. as you con Compensation or Employets Llablltty Laws. You are free to. . , !.. . - Ii l~undr:y, the markeu?g, ti¥: cl~ntng. ~u, ~ay ~~,:e,to take einue)ou,rpolicy it) force): . .
time off from yourl~b-or ~1C~ ·full·tlme ~omesu~ help~ If . go to any hospital of you'r own choice that charges for'room' j lPMI~e on All-FamiJyor Htisband~Wi(e Plan .."2.25 .
(me of YOllr eh,ldr~n u hos~lIal,~~d, yo"u.wdl. ce!talOly spare and board servIce, excepting only: nursing.homes,~onvales. female on Qne.Parent Familjr'or Individual Plan 3.00 110 expense~ 1~ yo~ re II semor .Clt,zen, ~Ith 111111ted refCflleJ, Ce~t or self.care units of. hospitals, Federal hospitals, or ~Iny 3.00 'Male on any. Plan.... ~ ... -'t.~ ~ml ~~ hospltaZ,zed, even With Medicare, where wdl the hospital primarily for treatment of tuberculosis, alcoholi!~ extra money you .need come froral drug' addiction, or nervous or mental disorder. ARE YOUR PARENTS SENIOR CITIZENS'i Without any extrll ca~h protecJion. in case of a hospital In ~dd'ition to th~ imporranthospital benefits"you get all! Most senior citizens guard against becoming a "bur. these valuable "extra" features: emergency, debts may be Incurred, savings may be lost, peace den:: But too often their insurance won't meet today's H Y of mind may be shattered"::and even recovery can be seriously' "H I h B k . . delayed. 91,9 our ea t - an Accounf' high hospital costs. Even Medicare won't take care of Grows Each Month, everything. A serious condition requiring hospitaliza. How The Plen Protects You And Your F a m i l y . '. '. tion can mean the end of their reserves and loss of in . " . '. Here s a wonderful benefit, no matter which plan you choc.se, dependence, To honor their independence and safeguard Now. ~Ith the unique. protection o~ the Hospital Plan for a'Imost like an ~xtra "Bank Account," When your policy is your ol/m reserVeS, enroll YOllr. parents in the Hospital Catho!Jcs. you can av~,d these wornes-because you can be issued,'your insurance provides up to $10,000, $7,500, of Plan for Catholics during this limited enrollment. Have assured of extra.cash mcome when .you or·any covere.d .mem· $5,OOO-accordibg t'? the PIa!), YQU choose. This is your the parent to be enrolled complete and sign Ihe Enroll. "Health-Bank Account." ';fhen•.every month yourP9licy is in ber,of your famJly goes to th~ hos~ltal-to help kee,\' y,?u out, ment Form, but enter your address clo your name. of ~ebt, to help k~ep y~ur savmgs Intacr, to speed recovery.by· force, an amount equal to your regular monthly premium (Example: clo ]ohn-M. Jones, 120 Main Street. Any. town, U.S.A.r.We will send the policy and premium easmgyour worned mmd! No mat~er how la~ge your faqlllYi (including y~ur first month) is actually lidded to youi' 'inuj.; Iiotices. to you; J~ C:oClc»cd f fot &he first month'. ~o ~atter.what your ag~ or occupat!o!1 al)9 fIIJt!lout allY other '. mum! When.you have claims, your benefits ·are.simply slib- .. ~ve~a~~ : ;: . . ' '. fJu.aldic(1:,o!lJ.wha~Joeller,you. can .c~oose.a~y.of {our Jow,4)st· .: tracted .irQn:'· you~. "ac~ount",:,""mlich like putting. mori~yio'; . pla~1S, s~ciallv~allored.tQ.s!o\lt,fo.\I[ ii.!JlIJys need,&. . . ..and-taktng·.lt:out of the bank. ' .'- ,', ,."" . ~ ,"." .., .. ' . . . . . '--'. ". . ", . >. . .•. . \ -. ',- ..... .;. . "
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lit Ibis point, you must ~asking, ~'How can we offer so muCh •
for so little?" The answer is simple: We have lower lolal eales costs! The Hospital Plan for Catholics is a 11Iall etiroll. {J/$CIII pIa" and n large volume of poHcies is issued only dueing ~rtain limited enrollment periods. And all business is con· ducted directly between you, and the company by mail. No sdlesmeit are flsed. There are no costly investigations or any extra fees "for you to pay. It all adds up to real savillgs we ehare with you by giving you lOP protection at lower cost.
1. What
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{;l1tholics-the low·cost, the high benefits, the case of enroll ment-you get something even more valuable: Your policy Is backed by the resources, integ~ity and reputation of the MflI"al Protective ltzmral1ce Compa1zy, "the Catholic~s Com· pany," specinlizing in low·cost protection for Catholics all across America for more than 35 years. Catholics everywhere, .!l'Ossibly right in your own community (including many priests), know about us and may be insured by us. Many. Catholic school children hav~ for years enioyed Mutual' Protective coverage. Serving policyholders throughout the Vnited States direct by mail, Mutual Protective has its head quarters in Omaha, Nebraska, .where it is incorporated and licensed.
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None at ~1I. Your only qualification is to complete and mail, ·yoUr' Enrollment Form by the deadline date shown on the form · below.
It becomes effective the very same day we receive your Enroll· ment Form. Accidents that occur on or af~er that date are cov . ered immediately. After your policy is 30 Jays old, sicknesses which begin thereafter are covered. Under rhe ALL-FAMILY PLAN, childbirth or pregnancy or any consequence thereof is covered after your policy has been in force for 10 monibs. 10. What if someone in my family has had a health probe '
lem that may occur again? Any covered family member who has suffered from chronic .ailments in the past will be covered for these pre-existing con· ditions after he has been protected by the policy for twO years. U. What conditions aren't covered?
Only these minimum necessaty exceptions: pregnancy or any consequence thereof (unless l'OU have the ALL-FAMILY PLAN), war, military service, nervous or mental disease or dis· order, suicide~ alcoholism or drug addiCtion, or any condition , covered by Workmen's Compensation or Employers Liability
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32. Can I drop out any time? Can you drop me? S. Which plan shollld 1 choose? We will never cancel or tefuse to renew your policy lor health reasons-for as long as you live and continue to pay your pre You may choose any of 10M low-cost plans-you can actuallv miums. ''V''e guarantee that we will never cancel, modify or ter .
select the 6x"&l.plan that suits yOIi best! minate YOUI' policy unless we decline renewal on all policies of If yours is a young, gmwingfamily, we recommend the
this type in your entire stale or unril th~ maximum (Aggregate ALL·FAMILY PLAN. You and your wife ate covered at once of Benefits) of your policy has been paid. You, of course, can for accidents, for new sicknesses which begin after your policy . drop your policy on any renewal dale. · _is 30 days old, and·for maternity after your policy has been in
force for 10 months. All your unmarried dependent children
13. Why Is the Hospilal Plan for Catholics almost like haVe (and future additions) between 3 months and undcr 19 ate ing an extra "bank account"? included, at no extra cost, as long as they live at home. When you/,. policy is issued, your insutance provides up to ,If you arc the only parent living with your children, we sug $10,000, $7.500, or $5,000-depending on the Aggregate of gest the ONE·PARJ~NT FAMILY PLAN. This covers you and Benefits of ·the plan you choose. This is your "Heahh-Bank all eligible children living at home between 3 mon'lhs of age Account." Then, every month l'our policy is in force, an amount and under 19. Under this plan. of course, future additions are equal to your regular monthly premium (including your first not included since no maternity benefit is provided in t/le ONE. month) is actually added to your maximum. When you have PARENT FAMILY PLAN. . . da'ims, benefils are simply sub/rorled from you,r "account," If you have no children, or if your children are'gtown anli no longer dependent on you, you will wanr the HUSBAND· " 14. Are any other unusual benefits included? WIFE PLAN. ' Or, if you ate living by yourself, you will want the INDi· Yes. In 'the event of an 'accidental dearh (within 90 days of an VlDU.f\L PLAN. : )" accident) of any person, covered. $ 50n will be paid to the cov ered person's beneficiary-unless you wish to name your parish 6.. If I become hospitalized. when do my benefits begin? as beneficiary-subjeCt to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of your policy.
·On tilt plans, your cash benefits are paid from the very fim daV' . you enter the hospital, for as ·Iong-and for as·many times-as ' ~5. Will my claims be handled promptly?
you are hcspitaliz<:d, up to the maximum (Aggregate of Bene
Yes. With your policy, you will receive a simple, easy-to-use fits) of the plan you choose.
'Clailn Fotm. Ypur claims will be processed quickly and your checks sent direCtly to you. 7. How much can I be paid in a Catholic hospitaii', H6. Why are the premiums in the Hospitlll Plan for Cotil· Each plan has its own "Aggregate of Benefits,'; what we olics so low? the maximum. . For example, under the ALL·FAMILY PLAN./he l1ur..~ilfl/lm Ypu actually get all these benefits-at such 11 low cost-because is $10,000-$100 a week ($14.28 a day) extta cash income , this is a mass enrollment plan-and no salesmen are used. Our while you are hospitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) while, ' volume is higher and our sales costs are lower. your wife is hospitalized. $50 weekly ($7.14 daily) for each ~7. How much does my first month cOllr?
eligible child hospitalized. . . Under the ONE· PARENT FAMILY PLAN./he'll14ximum is
Only $1.00, regardless of your age, the si~e of your family or $7,500-$100 weekly ($14.28 daily) while you"are hospitalized. the plan you,selecr. After the fim monrh. if you are under 65, $50 weekly ($7.14 daily) for each eligible child hospitalized. 'you pay only these low monthly rates: only $7.95 a month fot Under the HUSBAND·WIFE PLAN. the 1I/a.~imum PI the ALL·FAMILY PLAN; only $5.95 a month for the ONE· $7,500-$100 weekly ($14.28 daily) while you ace hospitaJ:. PARENT FAMILY PLAN; only $5.75 a month for the HUS· · ized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) while your wife is /1ospitalized. BAND-WIFE PLAN; only $3.25 a month (or THE INDlVID· Under the INDIVIDUAL PLAN, the maximlllll it $5.000 , VAL PLAN. (When you are over 65, premiums increase. See 'lllOO a week ($14.28 a day) while you are hospitalized. modest increase in box at left.) 8~ Must I go to il Catholic hospital to' collc;ct ben~6ts? Why should -I enroll rigbt now? No. you will be covered in any' hospital of yolir choice thar Because an unexpeCted sickness or accident could strike without makes'a charge for room and 'hoard, except nursing 'homes, con. warl)ing-andy()u will not be covered until your policv is in yalescent or self-care units of hospitals, Federal hospilals. Or force. Remember, if for anY,reason you change yout mind, you any hospital primarily for the treatment of tuberculosis, dru8 'may return your,policy within 10 days and your $1.00 will be "addiction; 'alcoholism, Or nervous' or menial, disbrder. refunded immediately. , '.'
enroll now, during dlis limited enrolIment period
there are 110 other qflalificat;om other than .to complete and
mail the Enrollment Form below. We will issue your Hos·
, pita! Plan for Catholics policy (Form P147 Series) imme·
diately-the same day we r~eive your Form. ~his aillomatic.
ally puts your policy in force. Along with your pqlicy, you will
receive a simple. easy·to·use Claim Form. Should you at any
time need your benefits, you can be SIIre that your Claim will
. be handled promptly. Doesn't it make good sense fQr you to be protected by the Hospital Plan for Catholics, should you or a mem ber of your family be stricken by sickness or accidene and suddenly hospitalized? Why not take a moment right now and fill out your Enrollment Forni. Then mail it promptly with only $1.00-"introduclOry" cost ior your first month's coverage.
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Money-Back Guarantee When you receive your policy, you'll see that it is direct, hon est, easy to understand. Bill if for aflY reason whatsoever you Jecide that "OU dOIl't wanl it, YO/~ may return it within 10'
days and we wilt promptly ,efllnd yOM do/lal'. Please Nole: Because this is a limited enrollment, we can only accept enrollments postmarked on or before Aug. 18, 1968. But pleaJe dOlll wait until Ihal date! It is important
that you act today! The sooner we receive your Form, the . sooner your Hospital Plait for Catholics will.cover you and" your family. \l7e, ((wnot cover yOIJ ij'yo//r poJicY#J f101 is
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MUTUAL PROTECTIVE INSURANCE COMPANY
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· 00''1'' ~eI8J-fm out end mail Enrollment Form todllY".wit~ $1.00, to, Mutual. Protective l1\surllnCe Company. .. " 3860 Lea!(enworth Stre,t, ()maha, Nebra~ka 68105. .
