Journal Blames American Theater
Pontiff B,lasts Nudity in Present·Day Lif,e ,...
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An Anchor of the Soul, SU're and Firm -
ST. PAUL
CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)Pope Paul VI has blasted sexual immorality and nudity in modern life. In a talk here the day after the Feast of the Assumption, he lamented modern man's. sexual degradation. "L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican daily, suggested that· a discussion of sex and sadism carried in the Italian press on the feast of the' Assumption had prompted Pope Paul to speak on
Foresees Shift In School Aid
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Aug. 20, 1970 Attit~des By Dr. Edward R. Vol. 14, No. 34
© 1970 The Anchor
PRICE 10¢ $4.00 per year
Schools to Receive Easter Collection On April 3, 1969, Bishop Connolly announced the inaugura-. tion of a new plan for aid to Catholic schools in the Diocese by distributing monies from the Easter Collection to financiall,Ypinched parishes and thus aid in the continued operation of parochial elementary schools. Following the recommendation of Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Ed. D., Diocesan Superintendent of Schools, the Chanc~ry Office is currently distributing these funds. A sum of fifty dollars-the 1969-70 tuition rate--:-is being allocated for each needy child. The total being alloted this year is $72,850 while last year's amount was $62,000. Elementary school tuition for
D'Alessio
(Dr. D'Alessio, coordinator af governmental programs for the Division of Elein~ntaFY and Secondary Education at the United States' Catholic Conference, traces the history of recent legislation and governmental conThis is the fourth in a series of arti les which will discuss the purpose and plight of Catholic School education and its future prospects.
the past year was one hundred dollars with the parish paying half and the child paying half.. There are, however, many in- - cern for the survival of non pubstances in which the child can- lie schools. He sees hope ahead not afford tuition and t~is is to in new' willingness to work for be no bar in accepting him and such survival on the part of prokeeping him in a parochial fessionals beyond' the Church.) school. However, since expenses There is no lack of free, open, still must be met the allocation and serious dialogue and literaof the Easter Collection money ture these days on both the exiswill aid in meeting this need. tence of and· assistance to nonPrior to 1969, the annual public schools. interest in them _ Easter collection was used to is at a high-water mark. Across the nation opponents operate homes for orphans, but with the development of the fi- and proponents of 'such schools nancial crisis in the elementary are engaging in conversation. school system, the orphans are Even the most cursory review'of now supported directly from what is being written reveals a diocesan funds, while the pas- breadth of interest in non public chal offerings to maintain the schools not apparent a decade parochial schools of the diocese. ago. . Turn to Page Seventeen
the subject at his noon blessing the day following. Although Pope Paul did not identify the papers he had in mind, the Vatican City daily quoted one Italian paper as blaming tile wave of nakedness in the wotld on the American theater. As is his custom, the Pope celebrated Mass .in the parish church in the village of Castelgandolfo on the feast of the Assumption. That day, at the lloon blessing in the courtyard. of his Summer residence, he extolled the Blessed Mother as that "ra· diant figure who brightens the dark horizon of our life on earth." By the next day, however, his own thoughts had darkened. The Pope said he was still thinking of the joys of the bodily As-
sumplion of MaFy, but lamented that modern man, "as an animal is degrading himself beyond any restrictions. " He then added: "Why do you marvel if pleasure, egoism, delinquency' and drugs spread like social epidemics, and render life so base and so sad?" Observing that the soul of man must attain dominion over the body, Pope Paul said that "this reflection makes us suffer as well as hope." As for hope, he offered the model and example of Mary herself. The suffering, he added, stems from the attempt today to exalt the body "so much that we are coming to the point in these days, (where we have) naturalistic and obscene displays, the exaltation of nudism, erotiTurn to Page Six
New England Nurses To Hear Fr. Thomas Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J. Research Associate at the Cambridge Center for Social Studies and former columnist for The Anchor, will be the main speaker un Saturday afternuon, Oct. 17 at a general session of the 11 th New England Regional Conference of the Diocesan Councils of Catholic Nurses scheduled for Oct. 16-18 ill the SheratonHyannis Inn, Hyannis. The speaker's .topic will be , "The I"amily in the 'Seventies': Protean Form or Procrustean Social Context?" and it will be followed by a reactor panel. Father Thomas holds masters degrees in both English and French, a licentiate in theology and a doctorate in sociology from the University of Chicago. A nationwide noted sociologist, Father Thomas studied social movements in Western Eu~ope in 1947, was a recipient of a
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Rev. John L. Thomas Guggenheim Fellowship in 1952, served as president of the American Catholic Sociological in 1959 and for 16 years was an Turn to Page Six
Large Diocesan Delegation at CCD Congress More than 350 from the Fall . River Diocese have pre-registered for the 24th. annual New England Congress of Religious Education scheduled for this weekend at Providence College. The Confraternity of Christian
Rev. James A. Clark
Doctripe Headquarters has announced that a total number of attendees from the diocese may reach 500. Rev. Ronald A. Tosti, Diqcesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, has
Rev. Thomas C. Lopes
informed The Anchor that "the State Room on the 15th floor of the Biltmore Hotel has been reserved in order that attendees from the diocese may meet at 9:30 on Friday night and thus exchange impressions on the
Rev. Thomas C. Mayhew
cOI:lgress." Among- the Fall River personnel who will be part of the proceedings at the Coogress, and the ·sessions they are slated to chair are: 'Sister Rose Lamb, S.U.S.C.-
Rev. John J. Smith
"The Parish Coordinator of Religious Education"-Mr. J.' Neiman. Rev. Thomas Lopes-"Experience in the Spirit," Rev. Robley Whitson; "Man - the Animal Turn to Page Six
Rev..John J. Steakem
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs'.. Aug:'26,:P9I'O 2 Archbishop, Damiano School H~s , U~ique Program for Reto,rded •
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CAMDEN (NC) - The truth _' about retarded <;hildren is that anyone can have one. . This may be small comfort to a mother who has _,just given birth to a mentally handicapped child, but it is some comfort. It has helped remove the stigma from retardation, the stigma that in the past shunted these children' to dark rooms where many of them were denied human contact. In the Camden suburb of Westville Grove there is something else to bring some small comfort: the Archbishop Damiano school.' Run by Father Dainien O'Shea with the Brothers of St. John of God and a staffaf teenage voluilteers, the s~hool's program is unique. . It takes infant children into its'Summer program as early as two weeks old and teaches them until they reach the age of .' three-and-a-qalf. The school, which is maintained by an annual charity campaign and the fund-raising effort of the par~nts, brings geneticists, psychologists, social workers and other experts in the field of retardation to talk to the parents so they have a better, understanding of the child and the problem. Father Damien, explaining' the school's pre-school-age program, commented: "These children are ~Iow learners in varying degrees. One cannot start too early in stimulating them educationally, socially, and maturationally." Volunteer Help .The school 'also helps the parents feel, that they are not alone with their problem, that there' are parents with similar or greater problems, that many professional people are prepared to help them, and that much can be done to assist their children. "We. emphasize that their children are more like than unlike normal children," Father Damien
Quiet Revolution In Rhodesia GWELO (NC)-,A Swiss' priest and an English Jesuit Brother are leading a quiet economic rev'olution here in Rhodesia by teaching African tribesmen to help themselves through savings clubs or credit unions. Father, Joseph' Elsener and Brother' Waddilove have hepled tribesmen· form 14 such' dubs in the Archdiocese of Salisbury and the, Gwelo diocese. The funds accumulated in the savings clubs are to be used to build community granaries for the storage of grain for more than two' years, to build large and small dams and to implement irrigation projects so that several crops a year can be grown.
Day of PiToyer \ug. 3Q--Our Lady of Assumption, New Bedford. Our Lady of Mount Carmel~" Seekonk. Aug. 23-our Lady of Grace, North Westport. St. John the Baptist, Central Village.
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Visitation Slst-ers Examine" New Possibilities for Active Apostolate
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says. He advises parents to "mother but don't, smother the child."" " Because of the volunteer; help of mothers and volunteer ,teen,agers" the school has been' able to accept every child who has applied for pre-school education. Unfortunately, this is not; true of the, regular school whichteaches', trainable and educable retarded' and brain-damaged children. The school was built to instruct 80 students. Becau~e 9f the need it has admitted ,90-and there is a waiting list of 400..., Father' Dil mien has hopes of enlarging the school, which charges no. tuition· or bus fare, and maybe with the combination of' prayers, Irish luck' and', the dedication of the Brothers, parents and teenagers, those dreams will be~ome -reality.
Coyle Class 16:0 Plans Reunion:
VIENNA' (NC) ~ When St. Federation Sisters also, agreed Francis de' Sales ,founded the then that the divine office, reVisitation Order in 1610, he en-.. cited in the vernaclular, would visioned a group of religious replace the office of the Blessed women supplementing lives of Virgin Mary, and decided to exprayer by visiting the sick and periment with formation centers for training new candidates. poor, But this m0r:!th's institute emBut French socidy could not accept Sisters braving the ghet- phasizes goals and philosophies tos, so Visitandines bec'tlme clois- over techqical changes. tered nuns. 'Generous, Courageous' The founder's unique approach Purpose of the, meeting is "to to religious life was remembered, ,apply the principles of St. Franhowever, and when the Visita- cis de Sales to the contemporary tion"order was established in the situation," said Sister Marie U. S. in 1799, the first nuns lived Therese Rl,1thmann, teacher at in, a cloister but conducted Academy of the Visitation in St. schools as, well. ' Louis, Mo., one of those attendAnd during a 12-day instit-ute ing, "We're going to look to th'e at St. Joseph Seminary here in past to solve the problems of West Virginia, modern Visitan- the present in terms of the dines examin'ed new possibilities fU,ture," she said. for the active apostolate of the " 'A panel of 13 theologians was semi-contemplative order today. 'invited to the institute to help "The Visitation has been Visitation Sisters define the awash on the waves of renewal cdnterriplative's role in the modand adaptation, failing often to ern world. "Because we love our commudifferentiate between the essential and the non-essential," Sis- nities, because we love our Sister Mary Regina McCabe, presi- ters," Sister Regina said in her dent of the order's second feder- keynote, address, "we are deteration, told those attending the mined to be ,what St. Francis de institute. ' Sales wanted us to be: daughters Sister Regina said Visitandines of the Church-generous, courahad been "distressed and dis- geous, apostolic communities of turbed by social, psychological prayer, full of faith and hope in and emotional reactions that the future ':' * * more orientated cloud understanding ana create by the future Ulan conditioned by the past." unnecessary confusion."
ARCHBISHOP COUSINS The class of 1960 of Monsi~nor James Coyle High School, TllUnton will celebrate its 10th anniversary reunion on' Saturday night, Aug. 29 at the Venu~ de Milo in Swansea, I Reservations should be made by Saturday, Aug. 22 by contactMILWAUKEE (NC)-Milwauing James W. Coyne, Jr., RFD kee's Archbishop William E. Trial Period Cousins said he will serve No', 3, Buzzards Bay 02532. ', One Visitation nun at the inf "strictly as an advisor" in his A check or money order O 'th S I t stitute said Sister Regina was t per couple shou'ld be', en- new pos WI erra n erna$ 12.00 '\; tional, a laity group devoted to referring to the reluctance of closed with each reservation. fostering vocations to the priest-, some houses to accept post VatA cocktail hour will start at hood and religious life. ican II' renewal and eOl)fu!;iipn 7 and the dinner: will follo"¥. '''~~', He succeeds 'Cardinal John about the be,st chC\nges to adopt. Co'dy of Chicago',' who served Mo're than '170 riu'ns 'from " for five years as the movement's throughout the. U. S.-half the " 'W'W episcopal advisor~ order's second, federation-atWith' the increasing decline tended the 12·day meetin~. The in the number of seminarians second federation consists of the RICHMOND (NC)-Virgir\ia's today, the Serra movement now, 14 U. S. monasteries with exteGov. Linwood Holton announced faces the greatest task in its rior apostolates. The order's first federation is seven strictly conplans to take, couit action in: an history, the archbishop said. effort to prevent the busing of "I would -like to see the au- templative houses. Virginia pupils to comply with ton(!lmous character\ of the iay In October, 1966 the second federally-ordered school integra- movement continuing without federation initiated a trial period tion. ' any interference., I see myself _ still in effect _ to examine At the same time, the Republi- available to d,iscuss policies but '. cloister rules and renewal before not to impose my views on the' can governor refused to take any board of directors. This is a lay , revising the order's constitutions. state action on the issue, reject- 'organization that looks to its ing a citizens' group plea to \'do own convictions,'" he said. ,Bill Bans Juarez whatever possible" to prevent the busing. : 'Quickie' Divorces "I can't ask you, to agree with MEXICO CITY (NC)-Presi'my decision and I won't ~sk dentGus~ayo D'iaZ Ordaz, 'who you," Holton'told the Richmdnd will finish his term on Dec. I, citizens' gr<;>up, ,_representatives. The Priests' Study Group has has proposed legislation which "But I'll ~sk you to believe that elected the following slate of of- would place Mexican residency I'm doing what is considered b~s~ ficers for the coming year: Rev. under federal control and as a to meet this' problem." Kevin F. Tripp, St. Patrick's, Fall consequence eliminate the famed Holton, whose children would "quickie" divorces 'for foreigners River, president; Rev. Edmund J. be affected by using plans proin Ciudal,! Juarez, , Fitzgerald, Holy Name, Fall Rivposed for the city of Richmond, Under the present law, resiadded "No parents in the w~st er, vice-presi~ent; Rev. Robert dency can be established in the end of Richmond are more c<;m- J, Carter, Sacred Heart, Fall Rivstate of Chihuahua by merely er, secretary; Rev. Henry S. Arcerned than Mrs. Holton and 11." signing the registry book in ruda, St. John of God, Somer~et, Ciudad Juarez, across the border treasurer. Nec.rology The executive board is com~ from El Paso, Texas. ' posed of Rev. Msgr: John E. , At least 45,000 marriages were' AUG. 23 , terminated in Juarez last year by Rev. Thomas Clinton, 1895, Boyd, St. Patrick's, Fall River; foreign "residents," many of 'Rev. James F. Lyons, St. Mary's. Pastor, St. Peter, Sandwich. " Taunton; Rev~ Bento R. Fraga, whom spent fewer than 24 hours : AUG. 24 ' St. Joseph's, Taunton; Rev. Wil- in Mexico. Rev.' Peter J.B. Bedard, 1884, liam W. Norton, St. Mary's Home, Founder, Notre Dame, Fall River. New Bedford. ' The' group sponsors monthly AUG. 27 Wilfred C. Rt. Rev. Francisco C. Bett~n study days for the continuing S(!d~DVClln Driscoll court, 19~O, Pastor, San,to education of priests and during the course of a year, speakers in Christo,' Fal} River. I, the fields of theology and liturgy share their ideas with the group. THE ANCHOR ' 469, LOCUST STREET Second Class Postage Paid at Fall RiJer, Mass;, Published every Thursday at 410 The schedule for' the coming FALL RIVER, MASS. Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass. 02722 year is now in the planning by the Cahtolic Press oI the Diocese of Fall 672-3381 River. Subscription price by mail, postpaid stage. $4.00 per year.
Archbishop New Serra Advi.sor
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Priests' Study 'Group, Elects'
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Pope's Message Praises Japan's love of P'eace
THE ANCHOR--
Thurs., Aug. 20, 1970
India Nuns Start Export Tfltide
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope' Paul VI has paid' tribute to Japan's firm dedication to peace "ever since the end of the tragic Pacific war." The, Pope's good wishes for Japan were read by Cardinal Paolo Marella, at EXPO 70 at Osaka on the occasion of the day dedicated to the Holy See which has one of the pavilions at the fair. The letter to Cardinal Marella, who was sent to the fair as the Pope's special envoy, read in English: "Your visit as our special representative to the World Exposition at Osaka offers us the welcome occasion to express our warm good -wishes, to the beloved people of Japan. \'The Japanese nation presents to the world the admirable spectacle of a people preserving its traditional heritage as well as looking for means of ever greater advance in all sectors. Surely this would not be possible with~ out the atmosphere of freedom prevailing in the country. "At the same time, Japan has ever since the end of the tragic Pacific war remained firmly dedicated'to the principle of peacefulness in international relations. Evidence of
COCHIN (NC)-A group of sari-clad young Sisters here has started a promising export trade in products made from local fibres that were once discarded as waste, The trade has so far brought nearly $7,000 to Vimalalayam, the sister$' convent factory here, and $6,750 in valuable foreign exchange to the Indian government. Export orders for an equal amount' are now being pro路cessed. Vimalalayam is the local house for the Daughters of the Heart of Mary, a worldwide congregation introduced to Kerala in 1961. Until that time, this little state on the southwestern coast of India was putting to use only one fibre coiro Banana fibre was used in ancient times in India, but the industry has been extinct for years. The Sisters not only revived the banana fibre industry, but set to work on several other路 fibres that were locally available.
Ce~ebrates
Mass For Road! SCIlfety
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Progr~ss
"The spirit of freedom and peace, so essential to all authentice Christianity, together with the proverbial industriousness of the Japanese people, may explain to a great extent the economic prosperity of the country and its technological progress, of which the present World Exposition presents such overwhelming evidence. "We heartily wish that the well-being of this' nation may continue and increase and that the moral principles of its peoples may be strengthened more in their hearts. "We pray for them to have in abundance DivIne enlightenment, that the national wealth be shared in the name of social justice, by as many of the people as possible, and that the great nation may wisely and generously use its skill and resources to assist in the name of international justice many less fortunate countries in the world. "With this hope in our heart we invoke upon the noble people of Japan the choicest blessings of the most high."
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NEW PRIESTS: Bishop Connolly ordained two men to the priesthood for the Diocese on August-16 in St. Mary's Cathedral in Fall River. Left to right, Rev. Edward J. Byington, Bishop Connolly and Rev. William T., Babbitt.
lNVERMAY (NC)-There are Red Mass~s, Blat:k Masses, Poor Man's Masses, and so on. Now Australia has added one more to the list-an Anti-Smash Mass. It was celebrat~d in St. Finbar's church here and featured prayers and a sermon on highway safety. The congregation included police, ambuIancemen, drivers, car salesman, mechanics and others involved in the motor industry, and road safety. For 10 days before the Mass, a crashed car with a coffin on its hood occupied the front area of the church.
