08.24.67

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ANCHOR

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11, No. 34

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1961 lJ'lRio Anchor

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$4.<10 P"'" VQear • . PRiCIE Uilllu

Pope P·au~ Announces Reforms in Curia V A'L'ICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI, fulfilling & !bul1"-year-old promise, has :reformed the central govern. Meul of the Church. Time-worn channels' of au·thorrJl1iy illll.' -' SEVEN LIVELY McDONAGHS: Seven little reasons- why Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. llome Curia .will be given modern pace and direction by 'McDonagh,.of St. MarY'ri parish, Attleboro;'are busy people: Add work in 'CCD and the' major changes he has 'oroe:rr" " .. . Cursillo· movement and you have fully occupied parenl;s~ Front, from left, Catherine, 4; M. Msgr. Giovanni Pirma. .. lems that . formerly bUt"denecll,' d\tlr. McDonagh; Richard~ 2i Mrs. McDonagh; Thomas, i~ Rear, Patricia, 10; 'Dolore$ 9;' IiIOOretary of the commission telePope; Barbara, 6; ,Virginia, 8. ' k the refonn has given 11 . -Five-year terms :lfOI' high . ' Curia officials will replace the liormer indefinite tenu'I'es that often became lifetipte careers; -Incorporation of diocesan bishops from around the ~orld into Curia leadership will alter the bitherto h~avily Italian character of the administration;' -Permission fot: use of mod­ em languages in Curia commu­ By Larry MichallDd nications will speed papa~ pap~r­ "I can't' put out the light", said Richard, age two, when the children were going 1;0 work, though Latin still remains the official language; · bed. "As1 your bigger sister to do it for you." The instruction came from Edward P. -Principal Curia departments McDonagh, vice-president of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in the Fall River will be reshuffled, renamed, and Diocese. Richard is the youngest of the seven McDonagh children who help, among in some cases placed in new other things, to keep theilt' combinations to meet 20th-cen­ from a three ~eek vacation in quite soon."

parents fully occupied. Be­ tUI'Y conditions; The children stayed with rel­

sides Richard' there are Europe. . -A new tribunal win be set "It took us five years of plan­ atives "and had quite a good lip to handle disputes among Patricia, 10; Dolores, nine; ning to do this," he said of the time," said Mr. McDonagh. the various Curia offices; Virginia, eight; Barbara, six; trip. "I don't want it thought Besides raising seven childl'en, -Administration of the Holy Thomas, five; and Catherine. we do it every year!" . the McDonaghs spend much oil See's temporal possessions and four. Mrs. McDonagh said she en­ their tilTle doing apostolic' work financial resources will be united Formerly of New York City. joyed the trip very much, "but on both parish and Diocesaaa nn an entirely new d·epartment. Mr. and Mrs. McDonagh moved I began to miss the chHdreltIl Turn to Page Twelve Pope Paul's reform of the to Attleboro in 1958 aild pl'es­ Curia, which goes into effect ently Nve at 5 Hunting Street. . \ j Jan. 1, was spelled out in an apo­ Mr. McDonagh, a graduate of stolic constitution Regimini Ec­ Fordham University, after hav­ clesiae Universae (For the Gov­ ing satisfied his military obliga­ MSGR. G. ,M. PINN &. ernment of the Church Univer­ tions, moved to this state and sal) dated. Aug. 15 and made became employed by Texas ~ conference discussing theSll!! public three days later. Instruments 'where he is manager The Most Rev. J'ames L. named pastor of Our Lady of ~ of the reformed curia: Setting the theme of the re­ of service and security. . Connolly Bishop of the Dio- Grace Parish, Noblesvill~, Indli­ -The Papal Secretariat oil florm, Pope Paul quoted illl has The couple recently returned 'F' R" ana,. and has served In that new document from the dogma­ ~te, now to be known as the cese of all lV.~r} ~as ap- capacity until his present ap­ .l!"Dl]!ta1 Secretariat and givea . !'lie constitution Pastor Aeternua proved the .nommatIon by . pointment to the Dighton Parish IM>ooder powers, win be able ~ CJi tbe First V·atican Council, tine the Very llev. Roger M. Chare.st,' in the Fan River Diocese. ~c many administrative probTurn to Page Five S.M.M., pf Rev. Raymond W. Graham" S.M.M., as pastor of St. Peter's Parish, Dighton . The. Montfort Father will suc­ ~.turgy, . . ' ceed Rev. James F. Lyons who has been appointed pastor of QUll" VATICAN CITY (NC) of Victory Parish, Center­ The head of. the, Church's Lady ville.' ,.organizaJti'on to'impl{nlent li­ HARRISBU.RG'(NC)~AM.Uldy r~leasedh~re ~~l<1e~the Father Graham, the son' of ~Jllsorship of th.e ,PenIlSY~1fall!na Catholic Gol!fer~nce.warns turigcal . Ciuiuges ,bas sent Thomas... Graham and the late out a circular letter warning that Mary Roxbury Graham, was ~at the "no~ di~tin~t possibmty" of drastier~dijctions in private and arbitbry liturgical born on on Jan. 9, l!l21 in New pall"ochial schoon popyl,atiornth.rolDghou~Penn~yly~ni~~ "spells experiments "are gravely threat­ York City. Following graduation !levere economichardshipi • ~ • ening the future of the whole from the Montfort Seminary, IMMll. grave disturbance" fOlir total public - is an' important liturgical reform." Bay Shore; N. Y., he entered the factor in the economy and edu­ Novitiate of the Montfort ~ S'tate's public sehools. The letter was sent by Gia­ Fathers in Nicolet and was pro­ como Cardinal Lercaro, presi­ <Qopies of the report were cational future of the state. Any substantial .reduction in dent of the Concilium for Imple­ fessed on Aug. 15, 1941. !Dade available to the governol" number of the non-pUblic school mentation of the Constitution on The, new Dighton pastor mull members of his administra­ population spells economic hard­ Sacred Liturgy, to all presidents was ordained on Marcb l. \lion, members of both the State ship to Pennsylvania and grave of· national episcopal confer­ 1948 after completing his philo­ ~n&te and House of Representlll­ dlisturbance for'public schools. . ences and to the heads of all na­ sophical and theolollical studies (llve3, and other public and OOl1l­ Non-public education in Penn­ tional liturgical commissions. at St. John's Scholasticate. ~~on officials. 11 says there are Father Graham hilS taught in "'i!ive fundamental realities" lJ)"lvania cannot much longer After taking note of various meet the cost of serving the pub­ ~ich must be faced. liturgical experiments that have the minor arid majo,r seminaries lic in spite of any desires or sac­ of the Montfort ~'athers and been carried out with the au­ Non-public education - cm­ rifices on the part of its sup­ Thnr&cing 23 per cent of all ele­ thorization of various national served as superiOT (If the semi­ hierarchies and in' cooperation nary from 1953 to 1959. ooentary and secondary school porters. Many public schoo'l d'istricts with the concilium, the letter Following studies in Ascetical I)ull)Hs in the commonwealth Theology in Rome, he was IltIEV. Ilt. W. GRJI\lHIA\Thi, S.MI.1'llL sounded a strong warning. TurAl t9 Patte '!.~ ~ effecting t&& savin~ to tllne

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VPLeads Contingent

From Diocese .to Convention

Fr. Graham Becomes First Montfort Pastor in Diocese

Foresee' Grave Disturbance For Penna. Public Schools

·Cardinql· Lercaro' Leaders ·Advises . About


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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall 24,.1967 . , . River-Th'u~s. Aug. .. ,

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.Pope Says World lLosing Concept Off Peace

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Greece's; King Constantine Calls for Church Unity

CASTELGANDOLFO (N~'

The world is losing the tnKl eoncept of peace, Pope Pam VI lamented, "while princi.­

HERACLION (NC};-In an apparent reversal of what

was heard from Athens concerning Christian Unity during the past decades, King Constantine bas urged Christian leaders "00 transcend the restrictive bonds of prejudi<ie" in

ples radically opposed to pea~ are ronsistently gainIng ground.'" He ·listed these principles:: increased efforts to unite the "The religion of force, the school 'branches of Christianity. The been given to the historic rather of terrorism and revolution, II King spoke in English to 223 than the unseen Christ." disregard for the lives of othera. egoism in international relations" . protestant, Anglican and Or­ King Constantine's ecumenical 8 spirit of retaliation and veD-> thodox delegates to the meeting spirit reflected the attitude of ·detta, 8 lack r of eonfiderice ill of the Central Committee of the . Archbishop leronymos of' Ath­ · methods ba~ed .on reason ahd in World Council of Churches. ens, who was named to his post institutions founded to inai'ntam The 27-year-old: king praised as Gr~ek primat~ .last. April by . equilibrium 'and order' amonll Pope Paul VI and Anglican the military junta, that took over · nations." ' . ' " Archbishop Michael Ramsey of the Greek government. The Canterbury for their recent vis­ .archbishop's predecessor, Chry­ GOES TO SYNOD: Leaving Australia for Ro~e, where. 'The P~pe' ~as speakingf.rom. Its to Ecumenical Orthodox Pa­ . sostomos, had· .been . a: vigorous he will attend the worldwide Synod of ~ishops to be open­ . :~O'\~~:t;~t1e~:~o:i: ~61Iday .opponent of ecumenism. triacb Athenagoras I of Con­ ed by Pope Paul VI on Sept. 29, is Norman Cardinal Gilroy,' residence here: s,,~, ,mmeJ'i' stantinople. . Archbishop of Sydney, accompanied by his nephew, Wil­ "The idea of peace founded 0:0 The king begged that "their initiatives and their efforts be . brotherho?d, j~stice, liberty anell f@~~ ~flVer p@~h)rm liam Gilroy, who will study in Rome. NC Photo. , collaboratIon -gives signs that ti an example to us always to seek is at the moment in a dangerous the truth, and by doing 'so to A[{\)Uil@Mml~eS Pn~ri)D«: decline," he said. "A true sense bush aside the inhibiting ob­ . M@@ [jiJ Oi) Parishioners of SS. Peter and of the meaning of man is lack­ Iltructions of our own making." ing, as are also lacking the Continuing, King Constantine Paul Church, Fall River, will strength, perseverance and in­ warned that "too many Christian :~~~ctht~~ss:'~e~~na:n~a~~~~~~ ~W'ne$fr ScaJ}f$' 5«llde~ MIl!Jstl' ~ec@glnlize . tegrity to 'bring it back to tOO leaders and ministers for too Pli'CJPl~1I' Use off world. many centuries" had limited Grove, Tiverton. Festivities will mr I F .... _.11 their efforts to the work of their begin Saturday night, Aug. 26 with a chicken pie supper to be LOVELAND (NC)-A special­ energies· to the more profound ....e prom 'UUU own denominations. evolutionary powers of human­ "But fortunately," he said. "As one who still belongs to served from 5:30 to 7, and booths' ist in the field of religious an­ "that peace which seems aI.'I. the younger generation," he · will be open until Ii. 'Activities thropo.logy said here in' Ohio ity. "Affluence," he continued, empty wish, a utopia, cari be added, "I ask of you all: Let us wIll. continue. all day Sur-day, that "our affluence demands that discover once again the inner and there w~ll.be.sw~mming.both we recognze our'solidarity with . "can be used for life ,or· ,death. realized with the help whiell . all mankind; that if we··are the At the frontier we can .transform . comes from. on higli, from Christ, meaning of some of 'the beautiful . days. first to attain these gifts, it is so the wilderness into'll' paradise from God. This is the help we things that Our Lord has left us. Under direction' of' Norman that. we in turn minister to or an empty' wasteland.", .., . . implore today through the' pow­ Perhaps too much emphasis has, Hathaway, chairman, and George . others, and not. from. p~.ide but. Father: Whitson warned that. erful and merciful intercessicm A. Froment and Mrs.' Stanley frOI!l reverence." poverty in .spirit is not supposed., of the Queen of Heaven and Clf · M. Janick, eo-chairinen, 'eight' to .result in a social levelinn-a ·.Peace." . '" . . ... ' "" ' . booths will feature handmade' Father Robley E. Whitson, 6 Th P dmi masslcollectivity-but in an open.. e . ope a .tted. that be f th C t tl t articles and country store' items." presen y a e· en er or participation in one another's speak s f requen tly of peace, but . Bingo games .will be 'played and World. Religions at Prmceton dd d "Th . al . P . gifts and life situations, a par-. . a e: . ere lB. ways that · 1 S· eolor . and portable telev.ision Th eo10glca emmar.y, nnce­ d d th an ever.. ticipating beyond the sphere of nee. -. ..... loU ay more As a contributi.onto the Debt' d th Oth t d on, N. J., a dresse F or 1t IS a sa d f a ct 1mown t 0 all sets w.ill be' awarded Sunday e 3 an­ economics, alone . Reduction Committee working night. A free bus shuttle will be nual. Catholic Art Association . and rrlfts, are' th a"t th . "All .possessi.ons . ere lB s till a war goin8 on behalf of the Religious of the available both days' from the C onvention here. Theme ·for the ... Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts · parish. "P rt d for' sharing" not for hiding on.. con f erence was Ol','e y an of the ·Fall River Diocese, Lin­ Simplicity in Life.and Art.~ away," he·said. "Poverty in spir­ roln' Amusement Park, North Father' Whitson; of, the New it is .not,· a' principle or' theory Po~t