3860 Leavenworth Street, Omaha,Nebraska 68~05 i~'. ;
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2. Wh·y. do I need the Hospital Plan for Cathoncs in addi· tion to my regular insurance? Probably }'our present hospital insurance won't cover all your hospilal expenses, but even if it does, you will slill need help
to cover all your household expenses when you are hospitalized.
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, 4. Is there a lot (If red tape to qualify?
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ADDRESS ".' ., (', ,,;, ..... , .'1
Lieensetl by "he',"
jo, ,my 1tcaSQtz '0# ie~id~ . ." 10t~ do,~'t wa/il ,Oftr Pf1li~l,. you'l1zay ,eltt;'~ it ;,z 10 tlays. and we will.prompJly ,e/lmil yomdolla,'
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,ContmofUDealth . ~ ,., . ·oJMassaelu18ett. ..
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ABOUT THE NEW HOSPITAL PLAN FOR CATHOLICS 9. When does my policy go into force? ;s the Hospital Pfan for Catholics?
3. Can I collect e\'en though I carry othet health insurance?' Yes, the Plan pays you in addition to any health insurance you ,carry, whether individual or group-even Medicare!, And 1l1l
your benefits are tax· free! '
lEasy To Enroll-No Red TapeNo Salesm~n Will Call
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·The Hospital Plan for Catholics is a brand-new, low,cost health protection plan-created especially for Catholics-thar p~ys ex/rll e4Ib ;,uome direcr ro you when covered accident or illness hos pitalizes you or a member of your family.
Fn ad8ition to the exceptional value of the Hospital Plan for
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18 Important Questions: Answered
A Respected Company
force!
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IMPOiTANT~).
: This tilcOllmen; fo;~, ': . must "" mailed no laltr
; Ihan mid.Rlaht ~f:'.
SELEct" PLAN DESIRED:·
~Check One
Onlv)
c:J"'~-' _Y_e_av~~I.;·
Aug..'18,~·968
'0 Ali.F~'mjlYPlan 0 Husband·Wife Plan " 0 One·Parent Fam.ly Plan
If All·Family Qr 1iNJ;'~~J. Wife
Plan is selected, give, following information on wife:
0 No '0 Yes
Middle Initial
Wife's First Name
DATE OF
WIFE'S BIRTH:
Olndividual Plan
100 you cany other insurance in this Company?
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Month
(If "yes," please list policy numbers.)_ _~:-
Day
Velar
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J[ have enclosed my firsr monthly premium of $1.00 and hereby apply to MIJtual Protective Insurance Company, Omaha, Nebraska, for the , Hospital Plan for Catholics l'orm P147 Series and Plan thereunder as scleued above. I understand the policy is not in force until actually issued. The beneficiary for,all persons covered under this policy shall be: Check one:
O-....----~........,.':"7."'-:'::"-:---------:
Name of Beneficiary
Address
IiJ .The Catholic parish. in which the covered person resides at the time of his death.
1Dat~.
Signed..:X:.:.--:--......
-::=~=-'===____:;~:;_;=_~:;:_;;=;;:_------ Insured's Signature· SIGN
Please make check or money order payable' to ,MUTUAL PROTECTIVE "''''.
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\ \·.Czech·: Court:",:,,·, Wr,it®$~Delightful
Of
Frees'iBlshop' '!'!'.i:·'
Acco'unt'
BO~" l(f'f,?)",-"" .. pishop'·'~8fI ), among 40 persoll6 wbose pnson sentenees:were ,tepMled l as'.unlJ.,' .. 'just by the Czechoslovakian su preme court. . He is Bish~ Karel Otcenasek, apostolic administrator of the Czechoslovakian diocese of Hra
dee Kralove. Others in the group of 40 are Father Francis Silhan, S.J., the Jesuit provincial in Prague, and Abbot Augustine Machalka, O.
Praem., of Riska. Father Silhan
and Abbot Machalka were re I leased"'from prison. ::in "1965'''QS' :. ,,' part 'of a general amnesty:' 'They
: :Qave'lbeen living'in 'Radvanow;
Church' circles' 'in 'Prague be- ' ". '.' 'lieve,that Bishop,Otcenasek will "j' : soon .be, reinstated and, per
"'I . mitted' .to ,exercise his ministry,
'as the.new Czechoslovak regime . ,continues its Hberalization· poli: , cies and the removal of, many restrictions against religion and the Church.
Summer~",Expe'riment" ,
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By Rt. Rev. Msgl'•.John S. Kennedy l.t could be the title of a&ong, a comedy, a light nove}, Or it could be that of a grim"situation..We mean Stp:~mel'
in the City. Actually, it. de:signates a delightful acooti~t 'of, a 'wonderful New York City eX'peritn~t which has become' a
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continuingly" successful
program. The ~ti,thor is Mary ""~l 'h' bl' h . K" vv e, .t e pu IS er ~g . 2 B' l ' S N'~p.0dy ,0 aroJay :to,' ~,
selves, about their environment..
The first two prin'cip~es aim
.'square , l' t' th . thO d h' h . ' y a e II", W IC 15. &'umlUi relationship, Having been '. :orki' N.Y, 10008), and the, pnce: :' brought.. 'together,.. and having ',',
16 $4.95: There are m,arv(!lous '.1earn~· to c09perate in simple . photog~aphs by 'creati,ve activity, people will be' Ken Wltte;llberg, . "able, ,·and. :will want, to engage ' . a gay. Jacket . in common endeavor to 'better desi~n. b,y Sister ' 'the neighborhood. They will
Judith. Savard, ' learn' to work together effec-" R.S.H.M., and tivelY. ' the handsome The plan is simple,but there b:<>0k was deis real vision inspiring and ani sl.gned by Marmating it. It is not elaborate, in '
ym Zetlan.They the sense of requiring a lot of
~ll deserve credmoney or equipment or person- : to It and thanks. nel but it is informed with life'
But the primary and love ' Over Committee
ce I" e d i t a n d . And that is .~hY it' has laccom-, SAN JUAN (NC)...,..A· Puerto
thanks ,s~ould go to Monsl~nor, nlished far more than ponder",'. R,ican.. ",J,esu.i.,t. bl.·sho.,p hIa,.s. been ..
t J Fox who was' ordamed,'.«'· ,', ,. , , ' . R o be r . , .' , . ous expensive, bureaucratically; appointed to preside" over 'il in 1955 :andis a,pnest. of.. ,the . tai~ted ente~p.rises; :" . . ~atioiiar cc>mriiittee 'to" organi~' ....: Archdioces~ ?~ New Y~rk. ,t. ..... In' tne·.. OPeb .. _ .. the c'elebration \of 'the ceri,tena'rY ,., .. If thete IS' a compla~nt: to be, '. The'<approach'·toa OJ;ieighbor- . '''of air 'aUemptedpuE!rtO" Ric/u'l' . a : hood :r'iS' .offhaii'd;" One.:daY· 'the made'! abOut the book, 'It 15 . ",,:,,-<':' .... ~ , "',,: ":":.:, ": , . , , . " " , , " . revollition against the~pa'niiih' .': we are"n'ot'told enough.a u ieam'jippears on" Ule' stre~i"per~,' , . <,,'" . • ' :""'~ ,",'. '. , ,'. '.' " '. ,·regime'. ., '" '.' : .. ," • ", ;,. this remarkable man. " ""haps playing guitars..-or. ~ccorBIG WEEK. Ron Hansen, Washmgton Senator~ shor.t- ' Bishop''Antalio Pamlla'·Bohil:.: '•.'" We" gathert~at· he' has' ~ell' 'dions. Attention is drawn to it. stop,:acknowl.e~ges a huge paperstar' taped' to ,'hiSI hot~l" 'la S:J.,' 'will 'deliver' the :ri\<ain' I working" among the' Spamsh- "'~he little children are att~act~ room door by his teammates. Hansen Stored thE~ ,ti'rst )major '., 'address 'in' 'the 'public' square of " "I ;.ree;k~o~~ ~~y ~~~t ~:gr::':~~:~ ':~,~st;. ,a,~4 tpe~ a,re. gi.~~n, ,soro,~:: Jeag!1el.lnassi$t~d triple.pl~y, in 41 y~'I'& (J ~ly '~iOr in ~Cle,ve-: .:'~ares; where 100" years' ago . a :" 'h dl thO g" thmg to do. . ~and, then,hit"abases-Ioaded' ,hom~.r(A!1g,. ,i). against ,the. ,group, of, .400 teb~l5 to?k ·the·,;J,J, l in Selma', b u t . a~ y: any as· I~e"', . Th~, do~ng is done right'outiii . , • T\~~' T' d th t ded F "d' town,,, 'and, proclaImed'. ,Puerto . ~l~e. P:rhaps thIS IS the open, right out on the street. league-Ieadmg ,.ut:'v.lvl1t 1get'S' an . en wasl'lfl , n ay·' Rican independence.· They were
WIshed It. Perhaps some tables are,set up, to Ohicago White Sox.NC Photo.. ' later forced to ,leave by the
. Be With People some drawing and painting mal> Spanish and turned to unsuccess 'Miss Cole first came III touch' terials supplied, .~me ,artistic ful guerrilla warfare, project begun., The celebration, which is with him in 1965, the year when ' Thus a new a'tmosphere is' sponsored. by all Puerto Ricllft the program known as Summer in the City began. She had been brought about. Destructiveness, ..... p' t pro-independence groups, will in such areaS; . has an lr"lIew ers.ey as or a es or I . incll,lde an open air Mass. ,.. e newspaperwoman and, a free- rampant }ance, magazine writer. alternative - creation. People Addiction The Grito de Lares on Sept•.
A brief' news item prompted. who lived in physical pro:l[imity. . 23, 1868" .was an abortive revolt her .to se~·.an interview ,witq :l)U\:hO w~red,J;'~mo't ~rof one : .. SAIGON (NC)--:An ~Anierican: . ary this year apd now am ,vistt- that brought,forthsevererepri- .:.': Monsignor. Fox, and it w'as. thu.s., ,ano . ~~; ~r;t ''1, IS ~S ,~ ,., ~n(i, a. priest with 34 years' e~perieDce ' ~ng in Southeast Asia. From., .sal5·on Puerto. Rican 'P~trio,ts; , tbat ..she chanced UPOJl"an lIn~"." co.mm?Jl. lll.t~~es~. ,anci. c1ev~l,t;>,?.a in dealing with"drug addictiOn is' 'here.,I.go to, Laos and then on to;,' but some.. years latet' .. liberals .. ; 'dertaki~ ,.:which fired her j,mag", ".~rle~dlY spmt, Commurnt", IS" in saigon at present as p;u-t:of a" 'Isra~l ~d Greece bef9re, helld-,. ,.1Iucceeded,.in establishing· ,local ",' inaHon, ,and .,brought . her bac~", ..~Chlt;X~dd . 'Bad"Ni M'. ',": ',,;,,'; world'tour to 'study 'drug' ~<i~~" " 'ing home,", " '. " , I ' self~gov.ernment.,,' Pueru»" Rice '",. as a"pllrticipant.. . . , .,' ":::':.,,, ,~ . . '. ,g,., ",: ': .",;tion around the world. ' .. h"~ "The p\ll'P06;e.o.f :l1~,tQ~\.'"is'~ :~as ceded by Spain to the u.s,· \\' A yellf,earlie..-, the N:e""~o\.'k·,,, Th~ eff~tlve~SS of,tbe,~r~f ,., Msgr. ;James"'. KelleY,'p8stor" studY.. ,anq ,oPservEl,;the.SUI>~~t.",:iD1899. . liisters of Charity were",seek.i~g .' pro~~~, w~: dr;unatipally,5ie~;" ..• ~ Our Lady 'of' Mt;Carmel,par':' '''and: to m.ake.. !eP<.,mmenqations",:: 'J IIOme,.,Summ,er· volunteer ,work,: onst~~~5i Ill, ,1J.1e,' ~~er.of~ ,.ish in Ridgewood, N. J., has'beeo.,,·!whe~~necessary • . ';'\ "t·'''·' . ""., ...- - ; ; " . . - - _..........._ ....- .. smo~g the poor, and ask~ ,l\;IO{l"'" ,1967. In ~ Har~~m, an, area ,of , ~nterested in the subject sim:e·. .,,' ReJps':Ad,licts·' f ' . 'I" .
signor" :F':9x . for .. suggestioos.",)25 1?~\~<;~ ~ ..y.'!lIch .soW~ ,7l),OOO: his' students'day;; at the Univer-' 0'" """"~'~' .,:, ., "', ," .... J",:; ,
·.ii.··· "'Don:~ . give, lessons," " he . said.. ,J'uen,o, ~1~IlS !iy~, ,a )'~un~:m~:: "ity,of Paris when· he ·wrote""his,. ,'.. Msgr. Aelley .is pre~d~~., I)f ,.