Preserve Schools Chicago Official Sees Increased .Enthusiasm Among Laymen
CHICAGQ (NC) - There is a movement growing in the Chicago area that has nothing to do with war, peace, civil rights or student power and yet it's still concerned with a type of crisis: At a time when the news media bring continuihg reports of Catholic school shutdowns across the nation, there appears to be a mounting enthusiasm among Catholic laymen in the Catholics Protest archdiocese to help preserve Hinduism in Liturgy their neighborhood parish schools CALCUTTA (NC)-The Cath- through work in local school olics of India were asked to op- boards. pose the "Hinduization" of the Father Patrick Farrell', 32liturgy in .a statement. issued by year-Old assistant superintendent the Catholic Association of Ben- of Catholic schools here, simply gal. does not believe that Catholic The association's protest, schools are on their way out or against "attempts being made to that the demand for Catholic edimplement changes in the Mass ucation is significantly diminintroducing gestures and symbols ish~d .. only from Hinduism in the name "I've just seen too much eviof'Indianization" was sent to the dence," he said, "that makes me Vatican, to Archbishop Lemieux Marie Joseph, apostolic pronun路 believe that ,Catholics, by and cio to India, Cardinal Valerian large, do want Catholic schools Gracias of Bombay, Archbishop and are willing to s'upport Lawrence Pi~hachy, -S.J., of Cal- them,': cutta and Archbishop Duraisamy In discussing the ,current stress Lourdusamy of Bangalore, presi- on formation of school boards in dent of the liturgical commission the Chicago archdiocese, Father of the Indian Bishops' Confer- Farrell was asked if this was simply not a last ditch effqn to ence.
find some way to salvage Catholic schools. Positive Values "If w~at you're suggesting is that we should have been doing what we're now doing 10 years ago, I would have to agree. In fact, it should have been done 20 or 30 years ago," he said. "We've just gone through a decade of public self-study in which we've wrung our hands and beat our brows," he added. "I think it's n'ow time that we stop worrying and concentrate all our efforts on improvement and on stressing the positive values of Catholic education," "If it was just a money problem, our solution would be simple: shut down the schools. In fact, we've had to fight some pastors wlJ,o've wanted to do just that, even though the parishioners felt otherwise. "What we're concerned about," he said, "is whether the Catholic people value Catholic education. I've talked with just too many of them to not be aware of a very real desire to see Catholic schools continue. They know that our schools are valuecentered. We stress Christian formation of children without apologizing for our Catholicity."
STONEHILL COLLEGE OPENS 'IN
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The Dean StonehiU EVENING College North Easton, Mass. 02356 Phones: Easton: 238路2052; Boston: 696-0400
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Orders- Pries,t..
,THE ANCHOR·-
Thurs., Aug. 20, 1970
To Testify'
,Expect Arrivo I 'Of Bishop Wal.s~ In Rom'e Aug. 24
LONDON (NC) - A London high court judge hus ruled that a priest acting as a marriage guidance counsellor is not privileged to refuse evi'dence on secrets ROME (NC),-American ,misconfide'd to him by husband and \vife, ' , sionary Bishop James' E. Walsh, freed last month by Communist' Father Francis Handley of the China, is expected to fly here Ma~riage Advisory Catholic Aug. 24 from Hong Kong if his Council, London, applied unsuchealth allows him to' travel that cessfully to the judge to sd soon. aside a subpoena ordering him to Should the 79-year-old Marygive evidence in a nullity suit. It knoll prelate be in fact what has had been served on behalf of been speculated, since his refease Dr. Joseph Cyril Pais, a univer-one of two men nam~1.t cardisity lecturer in' London, who was nal last year by Pope Paul VI "in petitioning fur a nullity decree • pectore," orin the secret of the against his wife Mary on the , Pope's: heart - the visit would grounds of n'on-cons'ummation. provide dramatic occasion for , Father Handley had had prithe pontiff to declare the bish. vate meetings with both parties op's elevation publicly. in the nullity. suit. The husband, Maryknoll ofii~ials in Rome wanted him to tell the court POSTAL LEGISLATION SIGNED: President 'Richard M. Nixon 'enjoys a laugh with said arrangements were being what had been said at these made for Bishop Walsh to reach Postmaster General Wiriton M. Blount at th Post Office Department after signing legis- meetings. Mrs,. Pais objected. here Aug. 24 and see Pope Paul, lation which completely :restructures the nation'!:! postal service, Blount is holding replicas Mr. Justice Baker, the judge, then c~mtinue on to the United of the seals 'of the old Post Office Department and the new P9stal Service, which are re- rejecting the priest's plea said: States. produc~d in background: Others in picture, left to fight: former Postmasters General J. "In my judgment it is not the A Maryknoll spokesman, here Edward Day, James A. Farley, Arthur E. Summerfield and Lawrence F. O'Brien. NC. law of this country that a privsaid Father John J. McCormack, ilege attaches to a priest or superior general of the order, other professional, man or any would be arriving Aug. 22 and other marriage guidance coun, . that' the Vatican has already sellor as such. Such a privilege I been notified of 'Bishop Walsh's would be putting the conciliator tentati~e arrival two days later. I on a far higher and' different plane f,rom the lawyer. CommuElevation 'Probable' CHICAGO (NC) - A career similar position for 12 years at' throuJh s~olarships, grants, nications between lawyer and Plans were said to depend on veteran in the college edudtion Marquette' UniversitY1 Milwau- loans and through student em- client !ire ,privileged, but the the bishop's' ability to make the " financial field said here that kee. Both' institutions' ,are con- ployment, while two indirect privilege is that of the client. methods are through company long flight westward from Hong "there simply is no student '!who ducted by Jesuits. "In communications between tuition payments' and money Kong, where he has been re- can say legitimately that he :canFinancial Need Key , priest and spouses-I am dealing from the GI Bill of Rights, he cuperating at a Maryknoll hos- not afford to go to college:": only with, cases of conciliationsaid. pital since his 12-year imprisonJim Dwyer, 40, who directs All it takes, Dwyer said, is deDwyer said he is' convinced the, privilege is that of the ment ended unexpectedly' July' that field of activity at Loyola - sire and legwork.' He pointed out that in too many instances, fam· spou~c, not the priest." lQ . Univers{ty here, hedged just a that considerable money 'curSeveral reports out of Rome bit however. ' rently iS,available in four m~jor ilies deprive themselves of availin the past month have said that He said a st.udent must have federal government programs;' in able tuition: funds because they Mark Anniversary, Bishop Walsh "will probably be the college entrance' schol~~iic certain key state plans; through have. not ,investigated methqds Of Bomber Crash " proclaim~d a' cardinal" and that requirement. 'He added thefe is individual colleges and universi~ 'of obtaining funds, 'are 'soJ:I\eNEW YORK . (NC)-A Mass, times too proud to take money, it would happen "within a short no guarantee a student ~ould ties and through a, number' Qf feel the effort to get money is concelebrated in 5t. Francis of time." An unnamed Vatican- enroll in the college of his :first private organiza!ions. based cardinal reportedly had choice. The key element 'in most, if too inconvenient,' or simply be- Assisi church here by Bishop Edcause they make erroneous as-' ward E. Swanstrom, executive said it was "98 per cent probBut he said whether a student 'riot all, ot these programs is able" that Bishop Walsh is al- is from an inner city' poverty financial need,' he said. The sumptions about their own eli- director of Catholic Relief Services, and other CRS officials ready considered a cardinal by, stricken family or from ari afflu- added factor is that a reasonable gibility for receiving, funds. mar,ked the 25th anniversary of the Pope but is yet unaware of enL suburban family, therei are degree of academic 'potential for Major Programs a bomber's crash into the, orit. . quite a few ways open tOi get success in college be shown, he ganization's..$mpire State BuildOn "It would be nice," said a the federal level, he cited him througll college. I' added. ing headquarters. Maryknoll official. "but Bishop major programs that exist: I "Those people who really: beFour central methods of ab· , Walsh is not the kind of a perFourteen people, 11 of them The National Defense Student , lieve that it's impossible to go to taining college tuition funds are son who would enjoy such an Loan Program. Available, to employees of CRS's pregecessor, honor. The only person who college because of lack of m~>ney graduate students and under- the War Relief ServiceS office, really knows is the Pope him- either are naive or they've made Seek Accreditation graduates, it is a loan repayment died when a B-25 Army bomber no efforts or inquiries into the. self." plan that begins after a student crashed into the massive buildsituation," said Dwyer, whd be- For CYO Coaches finishes school. Included in the ing's 79th floor in 1945. Historic Practice fore coming to LOYOla, held a ST. LOUIS (NC)-The Catho- plan is a stipulation that allows A survivor trapped near, the I lic Youth Organization has be- students to cancel their debt by flaming wreckage for more than The practice of naming a cari . planning an accreditation working as teachers after gradu- an hour commented that she still d'lnal "in pectore," which is Book Hotels, Motels gun' program for its athletic coaches ation. Latin for: "in the breast," is behad "a vivid memory of the acwho train thousands of younglieved to go back to the time of For Pope' S V"151lt' , jI The' Educational Opportunity tual experience." Pope Martin V (1417-1431). HisGrant Program. This is solely SYDNEY (NC) - Most h9tels sters throughout the nation. torians ,say 'he may have started a'nd motels in Sydney ani al"The primary objective of the for, undergraduate students with the expedient to avoid having to, ready booked for' the period ex- new program is to select and re- exceptional financial need and request the votes of existing car- pected to include Pope pkul's tain coaches who possess the entails outright gift assistance. dinals for some possibly unpop- visit here in November. i The College Work-Study Proquailities of Christian leadership, ular choices of candidates. The 'announcement of i the sportsmanship and citizenship gram. This is contingent on a J, TESER, Prop. Pope Pius IX in March 1875 Pope's visit sparked off a ~ran which will guide the youth of ,stUdent 'Working part time, and RESIDENTIAL announced he was creating sev- ' tic rush for accomodations by this country to become respon-, preference is given to students INDUSTRIAL eral "in pectore" cardinals tour operators, passenger :car- sible adults in the image of from low income families. EarnCOMMERCIAL whose names he would write riers and travel agents,acc()~ding Christ," said Howard Cusick. He' ings will vary according to the 253 Cedar St., New Bedford dO,wn in his will. 'Papal advisors to Hospitality, a public':ation of ,is program director cif Philadel- needs of the student. The bene993-3222 pointed out, ,however, that post- the hotel and catering business. phia's CYO and a member of the fit of this program is that it conI ###############~~( humous publication might not IJe One travel agency even I ad- National Committee for Accred- trols.a student's work hours-an recognized as a pontifical act, vertised its "See Pope Paul iri' 'itation of CYO Coaches. average '15 hours per week-and and might be declared invalid. Sydney" itinerarY. in newspapers gives a student greater opportuThe ,new accreditation pro- nity to get a worthwhile job. To ,avoid that possibility, Pius a few days after it was reported " , ' I gram was decided upon during a IX disclosed the names six that the Pope would be corping months later in a consistory. here. The' official date for 'I the , three-day meeting here of repreThe devic,e is used by popes, visit has not yet. been announced. sentatives from nine of the largOIL COMPANY The big motels and hotel~, in est CYO programs in the counwhen they feel that political, personal or ecclesiastaical cir- this City are completely booked try, cumstances would, bring harm to out for the end of November with Cusick reported that "coaches Est. 1897 ; the man or,his people if disclo- heavy bookings already recofded who spoke at- the national consure of his elevation were for suburban and seaside' motels. ference have agreed that an ac, Builders Supplies made public. Imprisonment by The travel agendes have' been creditation program is necessary 2343 Purchase Street South • Sea Streets civil authorities to block a bish- making block bookings; .orie to set high standards and to New Bedford op from leading his people is re- agency alone has' reserved 477 keep the' CYO program first,Hyannis Tel. 49·81 996-5661 garded a major reason. beds in motels and hotels. ' class."
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Minnesota Court Upholds State's Fair Bus Law ST. PAUL (NC)-The Minnesota Supreme Court has unanimously upheld the constitutiunality of the state's 1969 fair bus law. The courl's opinion, however, included stl'Ongly-worded indications that further state aid to non public education would require a constitutional amendment. In holding the law valid, the high court's opinion, written by Associate Justice James Otis, ~aid, "We do so with the conviction that this legislation brings us to the brink of unconstitutionality. " The busing law, which became mandatory, Aug. J!), requires schoOl districts that receive state busing aid to provide transportation to non public school students, St. Paul and Minneapoli~~ are among several school districts that do not receive state transportation aid and, as a result are not affected by the court's decision.. The 20-page opinion said if the slate further supports parochial schools "the danger of a. breach of the impregnable wall between church and state is sufficiently real to suggest the necessity of a constitutional amendment." Troublesome Issue While not wanting to "prejudge" the constitutionality of any olher form of aid, the court said the bus law brings the state to the ·.'ve~ge .of.unconstitutional· ity." . The high' court tested Minne· sita's bus law against both the federal and state constitutions. The "most troublesome issue" was to determine if the law violated the church-state section of the Minnesota constitution. The problem for the high court centered around whether the law directly supported religion or whether religious institutions were only incidentially benefited by !I law relating to the public welfare. The court's opinion relied heavily on a landmark decision in the 1947 Everson case. In that suit the U.S. Supreme Court found that any state authorizing public funds for sectarian busing did not violate the first amendment. Children, Parents Benefit Reviewing cases from appelate courts in other states as well as several U.S. Supreme Court cases, Minnesota's opinion said, "the thrust of these decisions is that whatever support is given to sectarian schools is incidental and that the children and their parents are the real beneficiaries of public funds."
THE ANCHORThurs" Aug. 20, 1970
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Pontiff Defines Teacher's Role
BLESSING OF FLEET IN ECUMENICAL VEIN: Rev. John F. Hogan, administrator of St. Julie Parish, No. Dartmouth and director of the New Bedford Welfare Bureau, is joined by Rev. Constantine Bebis, pastor of the Greek Orthodox Church, New Bedford and Rev, John Nieman of the Trinity Lutheran Church, Fairhaven in the first blessing of the New Bedford Fleet in conjunction with the "Whaling City Festival."
School Faces Loss of Accreditation Report
Critici~es
MILWAUKEE (NC) - Marquette University is on the verge of losing accreditation for its School of journalism. , .The blow to the journalism school's prestige has come at the hands of a three-member investigating team from the American Council on Education in Journalism. ' Marquette has the third oldest college journalism course in the country, preceded only by programs at the Universities of Missouri and Wisconsin. Marquette's course was tegun in 1915. The investigating team made its report following a visit to the university several months ago. The council reached its decision after making evaluations about the journalism school's physical facilities, quality of instruction, and salaries among other factors. Serious doubts reportedly were raised by the team in all areas. Plan Appenl Schools meeting council standards are recommended by the team for accreditation. Team visits take place every five or six years and include talks with faculty members, students and administrators. Marquette officials say they will appeal -the ruling when the council meets again in Chicago during October. Clifford L. Helbert, dean of the college said, however, "We
Although, according to the court, the law may encourage Schedule Jerusalem parochial school attendance, its Scripture Seminar "purpose and primary effect" is ROME (NC)-The World Cathnot to benefit religion. olic Federation of' the Biblical "There can be little question 'Apostolate announced that its that school-age children are "first big venture" will be an intransported more efficiently, ex- ternational seminar, on sacred peditiously and safely by public scripture next Summer in Jerubuses than they would be if left salem. to their own resources. The federation, founded one "On this basis, and to the ex- year ago, said eacll bishops' content that busing does not direct- ference will be asked to' sponsor ly involve support of the educa- a delegate to the seminar, to be tional process, we find that stat- held the last ·week of June and the first week of July, 1971. ute valid," the court said..
Marqu'ette Journalism
are not satisfied with the report. We believe we have grounds for an appeal, and we are going to appeal." A former dean; Jeremiah L. O'Sullivan, would not comment on the report because he said he wasn't familiar 'with it. "But if the school isn't in shape to be accredited, it's something to be concerned about," he said. "The physical facilities are the main problem I know about. Until the school has adequate financial support and better facilities, it can't operate efficiently." . The council president, Frank Ahlgren, indicated that the school's chances for"a successful appeal are rather dim. Successful Graduates He pointed out that in his seven years as president of the group no appeal has succeeded in being reversed and findings reevaluated. "It is unlikely," he said, "that the findings of the team will be changed." Marquette, should it lose its
Charitable Agencies Play the Horses SYDNEY (NC)-Two charitable agencies here are playing the horses this Summer-and they can't lose. But they will need a tipster's luck to win. Australians try almost anything for charity-walkathons, 1;wimathons, bingo, raffles, even wine-tasting competitions-and now the local Daily Telegraph has worked up a scheme with a local bookmaker· to help the Loreto Home for the Elderly Sick and a non-denominational charity' organization called the Smith ,Family. The newspaper's racing tipster is placing bets on horses he, picks. The bookmaking firm of Bill and Hugh McHugh will pay off on winners, and pick up the tab for losses. Any profits at the end of the season will be divided between the two charities, Results after the first day: the charities: are' $20 down!
appeal, may ask for -another evaluation after 18 months. According to Ahlgren, loss of accreditation usually means that a university's journalism school will face greater difficulty in at· tracting high quality students, loss of some. scholarships, and may cause problems for an alumnus seeking job or admittance to a graduate school. Many of Marquette's journalism graduates may be found employed on prelitigious daily newspapers in Chicago, Milwaukee, Washington, on the Wall Street Journal, among others. The council investigating team was led by Frank Senger, journalism chairman at Michigan State University, along with Charles E. Barnum, managing editor of the Quincy, Ill., Herald-' Whig, and William A. Hall, Ohio State University journalism school director.
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Heads See's Office Of Communications CLEVELAND (NC)-Father Joseph H. Kraker has been appointed diocesan director of the newly established Cleveland diocesan communications department. He will continue as assistant chancellor and director of the news bureau and head of the new department which will centralize all communication resources in the diocese. It will incorporate the bureau, media relations and col1aboration with the diocesan newspaper, the Universe Bulletin.
CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) The modern, Catholic teacher must give' his students a knowledge superior to that given' in previous decades, Pope Paul VI has told' the convention of the World Union of Catholic Teachers in Montreal. In a message sent by. the Papal Secretary of State, Cardinal Jean Villot" the Pope said this must be done despite a sudden change in the language of yest~rday which is unacceptable tu today's youlh. "The entire art of the teacher consists in ardently adapting his melhods whenever it is necessary to assure the faithful transmission of what is being taught," the Pope said, In still another warning, Pope Paul urged Catholic teachers to reconcile for the young the paradoxes of today. He listed these as authority and liberty, openness opposed to faithfulness, unity versus pluralism and autonomy and adaptation. He added that if these demands were placed on teachers in general, it was more important for the Catholic teacher to be aware of them and to cope successfully with them. Pope Paul reminded the dele.gates to the congress that mere k!,!owledge can never enlighten man in' his esssential problem areas, "his origin, his destiny, his llature, his' rights and his . obligations." The .Pope said that it was "here that there was apparent in all its grandness the magnificent and irreplaceable role of the teacher~"
Foundations Assist Ecumenical Agency VATICAN CITY (NC)-An international ecumenical agency dedicated to peace and justice for all men has received substantial grants from German and U.S. fOundations to continue its dialogue 'and action 'around the world. The Ford Foundation and a Swiss-based German foundation, Humanum, have donated a total of $240,250 for the year 1970 to the Committee on Society: Development and Peace, an agency cosponsored by the World Council of Churches and t:ie Pontifical Commission on Justice and Peace of the Holy See.