Dartmouth; has announced that of ~onomics, but the sign, of an II' O· "York archdiocese.. and formerly inner 'value to. be made manifest.. SEGOVIA . (NC) Fo~

10 per cent of profits from all , .' . ,.;., a member of Fordham Univer­ h f d rid~' iom'orro~ will' go to' the' J1'RIDAY"7""St.,Louis,.King.'cand sity's graduate theology faculty,' ;"The civi}.·unrest·of·'this"dee-"·,,raDgers. ave oun .• good'dJ.. project; . C f PI C W . . ade," he, continued, "is the "un- ,: ..servation post for,lorest fues 03 . on essor... + . . lass.'. h~te...:. ch~n~nged .the..;affluent.. 'society· weloome"'but,.:powerlul:' witness"" .~lIe top of:. the 270-foo,t tower df The drive, ·aimed. at. aiding the Mass .Proper; Glory,; no Creed; .', to .,fe~ognize tJ1e ,pr~per; .Ul:\e of th Se . C th religious reduce the debt on Common Preface. tl'\eir" gooqs. . . . . . for whabn()w, for the 'first ·time, e. govla a edral, here f!il can· actually, be done: I A. ;genera-:··.. SPaIn. From. there the .~ange.. eonstruction recently eompleted tion 'ago:'we were' fulfilling the' .• ruB";1l control center dunng'~ at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall SATURDAY - Mass of the ' .: <Gifts Are. lor Sharing" Blessed Virgin for Saturday.' "If .weconsidel' 'affluence' Be- . insight of eonscience' ,by ,Provid..:····Summer for·, 13 ~er'. J?OS*­ River, is eo-sponsored by the IV Class. White. Mass Proper;" rio'usly; we can see' immediately ingsystematically for. the. de- ': thraughout the, SegOVia prQvlllce. 2)ucordium Club and Fathers' Club of the 'school. It will, be Glory; no Creed; Preface 01' . the"positive significance for' the prived; now we must realize,ibat' • ." '.' Blessed .Virgin. . Christian," he said'. ""Affhilmce there must be no deprived.­ eJ!tended througn September. .' can result in a basicsecurlty· in r ....._·:_"'..;.'_'_ ....._ _''_--.._-.:','., '.' OR ·the 'e8ssentials' of life'so that . , FUNERAL HOME'" st. Zephyrinus, Pope and . more 'and more we can turn oW' Martyr. Red. Glory; no Creed; SEPT. 3 469 LOCUST STREET Common Preface. Rev. Thomas J. McGee, D.D.. 'ProseUyti~ing 1912, Pastor, Sacred Heart, FAU RIVER.' MASS•. SUNDAY - XV Sunday After NEW DELHI (NC) - Deputy Taunton. . Pentecost. II Class. Green. health minister B. S.· Murthy 672-3381 SEPT. 4 Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; has denied that Christian mis­ Wilfred ~ James' E. Rev. Joseph P. Tallon, 1864, Preface of Trinity. sionaries were proselytizing pa­ Driscoll Sullivan; Jr. Pastor, St. Mary, New Bedford. tients at a local· hospital. He Rev. John J. Maguire, 1894, MONDAY-8t. 'Augustine, Bish- said that a staff nurse of· the. VA 4-5000 op, Confessor, and Doctor cd Founder, St. Peter, Province­ the Church. In Class. White... hospital did distribute literature UlWll. , . on the Christian religion to· some .Mass Proper; ·No Creed; Com- . patients in her ward and "disci­ SEPT. S' . moll Preface. . . Rev. Napoleon A. Messier, ,plinary actiOll'~ was bein·g tak_ 1948, Pastor, St. Mathieu; Fall TUESDAY ---: Beheading of st. against, her. River. John the Baptist. III Class. . ·/Funeral Home"

SEPT. ., Red: Mass ProPer; Glory; DO Very Rev, ,James E. :McMahon" 511', 'Second Creed; eonimon Preface. ·273 CENTRAL AVE. 1966, Pastor, SacrecI Hearl, Oak '", 1 'River, Mas~

WEDNESDA~: st. Rose of Bluffs. " '~UNERAL HOME: .INC. Lim~ Virgin. ill Class. White. . '679-6072 . 99.2~6216· ",' fl. Maree; Roy - So Ulrralne _ Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; .. MICHAEL' J. McMAtfON .. AlI8Gr LllFmllCfl . Common Preface;.

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TAUNTON

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BROOKILAWN

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

_Aug..2'1-81. John the Baptist, . Central Village. .Our Lady of Gra4le, No. Westport. Sept. 3 Our Lady of Assump­ tion, New Bedford. . Our Lady of MOUlllt Car­ mel, Seekonk. mE. ANCHOR 8ecoIld Class Postate Paid 8t Fall Ahler, llass Publislleo every 11Iursday 8t 410 H1ahlano Avenue.. Fall Alve, MaIS_ 02722 ( . the ::atbollc ...es. 0' the tllocGlSe· of Fall 81vel. SUD.crlptlllll pri~ .., ..sJ. JIOStpald 14.00 per ,..,.

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THURSDAY ~ St. Raymond Monnatus, Confessor. III Class.. White. Mass' Proper; Glory;' no· Creed; Common Preface. Tomorrow is . the first Friday of September•.

licensed Funeral Director R~9istered· Embalm'.

~NErtAL DDRECT~RS

US ovvington. Ct." ·995·5166 New Bedford' .,!.

For Yo~~g.Adults

JEFFREY E. 'SULLIVAN

The fifth iii 'a"series of discus­ sion meetings. for young adults . held this Summer I in various parts of. the 'Diocese will take place at. 7:'0 tonight at Sacred Heart School, Taunton. A dis-' eussion on "Life after Death" will be followed by a (lUitar Mass.

Ji''U11Ieral R~e -55G Locust str~et' Fain River, Mass. ~12-2391

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NEW BEDFORD

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Penna. Orthodox Rabbis S~~~ort· Education ~Dn

'"Day Off" in Life ofMissioner in Bolivia

Means W:ork From Early Until Late

PHILADELPHIA (NC)­ Fa-theJr Murphy, a pn"'est ilIlJ1' the FaDD River IDiiDiCese formedy stati.~ne«ll at St. PatrlilClk's fFhe Pennsylvania Rabbinic~ Chll!llliCh llll1l JFallll Rnvl1lll.", lis II1l~W wnUlI the SiDiCidy of St. JJames--& missi~1I1l gJro1Uj[}-nlI1l JBoRnvn'a. ~dvisory Committee on Re­ IElgious Affairs has thrown Monday morning and my "day off". The day started M; 4:00 o·clock. Joni and Car­ [;;s weight behind proposed State melo, the two altar boys, arrived ~arly. They called me through my bedroom window ~gislation which calls for the telling me to come to the door sinc~ they had something very important to tell me. ~eation of an authority to pur­ ~ase services in secular, non­ The very important thing was. that if I wanted to 8'0 down. '00 the river with my rifle treligious subjects in private ele­ looking for ducks they had lmentary and secondary schools .......... ·.._·.,.--_·..·_·..·:......·"......·1 river. Th~ first jeep that comes permission from their par­ l1lbroughout the State. , t along is supposed to help. It is ents to 8'0 with me. I am 'i'he advisory committee, which an unwritten law but everyone sure that their parents heard IJepresents a number of Ortho­ follows it. Ciox Jewish rabbis and educators, [has urged both Governor Ray­ mond P. Shafer and the State fl,egl.slature to approve the meas­ 'iJre which currently is under ~nsideration by the House Ap­ !9ropriations Committee. The Orthodox Congregations !&Perate virtually all 260 Jewish ~ schools in the United States. I Great IDjustice In letters to Gov. Shafer, Atty. ~n. William C. Sennett and all ttnembers of the senate and house, Rabbi Abba Leiter, exe­ ;;::;ative secretary of the commit­ ~e, asserted that "it is a great ttnjustice that a religious faith, ~y virtue of the fact that it seeks Ibi> maintain and strengthen the opiritual beliefs of its membertl ,'I1ia a religious education'al sys­ !!:em, be automatically penalized ODd obligated to assume the eomplete financial burden of the liecular education of its mem­ Illers. "Secular education is the re­ /IIPOnsibility and obligation of the l,itate and is not forfeit when a ehild enters a religious school," ~bbi Leiter stated. "No religious group should bve to pay hundreds of millioIUJ .e dollars yearly for the privi­ lege of giving a few hours of religious education to its chil-:

another story but nevertheless

river, passed through the first half and parked in the middle on a mound of sand. Being in the middle of a jungle river with the sun coming up is a very beauti­ ful sight. We took plenty of shots but only got one duck. We arrived back for the seven o'clock Mass at seven-thirty. No­ body was upset by the fact that we were late. As a matter of fact I had to wait another fifteen minutes until the 20 people for the morning Mass got through looking at the duck. The only thing scheduled in the parish today is the morning Mass. This leaves the rest of the day free to do the weekly errands in Santa Cruz. Three men are waiting for me after Mass. They are the elected offi­ cers for the building of the school in the village of El Torno. l[ am the treasurer. The building of the school stopped before the 'the roof was put on because of' a lack of funds. Now, thanks to US-AID, work will begin again this week. Last week we had the official check-handing-over cer­ emony in the "futbol" field at El Torno. It lasted two hours­ ·speeches, a band, school children · '. marching, etc'., etc. At the end !liPen." of the ceremony I was presented Catholic Support with a check for 15. millions . B.B: 1136 has been endorsoo Bolivianos (about $1,200). Today .,. Citizens for Educatioriai we intend to cash ~e check and ~dom and a number of Cath-' .~ the paper':work for the • organizatioD.!l throughout school out of tbe way. Our de­ ~ state. .. . parture from LaGuardia' is deReferring to the' complaint layedl by a sick e~Dl. The Madre -ebat one religious group would' .GOmes with me with her medi­ ~ the major beneficiary," Rabbi . and needles. Not much J.eiter asse~ that such· an be done ouiside the spiri­ iument is not. a "relevant 01' tual realm. The man has tuber­ proper pOiiit' ill considerating culosis and will probably not IilUch legislation. There is DO live out the day.' When we re­ major beneficiary here, but tum from the sick call the ather a major injustice to one Mayor of LaGuardia is waiting minority group which should be for me. I am also the treasurer Ilectified." f.ol' the building of a clinic in Noting that some Jewish or- LaGuardia. He has two bills for ganizations which claim Uto me. One is for cement and the < speak ,for the Jewish commuotheIr' is for tiles for the floor. nity" have expressed opposition He will pay the bills but he gets 1lG the school proposal Rabbi' no money unless I get the bills Leiter told the members of the first. legislature that these groups "do We finally get on the road. not represent the opinion of Or-' Santa Cruz is only 20 miles fJlodox Jewry." away. We stop along the way to . FUs Constitution pick up a Mother and her three He pointed out that the Or- . year old sick baby. The Madre thodox Jews are the most dl- . is going to the hospital with her. IleCtly affected by legislation .of . Wi~ a Madr.e with her ~e baby Cbis kind since they operate. 95 ~ a better chance ~ bemg ~d­ per . cent of the Jewish day.. Dlltted to the hospItal, whIch lJChools in PennsylvaiJia and will take about four hours. Cbroughout the United States Santa Cnm

19!Dd indica,ted that, accordingly, We finally arrive in the city

Claey were in the best position. OIl Santa Cruz-a city of' 100,000

to evaluate the merits of the peOple. In' the United S~ates the ~. cars drive 0Ill the right; in EuRabbi Leiter maintained that rope on the left; in Santa Cruz "nasmuch as the bill provides the jeeps drive on both sides. ler secular educational programs Kind of like tholle cars at Lin­ Mone, it does not violate any. coin Park.. The sand is pretty l1Iederal or state constitutional 'bad-after rain i~ is ·mud. Only lillnctlons against support of re- jeeps with four-wheel drive are Mgion." of any use; We drop the Madre and the sick child with her · mother at the hospital and pro· eeed to the center of town. We PITTSBURGH (NC) Six have to stop a couple of times. Priests ordained between 1940 August is a very windy month and 1964 has been named to and the sand gets so bad that prepare for the establishment you cannot see anything through of a senate of priests in the the windshield. The only remedy Byzantine Rite diocese of Pitts- Is to stop and wait for a minute ))ur(jb. . Ql' two. Quite a bit of work itJ

ewes ar- '.,can

Senate of Priests

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it sounded like a good idea so we took the jeep. down to the

nUEVo JAMIES IE. MUJRlPllIlY

being' done in the center of town around the plaza. They bave finally found something with which to pave the streets. Everything has been tried but the rains usually wash every­ thing away. Now they are using small five-sided cement blocks. They fit together like a jig-saw puzzle and then tar is put in ~etween them. They have with­ stood a few rainstorms with no problem so the Army is pro­ ceeding on the . streets around the' plaza now. Shopping We cash the check after an hour which is an all-time ree.oro.. The men and I agree. to meet in the plaza in the after­ noon at two o'clock. The rest of the morning is spent buying the .meat. and groceries for' the week. vie almost had a catastro­ phe. They' forgot to put in the· peanut butter. We can buy American can goods but they are so expensive that we do not. Peanut butter is the exception. A few more errands, lunch and back to the plaza. The next four hours are taken up filling out forms and present­ irig abuilding plan of the school, a plan for obtaining free labor and a plan for raising two mil­ lions Bolivianos more (around two hundred dollars) which will be necessary for completing the school. Witb this over I return to the town parish for supper. There is. a twenty miriute stop along the way to pull another jeep out of the. sana which ia stuck: I have been stuck many times myself-five times in the

.,Schedule· La.bor Day Mass at Shrine ~ASHINGTON (NC) The annual Labor Day Mass, offered for labor, management and gov­ ernment, and sponsored by the 'Union of Holy Name Societies of the Washington archdiocese, will be celebrated at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart here at 10 A.M., Monday, Sept. 4. Msgr. W. Joyce Russell, pas­ tor of St. Catherine Laboure Church, Silver Spring, Md., will be the Celebrant of the Mass. Msgr. Lawrence J. Corcoran, secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Charities, will preach the sermon.

Jr was hoping to take in il movie tonight downtown. The latest Tarz~n movie is playing. Decided to retunl to LaGuaria ins~ead. I arrive back to the two b.oxers and the two German shepards. The shepards are pup­ pies and enjoyed the day by getting into the bookcase. A few other things have been pulled apart. I was going to 'clean up but ten kids ju'st arrived at the door. They say they want to keep me company because I might be afraid since there is sO much guerrilla activity, going on in the area. I think that. it would be easier to face the guerillas. The boys keep me company by playing cards and checkers-after cleaning up the house. Three of them are trying to get me to make a cake. We use Betty Crokett cake mix. Actually, the boys make it-I just give the orders. The idea is to eat the whole thing after we finish; The first time that I did this all the boys ate only half of the piece that I gave them. They all said that it was good but nobody wanted to finish. They finally told me that they all intended. taking the other half home to their mothers. To­ night, Raul has brought an egg with him-::"'his contribution to the cake.. Busy day on the Missions. Did my grocery' 'shopping~ 'l;>ought the meat and now have to make III cake. All for the greater 'honor ancl' glory ()f God-so they say.

3

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., Aug. 24, 1967

Cathc!o~V~te!'ans HC~@[{ [lJ)@@1Ji3 ~(1JJ~~ WASHINGTON (NC) - The United States can afford to meet both domestic needs and its for­ eign commitments, Secretary of State Dean Rusk told the annual convention of the' Catholic Waf: Veterans here. Rusk was honored by the Catholic War Veterans as the "outstanding American" of the year at a dinner concluding n week-long convention. Also honored at the dinner was Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of Washington, who was cited fOf: "outstanding achievement in promoting zeal and devotion for God, for home and for country." While acknowledgiltg the de­ mands of "unfinished business at home," Rusk warned that do­ mestic needs should not prevent the nation from continuing its efforts in Vietnam of foreign aid programs. ­ To do so, he said, would be to send the country "well on our way down the slippery slope to general war." The United States, he main­ tained, is well able to support the Vietnam war, fulfill its for­ eign aid commitments, continue its space program and meet do­ mestic needs simultaneously. "Our gross national prOduct,'" he noted, "is more than twice that of the Soviet Union and the gap is widening." l!JIIIIIIlIIUIIIIIIIII111111111111111111111111111111111I1111111111; DRY CII.IEANING §

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4

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Aug. 2:4,1967

Uproar Over Books. Shows 'M~®@j @~ ~~M~t tE@M~@~O«NI1 By Msgr. George G. lHIiggins (Director, Social Action Dept" USCC) , The current uproar over the new Benziger grammar flchool religion series-Word and Worship--reveals a num­ ber of things. It reveals the fact. that Vatican Council II, with its teachings about the Church in the world, is just beginning to get through olic position: religion has nothing to many Catholics and that to ,(10 with the race question, they...... are disturbed by it. It with housing, with the welfare reveals, too, the sad fact that of people, with conce'rn for the many of our people, educated in Catholic' schools, are really un­ aware of the so­ cial doctrine of the Church, of the basic mes­ §age of the Scriptures, and of even the very fundamentals of

theology. The

trouble started when some par­ ents , took vio­ lent exception to the use of Martin Luther King as an ex­ ample of Christian bravery. This is understandable. Un­ fortunately the very name, .King, has a tendency to arouse strong feelings in many people and pre­ ·vent -calm thought. Objections Re.veal Much But this is not the point. The reference to King was in one part of one lesson in one book. Thel'e are 36 lessons in this book ~nd eight books in the series. The "Concerned Parents," us­ ing their i?bjections to this les­ SOfl.as a spring-board, went on to examine all eight books of the seFies, to voice their objections to things they found or claimed to find in all the books and ·to -clemand the withdrawal of ·even the upper grade books from the Catholic schools of Chicago.

It is these objections which reveal so much. The Concerned Pcll'ellts were shocked at the ex­ pression, "Jesus our Brother." They denied that Jesus is our J>rother, inasmuch as He .is God. Thus they revealed that they fail to see the very fundamental lact of Christianity-that God became man, that Jesus, while being a divine person, is also

1ully and in every sense a man

'and the brother of, and mediator

1101', every' man.

poor and underprivileged, with aid to poor nations. ' When you mention these things, you are teaching sociol.. · ogy, they say, if not ·socialislp and c9.mmunism. They are out­ raged to find religion books treating of such things and do not want their children taught about them. One woman summed up this attitude when she said, "When are we going to stop all this talk about loving our neighbor and get back to the old time reli­ gion?" And what is the "old time re­ ligion," the one which tob 'many Catholics, I am afraid, think is the Catholic religion? It was summed up by one of the top le'aders of the Concerned Par­ ents, group - "Jesus, Mary an"d purgatory." . Not ·of the Gospels

Jesus - not the Jesus of the Gospels, not the Jesus who·drove the money changers froOm ·the temple, -not the Jesus 'who said that He canre to cast fire -on the earth, not the Jesus 'who tokl ·us that we ·must .act .as ·the .good Samaritan .acted, not the .Jesus 'who incurred tne fl<itred <of the Scrihes and 'Pharisees'because He ·opposed their worldiness.and legalism .and ·had ·compassi{)J1 -on

the poor.