"'DoO:t,,!lQ nursing, don't. ,trY ,tQ,: .. ~am~. +R?n~ld? '.Jito?~i~e~,:-,v:~ ,,;~esis:,on: "Behaviorism;" "which' the 8,0-me~~r.. ~ergen,~~ty"
teach anything'" • '" Just be 'VI!!t4,,\ ..,!Jh.ot, It w~ a"t.l.~e, :Whep.:De~rp~~" ,.includedtwo,chapters on drugs......(N. ~.). : Nar~o.t~~ , an~, ,,1?~g'I'
,the people!' It did not s6und was burrung, and. a not W9S He w.as president ·of· Seton Hall., .,Abuse' Cou llCl1, as, w.~11 as pelp,g ': • like much. But it worked. brewing in East Harlem. Univer.sity .South OrangeN.. J a special,a'dviset 'tothe'prosecu . A riot in fact broke out. There .from 1935'to 1949. , . , tor's office there. He is also . Three Principles was one very bad night of it, The priest said: "Drug addic- chaplain to the police depilrtThis led to planning for 1965. and it seemed certain to resume tion is a problem not confined to inent and a deputy sheriff of
·lIt was decided to' set up a·,pro- .,on the following nights. The ef- the ghetto anymore,but is' a B~rgen County.,
gram involving religious sisters' fo~ of police a~d pol~ti,cians problem .. for middle' and upper Known as a "narcotic? priest"
and brothers and artists. These failed to cool off the situation. class America, I was in South woo helps people addIcted: to
would go, in teams, into various Monsignor Fox got his Sum- America in January and Febru.. drugs, he averages 200 lectures
poor streets and seek to draw mer in the City people together a year on the subjE~ct. He'thinks the people into, a community' in aQd planned a peace, march' . '. . , ... '. ' " " ... there is too much' complacency .
the course of the Summer. ' thi:ough the streets where vio- Appeals about marijliana.· " . . .' There' was nothing haphazar:d le,nce had been worst.· I:t ap~ Of B' f C fl' : WI would like 10 see ,better . , ',I •
about the scheme. ,Mo~signor' ,p~~reddoomed·to ·failure. Who 10 ra on let recognition 'of thE~ dangers in ' Over .35 Yea'n,'
.. i . Fox proceeded on three'princi.,; "would jj>in it,,·and how Could' it piTTSBURGH (N-C) -Bishop using it. Its effect on futuregen' of Satisfied Servi~e. . I, pIes;. and the program was de:.: possibly change' the climate' of John J .. ,Wright of' PittsbiJ,rgh erations is Unknown. I would Reg, . ¥as,e'; ~Iun;'l~er 702~ , signed to put these intopractic;e'. hatred? . has appealed for prayers and' like to ~.paJ,'ent3,politicians, JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.. ~ The first is the public,forum. ,Color, Drama . material a!d for the starving doctors,clergy and teachers~ in 8Q6 N,O.• ,MAI~ .STREET '. That is, the people of a neigh":', . Bu'f it began. It wa~very victims of war in Biafra. that order - mon; cOncerned Fait ,River ,,_ 675-7,497 borhood have to. be brought to . modest, very tentative:. It met . In a letter' appearing in'an about it." . ',: --, ,' .... oiI see the conditions'in which they . with derision and' opposition. edition of the Pittsburgh Catb live. Ttli;!y' must be aware of But the marchers, with' lights oIlc, dioces~i1newspaper, Bishop . these, and aware 'of themselves and banners and music, went Wright told the, people of the existing in these, before they doggedly ahead, that night and diocese "infonried sources" had can be expect~d to do' anything thereafte-r. . "confirmed to him the "appahirig to improve them. . ' .. ~ T~e ar~a _, responded at first realities of the situation in 'Biaf- . Express Feelings' ,with c'uriosity, then with enthu- ra-in eastern Nigeria." ' 'I1he second is creativity.. The. siasm. :r'here was no more riot::' Bishop Wright said "hundreds pe~ple in a poor area need an' irig. . , ., of thousands of people are faced. opportunity to express their Miss Cole's book is cunningiy with death. from starvation. The feelings about life, about them~' put' together. Color and drama threat to the faith becomes 'every , ; " , . . . carry it swiftly along, with sta- day more sobering; one of the . tistics a~d argument introduced ,most promising Catholic com-' ; -. J oint ommission ",' at j~st tl,1e .r:ight point and atmunities in 'Africa, with intel .
P;RETORIA (NC) - A SoufK' just the right length. . ':lectual'leaders long devOted to
African Roman Catholic-Ang1J- , '. Her account will certainly ,faith and freedom; may become
C,an: J~in~ P~p;lrat<,lry. Comm~s-;, ' 'move 'Oth~rs, in ma?y places,. to :the casualty of a conflict which
Ston WIll be· formed for the pur-' ,try the kllld of thlllg' 'here de- :,takes on' incre~sing, overtones
pose of closer c;lialogue between,. ' sc.rib~l,l ... ~l:lt can thel'e ,be a,ny :'of unholy division along reli..,
the· two churches, it was dis- .. substitute for the genius ofgious, and not merely political, dosed here. 'Monsignor Fox. ,linp$," ';'. ,
Pre!ate
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"N,arco't'I··CS Pr'D-est., J
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Montie' Plumbing &
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C
OPE.N DAILY, ,FOR'THE SEASO.N
Cardinol O'Boyle Urges All Follow Pope liS Encyclfical.
New Bedfordite First Woman Law Student To Head Class at Be Law School
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 8, 1968
WASHING'roN (NO) _ Beauty oo(i brains a~ a combination most women would give their eyeteeth to Pa1Jrick CMdinal O~Boy.}e haB POSlSe88. Elizabeth @. 4'BOOty" 0'Neill just accepts them as a gift of the Lord. Betty is ealled upon all priests in the' a slim, wt~aetive giFI who now is i~ the midst <Y.f the happiest days of a young woman's Was'hington archdiocese to fife-gettmg ready:f~ her mMnage Saturday., Aug. 24 at Holy Name Church, New '"follow without equivocatioD, 'Bedford,' io lRonal'd' S. La , ambiguity or simulation" Pope SfJaNii. However, marI'iage Paul VI's encyclical which bans plans occasionally have ,to t?atbolics from using contraeep take seCood place toa new tiVe5. . ,
Cardmal 0 ~Yle's ~tem.~nt on Pope P~,ul,s ,encyclIcal. Of Human Life came in the wake 4)f statements by some priests and laymen in tbe Washington . b a~chdlOcese w~ ~ppose a . an on bIrth control pIlls and deVICes. Several days before the Pope released bis encyclical,' more than. 100 priests here informed Cardinal O'Boyle that they "can not in conscience" Ifollow the Church's teaching on contracep tion. Cardinal O'Boyle stated in bis letter that the encyclical "clear ly states and reaffirms the posi tion of the Catholic Church ban ning the use of contraceptives."
job, clerk for U. S. District Court Judge Andrew A. £affrey in Boston, 8 position Betty O'Neill assumed just weeks
two
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Sh' e acquI'red tbe ch' ()Jce job because of a "first" she bad earned at Boston College Law School: the distin'ction of being the first woman hlw student to' graduate first in her class since" the school was founded in 1929. She picked up her law school diploma magna cum laude at June commencement exercises. For Betty O~Neill, the "first" label at Boston College i'O{~s.pot her "first first." ,
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Prus<O>f71l C&ncplains PUGI1l Conve~t~on " SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The American Catholic Correct-ronal Chaplains' Association (ACCA) will 'meet in conjunction with the 98th annual congress of the American Correctional Associa tion (ACA), to be held here Aug. 26 to 30. Theme of, thtl ACA convention will be: "Cor rections Curb Crime." Prison chaplains from all ovell the country will meet to discuSi mutual problems of their apos tolate' under the direction oJ! Father ,Joseph O'Brien, O.M.I.. ACCA president and Catholic chaplain at HuntSVille, Tex. Father Thomas Ahern and Father Arthur Harrison, both of San Quentin, are host chaplains. Archbishop Joseph T, Mc Gucken of San Francisco will be guest of' honor and principal speaker at the convention luncheon, Aug. 27, at which , Bishop Andrew G. Grutka of Gary, Ind., ACCA episcopal atJ visor, will preside,
Teaching Authority
W,hen sbe received her under..: graduate degree in international affairs from George Washington University in 1964, the young \ New Bedford native also was awarded the Wilbur J. Carr Prize of $200 given annually "to that student in th(! graduating class who has demonstrated out ELIZABETH 'standing ability in the study of international 'affairs and who has given evidence of possessing -although there still is mucb to a marked degree the qualities of ber young ent~usiasm. which produce the good citizen "She's very feminine," says and dedicated public servant." her proud mother. "She certain She was the first woman stu ly doesn't look like a bookworm - and she's completely un ent ever to receive the award.
spoiled by the .things she has Daughter of Mrs. Walter J. done." O'Neill of 340 Summer Street, New Bedford, and the late Dr. Only Woman O'Neill, Betty O'Neill was activ.e The' "things" are a story In
in CYO activWes at Holy Name themselves. " '
Church" before CYO was broad The Summer after, she gradu ly organiZed," her mother re-. uated from George' Washington, calls, Betty O'Neill· to~red Europe, She graduated from New' getting a, first hand look at sit~ Bedford High,', Sch~l-after a uations an,d places. s~e had met Summer spent in. the' Philippines in textbooks. . as an American' Field Service One Summer she worked : exchange : stuci~n'i: D~ringber' senior year iflhjgh ,SChool she the· National Security Agency' i~ WaShington.' .' spoke before nu~erous ': organi 'Last Summer -:She' was ~, zations in Gre{l~el(Ne\\l Bedford, to ~nly woman' staff member inll telling them about her "wonder :. NEW YORK' (NC) - Officials ful Summ~r:" ",., . ' )al'ge Wall Street law firm; of Catholic Relief Service~, 'l"1'TOW, th~.soon bride-w'-be has, In. those' days; MI:5. Q;Neill re 'Overseas aid agency o( U.S. ,calis-and' photos attest"-'''B'etty . lltarted . a new job, bas moved Catholics, have announced bere O'Neill was a rolYJ>Oly. She was -into the Boston apartment that that CRS is preparing an emer more so when she came ·back !Jm be first home 'for her and genc.y shi,pment of over 500 tons from the Philippines.'" of food, clothing and medicines Today there's not· a trace of to aid starving Biafran victims the chubby young teen-;-ager left of Nigeria's civil war. The shipment, valued at about $250,000, will leave wi,thin the 1!I1I1I1II1II1II1II1I1I1II1I1I1I1I1II1IIllIIllIIlIlIIlIlIIlIlIIlII~ DRY CLEANING' ~ next two weeks from New York ~ for the port of Calaoor, in Bia Sand S fra, in anticipation that Nigerian ~ FUR S1I'ORAGIE ~ officials will permit the supplies to be unloaded there, and that Biafran officials will approve their di,stTibution by internation al relief agencies in the .affect 34-44 Cehannet Street ed areas. 322-6161 ~ CRS officials also stated that ~ 1I'aunten \ 1,100 tons of flour and 6,000 ii"1II11111111111111111111111111111111111111111!1II1111111111111111i: cases of strained food and baby' cereal .will shortly be shipped 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111'1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 f·rom New York to Lagos, the Nigerian capital, for the emer , gency program in western Ni geria. ~
, "This teaching of the Holy Father," Cardinal O'BoYle said, "should elicit from every loyal Catholic, be he, bishop, priest, Religious or lay person, a re sponse which recognizes the teaching, authority of Christ's Vicar on earth on all matters pertaining to faith and morals. "Therefore, as the ~ishop of Washington, I call upon all priests in their capacity as con fesssors, teacl)ers, and preachers of God's word to follow without equivocation, ambiguity or sim ulation the teaching of the Church on this matter as enun ciated clearly by Pope Paul VI." Cardinal O'Boyle concluded: "I also urge our iood faithful ' people, placing their trust in the Providence of God and enlight ened by the Holy Spirit, to ob serve and follow in, their family life the principles, set forth l>Y tbe successor of Peter, our hply , and reverend Father, Pope Paul. VI." . q
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P'repare Emergency' Shipment Biafra '
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Asks Experts Study Population Problem
CINCINNATI' (NC)-Problems of overpopulation and world food supply need "scholarly study" by Catholic experts as well as by secular economists, ~. O'NEILL , Baid Father Joseph' V. Urbain, , rural life director of the Cincin her husband and is getting ready nati archdiocese. He also warned against "over
for her wedding. Her fiance, a graduate of, dramatizing" the issue of popu
lation growth and the use of
Annapolis who has been associ ated in business with his father "scare" tactics "to promote un
limited planned parenthood here
for the last year, will ,enter Har in the West, where economic
vard Graduate School of Busi affluence rather than scarcity is
ness Administration in Septem ber. , ' an immediate moral concern."
