08.17.67

Page 1

.Services to Be Held TemporarHy •an Bishop Feehan High School

Establish Attleboro Falls Parish Fr. Raymond W. McCarthy First St. Mark's Administrator

WThell

ANffiOR : w·

~ 11, No. 33, Aug. 17, 1967

fan River, Massachusetts •

11967

PRICE tOe $4.00 per V. .

Establishment of the new parish of St. Mark in Attleboro Falls has been decreed by the Most Rev. James L. Connolly. Bishop of Fall River. The new parish bas been made necessary as a result of the continual increase in the number of the faithful in the so-called Jewelry City 00 the northern periphery of the diocese.

. Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, ·presently a curate at St. Patrick's parish in Fall River, has been designated as the first administrator of the new parish. Fr. McCarthy, who serve;s as associate . director of Cath~1ic·

Charities Appeal, is a native of North Attleboro. Temporarily, services for the members of the new parish will be held .at Bishop Feehan High School. It is expected that construction of a church to serve the parishioners will be started in the near future. Fr. McCarthy will reside at the regional diocesan school. The new St~ Mark parish ·win comprise members of St. John the Evangelist in Attleboro and St. Ma:ry;s in North Attleboro. Father McCarthy is the son of the late. Raymond L. and the late Margraet McGowan McCarthy. Born March 6, 1919 in North

Attleboro, he was graduated from St. Mary's Parish School and North Attleboro High Schoool, and attended Providence College. He completed his studies for the priesthood at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore and was ordained Feb. 24, 1945 by the late Bishop Cassidy. Father McCarthY served as assistant at Sacred Heart, Fall River and St. Patrick's, Somerset until his present assignment to St. Patrick's in 1963. Bishop ConnollY appointed him director of the Family Life Bureau in 1952 and Fall River area director of the DiOCesan Turn to Page Tw~

FR. RAYMOND W. MeCARTBr

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'f'South Easton .Church· Dedicaticinon Saturday, Sept. 2

Fr. Lyons to Centerville Most Rev. ·James L.-Omnolly, Bishop of the Diocese of Fall RiVer, has annoul.\ced the transfer of Rev. James

Y. - Lyons, ·administrator of . st. Peter"s Church; Dighton, 10- pas.... 01. Our Lady of Victory Ch.trch, CenteJ:Vilic. . .Father Lyons succeeds Rev. .losepll It. Welsh, woo retired OIl Aug. 9, as pastor of the Cape Cod parish. o'.IM: DeW pastOl' will assume 10M cluties OIl Wednesday, Au•. 23. Administrator of 81. Peter's, 1).ighton, since July, 1"986, Fat~ Turn :to Pale- Tw. 0

R. ,JAMES F. LYONS

Montforts

Investiture The Chancery Offiee . . . abb.unced that the investiture of the newly. Dame. l ' Domestie Prelates will

bke place at 7:3t, . . S_lIIay Dirrht. Sept: •• iJl St. MarT'S C,tbedra1, FaU River. Te l.te invested: Fr.. Fan Ittver....;....:Msc'nJ.. .l9IUIl!:. B.ml•. Lester, L. ...... Roben· L. St....., Georl'e E. Sallin•. Fr_ CaPe C .......- . . . . ...... A. Chippendale, Le<>.I. D.a.ri. William D. Thoms••.

Also:

Ms.-n. Arlhur G. Bop.is. Swansea: Patriek R. Hllrley. Taunton .and Armand·· J. Levasseur, NewBedferd.

The M<lntfort Fathers, WM al'e-headedinA*'epn>yinee which serves this area by a Fall .River n..tive, win

assume control of St. Peter's Ch\lrch in Dighton by directive of the Most Rev. J'am..es L. Connolly. Bishop of Fall River.

Very Rev. Roger M. Charest• S.M.M. is the proviacial of· the Montfort Fathers wlto currently have a Taunton mission house. TbeMontfort Fathenl are the newest religious community to do parish work in the ~an River See. A. Montfort Father will 1» 0

In

Dighton

designated _as adminiistrator ~ t~ South):,ng,hton panish to suc-" c~d Rev. James F. Lyons wile has been nam~ pastor. of Our . Lady

(If \r..ictory Ce~terville.

Church

ia

The Montfort Fathe:,rs came .to the Fall' River Diocese in 1962:·' and the Taunton M-is:sfon hOuse· estaqlishtnent markedl the first residence of the Montfort Fathers in the state of Massachusetts. Two other residences in ~ew England illlc]ude 81. _ ~uis de Montfort Seminary, L~tchfie1.d, C~nn.• and Camp SL Louis, Sabattus, Me., a Summer Tum to Page Tw.


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,,<~,; .'''~'. ~ ';.~~.: ;f\ .~ ..:_.....~.... ',I::', THE ANC'HOR-DiOeese of Foil River-Thurs. Aug. 17, 1967' ... ',.' ,I

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Diocese of . JAMES LOUIS ..' BY THE GRACE OF GOD AND "FAVOR OF

Foil Rive~

OFFICIAL

THE APOSTOLIC SEE

BISHOP OF FALL RIVER

DECREE

Rev. James 1'. Lyons fnml

8~.

Peter, Dighton to Pastor

of Our Lady of Vict~ry, Centerville, effective Aug. 23, 1967.

EstablishiUlg the Parish. of St.. 'Mark, AUleboi'o Falls, Mass.

Montfort Fathers t4l staff 8t. Peter in Dighton effective . Aug. 23, 1967.

In order to make better .provision for tlu Rev. Raymond' W.· McCarthy, administrator St. Mark, spiritual welfare of- the faithful, having taken coun­ sel with the Reverend Pastors of St. Mary's Church . Attleboro Falls,Mass. effective Aug. 23, 1967. In residence in North Attleboro and St. John the Evangelist's at Feehan H. S. First ''Mass on Aug. 27, 1967. Church in Attleboro, and withtne advice of the Board of Diocesan Consultors, We hereby establish and constitute the Parish of St. Mark, Attleboro FaUs, Massachusetts. The limits of the Parish will include: l Bishop' 0/ Fall River . 'cJ',:i •... ~~', a. That part of North Attleboro "he?'eafter d~s. ~.. 'cribed: Old Post Road from the Attleboro C'/.ty line to Reservoir Street; east on Reservoir Street to the Falls Pond .(Lake Coral) " thence in a line " ~ !!. J II... UAISON ROLE: Sister ~D$trerS ,enr .II" @sepPrll Announce through the Pond in a northernly direction to the most northern point of Falls Pond; from Mary Barbara of the Sisters J A . t """Jl. &l:...Dnllfn)$ in ·Diocese this point in a direct line to the intersection of of the Atonement in Portland Mssignmen vIr U~lMJ Chestnut and Elm Streets; then continuing in will serve full-time in her The provincial of the Sisters St. Therese School: Mothel' an easterly line to the intersection of Smith and capacity as president· of ~he . of St. Joseph has announced the Marie Felicite,principal; Sr. . Mt. Hope' Streets; from the center ~f t~is in­ Dioces~n, Council of Reli- following assignmen'ts for the Gabriel, grade 3; Sr. An.net14J . t' t' . a stra';ght l';ne to the' 'Junctoon .of " . .. be a htuson . . , coming acp.~emic year: ',' , Marie, grade 1. .' . ersec ton tn •• ..• .,gloUS. She will. ." Fall River '\ ~ SwanSea' Kelly Boulevard and Plain Str-eet; then north between' CoadjlitorBishop-" Blessed Sacrament SchoOI:·Sr.·. St. Louis'de' .Francc-,.Schbo): " easterly in a line,paralleling·the plainville .To'/!)n ' 'Leo' Gerety arid the dioceMn' \ lviarie 'Raphael, grade 15;' Sr. ··St... Sr.. Marie . CeUne,' prin~pal; line to the Mansfield Town.lin;e:;fr...9m ~~is point, " :,', Vie"ar for Relin-ious' and the' Emile, ,grad~ ;l. ':, ;,' . !: M?ther St... ~es!..~~ad~;$, Sr. in a southerly direction paralleling the 'Mans.. 6 . • St. Jean Baptiste School: Elizabeth de la Trimte, grade ~ , field Town line to the Attleboro City line. 26 commumties III the Mame Mother Marie Alphonse, princi- Sr. Gerard Marie. .. See. NC Photo.. pal; Sr. Marguerite c:ecile, grade St. Micha~l School: Sr, Marie b. A1ul ,that section of A~tleboto hereafter 'flescr.ibed: 5; Sr. Paul Marie, grade 4; Sr. Clotilde, principal; Sr. MargueFrom the point where Old Post Road, North AttleA S..JI Louis de Gonzague, grade 3. rite due Sacre-Coeur, grade 1il boro, bisects the Attleboro City line, in .~ north ' Adopts aturuary St.: Mathieu. School: Sr. Marie Sr. Ernest Marie, grade 6; S&, east ·direction following the Attleboro Citll line du S. Sacrament, grade 4; Sr. Theresia. to a poipJ north of the north ,side of .Rocklawn IPI7QSjIl'.Q1 f11/1l - Victor Marie".gra~e ,1. • '.. in a d.irect easterly line St. Roch' "School: Sr. Jeanne . Mas's Ordo . Avenue,' from th';.. ..., po';nt • WILMINGTON.. (NC)~Vacato the intet'section of Lathrop and West Streets; tioners at seaside resorts in the . du Sacre-Coeur, grade 8. FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sun­ po'nt ';n a north east. line to 'the ·J·uncI d M I d ' E s t ' Sr~ Marie Antoinette an~ Sr. , . from' th's • • • "De aware an ary an·s a Jean de la Croix' have'been as. day. IV Class. Green. Mase tion of Berwick Road and Eastgate; then in a ern Shore area will be permitted signed to St. .toseph'.Seiiiprate Pro~r;. No Glory nor Creed. northerly d'irection to West Street; east on West to fulfill Sunday Mass obliga- . and Sr. St. Pierie to St. Joseph ' Common' Pre,face. Street to North Avenue; then north on North tions.on Saturday under a ruUng . Pi'evinclalate. "'.' , .OR .. Avenue to the north side of US Route No 295' by Bishop Michael W. H y l e o f · , .. , St, Agapi~us, Martyr. ,..Red. : . . ',' Wilmington.. ' ' . , fU; New Bedfor:d ":. Gl CdC from this point eOrSt, paralleling Rou~e No. 295 . "St, _Josep,hSchQpl.: M'pther pry; '.~ ,. ree.;. ,WWnoJlJ R t k' f th" Bishop Hyle received p e r m l S - ' . ·frefac~.. ,,~ t o th e N .Y., N .H. & H . R . '"rae s,l' rom tS . f rom th e Holy See for ~ ,.. Louis St. J 0 h ~ ,.-,.,1./ 1<" d . h M r. ld Slon . . ' .Tosep)I .' p,'rin<lip~,I,;, Sr; SA'TURD""" ~ n-~ ..,..,.. e5l, potnt no?·thto..t ~, .~fl-SJ.J.e.<...... o~.n. ~ne·.,; . ,.. :c·:·"y", , .. ' five-year experimental period' Ch;a~les .. Mane,. grade 8,;. Sr.·. . <;::onfessor. m Clas.s. ..G~~en. Unless Qtherwtse '/,nd'/.Cated, these' ~boundanes:~n:..', " because of the large influx of Marie Norbert, .grade 6;, ar",Jean M~ .Proper; Glory;, ~.J;eed; elude both mentioned.·-·:--tT~-·..' -stimmer, vacationers to the re-':' M!if~e, .grade ~. ' sides . tJl ,a,llst-reets . , . . ,. " ,. P ref ace 0,f T n'nit . y. , ... '" ; . f th ·c'· t'h l' . P>'t'h' " 'd' .:.. ,,.- . sort' town and the scarcity of' , .. . " .."..,.... ,.' SUNDA:Y - XIV ~unday, .. Mteli' All persons. 0 ' .. 'e. (1,•. (! t"c~:r:a'/, '... res . . ' / , tng tn prl'ests l'n the dl·ocese. rt " bers htp 0 f th : ' 'o'n 00 Pentecost. ,.n ,Class. Green. these ar~asw'/,11 cons t.'/.tute th e:rn-e,m ,e The' program already has been !'" , ,'.' . .' " . Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; new pansh of St. Mark., The endowment and beneput 'into effect with a Saturday " Continued fro~. Page OJ)e Preface of Trinity. fice of the Parish ·will consist· of the free will·ofMass schedule at St. Ann's residence for seminarians.. '. ,MONDAY-St. Jane Frances de ferings the faithful. . . , church;: Bethany Beach, Del. Founded by St. Louis de Chantal, Widow. III .Class.

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The National Conference of· ,Montfort in 1765 in .,Brittany, Catholic Bishops at its April France, the Montfort· ,.Fathe~ meeting in Chicago agreed that have. as their principal·.work 10 individual bishops could seek' preach parish missions, and ~ the Holy See's permission. for treats, with particular concern such .programs in their individ- 'for the place of the Mothet of ual dIOceses. God. in the' divine plan of ~ demption. . With this Decree we appoint . t1J,e Reverend First established in N.ew York, Raymond W. McCarthy, Administrator .of the Par'the Montfort Fathers became a ish. The appointment of Father . . M.cCar.t'hy· and Continued from Page One separate province in the ,United erection of the parish become effeet~v.e .:;W.ednesday, Lyons was born May 1, 1919 in' States in 1948. Other' mission . ,. , . . '.' . . August 23, 1967. Fall River, the son of the, late ' residences are ' located . '. in' t Arch'.' . '. James F. and the late Mary A.. diocese of Hartford and' he DioGiven at Fall River this day' ·~f,·A'u.. g·.us.t· ceses of B'rooklyn: Fort Wayne, . Foley Lyons. Lafayette-in-Indiana' an'd liock­ , 1967. . A graduate of Coyle High ·ville.. 'Center., ..,," . .. ..."',, School, he took. his classical ;\ , ..' . C9urses at Holy Cross College, ' " ll,i1 '-~~~-s:-' '.:, , / . / W o r c e s t e r , and studied philosor . ' ~ "~~'Cl' I' 'phy and, theology at St. Mary's 1/1/ .. , : '. , ' . . Seminary, Baltimore. C~~tinued fro~ Page one 'Bishop of FaU' River ':" Following ordination on ·Nov. Council 'of Catholic Women ill 27, 1943 by the late Bishop Cas- 1961. "He' has also served as, spir'; sidy inSt. Mary's Cathedral, he itual: director of Caritas Guild, was appointed to St. Patrick's, Employees ot'Licensed Beverage Wareham where he remained Industry, and' has headed the until April. '1951;:- When he annual Catholic' Charities' Ap­ assigned to Immaculate Concep-' peal since 1957. . AUG. ~7 fORTY ,HOURS . tion, ',l'aunton.. ..' , . In 1964 Father McCarthy conRt. Rev. Francisco C. Betten­ He has served as 'Taunton area duCted a series of" 'Cana' and equrt, 1960,' Pastor, Santo Chrls­ DEVOTION Dloderator of 'the Diocesan Coun- Pre-Cana conferences' for 'Air , to, Fall River. cil of. Catholic ,·Women and' Force personnel in Erigland and AUG. ~9 . spiritual director of the district's Turkey and gave a ·'series of Aug.20-St. Joseph, Woods .Rev. 'J06eph De Villandre, D. D., Hole. St. Vincent de Paul Society. In talks in London on moral stand;' 1921, Founder, Sacred Heart, No.

IP60 he was moderator for the ardsand conduct. ..,' Attleboro.

Aug. 27-St. John the Baptist, drive conducted for ·the erection The original church that served . , . :~~.n~ral . Vi~lage. mE .NCHOR of ,!"ishop Cassidy High School the Catholic population 'Of No.' 'SecOnd' Cl8$$,l'ostage l'ald at Fall River,

for Girls· in Taunton.. Atttleboro and Attleboro'" was . Our Lady ()f Grace, Ne. MaS& Publisheo eve",- Thursday at 410

Father Lyons is also amem- within the confines of the'boun­ Hlghlano ~venue. Fall Rlvel Mass.. 02722. Wes*port. DJ the ~tholl( Press 0 the Diocese of Fall

ber of th~ Diocesan Commission dary lines of the new' parish oJ: Rlvel. SUDscriptiDII pri'e lily AIIil, postpaid

.fer Sacred Music. St'.' l\lIar~ ., . .. $4.00 per JUl. . .'

The partsh has the'1W?-mlege of keeptng '/,n reserve the Blessed Sacrame"nt under, the usual conditiort$, and with the proper provision for. reverent devotions " . of possessing a' baptismal' font, and having all other rights associated withtheadmini$tration of the Sacraments.'

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White. Mass Proper; Glory; DG . Creed; Common :freface. TUESDAY _ The Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgim Mary. II Class. White. MaSIJ Proper; Glory: Creed; Pref­ ace of Blessed Virgin Mary. WEDNESDAY -St. Philip Be-

nizi, Confessor. III Class.

White. Mass Proper; Glory;

no Creed; Common Preface. THURSDAY-St. Bartholomew. Apostle. II Class. Red. MaS!) Proper; Glory; Creed;· PrefaC€l of Apostles.. ,

"A'tt'leboro F'a s

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Fall River

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NEW CONNOLLY HIGH OFFICE PREPARING FOR OPENHNG: lfmnsfer of office records and equipment from St. William's 'Center, Stafford Rd., Fall River, to the newly erected Bishop Connolly High School tOok place on Monday. Left:' Revo Mr. Joseph ~ayden, S.J., of Scranton .

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Announce 20th ,Charity Ball Friday, Nov. 10 is the date thosen by members of New BedIoI'd Catholic Woman's Club for Ibe organization's 20th charity

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Prep, and Rev. Mr. Francis J. McManus of the Fall River Boys' High history department move cartons. Center: Rev. Charles J. Dunn, S.J., rector, checks the lights. Right: Rev. John- G. Cornellier, S.J., principal, ~arries students' J,'ecords into his office. '

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Clergy~an Scores Ecumenism Sees -Attempt to Escape Facing RealitRes

,Anglican

' l:sONDON (NC)'-One of Lon-. don's leading Anglican churchmen, the Rev. John Collins of .all. Sponsored by the ushers' st. Paul's cathedral, criticized'the ItOmmittee, the formal event ecumenical movement, elaiming ;will be held in New 'Bedford that it had become "part of the lIIIotel Ballroom with music by whole attempt of, the churches Bud Lilley 'and ,his orchestra. It . 'to' 'escape facing up' 'to realities." ..ill be p'receded by many dinner .. He' suggested ina sermon in ~..ties and cocktail hours, bis" cathedral that the, churches In charge ofsrrangements for .. , ' '..,' . e ball, which w1ll be a high­ "hould' give up "ecclesiastical ,light of the club's 50th anniver-' maneuve'ring" in favor of pro­ , . inot{ng unity of spint.' " . aary year, is Mrs. Robert Ben­ " :Ciinon .. Collins alsc» ,said that jamin, head of the usherS' "imPortant circles" in the Cath­ Ialittee. She w1ll, be aided by , oUe" Church saw the' ecumenic81 " movement as "a useful means of Emile Camire. reasserting its authority over the Filippini N... ns Open whole of Christendom."" It' is 'difficult not 'to 'suppose, New High School Be' said, that the. Anglican MORRISTOWN'(NC)-A new Church is' getting ready' "to sell private high school for girls will its birthright· for a' pot' of spa­ be opened here in New Jersey . ghetti" and that other 'churches tiext month by'the Filippini Sis,:,are being asked to "sell theirs ters. for a Lambeth stew." The Villa Walsh Academy will '(Lambeth palace is 'the Lon­ be located at the Filippini Sis- 'doD. headquarters of the Anglican ters' motherhouse where private, primate, Archbishop Michael high school training for girls en- .. Ramsey of Canterbury.) flering the order has ,been avail­ 'Evangelistic Stunts' ·Ilble for some years. eanon Collins said that instead With the opening of the new of backing those genuinely try­ Il1Chool, the number of private ing to think out afresh the SChools in the Paterson diocese ,meaning of the Christian Gos­ Will remain at six. Benedictine pel ,in, terms of modern thought Academy in Paterson was closed and practice, the' churches are June and will be used as a taking refuge in "ecclesiastical residence for nuns teaching at gerrymanderings, evangelistic the new diocesan Paterson Cath­ stU!lts and expedient rapproche­ tlic High School. ' ments" to give the appearance that what is dead and irrelevant ia them is alive and effective. Ma~yland Adopts

Supports Goal Fair Housing Law

At about the same iiine, how­ ROCKVILLE (NC) The ever, Anglican Bishop Kenneth Montgomery County Council has, Sansbury, general secretary of adopted an open housing ordi­ the British Council of Churches, Dance which is described as the ' gave firm backing for the goal strongest such measure in of a united church for all ,Chris­ Maryland. The action came at a tians and against a form of fed­ ClOuncil meeting after supporters eration among separate churches. and opponents of the measure, In a letter to the national press had been heard. The regulation Bishop Sansbury also took issue with Canon Collins on his aoes into effect on Aug. 30. charge that the ecumenical Led by Patrick Cardinal 0'­ Boyle of Washington, a number movement was part of an at­ ef Catholic organizations were tempt by the churches to escape among the supporters 01. tbe faCing up to realities. Measure. . ~e take one example,

fourth assembly of the World Council. of Churches, which meetS' at Uppsala (Sweden) in 1968, iii devoting the major part

At~L

Loan Approved

WASHINGTON (NC) - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has an­ nounced approval of a $1 mil­ of its thought to the churc\l's lion college housing loan for role in social, economic and in­ construction of dormitory and ternational affairs," Bishop Sans- , dining facilities at Queen of the bury wrote. Apostles College, Harriman, N.Y.