And Mary - not -the Mary wh<>se concern for -others ",as such that, forgetting ·herself, she went off to take care -of her cousin Elizabeth; not the Mary who .was so solicitous for ·others that she was the first to notice that the wine was running out at the n~arriage feast of Caria. ; And Purgatory -'- something not of this world. Cry Commission

This is really the heart of the matter. What have we taught our people? Have we really got­ Lack Understanding ten acr-oss the implicati-on ,of the The Concerned Par~nts were Incarnati-on-the fact that God ~lso shocked at the ~xpression became --one ·ofus?· If ·we can '"'-to have the mind and heart of manage to think ·of Christ .-only ·Christ," even when told. that as God, then we 'can close our this was.a direct quotation from eyes to ·the ·fact that -we -have St. Paul. They objected to the. to love every man if "Weare ·to idea that anyone should strive love Christ. . te ·be like Christ, thus repudiat­ T.J1ese people want.a catechism ing the message of the New Testament and the teachings of like the old Baltimore catechism ;Ill Catholic spiritual writers and - 1 l Q pictures, ·no -application to Jiving, just theological 'state­ 4Ji rectors. One wonders where these good ments to be eommit-ted to mem­ people were when the Epistles ory. . Show them the "corporal .,f St. Paul were read to them .from the pulpit Sunday after works of mercy" in the Balti­ more catechism, and they are Sunday. undisturbed.But show them a But most of all the objections showed a lack of understanding spelling out of thosecorpo'ral wOI'ks of .mercy with pictures ~f the Church and thc work of the Church in the world. One and applications to the lives of' would think that the great social people and they ·cry-"Sociology, encyclicals-from Leo XII to socialism, communism!" How.· many of our Catholic to John XXllI-had never been people are truly unaware of the written. papal encyclicals, the. Bishop's One would think that the American Bishops had never. statements, the teaching of the made a statement on race, on Gospels and of the Council? poverty, on anythig which has These things have ~been there all to do with the world. One would along,. but the people . haven't been aware o!. them until they :think that there had been no appeared on the pages of ... reli­ Council. gion book. Then they see them 'Catholic Position'? and are shocked and offended. These people have articulated It looks as though we have a their attitude very well, and great deal to do in the field of &hc.r insist that this is the Cath- adult education.

ATTEND MASS AT SHRINE: Led by Ambassador Alexandre Ohin of Togo, thic group of Togolese Catholics made a pilgrimage to the National Shrine of the Immae­ ulate Conception to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the introduction of Chris­ tianity to their African homeland. The Mass, offered by a Togolese priest, was celebra~ in' the new ·chapel of the Immaculate Heart of M;ary at the shrine, NC Photo.

S)fr@[flf [Q)[fO~® fr@ rn:W@ cdJB~@t® ~O~~@~ T ~!!@$ K' o,f C 'iro $o~Dcit Negro SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The has been setout, state KC leader long to the Texas KCs. IndiviiJ­ Texas Knights o(Columbus have Green said. ual councils will then actively launched a grassroots program The stat~ ·committee will oonsolicit members among Negroes. among their 32,000 members to centrate initially -on problems of Membership chairmen of. each 01 ·eradicate racial prejudice. racial ·discrimination, said Everthe 200 local councils will make regular progress reports OIl . . . . A three-man 'social ,action '-ett, ·butadded ,that the whole number of new members committee was recently created .program will -concern itself with beIon.g to minority groups, Bv­ by state deputy Willal'd Green, . poverty, -social justice aAdeeuerett· explained. partially in response to ·a May men ism. ~he worl(rS greatest probleR1 25 .-editorial in the :Alamo Mes­ is .povertY,the CbuFcn'sgreatest 'senger, the San' ~ntoni-o ar-ch­ problem is -ecumenism ;IfXi the "';diocesan newspaper. nation's greatest problem is ra­ The editorial prop-osed· that DimBy cial and -social injustice," Everett such.a committee ·be formed in BERLIN (NC) The Russiail said . .answer t-o charges of -prejudice Orthodox Church's spirit~2n Progress Reports and discl"imination leveled leader bas expressed coneero The social actioncbai nnafl against the T-ex-as Knights ·by over what he called false ex~ said tha~ a 'recentsurvey of the Negroes. !ations about Christian unity. 57 districts in the Texas KC --or­ Charles Everett, chairman ,of Ninety - year - old Patriarelll ganization indicated that Tace the new statewide committee, Alexei of Moscow, in an inter­ was still very much a problem in said theeditoi-ial "had a lot to view with the Sovie1 news many individulli councils. -do with the creation of a social agency Tass, said hopes for unity "Of the ·46 responses we re­ action committee. It was very were raised by the meeting in ceived, 17 indicated that there Istanbul in July between Pope just criticism." . would be a problem. of racial Paul VI and Ecumenical Ortho­ Social Justice discrimination," Everett stated. dox Patriarch Atbenagoras I CJf! He said that the new commit­ He pointed out 11 or ]2 districts Constantinople. tee had called the Maryland KC which reported that they had Patriarch Alexei was quoted 3!J organization f·o r suggestions councils· with Negro members. saying that in the case of the about dealing with problems -of He also· said that initial indi­ Russian Orthodox Church, any race relations, and had "learned cations showed there is ''sonre decisions about Christian unity a lot from them." Maryland re­ connection" between the interest -could not be made by "a 'single cently established a similar com­ and cooperation of the clergy in representative of a local church­ mitt-ee. KC activities and the ability and or a single local church. He said , Although .the S.upreme Coun­ willingness of local councils to the question of future unity cil ·of the Knights o6f Columbus accept and encourage Negro among the Christian churc~ has repeatedly ur.gedand end to members. eoyld be decided for the Ortho­ racial ,prejudice within the or­ One -of the committe's first dox Church only "through the ganization, 'no ·national pl'ogram projects is a eensus of thenum­ Syn4MI me~od" and that no deei­ bel' of Negroes who actually beSi-oA ~ould be made without him. The patriarch, who usually supp-orts the Kremlin on inter­ SHENANDOA.H (NC)-New-. national issues, said he opposed ]y elevated Francis Cardinal BOYS TOWN (NC) - Paolo any change in the status of the Brennan celebl'ated a pontifical Cardinal Marella, archpriest of Holy Places in Jerusalem, a re­ 'Mass at the Church of the An­ St. Peter's basilica in Rome, wiJl mark regarded by observers ae nunciation' of the Blessed Virgin celebrate Mass here on Monday, . in line with the pro-Arab polie,' here Sunday during a seven­ Aug. 28 to mark the 50th anni­ of the Soviets. His oppositiOlll week visit to the U. S. He 'Once versary of the fonnding of would include such proposals ae served as an. altar. ·boy at the F-ather Flanagan's Bome for internationalization of the Hol3' church here in his native town. Boys. Places. He 'was honored by the citizens of Shenandoah at a Welcome Home Day for Cardinal Bren­ nan.

w.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Aug. 24, 1967

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BISHOP BlLESSES NEW WEST HARWICH CONVENT: Principals. ~ the new Holy Trinity Convent blessing were: Very Rev. Daniel J. McCarthy, provincial of the Sacred Hearts Fathers; Bishop Connolly; Rev. Finbai'Jr McAloon, pastor. Center, Bishop Connolly it} greeted by

Mrs. Frank Kelly of West Harwich. Right: Meeting in the library fol!­ lowing the blessing were: Sr. Celeste, RS.:\,-I,; Mrs. WiJliam Monyhan, Father McAloon, and Mrs. John SulJivan.

Pope Paul's Reform of Roman Curia Effective Jan. 1 Continued from Page One oonstitution that defined the in­ fallibility of the Pope. He chose Mlis. passage: "Certainly no doubt can be rnised about the need for the hloman Curia. For how could the IWpreme pontiff, weighed down by so many great burdens, alone, w~thout advisors or assistants, fttear that burden 'which arises lYrom the' care of all the churches? It is equally neces­ 83ll"y that the Roman Curia be kept intact both in its basic structure and its close relation­ l3bip with the Roman Pontiff, that is, as an organic instrument Il1e uses in exercising the su­ preme power which 'according-' to the institution of Christ . . . be holds oller the entire Church.' " La9gCla~e

Although Latin remains the efficial language it is "accept­ sble to communicate with the Roman Curia illl lIDJ' of' the widely-known mod ern lan­ guages," the new constitution Iadvises. Regarding the tenure of Curial efficials, all prefects, members ..w. consultors of Curial depart­ Illents remain in office five ,.ears, with reappointment at the tiliscretion of the Pope. Prefects . , cOIl~l'egations resiaB at Ute

death of a pope, leaving only the- Cardinal Camerlengo, the Cardinal Penitentiary and the Cardinal Vicar of Rome in of­ fice. In the Papal Secretariat a substitute will assume the pre­ fect's duties temporarily. All other major curial officers are to leave their posts within three months after a new Pope is elec­ ted unless he reappoints them. Pope Paul had already intro­ duced various curial reforms, notably the reorientation of the former Holy Office (now the Doctl'inal Congregation) toward a promotion of the faith and a renewed emphasis. on the rights of authors and teachers whose opinions. come WIder suspicion. He has also brought several non­ Italians. into· high Curia posts, thus keeping his promise to in­ ternationalize tlu! Curia. Most recently, he provided that di­ ocesan. bishops should be full members of each curial congre­ gation; this provisiol'l was in­ cm-prated into the apostolic C911­ sIlitution Regimini Ecclesiae Um­

-Closer collaboration be­ tween the Roman Curia and the world's bishops, "especially bsr means of the episcopal confer­ ences"; -Greater coordination among. the various departments of the Curia "by means of mixed meet­ ings on various levels." Msgr. Pinna said Utat would avoid a "dispersion cd. energy, waste off

time, uncertainty over compet­ ency-, an eventual clash between decisions." Among details of the reform is the renaming of various con­ gregations: The Consistorial Congregation will be called the Congregation of the' Bishops, the Congregation of the Council will be called the Congregation of the Clergy (and

its competency includea per­ manent deacons). and the Coo­ gregation on Seminaries and Universities will be called the Congregation :fOIl' Catholic Ed­ ucation. The Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. while retaining its historicGll name, will also be called the Congregation for the Evangeli­ zation of Nations.