Betty O'Neill rides calmly Father Urbain, long active in through the chaos of pre-wed'-' the National Catholic Rural Life ding plans. Conference, made his statemeBt Mrs. O'Neill just shakes her in a paper prepared for a Uni bead in bewilderment. versity of Kentucky seminar tm "She's the 014est," the mother "Food and the Population EJI-', says;' "but I have two other chil plosioIl." He pointed out tbat dren, too." . "demographers and economists 'The younger illemPerB of the 'admit to 'great'gaps' of knowl family' Walter J. Jr., 23" who edge" in the area of population
will enter his second year at· 'and resources· and in ·reprodue
Boston "College Law' School in tive ,physiololW.
He was critical of' th,e term, September, snd. Margaret i'Peg , "overpopula1,ion," commenting gy," 'iil, ~ senior at Smith. . For' Elizabeth O'Neill, being "that "it is, indicative of a cur 'first in the family was prophetic. . rent tendency to dispose of the 'She to ,be first. in every-' ancient problem with; a simple
formula." ,
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Associate Dean Professor C. James Cleary has been named associate dean of Stonehill Collegej Nqrth Easton. At"the college since 1949, he has the longest record of, continuing service of any faculty member. Prior to his new a'ppointment he served as chairman of the de partment of history, in which he will continue to teach on 'a limited basis. The new dean is 11 resident of Norwood"
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Pope .Paid VI"has: given hisful! :support to: the ·naHan· ~'govem 'fue!1t's: campaign.;:to ,~promote. high'wa~. safety.. Speliidrig to Ii . tro\'Yd :in the· ·'cOlirtrard':. of his .'Sumtnel.hoD1!·'her-e,, the: PoPe ,~aid·.he,woul'd·like to' add his.voice . to "the authoritative 'voices which recall· all t/:lOS4!! who. us,~ the roa~tp a; sepse. Of ~htJf~,.. ' .. '.'
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Catholic Medical Missmon Board Makes Report
THE ANCHOR, ,,Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
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U[l'!bJan Novitiate
NEW YORK (NC) - The Catholic Medical Mission Board, with headquarters here, reported that its ship
NIAGARA FALLS (NC)-To provide a more urban setting for training candidates iri the Carmelite order, the novitiate for the Canadian - American Province will be transferred here in Canada from New Balti more, Pa. according to Father Malachy Smith, O. Carm., pro vincial superior. Father Clyde Ozminko1N~;ki, O.Carm., of Chicago, will remain director of novices. Father Thomas Pinkel, O.Carm., of Buffalo, will continue as supe rior. The move will be completed in August. Father Ozminkowski feels the change "is in line with the cur rent thinking on the planning of seminaries. The New Balti more site was too secluded but in Niagara Falls there are am ple opportunities for apostolic training in community work," he stated.
ments of drugs, medicines and hospital supplies to overseas medical missions during the first half of 1968 totaled 1,207,727 pounds, and had a wholesale value of $4.2 million. Father Joseph J. Walker, S.J., CMMB director, said that during the six-month period the board shipped supplies to 1,624 mis sions and mission areas in 36 countries in Africa, Asia, Cen tral and South America and Oceania. Largest mission country served by the board is India, with 283 missions, which received 222,455 pounds of supplies, the director said. The next largest shipments went to Brazil, which received 147,973 pounds; Bolivia, 110,414 pounds; and Ecuador, 108,809 pounds. . Heal Needy Sick The assistance program of the Catholic Medical Mission Board is designed to help the staffs of overseas Catholic hospitals, dis pensaries, clinics, schools, or phans' homes and other institu tions with material supplies to heal the needy sick. It helps some 5,000 medical missions in 87 countries. These missions treat an esti mated 60 million poor each year.
Philadelphia P'riest To Form Tribunal PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A priest of the Philadelphia arch diocese has been named to estab lish the diocesan tribunal in Brownsville, Tex., it was an nounced here by John Cardinal KroI. Father Joseph A. Galante, who received his doctora,te in canon law this year from the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome, will take up his duties in the three:-year-old Texas dio cese in June. In Brownsville, where he will live with Bishop Humbel'to S. Medeiros, he will set up the Church court system and engage in pastoral work among the Mexican-American Catholics who form the majority of the diocese's population. The Brownsville diocese now uses the ecclesiastical court of the Corpus Christi diocese, from which it was formed in 1965. There are 250,000 Catholics in the four-county area of the Brownsville diocese, out of a total population of 370,000.
iowa See Sponsors Parish Pilot Study DAVENPORT (NC) The Davenport Diocese has begun the first phase of a survey with the distribution of question naires to the seven parishes which will comprise the pilot study. ' The parishes have been chosen at random from seven survey areas to test the validity of the questionnaires before the entire diocese is polled. Six questionnai·res are being used~two for priests, one for "key personnel" and heads of parish organizations, one for parents on Catholic education, one for married Catholics on at titudes toward family life and one fO!'- non-Catholics who pro': vide 8 random sample of the parish population. The survey-known as I-SEE, (Iowa South East Evaluation) ~ designed ,to gather both factu al and attitudinal. information 'about the diocesan population.
Ships Food, MedicaB ,SilJppSies to Biafra ,
PRIEST DONA'fES HOME: Father !'rancis P. O'Reilly gives the deed to a recently inherited house in North Philadelphia to Mr. William Dawson, who"with his wife Carrie and their. 11 children, happily moved in. The Dawsons had been publicized as needing a home when the one they occupied was condemned by public health officials. John Cardinal Krol, who assisted in. the transaction, looks on at left. NC Photo.
Vietnamese .Refugees Get New Housing Army Engineers, .Navy Sea bees in Effort SAIGON (NC)-In the imme-' houses are ready; in District Six, . diate Saigon area the' Viet Cong 195 of a planned. 205 are ready" were responsible for the de and near the Phu Tho race track· struction of 27,653 houses in -scene of some of the heaviest their Tet (lunar new year) truce fighting in May 520 of a' offensive and their May attacks planned 795 are finished. on the city. Most of the houses The project to build these were destroyed in the military 1,500 houses started while the action against the Viet Cong in fighting was' still going on in filtrators who holed up in the some parts of the suburbs. Presi houses and had to be driven out· dent Nguyen van Thieu ap by mortar and rocket as well as proved the project proposed small-arms fire. jointly by Gen. Cao van Vien, One of the worst hit areas in chief of the Vietnamese joint the May attack was near the "Y" general staff, and Gen. William bridge (so called from its shape) C. Westmoreland, then U. ·S. south of the King Dhoi canal. commander in Vietnam. It was one of the fil'st to. be re Permanent Units built. Prime Minister Tran van Prefabricated frame units are Huong attended a ceremony on made at the Phu Tho race track the site marking the completion and erected on foundations built of new houses for the people. by the engineers and Seabees. The rebuilding effort to give Before the end of August addi tional building sections will be the people houses is called Proj delivered to the housing sites. ect Dong Tam (Hearts United) Other major housing projects and work is going ahead at sev are already started or are being eral sites in the city. It is a planned by engineers. These united effort by the South Viet namese Army engineers, the U. S. Army engineers' and the COlth«»l~c Conference U. S. Navy Seabees. Already at three sites in Dis Director Resigns trict Eight, 480 of a planned 500 CHICAGO (NC)-The National C;1tholic Conference for InArgentine Prelate terracial Justice (NCCIJ) has ~ ••"..JIe Mee't'ong' announced ·the resignation of To UOO<JclUl Mathew H. Ahmann, executive VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope director of the Chicago-based Paul VI has named as secretary agency since its founding in general of the second general 1960.
conference of the Latin AmerAhmann explained that his
ican Bishops' Council meeting at reasons for 'leaving are purely Medellin, Colombia, Bishop personal. He left his term ina Educardo Pironio, the apostolic Hon date open in order to per administrator of Avellaneda, mit the conference to recruit a Argentina. The meetings begin replaceqlent.
Monday, Aug. 26. NCCIJ serves 150 Catholic
The Vatican press 'bulletin human relations and urban 01' also announced that Pope Paul ganizations in the nation, 26 of had received a group of officers them located in the South. It of the council. Among them works to end racial discrimina were Bishop Pironio; Juan Car- tion' and to foster interracial dinal Landazuri Ricketts of justice and equal opportunity in Lima, Peru; Archbishop Avelar all areas of life. NCCIJ is the Brandoa Vilela of ,Teresina, Catholic participant in Project Brazil; Archbishop Pablo Munoz' . Equality, a nationwide interre Vega of Quito, Ecuador, and ligious effort to promote fair Bishop Marcos McGrath, C.S.C., employment ,by using the p~r 'of Santiago de Veraguas, Pan- chasing power of religious inama. stitutions.
will be permanent housing units. Already the Vietnamese go:vern ment is erecting 15 major build ings to house 2,607 families. The Canadian government gave $200,000 for a building to house 74 families. The Vietnamese government is working on plans for a build ing complex to house 2,000 fam ilies. The United States Agency for International Development (AID) has given $4 million to erect 18 units that will house 2,000 families. The larger per manent buildings will' be ready about the middle of 1969. It is estimated that these projects will provide housing for 54,000 persons.
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NEW YORK (NC)-Officiaill of Catholic Re~ief Services. United States Catholic Confer ence--overseas aid agency of American Catholics-announced here that 260 tons of acutely needed high-protein foods, med icines and clothing were being shipped shortly from the port . of New York to Biafra to aid the victims of the civil war. The supplies, valued at $123, 853, were destined for Sao Tome -Portuguese island off the west coast of Africa - from where they will be airlifted into Biafra on chartered flights under the auspices of Caritas, international Catholic welfare agency, CRS spokesmen said. The ocean shipment supple ments an airlift of CRS emer gency supplies that left New York for Sao Tome, COntaining 14 tons of high-protein food stuffs, valued at $35,000. More than three-quarters of this tonnage was purchased by . CRS from funds donated by in qividuals and foundations spe cifically to aid the starving in Biafra. The balance consisted 01( "in-kind" contributions from in .dividuals, groups, manufacturem and other commercial sources.