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Internal Revenue Issues Guidelines On Cha rity Gifts

-THE ANCHOR""":Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 17, 1"967

Sees Opportunity for' Laity To Get Action in' Crisis

NEW YORK (NC) - The Internal Revenue Service has ;issued new guidelineS. for taxpayers in an attempt tc

By Msgr. George G. Higgins . (Director, Social Action Dept., USCC) A solid week-end of reading diagnosis ,and proposed remedies or cures for the recent wave of riots in several of (lUI' major cities has left this writer numb ,and, frankly, rather frightened. The riots themselves' wer-e ·bad enough, but the lack oj anything like In other words, if I read Mr. a· visable consensus among Reston correctly, he is not .quite the experts-in or out of the ready to admit that the ·power ·of Congress-as to where we go persuasion has reached its limits.

clarify its policy on the purchase of tickets for fund-raising eba..­ itable events. The guidelines are being i9­ sued, the service said, because reqUirements for deductibility were frequently misunderstood, resulting in increased erroneouv claims on -tax returns. "A payment made to a quali­ fied charitable organization for .admission to a show, banquet, charitable ball and so forth," the revenue service said, "can quaJi­ fyas a deductible gift only tel extent that it can be shown that it exceeds the fair market value of any consideration re­ ~ived in the fonn of privilegetl ~r other benefits."

"The President and Congress," from here and how we ought togo about getting there is, in he says, "will assume the leader­ ship when the public and par­ ~ome ways, ticularly the business"community eVen more dis­ shows that it :gener.ally wants the

~ul'bing, In the national effort in ·this ·direction.

£ace ~f this dis­

If businessmen l'espond .to oefi­

concerting l.ack

LITURGICAL WEEK:- Msgr. John C. Nclan, right, lightened leaders such .as ,David of {lOnsensus

Rockefeller and Henry F-oro II natianal secretary ,of the Catholic Near East Welfare As­ about OUI fu­ (both ~f whom ~long -w the sociation, and F~ther ArrriandJ. Jacopin, left, executive ,.ure course of newly formed 'Ur-ban Coalition),

actien, the N';\­

,dir-ector of the St. Paul Center Byzantine Informaticn Deduct Donation the nation may )'et ,make .prQg­ :lonal Catholic

Bureau, Washington, D:C., discuss plans for display of For example, i! $30 is soliciteCl ress in this Summer oOf discon-' ~leporter can the coronation' tiara of Pope Paul VI as part of the Eastern for a ticket to a charity concert, :ee only one tent."

Mr. Reston's emphasis -on' the way out, and

Rites Exhibit at the 1967 National Liturgical Week at and the regular admission is $16" only the extra $20 can be con­ 'crucial importance of the busi­ :hat's for the ·Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 21-24. Msgr. Nolan is showing Fr. sidered a deductible gift. riess. community in helping to. churches "nd synagogues of the Jacopin the Gold Cross' of the Order of the Council of If a person wants to support z :lation to "commit themselves solve the current cI'isis is re­ . Rhodes whi.ch will be shown with the tiara. NC Photo. charitable event, but does no~ ~ogether tc raising a sum on the freshing. plan to use the ticket, he ~alll order of one billion dollars, the Too often, in the past, we have make all" outright gift without entire amount to be raised or thought of the power of persua­ 'accepting the ticket and deduct sion on matters of this kind as :Jledged in one year, and all of his donation, the service said. :t to be devoted, in alliance with residing primarily, if not exclu- ' "overnment but independently, sively, in the churches ,and syn-. IRs urges organizations to ~l!.!l\w~~ij'$, WOij'MwDtdl~ MteefrDll'ilg, ~f it, to the most effective and agogues and have 'not given make the breakdown clear on fundamental means of restruc­ enough attention to the power tickets they sell. Voeil'lI'ilOlIl'il'il Mn~nil'\Wfi'Y ~'~~l1'lQltnc~s of persuasion that private citi­ turing .our society," No part of the payment for a Think Big zens and groups of citizens can raffle ticket is deductible as a GREENSBORO (NC) - The A memorandum suggested that and should and must exercise Surely there is much to be gift, it was also pointed out. Fourth World Conference of Quakers oppose the ·draft <lnd said for this dramatic proposal within their own ranks,' first of Friends has urged the United special taxes levied to support as a symbolic gestuI'e of I'epent-_ all, and then in the political States to halt aU military oper­ war efforts. :mt concern on the part of 01'­ arena. ations in Vietnam and seek r~­ Noting that some Quakers op­ Limited Effectiveness 3anized religion, but unfortu­ convening of the Geneva Con­ po!'e such Ulctics the ·memoran­ :lately it would only be a drop As one who has had a bit -of ference to arrange a negotiated dum recalled that the "most sig­ WASHINGTON (NC) -Four experience in representing insti­ in the bucket. peace. nificant protest aCtion in history Catholic institutions are among ]!:or that matter, even a domes­ tutional church -bodies in the The statement calling for .an was the 'ride-in'. to .Jerusalem, those named by the Departments tic 'Marshall Plan, as advocated publiC arena-and, more speci­ immediate Vietnam cease-fire the great act of challenge to the of Labor and of Health Educa­ ily Vice-President Humphrey fically, before Congressional and subsequent withdrawal. of establishment that led ti> the :lIld seconded by Senator Robert co~mittes-I don't put too much -all foreign troops was approved martyrdom of the Prirn.-e of tion and Welfare t~ receive grants to train unemployed w :<:ennedy ..and other public fig­ stock in the power of persuasion by 700 Quakers attending the Peace." underemployed persons. .' . ures, would hardly scratch the exercised by the religious Estab­ North Carolina conference fmm

surface of the problem confront­ , lishment when it speaks out -on Notre Dame Hospital, Man­

35 countries. The conference at ing our major ul'ban centers. matters .of public policy. chester, N. H., will receive a

Guilford College here was the We will have to think much To be sure, the churches and first $19;408 to train 60 nurses' aides.

worldwide meeting of :Jigger than that if we are ever synagogue~ have a role to play St. Mary's Hospital, Syracuse,

Quakers since 1952, in helping to form public 'opin­ :~oing to get the job done. The CLEVELAND (NC) - :Bishop N. Y., will receive together with Delegates from the United total cost of the Marshall Plan, ion on these 'mattel's, but nor_ the Madison School $108,682 to Clarence G. Issenmann. of Cleve­ States were encouraged to pro­ if my memory serves me' cor­ mally their effectiveness,. for .test their country's participation licensed - practical land has approved formatioll of tr.ain . 30 rectly, was somewhere in the better or for worse, is some'­ nurses.

a Council ·of Catholic Negl'O in the .Vietnam war by "with­ neighborhood of $20 billion. I what limited. Laymen and met with its officers holding support from theil' govProvidence (R. I.) College has

am .afI'aid it will cost significant­ Prominent churchmen, singly • ernments' war-making machin­ for three hours last week. been named for a $84,599 federal iy more ,than that to solve the and jointly, have made signifi­ ery." grant tOward a $96,296 program The council officers have asked cunent crisis here at home. cant public statements -on the for'.a spiritual director and to train 20 business program­ This if, not to suggest, of current crisis and -no -doubt will Bishop Issenman has pFomised mers.

course, that dollal's alone will do continue to -d~ so fr-om time t~ to, to detennine theav.ailability of ~

st. Thomas Hospital, Nash­ the' j~b. But there is no use pre­ time in the future. priest. Anthony .J. Delg.ado, ville, together with Hume-F-eu ' Office tending that we can clean up .the The Congl'ess will list:ento ·president of the900-mernber High School, will receive $109,­ slums and .rebuild the cities of them respectfully, but, unless I WHEELING. (NC)-A new di­ council, said: 4tl3 t~ward a $112,640 program t4I America without the expendi­ am badly ·mistaken, it will listen ocesan Appalachian Ministry Of­ "Bishop Issenmann wants pos­ train 40 licensed practical ftUFSetJ. ture of vast sums of money. ' muet more .attenti'\ocly to the fice bas been established in the itive suggestions fr~m us, We Reston Hopeful ilrganized business community Wheeling Diocese -in West Vir':' are setting up committees on ed- . If the churches and syna­ and to other influential 'CCOflOffiic ginia. ucation and soci.al action to HWke gogues can raise a sinking fund groups in our 'society. Bishop -Joseph H, Hodges has more concrete proposals. The re­ Let Layman 1\et Oft the order of $1 billion, more announced the purpose of the­ action of the bishop to ~r pro­ po_rto them. But I would re­ Let's hope, then, that thelea-d­ new office is the "planning and posals w.as very good." spectfully disagree with my g~ ing businessor:ganizations of development"of programs and . friend, Robert Hoyt, Editor of this country will speak up with­ "communications of what is ef­ NCR, when he says that this is out del.ay .and th.at their C.atholic fected to the people and institu­ the only way out of the current members will prod them into tions of the diocese, as well.as to SANTA FE' (NC) Msgr.· saying the right tthing. impasse. society at large. . Mr. Hoyt argues that "the If this is the<lge of the laity "Programs shall be initiated Manuel .J. Rodriguez, vicar'gen­ power of persuasion has reached in the Church, let the layman locally," Bishop Hodges stated, eral ~f the Santa Fe archdio­ its limits," meaning by this, I begin to .a~t -on ·his own initia­ . and "where possible, they will cese and pastor of Cristo Rey Sea Streets take it, that there is nothing that tive where it counts the most, be sponsored jointly with other parish here since 1964, will enter

Harvard University Law School can be done - at least in the .namely, in his own occupational. churches and institutions."

Tel. 49-8·1 , Hyannis ShOl't I'llll-to create a national and political milieu. Father Hilarion V. Cann of in September to pursue further

consensus in favor -of all' ade­ When it comes to getting ac-. Fairmont has been .appointed studies. in law.' quate domestic Marshall Plan. tion in the public domain, the chairman of the board~of super­ He may be l'ight, but I hope layman ,is the professional; visors of the new office. Sister fllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHlI""""IHUIIHllIIHIIHIHIIIIIIIIIlUIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIUlI1IIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIJHIIUlllm1 whereas bishops and priests are he is wrong, for unless such a Monica Kelly, a Glenmary Sister the .r.ankest sort of amateurs.' consensus can be developed who has served in the Wheeling ~ Yes. • we Clams 12 within the I'easonably near fu-, Diocese for the past nine. years, ture, I am afraid we have had it. will be field coordinator' of the OKLAHOMA (NC)---.,The Ok­ James Reston of the New Appalachian Ministry Office. lahoma City Community'Rela­ Y~rk Times is somewhat more tions Commission has employed ilOpeful than Mr, Hoyt about the lJOSsibility of moving the nation the first Catholic nun for its CLAMBOll WASHINGTON (NC) - The lift dead center, He thinks it's staff. Sister' Celine Townsend has Youth Department of the U,S. ;)()ssible that "the leadership in joined the commission as an ed­ Catholic Conference has pub­ ucational progl'am assistant. Her )rivate life" will once again work will include coordinating lished a booklet on Vatican II .ally the public-as it did in the and Youth, excerpting sections "ase of the original Marshall ~ resources in the Oklahoma City UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 from the Second Vatican Council

''''lan-and force Washington to area to bring about better edu­ • ation in areas of need, she said. documents. i'espond. ~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllll~

the

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ProgrCllmming Grant Of $84,599 for PC

Approves COJJr;t.cil Of Netllro Laymen

Wheeling Ministry

Start

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HEATING OILS South •

have

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-thurs. Aug. 11, 1967

BISHOP'S ANNUAL VISIT TO CAMP: Overnight campers at the St. Vincent de Paul Oamp, Adamsville, learned pointers from Bishop Connolly iiD the art of horseshoe pitching. Right: Campers gather around the Bishop

and relate events that have. made their stay a:t camp a most enjoyable experience. This is one of the agencies of the Annual Catholic Appeal The camp serves aU areas of the Diocese.

• Diocese Provincial Announces ,Assignments. of Sisters of Mercy In 1'he following changes af­ ter M. Rita to Grade One, St.. Evangelist School, Attle­ fecting the F'all River Dio­ John boro. crese are announced by the Sister M. Rosalita to SS. Peter Sisters of Mercy, Province and Paul School, West Warwick; of Providence: From St. Catherine Convent, Belize, British Honduras: Sister M. Malachy to Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River; Sister M. PhiLomena to Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro. From Cathedral Convent, Providence: Sister Cecilia Marie Rita to St. Joseph School, Grade One, Fall River; Sister M. Joan to St. Patrick School, Fall River, Grade Three. From Holy Name School, New Bedford: Sister Gerald Mary to East Greenwich; Sister M. Hor­ tense to St. Mary Convent, Bay View; Sister Jeanne' Marie to Grade Three, St. John Evange­ list School, Attleboro; Sister Walter Marie to Grade Four, St. Mary School, North Attleboro. From Holy Trinity School, West Harwich: Sister Marie Leo \\0 St. Patrick School, Provi­ aence; Sister M. Margaret Ann' 00 Holy Family High School, New Bedford. From Mt. St. Mary From Mt. St. Mary Convent llnd Academy, Fall River: Sister Barbal'a Mary to Pascoag, R. I.; Sister M. Camilla to Grade Four, Holy Family School, New Bed­ liord; Sister M. Carmelita to St. Xavier High School, Providence. Sister M. Chabanel to Holy Family High School, New Bed­ ford; Sister Charlotte Marie to St. Mary Convent, Bay View; Sister Christopher Mary to St. James School, West Warwich; Sister M. Consilii to Salve Re­ gina College. Sister M. Eleanora to St. Pat­ rick School, Cumberland; Sister lVI. Elizabeth Joseph to Mt. St.

Mary Academy High School, Wall River; Sister M. Fatima to St. Augustine School, Newport; Sister M. Jacoba Murphy to Ty­ ler School and Inner City work, Providence. Sister M. Joseph Michael to St. Catherine Convent, Belize; Sis­ ter M. Maurice to Mt. St. Mary Academy High School, Fall lllivu; Sister M. Ralph to .St. AloysIus Home, Greenville, .St. Peter School; Sister M. Mau­ ll'itia to Grade Five, St. Mary <convent, North Attleboro. Sis-

Sister Rosemary to San Vicente de Paul School, San Pedro SUla, . Honduras. Sister M. Timothy, principal of Mt. St. Mary Academy High School. To St. Ma.ry's From Mt. St. Hita Convent, Cumberland: Sister M. Charlotte to Grade Five, St. Mary School, New Bedford. From Nazareth on the Cape, Hyannis: Sister M. Howard, principal; Sister M. Jamesita to St. Maurice School, Bethesda, Md. From OUF Lady oli Lourdes, Taunton: SisteT Donna Marie to St. James School, West Warwick; Sister M. Priscilla to Grade Three, St. Louis School, Fall Ri-ver; Sister Marie Luke to St. Patrick School, Cumberland. .!From Bishop Feehan Wgb From Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro: Sister Claudia Marie to 88. John and Paul Con­ vent, Coventry; Sister M. Hope to· St. Mary School, Newport; Sister Mary to study at Rhode Island College; Sister M. Rita Veronica to St. Brendan Con­ vent, Riverside; Sister Therese Marie to Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fan River. . From Sacred Heart Convent, East Providence: Sister M. Casi­ . mir to principal, St. John Evan­ gelist School, Attleboro. From St. Ann School, Provi­ dence: Sister M. Henry to Grade Four, St. John Evangelist School, Attleboro. From St. Brendan Convent, Riverside: Sister M. Catherine Ann to St. Mary School, Grade Three, Fall River. 'll'@

lHlolly lFamnib

From St. Charles School,

Woonsocket: Sister Rose Mau­ reen to Grade Six, Holy Family Grammar School, New Bedford. Wrom St. Edward Convent: Sis­ ter M. Regina Brennan to Grade Three St. Patrick School, Fall River. Fromm. St. Xavier Convent, Providence: Sister M. Harriet to DInt. St. Mary Convent, Wall River, procurator. From St. James Convent, New Bedform: Sister Rose Marie ~

St. Brendan Convent, Riverside. From St. John Baptist School, New Bedford: Sister Aurelia Mary to St. Xavier, Providence; Sister Theresa Mary to Holy Redeemer, Belize; From St. Joseph School, Falll . River: Sister Vincent Mary to Grade Eight, Holy Name School, New Bedford. To st. Patrick's From St. Joseph's Pawtucket: Sister M. Carl to Grade Seven, St. Patrick's School, Fall River. From St. Joseph's, Pascoag: Sister Mary Joel to st. Vincent's Home, Fall River, and Nazareth Hall. From St. Kilian, New Bedford: Sister Anne Maureen to Grade Seven, Holy Name School, New Bedford; Sister M. Celine to La Ceiba. Honduras; Sister Peter Mary to Tyler School, Provi­ dence and Inner City work. From Holy Family From Holy Family, New Bed­ ford: Sister M. Bernardine to Mt. St. Rita Convent, Mercy­ mount School, Grade Eight; Sis­ ter M. Dianne to Belize, St. Catherine High School; Sister Donald Marie to Grade Two and Music, Holy Trinity School, West Harwich; Sister M. Evangela to Bishop Feehan High School, At­ tleboro; Sister M. Immaculeen to to St. Margaret's, Rumford. From St. Mary Convent, North Attleboro: Sister M. Amadeus to Grade Seven, Our Lady of Lourdes School, Taunton; Sister M. Beatrice to.St. Joseph's Pas­ coag; Sister M. Eucharista to San Pedro Sula, Honduras; Sis­ ter M. Inez to .Grade Seven, SS. Peter and Paul School, Fall River Sister Paul Marie Casey to Holy Redeemer School,. Belize. From St. Mary's Newport: Sis­ ter M. Graclllle to Grade One, SS. Peter and Paul School, Fall River. 'lI'0 St. Mary's From St. Mary's, Pawtucket:

Sister M. Consolata to Grade

Six, St. Mary's School, North

Attleboro; Sister M. Perpetua to Grade Eight, SS. Peter and Paul Schooi, Fall River. From St. Mary's Bay View: Sister M. Francelia to Mt. S1. Mary Academy, Fall River; Sis­ ter M. John Catherine to Infir­ marian, Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River. From St. Mary's Bay View

House of Studies: Sister Marie Antone to Group Supervisor, St. Vincent's Home, Fall River; Sis­ ter Elizabeth Marie to Grade 'I1Wo, St. Louis School, Fall River; Sister Elizabeth Mary to Grade Five, St. Mary Cathedral School, Fall River; Sister Evelyn Mary to Grade Two, St. Patrick School, Fall Ri ver; Sister Mary James to Grade One, St. James School, New Bedford. Also Sister John Maureen to Grade One, Our Lady of Lourdes School, Taunton; Sister M. Karen t~ Grade Three, St. John Baptist School, New Bedford. From St. Matthew, Cranston: Sister M. Owen to Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River; Sister M. Therese Anthony to Grade Two, SS. Peter and Paul School, Fall River; Sister M. Sean Hurley to Grade One, St. Louis School, Fall River. From- St. Michael's, Provi­ dence: Sister M. Rosaleen Clancy to- Grade Six, St. John Evange­ list School, Attleboro. From St·. Patric:k's, Fall River: Sister M. Faber to Principal, St. Louis School, Fall River; Sister M. Barbara· to Salve Regina College. From St. Patrick's Cumber­ land: Sister M. Thomasella to Grade Eight, St. Mary's North Attleboro. From St. Patrick's Providence: Sister Immaculee to Grade One, St. Kilian's School, New Bedford; Sister Marie Victoire to Grade Three, St. Mary School, New Bedford.

From St. Peter's, Warwick: Sister M. Padraic to Holy Trin­ ity, West Harwich, Grade TW(ll. From SS. Peter and Paul, West Warwick: Sister M. Catherine to Grade Six, St. Mary's, Nortb Attleboro. From St. Philip's, Greenville: Sister Alfred Marie to Grade Eight, New Bedford, St. John Baptist School. From st. Vincent's Home, Fall River: Sister M. Alminda to Mt. St. Rita, Cumberland; Sister M. Bernadette to Mt. St. Mary's, Fall River; Sister M. Carolanne to Grade Six, St. James, New Bedford; Sister 1VI. Edith to Grade One, St. Mal'y's, NGrth Attleboro; Sister M. Joseph to infirmarian, St. Mary's, Ba~' View; Sister Maria Petrea t( Nazareth on the Cape, Hyannis; Sister M. Roberta to Nazareth on' the Cape, Hyannis; Sister M. Romana- to Grade Two, St. Mary's, North Attleboro; Sister Maria Thomas to St. Peter's WarwiCk. To l\1t. St. Mary From Salve Regina College: Sister M. Antonine to Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River. From Villa Mercy, Bethesda, Md.: Sister Marie Bernadette to Principal, St. Vincent's School, Fan... River.

Also of interest in the Diocese

is the establishment by the Sis­

ters of Mercy of a new convent

and high school in Central

America. Muffles High School

is located in Orange Walk, British Honduras.

OPEN DAmLY fOR

TH~

SlEASON

AFYERNOON AND NIGH1l'

SATURDAY AUG, BOY SCOUT DAY

COMIN.G

.......................................

19

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": THE, ANO!0R~Dioc~se

of

FaIl'Rive'":-Thu,~. Aug.

-17.-1-967

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Proclaimtng !

,.

Wrong 'Rood

'Delmarva Dialog, '" Diocescan Pape~'

Has New Editor

,

Christ

I"

WIL~INGTON(NC)-~

The religious education of '. children properly belongs to their parents and in 'their own homes. This is where values are absorbed, reverence for the things Of God in­ culcated, religious patterns laid down that will be follow­ ed throughout life. This is where, a spiritual foundation is built. Unfortunately, not all parents can and will set the example and teach the lessons and provide the patterns for a wholesome and strong spiritual life, for their chil­ dren. ' The burden-and the privilege-then falls on others. And. the truth is that the priest alone and the religious, alone cannot and should not be the only ones to step into the breach. ". .