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Blasts Nudity
THE ANcHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 20, 1970
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Festivals Some writers have tried to picture rock festivals as innocent gatherings of lovely young people indulging in harmless pursuits' while listening to their kind of music turning them on. "
If such festivals were this-then let's have more of them. The reality is far different. They usually begin ~s schemes of promoters looking for a 'dollar and quite willing to exploityoutb in obtaining the same. Many times, the various groups hired, to play are of , the same ilk"-taking the money and not· showing up~ No provisions are made for hygenie;'conditions at: the festival site. ' Many of the young peopl~ attending·.the festivaltare there because they want to hear rock '·lnllSic. Some i are drawn by the' desire for ,companionship. But what can be said of those-far 'too many-who come to indulge themselves in an orgy of sex and dI}lgs. Within a very few hours the festival site become~ a hqrror ' of bad trips a,nd sexual,license, a hygenic, nightmare. I
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COl1lgr'ess, Delegation
chan, and pansexualism." (Pansexualism is the 'belief that all pleasure, desire and interest are derived from the sexual instinct.) Following the speech, the Italian press was quick to speculate that, by displays of naturalism, the Pope meant the International Naturist Congress at Orpington, England attended by 1,700 per,sons. The Italian press carried a picture of an Anglican priest (clothed) conducting a religious service for nude worshipers. The Vatican City daily, in its article, specifically blasted the meeting at Orpington for 'its contention that collegial' life without the benefit of clothing is, a proper way of existence' or even the only and best way' to ' enjoy the sunshine. L'Osserva~ore Romano, takjn~ a !fIore scatter-gun approach to the problem than did the Pope,. listed as examples of a declin- " ing morality international por-" nographic exhibitions and the, gath~ring of "thousands and thousands of young people in sexual freedom and complete nakedness." The article attributed ·this wave of sexual freedom not only to the perennial antiChristian sentiment to be found in the world, but also to the "rebellion and contestation which find their nourishment in every expression of the "negative' and avail themselves of any means to overthrow the existing'order." L'Osservatore Romano qU9ted the independerit "La Stampa" of ·Turiri' as 'blaihfntf ·the •A:meriean 'theater.' for· ·tli,e'" prevale'nc'e 'of nakedness\ toda'y." La" Stampa said 'that nak,edness in the theater began with the production of "Hair," was followed by "Oh, Calcutta," and that "today the whole world follows th~ American ~xample." The Vatican City newspaper also condemned the big busiriess of erotic periodicals. "Their success is·due to their very unscrupulous pictures as welr'as -their awful texts and their offers of the filthiest personal merchandise," ,the paper said.
tionships," Rev. Henry P. OueContinued from Page One There is nothing innocent about this. lette. , I That Hopes", Dr. Donald Gray. Mr. Albert L. Gallant There is nothing edifying or even entertaining about Rev. John Steakem, "Teaching "Drugs: What You Don't Know this. About Other Faiths," Rev. Lionel. I ' Blain; "Discovery of Hope"-Mr. Can Hurt You," Rev. Archangel Sica & Miss Ann Curry. ' There is nothing attractive about young people throw- Robert Strobridge. ' The Congress is being hosted ing, away standards and values and risking their spiritual Rev. Thpmas Mayhew-"The this, yearby Bishop McVinney. and emotional and mental health. Future of Penance," Rev. Wm. It is sponsored annually by the Fletcher; "Ideas of God Today," Confraternity of Christian Doc'. A Christian does not find this harmless., Rev. Donald Kehew. trine Directors of, all 11 New Mrs. Mary Fuller-"Preparing England 'Dioceses. " Rather, he grieves that youVg people can be so conThrough" approxfmately ,90 fused and a source of such damage to themselves. !\nd Children for the Eucharist," Sr. John Julie, S.N.D.; '''Psychiatric he realiz~s-sadly-that Christianity has fa~ ~? ,8,0' a~:<I_I~a,~; Insights into Religion,": Dr. Beryl ..seinin.ars ,ilri4, ,w'orkshopsbei"g led by, some .of,the',(op. ~?fP~r~s after all, made such little .impact upon men. Orris. ' ' ' .. ,in the field, the Co~gr;essw.i11 Mr. Elmer Cunriingham-"Be- examine the future of religious coming a Person," Rev., Walter education through programs on Imbiorski; "Life, Love & Joy," theological and moral theory as Dr. Christiane Brusselmans·., well as teaching methods. Theme of this year's, Congress is "The Charles. Landry "DisMrs. It may seem naive to some and even, childlike to talk covery of God Through Contem- 70's: Decaqe of Hope.!' of offering up discoQlforts',' but this always has been I and porary Music," Rev. John Radice Parents, religion' teachers, , : , & Rev. Thomas Miller; "The CCD officials, parish education still remafn's a means of sanctity.' Intimidated Parent,!' Mr. Rod committe,e members and others The acceptance of pain that caimotbe avoided, the of- Brownfield., . interested in the subject will atfering of this in union with the cross of Christ, the giving . Sister Alice O'Brien, O.L.V.M. tend the Congress. it to God in atonement of sins and for the strengthehing -"Race: Solutions to the Prob, of will-power against sin-all this cav give a meaning' to , lem," Mr. Archie Dickerson. Ousted Priest Says I the JTlystery of suffering. MarthaWi;>rdeman, Sr. , , ! O.LV.M.-"The Religious Psy- Protest Useless During these hot humid days of August, the wea,ther chology of the Adolescent," Bro. BLOOMFIELD HILLS (NC) can be turned to spiritual profit just by offering it up in Mark DePietro, F.S.C. Speaking' out publicly in South ' this way. Rev. James A. Clark-"Peace Africa against that country's polContinued from Page One in the 70's," Prof. Gordon Zahn; icy of strict racial segregation is A'little thing, perhaps; indeed, maybe it sounds s6me- "After Drugs-What?" Rev. Paul not 'going to change the hearts assistant professor and then full what naive-but' of such things is sanctity made. I of very many people there, an '\professor in the department of Shanley. ' Episcopal priest who was forced sociology at St. Louis University. Rev. John J. Smith-"TeachIn an age that puts such stress on love of God,- then er-Pupil & Parent-Child Rela- to leave South Africa told NC Father Thomas is the author one has the right to expect this love to be put tOI the . News. of nine books dealing with martest. And the one test of love is sacrifice. There is -no other. The priest, Father C. Richard riage and a contributor of nui Striking Women find Cadigan,' from the' Protestant merous articles in the field of It is easy to talk of love. It is quite anothe~ thin,g to Episcopal _diocese of Missouri, sociology in journals both in 'Pill': Too, Bitter put ,it into action. visited relatives here in MichiWALSALL (NC)-Women em- gan after his return from .south America and Europe. The Conference will open on ployes of a glove-making firm Africa. Friday, Oct. 16 and the day's here in 'England went on strike The South Africa government because they found 'the com- gave no explanation for its program will consist of registrapany's plans to issue them birth refusal to grant his request tion from 3 to 10 P.M., an execcontrol pills too bitter for them for permanent residence. Father-- utive board meeting, a dinner at -to swallow. The company, Ta- Cadigan said he had refrained 7 followed by a mink style show. rantella, Ltd.,' wanted to pro- from Sessions will be held on Saturpublic comment on vide the pill to the 50 women South African political life dur- day and Sunday and will close • . i • I employes to prevent loss of time ing his stay there. with a concelebrated Mass SunOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER in pregnancy leaves. , " , . , . " But while still in South Afri- , day noon in St. Francis Xavier The women. struck to' protest ca he had said that "as a Chris- Church, Hyannis. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River the firm's decision to' undertak!,! tian" I have not been able to com410 Highland Avenue , I A luncheon will be served folFall River, Mass. 02722 675·7151 ,the ,plan without consulting partmentalize life by putting re- lowing the Mass.' them. ligion into one box, politics in Saturday's sessions will open PUBLISHER "Our sex lives are our own another,' and economics in an- with a business meeting. KathMost Rev. James L. Connolly; D.O., PhD. 'I business," spokesmen for the other. Christianity' has to do leen M. Burke, president' of the women said. "We are giving up with all :of life; God offers the New England Diocesan 'Councils GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER a day's pay, to mark our disap- world through Jesus Christ's re- of Catholic Nurses will preside Rev. Msgr. Daniel F.Shalloo, M.A. 'Rev.. John 'P.. Driscoll . -' . . . i proval of this slur on our reputa- demption; that is to say, the re- anp Mrs. Thomas J. Fleming will ' tions." ordering of the whole world." deliver the address of welcom,e. j
Of- Such 'Things
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Compu,ter-Like ~Ian~,ing Marks. Holy Fatherls Journeys Abro~d· VATICAN CITY (NC)-Getting Pope Paul to the church on time in Manila and Sydney next November is already being planned by a small task force in the Vatican. In fact, every last di::tail of the 20,OOO-mile jaunt - Pope Paul's ninth trip out of Italy since 1964-will be agreed on before he leaves the Vatican and will be followed almost down to the minute he arrives back in his top-floor apartment overlooking St. Peter's Square. To find out how a papal trip is planned, NC News talked with Bishop Paul Marcinkus, whose main job is at the Vatican bank but whose sideline specialty is coordinating with host countries every ,move the Pope makes and working ,with the airlines involved. He makes several advance trips himself before the actual papal vi,sit. "Pope Paul is a simple, ordinary priest who has the responsibility of the papacy," the bishop said from behind a glowing pipe and a pair of hornrimmed glasses. "I think it was before his trip to Bogota that he said the mission of a Pope is no longer confined to the Vatican, but now , he should move out to the world in this age of the jet." Bishop Marcinkus, a 48-yearold native of Cicero, Ill., said that every trip Pope Paul ,has made has been for a religious reason, one that will demonstrate he is first a priest and a bishop. Accordingly, the Pope will not .make a trip, merely as a tourist, or just because. he has not been somewhere, 'or least of all simply as a head of state, but to emphasize that he is a religious man with a mission. Stresses Mission Work
, THE ANCHOR..,., Thur,s., Aug. 20, 1970
Cathol ie Service A.ds Immigrants
presence of the Church universally." Other trips and their motives were: to Geneva to speak for the small' nations and for. the working man in today's society; to the United Nations to encourage creation of a peaceful world order; to Turkey to advance' ecumenism among Christians by visiting the Orthodox' patriarch there. The Pope has also visited Fatima, Portugal, 'and both South America (Bogota, Colombia) arid Africa (Kampala, Uganda).
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Like Other' Passengers Behind the papal trip to the Philippines and Australia is the idea of demonstrating Pope . Paul's desire to work hand in hand with bishops. He will taik with tjle bishops of 13 nations at a Pan-Asian episcopal meeting in Manila and with the bishops of four other nations. at a Sydney meeting. Selection of an airline is usually simple: the Pope flies the most convenient airline. This has' often been the national airline of the country being visited, such as on his trips to Colombia, Portugal, Switzerland and Africa.. Going to the United Nation'>, he left on Alitalia and came back on Trans World (TWA). For the trip in November, it Is almost certain he will stay, with one line to avoid the inconvenience of changing planes, "The Pope i:> a paying passenger just like anyone else," Bish- . O!l Marcinkus explained. "I have most of·the originial tickets 'an(l copies of the others to show that the passenger, Pope Paul VI, is charged the same fare, including' taxes, as anyone else."
Stresses Spanish Laborers' Demands
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SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT: Philip Pacheco receives scholarship aW,ard from Bishop Connolly.
Scholarship Award Santo Christo Parishioner Wins $2 000 Tuition Award to Catholic University 0
Philip Pacheco, son of Frank he has been' active in the Fall and Mary Thomas Pacheco, a River Parish, In addition to his member of Santo Christo parish, duties as secretary of the Santo Fall River has been awarded a Christo CYO, he has served as a $2000 tuition scholarship by teacher in the CCD program and Catholic University, Washington. a lector at Sunday Masses. This scholarship that Catholic While at Durfee High, he won University grants to students in the Class of 1920 history award, dioceses throughout the country was president of the library aides is renewable each year for the and 'a member of the german four-year course. . and history clubs. He was al~o A 1970 graduate of ,B.M.c. a member of the National Honor Durfee High School, Fall River, Society.
WASHINGTON (NC)-ehinese family members .arrive in Los Angeles fresh from Hong Kong with a job and a home waiting for them'~ * ·1' in NE'wark, N. J., an aged Italian sees his brother for the first time in 20 years '-, ':' * in Miami, a destitute Cuban refugee is offered clothing: money and a job plus a promise for more help if needed * '-, " At the Catholic Migration and Refugee Service here, arranging such happenings is an everyday occurrence. About 50 cases 'are handled daily from offices in the United States Catholic Conference. The number goes much higher in New York and Miami headquarters. The 50-year-Old worldwide Migration and Refugee Service operates on a $4 million budget, but its director, John E. McCarthy, said that the service provided to immigrants saveS American taxpayers around $40 mil. lion yearly. The service has volunteers in many Catholic dioceses throughout the country, plus its paid staff, to meet immigrants who may be arriving everywhere from Miami, Fla., to Miami, Ohio. The object of the service is to make certain immigrants have shelter, clothing and food. In most case::>, the service also has a job secured and waiting for the newcomers. "We're in a unique position to help these people," said McCarthy, "because anywhere we have a parish priest, we have a volunteer."
Nashville Newspaper Urges Di.rect Action ,Against Pro-Abortionists
NASHVILLE (NC) ,- Direct, "Look at the trips he has non-violent action against docmade," said the American prelMADRID (NC)-Only through tors and .!lospital~ engaged in ate. "He went to the Holy Land social justice can violence be abortion has been urged by the to get to the sources of our re- avoided, a Catholic 'magazine Tennessee Register, official ligion, to be where Christ suf- generally regarde:l as a spokes- newspaper of the Nashville 'diofered and died. Sure, there was man for the nation's bishops has cese. a eucharistic congress going on declared. The n~wspaper, comparing the in India when he went there, In an editorial the magazine,. spread of legalized abortion in but the Holy Father also wanted the United States 'to the horror to. underscore mission work all Ecclesia, an organ of Catholic state that developed in Nazi that the recent "unAction, said over the world. It was there he Germany, also called for action ordained . bishops, one from expected" disorders in Granada, against legislators who promote which left three workers dead and every continent, to illustrate the' more than 40 persons injured, permissive abortion laws. "What's the difference in killshould teach the nation "the lesChavez Union Wins son that peace cannot be main- ing Jews in a gas chamber and killing babies in the womb?" taine:l through inertia." J u risd ic tiona I Row Ecclesia said the laborers' de- asked the editorial. "In both SALINAS (NC) - The United mands for a $2.43 daily wage cases the state has singled out· Farm Workers Organizing Comwere just, and added that "scar- a class of human beings for mittee has won a jurisdictional cely 30 per cent of the workers slaughter," dispute with the Teamsters Unwere making the legal minimum The editorial, entitled "I Got ion as to who should represent wage (of $1.71 per day.)" . Mother~' and'signed by ediLife field workers in California. tor JosephS'weat, chided humanA pact was signed between, itarians for working against war the Western Conference of Powers of Priests' and capital punishment, but re: Teamsters and UFWOC director fusing to fight legalized abortion. Cesar Chavez which nullifies Senates Limited COLOMBO (NC)-The Vatican "It makes very little sense to contracts already signed between the Teamsters and growers in has disapproved a pr.oposal by worry about' the 40,000 of our the Salinas Valley and other the Church in Ceylon to invest young men who have been killed priests' senates in this country in Vietnam when it's estimated coastal valleys of California. with' policy_making powers. that in New York alone 100,000 The signing took place here In a communication to Cardi- children will be' killed in aborat a press conference called by the U. S. Bishops' Ad Hoc Com- nal Thomas Cooray, O.M.!., of tion mills," the newspaper said. "And it's just dumb to get ex-' mittee on Farm Labor. The com- Colombo, the secretary of the mittee, through its chairman, Congregation for the Evangeli- cited about a" fellow 'getting Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Don- zation of Peoples, said. the con- fried' in the electric chair at ·the nelly of Hartford, Conn., had ferring of such powers on priest state prison when they are asked that both sides meet and senates would seem to be con- knocking off kids right and left settle the conflict which had trary to the documents of the at the hospital across town." The Tenessee Register editor threatened to be a reapeat of the Second VatiCan Council, which, long struggle to organize grape he said, "attribute to the priests' called for activism against aborsenate a consultative function." tion in these words: . pickers.
'iI feel that people who believe in life should begin picketing and mass demonstrations against hospitals and doctors who kill babies under the legal loophole of abortion. And economic boycotts should be organized against these same doctors and hospitals. "My own brand of. activism stops short of doing anything that would possibly interfere with hospital or doctor's office operations (such as burning records of mothers waiting for abortions). But we can, at least, do everything within reason to make the mothers, hospitals, doctors and nurses.:-and certainly the pro-abortion legislatorsaware that· they are engaged in the business of murder."
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.THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug.,20. 1970
"Wari,na Buy Some Candy?': Annoys Ha.rassed M:other i. '.'