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STOCKHo'LM (NC) - TWO"" .Catholic observers' attended.'.the '," conference of Syndesmos;',tlle' ,: international ,Orthodox youth" move!llent, being held at the headquarters of the Lutheran diocese of Rattvik, northwest of here. They were Msgr. Joseph Gre million, of the Alexandria, La., diocese, secretary of the Pontif ical Commission for World Jus tice and Peace, and Miss Marie Ange Besson, a member of the Vatican Council of the Laity. '
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Continued from Page One .by the u.s. bishops 'is, :"clear... ··. Ms sense, of "grave re'sponsibll~ . 'It is. he said, ','an endofsement'of ilty," which caused him "no small the Holy Father's encycli~al apiri,tual suffering" in the four letter on the regulation of birth" rears of study prior to issuance $ * * the bishops in no way tM. his pronouncement on the intend to imply that there is any eegulation of birth. di vergence between their state~ On a subsequent occasion ment and the teaching of the '~Ug. 5), the Pope told crowds Holy Father." el visitors at Castelgandolf that Correct -Conscience' Illis ~ejection of artifical means "It is true that peoplE~ must, ~ .buth control stems. ~ot !from form their consciences," Bishop blS own personal deCISion, but Bernardin continued "but it is 4Ew.·om the "very structure. of .lif~: equally true that th~y have the .t love and of human dlgmty." responsibility to form a correct Commenting on the numerous conscience. ' messages of thanks and agree "Iri forming their consci~nces .~ ~ )'Ie ~d received regarding he added, "the people are to a~ tbe." encyclical "from every part, cept the Holy Father's teaching ~ "the world and from every, in the way envisioned by Vati l!oev~l of society," the Pope said can U>s Copstitution 'on the lie" wished to ~'cordially .thank, Church: '* * '" religious submis all., those who have received our sion· 'of will. and mind" must be encyclical and who have given showri in a such a way: to the .tness of their adherence," authentic teaching authority of Not Easy Words the Roman Pontiff, even when Then, addressing himself to he is not teaching ex cathedra. filose not in agreement with the That is, 'it must be shown in Giocument's teaching, the Pope such a way. that his supreme /i8id: ' magisterium is acknowledged "We know that there are many with reverence, the judgments Who hav:e not appreciated OU'l" made by hiq} are sincerely ad ~aching, and that not a few op hered to,. according to his'mani,-' pose it * * 0> Our words are not fest mind and will.' " easy; they do no't conform to a Wi.~hi~ ~ few days following usage today which unfortunately publicatIOn of the encyclical;' ;l,.; spreading as convenient '~Hi i more than, a!>core of ,American l!learly !fav~able to love aild-' prelat.es - includi~g cardinals, iamily equilibrium. We, wish.' archbishops and bIShops-f['om again to recall tha,t the 'norm' ?cr?s~ the country had issued wt\ich we have reaffirmed is not md[vldual statements to the ene' of ours,' blit that it' comes ~ait.hf~l:withi? the.ir, respective truly from the 'struc'ture of life, Junsdlc!lOns, In which they, sup 9flove and of hurn/ari dignity,; por t : d the Pop,e ~nd urged re-, and this is because it is derived flectIOn,. careful ,consideration lk'om ,the law of God." and senous study of the docu "lot is not a norm which ignores' ment. Accept and Assent ebe'sociological or demorgraphi In their individual letters. the cal conditions of our time," the Pope continued. "It is not per se American hierarchy called" for acceptance of, and assent to, the 11 contrary norm, as some would Pope's teaching on the matter of seem to maintain, to a 'reason the transmission of human' life. able limitation of births, nOlO to The Conference of Major Su scientific research and thera pen tic care, nor; even less to' pedo['s of Men came out in su'p pod: ,of: ,Pope. Pa1,l1's ,~ncyclical,',~ trUly' responsible parenthood, asserting that '''it is of funda nor to peace and to' family har meritiil "imPortance . to" , th'e mony. It is only an existing and sever,e moral norm, valid today, Church and to' the world at as ,always, which ,prohibits the large," In a statement issued use of means which intentionally by the organization's president, impede procreation and which, Father Gilbert Graham, .. O.P., the CMSG: said priests should thus degrade the purity of love and the mission of conjugal life.", "adhere" to the' document's norms. '" U.s. Support In its statement, the CMSC-· "The bishops of, the 'United representing 250. religious supe-, states, in a joint statement is .,riors of men's orders ill the U. S. sued (July 31), supported the -,-affirmed its members' "alle Papal pronouncement and stated giance and loyaity to the person that "the Holy Father, speaking of the ,Pope as the supreme I!IlS the supreme teacher of the teaching authority in the Church Church, has reaffirm'ed the prin on matters of faith and moral eiples to be followed iIi forming ity." The superiors "recognize the 'Christian consciences of mar Turn to Page seventeen ried persons in carrying out their responsibilites'!' The bIshops ,called upon the nation's ,Catholics-priests and laymen-tO ,"receive with sin Continued from Page Oile eerity what he (the Pope) has the issue might "muddy the taught ,to stiidy it carefully,' and waters" when legislators taclde W form their consciences in its the job of boosting taxes. ]light." ~ Cilontroversial Issue 'The statement was issued bv Guidry said, however, that he Archbishop. John F. Dearden';f is pushing for a special session Detroit, president of the Nation in January or February to deal al Conference of Catholic Bish exclusively with state aid to ops, in the name of the bishops non-public schools. of the United States, after con He 'said he asked the governor sultation with the country's about such a session "and the bishops. governor didn't discount it." Shortly thereafter, a story ap The south Louisiana legislator peared in the secuiar press quot said if it was up to him, the ing two Catholic theologians ~,chools would be closed now. who were among those who dif The only .thing a p~li~ician un fered with 'the encyclical _ as d~rstands IS $100 million over':'
Sol·on AI a rme'd'
CCO Convention Continued from Page One
and writer, and 20 others who
, will participate in panel discus
sions. BishOp Shannon, 'Very Rev. Robert J. Fox, known for his, work with racial problems ill Harlem, Mr. Klise, and, John Merchant, Connecticut's Deputy Commissioner for Community Affairs, will present the issue of "Poverty, Peace and Race.'" There will be general sessions , CITES SCHOOL NEEDS: Outlining n~ds of America's at which the main speakers will parochial schools for members of the Resolutions Commibtee give new concepts and new di rections. At special sessions the of the Republican National Convention is William R. Conse causes of poverty, dine, general counsel of the U.S. Catholie Confere~ce. With underlying race, unrest and, how and why him at the ,P?dium is Dr. John Cicco, deputy superintendent' they relate to religion will be of 8,chools of tjle Pittsburgh diocese. NC Photo. probed. A special p~ogram will be de voted to those interested in working with the exceptional child, the mentally retarded. and the' hearing-impaired child. ' Information on registration and reservations may be· ob I tained at the Diocesan CCD .; ' / ' PORTLAND (NC) Eight many campuses. Besides doing Center, 446 Highland ·Avenue, Fall River. ' seminarians of the Portland • most of the chores, the students _ _ __ .. archdiocese are expected to en- will set rules, in dialogue with roll as regular students at Port- the directe,r and an associate 4:,;'~ land State College and the Uni- director. ~;:;I,,:{,c versi ty of Portland here this' .~,,,:, ~ .~~ Fall, living in community in a' . "'\;) ::, house of !)tudies purchased 'by S.J~ 'j the archdiocese near the Port I . Continued from Page One land State campus. Woodstock College, Md. He Seven , applications, for ad se'i"ved his l:egericy' at St. Peter's" mission to the 'seminarians-on- ' C?lleg~, 'Jersey· ~ity, N.J., and campus program have been re was ordained by Most Rev. ceived, according to Father Ber A.Emme't, , ' , S.J. tram Griffin" vfce-officialis of Thomas
Stu,dy for Priesthood·
·Orego~ 'Seminaria~s to Att,e~d College Classes ,at State
nsti,tutions
~_"'''''.''''_·'···
'''.U'~'''''''···
.~._
o.u.~.:;
/ - (t
Fr.. Connors,
the archdiocese" who will be resident director,of the house of studies. '
The jubilarian completed the ological studies at Weston and ascetical . studies, at Cohasset· Two applicants are freshmen,\ Mass. He has served as a pro~ three are sophomores and two fessor at Lo,yola University, New are juniors. Three have attended Orleans, M:., and as a chaplain a seminary previously and one in the United States Air Force. ' plans t6, transfer from a semi Con'celebl:ants at the' Jubilee '
nary to the program. Mass will be Rt. Rev. Edmund G,
Had dad, chancellor of the 'On receiving a bachelor de Worcester Diocese; Rev. John P. gree from a Portland area col lege, a student in the house of Cronin; Rev. Joseph E. Mc studies program may enter", a Gr.ady, S.J., professor of theol~ major seminary for the final ogy . at Holy Cross; Rev. John years of study for ordination t<t P. Driscoll; Rt. Rev. John E. Boyd, St. :Patrick's pastor; and the priesthood. Rev. James P. Dalzell.
Father Grif~in explained that
Friends are invited flo the guidelines published by the U. S. Mass. bishops require that the colle gian-seminarians 'earn bachelor of arts degrees with a liberal arts basis, and a philosophy major is strongly recommended.
Till CITY
S piritual· Fo~tion
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Iel. 644·5556 The college curricui'U'~ in it- , 245 MAIN STREET self will not be sufficient to pre BOILE:RS RETUBED FALMOUTH-548-1918
pare students for' advanced TUBES REPLACED studies for the priesthood, he' ARMAND ORTlNS, Prop.
24 HOUR SERVICE said. In addition to regular colFULL IIfSURANCE COVERAGE lege courses; classes in such sub jects as Catholic theology and scholastic philosophy will· be provided at the house of studies. §!IIIIIIIIII1II1111111UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I111111111111111J!:
saying that the bishops' state Spiritual formation will be a Dlg.ht," he stated, referring to h!s ment departed from tlie Pope's ?shmate ?f the cost to the publiC ,vital facet of the program,
position on a vital point. The if Cath~lic schoOl~ were to cl~se. Father Griffin said. Daily, Mass
story said the theoll1giapS claim';,! " ,'I.:,h,e i.lght, ~o .gam state subSidy will be' offered in Ule house 'and
ed the bishops' statem·entc.'.."'\;'· .!Qr, nonpubh~ schools. was one weekly group meetl'ngs wI'11 help'
. . . . . _ ..e of the most controversial issues . ~los.~ to th~I~:oslbOn!~:.t~\t~O'i. ~f .the lIegi,slative session. studel~t. develo~_~ent" c:c~ e~ .w ee~ artiflc~l irth' Bills' by Guidry to supply The . ~l~egian-seminarians al n ~ IS mo,rl~ .,Y-. Re,rm~~af>l~o:" 'dire!.it' tuition,' ,grants to non- so will do apostolic'work, assist Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin~ public sl'ihoot" students were de- ing in Portland parishes and General Secretary of,ttte Nati.on- feated in the An alter participating in various .Chris" !iii al Conference of Catholic Blsh- nate measure introduced in the tian action programs. == '" == declared' (Aug. 2) ,that the ·Senate ..was blocked by oppo-· ,The house will be operated'{H\ , 'mtent·"otthe statement ~issued, <nents before.reachine'-avote.," ,.'a ~oopera~ve,'basis•. famili-al'.......§ ',UNION WHARF. FAIRHAVEN, . . -"7.9351 .~
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LOBSTER BOATS ARE IN WITH LARGE LIVE )
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encyclical Responses
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Continued from Page Sixteen gratefully welcomed this reaf
the complexity and urgency of firmation by the authentic
the~ problems treated by the voice of Pope Paul VI, SUI:cessor
Ho~y Father," and they "accept .of St. Peter, and visible head of the pl"inciples he has recalled in the Church of Christ." I'esolving this most dIfficult Fr~neh Cardfinal question," the statement said, In France, Alexandre Charles
and added that "professional Cardinal Renard of Lyon, pres
theologians will rightly debate ident of the French bishops'
and discuss this document." commission on the family; wrote
Methodist Bishop in the Catholic daily, La Croix,
Bishop Fred Pierce Corson, . "We do not have to restate,
retiring Methodist bishop of Phil much less to defend, the teach
adelphia, sent a telegram of con ing of the Pope: that teaching
gl'atulations to Pope Paul for his bears in itself its own indisput
able authority" even if one re
"courage and dedication and" • • resistance to compromise for the grets seeing it challenged.