Delmarva Dialog, object ,01 a ,two-month struggle be. tween its edir1Jor, members cd the board of directors and Wi);", mington's Bishop Michael ~ Hyle, ,will have a new editOll Sept. l. James P. Parks, Jr., 33, assJs9ot. ant metropoHtan editor of the Wilmington daily News-Journlll\ will replace John O'Connor, ~hQ was founding editor of the two-> year-old prize-winning diocesaJ!! weekly. Parks' title, according.~ the announcement, will be "in=> terim editor." . Bishop Hyle called Parks '9!l For one thing, there are simply not enough of them highly competent and qualifie~ to do the work. For another, they are not the only ones journalist who will ably assist charged w~th the task of teaching by word and example us in making the Dialog a new$<! the "good news" of salvation. paper its readers and advertisellD will accept and support." Each Catholic has a ministry-is charged with the. Long Contr4lversy duty 9f proclaiming by words and in his life the won­ Parks, a native of Wilmingto~ drous deeds of God. Each Catholic is a prophet--a preach­ , has been assistant metropolitam er of Christ and His saving ministry. Each Catholic must editor of the News-Journal sinCEi take seriously his mission to make Ohrist better known' March. ,Before that he was as'<> and loved by others. ,' sistant city editor, a reporter an~ business writer. Before going te Members of the Confraternity. of Christian Doctrine -the News-Journal, Parks workecll have this before their eyes 'and as, the reason f<u: th~ir in the Philadelphia bureau oJil labors-'---'toproclaim C h r i s t . . . the Dow Jon~s News Service an@!, the Wall Street Journal. They do it as teachers in the elementary and secon. I Parks is a director of, the Wi).. dary classroom with students who do not attend parochial, Catholic Youth Associ..o schools. They do' this in the administrative' posts associated" Specialostl's ciu1t ~@w~ Washington Symp,Gsnum mington ation, and is active in the Cath-> with such parish schools of religion. They do this as To Study lFailture of Catholic Educ«JItI'ion olic Forum of the Air and th(l leaders and participants in discussion' groups, as visitors Catholic Tele'vision Guild. He tf! WASHINGTON (NC)-More deal with the sociologiCal con­ a former editor of the Delawal'Cl throughout the parish.' than 100 persons will attend' a text of Catholic educatioe, Dew Knight, 'state publication of tIwJ ,They are' prochiiming Christ-by their words and; symposium here in the nation's organizational structures, ' fi­ Knights of Columbus.. . capital this, Flill on the, future nances and the role of laymen even more importantly, by their attitudes and aotions; His appointment is the latesIIJ of Catholic education. It will be in Catholic education. development in a long CO!1trQot I~ is 'always most revealing for a youngster, to ask, sponsored. by the NatiQnal Cath­ Author!! of the papers are Dr. versy over the Delma,rva Di.alo,., ,almost with awe, why. a man or' woman is giving up time olic Educational Association. Robert J. Havighurst, professor which became public June ,I Participants are specialists in ~education at th'e University ,wnen O'Connor said .he wouJI and. expe~ding 'effort to speak to him about Christ. Thie is the heart of the, (Xlnfraternity work~hristians who' public and non-public education, of Chicago; Dr. John I. Goodbid, resign Nov. 30, when his, communicationS'," civil dean of the graduate sCh'oot" cd tract expired. me m~ved by their lov El 'Qf Chris.t to proclaim Him, t<H>theri.- business, rightS and anti':poverty;' ., education at the Uriiversity Of That move· followed a vote -. " Next week innumerable priests and' sit3~ers, laymen The object of the "Nov. 5-10 California, at Los Angeles; Fa­ ,renew his contract and Bisb'" and laywomen of. the ,Diocese of Fall River 80, impeHed symposium is to provide' ideas ther Ernest.Bartell, C.$.C., ,~-, 'Hyle's demand that the pape~ onomics professor at the Uni-' , three-man finance eommittee :ieo will gather with GCDmembers from other sections of New and guidelines il'or decision-mak­ ers in Catholic education' -the' versity ofN-otre Dame' and .Tobit sign. England on the campus of the University of New Ham­ k>cal le~ei. '' J. Meng,. ~xecutive vice presi­ }'inancial Trouble ' shire and will meet in a Regional ConfraJternity CongreSs Four position 'papers will dent of Fordham University. Bishop Hyle later charged tb8lI to examine themselves 'and theirwC)rk, to ~new their the newspaper was in trouble .... fervor and sense of purpose, to consider 1Jeehniques and nancially-and that its troublell to ask howbett~r,they may serve Christ an.d His' Church. were getting worse-and "'indi­ cated that a change in the elft,t torship and fiscal managemenl COLUMBUS (NC) -':'An in-, JOIN and other. volunteer anti': would be necessary to rescue tt. O'Connor and the finanCf; vestigation of the area' poverty poverty organizations had sub­ committee disputed the bisho" There are more than five and one-half million students' program to ascertain whether mitted to CMACAO the detail­ financial calculations and federal funds are actually reach- ed application required for fed­ in Catholic. elementary' and high schools in the United ing the poor has 'been called for eral funding for their Summer . charged, instead, that the ,pre). States. The Catholic school system has grown one hundred, here by Msgr. Hugh Murphy" programs. However, ,when the, ate was giving in to a vocai nD­ and tWo per cent in the last fifteen years. , pastor of St. Joseph cathedral. $75,000. allotted to Columbus nQrity who have opposed' tbe paper's avowedly liberal 'editOoo These statistics would give great satisfaction if they' The priest asked for a "critical arrived from OEO later than ex­ re-evaluation" of the Columbus pected, CMACAO declared a rial stance since the beginning, stopped there; But they do not. Metropolitan Community Action state' of emergency. The dispute erupted less thati two' weeks after the paper n>oo It is also a statistic that the percentage of school- Organization (CMACAO) which.' Pet Projects ' age Catholic children in Catholic schools has d~pped from coordinates the local ,poverty Instead of being used through ceived a Catholic Press Associ.. what it ,was fifteen y~ars ago. ' program. existing organizations with ex- ~ion award for general excel­ lence in its circulation categoq; There are simply not enough p}aces in Catholic schools' Jo~~~r~r::r;:J~na f~:a~~ne~~ ~sting p~o~ram~, the money ~as and O'Connor was elected vice to accommodate those who wI'sh to a·ttend.' ,, ' c·t N d (JOIN) t k CMAunn~le mto what the prIest ' 1 y, ee s . , 00 described as "pet projects" set president of the CPA. , In a separate statement, Par" And so parents must -iook to the Confraternity of CI~Ot,to task forI "sdenseles~ t~U- '. up in haste by director Curtis said O'Connor and the Dialog . t'Ian D oc~rine --:. t h Ion 0 f a rea y eXlS mg' a Brooks . of ChrIS e parish ' school of religion _ for, pica programs." nd 0 th er mem b ers staff "are to be corrlmended'" . t . th 1" d t' f h' 'ld . CMACAO's staff. These Sum­ aSSIS ance 1D e re IglOuS e uca Ion 0 t elr chI reno It . H~ said that volunteer or~an- mer projects were held i the for their work iJl starting' tile must have the support and cooperation of all. It is needed. ~at~o~such as J~IN an!! nel:h neighborhood centers cont~olled Dialog. "The work of the past s It is fulfilling an indispensable, role. bor 0 "d c~)J~mum?, ~roiUPd t a by the Community Action Org­ years must be continued," Pa" ~e~ , eme a VOice ? e er­ anization itself. mlDmg how federal anti-pover­ "CMACOA IS . not suppose ' d to added. f '. ty unds ~ould be spent 10 Co­ be a' 'closed corporation,' but' a lumbus thiS Summer. '. t 0 a11'organlza . t'IOns WIS . h -' Fordham P'rofessor service , ing to fight poverty in Central Want Investigation With Vatican R.adio Neither he nor JOIN, Msgr. Ohio," Msgr. Murphy said. Murphy said, is opposed to the He noted that JOIN's five-, NEW YORK (NC-Edward A. federal Office of Economic Op­ week Summer program had giv­ Walsh has taken an indefinitll! portunity (OEO). "What we en educational and recreational leave of absence from Fordham want," he said, "is an investiga­ opportunities to more than 400 University to work as a cOJlro O~LCuca4l NIEWSll»A~E~ OF THE roUOCESE OF frAU ~IVIE~ tion of poverty programs in the inner-city children-most of sultant to the North AmeriCalill 'them not Catholics-"without a Section of Vatican Radio in VatJ., /Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River Columbus area.'" "CMACAO has to answer a penny of' government funds.' ican City. 410, Highland Avenue

Our application for assistance , big question: How are the fed­ Walsh, a veteran newspap~ eral funds reaching the poor in was never even acknowledged man and free lance writer, ill! Fa'll River, Mass. 02722 675-7151

by 'Mr. Brooks." Columbus?" vice-chairman of the commuJIl." PUBLISHER

Msgr. Murphy said he "was' cations arts department at For"" He went on: "Aside from the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. ' not declaring war on CMACAO one abvious benefit of lprovid­ ham, where he has been on tb6 ing for the CMACAO staff, the but that organization should staff for 19 years. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER, poor in Columbus find little evi­ prove itse!! willing til share with R~. Rev. Dani~! F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll He is a graduate of Holy CroIil dence .of any effective anti­ those volunteer gr,oups who want College, Worcester, and begaGi MANAGING EDITOR poverty program." , to provide the in-kind require-' his newspaper career in :NeIIpo. Hugh J. Goldep Msgr. Murphy pointed out that ment of OEO." port, R.I., his native city.

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EASTON SUMMER SCIHl(())())JL,: Informality is order of day at Easton

Bummer School of Religjon. Left, teen-age volunteers supervise arts and

@mfts session. Center, children' surround Hugh Cleary, Holy Cress semi­

narian, for Mams preparation., Right, rong slide gets huge' workout~ lEas­ 100 children from Immaculate Conception and Holy Cross, par4shes, Eas­ ton, participated in two w.eeks, Summer School, now in Iits third yea!!".

Greet'

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hymns with ~e c1hi1~ren and every day they learn severall

New York Court,'Easton Youth, Ch,rist in ,S14nshine "Orders Restudy"" At· .Summer ,School ,of Religi(jR, Of Bias Case ' ~rothy Eastrn~

new Ofi1!S. The chii.clre!ll' gather 'on the

porch where Father Butler is prepraing to say Mass. As he vests he e!tp:lains' the meaning of each vestment' to the chil­ dren. ''Today is the feast day af St­ John. Vianney, the patron saint of parish priests. Will you re­ member aU parish priests in the Mass today?" Father Butler asktJ the children. "Yes, Fjither, they whisper, and nod their. heads. The Mass begins and the chil­ dren are intent partiCipants, oblivioLls of the trees, the birda and anything else that ',would distract the average adult. They put their whole hearts into their responses and their singing. greeting Christ in the sunshine o.n a lovely Summer day.

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NEW YORK (NC) - A A young boy swings through the on a. tree rope'like Tarzan, while 30 little girls' order has directed the 'wOrk busily at arts and crafts on ~nch:es spread out under another tree. At the same New York State Commissiontmle20 fifth grade boys are matchillg filmstrips of "The lLife of ChriHt" in a' nearby for Hu'man Rights to recon- building. The scene of all this activitY. is the Easton Summer School of Religion at the fdder the CDse of an Ortbodox, Bermce Clare F-arm on Bay lew who complained he had Road. The two week long YOlHlgsters to the farm at 9:45 young ~eckle-r:ace4 boy proud­ been denied a job with an insur- 'school is the J' oint effort of in. .the morning from all over IV showed Fattier Steakem a an~ company because of his r~ , , , the 29 square miles of Easton. $100 bill in German currency. ligion. . , .Immaculate ConceptiQD and ' 'll'befarm is, the property of Another 'boy' hMl brought in a <iSOtR"t

. 'State Supreme Court Justice Holy Cross parishes of Easton. the Honorable James Condon of 'aacob' MarKowitz issued the orFather John Steakem, assist­ ,Dorchester, who bought it in der a suit brought by Bernard ant at 'Immaculate Conception, 1935 lind .named it after a daugh­ " Rllbin of Brooklyn, who charged and Father AUan Butler, CoS.C.. ter who died in childhood. an irisurance company denied assistant at Holy Cross, seem to lVIr. Condon has for many years .bim a 'job as a computer pro- enJoY' directing the school lIB brought children from Boston to gmmmer on religious grounds. ':'mticl:t as the children enjoy at- the on weekends so that Rubin explained he ob!'Prve~" tending it. they J'riight' enjoy a few days of fIte Saturday Sabbath and con-' ", A' "Monster Poster" Contest OOUIlb'y: life. " gequently would have to lea ve' 'was in progress and a youngster The' Bible Camp day begins the job- a little earlier on Fridays".'''ran up. to Father Steakem and with asseinbly and prayers and fn 'Winter' when the sun setS' asked- him to be.3 judge in the the cl:i.ildren are' given their as­ earlier 'since the Sabbath be.'" cOntest. Father c:heerfully de­ SignmentS ' for the day. The ains sun'down. ' eliDed and gave, that honor to morning, is . always divided into . He said he estimated the 1000 the arts ·and crafts teachers. three periods: Bible class, sports, (If suctl time would amount to "To . some priests and parish­ and arts and crafts. 16% hours a year which he ofi&n~rs a Sum~er Schoo1 or Bible TWG- semina{ians from nearby fered to' make up on other days, , ,Camp. seems to be one big head­ Holy Cross Seminary are the <W through pay deductions. The ac~," Father Steakem says as Bible' class instructors. They are rights commission dismissed Ru~ ,walk around the camp Bite J@sepb. Shea C.S.C. and Hugh bin's original complaint and he that is spread over several acres Cleary C.S.C. fDstituted the court case. Oi the Easton countryside. Ia ' the ,darkened building Where the filmstrips were about , "~nies Claim Orga.ni'Oled Disorder ' The insur'ance company denied. "So:meo.ne has called a Sum- to be shown 20 fifth grade boys were discussing-in typical un­ \be discriJ:1)ination claim, stating", met" Bitne school 'a time of or­ lJOme 2,000 home office employ-,' ganized. disorder! Yet there ,are mhibited'fifth-grade-boy fashion 008 and 40 per cent of its distriot many others who realize what !l .....:..what gaines Jesus might have managers ~re Jewish. 'well OI"ganized program can playem when be was a boy their' -age.' "Do you think He' played Willard W. Peck, second viceachieve, not only for the stu­ president and a personnel offidents, but for the whole parish baseball?" "Naw, that wasn't invented 'then. He probably <!leI', said' it was necessary for all "as well. employees illl the computer de"It can be a time of spiritual played "Kick the Can." parlment to adhere to a uniform growth and enrichment when The moment the filmstrips schedule of hours as the "con- evecyone involved can receive ,started the room was miracu:. '7enience of the equipment" must new insights into what it mearw IOllsly quiet as the boys watched aupersede the "convenience of to belong to a Christian commu­ in rapt attention the colorful tlbe l\K'Ogrammer.'· nity. The daily schedule can pro- pictures telling the story of vide opportunities for religious Christ's Baptism by John the experiences that Often are not Baptist. possible during the school, year, On another part of the grounds lLORETIO (NC)-Dr. Gerald, and can foster more effectively youngsters were enjoying the l!I. Cessna will receive the first , the climate in which friendshipl play equipment which included swings and two slides. One Distinguished Graduate Award and love for Christ can be in­ group of girls was having a hm St. Francis College here in tensified, leading to a deep per­ songfest and' the strains 9f Pennsylvania at the annu~ sonal commitment." JlJ.omecoming weekend, Aug. 25~ Tnere was no "organized dis-, "Kumbaya" filled the Summer M. lDr. Cessna is chief of staff , order" in evidence on the Easton air.

Each camp day has a different

and chairman of the department, grounds where over 100 children ,oil obstetrics and gynecology at fforn first through sixth grades ,theme and today was the da17 North Hills Passavant Hospital. ~l,\ve ,gathered now for. three each. youngi?ter was to bring in m Pittsllurgh. Summers. Parents drive tbeil" , i?QJ.ll.ething, unusual to share. A

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pony. ,Each day the Children are asked. t~ bring in a poster or picture showing "how God shows His love to me." Mrs. Catherine Callow, who is supervisor 'of arts in the Mansfield school 'system, in­ structed the teen,-agers whG are cou.nselors ,'at. the .camp. The children have made' totem poles, lanterns 'arid' May 'baskets. Volunteer ;Counselors C<mnselors, woo are volun­ teers from the two parishes, are Christine Griffin, Caroline Paul­ ino, Patricia' Readd,y, Mary W09d" .Kathleen Pietrowski, PaulaPanciocco, Mary Ellen CGrgini, Linda Gouveia, Paul Aries, Patr,icia McLaughlin, Charles Stoddard, Kathleen Cun­ iff, Ha~ld Cady" ~dward Guest, Paul Mullen and Michael Kav­ anaugh.· .. , " After 'lunch each day the chil­ dren pile ftlto a big green bus borrowed from Stonehill Col­ lege and a small bus borrowed from a parishioner and off they go to Easttm Municipal Beach f9r an afternoon of swimming. Highlight of the day is Mass at U:30. lVIr. Shea rehearses

LAR~VIERE/S

Pharmacy Prescri,?ti~

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Shortage of Nuns

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fail River-Thurs. Aug. 17; 1967 .

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Cioses School

Clippings' of' World' loday' 'Make Good Baby Book •'-cf'

DUNBAR (NC)~A shortage 8f teaching Sisters makes necessary the immediate closing of Christ . the King school here inWesl Virginia, Fllther Edward Bela. . . ger, pastor, has announc.ed. . The Sisters of' St. Francis of Penance and Christian Charit~ whose'motherhouse is located m. Stella Niagara, N.Y., had noti­ fied' Bishop Joseph H. Hodges of Wheeling and Father Robert H. Wanstreet,diocesan superin":' . tendent of schools, that they are unable to furnish any more " Franciscan Sisters to teach in the

school.

A decline in the number of ,.... girls entering the conv!'lnt in re­ .' c.ent years is the principal cause .of the shortage of nuns, it was .' stated. Also, age and. illness of ,. older members of the order has. . f.orced officials to limit available . t~achers to older and larger .' .. Catholic schools. Christ the King .parochial school opened only two years. ago, and is the first to be affected, officials said.

By Mary Tinley.Daly

As a result of' a /recent column, "Letter to Brian,~ , [CThe iIead of the House writing to his new~st grandson '. en the day ()f his birth), we learne<t from a reader of one. ef the most: fascinating "baby book" ideas ever. Wouldn't

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~u like to know the state of the world on the da.y you

including significant "Lett¢rs to the Editor;' and editorials culled ;'a'ere born? I would! The from. newspapers, news maga­ 3l'eader, Mr. Thomas F~ Row- zines" political polls as the 11m, tells' of such a scrapbook country marches toward the 1968 · eompiled for his son by Mrs. presidenti111 election. From Cath­

iValerie MacNees, a perceptive olic magazines and papers we

lriend and coclip ideas on liturgical changes, :'"V0rker, a book tlte "swinging Mass," use of gui­ ilbat will become' tars and other musical instru­ more interesting ments; meeting of Catholic edu­ as time goes on. cators on future conduct of Catholic universities. ' 'A microcosm of ribe world when 'l\'her~ to Go' ile entered it, Son of "The Traveling Macillb e recipient Kaigs," Brian will no doubt be :will find this interested in· the "where tQ go" 1Il0t the usual stories, what were the most pop­ '. ilo-hum b a by ular vacation spots' in his natal

....-ok.. For one Summer, including Expo '67. Sori

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..... ' vDSCOn mue pera Ion

thing, it's much larger, says Mr. an d gran d son 0f ommvorous Bowan,more than 20 big pages, "readers, he ·willlearn what were Of Home for .Boys encompassing. a spectrum as the best sellers, fiction and non­ broad as the imagination of the fiction, long before ~e himself ' . WASHINGTON (NC) -After ..... , tl-ierid who put .it .together:· was able to read. Also, what was "112 years the Sisters of Holy Cross relinquish' operation Fired by Mr.. R9W.··an.'s sugges'-' WI·th I' t 'In the f']d' Ie s 0 f popu1 ar . I mUSIC, . t were. of the' ·St. ·.joseph's Home for _on, we started .such a ~ook for ,and c1· aSICa w'ha' ,"oung. Brian. MacKaig, now ~~ '. ·thetop-selling. records; who NEW WORLD SHRINE:· Street. shrine to St. Rose . Boys here-the last children's tile ripe .old age of one. ,non~h. were. th~ swm~ing' siiiging.. of Lim·a, at the. 'place where she spent her,J.i::(e in Lima, p..er,u. 'home staffed'by the communi~ g ..vhicn 'is .riow engaged princj.;. .... ' We wish we had .started it. e!'lr:- .: . roups... " . . --.. ;, ....__ . The feast of St. Rose, the 'first native-born . . saint'Of . the . . ;'-" "'er.. However, we·,did. m.a.n . .a,ge. to . In .the" Amuse.m..e.n. t..~ .se.cti.o.n.. . .pally..ili.. te.aching arid bospital .. f ·New Wodd, is,. Aug. 30. NC. photo., . w k the sc.rIlPbOO. . k?. we 'Include... . or . "''''ivage from newsPllpers, news of B d Leo J. Coady, director h rt 'JI}agazines and. the Uke ~ go,?d s 0 revIews ,on-: r~a ",~y . . 'ofMsgr. Catholic Charities for the _any. items we hope Bria~ !VIll a~~ 9~-Broadway: shows, a te.l~'7 .. :read with interest in the ~ate VISIon forecast for .the. commg . . ro~:hp'~r,~ a~~:~~~~~SiI:::: :;:; .:'

1980s, seas0':l' From the.pio.cesan week' .

· Varied Contents , ly, we clip its list·of Catbolic' , , ' . Girls and the Catholic Charities

rati.n. g.s,.on ..·.·:inot ... !on.... ~ By MARILYN RODERICK ~ are involved in long-range.social

. . In·.·the. area. whe,re we. ,h,'v'e, . ,F.,.i,]m OffiCe . .' . .' . . ..' .. ' . . . " welfare reorganization program · birth ill1J.1ouncemel')~, exc.e~t.for.. p~,c~ur~s· ~nd' mOyles .ontele:': "slated 109'o 'into effect ·iri.-early·· YIPs don't'mak'e the papers as vls!on... ..' .. : ':'.:': 1968. . .) they.' 'iil so~e 'r~mm.~~i~ies,' . The. baby, born~', in; 1~67 . 'w~ll . but we did put· in the weather also wa~t to·.know.some. of Its The teenage revolution in the ·healthy. lookipg .yo_ung. t>~der~::" A'n.ew se,rvi~e, center :Wi~\~ report of the day, the horoscope, fa~tual,realities: ads showing the garment fndustry is 'in full swing. w'omEm have tried to adopt 'as:, . estabhshed at St. Joseph s, a the church bulletin for that par- .. pnces of food, of .real 'estate,. and shows no sign of abat~ng. pects' of this new look, but only . home f~r dependent .. boys ticu]ar week. From the sporting. clothing. Speaking of. clothing, Under 21 seems to be' the cry' the very young look absolutely fo~nded 1ft 1855, the monSIgnor pages, Bri,an will 'find the'. teams no contemporary . s~rapb~o]{' and. the' designers of Seventh right in it.' . . saId. The younger' boys at th.e H' t' d .I t home will be cared for at St.