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I get' "fed 4p," literally, with all ithe' candy sales used : to raise money for children's organizations. Granted th~ , 'org(\nizatiorisse~ve a good purpo~e . . . and they 11ee(l fund's . . " But, why .must they sell candy? . . . and op consecutive weekends? I'm thdr' own' children. I understand becoming convinced the' c.Y.o,'s rieed' to raise funds. Jf whole thing is promoted by you tell me what you actually enterprising dentists looking . realize in cash profit fro~n t~e for more cavities, or slenderiZi~g salons seeking new pros· peets. We. i.Io have a few' original groups who try light bulbs or .
sale of the 48 boxes, I Will dl?' nate that· amount to C.Y.? You')) have your money-and my kids won't be haunting the .neighbors," i She still wouldn't give in. "Why can't they go to some other neIghborhood? It's goo~1 for childl'en to feel' they' are attively participating in the supBy port of CY.O,". : "That's' true," I agreed, "b~t MARY why can't they mow lawns, br sweep sidewalks or run errands CARSON to raise the money-just so they don't go pestering the neighbors sd)ing candy?" . She took another lack. "We have a special, bonus for the .magazines but regularly there is children. Those who' sell their· a 'little face at the. door, "Wancandy by the end, of ,the week na but some candy?" will be taken to the ball game , I really don't. I "ve got fuur at the stadium. Only those w&o boxes left in the closet from seW the candy will be able to two months ago when my own go'" . kids couldn't sell their quota "But," I groaned, "I've got s'ix NUNS ON HOiJDAY: While waiting at the entrance of audience hall tQ hear the and I bought all they had left. kids registering in C.Y.O. a~d But I know the pressure the they will all want to ,go to the fope's Wednesday talk in Castelgandolfo, one of the nuns takes some candid shots of child is under, and I buy more game. Even if we sell the 48 her fellow nuns. NC Photo. candy. boxes, which two should I send So all the kids in town have to the game?" . , me marked as a patsy and each "That is your problem. As tJis' week another organization beats plan is set up, each family seils a path to my door. 48 boxes of candy within a' we~k' I'm mildly annoyed buying and is entitled to two tickets. _ from all the kids in the neighbor- That's all. No exceptions!" .. Sister Margaret Tierney, Sister became a member of St. luncheon and she has requested I hood, but when my own come known as Mary's Church when her family that all desiring to attend the I realize I was losing ground F.M.M.,· formerly home with, "Guess what? We fast. She just would not accept Sister Marguerite Cecile, teacher moved during her childhood to celebration contact her. each have to sell a' bag of candy a donation-and the kids wanted , at the Espirito Santo School, Fall the Cath~dral parish. While staying' in Fall River, -only 12 boxes in the bag," to go to the game. Riyer for 35 years and principal Sister will stay at St. Anthony's i She entered the Franciscan that's. when I really flip. Convent, 621 !?econd Street. But. I tried once more to rea- for two years, w'i11 celebrate her Missionaries of Mary in Quebec 144 Boxes son with her. "Look. If thb y golden an'niversary as a member in 1920. She attended the One of my boys found he was take the candy, I'm going ;to of the Franciscan Missionaries .School of Education at the ColNew Priest Officiates Mass ,'of Thanks- lege of the Sacred Hearts, Fall most successful if he waited for finish up buying most of it my· of M?ry at Sun8ay, Aug. 23 at I I giving on River,. Catholic Teachers College At' Father's Wedding a pouring rain and borrowed his self. We're all better off ifi I o'clock in Espirito Santo Church, and Providence College. older brother's raincoat which just give you the money," FORT PORTAL (NC) - An Fall River. hung down to his ankles. His Fed Up With Candy In addition to her pari~h American working in Uganda reasoning: "I look' so bad, everyA native of the Immaculate school assignment, Sister also .was ordained a priest one day She was getting annoy~d. one feels sorry for me." "You're trying to upset the Conception Parish, Fall River, taught CCD classes in Portu- and officiated at the wedding of Generally I just grumble to whole system. If I let you :do his father the next. I . guese speaking parishes. myself, but when six of them this, every mother will be runHoly Cross Father Stephen During ,the last seven years, Gibson, 27, who hails from Tifregistered for C.Y.O., I almost' ning down here wanting to give Hospitals Announce she has been assigned to work fin, Ohio, was ordained July 31 went into shock. money instead of buying the. Abortion Facilities' in San Francisco but returned by.Iowa-born Bishop Vincent McAs each child registered, he candy'" . : east in order to .celebrate her Cauley, ·C.S.C., of Fort Portal. was informed he would get his , NEW YORK (NC)-Two New' "Dq,sen't that tell you .someJ.D. card'. . . after he sold 24 thing? Maybe all the mothers are York City hospitals: the Park jubilee with two other jubilari- The next day the new priest ans with sisters at Frui~ Hill, witnessed the marriage of his boxes of candy! fed up with candy and would East and the Park West, have . The prospect of disposing of just rather help you out with sent letters. to some 50,000 doc- ·Providence. widowed father, Russell Gibson. 144 boxes floored me. When I plain old money," Following he Aug. 23 Mass, tors across the nation describing Also present at the ordination : found that in the case of mul-. "Sorry," she said, "no candy the hospitals' abortion facilities a luncheon and reception will be and wedding were the priest's tiple registrations from one fam-. sal~no ball game!" and pregnancy-termination pro- held in the Espirito Santo Parish sister, Sister Joan Gibson, C.S.C., ; Hall.' . Hy, only the first two children who teaches at St. Cecilia's High The kids looked heartbroken. grams.. had to sell the candy, the pic447 Alden . School in Washington, D. C., and Mrs. Joseph Luz of i_ I took the candy . .. The letter, signed by Park ture seemed brighter. C.Y.O. got their dividend. i.. East's executive vice-president Street is .in charge of the his brother, David Gibson. But on our block there were The candy company got rich... Ronald V. Shaw, said that the five families besides my own regThe kids got cavities ... : 'hospital "adheres' rigidly" to istering for' C.Y.O. That's 288 . . . and I'm still fed up with medical standards 'andadds that boxes of candy for the kids to 'candy sales. ' abortions will . be performed 7Y:l% Tenn Deposit Certificates-$lOO,OOO or more unload: on each other's mothers. only up to the 12th week of preg~ 6% Tenn -Deposit Certificates - Two .years Nice Attitude Announce New Schobl nancy. , I 5% % Tenn Deposit Certificates - One year I located' the "candy' iady" I . Abortion services provided by who was iii 'charge of ~fund Lun~h Guid~lines 5Y:l % - 90-Day Notice WASHINGTON (NC)-A new the two hospitals include counraising for the C.Y.O. I tried to 5Y:l% - Systematic Savings explain why I would prefer my Department of Agriculture rul-. seIling, surgical and anesthetical 5%%-Regular Savings· children did not sell the candy. ing' ,orders ,schools .to provide fees. and . a minimum hospital 5% Daily Interest stu-" stay of 24. hours..AII-inclusive lunches for poverty-level "Our block is flooded with: * Dividends payable quarterly candy. It seems ·unreason'able to dents at a maximum price of' 20 c;harges for an abortion· come to cents effective next Jan. 1. i .$575. obligate the neighbors." The. ruling, announced now: to . A Richmond, Va., doctor who "What do you care about your ' give schools a chance to comply received the letter remarked bitneighbors?" BANK BY MAIL There's a nice Christian. at- voluntarily before the mandatory terly that he wondered' why the . ~e pay the postage titude for you. effective date, adopts pov~rty' hospital didn't "throw in a resSouth Yarmouth Yarmouth Shopping Plaza Hyannis I tried again. "My neigh1>ors ,guidelines already i~ effect in . taurant dinner and a Broadway' Dennis Port Osterville . are all swamped with caridy from' other government programs. : show as part: of the package."
Ftanciscan Missio,na,ry of Mary Jubilee Sp'ent 37 of Her' 50. Years at Espirito Santo
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Fashion-Conscious Women Still Prefer P,antsuits
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 20,,1970
The Pantsuit Is Dead heralded the headline ill oue ,of our local pa~rs. The text underneath this declaration of farewell to what has become one of our favorite outfits went on to say that Paris was not showing any pant outfits in their Fall and 路Winter showings. However', just to time we sat on a low. piece of show you how wrong ~ven furniture. Now we could go to parties and not spend the whole prophets can be, another evening worrying if we were headline this week read' Pantsuits Stealing Thunder From Dresses for Fall and. Winter. Someone has to be wrong somewhere. While the demise of the pantsuit may come with time it does
By MARILYN RODERICK
sitting like a lady. In Jewel Shades ~ust the other week I was visiting my sister-in-laW who lives in Roslyn, N. Y. and we went shopping in an area that路 is known as the Mil'Ucle Mile. This consists of a mile or so of very good stores that have their home base in New York and then;fore (,me would expect路 to find here fashion at its best. One very exclusive little shop that certainly did appear to be catering to a fashion-conscious clientle was stocked with rack after ra.::k of the most sensuous , (this is the word for Fall), pant outfits imaginable in rich jewel shades. There weJ:e one 01' two midi styles on the rack blit it surely louked as if the customers that frequented this shop were going to be fashionable in pant outfits. While some designers would like us to throwaway this design in the same pile in wllich we discard our mini's, here again I feel that the American woman is going to stick to her guns and wear what she feels good in and what looks guol! on her. At least I hope so.
appear that at the present moment women are clinging to this article of apparel like a drowning man would cling to a life line. It seems to be the only type of clothing that women are truly sure of for Winter 1970. "The only thing I'm spending money on for Fall clothing is pant outfits." "With the hemline controversy raging, pants are the only safe buy." . '" hate midi's-I love pants." (Suddenly women are getting very militant) These are just a few of the Retain', Reduced Rates "IT FITS 'TOO BIG": Little Martin Lopez tries on gear of Fireman Rey May. Martin comments" that,,you are, hearing visited fire station with' other children from El Santo Nino Community Center in Los from fasl1ion-c()nsciou~ women' For Nonprofit Angeles Inner city. Holy Cross and St. Joseph' of Orange Sisters are conducting a volun(both old and young) all over WASHINGTON (NC)-Prefer- teer Summer program at the center. NC Photo. the area. ential rates for nonprofit mailers, including diocesan newsPleasure to Wear papers and bulk charity appeal Reluctantly (of course, be- mail, have been incorporated cause no woman likes to admit into the final product of the that she has made an error .in widely-debated postal reform judgment) I must admit that I bill. House and Senate conferees wasn't too big a fan of the pantCHICAGO (NC)-One of the found to be legal, with certain 255 students, had then to prove suit look when it first came' in. hammered out a compromise nation's biggest experiments in restrictions: students must live its value. that rates' for which will provide I spouted such phrases in this high school dual enrollment, or within the public school district In a 254-page report issued by column as unfeminine, out of these nonprofit publications can shared-time learning, has proved and must have parental consent. Schools Supt. James F. Redmond, be raised gradually over a 10place in certain public places, year perjod, but the final r~te that public and Catholic school The legal interpretation usual- the Chicago Board of Education and other platitudes that I truly cannot exceed costs of deliver- students can be educated effec- ly buttressing such decisions is was informed that "compared believed at the time. ing the mail. . tively together. that all citizens have a right. as with full-time (Kennedy) graduBut as with any new type of Sen. Gale McGee (D-Wyo.), taxpaYers, to share in the public ates, ,shared time (St. Paul) , The' dual enrollment plan on fashion, like Topsy, it grew and chairman of the Senate Post system of education. In the case graduates, on a group percentage . the Southwest side of Chicago grew and pretty soon we had Office and Civil. Service Comof the St. Paul-Kennedy High basis: accustomed our eyes to this new , mittee, said this ~eans the max- has' not been without problems, School plan, according to one Possessed, on the average, at however. Catholic students silhouette and we found that we imum rate assigned these mailCatholic 'school principal, the greater general ability; took more ers would only be about 50 per St. Paul School, where enrollliked it. courts decided that if Catholic college preparatory courses; recent of total postal costs. ment has been declining, have Wearing it was even more ,of parents have such a full-time ceived higher grades; were in Included among' nonprofit transferred as full time students a pleasure. No more were we right as taxpayers, they also fewer honors classes; ear:ned mailers' are churches, certain t)Jgging at our hemlines every charitabie organizations, libra- to Kennedy (public) High School. have a right to public education about' the same grade point averComprehensive survey reports, on a part-time basis. ries, 'educational organizations, ages, and had similar class ranks. conducted independently of each veterans' groups, agricultural Similar Ranks . They also were found to be Canadian Newspaper other by .both school boards, publishers and many others. After a test case was ruled in more college oriented and to get bear testimony that the contro- favor of dual enrollment, the about the ~ame ,scores on standPublishes Paperback versial shared-time experiment Kennedy-St. Paul plan, begun in ard tests used by most colleges EDMONTON (NC)-The West-, Bans Major Repairs has been valuable and worth 1965 on a four-year basis with for admissions purposes. ern Catholic ,Reporter has pubcontinuing. lished a paperback, It's New Of ' Damage~ .Schools World, marking the fifth anniCORPUS CHRISTI (NC)-In a Such a dual enrollment plan versary of the ending of the Sec- possible move to avoid integra- allows students 'from private or ond Vatican Council and the tion, federal judge Woodrow parochial schools to participate birth of the Edmonton diocesan ,Seals has ordered the Corpus .part-time in' secular classes at a newspaper. Christi School District not to public school during regular The 224-page book,edited' by make ,major 'repairs of damage school hours. Douglas J. Roche, Western Cath- . from Hurricane Celia. Opponents charge that such olic Reporter editor, is a selecObservers considered this a plans violate constitutional proHon of enduring articles publish- possible prelude to ordering ed by the paper since it began school .locations changed. The hibitians against against churchstate relationships, would allow September 9, 1965. district is under court order to religion to be injected in public The book is a presentation, achieve more integration-par- education and would open the ticularly of Mexican-Americans said Roche"."of what I think are way for at"tempts by Catholic the great religious themes today: and Anglos. school officials to. dictate policy This isthe first' time Mexican. the search for God, the movein public schools. ment of Christians to unity, the Americans have been considered Repeatedly, duaJ enrollment an ethnic group in Texas inteapplication ,of the social message. or shared-time plans have' been mlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJllllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllll1I1111111111HIiF. gration cases. of the Gospel."
Chicago Experiment' Wort,h Considering Shared Time Learning Proiect Proves Successful
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F ellol~ 'Missiofi,a.ry Recalls Timeless Frietldship With Bishop Wa-lsh
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 20, 1970
Team Approach To f'ormation
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop, James E. Walsh spent the last 12 of his 40 years' as a ,missioner WILLIAMSTOWN (NC)-Nov- inside a iRed Chinese prison.: ices from 10 different Qrders of His friend, fellow missioner nuns will participate in the first , Father Frederick 'A. McGuire, of two combined novitiate pro- C.M., missed such a fate when grams at Mount Carmel Renewal ordered by his superior general Center here this Fall. to flee a terror-stricken China The two nine-week programs being overtaken by comml,lni~ts. -slated Sept. 6 to Nov. 7 and The memories of the two Nov. 15 to Jan. 23-use a "team priests' times together in a warapproach to novitiate formatorn country came easily in reo tion," according to Father p!Us cent armchair conversation with Gagnon, O. Carm., program di· Father McGuire in his office rector. Teams will consis( of which is part of the United three priests and eight Sister States Catholic Conference. . novice directors. Snow-haired Father McGuire, . Four of the ll-member team now a priest of 40 years, rewill be active teachers. One of flected about his friendship with the Sisters will teach guidance the bishop as something warm and counseling to the other nov- and memorable, although' ice directors and counsel the strained by the times. novices themselves. Three Nationalist and communist priests will teacn scriptural val- forces were struggling for power ues and insights, prayer, commu- in the midst of China's civil war nity and the vows, and the the· when the two first met in J~n. ology of St. Mark's gospel as ap- 1933 over a breakfast of eggs plied to' the religious life. and Chinese pastry. Father Gagnon said the pro'Simple Man' gram is "geared to the personal "I had been warned that the growth and development of the young religious woman and is bishop didn't like to talk before not merely a series of academic his morning coffee," Father Mc- Father Frederick A. McGuire ana theoretical courses." He Guire said of the initial encouhcalled it a "nine-week novitiate tel' with the bishop whose rep:u-' niscent, of work' experience experience in community living." tation reached near-hero propor- , spanning the globe. tions until his recent releake ,Now associate dir~ctor of the Plan Other Sessions from prison. . USCC Latin American Bureau, The sessions are a further deHe had been convicted of qs- . Father McGuire talked about velopment of other Carmelite pionage and sentenced to 20 China with hearty fondness, but programs on the formation level, year-s. Although the communis~s said he thought that the only' Father Gagnon said, and were never ,dropped the original thing that kept the bishop alive 'started at several Sisters' recharges, he was' freed before tJ:le in today's Chinese prisons was quest. sentence was completed, they his "inner strength" and the "We've had about a thousand said, because of old age and-lll fact that "he was slim and' Sisters here over the past, two health. ' wiry." and a half years participating "It's ridicullous, his, being I a' in retreat and renewal proFirst Meeti!lg spy. He was just a simple man;;' grams," he said. said Father McGuire who lived He remembered the~bishop as Thirty novices will participate with the bishop sIx months in I a "standing al;lO,ut 5 feet 10 inches in both nine week programs and house with no electricity or rUh-, and never weighing more than coordinators are tentatively plan'ning water while both workJd 125 pounds." In pictures taken ning two other sessions for. for the Catholic Central Burea~, last month, the bishop's slight Spring and Fall of 1971. a relief and refuge operation. ' "We feel this kind of proAlthough the bishop has told gram is something that, novitithe press that some of his prison FBI Agents Arrest. ate programs of the' future are days were far from pleasant, he going to have to consider," has refused to condemn the com- Father Berrigan . Father Gagnon said. munists' treatment of him. I WASHINGTON (NC) A "That sounds very much Ii~e 'spokesman for the Federal Buthe man I 'knew: He would have reau of Investigation' announced Predicts no antipathy toward even .h'is ' here that FBI agents had arrestAbortoons' Annually jailers," said' Father McGuire. i ed Father Daniel Berrigan, S.J., NE;W YORK .(NC) - A samp'Inner Strength'· I at the Summer home of friends ling of New .York City hospitals , The fact that the bishop was on Block, Island in Long Island performing . abortions indicates released in the 26th year Of Sound. that at least 40,000 legal elective Chinese communists' repression The priest, who had evaded abortions will take place annual- of religion is "almost miracufederal agents for four moriths ly in the city. lous," said the priest in his of. after failing to report to begin (An elective abortion is one fice decorated with articles rem,iserving a federal prison sentence, deliberately undergone to terwas taken to Providence for minate a pregnancy. Some aboI" post-arrest processing. Name New Public tions, while preventing live birth He is under a six-year prison of a fetus, are by-products of Relations Director sentence for his part in destroysome other surgical procedure.) WASHINGTON (NC) - T~e ing Selective Service records in The survey, taken by the Catholic University of Americals a draft office in the Baltimore Greater New York Hospital. Association, sampled one-third of. new director of public relations suburb of Catonsville, May 17, is Ralph A. Klinefelter, of Pitts- 1968. Eight other persons, includthe group's 46 member hospitals. burgh, Pa, He succeeds Mrs. ing the hunted priest's brother, Its prediction for the annual Vaughn Hammond.' ' Father Philip Berrigan, S.S.J., alabortion rate was based on the Klinefelter, who holds the so took part in the draft board number of abortions performed M.A. and Ph.D. 'degree from th'e raid. in the sampled hospitah from University of Pennsylvania, is. 'a July 1-19. , veteran' of more than 30 year's Nun Candidate work experience in higher education. The past 17 years he ha's Not On Sundays SPOKANE (NC)-Sister ElizaDUNEDIN (NC) Because been a public relations consult- beth Kunz, a social science insome of New Zealand's 'leading ant to business and iridustry, pd'. structor at Fort Wright College labdr of the Holy Names here, is the cricket players have conscien- litlcal, 'organizations, latest Religious to enter the potious objectj.ons to playing on unions, colleges and hospitals., He helped found La ,Roche litical arena. A Democrat, 'she Sundays, the' New Zealand Cricket Council has had to cancel College, a four-year liberal arts has filed for the 7th, district plans for Sunday play in test school for women in Pittsburgh, state representative post currentmatches against 'England in New and was once president of that ly. held by Republican Carlton A. Gladd~r: . college. Zealand early next year.