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THE ANCHOR-~ioces~ ~ Fall River-Thurs,~,!g. 24, 1967 .. ,

K of C Outlines

Right Road

'-

Stand on Varied Current Matters

,Wrong Label on Paul Why are people so anxious to put a man into a mold­

MONTREAL (NC)-L~ 1essness in the streets, deS&> eraltion of the American flag, liberation of abortion la~

to pin a J<abel on him-to categorize him and insist that this is the way he must be because this is the way they have decided that he is? In a sophisticated' world, this is a highly naive ap­ pt"Oll.ch, but it is a common one. It has been the fate <if Pope Paul ever since he sue­ eeeded Pope John. All too many poople----and this includes some writing for the Catholic press - have jumped to the conclusion that Pope Paul is a "conservative" or, a' "go slow" ,Pope and have even hinted that the Council and i-ts'implementa­ tion have not been to his liking. This is the, mold they have pu't him into, the way they have categorized him,. and while the facts give the lie to their labels their opinion seems not to have changed. I ' 'The fact that it was under Pope Paul that the pr0­ ductive work of the Council was done seems to have made, tittle impression. The fact that it was Pope Paul who saw and approved all Council documents and post-Council' implementation' does hOt seem to have been noticed. The f.act thafPopePaul produced a monumental ency­ elical orienting the Church to the modern world seems not '00 have counted. One weekly news ni-agazine announced the recent'story , on the reform of the Curia as "Surprise F)"om The Pope." : Its lead 'paragraph read: "Pope Paul VI,recently seen as , settling into a 'go slow' viewpoint, now emerges as arclu­ D@~ies 'teet of a major revolution in the 'updating' of the Roman Catholic Church." e p" ~ Why ,is it that people pinned the wrong label, indee~ ,rganmxaJ.\ht~~Il'I1l, @.IO IDly label at all; on Pope Paul in, the first place? ' MONTREAL (NC)-The Knights of Columbus "are He is, after all; P'!>pe, and as such is committed not to charitable in our activities, Christian in our idealism, but one camp or another but, to GOd's glory and the g()Od of not exempt from taxes," according to the annual report the Church in her mission as Bride of Christ in the salva­ _tion ,of all men's 8'Ouls. In this position, it would be foolish of Supreme Knight John W. McDevitt. The report, presented to expect that any renewal or reform would be 'overnight at the Knights' '85th annual here, hit out at an and state income 'taxes whiCh affair. These, things, affecting the half-billion or more meeting , 11 t" th a t th e f rat' ern al' the society receives is an ex':' Catholics in the world today, their relations with aill other , a ega . t Ion . d d' ta emption from premium taxes ein socle y IS, P gmg xes un- the,basis that it is a "non-profit peoples and the future of the Church, take time and plan­ ning and - that, bad word of today's man- prfidence. Iller the guise" of a. church- fraternal ,benefit society." organization. He 'argued that "there is abImplications, ramifications, eOnsequenees - ali must be affiliated McDevitt ,said the allegatio,n ' solutely no religious relationship taken into consideration and anticipated. If they were not, was made by an Episcop'al prel­ or criterion considered. in tbJs if decisions came ftom Rome as' soon as ideas were pro­ ate several months ago in "a tax concession. posed, 'people would be decrying the dictatorial and un­ widely circulated magaZine which is known for its overex-, "The' law," he said, "makes thinking action of the Pope, would be 'inveighing against posure of feminine nudity and this allowance equally to the be­ snap-judgements, would be asking for more oonsideration underabsorption, of Christian liever and the nonbeliever. The grounds are ~mpletelynonand understanding. morality" "and "was dead religious and based on the be-' Pope Paul is a complex man in a complex role. He wrong." nevolent nature of the fraternal should not be forced Into a false mold of some writer's (An article by Episcopal Bish­ benefit societies 'and their spe_ op James A. Pike in the April cial charitable work." rnagination.

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Tr»'e 98 Summer '"

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"

As Summer draws to a close - did it ever open? ­ thoughts aTe turning back to school. And the questIon eould ,profitably be asked-What did young people do this Summer? . The newspapers have had their fun with, the hippiee - those poor creatures 80 afraid to face ,life that they have .ereated.a life of their own, ,uninvolved, unconcerned, flee­ ing from reality. There has been tragic news about YQung people joining in looting and arson in 'many 'a race-tom American city. , ' . " B ut what of the many young adults who never· made the papers?' Those woo have given services and skiils 88 volunteer workers in many governmental and eduCational: programs. Those' w~o have give~the S!imme.r to -WOrking in slums and among migrant WQrkers and in Summer school and vacation programs., '''', , What of the vast majority of, young people' who have worked in jobs this Summer to, help themselves and to g'ain tuition money for the Fall? Consider and praise thes""...

racial .prejudice and discrimina­ tion and the dissemination cd pornographic material are among the targets at the 85th annual meeting here of theSupremti Council of the Knights of C0!­ lumbus. , The' delegates also adopted • series of resolutions supporting President Lyndon B .. Johnson:. handlin~ of the Vietnam war. Liberalized Laws A resolution 0!Il lawlessnestl noted that "the streets of 01li' communities are being more and more unsafe for all people'" and declared that the council "opposes the indiscriminate free­ ing of criminals, the handcuffing of our law enforcement ageD-> des and urges more' stringeIdl laws and sterner punishment cf offenders as a deterrent to thUl rising crime rate." Five resolutionS adopted IDll 'out at desecration of, the Amer­ ican flag and in the words a!iJ