· leading in both the National and ,,:ould be com~lete wlthou~ ,8 . Avenue are de]li-ious with hapAmerican Leagues, what horses . pIcture .of TWIggy, ()f mml' S dd . ] eavy wee s, ong orso. Vincent's while older boys willi

aid .off at what tracks (he s.kirted misses, nuns in their up- pmess. u en Y swe,aters and fcrthochfetehd. an~le be placed in group homes CICl'

P . d t d h b·t ' . over the past soc k s are par t 0 eas Ion pIC.~ . foster homes. might some day want to put a a .~ a I s, PI~tu~es and ne",:,s. few years· a ture fo.r Fall, along with short bet on their descendents). A fi- stones of the HIPPIes and then who l e n e w skirts. The young .gir]s of '67 nancial journal provided' the Happening~. . . .. buying market and '68 will wear their skirts 'as state of the stock market, in both . As we chpand paste, we can't has arisen, deshort if not shorter than last sea­ the New York and American help wondering, how this book Fandinfi( more son, but they of the clear, unExchanges ('twas up), list of t1:Je will look 10, 2{), 50 years from and more clothes veined legs can wear them with :-most active stocks, companies now. And, just for kicks, we,in- and accessories dash. The~' seem to have more bitting new. highs and new lows. clude an ~dvice to the .lovel()rn with the look of . fashion sense than' my generaSpeaking of lows, this Sum- c~lumn, WIth a bet that the ad- youth and liter- tion did, they wear makeup well, mer of 1967 this clipping service vIce seekers of the future will ally buying out seem 'to be. able to handle their' found a ndne too rosy picture: still be asking pretty. much. the .. the stores that hair like' experts; and . all in all.." 'war in. Vietnam, repercussions of same qu.estions: "How can I be stock you n g . have fashion sense beyond their the short-lived war. between more attractive to me!)?" and fashions. As discouraging as this years.' .' Israelis' and Arabs struggle over . '.'How. can I please my mother- may seem' to us middle-age ·civil rights, the ' pov.erty pro--, ~n. I a.w.?" . Of course, like all of us; they matrqns,' who find w. ~en se,ar.. ch-:-. . , . make mistakes but we shouldn't · gram, unemployment, juvenile . . . .ing for a new outfit that mostly be fast to 'critiCize, fo'r .th·ey .are. delinquency, .riots in .the cities. p'relate' Asks Cotho~ics everyting on th'e racks has an . There were squabbles over gun . 'accent 'on youth, to the teenager·quite new at this fashion busi- . control, rat control, opening of. Clear Away Prejudice it is the answer' to a long time ness. Some carry things to ex­ tremes, such as wearing eye a P'sy'che'delic dance h..all,· 'ac- . MILWAUKEE (NC)-Follo.w- prayer. k' d h h f ] counts of increased use of haUu- ing a week of curfew-imposed I remember my own teenage rna eup an suc eavy a se cinogens and other drugs in our . calm here, Archbishop William years when such a thing as eyelashes' that they can barely pill-oriented .society, plans for '. E. Cousins of Milwaukee appeal- clothes for my age group didn't ~ift the.ir lids or venturing out' the moonshot, effects of cigarette ed to the 700,OQO Catholics of. exist. Either you picked out your into the highways and byways ' t ' with",their hair in huge rollers, smokl'ng on heart dl'sease and' the Milwaukee archdiocese to' clo t hes . m the. young rna rons looking for' all the' world like cancer. . . "do everything· .within your department. (especially if 'you ., , A]ong WI'th new s son t 'es. and . power, in. your home, at work, . were tall fo'r yo'ur age) .and . vIsItors from· Mars. These, how. CITIES SERVICE

. ever, are the exception, with the pictures, and to indicate the at school, among your neighbors; looked as if you were wearing' . majority befter dressed and bet;. DISTRIBUTORS'

opinions of 1967 adults,' .we are. ,to clear awa'y preJ'udl'ce and ml's- your sl'ster's castoffs' or you . . . . . . . .,., tel' groomed than any' previous . undlerstimding." stayed in the. juvenile depart:.. .' . . .

The Church, the archbishop ment if you were (petite) 'and gli!!1er~!lOn. . .

Ecumenical EncolUn·ter said, has spoken clearly and fre- ended up looking like Rebecca

Scheduled in Minn. quently on 'society's obligation of Sunnybrook Farm, ' Ma ine Sisters of Merrcy .

to provide equal rights to Ne- '. Sports clothes weren't as hard

ST', PAUL (NC)-The Minne­ groes and other minorities. In to find as dressy items, but once sota Council of Churches is plan­ Nam~ 41-Year Old Head!

ning its third annual two-day the light of such teachings, he you tried to venture into any­

PORTLAND (NC) Sister OIL BURNERS Lay Ecumenical Encounter at asked all to "ca]mly and reason-' thing other than a cardigan, Mary Denis Schwartz, 41, Port­ Macalester College here, starting ably examine your conscience peter pan collared dickey, or land diocesan supervisor of For Prompt Delivery as to your personal beliefs and pleated skirt you were quite out schools from 1961 to 1967, has Aug. 26. & Day & Night Service attitudes in the field of racial 'of your league. Nothing seemed been elected mother general of Sister Ann Patrick Ware, as­ to fit or be appropriate and the sistant professor of religion at relations and civil rights.'" the Sisters of Mercy here. G. ,E. BOILER BURNER tUlNlnrS Archbishop Cousin's taped ad- awkward age wasn't made any the. University of North Dakota The Congregation of the Sis­ dress was broadcast over Mil- . easier- by the designers. and Rev. Franklin Littell, presi­ ters of' Mercy staft elementary Iltufal Bottled Gas Service dent of Wesleyan College in waukee radio and television staMary Quant was finally the and high schools throughout the Iowa, will give the keynote ad,.. tions one week after a riot shook answer to all the young maiden's . state as well as St. J'o,seph's Col:' '!>~ COHANNET S1l'. dresses, . the city's five-square mile. dis- prayers as she brought before lege, North Windham, Maine.' ., TAUNTON Sister Ann Patrick, a Sister of trict bringing about 26 hours of the public a whole new concept The community owns and oper­ Loretto, is one of the first nuns strict quarantine of the city and in clothing .design, a look that ateS Mercy Hospital, Portland Attleboro - No- .. A.ttlebor@ to hold a teaching position in a . its residents ahd a week of tight cou]don]y be worn well by the and Madigan Memorial Hospital, .. '· , ·Taunton secular university. nightly curfews. . "fresh faced, firm sldnned, "Houlton, Maine.'

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THE ANCHOR-

This Wet Summ.er's> Good For, .. Y,pur law,!I1)t -,Anyway

9

Thurs., Aug. 17, 1967

Ecumenism; GOGO\) ~n Latin America .

,'. ,'" By Joseph Ml€HVlal1"fi!Ynl Rod~rick , .riii~ .~as': been ag.r~~· S~~mer fOr lawns. With the oonstant supply of rain, they~ve stayed' green a.nd are thriving, helping to offset .the terrible damage done in th.e past two seasons. This is an opportune time to refurbish (tld lawns with new seed and . extra money to squander on all. '00 establish ,new lawns. Any- . those kitchen appliances that are .ne who h'as planted a Yawn oonsidered luxuries, not neces­ has had the experience @f sities. For some unknown reason,

BOGOTA (NC) -Ecumenism in Latin America, untii a few years ago made impossible bY' both Catholic suspicions and! Protestant proselytism has ad­ vanced now to the stage where. doctrinal studies as well as s0­ cial and cultural cooperation are common. According to Colombian jour­ nalist Jose Ignacio Torres. knowledge has opened doors for cooperation. "True," Torres said, "there are still threats to our traditional faith. But there Jl(j longer prevails in our efforts tG . uphold it the defensive apolo­ getic approach of yesterday.

"Catholic doctrine and dogma'

are presented now in a more realistic way, based on reform and renewal," Torres added. m an article in the Catholic newa service, Noticias Aliades, he pointed to 'the formation of pr&­ grams throughout Latin Amer­ ica designed to train priests ami laymen in ecumenical coopera­ tion.

lieeing it get weedy and Jess this SUmmer my dreams have attractive with each passing been centered around an ice lieason and has realized the need. cream freezer. to re~eed" each Fall to maintain . In tbis a'ge when everythilllC the lawn at· some degree of at- . that can possibly be mechan­ NOW BYZANTINE RITE PRIEST: ,Father Michael kactiveness. What follows W· II izeEI is mechanized, even this method for SCII doing which in- item has been' streamline<I and B. Sisak, Orthodox priest of Ambler, Pa., left, Wa3 received wIves a considerable amount 9f electric ic-: eream freezers are into the Catlrolie Church as 'a Byzantine Rite priest in labor, but very Uttle cost. aVailable, along with. the old ceremonies at the residence of John Cardinal Krol, center, The' first step in reseeding a standard hand-eranldng model. ef Philadelphia~ Bishop Stephen K~iskl>~ right, of P.assaic lawn' is to rake it as vigorousl!" If I did purchase one, though, I l)S possible in order to get au.t would want ~. old-fashioned. witnessed the eere~Qny. NC Pho~o. the dead grass and loosen the model. There i2 something ro­ liOiI. Garden books recommend mantic about' sitting, cranking lA thatcher for this job but II: your own ice eream, something llave tried in vain to locate one that conjures up visions of tree­ In this area. None of the gardea shaded verandas, complete: with five Nuns With Doctorates to Attend liIbops rents them and they are swinging hammocks and banjo­ ~ expensive to buy. playing yeung men in white Son· Francisco Workshop A good steel rake will do tile fllannels. job but it is a difficult task es'As Ameriean as apple pie, ice SAN FRANCISCO (NC) -lI:t cisc_ Sister:Mary Reginald.

pecially . if ;you have a large cream' has been a national des­ oould be said a gro,up of five who sPecialize in French, Span'

'lawn., ,It's Jlecessary, however, sert since the middle of the specializing doctors are headed ish, Latin and Ameri~an studies; New Church to Hove

~ca"lW, any :weak or dead gl'~ ,,1700's.' Geo.rge Washigton w3s this way. Teclmieally, it woold Holy CrossSist~r Margaret Rita Drive-in Confessionals, '.. must, be rem.oved to make roo,m known to have had an ice cream be cOrrect but might be mislead- Merellie 01. St. Mary's College, lor the .new seed. , . freezer made of pewter and . ing. The ,nuns are not medicall Notre 'Dame, Ind.; Sister Rose SYDNEY (NC) -The new" ." T~, n,ext ~p ~. to check ~".l'honl'as Jefferson who was' as doctors, bUt have Ph. b. degrees Maureeii Kelly"of the Maryknoll $250,000 church ,planned ·fol' St.,., , lawn, for .gra~e to be sure 7 0 !i.. ,well 'known"as egourmet as ·fl. in' history, ecooomics, sociology,- Sisters" Jimiorate, 'and Sister Gertrude'S' parish here in ,AU!i- ','. have, nq,.lQw IO~ high spots.... I1?'h.statesman' wrote, down' his' wa!7 'anthropology '~socialpsychol-.' Mary Bernadette Giles, a P~ ~ 'tralia will have drive-in confe9- . '" there are low spots, locate tbe~ ...of preparing this tasty confection ~.i i. . entatlonol the '~lessedVir'gin' sionals, according'to"plans sue­ flben.,lild.d a,.qua~ inch ,~f loa~.", in lengthy detail. He used a The traveliug nuns wiil be MarY "nun' w:ho is "engagecJ. in mitted to the Fairfield Ml:micipal.. '.. • ~gin tPe job. of. raising t~sorbetiere (iee pail) and: batches here Aug. 28 to sept. 1 for Ii social 'work in thisarea~ .' , '. Coun'cil for approval.....

grade, :Q()ll't try to even 0~ th~, . ()f ice and salt. workshop on human rights and T~,' works'h~p' will ~'spon.., . : A special traffic ,lane along..;.· ...

grad,e. in .one ,year. Plan on doio!:." Other history-minded people relations at the, University of sored· by the National Catholic . side 'a "",in'g of the' church will' .

this over a periQd, of time., credit Dolly Madison (the hostess San Francisco. Conference for; InterJ'acial Jus- lead to the "drive-in" confes-

A quarter inch of soil will Rot with the mostest of the ear17 Among the doctor-nuns will tice, the U~iversity of San Fran~ sionals,-which will be provided

kHl the existing grass but will 1860's) with sending ice cream be Sister Mary Mangan, a Sistel1' cisco and. the San Francisco for people unable to walk.

eventually bring the grade ~p to on its road to fame. At her hus­ of Loretto from Webster College, archdiocesan departmEmt of eduA private panel, opening be-

:IJ1hat it should be. band's inaugural ball in 1812, Webster Groves, Mo., and Fran- cation. tween the traffic lines and inside

Most Important she capped her splendid repast one of the confessional boxea After grading, you can sow with large silver platters of pink will be built. Apush-button will ;,our seed. The seed is the most ice crea~, r~ported to have been confection in its freezer and 'tis Women's Council Names be provided to indicate that important element in the whole mad~ wl~h Ice cre.am 1rom the a better world of eating for its ~lOmeone has driven up to the process, so you should buy the ,.lVla~lsons own daIry at Mont­ discovery. /Program Directors confessional.

This Summer,. however, the

very best you can afford. There pellel1'.

The parish is in the care Ilf WASHINGTON (NC) - The One ParDor money I would like to spend fol1' ~ational, Council of. Catholic the Sylvestrine Benedictine in no point in reseeding with in­

DesPite the popularity of this an ice cream freezer will be Women has named program di­ tlIerior seed.' Check with 'YOW' priests, originally from th0 channeled into the Debt Reduc­ seed dealer as to what seed fits . dessert among the famous host­ rectors for two of its five newly United States. Four site, and then buy the hEist esses .of that day, its widespread tion Drive for the Sisters of the .organized operating commissions. acce,Iitance .was slow in coming Holy Union, a much worthier rou can afford. Dr. Genevieve Gabower Mehus Sow seed according to the because of the lack of facilities cause' than the addition of an­ Must Register

~ill head the family affairs /lIDount specified (this will to store it. In Boston, in the other gadget to ·my kitchen! commission ,.and Ruth Dowling MADRID (NC)-A Justice De­

This is my favorite way o!z Wehle, will direct the' community partment decree implementinll vary with each seed mixture)­ early" part' of the 19th century, snd hope that the rain continues! there was only one ice cream serving ice cream. affairs division. Spain's controversial religious You can use a spreader for this parlor' and this was on Newbury lIce Cream Spectacular DI'. Mehus has spent more liberty law has given the na­ Street. 1M' one of the many devices that than 20 years with the U. S. tion's non-Catholics until Dee. :Ih cup chopped walnuts /are available for spreading'seed., The iirsthaDd-erankl~d port­ government . in local, national 31 to apply for government reo­ 1 egg white'. but I usually seed by hand, able freezer wasn't nvented until and 'international social welfare. Ggnition of their congregation IJlI % teaspoon salt walking first in one direction 1846' 'lind from' this one invention She is presently a member of "confessional, associations." % cup sugar and then again at right angles to the birth of the wholesale ice the District of Columbia Advis­ l' pint coffee ice cream my original path. cream industry· came about. ory Council to the. Department 1 pint vanilla ice cream The're are two' stories that I have At this pont I :!lind it worth­ of Public Welfare and chairman 1) Butter generously a t inch \While to take a bamboo lawa come across concerning the dis­ 9f its juvenile delinqu.ency com­ covery of the first ice cream pie plate. rake and rake the lawn vigor­ . mittee. 2) Beat the egg white until <tusly to help the seed settle intG soda. Miss Wehle is a government The first tells of how in 1871 .frothy and add the sugar, grad­ Che soil. Then, if there 'is any Est. 1897 career worker in public relations ually, beating well after each "loam available, it might be in Baur's confection shop in Den­ and. information. She has worked worthwhile to spread it very ver, a man ordered his soda pop addition. Continue beating until. for the. State Department, Cen­ lightly (no more than an eighth with ice. Because it was before stiff' peaks are formed. 2343 Purchase Streett tral Intelligence Agency and the 3) Fold in the chopped wal­ ()f an inch) over the whole lawn. the iceman had arrived, the in­ U. S. Information Agency. New Bedford

'nuts and turn into the pie plate. This won't hurt the existing ventive clerk substituted a scoop 996-5661

grass and it does help the seed of ice cream' for the ice and the Spread evenly over the bottom.

get started. If you take this last more than 'pleased customer and sides, building up a rim.

atep, it is wise to roll the, lawn went around 'singing the praises Prick bottom and sides with a

with a light roller to settle the of Baur's d'elicious soda pop and fork.. 4) Bake in a 400' oven for 1@ . ooil, Do not use a heavy roller. ice cream drink. 010 e SYSTIEMAUtl~ SHEET ME-rAL The" other story of the ice to 12 miriu~es or until lightly By this time you should be lC year SAlJIN&5 J. TESER, Prop. fttoroughly exhausted, but there cream soda beginning, describes bro·wned. Cool. MONTHLY DEPOSITS 5) Fill cooled shell with the are a few things left to do. The how a demonstrator of soda RESIDENTIAL 01. II aNVESTM~1IU most important is to set your fountains at the 1874 Franklin pint of coffee ice cream and INDUSTRIAl. • 10 year SAVINGS then the pint of vanilla. mower so that your lawn can Institute Exposition in Philadel­ COMMERCIAIL. NOTICE ACCOUNTS 6) Place in your freezer, cover grow as high as possible without phia was concocting huge drinks 253 Cedar St., New Bedford with wax' paper or clear wrap to lOecoming overgrown. The long, of sweet cream, syrup and car­ 01. s REGUW 993-3222 <tlipped grass will help shade the bonated water giving them to prevent crystals from forming. • 10 year SAViNS$ Serve with' the following sauce.

aeed, thereby preservig moisture. visitors to· demonstrate the mer­ Lastly, there is the matter of its of his particular fountain. Butterscotch Sauce

watering, which must be done When one day he ran out of the lh cup butter. BEFORE Y()U daily. Without a constant supply rich liquid cream, he substituted 1 cup brown sugar BUY -TRY <Ai moisture, the seeds will eithell' 11 scoop of ice cream, and thus If.s cup heavy cream

claimed to have invented the ice IIOt germinate or will not de­ Bank By Mail 2 Tablespoons light corn syrup

'Il"elop a good root system if they cream soda as we know it today. 1) In a heavy saucepan melt We Pay The P05t9ge _ aerminate. Well, DO. matter who invented the butter over a low heat. fee cream itself or its delightful Ia a.e Kitebea 2) Stir in the sugar, cream and • SOUTH YARMOUTH • MANIIII

Many WOJDell long tor clill­ products such as sundaes" sodas, corn syrup and continue cook­

OLDSMOBILE • YARMOUTH SNOPP'NC iuD .onds, ethen yearn' for mink, and the queen 01. them all, the ing over the low heat until .it Oldsmobile-Peugot-RenCiult but this particular female 001­ 9aflSna split, nO house is gener" comes to a boil. Serve warm ever • D£.....S POIT • osnlfWll 57 Middle Street. fairltarea IWDD&st dreaDIJI of having ~ a1:J,y' without & IlUpply of llkia the ice cream pie.

For Human Rights

Sturtevant 6­ Hook

Builders Supplies

Norris H. Tripp

5.50

5 00

4 50

PARK

MOTORS

Bass River Savings Bank


Mossioner fears

THE ANCHOR-, Thurs., Aug. 1,7,1967

Econcmic [Ruin mrro HOFJ1S KOtrug

Dove.. Httrlwk SpOil' IDmvu<&ces Meefrang ~n, Havana

MARYKNOLL (NC)-The pressing danger in Hong , Kong asa result of the recent riots there is not so much that of an invasion by Red Chi­ nese troops as' of business aban­ doning the British Crown col­ ony.

That is the opinion of a Mary.. knoll priest, Father Morgan .II. , Vittengl, ' M.M., 'who was for­ merly stationed' there and who visited' the colony during June , of' this year when' the first of the rio.ts occurr¢d. . ' :' , Father'Vittengi, who was'~ correspondent tor' the NCWfi News Service from 1962 to 1965, pointed to a, strong indication of waning 'business confidence" i~ Hong Kong's stability. He noted 'that this would precede business 'withdrawal from the area, bring­ ing total economic ruin to the colony.

,He said that even without the current rioting the continued existence of Hong Kong would be "a miracle." Eighty per cent of its population are refugees who :have struggled to develop a reasonable standard of living from light industry, he said.

Thousands .vobless

Father Vittengl, who 'hoo , served as editor of Mission Bul­ letin and is the author of "All! AroiJnd Hong Kong,'~ said the immedia+? result of business withdrawal would be misery and starvation in the colony, The number of jobless people would. , be in the hundreds of thousands, he said, and the probable result would be riots which would make the earlier ones look "ants at a picnic."

The only country which couliill easily absorb the refugees would 'be Red China itself, Father Vit­ tengl said, but added that Red China does not seem to want ,t.hem because of its difficulty feeding its own population.

The 39-year-old priest said.. that one of the reasons that the riots are continuing is that fae­ tions within the ,Hong Kong Communist party are trying tQ outdo each other in "anti-impe­ rialist" activities.

BOGOTA (1'lC) - A long heralded communist congress met in Havana to find that its delegates and its go~ls

were'sharply divided. ' Symptomatic of the', division was the 'refusal of communist g~oups in' Argentina, Bra~il, Colombia and Venezuela to show' up at what they, cQf!sidered ,"the Il,ideshow of an egomania!;," eu,. 1>~ Premier Fi,del Castro. "But, the division went even deeper than this. , '" In the first place; fhe ,com,. nl.unists in the four delegations, that' stayed at ho~e' and' the communists in the Mexican dele­ gation give priority to political action over violence. This puts them in Moscow's camp and

clearly rejects the pro-Peking tendencies of Havana. Then too, the fanfare and pub­ licity tr'umpeting the Havana meeting had little to back it up -the ,festive program of com­ memorations planned for the 700 delegates mirrored too harshly

the cruel reality of recent com­

munist failures. Two Wedges What some yeai's ,ago was a monolithic Red frol)t, feeding revolution on ,the social injus­ tice widespread in Latin·Amer­ ica had become by July, .1967, a force split by two wedges. . The first of these was, the growth of more enlightened gov­ ernment in Latin America, both reform Christian Democrat movemerits and newly socially­

conscious military regimes. The second was the growth of grass-roots programs of self-help and an accompanying spirit that has done much to banish despair. Faced with shrinking' influ-' ence and visible failure, dele­

gates to this year's meeting of the qrgariization' for Latin American Solidarity tried to fig­ ure out what went wrong and 'where since plans for revolutio,n 'were laid in Havana in January, 1966.