Of Novice
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'Alert University For More Action
WASHINGTON (NC)-A' group of black students served notice frame appears even more dim in- ' to the Catholic University of America that they expect more ished. , In striking contrast is short action by the 'university to meet and full-bodied Father McGuire their demands when. the Fall who at 65 maintains a rosy glow teJ:m begins in September. 'from a deep tan acquired during Looking upon themselves as guests, 10 students stayed for weekends at a nearby beach. "Yes, it must have been his four hours in ·the' office of uni· inner strength that helped, him versity president Dr. Clarence survive,'" said Father McGuire C. Walton, who is on vacation. of the man who was known to The students are part of a .contribute that strength best to task force that was set up last others after his morning coffee. Spring to discuss black demands. Father McGuire remembered These are, principally, that the 'university hire more black pro, their first meeting this way: "The bishop entered the dining fessors and that it set up a black room and said nothing. He studies program. wlliked up to the table, sat down A university spokesman said and took a big, long drink of the university had recently addcoffee. ' ed three black professors to its "Then, he looked around as jf staff and that history has shown seeing us for the first time and that black studies programs "are witl1 a big smile said 'Hey, where not easy to finalize" and are not you guys from?'" popular. Father McGuire and two other In any case, he said, the uniVincentian priests making the versity is part of a consortium 24-hour visit to the Maryknoll of universities in the Washinghouse in Kangmoon told ,him . ton area and the students therethey traveled from Shanghi and fore can take courses at Howwere heading by steamer, sam- ard University wl!ich has a black pan, horseback and foot to the studies program. bandit-infested province of KiagDescribing the students' stay si-some 200 miles away. in Dr. Walton's office as It was a detour that took them to see the bishop in two-story "friendly," the spokesman said brick house. Next to it y.ras the the only disturbance occurred little brick cathedral where the when they objected to tlJe at'bishop said Mass at 8 each tempt of a Wa'shngton Star morning for Chinese peasants newspaper photographer' to take living in the heavily populated pictures and forcibly took' away his film. area - almost exclusively nonCatholic: At that' time' three million or one-half of one per cent Creighton Appoints of Chi~a's 450 million residents New President . adhered to the faith. OMtIA -(1'iC)7~r:eighton' •Uni} ver'sity officials have announced New York, Chancery that 'Father Joseph J. Labaj, S.J., has been seleCted as the school's Has Bomb Scare ' NEW YORK (Nq""':'Discovery 29th president. Father Labaj, 49, a native of of a small neatly wrapped box leaking a frothy liquid forced Milwaukee, Wis., holds a bachelemployes of New York archdioc- or's and three master's degrees esan chancery office into' the from Marquette University and street while police bomb experts a doctorate from. the Gregorian University in Rome. He served as probed the package. Traffic was halted on- Madison principal of Creighton Prep and Avenue until the box was un· has been superintendent of eduwrapped and found to contain cation at Holy Rosary Indian " , rock salt, used to, melt snow in Mission. winter. Currently on several advisory The Chancery is directly across councils in the Jesuits' W1sconsin from the residence of Cardinal province, Father Labaj is a comTerence Cook where a detail of missioner of the Jesuit educ~tion city police has been maintained association. since a small fire of unexplained origin broke out several years ago. New Yorkers have' almost learned to live as easily with bombs as with traffic in the wake of bombings in government buildings, offices and department 94 TREMONT STREET stores. No pattern and little ideoTAUNTON, MASS. logical influence has been discovered in the bombings, police Tel. 822-0621 said.
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Priest Stresses Catholic-Ang IDca In Unity Efforts CHICAGO NC) - If people complain that the ecumenical movement is "running out of steam," it's most likely because they have never properly understood the concept of ecumenism. That was part of the message made here by Father William Purdy during a three~hbur meeting with 14 Episcopal and Roman Catholic clergymen at Holy Name Cathedral. In his talk, he dealt with several problems facing ecumenism. Father Purdy is the assistant for Anglican and Methodist relations in the Vatican Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. He is in the United States this Summer visiting several dioceses to meet with Episcopalian and Cathoiic clergymen involved in the ecumenical effort. 'Down to Business' According to' Father Purdy, the ecumenical movement is "getting over its first flush, the honeymoon stage, and is now getting down to business." He said that in many instances he has seen only superficial "sporadic effort" being made at works of ecumenism. "The impression has been created in some circles," he' explained, ,jthat you can have a good old one week's spill of ecumenical activity and forget the other 51 weeks in the year." He said that "a conscious effort must take place at every level of the two communities" if Catholic and Anglican faiths are to ever "grow together." Pre-requisite to "growing together,'" according': to Father Purdy, is the need for members of both faiths to experience a "spiritual renewal" and to go through ','a merciless self search." . Areas of Agreement By doing so, he added, members of both Christian communities will help derive "a' deeper understanding of themselves, of others, and of what manner we· can celebrate in common witness." In his current post for three years Father Purdy participated in ecumenical discussions conducted during 1967 by a joint Vatican commission. He said the meetings' were designed to explore areas of common communication, to make recommendations about what practically can be done to carry forth mutual cooperation, and to' pin-point areas of agreement and disagreement. . He also participated in a joint meeting of an international ecumenical commission in Windsor, England last year that dealt with such sensitive areas as church authority, ministry, and the eucharist.
Guild Appoints New Executive Director NEWTON (NC) - Frederick Picard, 42, a veteran U.S. diplomat who helped establish relief programs for victims of the Nigerian Civil War., has taken on new duties as executive director of the Catholic Guild for All the Blind here. Picard succeeds Father Thomas J. Carroll, who· became the guild's director of professional policy and development in March.
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 20, 1970
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Priest Ail'rested In Tria ~ [Protest
POLLUTION SOLUTION?: This horse drawn conveyance in New Orleans just might appear to some to be the perfect solution to ,polluted air in the cities. NC Photo.
See Catholic Hospitals More Efficient 'Mergers, Closings Reduce Number WASHINGTON (NC) - Some 5.5 million patients of all races and creeds, more than half of them non-Catholics, were admitted to the. nation's 796 Catholic hospitals last year, according to 1970 figures released here; The Catholic Hospital Association, whose members account for almost one out of every three beds available in the nation's hospitals, said the 5.5 million was an increase of more than 100 thousand admissions over the previous year. One important trend is more· beds in slightly fewer but more efficient hospitals, said the CHA. The 1970 report shows that mergers and closings during the year reduced the number.of Catholic hospitals across the nation by 19. According to the statistics, the number of beds available increased' by 1;100 to 159,600. The number of patient-days in CHA hospitals also rose, climbing 1.3 million to a new record. of 47.6 million days. The mergers and closings occurred in smaller communities and generally involved facilities of 50 beds and under, according to Msgr. Harrold A. Murray, director of Health Affairs for the Unit~d States Catholic Conference. "Rising costs in the medical care field today dictate that
Prelates Discuss Mixed Marriage LONDON (NC) - New regulations regarding mixed marriages and Baptism in England and Wales have been discussed by the bishops' National Ecumenical Commission. Its suggestions have now been passed on to individual bishops concerning application in this country of the norms of Pope Paul's ,recent decree on mixed marriages. The bishops will, as required, decide on'· this in September after considering the report of a special subcommittee of four bishop-members.
smaller hospitals merge where possible, or close, if they duplicate services offered by nearby larger facilities," he said. "Unlike taxpayer-financed municipal and government facilities, Catholic hospitals are maintained through volunteer funds con~ tributed by individuals and reli-. gious groups, in addition to pay- .. ments for professional services," he. said. "We ,must operate efficiently to keep our doors open." The conference is the nationallevel organization through which the country's 160 Catholic dioceses coordinate their health, education and· social service activities. . The 796 catholic hospitals rep~ resent a total investment of approximately $5 billion for land, buildings, and equipment. The CHA .report says 250 hospitals are located in communities where no other facilities exist.
Total employment is 344,000, including 11,000 nuns. The CHA says the average number of beds per hospital increased from 190 to 200 last year, and that figure is expected to co'ntinue to rise each year. The largest Catholic hospital at:. present is St.. Mary's in Rochester, Minn., which has a bed capacity of 930. However, current building programs call for the expansion to I, I00 bed capacity of Santa Rosa Medical Center, ~an Antonio, Tex., and St. Francis Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. Pittsburgh also is the site of the nation's oldest Catholic facility in continuous service, Mercy Hospital, which was founded in 1847.
Plan Eucharistic Congress in 1973
MELBOURNE (NC)-The dates of Feb. 18-25, 1973, have been Sats Politics, Protest announced for the 40th International Eucharistic Congress, and Women's Obligations BALTIMORE iNC) - Politics work is already in progress on and protest are· obligations of the congress in this host city. The last international Eucharchurch women today, if they're istic' Congress in Australia was going to stay abreast of the current revolution for women, Mrs. held in Sydney in 1928. The postEugene McCarthy told the an- war congresses have been held nual convention of the Lutheran in Barcelona in 1952, Rio de. JaChurch Women of Maryland, neiro, 1955; Munich, 1960; BomDelaware, Virginia and the Dis-' bay, 1964; and Bogota, 1968. Pope Paul VI attended the Bomtrict of Columbia. bay and Bogota events. "The political way is the esThe theme of the 1973 meetsential way," she said, not only ing will be "Love One Another As in women's movements but "if I Have Loved You," and the motwe are to respond realistically to will be "The New Commandto the Gospel imperative to feed ment." the hungry and shelter the shelA worldwide competition is terless, care for the sick and under way for a congress emgive succor to the weak. and blem. Archbishop James R. Knox helpless:" . of Melbourne has offered a $500 In her talk at Hood College prize for the winning entry. near here, the estranged wife of U. S. Senator' Eugene McCarthy , Divorce Bill cited the recent Senate subcom,ROME (NC)-A bill legalizing mittee hearings on hunger and malnutrition among migratory divorce, already passed by the laborers' as evidence of the ne- . lower house of parliament, will cessity of acquiring power and be debated in the Italian Senate influence in order to battle effec- at the end of September and is slated for a vote on Oct. 9. tively with national problems.
MINNEAPOpS (NC)-A chaplain 'at the University of Minnesota Newman Center was arrested by Minneapolis police following a demonstration in support of eight anti-war protestors charged with attempting to sabotage Selective Service records. Police arrested Father Harold Bury after he asked them to stop shoving during a police effort to clear protesters from the sidewalk in front of city hall. The priest was released on $600 bail. Assistant city attorney Edward Vavreck asked that the bail be set high because Father Bury had been a leader of the demonstration. Another protester, Paula Kelly, 22, was arrest.ed after she damaged a city-owned car with a stick and shouted obscenities at police. More than 300 people took part in the protest. Police were called to the scene after protesters lowered the American flag and raised a North Vietnamese flag in its place. A man who claimed to be an ex-paratrooper succeeded in lowering the North Vietnamese banner.
,Stress Confronts Most, AmeO'icans WASHINGTON (NC)-ehances are you, your neighbor, your spouse or your child is under stress-feeling the pressures and 'tensions of a world that seems to be pinching a nerve. -: It can result from a public pressure or from a private pressure such as a kiss, said psychologists quoted in "Stress In Modern Life," one of the recent Editorial Research Reports' published by Congressional Quarterly, Inc. .
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Controversy Is Inevnttable: In Social' 'Reform Efforts,
Publicity ganizations news items Anchor,P.
Father Daniel Berrigan, S,.J., is, alive and well and !lis presence is made known by' publish~d i~te~vie'v.s ,in t~e, better American p'eriodicals. One can easlly lmagme what' a movie director would do with the scene Betty Medsger of the Washington Post des, 'cribes in a recent- interview, in our nation. It claims ,a cletgy even from th~ demands lof with Dan Berrigan. "It was free wife and family in order to laltime for him to moVe to the low the full carrying out of the','
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next hideout. On top of the plaid' radical Word· of (iad.· : . shiit and' baggy brown slacks, Saul Alinsky, among oth~rs, he put on an old, worn dark wants the Church to use t?at 'sports coat., Theil eye glasses freedom: "to play an important and an old workman's, ',cap, the part in, the creation of those povisor turned siightly upward * ':; ':' 'litical, social and economic cir,Someone was' waiting to meet cumstances whereby people will have the ability to act and the 'power to,operate as, free citiz~ns 'in a free societ.y so that our present civilizatjon will not di~." B~ Besides the crucial moral . , question of life before birth, our REV. 'youthful ' critics. say we nJed greater interest' in the ethi~s \of P. DAVID life after birth. Catholic piety I in FINKS social circumstances of past cltl-' tures has led to a stress on GOd's love and the way of individual perfection. Today many, ~re ' searching for a social ethic t~at ' him. He turned to the center of gives equal stress to God's powthe room and, said, 'Shalom'." er and 'how man shares in' t~at The romanticism of tile whole power to act. '\ Berrigan affair: from Catonsville , I Hard Work , 'HOPELESS' 'LEARNERS: Sister Joyarine Mueller, 9 to Minneapolis 8 and beyond is , really heavy stuff. If much of Moral theologian Charles O.S:F., a teacher and speech' therapist helps a pupil at the the overblown rhetoric - makes E. Curran is aware lof Children's Activity and Achievement Center located at some smile in recognition and this direction:. "Catholic social Temple Sinai, a Jewish synogague in Milwaukee, Wis. At 'others frown with annoyance, no ethics needs a more realistic one is able to ignore easily what basis especially in ~he' area I,of the center, staff specialists apply their skills to teach chilis bejng said and' done. ethical strategy which will come dren \traditionally iabelled"hopeless." NC Photo. Others express similar con- to grips with the elements c4pcerns in different ways: "We able, of bringing about social have develope~ a pattern," said change. Too often jnthe: .p~st !,,, Senator Walter Mandale at re- the stress on order a'nd structure' , cent Senate meetings on migrant resulted in social ,conse~vatism Specialists Ap'ply workers, "in our society of de" in practice. . I Skills t·o Children's Problems plore andignore.'~ The Berrigans "The approach of a more oper.understand this along with many ational motif must consider the MILWAUKEE (NC)-Six-year- and Catholic laymen, as well as others. responsible uses of power a~d old Jane has 'screamed almost Catholic Sisters, staffing it. AdThey also know that except also' collaborate more with the continuously since the day of ministrator and prime mover of for some brief shining moments" soci~1 sciences in its approa¢h' her birth. the two-year-old school is Eli like the Bishops' Committee on t6 social ethics." ,: Judy, a bouncy, -healthy-look- Tash, a member of the Sinai conFarm Labor's effective, intervenIf some of us are less than ing three-year·old cannot sit gregation, and head of the Wistion in the farm workers settle- "~atisfied with the dramatictllcdown or stand up by herself. She consin Society for Brain-Injured ments, Bishops, Jesuits, Pastors, tics of the brothers Berrigan ahd needs assistance. Children. Most of the society's' Churchmen in pew and in the friends in the face of social evil Mark, age four, is a perpetual 125 members have children of worla are not ready to move on and human need, there is room their own with learning disabiliI ' motion machine who literally is contemporary human needs with for any number of less radi<;al ties. never still while awake. appropriate moral and political alternatives. ,I 'Brian, at 14 months, does not Staff specialists in speech, strategies. , But they all 'demand ha'rd respond to 'a smile, color or motor control and behavior modExpect Le'adership work, good sense and an accept- tickling. . ification apply their skills to "On issues of ,sexual morality," ance of the reality that social Educators have traditionally each child's specific learning writes Fordham's Father Ray- change means controversy and given the "hopeless", label to problem. In !iddition, the center' mond Schroth, S.J., "pastors some redistribution of available such children -who are already , , encourages frequent contact have been known, to demand power. , called "autistic," "brain-injured," heroism; but on moral issues In the words of my favorite "hyperactive" and "aphasic" with parents-on the theory that a child who needs help has par· that question, the . American working radical: "Change means (having limited verbal ability). en'ts who need help, too. dream-r;tcism, nationalism, do- movement. Movement mears ,"Nonsense," says Sister Jomestic political repression....:we, friction. Friction means heat. anne Marie Kliebhan, O.S,F. "If "We have the children only a 'had best look for moral out- And heat means controversy."1 few hours of the 24 in a day," a. child hasn't learned, he hasn't , ! rage to Tom Wicker or the New been taught. He's suffering from said Sister Joyanne Muller, York ,Review of Books." disability, not a learn- O.S.F.,. a teacher and speech : aingteaching Again, we may frown at the Villanova disability." ' therapi,st on the, Center staff. intensity of, the rhetoric,but are $100,000 Grant' Sister Joanne, head of special "The parents have them most of , not these men and much of to, VILLANOVA (NC)"':"-Villanoya. education at nearby Cardinal the time, so they need to know day's youth correct when they' University has received' a $100,· Stritch College, directs Children's, how to, teach them, too," .she expect from the Church signifi- 000 grant from the Law Enforce.' Activity and Achievement Cen- said cant, even dramatic, moral lead- ment: Educa,tion Program, of, the ter' in classrooms at' Temple Weekly' Wednesday night' ership "in season and out?" United States Department of Sinai,' it Jewish synagogue here.. meetings give parents a' chance Ethics; o( Life' Justke. , -.' ,I The center is ecumenical in -to speak out on fears andquesNo' 'one ..really wants more tions about their special children. Th~ gran~ will be used to fund ' scope 'with Je~ish, Protestant verbal ,iiction., .The nation , is Viilanova's criminal. justice prbsuffering from a rhetorical in- gram, with, a socio-Iegal focus, flation on all sides which con- under th!!direction of James 'J. tributes much heat but very: lit- McKenna; assistant, professor of t1~ light. But with its resources,' sociology. I especially in spirit and personObjectives of the program are Over 35 Yea'rs ,nel, the C!lurch of pastors and to prepare students, for careers of Satisfied ServiCe workers can address itself to its in criminl\l justic~ (police, cour~s Reg. Master Plumber 7023 role of being a catalyst in cre- and corrections) and to enable JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. ating a' climate for peaceful perso~s presently' incri~inrl a06 NO. MAIN SlREET ' social change. justice careers to increase proFall River, '675-7497' i The Church is not repressed fessional skills.
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SACRED HEART, .'ALL RIVER The annual parisll picniC will be held on Sunday, Aug. 30 at Camp Welch in Assonet. Swimmingand activities will occupy the day's program. Men of the parish will supervise the kitchen and offer food and soft drinks. OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS, FALL RIVER Sister Delia Santos of the Sisters of St. Do~othy will receive her final vows' at the 5 o'clock Mass on Wednesday evening, Sept. 2. The Winter schedule of Masses will start on Sunday, Sept. 20. Masses will be offered at 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, noon and 5 o'clock in the afternoon. The Saturday afternoon Mass will be at 4 o'clock. 'ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild wiill sponsor a Flea Market from 10 to 4 on Saturday, Aug. 22 in the Parish Center on Stafford Rd. ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER Mrs. Sophie Pinkowski, chairman has announced that the Holy Rosary ,Society will conduct a Polish food sale at 10 on Friday morning, Aug. 21 in" the parish hall. Mother Mary Landdane will lead, a, group. 01\, ,60,' Felician, Sisters· ',frolp .~he,: ,Motherhouse':ih:: En(ield, Conn. on, Wednesday,· Aug. 26 and will "participate in the 11 o'clock Mass on the Feast of Our Lady of Czestochowa. Members of the parish' will dress in their native costumes and form a procession into the church. A buffet will be served following the Mass. There will also be Masses on the feast at 3 in the afternoon and 7:15 in the evening. ST. JOSEPH, AITLEBORO The parish, picnic will start at noon on Sunday, Aug. 23 at Slater's Park, Pawtucket. There will be events for both adults and children. All are urged to bring their own lunch and grilles. The CYO will meet tonight at 7 in the rectory basement.