issue of Playboy cited the Knights of Columbus as an ex­ 'ample of a church society which escapes paying a fair share of income and property taxes.) No'Religious Relationship McDevitt argued that "the Knights of Columbus receive a~ solutely no tax concessions on any religious grounds. "The order," 'he said, "pays, taxes directly or- through lessee on all the physical assets it holds in itS insurance portfolio. Thee order pays substantial taxes on its present headquarters in New Haven. Regretfully but justly it 'will pay even more wheJ). it' moves into its new skyscraper building in 1969." , The K. of C. offici81ll8id that the only freedom Jlrom federal

~~~;:e~~dt~a~~~~rr:~~~:~~~v~~~

to assure proper respect for 0Ul' cOuntry's flag." , The'Knights also went on ree-ord as opposing liberalization ail' laws permitting abortion and "mercy killing"; reaffirmed theil', c.ondemnation of racial prejudiee and urged all members to work toward eliminating disci"imin~ tion and renewed support ClllI congresSional efforts to halt the dissem,ination of. pornogr,aphlc material through the U. S.m~ False ImpressionS

In' one of Dine, resoluti0D8 pafised in support of the Pres).. dent's 'efforts in Vietnam, the Council expressed "its strOl1Jl(J approval of the policy of i'lIlJ;:a United States in Vietnam" ~ ',urged its contin1,lation. ' The resolve further asked JilllS a campaign to "induce the news media ,to upgrade the picture oj the United States and relegate tQ a minor position in, the news tOO adverse ,publicity given bY, , marches, speeches, pictures and articles." Another Vietnam' resoluti~ urged the' President "to continue to stand firm against the pres­ sures of the well-meaning bull misinformed, the agitators for ,peace through surrender, the communists and their fella. i3-avelers." It deplored the "well-pub... tied activities of a relativ~ lDDall group of dissidents who, by creating the false impressi. . that our people are in seri~ conflict over our participation_ tbis undertaking, are giving aid and comfort to the enemies of tile

McDevitt also charged that B' h P'k ,,·th IS op 1 e' WI a careless flick of his typewriter. • Ii con­ ceded the entire Yankee Stadi­ um to the order." He pointed out, that, the K. of C. owns the land on'which Yankee Stadium is built but that Rice University, Houston, Tex., owns the actual stadium.' The Supreme Knight acknowl­ edged that Bishop Pike had been "profuse in his apologiess" Ie­ garding, errors in the Playboy article but added that "the ear­ ror-like all lies once set loose­ lives on. "'It has been repeated sloven­ 17,· :McDevitt sai~, "in ptibllea­ tion after publication by Writ­ ers who simply haven't bothered ,U. 'S.'" to check the facts.· ''

, Look to eoDeglans

IiI other action the ColJDdl approved the merger of the ... sets and membership of tile catholic Benevolent Legion .. Puerto Rican Christian Workers Head Gives Brooklyn with those of 1bfj H ' Knights of Columbus. emily at MCDl~S fori' Belgium Cardinal The legion requested tliil SAN JUAN (NC)-A iayman er," Caraballo said, "and Cardi- merger because its own org~ - a worker - preached the nal Cardijn was always aware zation, founded in 1881, had bo­ , homily at a Mass offered here in that workers are a part of the eome tOo small for an effectige Puerto Rico, f.Qr the late Joseph Church. fraternal benefit society and Ie OI:~Ir.!.I.\L NEWSflAIPER OF THE DIOCESE OF IFAIl.Il. ~IVE~ Cardinal Cardijn of Belguim,' "If the workers are lost, Chriswas searching for increased a.­ Published weekly by The Catholic Press oi the Diocese of Fall River founder of the Young Christian tlans will also' be condemned.' marial security for its insurllJ14llli Worker movement. 1"he Mass We should open our hearts to the holders.

410 Highland Avenue was celebrated by Archbishop needs of those around us." The K of C Council also ~ Fall River, Mass. 02722' 675-7151

Luis Aponte o~ San Juan at St. Archbishop Apo';te called Car- action to strengthen the filCI!" PUBLISHER John the Baptist Cathedral. ' dinal Cardijn "an inspiration for eiety's effectiveness on colle.Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. Juan Jose Caraballo, president the Church of today" and urged campuses by providing a 25 pee GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL. MANAGER of the Young Christian Workers those attending the Mass to cent rebate of council per capita It. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll of the Arecibo diocese, was the "build a perpetual monument assessments to the college co. . . MANAGING EDITOR ' preacher. for him with our apostolic work ells for religious and frateJDlll Hugh J. Gold_ ' '. "Christ made, himself a worll- amoni the w'orkera." p-ograms.

®rhe ANCHOR

LmlY Preacher u' Late


THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 24, 1961

7

Renner· Accepts D;,ec\tor B<e~11'~

EXAMINES CO['O~ CAIWlERA: Father James M. O'Brien, newly a.ppointed Dio­ Director of Radio and Television for the R.ockford (Ill.) diocese, examines WR.EX­ TV's GE plumbicon color camera. He worked at the :Rockford TV station this Summer on an internship in coimection with a master's program in Communications at Northwestern .University, Ev·anstxm. NC Photo. ces~n

Spends Vacation as Doctor in Vietnam

NEW YORK (NC)-Gerald A. Renner, former acting directoi' of the U. S. Catholic Conference Bureau of Information, has been named national director of pub­ lic information for the National Conference of Christians and Jews. His appointment is effec­ tive Sept. 1. Renner, an associate director of the USCC bureau since July 1965, became acting director when Msgr. Vincent A. Yzer­ mans, director for three years, was named editor of Our Sunday Visitor, Huntington, Ind. Recently, Renner announced. he was resigning "at the behest of Bishop Paul F. Tanner," gen­ eral secretary of USCC who Renner said told him he intended! "to close down the bureau." Bishop Tanne·r denied the blll­ :reau will be closed and said: "We are looking for a new di­ :rector and are having some dif­ ficulty Jiinding the right type of man." The 35-year-old Philadelphia Illative is a graduate of George­ town University's School of Wor­ eign Service. He worked in pub­ He infOl·mation for the U. S. Navy, was on the staff of the Reading (Pa.) Eagle and worked m the Washington bure81U! o:f United Press.

- Also approved were the begin­ Illing of incorporation procedures and a loan of $30,000 to purchase Clites for a rectory and convent S<clh~ma$tic VO~lUnt<ete[f

and to sustain the parish in its Seton! Meda~ m 1964 he joined the Socle~ !Urst six months. KOTUM (NC)....,.An American for International Development . The loan would also cover the do~to·r with the unlikely address and the American Medical As­ of . Jesus. Instead of the usual! ST. LOUIS (NC) - Marillae 13 or 12 years of Jesuit prepai'S­ ·oost of vestments and altar ap­ J (]if·a Jesuit major seminary has· . sociation. Coilege has awarded its Mother tiori/ Dr. Padovano will be Ol!'­ Seton Medal to Mother Mary polntments and would help pay finished a GO-day volunteer tour

Almost 300 doctors have vol­ rent for an apartment and parish . of bringing modem medicine to unteered for the program sinCl!l daine<ll after five years. Aitei' Omer Downing, mother general office which Father Walsh will .the Montagnard tribesmen of its inception. The program main­ . ordination he plans to begiJa of the Sisters of Charity of C~ occupy until permanent facili­ centriu Vietnam's high plateau. tains an average of 28 doctors iIm pJl'acti~ in psychiatry. einnati, for her outstand.in!J 'Mes are ready. . He is Dr. Louis Padovano, S.J.. Vietnam at one time. worlt with women Religious. The temporary parish office, a Jesuit scholastic at Woodstock Assigned to Kontum in the Iln the Village Green of Wilde College in Maryland. He is central highlands, Dr. Padovano !Lake will be in facilities shared also an obstetrician-gynecologist found he COl,lld do his best work with the Lutheran, Methodist graduate of Georgetown Univer­ at the Minh Quy hospital a. few !ill1d ·Presbyterian congregations. sity's school of medicine in miles .outside Kontum city. The In the meantime, beginning Washington, D. C. hospital is run by Dr. Patricil:l ,With. permission from the su­ Smith for Montagnard patients. !Sept. 17, Sunday Masses will be offered in Slayton Community perio~ general of the Jesuits, After graduation from George-: Hall. Father Walsh says he is m Father .;F'edro ArIVpe, S.J., as . to·wn, University illl 1956, Dr. the process of arranging .for III well as from the Sacred Congre­ Padovano did his interneship at I1:hapel for confessions, daiI:v g~tipn ·for ReligioUs allowing St. Michael's Hospital in New­ Masses and reservation of .the him to practice medicine, Dr. ark, N. J.:,' his home town. From Blessed Sacrament. Padovano voiunteered to serve 1957 to 1960 he was resi­ Parish Is POOl\Dne in Vietnam for 60 days during . dent obstetrician-gynecologist mt his Summer vacation. Georgetown Hospital. From 1960 "We also plan to take advan­ He arrived in Saigon June 19 to 1962 he was a captain in the e&ge of the permission to have with eight other doctors from army. Next followed private Masses in the homes," he says. "'-e ". Un·l'ted States. practice jn Newark. ~lthough the four congrega­ ,They are part of the Volunteer \nons serving the area will be Physicians for Vietnam program, 6epara~e and distinct, Father I i ' non.,profit, people-to-people 1 Q S'lSVElwAmi: ~alsh says it has not yet been 'organization that has been send­ 7( 0 year SAWIL\l&i established whether there will· ing physicians to Vietnam sinre MONTHLY DEPOSITS be four separate churcn biAild­ September, 1965. ', 01 a INWfSVMOO fngs or some sort of shared It is a joint venture flnanceci .. ,.10 vear SAVIN~· !acilities. and directed by the U. S. Agency '''Too often when you· say NOTICE ACCOUNTS "parish' people think of a church. 0 alt£&ULlUI . , 'We all do it," he says IKlinting ~. year SlIV8~ out that the announcement oe Ii , . lIIew parish does not necessarily • HOME ~MPROVIEMEN1' lOANS 'mean there will be a separate Ri~er , Catholic church bullding~ ,, ,·'.PERSONAIL ILOANS'­ ~A parish is not a building," :. I:le says, "it is people, the cOD­ .,.. , iii' VACA1'~OIN ILOANS . 'hnk l3y Mail ;

IPlhys.ician

JeSlUJGt'

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANTS

5.. 5· 0°

"Economy" Auto loan Plan

5 00

grega~ion."

Catholic Coneg'D«D'~!i To Hear Graham

",:MONiHlY· CflUI(H .IUDGET .rNVrElOP!E$ NINVED AND MAOa.m

WlI'ote or Phone

672l-n3~

4 ,. 5 () .', .. Ba,s5 "Savings B'ank· ., . We

Pay The 'O~G~0

,. SGJlIJm YARMOUlI'lii ,.

Ii'{a~.

• YARMOUTH SHOPPING I?U.LlD

BELMONT (NC) - Evangelist ~34 .Second Street - IF(CJfiO llowlH'

,. IlIE~NIS ,om ,. I!DSlI'lEml'DR.lJ.f Billy Graham will address a spe­ ,,,• •IM#O£ cial convocation to be held in his honor at Belmont Abbey Coll.ege Illere, Nov. 21. W~OIP·· O~U C!l'eam~ Abbot Walter A. Coggin, O.S.B., of Belmont Abbey, sahli YOln this special event is part of lUll Ecumenic Institute, now in the planning stage, to be held at the Your Gll/Ifflf Man g~ Abbey for Protestant, Catholic nnd .Jewish clergymen. A9w~'f$ (OJ{J; Y@CUJ(f Se,.vk~! ][)Ir. Graham's appearance on Foa HOME D~UVIERV CALL 998-5691 Illie Abbey campus will! lire biB . Gecond visit to this North Caro­ llina college. On Nov. 18,1963, he spoke at a college assembly. It.· '\1Vas. his first appearance· at a.:·' " S<Ol. I!!JAInM«:l>.l\ll'U'I!'!!. M4\SS. <1::atbolic institution. .. ..'

UYou Can

but Can't lBeat. Our Milk !llll HiiOD lRq)ute

'GULF

H~ll· DA~RY

,+

:

CNE STOlP COMPll.m IIAINKING SIERYICE .Al Aillrif

,

.Of OIlDR 4\ IHAINlD'1l' BANKS

qkJ~E~CHAN . TS

C/Valiotuie BANK

wnH SDX CONVIENGIENilY lOCATED BANKS ON NEW BEDFORD SOUTH BANK-Cove St. at Iltcdney French lliouievOlrll1l WIEST IBANK-l(emp~oll1l Street Cit Mill Strep.t WIND'S CORNIER BAINIK-AcllDslhllltet Ave. neClir lund's COl'll1la:r DA~TMOUiH 8ANK-lDarimcllDtlh Streeft nea!/' Roc!td(CJ~e Aoo. NOll!1I'1H BANK-AclBsllnll1let #1...,0. at CoHill1l Av~. . CIEN'lT1E1R I8ANK-lPllDlI'clraa50 «Illl1l<lll Wolfioam Sro.