" They looked back on 1966 as a

year of communist-backed gmir:':'

,rHla ,warfare" that had wOl~ii ,.down to, minor distuI'bances in ,three countries ,by .mid-1967. , 'Aggression Useless ':. This year's meeting took on' a , "lIpecial note of interest to the" United States because of the

:::::~~ei~ ~i~~ic~~:t advo~

" Asa resultofhisacii~ity at' "the meeting and the wave of i-iotsthat rocked America~citieS .'."';

lilre

WORKING IN PAKlSTAN: Lay volunteers fz:om The Netherlands are working here in Pakistan' as teachers and medical assistants. in a project sponsored by Dutch-born Archbishop"J~mes C. vail Miltenburg, O.F.M. The hypodermic needle-'-perhaps~he fir8t these ladies ,have seen--ereates a bit of drama. NC Photo. " ,

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Fos1l"er Home -CLEVELAND HEIGHTS (NO) , ~Mr. an,d'Mrs. Edward Novotn'y , now are providing, a 'home fOIr four foster, babies here. Thim 'brings to 129 the number of in­ fants they have cared for in the , last 25 years while the babiem were awaiti'ng adoption: In 00­ lJltion, 'they've reared, foUll' adopted children of t1:Jeir own.

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,~rrTSinjRGH' ',('i'lC)'- R.en~ , . James" R~binson; pastor of a ',unit.<; are available~ :'~O:t!iI ~A,D~SEGQ I ~ that" ol:gartiiedthemC'eting, ail;:." str)~~ .. grol:i'psh~vde 'Wf'f?~ PI}·omf'tshes 'P,resbyterian g~etto ~hurchi head "Rea'itol'si:bo~rd-l>ffid':ljs'addi;' , Jio'unced 'that "th'is coAgress will" from '~hecl,~yan '~, ICla s, 0 " ettl~ eccc, lln' ,interfaith cle,:gy" ':tion'a'l1jT 'ag~eedio ' discipii'rie' Aluininum Steel' 'Ii' -. "'11 't' 't···· " ",Gr-eater Pittsburgh Board, of and lay,group.'Wil1i~m',ff~den'"members'renting,. out t>elowII ow our overa S I'a egy 10 ' ..' b d h h tt b dUMP , " , ,", " 944 C~unty Street· lIupportof the: Negro pop'ulatioil 'Realtors'forsupp()r~ 0r'a· roa ' heads" t ~ .g e l>,- as,e, , ' ,standard housing ,and ,to a,PI>ly in the United',States in its' fight ,attac~,o,n.-slumhouslI~g,here., and Henry ,Woods" represenu; a .,:whats,aric-Uons theY' can against NEW 8~DFORD. MASS•. against racial .segregation a'nd ' 'But the Citizens-Clergy- Coor- collection ,of.'neighbor~ood coun- .- uuiltyrion-members.· , , WY 2·6618 " cils in ·the Hill District slum. ", ' ,,' i,ts defense 'of freedom and dinating Com~itte'e,the United They' won, most .of thelr,.de-' , ',Two' of the dema~ds seem as­ equality." Movement .for Progress,' and' Hill, d f M J li M 'sured. Under the stnke pressure, 'But as delegates to the con- li>istrict representatives decided man s rom ayor osep. . b'll f h' ' t' d Barr and' officjals ,of the Board I ~ . or a ousm~ cour an gress found out, it' may' have to coritinue their strike UIytil the of Realtors after lengthy bar- cl~)Slng ~oopholes In- the rent overextended itself long before 'realtors' board ratifies the .. , '. '. wlthholdmg ,law are· expected it reached' a helping hand to the agreainent: gamlllg seSSiOns carned, out t f th' t t l '1 t b' United States, The' board is not scheduled U; against the backdrop of racial ou lOA e : a e egis a ure y In. Chile, Christian Democratic meet until mid-August, leaving riot headlines from Detroit and ear y ugus. PreSident Eduardo Frei an- tenants who withhold first-ofelsewhere.

nounced that, his government the-month rent in a touch-andHalt Demolition

had both the WIll and the me.ans go situation. The city and re1,lltors agreed

10 stop any CUbansubve~'slOn, Strike leaders are hoping the to press for a city housing court,

and warned that the good :rudg. . ' , t ·thh Id' '1 ment of the Chilean people sensItiveness 'of, the ~ss:,e, un- stronger ren WI 0 mg aw, , derscored by slum notmg nacentral relocation agency for would render aggreSSiOn useless. tionally, will deter evictions those evicted by renewal, uni­ until the realtors meet. Some fied and expanded code enforce­ 7. Perry, 'Our. tenants already have withheld ment, and a crash' program of, labor Day Masses ~~ Avenue NEWARK (NC) Special • rent without eviction, apparently, scattered site public housing in' Masses will be offered in t.he because '6f the. tense local and poverty neighborhoods, AMERICAN Newark archdiocese on La,bor , nationaL situation strike leaders ' The city also :promised to Taunton Mass. shake up the board of. the Pitts­ Day, Sept. 4,· at' 9:30 A.M., in said. " Father Donald W. ,McIlvane, burgi'). Public Housing Authority, '. l'lOur churches, each of, which is 822-2282 ledicated to 'SL Joseph, the 'adminrst,rator -'of' a Catholic" and to -halt ,further housing worker, patron, ,of ·social justice. , gh,:!to...",p_arish"andth~". ~ey., demolition, untilllew lo,,:-income

J',,'

BODY 'COM,PANY ot

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NASON Oil (OMPANY

Heating

.

- 'iiI -

Oils

Make

'~III~ ,Warm Friends'


New Jersey Cit,

fathers lLoiteli'i~g

'!THE ANCHORr~lJrs., Aug. 17, 1967

Reject

.Ahmc:n~lTIl ~~~~~~~

[8~n

NCCmJ

PLAINFIELD (NC)~The lPlainfield Common Council voted 9-1 to reject an anti­ k>itering ordinance which·

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CU'M@Oc.d'

KANSAS CITY (NC) Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York and Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit

opponents said was aimed at &Jetting Negroes off the streets. Clergymen among those op­

jj)osing the meaSUl'e included

Msgr. Charles B. MUl·phy. His

4>pposition was greeted by ap­

plauseand cheel's II'om the au­

will deliver the opening and closing addresses at the biennial convention here of the National Catholic Conference for Inter­ racial Justice, starting Thursday, Aug. ]7. . Theme of the convention, to be held at Rockhurst College in "The Church and the UJ:baill Racial Crisis." The meeting was descl"ibed' as "t.he most crucial we havc evell' sponsored" by Mathew Ahmann NCClJ ·executive director. '

,lienee.

., More than 800 persons, most of them Negroes, attended the meeting. This city was the' scene

.~f four days of racial violence

last month. .

. Opposition Overwhelming . The 600-capacity auditoriuI:J} :was jammed for the public hear­ ing. It was necessary to equip a second room wi th sound so people could hear the proceed­ ings. By the time the meeting started, people lined the corri­ dors and the sidewalk was !Crowded with the overflow. The meeting originally had been scheduled for the Council Chambers the night before; but when more than 400 people sought admittance the Council accepted the offer of Fat her G e 0 r g e A. Dillon to con­ tinue the meeting the following night at St. Bernard's parish ball. More than 50 persons spoke. All but three expressed oppo­ sition to the ordinance. A 20­ minute executive session follow­ ro the hearing after which the 'll'esults were announced.

1~

"With city after city experi­ encing civil strife, 'our meeting takes on an urgency we cannot overemphasize," Ahmann said. "The riots are inexcusable but in condemning them we c~nnot ignore their ultimate causes. The riots are spectacular evidence off deeply entrenched social injus­ tice. "The National Catholic Con­ ference and all of the Catholic interracial councils, diocesan commissions on human relations urban affairs offices and inne; city prog~ams associated with us must search out more meaning­ ful and effective programs on the part of the Church her institutioJ'\S, organizations' anllll memlJerll."

.t

Action Pll'ograms

Blesses Homes

for Refugees

Other convention speakers be­ sides .Sen. Kennedy and Arch­ bishop Dearden will include MADRAS (NC)-The first of lVIsgr. Daniel Cantwell of Chi­ more than 100 houses to be built cago, ~ pioneer in the Catholic here for Indian refugees from interracial movement; the Rev. Burma was blessed by Arch­ Henry Browne, president of the bishop Arulappa Rayappa of Stryckers Bay Neighborhooo lVIadras-Mylapore. Council in New York, and Dr. The homes, costing $1,500, will George Wiley, director of the be leased at a nominal rent to . Povert)'IRights Action Center in .._ ...._. .,~ .•_.""' a ::..:. . ......... _~=""""_-'Washington, D. C. ll'efugee families who were among the hundreds forced o.ut Convention participants are ENGLISlJ[ LESSON: This Pakistan sc.hoolboy, who speaks a local dialec.t, seems expected of Burma in 1964 following na­ to formulate recom­ somewhat puzzled as he tries to master the fundamentals of English taught 'by aNeth•. mendations and priorities for ac­ tionalization of the business of ]ndian settlers. erlands lay missionary in .ll.JProgram sponsored by the Catholic archdiocese of Hyder­ tion programs by the Church in The houses were built by four the inner city. Photo. abad. NC masons and a groiJp of nine boys Before the convention they of the local St. Mary's. High , wiJI receive a set of specially .School whodi~ all the .uns}dlled . prepared background papel'S on ..• .'work. education, employment, hOllsing, ,. The present plans' call for con­ . health, social welfare, legal serv­ . etruction of anothel' 105 houses­ ices, and the special needs of the , ~ith money dOllate'd 'by Caritail Spanish-speaki.ng. lfJ'iternationalis, the International majority .in favor of . the reten~ NOTTINGHAM (NC) - An. "To bi'ing chiJd~en to ChrisCatholic Charities organization. 2ll-outcampaign against reli- tian belief is not the· job of. the tion 'of religious teaching in state Father J. McFenan, S.D.B., gious teaching,)n public schools county school; for those pal'ents schools. . local director of Catholic chari­ . waslaunched.~t the annual eon-' who desi're it, it is. the job of. the In May, 1967, the annual con­ White's .Farm Dairy iies, .said a repI'esentati.ve of JIerenee here,.. of' .the British . home· and of the chuI'ch or ference of· the· National Associa­ ". ~/SPEC)AL' MILK Cal'itas was expected here in Humanist ASliociation, ... cllapel oi' Sunday· school chosen tion of .. Head. Tellchers ·voted .. September for an on-the-spot Their 'imm'ediate . target. is by, the parent for the YOUJl;g unanimously, to .maintaiJ\ morn­

".Tested, HerdJl 191.udy of the project.' . . lOOunty and co.~.iroJied schools, . child or' by the ·older. child for. iJ)g worsh.ip lind ~eHgiolls. jn":

. From' 'Our Own struction. in tl:te ,schools. . ' '

The present ,:E;ducation A,ct· (of himself." . ' 1944)' makeS:' ~ ..collecti'Ve act ·of The Humanists.said ,they see '." The British Humanist Associa- ' : A~v$hnet, Man. 993.4~5'" . Makes Prepar,ation worship and IHm-denominational the com·pulsory act. ·01' worship tion was started in 1963 as a • Special Milk' For Ceylon Synod joint enterprise of the Ethical·' religious . inst.':uction according and religious in'struction as a • Homogenized Vito 0 Milk Union and the Rationalist Press to a syllabus. agreed on by all violation of the rights of parents COLOMBO (NC) - Colom­ Association, which provided' .• Buttermilk bo's Thomas Cal'dinal Coo ray, the churches except the Roman who do not wish. it for their • Tropicana Orange Juice Catholic compulsory in the children. They demanded its most' of the money. It' has a' O.M.I., has published a ques­ • Coffee and Choc. Mille membership of about 3,300, plus tionnaire distt'ibuted to Catho­ .. county schools, the largest group abolition. of state schools.' . . They also said they will cam­ as many again belonging to 70 • Eggs - Butter lics throughout the Ceylon na­ Controlled schools are those paign for the abolition of the affiliated local groups. tion,asking them to help pre­ "entrenched position" of religion p:ue for a pl'ovincial synod where two-thil:ds of the man­ in broadcasting and the religious scheduled for next Pentecost agel's are appointed by the secu­ lar authol'ity, where agreed syl­ clauses in the Indepenqent Tele­ Sunday. RESiDENT~Al labus religioull teaching is com­ vision Authority charter, and for The questionnaire asks indi­ the allocation of more broadcast­ viduals and leaders of Catholic pulsory but where, in addition, SCHOOLS. CHURCHES two periods a week may be de­ ing time to humanism. organizations to send their ob­ voted to denominational teach­ All forms of government sup­ servations and suggestions re­ ~NDUSIRIAl • BUNKE~ ing. Controlled status has not port for religious bodies, they narding the synod to a commis­ sion that will study and tabulate been accepted by the Catholic declared, should be stopped. D ADSON OIL BURNERS Church. In the past, secularists have the returns. Suggestions re­ Comp,lete Heating Onstallations Most of the operating costs of made repeated calls for the end­ ll:cived on the questionnaires 24 Hour OiD Burner Service most of the Catholic primary ing of religious instruction in will fOl'm part of the basis for 2nd secondary schools are' met public schools. Dynod discussions. 2l by'the local education authority. There. is no desire in any of Intensive coul'ses and distribu­ tion of vel'l1acular literature In these schools only Catholic the political parties to change the present act. llla"e been planned to help bring religious instruction is given. The policy statement adopted M.ajority in "'avor tel the priests and people of the New Bedford 640 Pleasant Street· TeO. 996-8271 rQuntry the message of the Sec­ by the British Humanist AssoAbout two Y('''I'~ "go. ;1 public cil.)Uon stated: opiriion }>QIl revealed a. large tmd Vatican Council. )

,Human·ists Oppose Teac~ing Religion

. British Public. Schools Target

FUEL

OIL

(


'. Renner Quitting . ,Bureau Berth \

• THE ANCHORThurs.,' Aug. 17, 1967

.. '"',,. WASHINGTqN (N.C)-Ger­ .,aid A. Rcriner; acting'director- oi' the U.S" pathopc C;onf~rence, , . Bureau '·ot· Infoml.ation~ says he ' is· resigning""iat the: behest of'" ' , Bishop Paul F. TaIiner," general secretary: of the conference. Renner has been quoted as saying that Bishop Tanner told him he inten.ded. '~to close doWll the Bureau of Information ~ • .. he indicated that he does not, believe it ~rforms any Usefull : . functiol,l." .. Bishop Taqner has denied the Bureau of InformatioD wiD close and said: ."We. .are looking for a new director and are hav­ ing some difficu~tY.finding the right type 9( man." . Renner became acting direc­ tor on Jul,. 17..,last -.v:hen Msgr. Vincent. A,. Yzermans, director \ iot' three .years. was. named 0d­ . itor'of Our Sunday Vil!itor', Huntington. Renner had been associate bureau director sioce .1uly 1965.

Riots SI1l1@w N~<ed :" Of,PaS$8tng 196',·,­ cavil' Raghts [B~ur' .;, WASHINGTON (NC) ..:.­ of'the Civil Righ~ Bill of 1967 "is more impor­ tant than ever in the wake.

P.a8s~ge

@f incidents of violence and riot­

ing recently occurring all around ~e

United States," representa­ tives of three religious bodies told a Senate Subcommittee. Although stressing that the r.m should not be regarded as II IlIrewa rd" . for riots or asll "panacea" for the nation's 'social ms, they' maintained that the "conditions that have spawned "lolence in our cities do have tct be realistically and generousl,. f.aced~and some of these factors lIr-e dealt with in the bill." Positive Factor , The religious support for the .edministration -. proposed civil rights legislation, including ita controversial open housing {)r-G"i8ions, was presented in a state.ent to the Subc~mmittee <NI. SPICE OF LIFE: Variety is the .keynote this S.timmer on'the campus of St. Ma~'11 Constitutional. Rights Gf. the Oollege, Moraga, Calif. John Brodie, second from rIght, .quarterback of the S~n FranCISSenate . JudiCIary. CommIttee.. 00 49'ers '9lho train on the campus is seen with, left, b@ nght: Tim Horgan, SIster Jude, Appearing· .jointly before ,the , . . . . . . d J' h FoOh' Photo oommitteein'supportof·the.bill, ,)bch~el man 0 n nz. , ..~. .... '.' ..ere:'" .. .... . : " , ' , : " . . "'" ' , ". ' . ' , ' . . '",

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MILWAUKEE (NC) _ Arcli~ bishoP William E. CQusins ~ Milwau)tee"was among a'gr9Up ' 9f religious: ieadenl. who paid for anewspaper.ad,vertisementcaU­ .jog fpr,.in~r~ased to Amer-.

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according. ~ . chancellor Msgr•. Leo J. Brust. The funds came from "private Catholic sources," M sgr. B rus t sal'd . The 'advertisement said that President LYQdon B. Johnson has "worked barder to solve the problems of central cities thao any other President io history," but added. that he could not d. so unless fU~ds,for his programa were.pro.vi·d!ld.·..

School to' Clo'58

TULSA., (NC) ~ .St. Francis Xavier parochial school here will .not. reopen. this Fall,. due to 'a drop in enrollment. Many families formerly located in the parish have moved to larger houses in suburban areas. Deci­

sion . to close the 39-year-old school was taken by unanimous . vote at ,a meeting of par-ishioD-' era. '

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LOUISVILLE (NC)~An ori- .first bishop of Bardstown, now to Catholic officials of the Louisllins, director of the SocIal A~~on Department, U.~. Cat~olie B'bl (1609 10)' part of' the LouisvHle archdioville archdiocese that they recConference; and Marv10 Br~lt~1"- ginal Douay I e xa.. cese, from 18.10 to 1850. ognized the value of these mate:!nan, counsel to the CommlssloD included in a collection of about rials from a scholar's point of $A Social Action of R,efor~ Ju10,000 books' soon to be made.. Reeogni~ec1 Value ' . 'throu h the earS and saw daism, Synagogue CounCIl of available to s<;holars here. . Dr. Wayne ,So Yenawine, libra- V1e~, g. y, . -.' . The ·coll.ection to "It tha~ nothmg. happened to Amenca. ,. , " .containing'edi' . nan of the University' of Louig.;. th The religious leaders told the' ~'tions of literaq .classics prin~' viiIe,s~id ,"it· is great tribute. em.: ..:. . flUQcommittee that the' € i vil : in Europe 200. or 30? y,ears ago, . ...; ~h~ COUeC!lo~;'" he ~ontm~ed. Rights Acts of 1964 and 1~5 . is owned by the ~~Ulsvl~le ~r-chA .. -II IS a scholar s ~lbra':Y'. not lw:t have been a "poSitive facto1" m . diocese. It was mherlted by A~(gJ a Ro~an. CatholIc one, m that It the hands of our. people and our . Archbish?p John. A, Floersh, ~ntalns p~os and cons on aU IJOvernment in defusing violence now retired, who headed the' _ 1/ ~ II Issues relative to the Church. AU and civil disorder." Louisville archdiocese from 1924 WASHiNGTON (NC) ~ Act- ',sides are represented." Defuse Ghettos 'to. 1967, from his predecessors, Dr.. Yenawine said: "it Is "The existence 9f problems all .of .whom preserved the ma- ing' through Miami's Bishop perfectly possible' that 'this' col­ and disorder in our cities is'not : terials: 'Coleman F. Carroll, vice-chair':' lection can now. be madeaccessi­ 3 testament td the, failure of that T~e coll~ction is reported to mao of their committee· for ble to scholars; in view' of the ]legislation," they'. stated, ."but 'have been begun. by Bishop }3en...... Latin" America, the' Catholic cooperative curriculum in reli­ <JI\ly to the fact ~hat we have. edict ;Joseph Fl~get, S;~., the' bishops .of the . tini~ed 'Siates' gious ·s.tudies,inyolving thr~ or Qot yet gone ffar enough in ·in. have' allotted $135,000. to the fouri~stitutions of high~r leam­ auring equality 'of opportunity, . Ar,cli.bOshop Resigns Bishops' Conference of Brazi~ ing·in the' Louisville area, which 1ior all of our. p e o p l e . " . The allocation, made to wha.t is now in the formative siage." Pointing to the "ghettos and. College Presidenc:J has been described as the largest He also said it is possible that Inner city slums" 'a!! amo,ng the . Catholic coun'try'in the world, the. collection could serve as a

sources of 'rioting, the religious . KANSAS CITY (NC)~Arch- will be used to help finance the memorial to its founder, Bishop bishop Edward J," Hunkeler of .' leaders called;:for twofold action ~ national secretariat of the bish- Flaget. . -Kansas City, Kan., has resigned . "'to defuse th¢ ghette:,s of Amet;:- as· president of...Donnelly College . ops in Rio d~ Janeiro as well as ' Preserv-" """ 10'--. ....,. ~an cities" , . three regional programs in ..' . · st' th' ey . sal'd'IS to nro " N orthwest Much Th e f IT .. - " a post he· held since .comingto . Bahia,.. th e B razlnlans d t Iof the work of sorting 'd " li't· . rtu' I'tl'es" :eOI' archdiocese in. 1951.· . an ca l:I oging has been handled e rea SIC oPPO n .L' H"e said he ~esigned because . and 'the Amazin valley. b' R . d F B ibose who wish "to leave ghette "The sum," .stated B,ishop Jose Y.. ~ymon.. . . ' ossmeyer, . . " the" "office 're'qu.ires attention LOUISVille attorney walls b e h i n d ' t h e m . . Goncalves da Costa, :general see' : .. and book: ." 7 and service hardly' compatible collector "The Civil.Rights Bill of 196 , retary' of the national s e c r e t a r - . · ' · . In March" 1967 A rchb 18. hop -seeking to break the housing with my. duties as archbishop." iat,: "will be. used for implementnoose, helps to achieve that op- . He. will remain chairman of the . ing a national pastoral'program Floe ., rs h ga ve. B ossmeyer pernus­ board of directors. ' portunity" they said. ' seeking' to increase' the' level of Slon to examme an d so rt out the Second: they' I!oted, "~~ose Succeeding the archbishop as : religious ."practice among the volumes in the colle~tion, ~hich who choose to remain within the president and assuming the.: people throughoui the country." had been preserved mtact 10 the inner city must:not be forgotten . duties formerly held by the dean Aid received from abroad will back room ~f the Cathedral of t either" and maintained that will be Sister Richard Pender:" . comp'lement, a . new .funding the Ass u m pIon rec t ory h ere. ' , f . b'U " . g~t, ~hairman of the college's P " . to h 9ther provisions 0 the I are· : program lalinched throughout '. ~or. t at time,th~ collee­ ()[le part of the effort to make, biology department for the past B~zil' under the title "Cam- . tion had been stored at old Pres­ life for all 6f our citizens more four;years. .. paign .for Brothethood." This ton'Park Seminary-on,the site bearable, mqre Just, more a~ . pri.>gram. accentuates the concept. of what is now Bellarmine Col­ eent." Amer8~lIJJi1l of Church aid !for the needy of lege, a liberal arts college staffed 'E . DD Ji. lI..'p • I L t h e nation.:,. '. by:priests of the Louisville arch­ hi' n91' 51111. .arI5IrneS; Church work iil Brazil is ar- diocese~·· . lLDMass ..IJco~s LONDON (NC) ~ Thirty dea- ranged through 13 administraWhen Archbishop Thomas .1. 'Santa Claraf(u:lI.!J~ty cons from the North American tive regions linking the nation's McDonough, acceded to the See College in Rome are spending 190 dioceses and prelatures. earlier this year, he gave" ap­ SANTA CLARA (NC) - A proval to the project undertakes dean from the University of six weeks of their Summer vaworking in .E n g l i s h · by Bossmeyer under the aus­ Massachusetts has accepted a cation parishes. Right Not lI'o,)V@rl)( pices of Archbishop Floersh. professorship at the Jesuit-oper­ The arrangement was made by WASHINGTON (NC) - The ated University of Santa Clara Bishop Derek Worlock of Ports- Senate's Constitutional Rights School of Business. mouth at the request of Bishop subcommittee has reported that H. B. Kirshen, dean of the Francis F. Reh, rector of the a civilian employee of the ail' School of Business Administra­ tion at Massachusetts, will be college. "It saves the students a Force who has been fired for the fifth former dean to join the long trip home to the States," refusing to work on Saturday ••• Cleansers ... It Santa Clara business school fac­ said Bi~hop Worlock. has been rehired. The woman, a tIlty. -The U. S. deacons are gaining mess attendant at Grand For-Its Other ex-deans came from the experience in parishes spread Air Base, S.D., has appealed the TREMONT 11fni versity of South California. over five diocese~Westmin8ter, firing on the grounds that as University of California at Loa Birmingham, Portsmouth, Liver- a Seventh Day Adventist aBe .AUNTON, MAli.