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Cites Need of Dis'cussing' Controversial Subjects
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 20, 1970
Publication Makes Appearance DENVER (NC)-Priests U.S.A., a four-page monthly supplement. to the weekly National Register, made its first appearance h'ere under the auspices of the National Federation of Priests' Councils and u'nde}'l some confusion as well. The federation planned the paper as a means of linking its 130 member councils across the nation. Editor of the paper is Msgr. Alexantler O. Sigur of La-
There is a rumor abroad that. Cardinal Suenens .came within hair's breadth of being forced to resign as Archbishop of Malines in Belgium. One' can only rejoice that such an event did not occur. The Roman Catholic Church can, of course, survive an indefinite series of disasters. that one m~mber of the' Rom~n It has in the past, and it will Curia has commented, "We will lose 75 per cent of the priests in probably. be called upon to the world, but still we do not
a
do so in the future. But if Cardinal Suenens was indeed to be thrown out of his office for ex-
By
REV. ANDREW M.m:::::) GREELEY
pressing a very mild and gentle dissent, it would easily have been a disaster of staggering consequences. For, while he receives apparently little support from his fellow cardinals and only silent support from most of the bishops of the world, there cannot be much doubt to anyone who is in touch with opinions among the Catholic laity and clergy that Cardinal Suenens represents a vast number of the faithful. If he were to be suppressed then one would be forced to regretfully conclude that colle'giality is largely meaningless. Unusual Situation I suspect that historians of the future will' spend' many .long hours puzzling over why the two most controversial subjects facing the Church in the waite of the Vatican Council were not the subject of collegial decisionmaking. If collegiality means anything at all, it means that it is practiced on controv~rsial issues. If it is only to be practiced when the subject matter is not controversial, then it would be simply an empty and formalistic exercise. So the historians will wonder why the Pope chose to tr.y (obviously with no success) to shut off discussion on these two questions which are on everyone's lips. One must look long and hard in the history of the papacy to find a similar situation: when in the past has a Pope adamantly refused even to discuss with his brother bishops a matter which no one claims to be part of divine revelation? I suspect that some of the historians in the future will want to conclude that the Pope simply did not trust his brother bishops to be able to competently and intelligently discuss the issue. It is hard to think of another explanation. Extraordinary Attitude Historians of the future may also decide that the Pope is correct: that, indeed, his brothers in the hierarchy lack the intelligence, the wisdom, the good will, the sincerity, the humility to address themselves to the questions of celibacy and birth control. But if such a judgment turns out to be 'im accurate one, it will be a sad commentary on the state of the Church in the second half of the twentieth century, I have .bee.n told recently
change on celibacy." If such an attitude is the official Curial position, then it is an extraordinary on'e, both because it completely misreads the attitilde of the world's clergy (it is most unlikely that 75 per cent of the 'priests of the world will leave); and:also because' it· completely ·misunaerstands the issue and completely misunders~ands how the clergy and the laity re-. spond to the unilateral and closeminded exercise of authority they see going on in the Church at the present time. As I have said before, what worries me most is the harm done to the Papacy. . Papacy Necessary For Christianity needs the Papacy. If we did not have one, we would probably have to invent it It is .an absolutely indispensable institution not merely for the Catholic Church, but for all Christian churches. When it loses its ability to obtain the respect and the consent of substantial segments of the Catholic population, this is a tragedy for the whole of Christianity. It is not necessary that there be change on either of the two issues, but it is necessary,· absolutely necessary, that there be discussion; for ours is a world that simply cannot credit a refusal to discuss. I cannot understand why such a moderate request for discussion as that made by Leo Suenens should be responded to as though it were an act of sacrilege, not to say blasphemy. In truth, the Archbishop of Malines-Brussels is one of the best friends that the contemporary Papacy has. There does seem to be no other way for the Papacy to reestablish its credibility than to engage in discussion, a discussion in which it operates from a position of hope and confidence and not from a position of insecurity and anxiety.
Dominicans Over 'Worst of Crisis' LONDON (NC) - The English Dominicans, who in the past few restless years have been going through perhaps their severest test since they were wiped out temporarily during the Reformation, are now "over the worst of it," thinks their provincial, Father Ian Hislop, O.P. He said the wave of unrest after Vatcan Council II has hit them particularly hard because of their special involvement with and exposure to the pressures of an increasingly complex society. "My feeling is that we are now over the worst of it," said the tall Scottish convert who has been Dominican provincial here for the past four' years. "Like everybody else in the Church we are in a: moment of transition adjusting to a new world."
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Confusion about the paper stems from the recent sale of the National Register to Twin Circle Publishing, publishers of the conservative Catholic: weekly Twin Circle. Whether this will affect the 'relationship. between the Register and Priests U.S.A. is still an open question. According to Father Francis J. Bonnike of Chicago, federation president, the priests' group is adopting a wait-and-see attitude towards the new Register.
BROTHER DONALD
.New Bedfordite To Take Vows Brother Donald A. Pelletier, C.S.c., a. graduate' of St. Anthony High School, New Bedford will take his final vows as a Brother of the Holy Cross at ceremonies on Sunday, Aug. 23 in the chapel of St., Joseph's Novitiate, Valatie, N. Y. The son of' Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pelletier of 48 State Street, New Bedford entered the Brothers in 1963. He attended New Haven College and in September will teach at St. Thomas Aquinas School, Brooklyn.
.. Matters of Consequence Have you ever read The Little Prince? Written both for children and for the young at heart, it is an enchanting fable about a little. prince who leaves his oWn tiny planet in search of the secret of what is really important in life. But all throughout his journey the Little Prince is confronted with people who have no time for his questions. They are too busy with "matters of consequence !" They are so busy thinking about how to live, that they forget to live. To the Little Prince these' people are missing the very basis of life itself: the beauty found in flowers, the ocean, the stars, and ' . in each other.
Str'ess Search For Peace CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) Aims shared by the Holy See and Great Britain for peace and equality for mankind were heavily stressed as the new British minister to the Holy See presented his letters of accreditation to Pope Paul VI at his Summer residence here. Amid the pomp and panoply demanded by protocol for the occasion, the new minister, Desmond John 'Chetwode Crawley, told Pope Paul that Great Brite ain had followed "with interest and sympathy" papal concern for all mankind. Speaking of Pope Paul's personal efforts for a better world, Crawley singled out the Second Vatican Council, the papal trips outside Italy, the pleadings for peace. and the emphasis on helping the less fortunate. For its part, Crawley said the British government is "pledged to uphold the rule of law and to work for * * '~peace, the promotion of prosperity, the settle111ent of disputes by conciliation and agreement and the encouragement of trade and peaceful exchanges between nations." In his address of welcome, Pope Paul expressed his own "special regard" . for Queen Elizabeth and said that the aims of his pontificate "are really the goals of all right Christian living."
. The insights of the Little Prince we busy ourselves with "matters of time for what is truly important in grams, our cars, our newspapers, our We tend. to judge how good we are
are profound. How often do consequence," leaving little life. We have our TV progames, our books, our jobs. by ·how busy we are.
But is there time in our lives for prayer? Is there time for. thinking about others, about our neighbors, about people we have never met, about people we wlll ~ever meet? In the end, we won't be judgd by our cars or newspapers or jobs. We will be asked only one question: "What did you do for the least qf my brethren?" THAT is a matter of consequence! . Think about this for a while: thousands and thousanclls of people are starving every day. They hunger for food, yes. But they hunger for much more than that-for meaning and purpose to their lives. They long for personal security, justice, and a belief in Something outsIde of themselves. The missionary tries to fill both these voids: physical and spiritual. He gives man bread and the sacred host; he teaches the alphabet and the doctrine of Christ; he teaches the value of work and the value of prayer. This is why he asks for support. The missionary depends on your prayers-he has to know that we're behind him, rooting for him, as it were. And he also depends on your sacrifices. Without money, the missionary cannot help to build a better world. So take some time from your busy day to think and act on what you have just read. Send a gift large or small, to The Society for the Prepagation of the Faith as a sign of your concern for these grave "matters of consequel1ce."
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~ : , : 'Mail Rates WASHINGTON (NC) - Mail ,. rates for diocesan newspapers , and charity fundraising pubiica~ ., tions will go up as a result of Postal Reform legislation signed : by President Nixon. The in; crease, to be ultimately set by : a five-member Postal Rate Commission, would be more gradual :. and less steep than rates as- : signed, to other classes of mail.
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SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Please cut out this column and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T. O'Meara, National Director, Dept. C., 366 Fifth Ave, New York, N.Y. 10001 or directly to your local Diocesan Director. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine . .368 North Main Street Fall River, Massachusetts 02720 NAME ADDRESS ..: CITY 8-22-70
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Bishops Say Family.. Planning Bills Overlook Dignity' of Individua~
.THe-ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall I.... River-Thurs. Aug. 20, 1970 ..", , .... ".' .. ,. . 0-' 'lr~~; •
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'P,o~luti,o,n More Imp-ortant:
Tlh·an Eco'nomic' Problems! ' .
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By Marilyn and,.Joseph Roderick
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On two different occasions. irt the past two weeks iwe drove from Fall River to Long'Island, about 20 miles from New, York City. 'For most of the distance we drove alpng the Connecticut Turnpike past many of '. the large cities along the s,tate's coastline. It ; was nota pretty sight. Every write a book stating 101 reasons , town we passed was covered why Summer camp's should be with smog. '.New Haven is 10 abolished),
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times worse· than Bo'ston; Providence is bad; Stamf()I:d Conn. is the worst city we saw. Bridgeport. is .covered with a particle-, filled mist, and most of the -little '. towns have now reaped the benefits of' city-based industry.' . , Fairly Clean Air I suppose people are sick and tired of hearing this' by now tiresome story, but this is. an issue we had better not get tired of or we will ensure our children of terribly unwholesome places in which to live. Fall River faces few of .these problems at the present time. We do have some smoke stacks and we do' have some .degree of smog, but the overwhelming combination of industry. and congested traffic. has .not taken its toll. . This is the same for most of Southeastern Massachusetts, an area that was deserted by industry early in the 1900's: It is a paradox that we who were considered poor in wealth are now able to breathe fairly clean air while. those towns and 'cities which were fortu~ate enough to bring industry to their' shores are now 'suffering, -far more than economic malaise. Now we must prepare to guard against the entry of undesirable industries which are unwanted in other locations but which will be willing to offer' huge tax reductions, jobs, etc., in retl,lrn for clean and livable air. In the Kitchen
Hurt Cry
Back to bed stumbles tired parent, taking time. out only to stub toe on sharp edge of linen, trunk at the foot of the bed. "Oh-ow-ow" is the printable part of the retort that this sleepy accident brought out. The. rest fades into oblivion as head once again manages to come in :contact with pillow.. I "Mee-ow Mee-ow." com~s a strong, hurt cry from the ICuPboard. One of Snowbil1l's kittens has fallen off the shelf arid is shrieking in fear and confusion~ Mother to the rescue [only mother of the house not mother of kitten. Again sleep is brbken up. ' The third and final intrusion into this night of quiet repose is Jason. Who glides silentlyi into our bed, ~muggles in the middle and manages to deposit half of his body on Joe and the bther .half on me. Needle~s to say. when morning.<rfinally does arrive blurry-eyed parents ~arise from what can only be described in the Victorian prose as bed of pain." ., , I still find it hard to believe that there are actually people who can't .fall asleep when: they have the chance-a few nights at our house would do wortders for them. .In fact, they \yould probably end up even enjoying a night of slumber on a. Jicket. fence. This recipe for .a mblded salad is from Entirely Entertaining, a book of party menuS and recipes put out by the J.unior League of Montclair, N: JJ I
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I read with quiet enVy the ads promoting sleep-inducing devices. Can ther,e actually be people in this world who can't sleep when they get the chance? I'm sure that none of these people have small <;hildren (or animals) 'who spend their time' prowling the house just, when their parents' heads' hit 'the pillo\v. Let's take last evening as an example. Melissa is covered from head to toe (literally, not' figuratively) with poison oak that she acquired "free of charge" at that great American institution·Summer. 'camp, ,Snowbal1, our fertile cat, has just deposited her new' litter in my bedroom closet and Jason, as usual, had managed to begin his eve,ning's repose in his own bed b,ut end it in 9urs. No sooner do said paren(s put' their head on the pil,low and fall into a semi-deep slumber than the night's activi~ ties begin.' First it's Melissa who is one big itch an,d can't sleep so one of us has to get up and bathe her with the latest anti:itch medicin~ imd' then commiserate with her until she finally dozes off. (At this point I would' like to '.
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I large package of strawberry gelatin' 1 cup cold water : No.2 can of crushed :pineapple (reserve Y2 cup juice) large box 'of frozen s~raw berries, thawed,' drained Y2 cup chopped walnuts : 1 envelope plain gelatin If.J cup celd water '1 cup mayonnaise I cup sour cream 1). Add boiling water til the strawberry gelatin, stirring to dissolve comj;letely. Add; cold water and Y2 cup pineapple ijuice. Chill until slightly thickened and add drained p'ineapple, strawberries and nuts. : 2) Oil a 2' quart ring I mold and spoon in Y2 of the mixture. Chill \,lnti! almost firm. 3) Soften plain gelatin iJ cold water; dissolve over hot *ater. Combine· mayonnaise' and, sour cream. .Add . to plain g~latin, stirring ,well, to blend. 'Cover strawberry gelatin withrilayonI naise' . mixture. Add remaining strawberry gelatin. and chill until .firm. When ready to serve un. mold and· cut into' slices! Top with mayonnaise thinned I with a:. little, cream. ' I
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RETIRING: President of , Union Theological Seminary, New York, Dr. John C. Bennett, will continue to teach at the Pacific School of Religion and, the Graduate School of Theology, Berkeley, Calif~ NC;Photo:.
WASHINGTON (NC) - The 'National Conference of Catholic Bishops has told the United States Congress that it opposes family-planning or populationcontrol bills on the grounds they overlook an inoividual's dignity and put the cart before the horse_ when it comes to assisting the nation's needy. ; Without a long' overdue family . policy for this country, "family planning ,and birth control progra!11s are a limited and negative approach to family life," said Father James'T, McHugh, testifying in behalf, of the bishops before' the House Committee on Interstate Commerce, The priest is director of the family life division of the United States Catholic Conference. Programs under consideration by the committee, Father McHugh said, are "very often based on pragamatic decisions that overlook the dignity of the individual and that are questionable as to intent and expected results.
the people, but is actually determining those attitudes," Some agencies, he said, hold the particular ideological conviction that limited family size is good for all families 'and that people should have small families or even restrict its size to two children. "Such an approach is unacceptable because it is a negative and limited approach to the needs of families, and because it places the prestige of government in support of one ideological position."
Henlth Needs Ignored So, too with research funding, he said, explaining that "If research . monies are ,allocated merely to 'improve contraceptive technology, the health needs of mothers and children are ignored, and such research and the service it promotes falls far short of the needs for improved pre-natal delivery, post-natal and and .pediatric care" " ,-,,, Father McHugh cited "perhaps Op~,n Fund Private Agencies ' th,e most significant weakness" ROCKFORD' (NC)-Almost all Silence of population bills on of various population bills as . parish grade schools have opted the topic of abortion "makes it their underlying. assumption that to stay open next year, and even more .dangerous and. unac- America's population must be Rockford Bishop Arthur O'Neill ceptable," he said. curbed to prevent an ecological ·has approved their decision after catastrophe. "To begin with," Included in this blanket dere-evaluating the financial status , said the priest, ,"current projecnouncement were bills S2108 of each school. tions for population growth have After the 'Illinois legislature and HRI5159 and others. The been revised downward and as . rejected proposals' for funds for first, S2108, is a nearly $1 billion . the Report on National Goals inthat bill nonpublic schools this year,.' population-control dicates, our more serious probwould provide American women Bishop O'Neill gave the 56. parlem is one of population distriwfth birth control pills and other ish elementary schools four opbution." contraceptives. tions: close for one year; nego.Further, there is no firm eviThe other bill \ would amend tiate for shared enrol1ment pro" dence, he said, to support the grams with public schools, at the Public Health Service Act to supposition that the legislation provide specific project grants least in 'grades seven and eight; eliminate the seventh and eighth' for family plimning services and would alleviate poverty and regrades entirely, .or stay open related research, training and duce mater!1al' and. infant mortality by providing birth control without dual enrollment with technical assistance. to women now denied it. "In rechancery approval.' The various legislative proForty-nine schools . chose the posals contain authorization to gard to poverty, there is no aslast option. One school closed, fund private; non-profit agencies,' surance that birth control serfive picked dual enrol1ment, and institutions and organizations vice will help the pO,or tq. be one other eliminated grades for the provision of family plan- freed from the condition of pov. seven and eight. Bishop O'Neill ning services, Father McHugh erty," he stated. . '. approved aU the schools' deci- said. sions, ' . AnLEBORO'S Need Positive Policy . F~ther Thomas C. Brady, di9cLeading Garden Center 'esan director of education, whos.e '~We are opposed to the utili'office helped evaluate the zation of public monies,". he schools' finances, said the bish- added, "for the funding of priop's approval is for only one vate agencies whose whole inyear. He said each' parish situ- tent is ·to promote birth conSouth Main & Wall 5tl. ation will be evaluated again trol." next year. , Needed, he said, is a family Unless the state legislature al- policy which is "comprehensive, 222-0234 leviates some of the financial positive, supportive of family problems, Father Brady ·said, at life." He added it "should inleast one-third of the '$nlde clude income and 'work proschools should consider closing grams such as those contained The ANCHOR after the 1'970-71 school year. in the Family Assistance Plan, a He said many parish schools unified health-care program, an • TYPE SET could continue. this year only education program' that would • PRINTED BY OFFSET with serious' efforts to increase include early childhood educarevenue. tion: vocational education and • MAILED Earlier, the diocesan priests' adult education programs in ad· - BY THE senate had recommended imme- dition to our present institution diate closing of all diocesan of learning." schools due to the lack of He added that such a national finances. ' family policy should "also inFALL RIVER clude specific wel(are assistance Ontario Hospitals for those families and individuals with special needs." . 'Split on .Policy . TORONTO (NC) - Differing Negative Approach abortion policies in Ontario's hospitals may lead,to an antagonisIf ,instead of developing this tic .split between "those who do" type of family policy, the govand "those who don't," according, ernment pushes a family planto a recent survey by the Cana- ning program backed by vast dian', Register.. sums' of money, "it will be ex- Ontario Catholic hospitals do tremely. difficult-if not imposnot perform and do not expect 'sible-,-for t!te individual to' pur~ to perform therapeutic abortions. sue 'a policy different' from that The public general hospitals ac~ of the government. . ' cept patients who want -the· oper- "Moreover," Father' McHugh ation·as permitted in the amend- added, "at· this point goverriment ed "Canadian~ criminal code. is. not ref1e~ting the attftudes of
Bishop Approves Schools' Decision Stay
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CONLON & DONNELLY
ATTLEBORO
LEARY PREiSS
amODS for QUALITY, and SERVI.CE'!