D~~VIE-DIN SlE~VDCIE

,At :j\·U f'

BANKS


Pkln . to' "Conf"'" , •

,After 'Baptism

1'·

Gue'st Co~umn_ists ,Step ~n As ,Mom ,1ake's V,acation.' . .

,

,

, DETROIT (NC) Maroni. Catholics iii the 'United state. will ,DO longer wait until earl,v adolescence to be confirmed, eording to ~ directi've just issu~

by Bishop Francis M. Z8yek,

,apostolic exarch for Maronite

, Catholics in the United, States. '

ae:.

.

., .. 1.

By Mary Tinley' Daiy, '

'.

:

~. ~

..

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Annual eustoin;along about thiS: time each year, 'ifj' to invite two guesteolumni8ts fu tak~:'over, put this colQmn up for grabs as it were. For 50 week'S ayw, it if! a thor­ ',',',', oughgoing, "p.lea~u:re~, 'V\Trite of thifl, and~t. !tis still, Another .<FAlee,n), was wiIQng ,,more, fun to, get letters of' , cOmment, from .rea{leis' ~ but with ~ big if; ",U you'll just 'from those who agree' and give me the idea, Mom." ~m those throwing brick-, But that's, against all rules 'of bats. Many a pen 'pal we', have t,he game, reminding us of it.

....

The directive, effective Autio 15, states th'at Confirmation willi ; immediately follow Baptism. Bui ~hiidren ,will still receive ,~ 'same religious training ,which ,heretofore preceded Confirma:­

tion.

-

'

Bishop Zayek said' the Dew . practice !ollowed the decree OR acquired through this experien~e question once put, to Giimy ,the Vatican Council. on Eastenn and many a when: she ~as small. Rites, which urged them to re­ helpful sugges- "How does your mother think turn to their ancient traditions• . tion has come up ideas for her column?" Ginny He said it also followed the 'our way from was asked. wishes of Maronite Patriarch people we ,have "Oh,shuck~," Ginny dismissed Paul Cardinal Meouchi of Leba­ never seen. But the problem, "she doesn't have non, who instituted the practice for the other to think-she knows the touch there last year. There are about two weeks, the system!'" 150,000 Maronite CathOlics in the I ate Summer As the Head of, the House reU. S.

weeks, it is a marked after that, "The touch

cUlange of scene,

system, in this case, is s9metimes

cUlange of pace touch and go and where' it will

w cover this land you, you'll never know."

typewriter, leave a stack of copy, paper, carbons and onionskin Suggestion Offered ~~w~c~ 'and take off. , I n the course of the column's flE~Smf\1S - ORGANIZATIONS Who will be the guests colum- leareer it has covered a wide Bists, I know not. range of subjects. Those who C~~P~RAVE·PERSONAl Family members who wa~t to have been with us through the 'get'into the act, either for the years haveoecasionally, sug" LOUD AND, CLEAR: This Bronz~ Bell; made in De. fun of it or to give the \lsual gested ,topics: Why don't' you author a test will trY their hand, write about the :way-our gov­ troit 140 years ago, now calls children to school at St. ., As of ]anuary 1st at' writing. ernm~nt ,is, throwing lIIround Francis Xavier School, Sydney, Au'sfralia. Mother' ,lm~11l Each is free to uncover the money? Why don't you take up 1111~ Ilf m typewriter, insert copy paper ,the subject of those jets'that fly ,'Edith of th~ GQod Salparitan Order says the bell was used for many years to open and close d~ily ~rading 'atthe

and go to it; with the editor '. over our houses and wake up the Sydney City Market. When a' new electric bell system was

making the final judgment as to ,babies· and give, their mothers which copy will be printed;, ' the jitters? " installed in, the market, the s~hool receivec;l the beil as For those who tuned in late, Then, there was the reader Ba present from the' city Council. NC Photo. ' '-, this' column has been running Chicago, anxious for a discussion Pel' for 2Q1h yea~s. During that time, on the relative intellectual '\feor. nearly ev~ry member of the standing of Notre Dame and

family 'has taken a crack at these Catholic University in the light

late-Summer guest ,appearances. of the ,revolt on the latter insti­

During the first' few years, 'of ' tution's campus last Spring; can

eourse, 'twas' only the Head 'of a university be both 'Catholie

tile House who was, capable of and academi~ally free?

,writi'ng for publication and this 'All, of ~ is ooghty interest­

'he, did valiantly' while,'I took ing but "sOme ,of 'the ideas are Mothers who find it difficult the hea.d of t~e c]ass.~~ts ~ :. ,those "two ,weeks: off" each 'out of range of this eolumn, IlDd t.o get the' young ladies of their , every SIze, shape and color are Summer. Matter fact, so well families to dress warmly will knitted 't'o' ~complete the total did he do that several readers, 'columnist. , ' ' particularly men, ,think ,be Wonder who'll do fhe DeXt' find this year's Wint~r fashions look for the chi'ld.' Too often when ~hoPPing' for lIhould pinch~hit more often. ,eolumil' 'mid what it Win be for the younger se~.' a blessing. headgear to c'c,mplete a Wintere$1000 Multiples,~held for ,Come to think' of it;· that's i1 " abQut1 We'll all in dUe'time. ,Head-hugging crocheted,' tams and heavy knitted and crocheted outfit for, a 'youngster, a' mother Six, Months or Longer pretty g~od idea! stockings rank found she,had very lean pickings .A1l each of the' children to choose from, but this season e ' Dividends paid twice yearly, number' one on learned to type and to set down her only ,problem will be not to ' 'eNo Notice Required f';~ " the' list'ing of 'ideas in readable form, he' or cllildren's fash:" buy too many. )lats. Also, if she , Withdrawal she took on tlJe relief pitcher

or the Nana of the family is _ • 'Dividends not subject to ,MJNNEAPOLIS(NC) -:M~ ions, for Fall.

role ,during these Summer ses­ handy with the knitting needles Mass. Income Tax Am :.-J'ican Catholics have "vacu- Mothers who !lions. or the crochet hOc>k, the littie urns" instead Of consciences" remember re­ Some found' it rough going. miss hasan'extra' bonus working One,I'think it was :Johnny" had , when confronted with the issue ~uctantly wear­ , for her fashionwise~Kriit beretS' of ,raciai justice according to mg l~lDg cotton 'the answer: "All you have to do are looking hand done; so how ,M 'p' t-'B 'd t' , ' stockmgs a en s on, a program ; th' W· dur­ t " ill get the idea and put down one , rs. much better if you know some­ , coordinator at The Way Commu-' m gth . ~ " mthers word, after· another until you've one whc, eould 'actliaily' do we' , ·t Ce' t h '. 0 f' CIr you , Now Earn n er ere, and a parlsh'11 fi d th 'Written 650 of 'em. Then you Dl Y by hand. .. , 1 n t o~

.top, make little dots and you're ioner 'at Ascension Catholic: cl1urch on the city's near DOrth.ygone a rOCl, Shoes Neglected

finished." side, scene of recent riots. ties (remember how they seem­ The only: area I still find: ne- ' , " , . ed to bag permanently '31\; the ~ay ~ople must demand ~at knees) quite 'unrelated to the glected ' in, area stor~s when SiUlbcommittee ,Favors theIr pnests, teachers and.. CIty smart looking tights and knee shopping for the cbildren's back Per officia~ prac~ce wha.t ~ey socks on the market today. to school wardrobe is that of Yearr Bilingual' Education ~reach, . she saId.. asserting that Knits, are the highlight of the' shoes. Fashion magazines always WASHINGTON, (NC) -Chil­ Cath?,hcs are ,~ much to, Fall Sportswear picture and legs show their models wearing de­ dren in poor Spanish-speaking blame for the VIOlence that are the show case for 'these knits lightful footwear and they also families--whose education has racked the city's Plymouth Ave., in every type of stitch and color. always kindly list the brand proved difficult for public school area, Jll1Y 19 and 20, as anyFashions for, the hopscotch set ' names, but when you appeal to You may save any amOURt, officials in the Southwest and a one * * * don't stop at' the: thigh line the ,shoeclerks for something any lI'ime when you have • Dumber of Northern cities--will "Why', do you keep saying though, and the shopping mother other than' the ,standard oxford Regular Savings Acco'unt. Old­ "get a measure of help if a bill things like 'your problem' and will find handsome sweater ties or the strap Mary Janes, just' approved by the Senate Fashioned Pass Book flexibil;a.,. the 'Negro community' when dresses for school and socializing. they look;' at, you as if you're Labor Subcommittee becomes asking for' 's~mething that's ,II' our problem in our community?" ,I have always been' partial to SAVE BY MAIL 'law. Aran Isle knits arid this ,season figment of your imagination. The bill, was described by its, she asked. We provide Postage-P~id In summarizing the race probBetsy Daniels of Shutterbug has Somew~ere there, are pretty sponsor, 'subcommittee chairman 'opes for convenience. Sp8ci5r Sen. Ralph YarboroJgh of Tex­ lem in America, she said, "no designed an adorabii! ,ta){e-off on' little girl" shoes but as of yet tYpe of account. ' , such thing as a good Christian the fisherman knitS in a natural they haven't found their way as, the "the first bilingual edu­ heart exists. In Minneapolis no colored sweater dress made into tpis particular section of eatjori bill ever to be approved human rights laws exist on in quite practically of Acrilan. New England. , in the Congress." Another outstanding sweater Well, with the exceptioD of

The measure authorizes $30 the Church no action exists," she million oVaI' the next three years declared. "The Church still sits' dress for, the young miss comes shoes this looks like a Fall sea­

for' grants to school' districts to in its ivory tower and preaches." with its own matching pompom, son that will bring forth a col­

Mrs. Bendston addressed about hat and striped scarf. A brilliant lection of pretty, practical and

meet the special needs of "stu-, dents from Spanish-speaking 220 parishioners of St. Philip shade of paprika red, this smart ' parent-pleasing children's fash­

backgrounds" in schools which Catholic church, located, about ensemble comes from the draw­ 'ions. The only other thing that

a mile and, a ,half from Plymouth ing boards of Cinderella, a well­ will cause both mothers and

have a large proportion of chil­ fathers to frown this Fall will' 11bt1!,~ Stre~ dren from low-income familie~. Ave. The audience also' heard ,known n~me in th'is area. MLL AIV&D It also authorizes $11 million for ,from a representative of the Knit one-purl two goes from be the prices- of these clothes for,

the next year to help traiD city's Negro, Jewish and Indian your knitting needles or from a like. ,e.v.ery.thing else, they ue

telU:bers for these students. . minorities. company's knitting ,machi!1e to going higher and higher., ,

fUNDS·TRUSlS

SAVINGS

:Mary

HIGH 'R,A'TE

a

on

,INVESTMENT

SAVINGS CERTIFICATES

of

.ee

'Scores: Catholics For', Race' Strife'

,REGULAR

,SAVINGS

it's

en".


. tHE" ANCHOR-

Ga'r'de'n~~g >t'~'S ~nexpensive

Thurs., Aug. 24. 1967

Bu.t',Offe'n,'.D.oesn't Seem ~it

~urses Approve;, Sa~ary Pact.

.,.

.' " By Jlilt8eJlllllt' ~\ll Marillyn ROOeyicl!t Th(j) llmlb cataligg 'ax~ '~:ml the way and we are facM with chOOsing ,wha.t we' for FaD planting and, ju.st as importantly, with th~eoonomics of a pretty Spring garden. 1ft is the latter problem which is most difficu.lt t@ overcome fur most of us. lit So i ~ . _..lI..:I ....h· , 1 . . . _ t me o;'l them ore so spac OWl U:I ~n Il1UU " mg auvu ~- .• one might even be able to lose ~emng that most of ~8.~ the kids foll" a few days by send­ ~ry tight-fisted when it ing them on an errand to the

want