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Assert Prelate's Pastora m letter Timid, Deceptive KIN~HASA (NC)-State­ controlled Radio Kinshasa has criticized the pastoral· :tetter of Archbishop Joseph

A. Malula of Kinshasa as "timid and deceptive." In his letter, the, Congolese archbishop criticized earlier radio broadcasts that spoke of God as if He were "the God of the West, the God of our ances­ tors; the God of the whites," and used the phrase, the "Christian­ ity of the Western people." The Congolese people have no need' of xenophobia (fear and hatred of foreigners); they are' in need of peace," the archbish­ op said, and continued: "That's why we reject all piracy, all un­ just attacks on our country, all destruction of peace. Just as much, we reject all xenophobia, because it opposes men, it di­ vides them, sets up one against another and so destroys peace." Radio Kinshasa, the govern­ ment radio station, said that Archbishop Malula, being Con­ golese, knows the Bantu lan­ guages well enough to be aware that lerms like "xenophobia" and "racism" do not even exist in those languages. 'Killed Their God' The 'gove'rnment radio said that the Congolese, in distin:" guishing between the God of the Western people and the God of their ancestors, are not ap­ proving the principle of racism. The white people, it said, who came to teach the Congolese about their God, have by their deeds of banditry and ganster­ ism, killed their God. Radio Kinshasa also said that Congolese regret that Archbish­ op Malula did not vigorously condemn the ,criminal attack by mel'cenaries on the Congo's in­ dependence. The day after Radio Kinsha­ sa's criticism, Archbishop Malula celebrated a Requiem Mass for the victims of the mercenaries' rebellion. Archbishop Giovanni Battista Maury, apostolic nuncio to the Congo, and members of the diplomatic corps attended the Mass in Our Lady of the Congo church here.

Daly Most Decorated Pilot SOC TRANG (NC)-A P1Aila­ delphia Catholic is the U.S. Army's most decorated warrant officer aviator and one of the most decorated individuals in the Vietnam war.

bronze stars for valor, 68 Air Medals, three of them for valor, one Army Commendation Medal, two purple Hearts and two Viet­ ,namese decorations for gallantry in action.

He is Chief Warrant Officer Jerome Daly, 36, a n'.ltive of Oakland, Calif., but now from Philadelphia, :pa. Both his par­ ents are living' in' Long Branch, N.J. He is unmarried.

CWO Daly has 5,000 flying hours in helicopters, 2,000 of .which are as an armed belicop,.. tel' pilot in Vietnam.

Gen. Harold

1\. Johnson, chie!f

sented Daly with the Distin­ guished Service Cross, the na­ tion's second highest award, for gallantry in action. The cere­ mony took I?lace here in the Mekong Delta, the home base illd' the 121st Assault Helicopter Company, to which Daly is at­ tached.

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some 1,000 leaders of business, labor, religion, education, civil rights and government will meet in Washington at the end of August to muster support for an all-out attac~ ?n city problems. .

Its membership includes 18 top-ranking civic and religious leaders, including Archbishop . John F. Dearden of Detroit, president of the National Con­ ference of Catholic Bishops; Arthur S. Flemming, president of the National Council of Churches, and Rabbi Jacob P. Rudin, president of the Syna­ gogue Council of America.

In all, Daly has a total of 80 medals, 78 of them from the United States government and two from the Vietnamese. They are the Silver Star, three Dis­ tinguished Flying Crosses, two

Three members of the Coali­ tion-whose first meeting was that at which the announcement was made-are also members of President Lyndon B. Johnson's Commission on Civil Disorder: Lindsay, I. W. Abel, president of the United Steelworkers of America, and Roy Wilkins, ex­ ecutive secretary of the National Association for the Advance­ ment of Colored People.

PDlt11l11llnlurro~

COLUMBUS (NC)-The Ohio House has passed a bill which would force mothers ):eceiving Aid to Families' with Dependent Children (AFDC) 'to seek family planning services, but defeated an amendment' which would

bave permitted" 'staie welfare authorities to' 'take illegitimate children-except ~he flrst--:from mothers receiving Aii'DC sit;'!. '

VWOJEROME Jlllll,n.ll ,

13'

Nationally Prominent leaders To Confer on Urban Problems

plans for the meeting were announced by a newly-forme~ Ur1?an Coalition, headed by Mayors John V. Lindsay of New York and Joseph Barr of Pitts­ burgh.

of staff of the U.S. Army, pre­

Family

THE ANCHOR-DiocesE~ of FaIT River-Thurs. Aug. 17,1907

are officers of that group. Their meeting was held at the Wash­ ington offices of Urban America, Inc., a non-pt:0fit urban planning and research organization. In addition to announcing the end - of ..: the - month meeting­ dubbed the Urban· Coalition .Emergency Convocation - the coalition also called for: 'Too Long Denied' Immediate Congressional ac­ tion on urban programs: model cities, education, anti-poverty, housing and job training legisla­ tion "and a host of other mat­ ters that have been too long denied the ,cities." . . Establishment of a federal! Emergency Work and Recon­ struction Program to provide new trainin'g programs a!ld jobs for the unemployed. Immediate promotion of "Earn and Learn Center.s" which "might well be the joint venture of business, labor and local gov­ ernment."

The 'Coalition also said tha~ private industry "must directly and vigorously' involve itself in the crisis of the cities by a com­ mitment to investment, job

training and hiring, and all other things that are necesstry W the ' The Urban Coalition was called full enjoyment of the' free enter­ together by the U. S. Conference prise system, ~nd also to US SlM'­ m ,May!>rs-Lindsay ana. Barr - vlval."

12 Minimum ASJe For ConfirmOltuon WASHINGTON (NC)-Candi­ dates for Confirmation in the archdiocese of Washington must henceforth be at least 12 years old and in the seventh grade. Practice in regard to the age for receiving t.he sacrament has varied from place to place in the archdiocese up to now, with some parishes permitting it to children in the third grade. Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle, who issued the new ruling, said it is intended to standardize proced­ ures and to ensure that those receiving Confirmation will be "more amply instructed in the , faith, and to foster a greater appreciation of the seriousness and responsibilities of the sacra­ ment."

Change PrepOJII'Glt!'DU»II1l" 'For Priesthood] NORTHHAMPTON (NC)-The Vincentian Fathers will move St. Vincent 'de Paul Novitiate froffi' Ridgefield, Conn., to Mary Immaculate, Seminary and Col­ lege here in Pennsylvania in September. The change, the order said, will shorten the time necessar:v to prepare for the priesthood by a full year, insure accreditation for second-year novitiate studies, and eliminate the expense of maintaining cW.Plicate facilities.

This chn~d1 sllJIffers from malnutritioD1. Ort1l~y fQod and care 1Il0W keep heir from being O/Ille @f 1l.0pOOO children who wm doe today. On every cORlltoD1elnlt mOSSOlOlll1lBlrrneS are at work bring~ng f(Q)(»dl p medicine and TIHlIE SOCIETY tlhJe ~nfe-go~oll1lg w(\))ft"d of God to the 1PJ(»@6"~ BllJIt they need y~ur he~~8 fOR THE W@llJJlI..ll» w«»tl!J SEND A Gin WUTIHl il'1Hl~$ f~CTl\]RIE TO SAVIE A ClHluu"1lJ)1 TO RT. REV. EDWARD T, O'MEARA. N.ATIONAL DIRECTOR, ~J..,.._

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. WASHlNG:rON~ "tN~~""::,,,Viewa on Cuba he',eipt~ied,:~er III recent visit- to 'that'islahd, were '''twisted'' in pi:-ess~eiiot.ts·in the United States, a pro~~n~n.'t Latin 'American prelate has declared. Noting that' he was' quoted ms saying he saw' "religious free­ "dom in Cuba," Bishop Eugenio 'de Araujo Sales of Bllhia,'Brazil, 'emphasized: "What I said was 'that there is religious freedom :within the confines of tne 'churches in Cuba.'" Bishop Sales, dii'e~tor'of the 'Social Action Deparfment of the Latin American Bishops:, Con­ ference (CELAM), made his ,point in a letter to Father, John J. Considine, M.M., director of the Latin America Bureau, U.S. Catholic Conference.' Bishop Sales had visited Cuba to deliver ,to the bishops of that country reports and statements' of the , CELAM meeting held in Mar del "Plata Argentina, which they were unable to attend. Father Considine said Bishop "Sales, "one of Latin America's distinguished Catholic leaders, 'feels that too much 'was read , into his words." "It is clear," Father Considine 'continued, "that, he wished to give recognition to the fad that Cubans may worship in their churches. But it is drawing too broad a conclusion from this ob­ servation to state that there ill complete' religioUS fi'eed()ni in CUba."

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By Rt. Rev. Msgll'. :.vollnim S. Kennedy If we live lon'g enough, we see loss turned into gain. This 'is not always s'o, but it happens often enough. The 'Nazi occupation of France from 1940 to 1944' was, at the .time, counted a 'tragedy' fur' the French, and it c'aused them .bitter ·suffering. But the in history, is not Christianity, harsh ,experience shocke.d and that it may be' giving a very them 'into a realization that ,unfaithful expression of Chris­ they must reor9-er their tianity." . -. .

C

ways. The occupation and the " H?w, then, gl\.'e a faIthf~l, Resistance strongly affected the 'pertment expreSSiOn of Chns-' ,.C a tho 1 i c s tianity to and ~n the ~odern ',of France, acworld? The .~aslc reqwreme~t, :eording to Jean. as twofold: a humble recognlMade 'Domen,~lOn of the values of the. moder,n ach and Robert \ world, and a movement mto thiS :de ' Mon"talvon ' world for the purpose of evan­ the co'mpiler~ ,gelizing it." There had to ?e a "of The Catholic return to the sources,' espeCially 'Avant _ Garde ' the 'Gospel. These had to be ad­ which is sUb~ dressed not merely to the re­ titled "Catholi,form of abuses, but also, and e ism ,S inc e more essentially, to the revision World War II" of structures. ;(Holt, Rinehart Priest-Workers lllnd Winston. $5.95, 383 Madison As to the revision of struc­ ,Ave., ;New. York, N. Y. 10017). 'tures, the parish came under Their book consists of passages critical study. Plainly, it was not from the, writings of, many 'functioning well. It ministered "'Frenchmen, some, celebrated "to a dwindling handful and did (e,g Teilhard de Chardin, Su- not even g 1 a n c i n g 1 Y touch ,'hard,. de Lubac, Congar, Mau... " thoUsands who lived' in its riac), oth~rs less well known. ,'bounds. This was most strikingly These excerpts have been chosen tnie in working class areas. fin illustrate the thrust and deThe experiment of the Priest­ 'il'elopment of French Catholic Workers was launched. The thought and action in the, past, ,priests involved in 'it wo~ld be­ 'quarter-century. ',long, to the workers' world. They ,GREETS PILGRIMS':South,Koreart' ,pilgrims were They have been arranged ac- were astonished by what they" greeted by Pope Paul'VI 'after his general audience at Cas­ !Extensive oording to categories of theory found there. They became con­ tel.gandolfo, where the' Pontiff gets ~me I,'eltef from what , MEXICO CITY (NC) - The and practice. The editors ~upply vin'ced,that their chief responsi­ Shrine of Our Lady of Guada­ has been a very hot Summer in ~me. NC Photo. '" explanatory matter, along with bility was one of presence, not lupe is undergoing extensive ,lin introduction and a conclusion. ()f formal apostolate, illl any elestructural repairs to stop the They contrast the French gree. sinking oi its front section. ' , Church of 1939 with the F,rench Some of them eventually be­ , Most of the sbrin~ is Duilt on Church today. ~'When the' war, Ueved that Communism was the the solid rock forming 'the' hill began," they say, "the French ,,~xclusive instrument of history PIJ'(1){hes1taUit MagaEBInlceSWl9gests ,Clause where Our Lady 'appeared to Church viewed itself asa for- in oUr time. Trouble and con­ the' Indian' catechumen' Juan tress besieged by secularism.'troversyensued,and Rome or­ ~dentiial !FOB'slt", A~e~dnu~nt modernism, and Communism." dered the end, of the experiment. Diege ,in 1531, but the facade and .' . , , • Its foundations were rural and Plight of POor ported its stand by 'asserting that naves rest on soft soil~ NEW, '!'ORK (NC)-Cl;ristian­ antiquarian. It was distrustful of' 'This' sad denoue~eni did not ,ityll:nd CrIsis, an in#uential' in'an age, of 'increasing coopera- ' "We do'not wilht surprises," ,;,democracy and of the ,IP-odern stop experimentation: Itcontin­ liberal Protestant, weekly:", has tion between,,,atate,.' £ederaJ and Msgr. GuUlenno ""Schulenburg. rector of the sni.-iii'e,' tOid 'Mexi­ .. "world. uOO in many fields. The cOnfron­ propo~ed that ,the state ,of; ;New, , local, .g()vel;'nmen~, "~t' dges not !France de-Christianized ,,' tation' with the . world' did not ' York, replace the controv~rsial see~ re;1S~)llabJe,to, have a more can newsmen. Abocit stories' 'that a new shrine' will' be b~ilt, he Under the prodding of some'''; cease, and' change' weilt forward Blaine Amendment forbidding, rigid article ,in -U!e, ,State Consti­ Cathelic intellectuals and of in- 'in religious education, in spir­ state aid to parochial schools" tution ;than,.intl;Ie"Federal Con­ , remarked: '''That'' is' iIi It "very distant future." " , , ' ,,' , , 'escapable events, it began to be" 'ituality,'in liturgy and' sacred 'with a" clause identical' to the stitution.~, "." " recognized that the chu~li, sO art, and in concern for the diffi­ First' 'Amendment of the United " Ghristi~nity an4; Crisis J;loted the infJ.~l[i6ilj,ty of., the ,present' understood, was irrelevant. It "culties of,the secular City. States Constitution. law and said "what, is' needed

stood apart from the world and The plight,of the poor weighed 'The editorial position is oppO­ had little influence on it., ,The, ,heavily on the Catholic con­ site 'to that of many Protestant , here is a hard look at'the whole

world regarded it not with anti-, ' .. science. The whole question of groups~' who' believe that' the' context of education; public and

pathy, but,with apathy. ,the Church's, relationship to the Blaine' Amendment safeguardli private, 'in our society."

Remarking' that elimination of"

':" StudieS showed that France, ,poqr was explored anq the con­ the doctrine of chlirch-state sep'­ the Blaine 'Amendment would

,hael become de-Christianized."" cept ,of the, Church of the poor aration." "Although nearly 85 per cent of , was ela~orated. . The Blaine Amendment to the not establisb~an,open pipeline

Frenchmen were baptized, twoThe school question was more state constitution specifically from the public treasury to the

parochial, school," the editorial thirds of them quickly aOOn- candidly and cooly considered. It prohibits the use of public prop'­ . . .. <loned religious practice and had been taken for granted that erty, money .or credit "directly urged, that" energy ,be directed 3liS NORm FRONT STREET lived as pagans * * .. The propol'-' a dual system was essential and or ind~rectly, in ,aid or mai~ten­ 'toward finding an approach '''in NEW IIEDFORD tion of practicing Catholics di.:. perpetual: But some voices in ance, other than for exaritination which the ,values 'of both a

strong public school system and

minished. with age, and was es- the Catholic ranks' now sug­ 01' lfl.Spection, of any school lK' 992-5534 pecially low in working-clasS 'gested. the possibility, arid in­ institution of learning w-h9lly responsible; 'pluralism can be

parishes." ., , deed advisability, of a merger of 01' iO.part "under the control or­ creativelY utilized.!II " . :. , . T'hese people, nominally, but the two systems, civic' and reli­ d.l~tiOJ1 , of , any, religious de­ .i: . not actually Catholic, lived in a gious. " nominati,(m" 01' in ,which any de­ world apart from the Church;" 1 ·Of Interest tollJ.s. nominational tenet or doctrine is , ' moreo~er, they liv~d' by t~at" 'It was in this periOd that the taU:gh~." ' . '. ' . "' .. " . 'U1 '" ifI" ' ~t has, .been hotly debated for­ world, and SUbscrIbed, to, Its "painful process of decoloniza­ " ,7_ , ' _ values. Was that ~orld ~d, 01' tion occurred. War was -,vaged severai months -in the state's ,,', cOnstitutional ,c~nvention. ' ~orthless, or meanmgless. ,Were .. ,to retain Indochina and Algeria. "." The First Amendment to the Its ,:~lues Wholly false? It had ,Atrocities were laid to the traditionally been assumed. ,that., ,French forces in both countries. ~ U. S. Constitution simpl~ states: "Congress shall make no hlW re­ such ~as the case. But thiS as- An ever stronger Catholic opin­ su~ptIon. was largely o~ the ion was mobilized in oppositioll specting any establishment of religion." basls of Ignorance. That IS, t~e to the practice of torture, and The Protestant journal sup'­ mod~rn world had not been 'the colonial wars met growing passIOnately and acutely studle? resistance in Catholic quarters. '/Pl1'ayer Leaders When it was ~ ,:onsidered, The section, dealing with this there grew a realIzatIOn thl,lt III subject is ,of capital interest to NEW DELHI (NC)-UA pray­ great deal could be learned from the American "Catholic reader in er for ~dW' asking God, to bless the world; that the Church 1967 because of the American the country's leaders with "lofty Bi!ould pay attention to it, care- enga'gement in Vietnam and the ideals, far'-reaching vision and fully and sympathetically, not critiCism of it on moral grounds undaunted courage" has been condemning but endeavoring to being loudly, sounded here at published here _by the n'ation's I!IIlderstand. home". ' Catholic Bishops', Conference. Two-fold Requirement The editors maintain ,that the It was also perceived that, Church in France has CQme "there, passes' a reflection of the as Emmanuel Mounier said; "We alive, that it is making Christ Resurrection. Despite mistakes cannot recall too often that the, present and pertinent there. and discouragements, they, look Christian world, understood soAcross the faces 'of the Cath... forward to the new world which ' ciologically at a given zpoment olie avant-garde, they _ say;, js , emerging.",

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SlIuDlJlIce 'Undergoes Repairs

Asks End of Blaine to

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., THE ANCHOR-Diocese of '.'IIYer~:rhurs.Aug. 17, . .

BlfSHOP BLESSES NEW BEIDFORD FISHING FlLEET: ,Bishop Connolly, assisted by Msgr. John A. Silvia, pastor of St. John the Baptist Chureh, New Bedford, bless~s the fleet' from a special platform on the

Maryland Court Asks Test Case On Obscenity ANNAPOLIS

. . . B y Patricia Francis

M'aryland Oourt of Speci'al Appeals has asked for a test case to clarify the "contem­

lJnclear Ruling Asserting that neither the U. S. Supreme Court nor the Mary-' land Court of Appeals' had Blt­ tempted to define the term "community standard," the Court of Special Appeals said that it would be willing to do so once the question "is put squarely before us." The court maintained that it is unclear wh~ther the community referred to by the Supreme Court ruling has a local, national c:r some other connotation.