sake of fashion between spirit "P~ul VI," the cardinal said, and -ffi!\tter". in th.e. jssuance of . "is,.taking the pa~ 9f difficulty; his encycli~al.' " , . , ' . . , ' ano,iher position would have Bishop Corson, former presi been 'J110re easily accepted: that dent of the World Methodist wafl;' in the short run, 'success,' Council and an official observer bur with the acceptance' of 'the at Vatican Council II, told the gel'l'e'ral lowering of public and Pope that he was "reminding the private morality.''' wOl'ld of its r.eligious, moral and The. head of the Swiss Catho doctl"inal heritage." lic ~ishops' Conference wamed A sizable number of priests, against the danger of "superfi both as individuals and in cial and inappropriate opinions" groups-priests' associations-in on the encyclical. Bishop Jo various parts of the country hannes Vonderach of Chul"ch said the encyclical "is far more have voiced their dissent regard ing the papal teaching as ex far-reaching and involves great pressed in the encyclical. They el' commitments for Catholics than the views of the in.divid have stated that they "cannot in uals," conscience" accept the Church's tradi tional teaching on the im In Austria Franziskus Cardi morality of contraception under nal Koenig of Vienna said what all circumstances, and that they is important about the encyclical is its view on morally justified respect the judgment of those Catholic theologians who uphold birth control. "This encyclical," he said, "stresses principles and the I'ight of ,individual spouses to "responsibly decide according avoids entel'ing into particular cases." to their conscience that artifi Dutch to Meet cial contraception in some cir cumstances is permissible and The encyclical: stirred up a indeed necessary to preserve storm in The Netherlands, The and foster the values and sa Dutch bishops said that would ,credness of marriage." not be able to offer their guid The National Association of ance on the meaning of the en Laymen issued a statement call cyclical until after much consul ing the document "tragic," and tation with theologians and reaffirming its own position that other experts. Catholics must "prayerfully and Vicar generals in two Dutch conscientiously consider in their dioceses in the absence of their own situation the optimum bishops signed public statements number of children and the saying the encyclical is contral'y proper means of regulating to the majority opinion of the birth." papal advisory Commission on The lay groups endorsed the birth conb-ol. However, Bernard statements of the theologians, Cardinal Alfrink of Utrecht pre and asserted that every Catholic dicted that the encyclical would is expected "to follow the dic not lead to any rupture. in the tates of his own conscience in Church, because "the time of the matter of birth. control." schisms ia over." "Enc~'clkals," Canadian Response he said, "can be no reason for Most Canadian Catholic lead any schism for anyone with ers expl·essed.' acceptance of the some theological education." encyclical 'but 'several Church AustraDia liberals voiced dismay and dis In Australia, the encyclical appointment over the document. was the object of the Sydney Maurice Cardinal Roy of Que archdiocese's first fulldress bec, said the Pope's appeal for pi"ess conference f9r newsmen more research 'on birth regiJla and radio and television com tion has been ignored by crH.ics mentators. At the conference, of Humanae Vitae. He said he Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Mul hoped that science could im doon called the encyclical a pro"ve means of I'egulating positive, beautiful, elev<Jting births such as by, establishing document. the exact time of a woman's Bishop Muldoon said that the fel'tile pel"iod. encyclical is gravely binding on Bishop Gordon Wheeler of the conscoience of Catholics, He Leeds, England, said he expected added that it is one step re nothing else and the encyclical moved from an infallible ex was a "vel'y' p"ositive document." cathedl'a stntement and that it He added that "there is no long is unlikely to be altered by suc er any loophole of concise con ceeding pontiffs., science for Catholics," , In their statement upholding Ireland's Response the Pope's position, thE~ bishops In Dublin, Archbishop John C. of New Zealand said: "Through McQuaid; C,S,Sp" said the ency out that history (of the Church) clical "sets forth once again the there is one essentially varied natul'e and purpose of marriage stream of teaching by the au as they are manifested b,ll. the thor'ity of the Church, to the ef natural law and purpose of mar fect that al'tifieial contraception riage and the law of the Gos is contrary to the natural moral pel." He said that the Pope's en law * * >I< cyclical "with great firmness "The letter 'Humane Vitae' is and immense compassion, reas not desgned merely to hold the serts the moral law that has traditional line at all costs, ir been constan tly proposed by the respective of personal human teaching authority of the perplexities or of problems fac Church," ing the whole of mankind, It is He said that, with all the 3 firm statement of principles by bishops of,the Church, he "very which, to quote Pope Paul, 'the Chul'ch knows that she contrib utes to a tn;ly human civiliza College President tion; ,she engages man not to ab PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Sis dicate from his own responsibll ier Mary' Xavier has been ap it,y in OJ'der to rely on technical pointed presIdent of Chestnut means; (and) by that very fact Hill College here. She succeeds Sistel' Catharine Fr'ances who she defends the dignity of man and wife.''' beld the post, since 1954.
THE ANCHORThurs." Aug. 8,
I
t 968
17
Pope' .Felicitates
Brooklyn Prelate ;"
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope
Paul VI sent an autographed
letter to Archbishop Bryan J.
McEntegart, retired bishop of
BrQOklyn, on the occasion of hill
25th anniversary as a bishop.
FESTIVAL GIFT: Pope Paul VI receives a box of peaches from children at his Summer residence on the otcasion of the Castelgandolfo Festival of Peaches.
'Ur,ge Experiment Northern Illinois Laymen Propose,Change In Status of Diocese of Rockford SYCAMORE (NC) The Northern Illinois Conference of Laymen has ~ecommended that the Diocese of Rockford be made an 'experimental diocese for 10 years with two ·five-year terms for the office of Bishop to be filled by elections. The laymen want the Rock ford Senate of Priests to elect a Bishop for a five-year term to succeed the late Bishop Loras T:- Lane and then have the clergy, Religious and laity elect a Bishop for the second fi ve )'ears of the 10-year trial. The request has been made in 3 letter to Archbishop Luigi Rai mondi, Apostolic Delegate in the United States, "John Cardinal Cody of Chicago, ecclesiastical province in which Rockford is located," Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit, president of the National Conference of Cntholic Bishops and Bishop Joseph L. Bernadin, general secretary of the National Con ference of Catholic Bishops, The 1aymen noted that "Ulider Bishop Lane the diocese pro gressed noticeably and we fear losing momentum of his legacy by any prolonged vacancy," doubt that a candidate from out side 'the diocese "could become duly acquainted with the people and the cil'cumstances of their lives." The lny conference mnin tained' that the Diocese of Rock fo\'d I'esembles "a small scale uni vel'sal church to an unusual degree" being "urban in charac ter as well as rural" with people' of all ethnic backgrounds and
New
~ector
WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James H. Mullaley, S,V,D" has been 'named rector of Divine Word College here, succeeding Father Donald J. Ehr, S.V,D" \Vho is now provincial for the Eastern Province of the Society of the Divine Word.
DONAT BOISVERT NSUIl'A~Cl
AGJ:f'ICY, INC
96 WILLIAM STREET
NEW BEDFORD. MASS,
998-5153 997-9167
rERSONAl SERVICE
advanced as well as tradition
ali~t litlll'gical programs. "In these days of renewal," the laymen said, "a vacant See in the Diocese of Rockford pre sents a challenge to apply fresh ideas to the universa.l Church wit.h relative obscurit~·." The letter, signed by Norbert Jacob, president of the lay group; also asked an immediate com missioning in the diocese of a sociological study by an inde pendent pl'ofessional -research agency.
Religious Journalism Session in Evanston CHICAGO (NC) - A three day working conference of 100 journalists from thl~ general press as well as the Catholic and Pl'Otestant press, foi:using on "issues 'in religious ;journalism in t.he seventies," will begin Sept. 13 at ,Northwestern Uni versity in nearby Evanston, The conference is being spon sOl'ed by the Medill School of Journalism of Northwestern University; the Divinity School of the University of Chicago; the Center for the Study of Man in Contemporary Society at the University of Notre Dame; the Associated Chllrch Press; the Catholic Press Association; the Religious Newswriters' Associa t.ion, and the 'Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rlth in Chi cago, ,
In the Latin-language lette..
Pope Paul said: "It is our most
lively desire that the occasion o!
t.his event be celebrated with.
public manifestations of homage
and ,piety on the part of, .the "
cle,rgy . and people entrusted, to, I your cares. . ,,' '" "ITo increase the holy joy we'
volun'tai'ily take this opportune""
ana ",;clcomed occasion to ren~w "
10 ' you' op,enly our long-time"
benevolence and our profound .
esteem; hoping that that which.
for us is a reason of joy may be
welcomed also in the com
munion of faith and in the
union of a more ardent charity."
<"
On July 17 Pope Paul ac
cepted the retirement of Arch
bishop McEntegart, 75, for rea.:'"
sons' of age and impaired health.
The archbishop was consecrated'"
Aug', 3, 1943, and became bishop "
of Brooklyn inA,Pril, 1957. .
laity to Have Voice In Parish Affairs
:eOSTON (NC) -Laymen hli the Boston archdiocese will SOOIll have responsibility for appro~,' ing parish budgets, shaping edu-, cational policies, planning soeial action programs and dealinll ll'ith other parish matters. The new role for the laity was outlined in guidelines is sued for the formation of padsla councils, drawn up by Il special! committee of the Archdiocesan Priests' Senate. Richard Cardi nal Cushing has directed the e£ 1ablishment of parish councils illl" every parish in the archdio~, by late October.
The councils will be concerned . with fiscal planning, school'con sl mcNon, liturgical changes, 90-" cial problems and all mattet'fl' affecting parish life. Each parisb" will have five commissions headed by parish council mem bers and drawing membership from all 'sectors of the parish. The commissions will deal with., administration, parish activities" religious education, social ser";' "ice and spiritual development.
DEBROSS OIL co. 'He~ting Oils ond P~"·"ers
Pal"ticipation is limited to 100 joul'llalists divided among the three religious press organiza tions. The Anti-Defamation League office is coordinating ar rangements.
365 NORTH FRONT -STREET
NEW BEDFORD 992·5534
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18
THE ANCHOR-Diocese
of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
Education Probe Miamli AIl'~ihl~mslhop Carroll on Florida Bocud StudyGIl'il\9j PublocSchool Needs
Writ®~ .Random Con, me trn ts_
On·l@bor Re~ations Scene
I
By Msgll'. George G_. Higgins Writing a weekly oolumn is, if the tru,th must be told a beastly chore even under the best of Circumstances. It's 'sheer,. unadulterabed torture, ho,wever, when your dead Hne happens to coincide with the last day of your Summer· vacation. Under thes1e cir cumstances the effort re.1 The New Republic and other critics of the labor move quired to put together any liberal ment will have to say about the thing like a coherent essay Alliance. Much will depend, I
MIAMI :NC) - Archbishop Colemah F. Carroll of Miami is one of 15 F'loridians named by
Florida Gov. Claude Kirk to a Public School Board.
a master plan that will make Florida first in education."
The prelate has been appointed .to a four-year term on the board which is to ,;tudy the state's edu cational needs and recommend improvements to the legislature. It was created during a special session of the legislature called earlier this ~'ear to deal with the teacher-walkout crisis.
MIAMI (NCh-Msgr. Ambrose De Paoli, a priest of the arch diocese of Miami serving in the diplomatic corps of the Church. has been assigned as secretary in . tl~e nunciature of Caracas, Venezuela. Msgr. DePaoli, ordained in 1960 at the North American Col lege, Rome, has been secretary in the nunciature at Zambia, Africa, for the past two years. A native of Jeannette, Pa. he served in the English language section of the Papal Secretadat of State from 1964 to 1966.
Name Miami PriesII'
C(llracas Secretary·
ona single topic is .almost too suspect, on what· the Alliance much to ask of poor old human does in the field of political ac Late last year the Archbishop \ nature. This will tion between now and the Ides was named to the governor's 30 explain why the of November. If it suppor1;s the' member Commission on Quality present column, NR's candidate, I suspect· that Education, ·a study and action by .way. of ex NR will find some reason to group .which Gov. Kirk said "will ~eption will welcome the formation of the have but one task: to draw up take the form Alliance as a forward step in the of a. ·discon right direction. If, on the other CHAIRMAN: Dr. Garroll nected series of hand, it supports another candi-. Hochwalt, St. Louis,· Mo., random com date, my guess is that the Alli ments ·on a ance will be cited as additional business leader, was elected number of re evidence that the labor move chairman of the board of lated develop ment has gone to pot. trustees of the Catholic Uni ments which California Vineyards V'ersity of America when the
occurred during Item: The Agricultural Work r e c e n t I y enlarged. board; the .past few weeks in the field of labor relations while the ers Freedom' to Work Associa-· equally divided between lay
writer was browsing around .the tion (AWFWAr has annouriced
and clerical members, held
hills and dales of ·Southern . it will picket any business ad its initial meeting.NC Photo vertising in the Central .cali California.