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of.Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 20, 1970
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BISHOP'S ANNUAL VISIT TO CATHEDRAL CAMP: Boys from the overnight and day groups, together with girl day campers, hold their annual Bishop's Day in honor of Bishop Connolly. Left: Karen Sunderland of Fall River and Sean Guest of New York manifest their proficiency in canoeing to the bishop, and his guests. From out of blue comes Michael Nagle of Fall River, a seminarian from the Theological
Says Family Size Parents Decision " ,~0T.~t;:. PA,~.F ~9;;;;Moah ,o,f family planning programs should be geared 'to the family size desired by parents, rather' than a government-set figure, according to a University of Notre Dame study recently presented to the U.S. Agency for International Development. A two-year study of reproduc- . tive behavior in the Phillippines concluded that the current underlying philosophy of family planning is voluntarism. "To stress the desirability of a two'or-three child family in an area where such a unit is both unknown and not wanted is to court failure," wrote two researchers in their 130-page re;lort. The. two-Drs. William T. Liu and Arthur J. Rubel-professors here, made eight major recomJ;l1endations to ,assist officials in planning more effective family health programs with reference to their findings. These included improving and updating statistics so population trends can be evaluated; expanding medical school curricula to encompass sex education and family planning. and a government sponsored' family planning program cooperating with local health units, medical schools and private hospitals.
College, Washington as he demonstrates' the rapidly growing sport of parachute jumping. Following his act, Michael discusses his technique with Bishop Connolly. Mini-Olympic trials are started py chief counselor Peter McCue of Falmouth for Mark Moniz of New Bedford, Thomas Nicoletti of Somerset, Rosemary Riley of Fall River.
Sees Struggle for Justice in Ireland . .,.. Tension . ..
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CINCINNATI (N-C)-Northern Ireland's troubles stem from a political struggle for equality and justice and are in no sense a religious war, according to an Irishman involved deeply in the conflict. John Hume, 32-year-old former college teacher who represents Londonderry's Bogside district in Northern Ireland's Parliament, said in an interview here that his country's tensi~n is rooted in centuries of British colonialism. The struggle, Hume said, is for "equal rights and full equality for all citizens'; in Northern Ireland, where he charged the Catholic minority has been deprived of job opportunities, decent housing and adequate representation in government. Bogside is "where all the trouble started," Hume pointed out. "It is a kind of Catholic ghetto in Londonderry, the city of Northern Ireland with the largest proportion of Catholicsabout two-thirds," he said. . Hume was in the U. S. to address the national convention of the Ancient Order of Hibernians at Indianaf)olis. He came to Cincinnati with officials of the Cincinnati branch of the Hibernians. Cardinal William' Conway of Armagh recently named Hume Jesuit Arrested chairman of the new Northern MAASTRICHT (NC)-A Jesuit Ireland Resurgence Trust, a kind priest, Father Edward Krekel- of anti-poverty program set up berg, 57, was arrested here' in by the cardinal for housing and The Netherlands for breaking industrial development in the the window of a 'so-called sex country. 'Devoted to Civil Rights ~hop. The.' damages were estiOne of the first to support the. mated at several. thousand dollars. Father Krekelberg explained effort was the Ancient Order of that he broke the windows to Hibernians in the U. S., which protest thfil proliferation of "sex has contributed more than $100,000 to the trust in the first three shOps,"
moriths of its eXist~n·c~:. Formerly a teacher of history and French at St. Columb College, Londonderry, Bume said he "came up through the civil rights movement into. politics and Parliament." An independent in politics, he
Asserts Official Dia logue Useless MEXICO CITY (NC)-An' official dialogue - .between the Church and state in Mexico would be useless because neither institution is a true representativ~ of the people, the director of the Church's Mexican Social Secretariat has deClared. Father Manuel Velasquez' statement Clime as a response to a statement nearly two months ago by Bishop Sergio Mendez Arceo of Cuernavaca. The bishop called for an "open dialogue" with President-elect Luis Echeverria Alvarez on the subject of Mexico's anti-Church laws, which, although largely unenforced, restrict the Church's activities, preventing it from owning property and operating schools. "It· would be a mistake to start an il,1stitutionalized dialogue between' the Church and state in Mexico because neither the government nor the bishops can claim they ara the representatives of all of the Catholics in the nation," the. director declared. The dialogue that should be established is one between the Church in its modern .theological sense as the people of God and the state ali a political community, he said.
belongs to the Citizens Action Committee, which, like Bernadette Devlin's People's Democracy Group, is devoted to civil rights, "But we have different goals from those of Miss Devlin's group," he said, pointing out that he couldn't accept her socialist thrust. . He praised her "obvious talent," however, and said that "we all resent the fact that she was sent to prison. She did nothing more than thousands of others who are not in prison." Miss Devlin, a member of Parliament, is serving a six months' jail sentence for participating in a Northern Ireland riot. 'Inflames Passions' Hulne said he has seen some progress in the civil rights struggle. "We pave a one-man, onevote system now," he noted, and he suggested that gerrymandering-drawing the lines of political.districts to favor the ruling Unionist party-was on the way out. But his hopes of reconciliation in Northern Ireland are diminished by the activities of "men like the Rev. Ian Paisley," who Hume said, "abuse religion to prey on the fears of the people and create social resistance to the cause of change and reform," Paisley, leader of an outspoken anti-Catholic group called the Ulster Volunteer Force, was' sharply criticized last year by a government commission of inquiry into the Northern Ireland disturbances. The commission accused Paisley of "inflaming passions and engineering opposition to lawful and what in' all probability might have other· wise been peaceful demonstrations,"
University Sets Minority Group Nationa I' Record SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-With nearly a quarter of its entering freshman medical students from minority groups, the University of California Medical School has set a national record. University statistics show that last Fall's entering medical class of 136 students was composed of 22 Negroes, eight Mexican' Americans and on~ American Indian. This' year, with admissions almost complete, the school expects 33 minority group freshmen students in a class of 134. Except- for two predominantly black medical schools, Howard in Washington, D. C. and Meharry in Nashville, Tenn.,. those statistics give the medical school here the highest p"ercentage of minority group students in the nation. The university's drive to iri'crease minority enrollments has resulted in a number of modifications in the medical school's admissions process. . In past years an initial screening, based on college grades and scores from the Medical College Admission Test, usually eliminated more than half of the school's applicants. ''The procedure automatically elimmated nearly all biack and Mexican American applicants," said John S. Wellington, associate dean of the school. Now all minority applicants are passed through the first screening automatically and whenever possible they are in'terviewed. by the school before an admission decision is reached. "What we try to do," said Dr. Wellington, "is to delve into a student's personal situation, especially to gauge his motivation and perseverence. We look for the personal characteristics important for being a physicl~n."
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THE 20,::1910 . - ANCHOR::"'Dioceseof Foil River-Thurs. . . .Aug. ., . .. "
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Time : to', .Replace, 'Ancient M-~g·ht:· Is . . Right' ,'Prin'cip~e It is . all. very well to talk aQout the "new" pollicies which' rich;. industrialized nations can pursue· in~or1d affairs. But what are they? How can they be said to differ from old ones? What makes them new? For that m~tter, what makes traditional pol'J'akt:', as one simple example, icies "old?" The old policies last few hundred· years in can, in 'large measure, be the Europe,' In the 17th century·. summed up in terms of such Sweden had its moment of preJ
well established concepts as "the struggle for survival" and the "survival of th~ fittest." The most ancient rule 'of unreconstructed humanity" is that "mighl
dominance, defeating. .Gerlnimy , and Russia. Then France had its moment which lasted, intermit· tently, from Louis XIV to Napoleon. Then after a peaceful interregnum, Germany had its hour after 1870 and plunged the world into two holocausts.;, I
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Nuw Europe is un~asily divided between a Hussian and an . Atlantic ur, in esssence,1 still American, sphere of influence.' There is no "solution" in all this, unly a series of unstable power relationships. Nothing is new. Neanderthal man, with 'stone axes instead (If atomiC weapons, observed the same principles: . . ' . Everyone Inside
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is right" and that if you or your group happen to be stronger or 'REACH AGREEMENT: At a press conference called by the U.S. Bishops' .Ad Hoc luckier or more wealthy than your neighbor, you can' knock Committee on Farm Labor, William Grami, left, of the Teamster's Union shakes hands Since,' then, our tradi'tional him down, take his goods or his ~irector .Cesar Chavez after the two signed a pact giving the UFWOC exwith UFWOC land and either kill him or en- international relations are rooted clusive rights to organize field workers. Msgr. George Higgins, director Qf the urban life in our oldest' .and most brutal slave him. . ' .1 practIces, where can we .look for 'department, USCC, and ad hoc committee consult1:!nt, looks on. NC Photo. This is a process that has something new? This is where been going on since the Ice Age Christian principle, however disor even longer. When the regarded in Christian practice, is Babylonians conquered Israel· strictly relevant. . and' the Jewish people in exile by I The profoundest of all Christ's the waters of Babyon "wept when they remembered Jerusa- teachings is that all men are Project Wonder is for preBALTIMORE (NC)':""Warwick' Mary's Seminary in nearby Rolem," the cry they raised was neighbors and our world', our teens,: l.9,to :13,· years· old.- ·They planet, our single earthly·lhome leans 'with the surroundlai!d ,Park. "H isJirst a, quisti,an House no different from. the lament of . ,house." attend Bible classes, too, 'but the Volga Germans exiled to must learn to conduct· its affairs ing buildings. " Its three-story, red brick exte-. also study black culture, and see Asia by Stalin or Sioux Indians on the basis of a genuine heigh. . \ Four Programs ' rial', with the low·tattered woodexiled by white American set- borhood or commL!nity. Mass· is' offered in the house movies on Black awareness, relien porch jutting from its front, is every Wednesday night, and gion and sex education, followed tlers or Bantus driven by the Groups, . clans, tribes, nations, Boers from the high Veldt to the states-all of which have fought no different from the other row four days of its' six-day a week by discussions; houses on the block in West Bal- operation begin at 8:45 A.M. Transkei.· " Danc~s, Sport~ each other to the death over the timore. Project Alert, for young adults All history is strewn with millenia-have to resolve' their . .But the house serves· the· with a prayer service. Other activities include a 18 and over, also consists of weak and 'wretched . peoples differences with each· other· as n'elghborhood in a uinque way driven from their homelands or they do with fellow dtizens · with recreational, educational lunch program arid shopping discussions. on religion, black enslaved upon them by powerful within .clan or tribe or nation. and religiou's activities for young trips to nearby stores so young- culture and 'history, and commusters can learn thrifty buying nity action programs. Some of No one is "outside." and ruthless newcomers. . people aged four years to over habits. these students volun~eer to tutor The needed newness in: inter- lB. But the bulk of activities come youngsters participating in WarOne Clear Answer Two seminarians operate the under four programs, divided ac- wick's other programs. national policy in our day conThe only difference is that in sists .in seeing that, on this little house, established and funded by cording to age groups. Best-attended Warwick activSt. Gregory the Great parish the last 200 years, for the first planet, everyone is inside. Project Giant Step provides ity is Project Coffee House for here. Their 10-week activities morning Bible school 'and read- teenagers under lB. In addition ,, time in human history, a powerare now under the B'altimore ing classes for youngsters aged to discussion groups, the, teenGuide to Action ful humanist tradition, rooted in archdiocese's Summer work pro- four to eight. 'IWe teach them agers sponsor dances, sports ac-. Greek idealism and Christian This 'sounds like im empty Vision, has begun to question . abstraction. It. is the opposite, gram, enabling seminarians to 1'0 appreciate what they have tivities and trips to nearby recwhether these brutal, con- It is potentially a precise, guide work in the community or fill in themselves-wl1at God has given reational and cultural functions. for parish jobs. . scienceless uprootings and ex- to practical political action. them," Maurice said, "such as Contributing to a project fund "This is not a social center," their eyes, ears and mouth." ploitings of the weak and poor for their activities also encoursaid Maurice Blackwell, a Wa~ If people outside my Igroup by the rich and strong ·are the Then the children are taught ages the teenagers to open savultimate answer to human or· are, by definition, enemies,: I can wick House staffer from St. to become more concerned ings accounts, Maurice said. spend, as Atlantic nations do national .relations. "I thought it would be hard about their community through spend, some $110 billions each religion. "We teach them that to get teen-agel's in here," said This, then, is one clear anSolons 11' 0 Consider God wants the block to be clean Terry Almon, sophomore at St. swer to the question of what year to blow them up: But so' we must make it beautiful," Mary's Seminary in Catonsville, makes a policy "new." Is it or is equally they. in their turn, can Permissive Abortion spend the same amount to blow TALLAHASSE (NC)-A sta,te' Maurice said. Giant Step youngother Warwick House staffer. it not based on the unconscious domination of the powerful? Is me up. This may sound like senator said here he plans to in- sters clean up the block twice "It's not hard to get them in troduce in the 1971 Florida legis- weekly. here; it's hard to get them out" it, consciously or unconsciously realism. It is in fact, idiocy. . ' lature a bill which has been de"imperialism"? Does it, with or If, on the contrary; I were to without intention; favor only the see these other human beings · scribed as the most permissive WIIIIIIIIIIII11111111111111I11I111I111111IIII11I111IIII11I11I11I11I1IIJ111111111IIIIIIIIJIIIIII III IIIJIJ III1IIJ11111II IIIIJ11I111I11I 1II1111~ rich, the fortunate and the not as "outsiders" but as !leigh- yet proposed in Florida. Sen. Cliff Reuter, a Republican strong? bors, it would be perfectly con· from Brevard County, has preEver since history began, in- ceivable to spend, sayi one filed a bill for next year's legistenth of the present arms budget tE;,rnational policy has been INC. lative session which would make based on a deep bias in favor of not on blowing them up but on abortion a matter strictly bej the successful. Trye Germans building· them up. . tween a woman and her doctor. were not the first to ~ay' that Such a policy would be: really "The question of abortion," "might is right." They were only .new. Neanderthal man I never Reu~er said, "should be decided , the most outspoken. tried anything like' it:' But this, by the individual, not the state.' "Adequate birth control infor, precisely, is its great virtue. On Nothing Is New . the ,Neanderthal principle of mation and availability," he conThe trouble about all policies :'might is right," wars have been tinued, "are the best defenses CONDITIO~ING based upon this principle of sur- fought for at least 10,000 :years. ' against unwanted pregnancies, vival by violence is that there Is it not time. in the' face of nu- but women' are entitled to a sec363 SECOND' ST. FALL RIVER, MASS. is no end to the violence they clear destruction, to try another ond line of defense if birth conunleash. . principle? trol methods fail." ,..