Experts to Meet NEW YORK (NC) - World renowned experts in the arts, education nnd theology ~om I!IOme ]9 nations will eonvene here. Aug. 27 through Sept. 1 for ·the first International Congress CIID Religion, Architecture ood Ale ViDual Arts"

Celibacy Special Form of Life

Bishop 'Blesses ,New BedjordFishing Fle~t In Colorful Ceremony in Whaling City

(NC)-Th~

porary community standards" criterion for obscenity estab­ lished by the U. S. Supreme Court. In a split ruling which af­ firmed two Baltimore obscenity convictions but remanded three others for new trials, the Mary­ land court upheld convictions including what it called "hard eore pornography," but sa14 the state had not adequately estab­ lished that the others-involving nudist magazines - fell within the category defined by the Supreme Court. The standard used by the Supreme Court, known as the Roth-Albert test, requires show­ ing that: The dominant theme of the material, taken as whole, ap­ peals to 11 prurient interest iml sex; The material is a patently of­ fensive affront to "contemporary community standards" regarding sex; The material has absolutely DO J'edemptive social value.

pier. Center: Draggers and small craft maneuver into formation for th~ Episcopal Blessing. Right: One of the draggers s-ailing towards the piw fOO' the benediction.

The skies w~re gray but the. mood wa.s bright Saturday as the Most Rev. Jam,eil L. Connolly officiated at a oolor'ful "first" in New Bedford-the first annual blessing of that city's fiehing fleet.Th~ traditional, cer·emony, . held in conjunction with New Bed.: ford's Portuguese and' Scallop Festivals, drew more tb-an 1,000 persons to vantage points on State Pier' and' at other ' with such policies. It "homebound" parade was II spots on the' waterfront. eontrast wo\.!.ld be a new and profitable. Coast Guard cutter ·from New­ Twenty large draggers' of experience. to . some statesmen port, R.I.. the city fleet, interspersed and diplomats, as we trust it wiil

.with an array of small craft, decks crowded with crewmen and members of their families, moved slowly by the speciai stand at the northeast corner of the pier for a sprinkle' of holy water from the bishop's golden aspergillum. "On deck" with him 'on the reviewing stand were Mayor Edward F. Harrington and cler..; gymen of New Bedford'sPortu­ guese churches. Among them wereRt. Rev. Msgi'; John A. Sil­ via, pastor of St. John the Bap­ tist Church; Rev. A. Castelo Branco, pastor olE Immaculate Conception Chull"ch~

'

"Today we bless ~e fleet,'" Bishop' Connolly said· in an ad­ dress before the parade of ves­ sels moved past him. \

"Tomorrow you set out· hope­ fully over familiar eourses to favorite fishing banks. Please 'God your searching will not be ~n vain; please God your rugged work will not go without rewarcL May your voyage bring you back to this sheltered port safely and successfully. May Our Good Lord guide and guard you mid storm and calm and bring you to the haven of peace and rest. so There is nothing new under the sun, the bishop said, "and yet, for each one of us, every experience is unique, every voy":' age a trip into the unknown, <avery adventure of life a per­ sonal thing that makes the an­ dent ever new , to us at least." Speaking of the spiritual­ weaknesses that have beset many men in the modern world; he emphasized that, "What we ((io here today stands in flU'ong

MAINZ (NC)-Celibacy 'must be secn as a special form oi the Christian life, Julius Cardi­ nal Doepfner. of Munich; the head of the German Bishop:! Conference, said here. . Speaking on television about Priestly celibacy, the cardinal said that, just as it is impossible to form a true picture of mar­ riage by considering only un­ happy malTiages, it is also im­ possible to form a true picture of celibacy by considering only negative experiences.

Overhead, a flyby of 16 jets added a swooshing emphasis to the ceremony. Closer to thf) boats and the crowd was an ar­ Celibacy, he said, is not esaily "We bring our hopes and our mada of sea gulls wheeling low understood by those not' con­ fears, our courage chastened by with raucous eries, apparently cerned with it. . disappointment, our loyalties, trying to join the sea-going pageant. ' our faith in one another and our The cardinal stressed that it in abiding faith in God. We s1,1m­ As the boats moved past, those possible that 1.he present· .strict mon up all that is best in our on deck waved to the shore regulation on priestly celibacy nature. We offer it to God. We bound crowd and the bishop. may be changed, but that there freeiy associate with all that is Others on deck snapped pictures is' a close link between the vol­ good in our national tradition, of those on the pier, while cam­ untary choice of celibacy ·by a our freedoms and our' responsi- era fans on shore took pictures .priest' and an active Christian . bilities. faith. of the boats: . , "We ask upon them the biess­ . Adding more color to the al­ ing of Almighty God. May we al­ ready vivid scene were mem­ ways be safe and secure on land , bers of the bishop's honor guar.d and sea. May we venture out from McMahon Assembly 15I, always with confidence in God 4th Degree. Knights of Columbus, Maintenance Suppli~ 'and one another~ May we return in their scarlet robes with white from each voyage ,better and plumed hats. SWEEPERS - .SOAPS braver men than we were begin­ DISINFECTANTS The sun occasionally tried ning it. May we know with each FIRE EXTINGUISHERS,· peeking through the clouds, then passing day something of the ad­ venture of growing in the love gave up the battle. However, of God and fellowman and may the rain held off until the cere­ no day's sun set that has not mony ended. 1886 PURCHASE STREET helped us discover new strength It was a spectacle worth see­ NEW BEDFORD and faith and fidelity to God and ing-men who go down to the country." sea in ships asking God's bless­ 993-3186 ings on their voyages. When the bishop finished speaking, the first of the fishing boats began separating them­ selves from the clusters at BanlcDlJ'iJ~ ~®rv;ces' neighboring piers. Young girls tn Portuguese costumes began circulating through the crowd Savings 3ank Q.D~l!!l InSUral'ilC0 selling tiny Portuguese fl~gs. Illeal Estate loans always be a renewal and blessed safeguard to us. We turn today to God. .

SCHOOL

DAHilL CO~

Check These

The fishing vessels moved out into the harbor led by the gaily bedecked' Portugal flying flags ~d pennants and adorned with artificial flowers in the Portu­ guese tradition. Small craft frisked around them as they took positions in a wide circle to parade majestically back past the reviewini stand. Leadins the

•• • • •

Christmas and Vacation Clubs §avings

t4ccoui\)~s

5 Convenient

llDca~ions

NEW BEDFORD

INSTITUTION for SAVINGS


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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Aug. 17, 1967

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l®@~@ ocru ~O@ {f@ [L@tfO cru ~ From "Social JRevohntimu in the New I... atin Americat '

Edited by JollUilU J. Considine, M.M.

As of January 1, 1965, the bishops of the United States had a total of 179 diocesan clergy at work in Latin America, Qf whom by far the greatest single group, 74 were under t1;he spOnsorship of Cardinal Cushing~s Society of St. James th.e Apostle. In all, and in various ways, 48 dioceses sending Societies of the Church. Quite to the contrary, the have sent priests, seven gradual growth of all St. Louis ~hem more than five priests mission-aid projects gIves credi­

of

<each. Their principal function-'­ almost to be taken for granted­ iiI!l the operation @f parishes; 59 Il&arishes a t: e Ilmder their care Ibm. 11 different countries. On' ImO previous oc­ .easion in the history of the Church in the United states have so many bishops on their @ VI n initiative Qlndertaken to place such a sub­ Cltantial number of their diocesan lltCrsonnel at .the disposal of bishops in other nations to meet Ql crisis. . Since priests" from the Arch­ diocese of St. Louis have been QIl\ong the number of those ser­ ving in Latin America for some time now, I (the late Cardinal ,.Ritter) would like to offer the following pbservations not only for your information but also in 'lUte hope that other United States bishops might be prompt­ ed to involve their dioceses and clergy in Latin American work. In the first place, this diocesan _... Initiative gives a bishop arid the 4:1ergy a new mode of apostolie involvement. Funds are con­ atantly being requested for mis­ alonary and relief enterprises, and of course that is most nec­ essary, but a new dimension is lidded when the giving of per-· lJOIlnel accompanies. our contci­ butioo of financial assistance. Secondly, this initiative has /:iven every member of the di­ ocesan clergy of the Archdiocese of St. LoUis a new awareness of .the world dimensions of their priestly vocation. When volun­ teers .were sought to leave for Bolivia, the younger clergy re­ aponded almost .to a man. Every priest I have sent has gone voluntarily after having distinguished himself for priest­ liness, zeal and initiative hel'e at home; each of the 10 I have sent has found a fulfillment and satisfaction so evident that I am completely assured Qf their love for their work, for Latin Amer­ ica and its people. -They have established the finest of relations with the priests of Bolivia, the country of our greatest experience, and on their home visits, have commu­ nicated to their brother priests' back in their Archdiocese of St. Lous an enthusiasm for the project that assures its continued support. Lay lEnthusiasm As a third point, I am con­ vinced for a number of reasons that the enthusiasm of the 'Clergy for the project has <Xlmmuni­ eated itself to the laity as well. The laity's response toward the support of the project has been truly heart-warming, and has been accomplished without in any way detracting from what the Archdiocese has been doing, for the Church Universal through the Pontifical Mission­ Aid Societies, and without the alienation of the Missionary Plan of Cooperation away from its goal of assistance to the Missiell-

HILLSIDE (NC)-The Amer­ now. The White youngster hacll ican Jewish Congress has threat­ attended the Hebrew Youth Aca­ ened to file suit against the demy of Essex County in New­ board of education here in this ark until enrolling for the Sum: New Jersey community unless mer' class. it rescinds a policy against the Branom said the wearing of wearing of yarmulkas in public yarmulkas could create a dis­ schools here. turbance in classrooms and The AJC is acting on behalf of would single out certain children William White whose son, Bern­ as adherents of a particular re­ ard,. 13, who has been told he ligion. "We don't like to identify would have to forego wearing children in public schools as the cap in order to take a sum­ members of any race or creed," mer typing course at Hillside he said.

High School. Mr. White with­

drew his son from the class. Jesuit AhllMni Wayne T. Branom, superin­ 'ROME (NC) - About 1,50lD tendent of schools, said the alumni o{Jesuit schools, colleges board had a policy against the and universities throughout the wearing of yarmulkas in class world are expected to come t<il> f{)r at least six years and had ~ome for their second internlll­ not had any complain.ts up to ,tiona! congress, Aug. ~6-30. 8Hl_ _iIiI'll!'iI ..

Meet

bility to the thesis that Apostolic activity is so interdependent that var'ious Apostolic projects al­ ways help foster one another, when there is careful guidance and supervision. The clergy's enthusiasm for this involvement in Latin America is also measur­ SPEAKER: Joaquin Ruiz­ ably responsible for the numer­ Gimenez of Spain will give ous responses of the laity them­ the closing address· at the selves 'to the call to become World Congress of the Laity, Papal Volunteers. to be held in Rome, Oct. 11­ Pledges Tithe 18. Ruiz-Gimenez, a lawyer, Some 'years ago, through the has' served as Spanish am­ Pontifical Commission for Latin America, the Holy See extended bassador to the Holy See and an ul'gent invitation to the reli­ was Spanish minister of nat­ gious communities of· priests, ional education from 1951 to BI'others and .Sisters of the 1956. NC Photo. United States that within the period of 10 years, each religious family make 10 per cent of its total pel'sonnel available for' service to the Church in Latin America. n this tithing of consecrated HOUSTON (NC) - "With the flesh and blood is being asked of many programs needed in the and actually being received from inner city we ·can no longer af­ our ordet·s and communities, ford the 'luxury' of a parish could 'not a like sacrificial shar­ school -when the public school ing be not also expected with pmpdety fmm our dioceSes as system is able to provide an adequate education for the chil­ .well? . . Accordingly, I would like dren~ This statement by Father Wil­ this evening to pledge the Arch­ liam Robertson, Confraternity of diocese of St. Louis to the attain­ ment of this go'al, namely, - that Christian Doctrine director for the Galveston-Houston diocese, by the year 1975, with God's as­ explained Why St. Joseph's ele­ sistance, 10 per cent· of our dioc­ esan clergy will be' in pastoral mentary school is going out Gf business-sort of-after 88 yean service in Latin America, and I confidently express the hope in down'town Houston. But . not completely out of that other dioceses will see fit business. to set similar goals for them­ selves. Three of the Sisters of the So that this might be realized Incarnate Word and Blessed with. maximum' effectivesness, Sacrament will remain in the there is need for an overall plan parish and conduct CCD classel3 for the recruitment, support and in, the old school building. careful placement of this priest­ Father Edward Abell, assist. ly manpower, but this should be ant pastor of St. Joseph's, said. well within the competence of that while the school was onl,. the Welfare Conference's Latin able to serve a small portion ol America Bureau. For this goal the pal"ish, the new CCD pro­ to be really possible, there will gram will be able to serve the be a need for a review of our entire parish. diocesan structures and present use of pdestly personnel, but surely this would be a healthy , thing for the Church in our own land. . Catho~ic Cathedlr~1

BRiDGE TO DESPAIR 'CRHDPE?

'lI'1lt1 IltDLY FATM:~'8 MISSIt;)N AID TO THI llJllIOIENTAL CHURCH

Close Houston

Parish School

NEAR EAST CRISIS !NOT YET OVER

"We pray the guns will remain silent" writes Monsignor Gartland from the Holy land, "but the 'crisis is far from over for the Innocent victims." . He speaks of the nearly two million refugees still caught In the web of misery spun by the Arab·lsraell fighting of early this summer.••• "If Americans could only see the suffering, the concern .••" he added. Perhaps If we saw the endless line of refugees waiting to cross the twisted girders of the Allenby Bridge, buckled Into the greenish waters of the River Jordan, the stream in which Christ waG baptized-if we saw the children, the aged, the blind, mothers balancing unbelievable loads, most bringing only what they wore-we Americans would-<:are.•..• For. the Holy land poor,- the brIdge was but a rickety escape to more poverty. Hazard of epidemic is .high, and momle of these-the least of Christ's brethren-is near th\! despair level. If you care, If you see til them Christ sufferln.. please help now. Give them hope.

o o •.•••••••••. Your StmlllNs 91ft, fA an1 amount, goes where needed most $1000 In Pontifical M!sslon hands wUf Mreteh to $10,000 in mercy. $500 equips. chlld-carll cIiAlCJ $250 provides shelter for III refugee famll1 . 0 $100 bUyS the equipment (stOllI!!, urn, oops, . etc.) for a milk station $50 buys one week'. food for an orphanas•. 0- $25 provides week'. supply of antibiotics $10 buys III family kit (straw mattress, cook­ ing utensils, etc.) $5 clothes an orphan D $2 provides II cold ahlld with II blanket (100,000 blankets are neadsdb

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CLEVELAND (NC) - Joseph . C. Pednekar of India worked hard at learning English at a Catholic college so that he could study Marx. He picked up a Catholic catechism (strictly for more practice in English) and eventually became a convert al}d then a priest. He attended a Portuguese col­ lege operated by the Mission­ aries of St. Francis de Sales, the oi'der to which he now belongs. Said Father Joseph: ' "Man proposes and God dis­ poses. I wanted to study Marx and God wanted something else. Above all, I was impressed with the thought of one God and one b'ue religion." . Father Joseph was baptized

at the college in Nag Pur in 1952

when he was 21, and 10 years

later was ordained in the 'Papal

Seminary in Poona.

LONDON (NC)-A 300-yeer­ old Congregationalist church in London's 'West End has been bought for conversion into & Ukrainian Catholic cathedral. The building was sold for. $450,000 and should be ready for use lat'er this year. No major alterations are needed. . The purchase of the disused church, most recently used as & chapel for the United States Navy, ended 1:1 long search for an adequate cathedral church for Britain's 20,000 Ukrainian Cath­ olics. Two years ago they bought another building here for that purpose but the idea was aban­ done!i and the building will be resold.

Newsmen HOI'\l@r@d ROME (NC)-James, C. O'­ Neill and Patrick Riley of the Rome bureau of NC News Ser­ vice have b'een awarded the Cross__ Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice by Pope Paul VI.

8 WHAT ARE YOU IIiIAVING IFOR

1CliNNEfU

How often have you said: ~'I Just don't know what to buy; we're tired of beef or chicken, etc." Hungry refugees In the Holy land are glad tc get the same daily menu of dried vegetebles and cereal, powdered milk, canned meats, rice and sugar. For as little as $10 a month you can feeo! an entire refugee femlly fpr a full mont",. Please>. will your . . _ _ _ _ _ . . - _ _ c::=oc:==o_c=-

®. PLI!ASIl: FIND

lli)eQi' . ENCLOSED L\Ilcnsigncr !Molom' IFORt PleasQ .NAME: return coupon with your DTREIiT· offering CITY

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPIE4.JLMAN, PresIdent MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, Nat/ona/secretary Writo: CATHOLl'O NllAR lAST WEL'ARI AsIOC. 330 Madison Avenue-New York. N.Y. 1001' Telephone: al2/YUkon 15-21840


mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fo"

RiVef"-Thur~.

_. i 7, 1967

17

HOLY TRDNITY CONVENT

West Harwich! Mass.

Dedication and Blessing at!' 40 followed by Mass at 5. SUNDAY AUGe 20. 1967 D

r:-::----.--------..

We as Contractors are most pleased with our participation ml11 the Planning and! Building of this Most Recent Addition to Holy Trinity Parish 0111 Cape Cod and we offer OUII' Best Wishes on the Occasion of if's Dedication.

JOHN B. LEBEL'CO~ ~$7RUCTION

COe, INC.

GENERAL CONTRACTOR Osterville

30A Wia.nno Avenue

T el~ 428-8551 Plumbing & Heating hy

RONALD J. HOSIE Plumbing & Fuel Oil Main Street

Electrical Wo,l i,r -

FULLER ELECTRIC

CO~

~a;nt;ng

",

GIEOaGE l., D. ST. AUBIN (06

Falmouth 1It0GCil

4'1' Arrowhead Lane

. s.

Hyannis

Darrtmouth, Mass.

Hyannis, Mass.

Tile Work by

JOSEPH GEMME 78 Pitcher's Way, Hyannis

Mason Wo"k

JAMES

J~

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IARIY

Main Street, Marstcll'ils Mms, Mass.


'18

THE ANCHOR--;­ Th~15., Aug. 17, ~96i

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M(O)w®s A[}u@@@] NEWARK (Nt) - Set~n Hall University· has upgraded the· pre-high school Head Start program it inaugurated b1 cooperation .with the United Community Corp" Newark's .anti-poverty agency, three years ago. Now, in addition to preparing Gelected students for high school :work; it is preparing some high school students'- including 35 :wqo were among original par­ ticipants in the program -.for ~ollege.

Now It's College . Funded by' the Office of Eco­ nomic Opportunity, the program :was given the 1966 distinguished achievement award by the '.'t; American Association of Col­ leges for Teacher Education. It finds 180 students attending intensive. small-group sessions during the Summer. Only stu­ dents who are doing somewhat poorly in school and who come llrom a deprived background are accepted. Most participants are Negroes but there are '11so some Spanisl:i-speaking arid, .white ¥oungsters: in the program· beaded by Dr. Albert W~· Rein­ 'J ers, dir~ctor of Seton Hail's' edu': CARDINAL, JOINS IN SONG: Discovery Center in • •• but to bring out what God put ~nto you." With the 'eational research. . ." " . Original' purpose of the" pro­ Wes.t' Philadelphia, one of six antipovel"fy projects in the Oardinal, from left are, Mrs. Virginia Prior, chairman, cram . was .to help. grammar city sponsored by the archdiocese this Summer, -was visited Community Action Center; Miss Barbara Weems, assist­ school students make the transi., ant head, Phil-adelphia' Anti-Poverty Action,Committee;and tion' to high school .and give 'recently by John-, Cardinal Krol, who. joined in \an im­ UJ.em the incentive to continue' promptu song with the students. The Cardinal said, " Yon . F!ank LeMa~; music instructor. NC Photo. all have talent. This program ia riot to brainwash lYOU @hrough togrliduation: Teacher Internship Now it is also 'geared' to pro-· ~ding the incentive togo on fA). oollege which explains why·35··· .f the original 105 enrol:leesare " . lItill participating. Enrollment· this year is down

from the 210 accepted last Sum­ 'ilier buf Prof. George" Lind.emer ALBANY' (NC)-The Blaine . state agencies playa vital·part Retain intbe constitution. th'e' eH~arlyand fully gU3ranteea of , lIaid'it's riot because of. Ii hick, '~endment, the.:' 73-year-old . in llttaining··those ends. provision exe'mpting from taxeS freedom against discrimination. Note ,SupPort . ' .of applications'but"bedlUse 'oo.r ,; 'constitutional ban to aiding chil- , ,Others are: , o f personal. property owned, anci The committee's sta'nd',OR these 'funds 'have been decreased. "We' 'drenattendingnon-P\lbli~' That ·tliesection of t.he consti-, used by charitable, religious and Just' couldn't tilkein an,y': more' Schools, is only.. :on~Qf 19, i~-. ',t!1ti0!l w~ich ·is pr:e~ently. res1ri~;- edu'cational organizations for, re- ~ i~\i~s . is"l!'t¢lu~ed ~n ,testimony , Students."-'· ' ' . . . " :' , ,.', "•. portanf'areas'of~.oncern 'of~he'"tive-onwhat,·programs· ean be· 'li~ous,'eharitabieor edu~atio'na}. made -to' .convention committees