Item: ,The editors of The New fornia Register, the official
Republic, whose political stance newspaper .of the diocese of
THE HOLY FATHER'. MISSiON AIDTD. THE ORIENTALOHU.ROH , in this frenetic pre-convention Fresno and the diocese of Mon. season comes close to being doc- . terey, after August 1.. You are needed • ~ , to act as a Mom or'Dad to trinaire,has joined ·the ranks of . In a letter to all current ad ~n . an orphan in the Holy Land,. Ethiopia, or IndIa. vertisers in the Register, Jose those who think that "ossified LONDON (NC)-Four Eng trade union executives - men Mendoza, general secretary of lish Benedictine monks are tak The cost Is very little. The satisfaction Is great. like George Meany * • * have AWFWA, charged that the . ing. over 750 acres of the Peru More than half of the 1,400,000 refugees in the transformed the labor movement Catholic Church is "helping to vian jungle some 300 miles from promote an ·Illegal boycott Holy Land are b'oys and girls. A gre.at many are from an inspiring force for so Lima. G:ial justice into a baronial club." against California vineyards" orphans. Some barely exist by begging for milk, Their prefabricated monastery Comment; . If my memory and that "this action directly in the Apurimac Valley will food, clothing. Others are in the Holy Father's serves me correctly, the editors threatens our ·only means of help bring literacy, religion and care - supported by the generous friends of GIVE of The New Republic were not support." also the teaching of new agricul Laudi;! Register talking quite so disparagingly Near East Missio·ns ••• You can 'adopt' one of tural methods and domestic sci- A Comment: the· AFVVA is quite ence to the Indians there.. about Mr.. Meany eight years ago these children and guarantee him (or her) three (:HILD when he and they happened to obviously a front for anti-union The monks, from Worth Ab be -supporting the same candi California growers. Hats off to bey, Crawley,· in the south of A meals a day, a warm bed, love and companion Gerard E. Sherry, editor of the England, will give a 20th-cen pate for the presidency. ship and preparation to earn his own living. An HOME In other words, I strongly Register, for sticking to his guns tury touch to. their order's mis orphan's support costs only $10 a month ~ , • suspect that The New Republic -in the face of the Association's sionary tradition. Father Bede would forgive and forget and threatened boycott. Hill, their leader, said Peruvian $120 a year. Send us the first month's support .might even find something nice "Even· though we may go firms had promised to supply. and we will send .your 'adopted' child'·s photo. to .say about Meany and other down financially," Mr. Sherry them with radio transmitters "ossified trade union executives" has stated, "we have the conso You can write to him or her. The Sister who and receivers for broadcasting lation of being able to sleep educational programs to the if only they would endorse the cares for your child will write to you, if the child NR's current candidate. You peacefuJly at night, secure in Indians..
cannot write yet. A close bond of love will
know how it is. Politics makes the knowledge that what we "We shall go out into the strange fellows-and all that stand for is right and just." country, pick up the leaders and develop. Please send the coupon with your of sort of thing. Mr. Sherry's willingness to bring them back to the center today. fering Union Alliance stick out his neck in the cause of for a residential course," he Item: The Auto Workers and social justice speaks weIr" for the added. "When they .go back the Teamsters have committed Catholic press and would seem with· a radio receiver. they can to suggest that i·t still has an im help their fellows to assimilate themselves to a joint action pro gram that will cover the Amer portant role to play in Ame.rican what comes over the air." WHO ORPHANS BREAD is the olub (duesl $1 • ican economy. It is called the life. Worth. Abbey· also hopes later Alliance for LabOr Action r :wonder, incidentally, if any· to send c;>ut students from its I!:AN'T month) that comes to the rescue when orphan. (ALA). of the secular dailies in the school to do voluntary service aPARE need milk, medicines, underwear. Like to joln1 . Comment: The same as before Central Valley of California there for a year before going on -Le" politics (in this case, trade would dare to. take on· the grow to university studies. After the send $1 every month. union politics) makes strange ers as fearlessly as Mr. Sherry monks are settled, missionary bedfellows.. This is not said in is doing? I rather doubt it. Sisters may also join them. to criticism of the new Alliance. Freedom in Spain teach domestic science and On the contrary, I wish it Item: The Spanish Bishops' hygiene. every success. If it manages to Conference has· defended the The Peruvian government is Ifs never too late to remember children In your carry out its stated objectives need for real freedom i,n the supplying the land and helping (for example, helping to organ will. The Holy Father knows where children a... WILL trade union movement in Spain the monks with supplies and ize farm workers and other .dis and has stated that strikes may , equipment. Private interests in P(IWER the neediest. Simply tell your .lawyer our lepl advantaged groups) it will have be a necessary means for work- Peru are giving the prefabri tltlel CATHOLIC NIAR EAlT-WELFARE AlSOCIAnow. served a very useful plirpose. . ers to obtain their rights. The cated . house and paying their Awaits Reaction bishops also said· ·that the fares to ~he country. -----------------~ co _ The fact remains, however, ·Church should concentrate on DeIlr IlNCL08BO PL1A81E" PI NO , :-that such a close working rela attracting the mass of workerS Venezuelan Prelate . Monsl,"or MI»180; . FOR' _ tionship between the United .by giving greater. freedom to Deplores Socia.I Ills Auto Workers and the Team lay leaders in the workers' apos . NAMllr _ Please CIUDAD BOLIVAR (NC).sters, whose expulsion .from· the tolate. . return COIJpon AFL-CIO was insisted upon by Comment: That's the Qes~. Archbishop Cdsanto· Mata· Cova . _,_----- wjth ypy.r ITRIl...· .,..._-'-_.,..... the UAW, could not ·have been news to come out of Spain in a of Ciudad Bolivar has deplored .. .off"rlng OITV_,;,.predicted as recently as a :year long time. It WOUld. seem to in.,. . the social conditions affecting tTAU ZfI" ago. .. ... . ·dicate that the Spanish bis~-. workers and their families tn Parenthetically; I can hardly ops as a· group are .capable . tl1is boom town, and added that rHI aATHDLla • • AII ' •• T WILPA" • • • • aOI.TlG. wait· to see what the editorS of of moving with the·. times and efforts at correcting this injus,;, are not ·afraid to admit that"t11ey tice can.. never be termed "coni .xempts Cha'r.'t.oes· might have been wrong in their munist." E earlier approach' to the labor Archbishop Mata described
NEW DELHI (NC) An· problem in Spain. . some of the slums as being
agreement exempting . relief: Let's hope that their.efforts to "worse than: concentration
goods donated to India by reli-· make the evangelization of the. camps."
MSQR. JOHN II. NOLAN. Netlonailleoret.ny gious and charitable organiza- . working· world "the first task Jie said. that the shanty town· Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WeLFARlI A~. . tions in· West Germany from 'of the Church in Spain" wil(be·· sur.r(>unding this mining· and in:' 330 Madison Avenue 'New York, N.Y. ·1001' payment of custonisduty was blest with success. The alterna-··· dustrial city of 270;000 ate "like T.81~phonel 212/YUkon 6·5840 signed here· by ·representatives tive might well he· another .' a disease .that· must·· be cured, .of'the two·,ovemmellts•.. ~ _. 'trajpccivil war in SgaiR;, .. not.i.iliored,"
WANTED:
AMOM O·R.·CAD
Plan Monastery Peru Jungles
r"..
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..
•
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•
OO~II_
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NEAR EAST ·MISSIDNS
".
THE ANCHoK-
Threaten to Picket Advertisers· In CaUfornia Dioce$...e per
'a
Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
u.s.
19
[f~~®§ FRESNO (NC)-The Agricul American," the letter declared. tural Workers Freedom to Work AWFWA members recently Association (AWFWA) bas an interrupted'Q Fresno diocese" nounced it will picket any bus Spanish-issues 'oonference at tbe NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The lness advertising in tbe Central Newman ce:qter of Fresno State United States Department of California Register, the official College. More than 75 pickets Justice has filed a lawsuit newspaper of the diocese of paraded around the center with against tbe developers of three F.resno and ,the diocese of Mon anti - Church signs. attackfng Baton Rouge housing subdivi flerey, after today. Bishop Timothy Mahning and sions, charging them with dis In a letter to all current ad the diocesan newspaper !for ·the crimination against Negroes. vertisers in the Register, Jose alleged pro-union bias. The suit, filed in U.S. District Mendoza, general secretary of Gerard E. Sherry, editOr of Court here, charged six Baton A WFWA, charged tbat tbe Catb the Regi5ter ,said the AvyFWA Rouge firms and five of their olic Church is "belping to pro attempt lilt economic boycott of top officials as defendants. They mote an illegal boycott against the diocesan newspaper was were charged witb selling the certain California vineyards" merely an additionl,ll action to houses in tbe developments only and .that tbis action "directly tha.t already taken by the grow to whites and engagirii;( in "D threatens our only means of sup ers in the past year. . pattern or practice of racial Pro~ Biishops' Support · port." discrimination." , In his letter Mendoza said ''the "We estimate that we have lo'st Single family homes)Vill not " di::;carded and forgo~ten C?atbolic some $6,~OO in retail and speci31 be covered by the oper;It hous farm workers .of Cabfo~Illa ea~ edition'advertising as a direct r~ : in~ law until Jan. 1, 1970. But estly request your assistance 10 suti of grower pressure withiJl, . '. ~¥:J.u::;tice Department was able our, desper~te struggle, to re the' diocese, and the Mendoza . to use the law because many 011 store ou~ right to work ~ free group is especially upset at our ~be development homes were people 10 peace and WIthout coverage of the unions as 'well covered by federal mortgage !fear of government, professional as their, viewpoint" Sherry guarantees. agitators, labor organizers, and state·d. ' < the Catholic Church." "Growers have visited my of The provisions of the open 'Blow to Economy' :£ice and personally threatened housing law forbidding discrim ination by builders and' devel "We deeply resent the finan to put us' out of business for opers in housing developments cial backing you are providing daring to' suggest that the farm . constructed under federal fi
the Catholic publication, the ·workers have' a right to organ~' , Dancing or federally gmtranteedl
Central Cal,ifornia Register," ize into \lni9qs," he continued. . lOans went into effect irriediately
Mendoza said. "As you have ' "They aIsO"suggest tbat tbe is when' President Johnsoti' sign~ probably found out they axe in sues involved,' in : tbe Delano'. PRESS RELEAsE: Msgr. Ferdinando . . .Lambruschini, the bill into law April '11. favor of unionizing the agrieuI disput~ are legal and political , turalbusiness in tbis, state. andbave no moral angles. The noted moral theologian, .announces at a press conference "This action ,as you may dis-'" growers have also protested to . the' Holy.'Father's :encyclical on ,"Human Life," in which 'Pamph~et «lOver, would be a terrific blow the Churcb in Fresno over th~ Pope Paul VI oonfirmed the traditional Catholic teaching to the vital California. economy fact that the California bishops .:., WASHINGTON (NC).'- The on which thousands upon thou ·have come out in. support of rejecting all forms of artifi~l birth control. With Msgr. publtcations office of the, United sands of Mexican people are de amending tbe National Labor Lambruschini is Luci'ano, Ca$imiii of the Vatican Press' States Catholic Conference has . , , issued' a pamphlet edition of Office. NC Photo. pending. . Relations Act to include farin "Disguised as a struggle· for w()rkers," he said. "The Credo of the I:'eople of human betterment, the United "Tbere is also resentment 'at God," issued by Pope Paul Vll Farm Workers Organizipg Com the recent issuance of nine dio on June 30. The pamphlet is mittee is being aided by tbe eesan pamphlets giving the available from the publications Catholic bishops of California in Church's viewpoint on the farm office at 1312 Massachusetts Ave., N.W., Washington, D. c.. the deliberate attempt to 'destroy workers' problem. Growers want 20005. our liberty to work. We feel this the Cburch to remain neutral, 'movement to be contrary to and by that they mean keeping CAMBRIDGE (NC)-Richard aimed" at society and social in Catholicism, and definitely u,P quiet," Sherry asserted. Cardinal Cushing of Boston is of stitutions.