Baltimore Neighborhood·· Center Popular Has Diversified Activities for Youth
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'REFRDGERATION APPLIANCES' AIR
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Interest High in Nonpublic Schools
THE ANCHOR~ Thurs., Aug. 20, 1970
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Continued from Page One school programs was clearly decourt in Lemon vs. KUl'lzman Then' is a wide diversity of scribed by Justice Byron I R. (Pennsylvania Case). The U. S. opinion on the subject. Among White in the 1968 Allen decision, Supreme Court said it would others, Saturday Review, Look, which upheld the constitutionalhear that caSt~ during its Fall U. S. News and World Report" ity of New York State's program term, A Rhode Island staluto:', the New York Times MagazinE' of lending textbooks to students and America havE' recently had in church-related schools. however, was declared uneonslitutional by a similar court in articles on non public school edStudents and teachers in priJune, ucation. Compact, published by vate nonprofit schools art' eliEuemli!'s OImillishilig the Education Commissil)I1 of gible to participate in numerous the States, devoted its entire U. S, Office of Education proJllterestingly enough, Uwn, the February issue to the subject of grams as well as programs spon· decade of the 1960's witn.,ssed state aid to private education. sored by the Departments of a renaissance of interest in nonBasic Assumptions Agriculture, Labor, Transporta-' public education in edul:aliunal A number of assumptions Ii~ tion, and the Office of Economic theorists and practitioners olht:>r bC:'hind the broad discussion: Opportunity. However, the landthan the traditional advocales, I) that non public schools have mark Elementary and Secondary A recent National EdLl(;ation Asa legitimate right to exist and Education Act (ESEA) of 1965 suciation (NEAl resolLltiun nut that parents may lawfully select is the most conspicuous and withstanding, trauitional educathe school to which they send . significant of the federal educational "enemies" at the national, their children; tionai programs involving both state, anu local levels are "dia2) that government may legi- pl,lblic and nonpublic education. CONTROVERSIAL CATHEDRAL DOORS: Italian loging" for th~ benefit of the timately assist persons ill the With the' passage of ESEA, of' all of America's sculptor Emilio Greco stands in front of one of his panels education children. ' exercise of such a right; moreover, Congress committed 3) that children'should not be the nation to the quality educa- on the central door of the 13th century cathedral in 01', Things have come a lorig way ' vieto, Italy. A dozen art experts have quit their govern- since the days of the "divisivedeprived of welfare benefits sim- tion of all its children. ment positions in protest to adding the modern doors to the ness" arguments. It's unfortuply because they attend a nonPresent .ESEA Legislation na.te, however, that many of the public school; When President Lyndon B. Gothic structure. NC Photo. present discussion~ were occa4) that non public schools take Johnson signee! the 1967 amenda multiplicity of forms-private ments to this act, he extended Nixon said. that, if elected, his' the National Union of Christian sioned by a financial crisis facnonprofit, church-related, non- ESEA for two years, through Administration, without weaken- Schools. That panel is now re- _ing nonpublic education 'and not denominational; June 30, 1970. President Richard ing its commitment to public searching the financial base of by the merits of legitimate educational alternatives to the pub5) that the state has general M. Nixon signed the 1969 ESEA education, would proteet and en- non-public education. regulatory powers over non- amendments last April 13, t\1US courage the pI-ivate option in It is significant that a growing lic school system. Generally, non public schools public schools; extending it for three more years education by ~rging "state- number of state legislatures arE' are freer to assume an experi6) that it's a "new ball game," to June 1973. prepared plans for state-admirr- adopting educational policies so to speak, concerning publicAs amended, then, ESEA con- istered Federal assistance to which utilize the private sector mental posture 'than are their 'nonpublic school cooperation, sists of eight parts or titles. non public school children"" ,-,,, in-education to serve the public counterparts in the public sector. with new and interesting attiTitle I provides educational Eight days later, in Pitfs- purpose. Even though the meth~ , Thus their potential for change tudes seeming to emerge and programs for environmentally burgh, he noted that "there is a ods vary, the most recently is greater, supplementing but evolve; handicapped children. significant role for religious- adopted programs generally pro- not duplicating public education. 7) that being "for" non public T'tle II .IS a program 0 f ' I acqUlraffiliated schools in the future of vide for the purchase of secular Their potential for change, moreschools does not necessarily ing school library resources, our country'!' '!' * along with services from private nonprofit over, is just being realized; imply being "against" public textbooks, and other instruc- state schools and other private schools and for salary supple-' they're positive catalytic agents for social and racial justice, both schools; and finally, tional materials. schools, they have grown side- ments for teachers in these in and out of the city. To let The purpose of Title 1II is to by-side in serving the American schools. 8) that American education is a totality with the public and design, create, and utilize educa- people." In summary, 27 states provide them down would be .detrimental non public sectors interdependent, c:tionally innovative supplemensO,me form of aid to students at- to the well-being of American In his, education message of so that what happens' in one sec- tary centers and services. This March 3, 1970, President Nixon tending non public schools. Some education and, therefore, Amer,tQr has ,impact..upon the. other. ·title' now - includes gUidance, acknowledged the contribution states (23) provide pupil trans- ican society. A recent National Catholic EdQuite apart from its spiritual counseling, and. testing programs. of non public schools 'to Amer- portation, textbooks (9), health ucational Association superinTitle IV provides' for educa- ican education: dimension, the Catholic and/or services (8), general auxiliary tendents' statement declared: non public school performs a tionaI research and training. statesservices (4), while four "The non-public elementary Title V provides grants to and secondary' schools' in the Connecticut, Pemtsylvania, Ohio, "Those Americans who choose five-fold function in our pluralistic society: exercise of a paren- strengthen state departments af United States have long been an and Rhode Island-purchase ser- non public schools for their children, often for deeply religious tal right or option, .public ser- education. integral part of the nation's edu- vices from non public schools and vice, "substantial savings to the The special education of chil- cation establishment ' - supple- pay salary supplements to teach- reasons, should not be penalized for exercising th~ir freedom as public," diversity, and compe- clren is the focus of Title VI. menting in an important way ers in these schools. tition. Title VII is the bilingual edu- the main task of \ our public One state, Hawaii, has a small guaranteed in the First Amendtax credit. New York State has ment of the Constitution." cational program. Attitude Changing school system. The non public Slow in getting started, the Title VIII authorizes informa- schools provide a diversity approved a "mandated services" The Schempp and Allen cases conversation is now in motion. are at bill. Study commissions in the U. S. Supreme Court and tional dissemination and also in- which our educational system work in Maryland, Massachu- As educators learn to underrecent federal and state educa- cludes technical assistance to would otherwise lack. They also stand and appreciate one anothtional legislation, moreover, indi- schools in rural areas and give a spur of competition to the setts, West Virginia, South Da- er's goals and needs, it will unNew Hampshire, kota, Kansas, school dropout prevention propublic schools-through which cate an attitudinal change redoubtedly pick up momentum. ' educational innovations come, and New York. garding government assistance grams. And only then will American eleExpansion Suggestions both systems benefit, and progAdditional Programs to non public schools. The mentary and secondary educaress results. A report entitled "Financial tion achieve its full democratic Schempp case test in 1963 was Some of the other more signi"There is another equally im- Support Nonpublic Schools, New potential. 'bat if the purpose and primary ficant federally assisted educaportant consideration: these York State," was released by the ffect of aid legislation is neither tion programs in which non pubschools-non-sectarian, Catholic, New York State Education Deco advance nor inhibit religion, lie school students and profesand if it has a secular purpose, ' sional personnel are eligible to Protestant, Jewish and other- partment in No~ember 1969. It then legislation is not contrary participate are: NDEA Title III 'often add a dimension of spiri· lists six suggestions for expandSee Us First to the First Amendment. Loans for the Purchase of Equip- tual value giving children a ing' state assistance to non public The public service function of ment, Education Professions De- moral code by which to live. schools: free textbook aid to elethe secular aspects of non public velopment Act, National School This government cannot be in-: mentary school pupils; pupil perSee Us Last sonn.el services; remedial instrucLunch Program, Special Milk different to the potential coltion; dual enrollment; tuition Program, School Breakfast Pro- lapse of such schools." Agency Approves scholarships, and direct aid. But See IUs Study Plight of Schools gram, Driver Education, NeighTwenty-four states are "conborhood Youth Corps, Follow Housing F'roject On April 21, President Nixon sidering'" legislation to assist , ENGLEWOOD (NC)-The Mt. Through Program, Head Start: announced the appointment of nonpublic schools. Carmel Guild, social action agen- and Performance Incentive Con- four educators to a panel to Purchase of services has been study the plight of non public upheld by a three-judge federal cy of the Newark archdiocese, tracts. and secondary has granted approval of the EnA significant political first elementary elewood Planning Board for the happened during the 1968 presi- ,schools.' A committee of the construction of 80 apartments in dential campaign-both major- Commission on School Finance, ~ ELECTRICAL an urban renewal area here in party, candidates advocating fed- the panel includes: Clarencll' ~~ - Contractors New Jersey. eral assistance to children at- Walton, president of The Catholic University of America, chairSome of the apartments would tending non public schools. be for low-income families under The Republic platform urged man; Auxiliary Bishop William the government's rent subsidy the states to formulate state E. McManus, director of educaplans which would include fed- tion for the archdiocese of Chiprogram. 7007 Kings Hwy. Approval of the planning eral assistance to non public , cago; William G. Saltonstall, for'board clears HJe way for a school children and to include mer principal of Philips Exeter NEW BEDFORD September ,,' construction start. non public school representatives Academy and chairman of the The Federal Housing Authority in the planning 'of these pro- . Massachusetts Board of Education from 1966 to 1968; and has already made a $1.7 million grams. Open Evehings 944 County Sf. ~ In a New York radio address Ivan E. Zylstra, administrator of mortgage commitment for the New Bedford on Oct. 20, 1968, Richard M. ,government-school relations for project.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 20. ;1970 .
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CAMPERS: Boys from' Cape Cod enjoy varied pro~' gram at St. Vincent de Paul Overnight Camp as is evidenced by pictures during the last period of the camping season. Top left: makingbeds is a chore at home but a . joy at camp. Top right: a quiet game of cards occupies the rest hour prior to another period of physical activities. Bottom: Tini Goldrick, head counselor from St. Mary's Seminary, directs a group in' the technique of tent raising. Mayor~
Archbishop Meet Privately NEWARK (NC) - Newark's first black mayor; Kenneth, Gibson, continued his efforts to make personal contacts with leaders in this city as he met privately with Archbishop Thomas A.. Boland at' the chancery office.
Urges Separation Prilndple in Israel
Registered Nurse
. REHOVOTH (NC) Israel Jesuit Brother in Hospotal'School',s needs to adopt the U.S. principle Gra~uating Class \. of separation of church and state , both to advance democracy and -DETROIT (NC)-Brothet "Dan- tive of Detroit. said he cares for to strengthen religion in the Jew- iel J. McCullough, S.J.; I is Ii from three to eight priests. in ish state, the American-Israel- stand-out in any crowd - he ,the 70-to-90 age bracket at the' "Dialogue" was told. ~ measures 6-foot-5. I . college. Dr. Robert G,ordis of New He'll be particularly noticeable He's scheduled to put. in a York, professor of Bible at the Sunday when the latest class' is year's internship at St. Joseph's Jewish . Theological Seminary. graduated from St. Joseph's Hospital. Pontiac. b~fore getting told the symposium of American Hospital school of nursing here back full time to his duties at ---'-he·s the only man. in the: class. 'the college. Jewish and Israeli scholars: "Israel's Orthodox religious Brother McCullough has trainBrother McCullough said he, ed and studied with his female strives 'to fulfill the bodily. emoestablis~ment is concerned with politics. power and position. Any . counterparts for two years to tional and social needs of the re.' connection between religion and earn his registered nurse degree. tired priests. He commented: "I For the women graduatJs. the'· try to analyze what each is capethics is purely conincidental day will launch them on a new able of doing physically, then enand unintentional." career. But for Brother McCul- courage them. We want them to, Dr. Gordis said the separation lough. it will be a return to duty participate in the community. principle is necessary "to put an as the infirrnarian for retired want to give them a sense of end to religious compulsion in Jesuit priests at Colofttbiere belonging." Brother McCullough Israel •. not merely for· the sake Coltoge. near Clarkston. !Mich. said. of religious liberty but also for -but a wiser. better trained inAll of which proves that the enhancement of the spiritual . firmarian. He's held do~n the Brother McCullough also has life of Israel and the vitality of job since 1961. ' bridged the ~ generation gap. Judaism." The 33-year-old Jesuit. ia na-
Students Substitute For Swiss Guards VATICAN. CITY (NC)-Eigh_ teen Swiss students. including seminarians. are doing temporary. summer duty with the papal Swiss guards whose ranks have thinned over the ~ears. The Swiss students are serving at the Vatican and Castelgan'dolfo during the months of July. August and September.
No information on the topics discussed was provided' but spokesmen for both the archbishop and the mayor described the meeting as a "get-acquainted" 'one. The archbishop indicated, a spokesman said, that he was willing to cooperate with the mayor in any way possible for the advantage of the community. The two met informally last month when both were on the reviewing stand for the annual Puerto Rican Day parade. Mayor Gibson at that time asked if he could meet ~ith the archbishop privately at a later date.
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NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK 115 WILLIAM ST.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of
Finds Moderate Pleasure In Reading Marshall ,Novel
By RT. REV. MSGR. JOHN S. KENNEDY
$5.95), which the jacket tells us is "a humorous novel about the modern Catholic Church and the Pill." Mr. Marshall, who has been turning our books for longer than almost anyone writing today, has slowed down in his more recent output. His work has been lacking in the exuberance and Iightfootedness which once characterized it. Besides, he has repeated himself more than a little, and his typical tricks have. grown so familiar as to be predictable and consequently less titillating. The Bishop of the title seems to be Bishop Bed,e Jenkins, although throughout the novel there are allusions to the certainty that Jenkins' secretary, young Father Spyers, is certain to be one day a bishop, possibly even pope. Father Spyers loves people, is solicitous for their needs, gri~ves over their sufferings and perplexities. He is also, an ardent antivivisectionist. ConfessIonal Scenes.. Two other clerics are close to 8ishop Jenkins. The first is his vicar general, Monsignor Basil Powell, a man of taste and with a distinguished military record. The second is Monsignor Finbar Ignatius O'Flaherty, administrator of the cathedral, a roaring flannelmouth. Such plot as there is, is set off by the publications of the encyclical Humanae Vitae. This arouses lively discussion and some debate. Bishop Jenkins is -firm in demanding external and internal acceptance of it by his priests. As in other Marshall novels, there are confessional scenes, and in a series of these Father Spyers requires conformity to the law by a woman whose situation is extremely difficult. There are dire,indeed tragic, consequences, which lead to a change of attitude on Father Spyers' part and his being penalized. Ce~trlst Stand The other main theme is Monsignor Powell's troubies with a nun, Sister Juliana, who is convinced that she made a mistake in entering the convent and is
but her persuasive powers are greater'than his, for she induce~ him to leave the priesthood and also leave the Church. They do not marry; however, but go separate ways. ~t is hard to ~etermine precisely what is Mr. Marshall's attitude toward the changes and the turmoil in the Church. He is no longer a young .man, and one might readily expect that his views would be conservative. And so, in part at least, they prove.. But just When onâ&#x201A;Ź concludes that he opposes everything new, there pops up evidence clean to the contrary. His stand, apparently, is centrist. 'Theft of Silence' He can be biting about ,the Englishing of the liturgy., "Surely that was no excuse for this mixture of second person singu-, lar and plural, for this intolerably chatty prayer of consecration ,~ ;' 0:< the vulgarity of 'all God's friends' for hominibus bonae voluntatis.' " "That was the great error the liturgical reformers had' made ,~ 0:< 0:< the theft of silence from a world already dedicated to din." But then he can make merry with Monsignor O'Flaherty's bellowed criticisms of Vatican II as "a greater disaster than the Reformation. " And he can say pithily, "But Pope John himself spoke of the necessity of an aggiornamento. That was what Vatican II was supposed to be about. It seems to me that we're now interpret~ ing this in the English senseadjourning the aggiornamento, putting off the bringing up' to date." Good:Humored While satirizing the high dudgeon of the self-important Mrs. the Pickley-Oxborrow over changes in the Church, he can sympathize with the bewilder'ment of a person who truly loved and faithfully observed the old ways. One especially striking point which is made again and again in the book is that "Our Lord was never Delphic," meaning that He spoke plainly and not ambiguously. But one remembers, too, that He habitually used parables and disclosed the direct meaning only to His close associates, not the multitude. If this novel settles none of the problems which its people face, if it is skipping rather than probing, at least it is goodhumored, even-tempered and can be read with moderate pleasure.
River-Thurs. Aug. 20, 1970
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Sund~y
S'ession at Castelgandolfo Most Desirable Papal Audience
Comic novels about things Catholic, with clerics as figures of fun~ There is nothing new about the genre. We have had them for many years, in many languages. A whole generation ago, for example, there was Bruce Marshall's Father Malachy's Mirasking for dispensation from her acle, followed by several vows.. others from the same pen, Monsi,gnor Powell is charged the best 'of these being The with persuading her to remain, World, the Flesh, and Father Smtth. ' Now, almost 40 years since Mr. Ma'rshall delighted us with Father Malachy, there comes a new Marshall novel, entitled The Bishop (Doubleday, 501-Franklin Ave., Garden City, N. Y. 11531.
Fa~1
FILIPINO LAWYER: JeremiasU. ,Montemayor, president of the Federation of Free Farmers speaks during an interview at the Asian Ecumenical Conference on Development wh'ich convened in late July in Tokyo. NC Photo.
Advocates New CO Provisions \ NEW HAVEN (NC)-An edi, torial in the Knights of Columbus' monthly magazine Colum,bia urges new government steps to prevent draft-eligible 'men from abusing conscientious objector provisions of Selective Service rules wid,ened by a recent' Supreme Court decision.
Accuses IFB I ATLANTA (NC) - The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, successor to the slain Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, charged here that Federal Bureau of Investigation agents are wiretapping the telephones' of "anyone who stands up for justice."
Written by Columbia editor Elmer Vol Feldt and scheduled to appear in the magazine's September issue, the article points out that civilian service options available to conscientious objectors are ,generally qess onerous' than combat'military duty. To equalize the burden, Vol Feldt suggests prorating civilian service at the rate of three , years for every year of obligatory military dutr. . New provisions regarding conscientious objectors are needed, VOl1 Feldt commented, because past and potential court decisions are greatly widening opportunities for men to claim C.O. status.
Judge O'Caliahan Finds Priest Guilty JERSEY CITY (NC)-A municipal court judge named Jeremiah O'Callahan convicted a parish priest named John P. Egan here ~m charges of being a disorderly person and interfering with an arrest. The judge, former national 'president of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, fined Father Egan $IOQ-but suspended the sentence. He said he could not understand why Father Egan, who chUrned to be an innocent bystander, didn't protest at the time of his arrest. Policemen claimed that on the second night of an outbreak by Puerto Ricans, Father Egan advised a Puerto Rican youth, who 'had been throwing bottles at policemen, to run, ,then shoved polic~men aside as they pursued the' youth.
~OME (~C) ~ Romans ~dvise' ,attention WIth pike~ at the ready, their tounst fnends to bring but happily unused in their shinthree things along to a papal ing' brightness for over 400 general audien~e: their admis- years. One of the guards, helmeted in sion ticket, a rosary to be blessed for Au~t May back in Winona,. steel and plume, garbed in the and their sense of humor. blues, reds and oranges of the They are also telling them to Renaissance, takes a different forsake the general audience on view of things than did MichaelWednesday for the Sunday angelo who designed his uniform. noontime blessing in the court- With attention and'ramrod rigidyar~ of the papal Summer villa ity he looks out at the world at Castelgandolfo. from smoked sun glasses. Not only that, many R9mans Happy Crowd themselves make the half-hour " . . drive up the shaded lanes of the For ~ short five mmutes. th~ Alban Hills for the Sunday bless- Pop.e discourses on' some little ing. With family in tow, they subJect. of instant re!lection, dally after~ards over a late ,t,hen r.ecltes. the An.gelus 10 .Latin lunch overlooking Lake Albano and gives hiS bles~mg. Agam the, or push along to one of the near- applause .and. agam. the wave of by "castle towns" for canneloni arm~, thiS time With the Pope (pastas) and iced Frascati (wine) lean 109 way over th~ b~lcony before descending to the sizzling ~~I be seen. by those directly sidewalks of downtown Rome e ow. In five European IanThe .first advantage of the guages he a~dresses various Sunday session is that it affords groups, but. seems to get .the loude~t ovatIOn from the SpanIshan unlimited view of th' P .' e ope" speakmg sometimes comparable to stand-. '.. ' ing at mid-court of a basketball Perhap~ It IS the example of floor and looking above the the SP?nI.sh ?r perhaps it is becaus~, It IS tune to say goodby, backboard. but "Just before the Pope leaves, ¡ . At the Wedne sd ay au d lence, you are crammed' into a hot hall enthUSiasm runs rampant: through with 10000 oth er peop Ie, com- the crowd. , t . t .. Even the quietest of . ouns s Joms. a crowd that IS pared to about 2,500: in the courtyard and run the . k f no~ ~nrestramed and happy, a ns 0 whistling t' h t' , being pinioned between a wood. s ?~pmg, S ou 109, en railing and the 14 elbows of clappmg, laughmg crowd. As the nuns who arrive after you do Pope waves from above, the . h . crowd waves back with tripods, That, by the way, IS were you h need your sense of humor ats, passports, fans, flowers, . flags and babies. More Pleasant As quickly as he came, the 'Remember to smile a lot alf.;l Pope is gone and the week's when you are standing in the most comfortable' dialogue is "end zone" of the general audi- over. ence, swelter through an hourThe Sunday session is carried long ceremony for which you live - but without the colorarrived an hour early, and won~ over loudspeakers in the Vatidel' what is going on way down can's St. Peter's Square. That, there at the end of the hall. of course, is down near the cenFor centuries tourists _ and tel' of Rome and Rome is hot. Somewhere, high in the hills, Aunt Mays back home-it is all worth it, of course, but the Sun- the iced Frascati is waiting.. day outing is simply more pleasant, and you don't even need Greets Methodists one of the free tickets given out CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) for an audience. Pope Paul VI welcomed a group On Sunday, a canvas canopy of 50 Tennessee Methodisti and shades the courtyard, save for urged' . patience, humility and a three-foot ribbon of brightness hope in striving 'for Christian along its length. In that corridor, unity. The group, led by Dr. of sunlight any man can truly be . Wayne A. Lame, visited the.Pope an island, as his fellOW tourists at his Summer home here after seek the shade. 'having completed a pilgrimage There are 61 windOWS in the to the Holy Land. courtyard, but only one has its shutters thrown back, a microphone mounted in its middle and a papal c;t>at of arms furled from its balCtmy, not unlike a blanket left out to air. Pope Pius' XII, 'with something Of the deviltry of a young' boy, would on CITlIES SERVICE occasion pop out of one of the , DISTROBUTORS back windows just to turn the crowd around before' scurrying Gasoline to the main window. Fuel and Range Swiss Guards Precisely at noon, dutifully alerted by the large clock over the main window, the crowd beOIL BURNERS gins a measured applause" a For Prompt Delivery polite way of saying in Italian & Day & Night Service it is time to get the show on the rQad. 'G. IE, BOILER BURNlEit UNITS Pope Paul VI must be standing there, smiling, acknowledging Rural BOHled GClis Serviee the applause and the cheers with that bobbing wave of the arms, 61 COHANNET S1' hands flat out, a gesture so TAUNTON , reminiscent of Pius XII. ' Attleboro - No. Attleboro . Framed in the balustrade of Taunton the courtyard at crowd level are two Swiss Guards, standing at
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