. and has beep.. the subject of .~

Besid~s : aiding st\.lde-)1ts, 'the . Ne~ Y~rk State ,eatholic Com~ aided or expanded to include a purposes. ' , School also serves as an' iIitern':;;:' 'mittee observin'g the state's con.:. 'general freedom for the state to That a provisi.on be' inserted· .series of "position statements,·

ship for beginning teachers. The stitution~l corivention which-' Is' , take·action to meet human needs. into the Bill of Rights"to commit issued, by the cOmmittee. "These positions merely ~ . faculty of 33 includes"20 "insti:., now under wily. 'Retention of the·Board of Re- ,the state to foster and enc~>urage' 'tute teachers" , - recent college' T~ .Blaine·· issue tops the'list gents and the, Board of Social efforts of people, and grol,lps to summation 'of positions we have taken frorit'time to tim:e at pub- ' graduates or \lDdergraCiuates en';' because the debate . itS, re- .. Welfare and: creation of. citizens me~t human ilOd' spiritual need!? tering junior, year. Two insti.. peal has become heated. 'boards for' health and hospitais ,That the Bill of Rights clearly lic hearings 'and in repOrts," said tote teachers work under the " But,the Catholic Committee' and mental health." state it is a basic human right to Charles' J. 'Tobin Jr., executive ,guidance of a regular' faculty has' given equalattentio'n to That the, sta.te· com,mit its~1f organize together for legitimate secreta'ry' "of the' committee. inember, picking up experience other major issues' concerned' ·fully to· good housing for all social ends, including the right "Members' have appeared as in­ terested citizens' at hearihgs all III. work ~ith deprived children. with the' welfare' of .citizens,- c;itizens' 'by removing sections'of to collective 'bargaining.. .' , Displays. Interest' " , rights and relationship with the the'constitution which hamstring, That the Bill of Rights express over the state to give. our viewil on the matters before the con­ ,An ,advisory committee of 14 state. .' such operaiions. . vention.", , ' Yolimteer 'p''arents' ev'-'luates th·.e . ' , Retain in' the constitution ~ l I I u m a D Needs ' Urges, The stand taken' by the com­ ~" prognim' periodically and i n l i k e s t h a t , t h e religious right of a child recom_wend~ti!>n!l fo~" st"engt~ At the top of the list is inclu- be. respected "whenever prac­ mittee at public hearings "have C~urch Convention ening it. Besides regular in- sion in the Bill of Rights of a' ticable" in placement ·actions..

received the overwhelming sup­ HANNOVER (NC )-Cathoiics' port" 'of the convention commit­ structors, guidance counselors stateme'nt' indicating that freeand .Protestants i~, Germany tee members, he noted. and psychologists,' health aides' dom from want for all citizens -, ," . . , should hold a joint church con­

and social workers are' invol~ed.. is a state concern, and .private :. ~~proves vention, a German Jesuit said. One student who attends from agencies, in cooperation' with. B d ~ CI ' . ,it town If miles away travels . . . . . oar lTOII' Writing in the ,Jesuit monthly" C. ·Austin t~O"lio~,rs' d~il!, tl), par.trc~pate. Fil.'ilP·in08,. ishop'5' G. ~'t ~, Cardinal' BOS~ON (NC). ~ Richard Stimmen derZeit (Voices of·the Cushing of Boston has Time),Father Wolfgang Seibel, Radoo-TV approved a reconimendationof 'S.J" . the editor,' said that the Replica of Mission MANILA (NC) '_. ·Preside.'~t' the' archdiocesan pdests' senate problems dealt with at the last . FUNERAL SERVICE . for establishment of a personnel Kirchentag, the Protesta'nt con­ .Ferdinand Marcos Of the Philip-boar~ to take charge of all as­ vention - held' in 'July - had NEW BEDFORD, MASS. ST.•AUGUSTINE (N C ) . pineS has signed, into law an'· signments and transfers of as­ been the same as those 'that con­ American visitors to Berlin this act permitting franchises .for 'sistantpriests., cerned partiCipants at the eath­ 549 COUNTY STREET In approving the recommen­ Summer' have found themselves ,radio and tel~yision to thE1 Catb'- , olic ~nvention, the Katholiken­ faced with a mirror image oiSt. oUe Bishops' Conference, here. dation, the cardinal also endors­ tag,. Present· at the. signing were .ed the senate's proposal that a Augustine,Fla., in the midst of the West German city, Mrs.' Marcos; Bishop Mariano full-time director for the board' The image came' from a repiica' . Gaviola, secretary-general of be 'chosen by the 8.rchb,shop

of St. Augustine's chapel of the ,the bishops' conference; Bishop from a list of five priests rec;';

Mission,of Nombre de Dios, buiit Antonio Mebutas y Lloren of ommended by 'the senate and

, II'S by United States 'Army "person­ Laoag and Father James B. ·that the assistant director be nel for the city's German-Amer": Reuter, S.J. Father Reuter, a chosen from a list of five rec­

ican Volkfest as an illustration U.S:-bom member of the Jesuits' ommended by the director and'

of early .American history. Philippines' provinCe; arranged the senate. ,

at The present· director of the for a conference in June in Co­ Cardinal Cushing also acti­ mission, Father Michael V. 'Gan­ tabato City, the Philippines, of . va ted the already established non, attended the. festival, and Catholics 'involved in broadcast­ .retirement board for the' clergy reported_ that some 70,000 Ber­ ing' work in Asia. by naming five priests to man it. liners have visited the replica The new law would enable," Named chairman ,of the' board of the, chapel. The original is' be­ any bisho,p here·to. establish a'· was Msgr. Edward F,.· Harti'gan, 115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. lieved to be the oldest miSSion iA radio or television station in his' administrator of Regina Oleri America.. . . diocese. Boston home fQrretired<priesu.:

"Constitution ,Changes Concern Catholics New 'yorlk:etrs 'Manifest Interest in '10 Areas

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Personnel ergy

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NEW BEDFORD· ACUSHNE'r 'CO~OPERATIVE· BANK

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Ho,', Union Seeks Financial Aid For Academy

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., Aug. 17, 1967

19

.Westport Pastor To Be Honored

ChiJdren 8ft pJanning a bookyard carnival. Parents are erganizing a city-wide fund drive. BCYth projects are

Parishioners of St. George'lJ Church, Westport, are planning am Appreciation Banquet for Rev. Lorenzo H. Morais, pastor for 17 years. Open to the public, it will beheld at 6 Sunday night, Sept. 24 at Lincoln Park Ball­ room. Tickets are now available from Mrs. Louise Buckley anG Mrs. Roger Forest, Westport; anG from Warren Johnson and Mm Ralph Souza, Dartmouth.

or the Sisters cd the Holy Union who staff 88­ ered Hearts Academy in Fan River, Bishop Cassidy High SChool In Taunton nnd HI ele­ mentary schools of the Diocese. Reason for the drive, to ex­ tend through September, is ex­ plained in Ii leter signed jointly by Wnliam P. O'Brien, presi­ Opposes R@~@x~tion dent of Sacred Hearts Aca­ demy's Fathers' Club and Mrs. O~ Aborti@ml l(1l]ws Edith Raposa, head of the moth­ INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - The er's Sucordium Club: Indiana Catholic Conference Ad­ llteall'Qllce Indebtedness visory Council has created alll "On behalf of the Sisters of ad hoc committee of physicians the Holy Union, who staff so and lawyers of all faiths to op­ capably our Academy of the pose broad relaxation of abortion Sacred Hearts, we are asking laws in Indiana. for your assistance in an effort The action was taken after to reduce their indebtedness in­ Gov. Roger Branigan vetoed fiJ­ curred in the building of the much-amended bill which would gymnasium-auditorium at the have permitted abortions ilIl Academy and the attached con­ cases of rape or incest. Propo­ vent. VATICAN OFFICIAL MEETS DIRECTOR: Msgr. Raymond Etteldorl. secretary nents of relaxed abortion mea­ "The primary, compelling rea­ 8ures have said they will re­ Iron for this expenditure' was reneral of the Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the Faith, talks with Msgr. Ed­ introduce the legislation in the ward T. O'Meara, the Holy.Father's nationald.irector of his Society for the Propagation retention of accreditation for the legislature's 1969 term. Academy, which was in danger of the Faith. " Other steps taken by the co.~n­ of losing this endorsement, with- . ~l included development, of &l o\lt which graduates would have position paper and educatiQnall difficulty in being accepted by , . material for. dissemination colleges. ,through aU media; a request 11The compelling .necessity foE, , that each Indiana bishop desig­ .I ,thi!} ,ppve 11! to relieve the su- . !;late a S\lnday when the sermolll peIiors ,and staff of the necessity ,would be on "The Moral Q\Jes­ of ·giving every energy to' the t~OJJ of Abortion"; the enJjstment , , bbtaining of funds to keep cur­ of parish public affairs o~fjC;lals rent in the monthly' struggle flo ,and other prominent citizens, to meet interest payments and Q discuss the question with eacb paltry reduction of the debt. legislator.' , "We want them to devote their time and energies to the Ecstl'on Nuns to. See ush of providing a 'superior ed­ DcaUollD for our daughters! ,SlOlxc-Senators Tilt:. "The remainder of the original BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car­ debt is $569,349. The cost of the dinal Cushing of Boston has ex­ buildings was $1,050,000, and tended an invitation to aU com­ $350,600 of this amout was raised munities of Sisters in the Bos­ , : before 'any money was' borrow-' ' ton archdiocese to attend"·tOO ed. In 1961 the Sisters borrowed baseball game between the Bos­ $700,000: This means that since' ton Red Sox and the Washirtg1o:t\ 1961' appoxirriately $130,000"has Senators here on Aug. 24--->des­ been 'paid' on the principal. In-" ignated by the Red Sox manage-­ terestpayments have totalled ,ment as "Sisters' Day." It will! about $180,000; making a total of also be the Cardinal's': 72ntl $210,000 raised in five and II' birthday.·.· , lialf 'years. This sum was raised entirely under direction of 'the' Sisters. ' "We hope that our dri ve ' will 'result in sUbstantial assistance 'Faint and ,'Wallpaper 00' tliat the' superiors will not Dupont Paint cOntinue to be strained to their' :cor. Middl'e St. utmost in reducing this debt. 422 Acush: Av~. "Your efforts will be eternally' remembered in the prayers of ~t:'.t'" New Bedford the congregation and the youth PARKING whom they serve." Rear of Store More Succinct The .fundraising problem was expres~ed m()re succinctly by a mother whose daughters, like many others, were left without 8 school when the academy's cl­ emeqtary division was closed b1 , .June in an economy move: "My' girls aren't with the Sisters now, because the 'little academy' closed, but if we don't do some­ thing to help, there'll be no Holy Union high school for them,' either." The Falmouth National Bank The situation is that serious, FALMOum. 1lASS. . say the Sisters, noting that com­ Adding eeu;oenical touch is

By the Village Green Since 1821 plete closing of the academy Ule fact that several Protestant

may come within two years if pupils of the Sisters are also

Receives Deg ree the present fundraising cHon 'helping out. The affair will be, 1ft ELECTRICAL isn't successful. held 11 to 41 Saturday, Aug. 26 Sister Mary Immacula, O.S.F.. "~ Contractors "As things are now," said one in the backyard of 80 Under-.·the former Felicia Supczak, Sister, "we'd have to withdraw wood Street, d~rectly across the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stan­ Sisters from all our elementary street from ~e former elem,ent- ley Supczak, 4052 Acushnet AnLEBORO'S

schools in Fall River and use ary division of Sacred Hearts, "Avenue, New Bedford, is visit­

Leading Garden ,Center them in the high school in order Academy. jng her parents following recep­ to break even. We certainly , It won>t make as much «or tion of a master's degree in see­ doe't want to do that." the Sisters as the adult drive, ondary education from Boston bUt its planners are, if anything, College. She is a, graduate of , , , Children Help more dedicated in their efforts. Holy Family High School, New The children's carnival to ben­ South Main & Wall s,.. They're an present 01' potential!, Bedford, and, Misericordia Col­ efit the Sisters is being organ­ ized by youngsters from Holy stuoon1s of SMA-and they don't" lege, aAd, is presently, assigned 944 County St. ~ .. Name, St. Joseph's and Holy want to 'lCbangse their high 8Cboo1l as an eighth gr,ade' teac))er An : 222-0234 , New Bedford ­ Manville, N. Jr. "",: Rosaq parishes in Fall Diva. plana! for the benefit

'Propagation'of F'oith Officials 'Meet' , .• , '

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Study .Linking of Privat~ CoUeges With Michigan State Institution

Pittsburgh Bishop' Proposes Race-Term I,Mor,atorium" PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop John J, Wright of Pitts­ 'burgh has urged "'a moratorium' on the': words 'race' and' 4'racial' and all their variations." And,he .would have it last Cl<until the psuedo-scientific l)l'etensions and neurotis con­ sequences of these emllty . d h 1 t th "Behind these, there must be wor s ave os e perverse an across-the-boar'd community power they have acquired as censu's, not 'of generous majori­ ''tuyth' phrases from SQme ties in behalf' of hard-pressed flIuperficial19th-century theories, minorities," 'he" continued, "not and from the mad political and' of. one 'race'suddenly seeking to oocial developments of" these befdend another, but of people myths in nazism anci other forms serving the persons. of their !)f racism." brothers whoever and wherever

Bishop Wright joined other they' may be!' ' eivic·arid religious leaders in the ,. Cite Big Problems jE'ittsburgh area in responding to a survey'conducted by the Pitt:>David W. Craig, director of burgh Catholic, diocesan news- public safety, said "the most jpaper, on the. question, "W,hat needed action from every citi­ action should be taken to pre- zen is to let his congressman vent the, outbreak of civil dis-.· and, legislator know he would <nder and lessen' the' danger of support massive public money racial riots in the area?" 'pl'ograms in 'housing and 'educa­ Empty Meaningtion, to wipe out the racial dis..... ,Thus far, Pittsburgh has been advantages of' the decades." , gpared the violence, rioting, lootRev. G. M. Cochran, president bIg, burning and other disol'del'S of the Pittsburgh Area Council of which have'ocurred: in' a· num- Churchse, cit.ed "three areas in bel' of northern cities in the U. S. which continuous improvement IM~ f h . " 'd" must be made if racial difficul'''',.,'''", ;", ...rvst,.,ot ose rel;ponmg...:were·,. t.·ies.· ....are"to·Dli."iiv·,oided: hO.'using''',' Dpti"mistic "that riots could ,be pl'evehted 'Qere-if appropl'iate education and job opportunity:' .action were taken not' only to re- ' Pa.trick Fagan,. City Council · Ilieve .causes·'of 'ghetto tensjl;lns president,:noted "there.is always but also' 'to""eliminate the root som~thing more ·that can, be . · (jauses': "I" done,' but ~er~ -is a l~mit to , ".Bishop "Wright; :asserted that ' ~ha~, y..o u ~can, do" t?O. The' big .,Glno· wo.r:d 'is,'more' enwty .of ,.probl~~s,are educatIon and em­ meaning .th'an the'word 'race' ' t i " ~loymen~" and slum conditions," r it 'iscjurentiy Osed: Ihhouldbe . "

:~r~¥:o~~~e:V:;d:~e:;:ti~ei~s~o~ :- -U~ges . Gern"an~';, ;:th~~t . p~~~~e ,~gai~S~ 'lKle~, ftolish DiCJI,ogue

SAGINAW (NC)-A study oil where they take such courses. a 'privately supported Catholic . Library, Athletics college on the campus of Sagi. The students will be eligible naw Valley College has ~eelll for' S'aginaw College athleticg l~uncheq here by _the Saginaw and will be able to use the col­ dlOces~.' . lege library and participilte ,Auxlhary ~lshop .James. A. equally in aU student activities. Hickey of Sagmaw has apPolllt.. . ed members ·of seven committees' .' Blsh~p Hickey .estabhshed the to carry out the study and hJlS follOWIng commlttee~ .. ~or .the expressed the hope they will st,:,d.y-n:ed and ~eilslblhty; ad-­ complete their work by the end, ~11l~tr~~lOn; c~rp<;ulum and a,: of September," cre~ltatlOn; a,r~hltecture; cons~­ . '1 . t d 1 h b . tuhon; publICity, and coordl­ A Simi ar s u y a so as een nating undertaken by the. Michigan' ,;'

Lutheran Churches, Missouri Sagm~w Valley ~ecame a,sta~ Synod, to determine 'if a Luther-' coll~ge III .196.5. SInce then the an college should be established' ~agmaw. dlO~~se has beer:t se.nd­ on the campus. The Saginaw l~g 'semll1arIa~s to the IllStltu­ Valley College is located ,be-' non for. the fust two yea~ of tween Bay City and Saginaw, , college hberalarts courses. , Bishop Hickey said if, the D~. Samuel. D. ~arble, SVC committees report favorably and preSident, ~arhe.r thiS ye~r pro­ a dec\sion to proceed is reached, posed the Idea. .of Cllthoh~ .a!,d it will mark a new era of devel-' Lutherans shanng the f~Clhtles . opment in coop~ration between '.- of t~E; ~olleg~. as a me~ns, of EDUCATOR: Dr, John I. public-private education in this m~kll1g .It e.asl~r for surVival of· country...· . prlvate'lI1shtuhons. Goodlad, . dean of the GradThe' bishop said such 'programs ' uate Schq61 'of Educal;iOIi; have been carI:ied out in Canada,' Marq'·.uette Planning, University of California at but added he has.£ound no paral- ' Los1\I!g~lest, i.s . a.~on~ &. leI for such an arrangement'in .. ~~~~.~'", ;~!~.d., ,~~~m..:, J . MILWAUKEE (NC) -;- Mair~~ gl'OUp of prominent educa_'thi~ cptiritry: :" tors preparing po~ition paOfficials of the college. ~,a~~, quette'University, whicb dropo- .. , the plan;meets constitutio,n-. 'ped' intercollegilate football' • pe rg f.or'theNation-al Cath..·- said al ·provisions regarding the sep-. 1960, .will initiate a program 9fl. olic' Educational" Associa- . al'ation of'church and state, ,'. ,club football this Fall 'and 'p~ .. tioil'S symposIum this' Fall ,The" private college will'~ ~ .~~~ a b~~get f~r equipment and! on 'the future of Catholic ed-' finance~l by private ,funds, and 'unforms fOJ;' 30 play.ers, .' , .. ,' ucation. Dr, Goodlad's papervrillrecei.ve, no public ll1~n~y; ... rpere ~Hi..'?e n~; s,al,ari~s'f~ , , ." 1" 'th .' lal)d 'or gift. Students enrollIng _ coa(lhes 01" scl).olarshlps'forplay,., . , . Win dea WI new orgam~~ in the pr~vat,e college also ~l,l,. erS llnd il)~,'J1}<!v~'is'not ,designe4i, ," ,;, ,'tional st.r:uctures educa-., eIll'()ll'" iii the' Saginaw... ValJq :'~ ,a, step }owar.d interc91lep~"". 'tion. NC' Photo. : College and', lv.ill pay .eourse feea: play. " '..:, - . - ,',' , " . ' .,

in

... "The myt1}l.of 'sep~l'~te; 'ra.ces· :' GEMEN, (NC)~erma~Cath- . ~bad a~t~~o?ology, ba~ theol: :. olicexpell~esftoin Gdansk, ~or~ . · ogy, bad P?1itI~~:. b~~ soc.1010g-!,: ... merly l,he free"ciJY .of Danzig.bu~ ,

{Ie, emphaSized. tt IS. anh-Chrls-' now under Polish 'rule were

gan· and an~i~human.'·:.·':, ul'g~d to eng~ge:in dialog~~'witi.. ,

Polish Catholics whenever pos­ Ser.vmg- :s.rotbel'li. ~he Bishop ,warn~ tha~ "ci,ti:" sible and to overcoinehatr~d

, 'mens, ge~~rally,. ~ust.be 00. 'through Christian love: "

l?ua~d agam~t t.he.. ,collechve par. Catholic expellees froni'Gdansk

ano,la. that' sets . I~ ,,:hen pr~3S. now living in West Germany Ndlo an~ teleVISIOn m~~~santly. tended their 21st annual'meetinii .'

.report not "only actual' VIOlence, whose theine was "Recoricil~

but ·also e,:ery alleged evidence' 'Yourself With Your Brother:"

_?f t~e tensl?,ns that could el'Upt Msgr, Anton Behrendt 'of

m ,;vIOlence. '.. '. . Duesseldorf, the apostolic visi-'

. We must press forward on tor to. Catholic German expellees

every ~ront, ,a r~solute, calm, Uom Gdansk, called the fOI'ced

m~gnanImous and. sane cam-., expulsion of nearly 12 million,

pal~n for th~ ~x.te-?sIOn,;md yl'O- Germans from what became

tec~lOn of CIVil rIghts, Bishop Polish territory after World War

:WrIght u~ged, "and for the" II one of the most sinister meas­ s~rengthenm.g o~ all.four f~unda- ul'es in history.. '"

twns of SOCial J.ushce-falr emThis mass expulsion became.

ployment practI~es, open and· the cause of friction in relatioIlIl

de~ent, hOUSIng, I~proved edu- between the German and Poiish "

ceah?Qal opportunities and pm- peoples, he said. .­ tectIon of health , Referring to the conciliatory'

,pronouncements of the German·

and Polish bishops at'the etid of

:. Melkite Archbishop the Second Vatican Council.

Msgr. Behrendt asked for a dia- ,

To Visit Boston between Poles and. Ger­ BOSTON (NC) - Archbishop logue mans, George Hakim, spiritual leader Prof. Franz Wothe of Hildes­ ()f Melkite-rite Catholics in Is­ heim told the. annual' meeting rael, is expected here to pal'tici­ there is the possibility of a dia­ pate in a Histadrut fund raising logue with communism, mission, The Histadrut Federa­ tion is a teachers' union in is­ rael. . Asks Special Archbishop 'Hakim will be one

~f the guests of honor at a din:" Towards Catholics Il\er here early in September,

BRISTOL (NC)-Father John $rganized by .' the Histadrut Meyendorff, . Russian Orthodox

<campaign in .the U.S. to raise theologian from Tuckahoe, N. Y.,

{runds· for the':'Cardfnal Cushing. ~allecl:on d.e,legates '~o the.'World ~ospital, in" is~ael, n~med' for Council of· Churches' Faith and

,,~ichard· Cardinal Cushing of . Order; :'meeting: here 'hi, England

18oston.· .;,,' . '. '. ,to m'8k~ a speeiai ecumeniCld ef­ ,Gov. John: A ..Volpe ~f:Ma's­ fort tdward the Catholic' Church, . Q3chusetts . will sponsor" a. ball, . . Com~entingonthe'large:­ I» beheld in conjunction with scaletheoiogical ~illlog~eS'going ~e dinner, ~o. ass1st. in raising, ,on amongre.presentatives of dif,. lfunds for the,hospitaI. '. fei-ent commUnions,:'Father Mey:' .

endorff urged that' as many·.

leadership' TraIning Catholics as ,possible be' 'brought " NEW YORK (NC)-:...· Three ' into these"discussioDs: mew 'Christian Leadership Train­ More than 100 Protestant and' irig Institutes' to train Puerto Orthodox delegates' m'etiti . ·Ricans and Negroes in the tech": . Bristol to make 'plans for next ,.

niques of leadership have' bee!l year's' general .assemblY 'of the

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