First
HouSiirro@ Suit
o
Edition
Commends' Revival
'Cardinal Cushing Says America's Religious Influence and Life Never More Vigorous.
FALSE TEETH
the opinion that America's "re "Even our calls for moral
Do ligious influence and religious strength and spiritual energy Roelc. !ili¢i1e or Slip "1 life have never been more vig 'are often directed to the general Don't live In fear of false 'teeth orous" despite widespread aIle-. 'community or portions of it, as lOOS2nlng, wobbling or dropping Just at the wrong time, For more security ·gation of "ethical confusion." if, in one effective appeal and in and more comfort. Just sprlnltle Q Speaking here in Massachu-" a single step, we could change ·MIAMI BEACH' (NC) to, be successful can only be in little FASTEETH on your plates.
setts at the opening ·of the na-' the world." FASTEETH holds false teeth firmer.
Spokesmen for Catholic educa partnership with the other Makes eating easier. No pasty. gooey
Declaring such admonitions to tion asked the Republican party brancbes of the education en- . tional convention of the Cath taste. Helps check "denture breath.. , Dentures that fit are essen'ttal to olic Order of Foresters, Cardinal be' "fruitless and unavailing,'" to show its "concern" for the terprise Cl • • in point of fact health. see your dentist regularly• Cushing said the "confusion and Cardinal Cushing said, "in the education of the more than six .cooperative activity has charac Get FASTEETH at all drug countero.J uncertainty of these present 1ast analysis, and indeed in the . miilion yoUng persons in Catho terized the public and nonpub 'lic schools and colleges across 'lic' schools in the past few years years" make the opening. words . first 'one, we' can only' change under various federal aid pro-" of Charles Dickens' novel,., "A peoplej and the most -important the nation. grams." , Tale of Two Cities," especially people to change are ourselves." The appeal for continued fed descriptive of' modern society. ' ,He continued: . ~PO~Dt Element eral aid to nonpublic school stu Age of ,Contrasts ' "Would it not then be a ·tri . dents under a possible Repub "It is because we consider ·"It was the best of' times," , . umph for the years that are lican administration was made ourselves put of the total Dickens wrote, "it was the worst before'us if we could make our before the Republican Platform Anierican education effort that of times, it,was the age of wis selves a generation of individual Committee prior to the party's , ~e do not hesitate to come be dom" it was the age of foolish men who accept an individual national convention here. fore you today to elicit your ness, it was the epoch of belief, responsibility for what is here Tille statement' on Catholic . concern for ·thequallty of in.,. it was the epoch of incredulity, and what lies ahead? education was read to the com struction we are daily giving it was the season of darkness, it Can Be Done mittee by Dr. John Dyer of tbe ,Six million citizens and to ask was the spring of hope, it Was . "Sbow that we can bring the o Department of International you to express that -concern·in· th~ win~r ?f despair." , ~esources of faith to the waver Trackl at the University of Mi a concrete way in your party ,We live In an age of contrasts mg person of' man and watch ami, the chairman of, a commit platform," the statement·-said. w~ere affluence and poverty, ,.tbe. world grow strong hi a I tee, for the. study . of , Catbolic Tbe Catholic Spokesmen said ,~rlme and ~e law, pea~e and super..natural strength. It is sc~o~ .sy~tems in Miami; Jobn. Republican members of bothatmament, sm and sallctlty co man. that must first be saved T. Cicco, deputy superintendent the House and the Senate espe- exist si~ by side wi~out eitbe~, .and after bim and througb him ' TAUNTON, MASS.. · of education 'of, the Pittsburgh" . A;all'y th' th ed' ti ' one bemg able to wm a deci this world and all its parts .... ose on e uca o n · i t i " th C d' a1 ... . d~ocese" aQd William R., Co~ . committees .have in. the past' slve ~oson, e ar lD. '. , It'lS an old task then I 'set dine, general counsel, United been "extremely sympathetic" to ;,DOted. before you but Qne whicb we THE BANK ON
. . scbool' know can States C a tholi c Conference the needs of nonpublic ,,'' Unique in History , , " .be d one because we TAUNTON GREEN
(useC). It was made on bebalf cbildren and that it was under Wben we are told, tbe Hub have seen'Jt done before. To be of the usec Department of . the' Eis~nbower- acfuunlstratl.6n Archbishop added, ''that we are ,su~ it iS'never done easily, nor Member of Federal DelMllfh Elementary and Secondary Edu that the Nationai Defense Edu facing a world in ethical confu cheaply, nor by hazard; it must , blsUrance Corpom~loD cation. cation .Act was passed with sub sion, one lacking in moral fibre, be done boldly and with intelll The statement called for a stantial' p~visions for private" we know at .the ~e time that gence and witb nobility." partnersbip between public and school children. ' ,in those nabons, like tOur own. Don-public education in AmerTbey ~n~ted; that last April tbe' wh.e~ th~se ,charges are ?,~de, ica, claimed that, recent court Republican Coordinating Com rl~fbglhOUS lDfluencbe ·and religl(~us, decisions bave reaffirmed the mittee d ted rt I e ave never een more Vlg.. . ". ON CAPE COD " constitutionality' of aid'to non- . "Urban"oa~p 'ttona ';:-"t'edrob reco bl etms Qn. orous·~ which * !I' theisdecline in public ". ~(O· ;ti·u~~. , morals so severely, de ~ public school cbildren, and and Pn n es presen y he ',' on '" ed" uca " t'Ion w h'IC 'h' .,nounced is . itself balanced. by. a , pledged . that the Churcb will study','gro" up • • • continue to operate schools in . said:"'Non ubli r" ta d r~hglOusrevlval?fsu~hpropor " .tlOns as,to be umque 111 our na '.~.,,' ,. " p c e em~n ry all the ghettos of large urban areas' .,~con~,arY..:¥hools C<;il1stitute an tionaI,'histo."· " .~! 5-O~OO' to serve the poor and disadvan- unpo~nt ..~lement~f the total, , N ti th "th <l ~ 'I ~~ell ~~~~~ . .', " . .... educa,~_onsYs:;em ~f:}be nation ste~ ::akinag of ;r:g::s:" ~an~, 'I'~ ,"w~ .do not feel that our ed- ' •• III The . eXistence.' of tbese '; dinal Cushing observed "there ' ,,~l;iilonale~forts·can be~isol~ied' i'~hoo~'.permiis par~n~ to exer-··, are:veryfewbeating-of-breasts!' . 'AI~,,~ from the plainstrE!am of ~e-'-."cise a: 'd~gree Q~ .'"tI'eedom : of ,He l also pointed out that ." AMPLE PA'RKlNG ., lcan education," the statement choic~'li(ibe?"educationof their !'moral,indignation is always ex ." '. :., ". . \, · !Said., ".We fe~lJli~t ~ur:effort,<l ..cbJld~en/'-·- .' ,;. "',. trovert" and "salvQs are widely 17
Urge Republican 'Party to 'Show
,Concern for Catholic IEcflllIcation
j
Complete
BANKING
SERVICE
.for Bristol County
•
'Bristol County Trust Com,any
I(JJ . •
,JOHN' .HI NCKL'EY' & SON •
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IUllD,ING MA,TERDAlS SPr."ng .
.49 YARM'O.UTH' ftOAD.
HY·A,.'.....a..JIS
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~oc:ese·of.·'o'l'lin';er"':"Thurs., Aug. 8, 1968
\
lLEO MAZA
PATRICIA MANNDNG R~medial
Baker
Teacher
LOUISE COGGESHALL Fountain Specialist
Todoy's Yo'uth as Ambitious· as· Ever By Patricia Francis W'ho says today's young&" doesn't want to !lOOrk for a living? Oertainly some of the Catholic col ~nerntion
mot
~ge
students who have found and sundry ways to help pay for the coming year's ex penses at the colleges of their dJ,oice. • Summer for the college crowd !is a frenetic season 'of wOl'k and lfuco and socializing-and adding lIP a bank balance that will help pal'e the cost of the ever-increas ing price tlig of four years of (Wllege. ~he work is 'as varied as it is profitable. It ranges from uni f.o\ming high school students to. ~eaning state beaches to shovel ilng biscuits in an oven to pour ilng soft drinks and serving sandwiches 'to helping young sters 'learn to read to hauling ilines and caulking seams of !\)oats at area shipyards. Whatever the job, the young _lege' students are not afraid 9l« working. ' i&eo Maza, 20, a Holy Family ~ried
graduate, began his "working"
days when he arrived in the city
with the first group of Cuban
refugee youngsters to land at st.
Mary's home. His family was 'left behind in Cuba. He still is awaiting the arrival of his mother, whose exit from Cuba has been "almost cer~ tain" too many times for Leo to remember. He is working his way through college-entirely. Mornings he has one job. Afternoons he turns into a baker's assistarit at Giusti Bak ery. At night, he goes to still ariother job: A Sophomore at Providenee College, Leo 'does not complain. He feels if something is worth while-and a college education is in that category-he has to be .willing to, work hard for it. Patricia Manning, 18, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs; Francis J. Manning of 58 Nautilus Street, is a graduate of Stang High School. She will enter her· Sophomore year at the College of St. Elizabeth in Convent Sta-: tion, N. J., in September. Pat has worked this Summer
STEVE CURRIER
..
sea-Minded
as a teache~'s aide in a Feder~ where the majority of Catholic ally":financed, program in reme: high school students in the area dial reading for elementary are uniformed.' 'school ,children" COnducted a.t What does she do? "Every Roosevelt Junior High School. thing," is the su.ccinct answer Her only complaint was not 'and Louise grim: as she say it. enough work. Steve Currier. 20, will enter his Junior year at St. Anselm Dennis K~nnedy, 18, an al most Sophomore at Stonehill College in Manchester, N. H., in College, is the son of Mr. and Septemb6'l'. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mrs. William /K. Kennedy of mund F. Currier of 84 Alden 280 Main Street, Acushnet. Dennis' Summer job is, a Street, New Bedford, Steve is ,catch-all one at Horseneck acquiring a deep suntan along-' with dollars as he serves as gen", Beach, where he collects admis eral utilityman at Fairh\lven' sion tickets at the turnstiles and Marine. helps clear debris from the Louise Coggeshall, _18, who sands before the arrival of each day's swimming and ~unning will enter her 80phomore year at Emmanuel College in Sep hordes., tember, is ilnother Stang High The hours are long-but Den-, ' School graduate who is inter nis is helping to earn -his way ested in helping finance her edthrough college. ucation. . Louise Cayer, 18, who :will en The daughter o)f Mr. and Mrs. ter her Sophomore year at AI James C.' Cogl~eshall of 102 bertus Magnus College in New James Street, New, Bedford, Haven in September, is a grad Louise works parttime at the uate of Holy Family High snack bar at the YMCA in New ' , , Bedford., School. ' 'This is, Louise's second Sum Their backgrounds are varied. mer of work at Sll»'erstein's So are their goals. Uniform Shop 'in New Bedford, Leo Maza is an Education
LOUISE CAYER IJDiform Shop
major. Louise Cayer and Pat Manning are majoring in his tory. Louise Coggeshall is a chemistry major. Dennis Ken nedy has selected an English major and Steve Currier is rna,.. joring in sociology. 'Their schools are different. One thing, though, is commom to all of them. None thinks the world owes him-or her-a living. Each feels he must be willing to exert some effort toward acquiring the skills that will lead him to the lJ{lal he has set. Work is a way of life, a pato tern that is followed because it brings its own,reward and be.. cause it is a step on the road toward the life's goals that each has set. Some young people may veer clear of work these days-but not these, Catholic college stu dents from Greater New Bed,.. ford. They', and schoolmates like them prove there is hope for the future. They are willing to work foli' what they get-and they have, fun while they are workin~
DENNIS l{ENNEDY ricket raker