oomes to spending money ,on .OW' hobby.. Every Sprhig arid FaD. rr have f>i> argue myself into spending money. This is also hue of my iiriends. This is really rathet silly. As I bave explained to my associates, gardening Is rather Inexpensive compared to other 1l10bbies. For instance, if you have III golfer. in your family, you know 1lliat a link devotee must buy his clubs at considerable expense, tllat golf balls are at least $1 each, thlllt greens fees, etc. amount to a total cost of three to £Our hundred dollars III year. I am sure most golfers would question this total until' they actually sat down and figured it out and then I sure they would be amazed at the cost of Uleir hobby. .

am

Big Buyimg Periloda The gardner who spends thia much money annually is a rarity. And yet we gardeners tend to !!lold ,back every penny we can. The reason is obvious. We have two big buying periods, Spring and Fall, whereas other llobbyhrts spend h1 dribs and drabs wer a long period of time. The bowler does not miss the $3 per week he spends bowling, but the ~rdener really feels the $50 .-del' in the Spring! Obviously, the reader will now assume that since I have convinced myself of the truth of lilY argument, I will immediately buy everything the catalogs offer. Nothing could be'mo~ removed from reality. Actually 11: will now make 11 long list of what I would like to buy, then begin paring it to size. M:" Griginal order will be dwaif~d, by mailing time, and we will go through tbe process (lgain neJtt Spring with further jwitificalions. So-if you are one Gi. those lJ3re gardeners who is not besitant about spending some mon~y 11I1 your gnrden, go to it. Utose of you who follow me fn lily timidity-shame on you! - Kitch Ia ItU'C en '"It's ironic;" moaned l!, to one ." my dearest friends, "when 7'OU said you need a big house for your family, you can't afford ll, and by the time your income l!ncreases 110 its high point and you can afford a bigger place, the children ,are all grown and ;VOU don't want a big place to dean." She couldn't have agreed more Decause she and her husband and five children (with another offspring on the way) were livbtg in a lovely home' that had lllll of three bedrooms. Like the majority of young marrieds with tmlall. children, togetherness was a disadvantage of her home and Il!lOt an advantage. Both she and I turn green with envy when we hear anyone complain of rattling lnOund in her large manse. If!. Wi' homes everything rattles eJt~pt the people. They are too packed to rattle, they can't 0velll make a complete turn. Of course there are a few a1ternate courses open to l.l8: 1) IlDok for a bigger house, 2) ean _large the ones we alreadY' M.., . . I) ad believe me. it'lJ • drastic . . . bliild. db' in w:bicla I l'iw: tlaere are quite a few laree lovear homes anJlable' that wouW , . ~ d . . Ii'Owine familiea.

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.SEATTLE (NC)-An ag~ ment, resolving the wage dil> pute between the Seattle Are@ Hospital Council and the Wash­ ington State Nurses Association" has been announced at a j01llli press conference. Two local Catholic hospitals­ St. Frances Cabrini and Prov[­ dence-were involved in tho negotiations. About 80 per cen& of the registered nurses in bc;Jtkll instit~tions hold membership 1m the state nurses' organization. The agreement guarantees thQ registered nurses of the area an immdiate increase of $60 per month with an additional $4(1) per month effective Jan. 1. ThQ nurses were pressing for an im­ mediate $100 per month to bring the basic monthly salary from $500 to $600. The new terms make the nurses in western Washington among the best paid in the nQ­ tion, according to Elizabeth Cantwell, executive director af the nurses association. In announcing the pact, Jus­ tin Greene, president of the h_ pital council, said the pay hike would inevitably mean ,increase. in patient room rentals. The two Catholic bospitala have already announced boost. in room fees. Providence Hos­ pital's rates have been hiked be­ tween four and six dollars daily while Cabrini announced llIn im­ mediate across-the-board in­ crease of four dollars. These in­ creases, administrators at botb hospitals said, are in line with those to be effected Un other hospitals in the area.

upstairs. Stop before you rush ll"ight out to your favorite relll1 estate man, however, foll" these spacious homes ha~e a few draw­ backs such as high taxes, large heating bills and even larger repair bills. The price of privacy lIlDd room comes very dear. Not lEasy T d It t· ..he seC?n a e~a ~ve soun"", much eaSIer than It IS. A year or .so ago we adde~ to our up­ stall'~' so I feel a .bIt of ~ ~u­ thonty on renovation whIle liv­ ing i~ the structure. D?n't. Don't, that IS, unless you enJoy p~aster . for breakfast, lunch and dInner and the ever-present presence of( work~en for months on en.? TREND IN ARCHITECTURE: St. Mary's Cathedral, You ve heard. of t~e Man Tokyo, Japan, designed in modern style; will be ~mong Who Came To 1?mner. ,Afte~ a examples of newer trends in church· architecture to be bout of remodelmg, "OU U tllllnk discussed at the International Oongress on Religion, the playwright should have changed the name to the "CarArehitecture and the Visual Arts, opening Sunday in penter Who Came To Dinner." New York City. NC Photo. . Luckily, O\lr carpenters were abs'olute angels who even amused the children while they worked but at the end of what must hav~ seemed to them months ()f climbing over screaming chil­ Soster of lLolI'etto Guides Instruetioll'\l

dren, I'm sure they were lW glad to leave as we were to see them Foil' 45,000 Youngsters

go. The discouraging part of the whole remodeling project was DENVER (NC)--8ister Simone instruction and for training lllly that I still baven't enough living Inkel of the Sisters of Loretto teachers who conduct the CCD space. bas been· appointed coordinator classes. Supper Style Show The last alternative really of religious education for the The CCD program makes reshould be the last! ~yone who Confraternity of Christian Doc- ligious instruction available to Fall River Catholic Woman'. has gone through the form of trine (CCD) in the archdiocese 45,000 Catholic youngsters at­ Club Building Comnrittee an­ torture referred to as "having of Denver. tending public schools in the nounces plans for a supper fash­ our home built" can assure. you Her appointment was an- archdiocese. More than 2,000 l~ ion show to be held at 7 Wed­ that it is far from easy. Those nounced by Msgr. William H. teachers and .. ~eligious. are the , nesday night, Oct. 4 in the grand of ,you who are old enougm to Jones, superintendent· of Catha- inst,uctors., ... . baliroom of White's restaurant. remember what seemed like a · Hc schools and CCD director. DoOr prizes will be awarded. Sister Simone is a graduate highly exaggerated movie of Sister Simone will' be' iBa' Co-chairmen are Mrs. Anthony Jr. homebuilding titled. Mr. Billnd-· charge otreligious instruction'" of Loretto·· Heights College.· She Geary and Mrs. Michael J. 'Me­ ing .Builds His Dream House Cllln for Catholic children who attend earned.a master's degree ·in the- ' Mahon. Tickets are available ology from. Marquette Ubiver­ be assured, by. those of WI who public schools and participate·,' sit1', Milwaukee, and studied at from . them, . their committee have built our. own. homes that in CCD classes after school and' members and members Of the rather thUD being n movie of· on weekends. She will aiso be' Lumen Vitae, an international . club's executive board and impossible situations, it really responsible for setting up or ex- religious 'education center in building and house committee!il. quite understated the problems panding programs for religious" Brussels, Belgium. that, face an homebuilders. you do pick up a vast vocabu­ . Disavows Involvement lal'7 of terms such as dry wall, !COpper tubing, cast iron beating . In Family Plannong UNITED NATIONS (NC) and ,lIO forth, but belEeve me' the Rt.6 at The Narrowc in. North Westport added spice this gives to your Disavowal of any involvement ill conversation is not wortlil the birth control or family planning wear lIlDd tear on your nerves. .by the United Nations Children's Wheo-e The This afternoon I asked my hair­ Fund (UNICEF) was made by a IEntire family dresser, who recently finished leading official of that agency in 'Can Dil'1e building how she would de­ n letter to a Catholic editor. scribe the experience. Her an­ lEc:oncmically In reply to a query by Bernard swer.was concise. "A nightmare." Casserly, editor of The Catholic No. matter. whether you're Bulletin, the weekly of the St. [FOil cooking in a new kitchen or l1llll Paul - Minneapolis archdiocese, old, the following recipe for Victor de Keyserling, director of IESIERVAlCONS zucchini squash is sure to add information services for the fHJON~ zing to your table. United States committee of ~75·1TIG5 .. . . '. . UNICEF executive board last Z\I!celhimi, lIb.lial!il S1yne June, following a .study, decided 2 Pounds 'of zucchini scrubbed that· the organization would not but ;not peeled and split dOWIll "adopt family planning as a sep­ the center llIrate category of assistance" but Y-! cup olive oil or salad en that, "as in the past," it would 1 % cups sliced onions .consider requests for aid from 1% teaspoons salt governments for their health' WITHOUT TRAFFiC a. PARKONG PROBLEMS Y-! teaspoon pepper services. at the 3 cups canned tomato juice 1) Cut unpeeled zucchini into crosswise 3 inch long pieces and place cut side down in the skil­ SOMERSET, MASS. let with the hellited oil. Brown lightly. 2) Sprinkle the zucchini with The most frienclly, democratic BANK oHering the onions and cook a few min­ utes longer until the onions are softened. Turn the zucchini cut Club Accounts Auto Loans aide u!p. Checking Accounts Business loans 3) Sprinke the zuccaiai witll. 'Savings Accounts . leal Estate loans the pepper arMi salt and ~ the tomato juice over aH. At Somerset Shopping Area-Irightm_ St. Ir~ 4)· Cook, eovered, _er II W­ Member' Federal Depostt Insurance Corporation lIeat for 40 minute. . . TIIdK lRlccbini . . ~ .

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J makes his profession of faith for three years. Right: Bishop Connolly joins Father McCarthy, second right, and , three newly-professed brothers9 namely: Bro. John Ya,mada of Japan, Bro. Jerome Anaya of Hawaii, and Bro. Nicholas Centeno of Puerto Rico.

PROFESSION IN SACRED lHIEARTS CONGREGATION OF FAIR· lBIAVEN: Left: Newly professed brothers march from the chapel after the Mass' of Profession. Center: Brother Anthony Couto of Fairhaven kneels before the provincial, Very Rev. Daniel J. McOarthy, SS.CC., and

C~~mS~~!~~:~~ee Bis/l,op Connolly Dis~ussesRoleofReligious ,A,os' O ~Ia' ke" D~o~-r.ess' " ,'u' n':g rneolnl~ r 'J .,:0',,n' "

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of the commonweaith are faced ~,-"""':'-: ... V.L~ \ .... ~ • ..l..WC 'with too severe firiancial',diffi­ "tl ~niors from, Jeswt-run Bostollil eulties to' permit their" accom-' ;L 4 I ~ 1'.1.4 F • I ~ ,CQ]]ege HighSchool, Bo~ton, won 'modating substantial ,a~d,iti9,n~1 ,';0" ' " ", , ' , , "" " ti,le', varsity debating champio~ population resulting ~rom J:e~uc;­ " ' ' " tion in non-public school poptihi­ "When 8()"rnai1y'people tJalk abOut'''oCaH6rl~ falling a~-3,Y; it'sworid~i-ful''to" :lss'jst ship over 325' other eontendelre 39 states ,including Hawaii! tion. at a ceremony in which 23 men have at least taken their first vows," the Most,Rev'. James from at GeOJ'getown University's aD­ The solution of Pennsylvania~s L. Connolly, ,D.D., bishop of Fall River, ,said Friday. Bishop Connolly was speaking spe­ 'nual Summer Forensics Institute educational crisis' is to afford cifiealiy ,to the group of Sacred Heai;ts:cleric,s'''Who p'rofessed vows to the Very ~:Rev. ' h e r e . ' aon':public education a m e a s u r e . , " , .... ­ ,,' Richar~, ,Lewis, 17" and ..,-0»&1 .' .',support; within strictconsti- .,])~~.1~~ ,J. ,M<parthy, SS. .tutional, limitations,' to enable. it ..,provin,cial, ,during a,.$olemn" ' flimes.':'.Bishop,ConnoUy',said be Sacred.. Hearts :bl'others '''ihis .be-", ~cMjll;I!.1, l(j,·emerged'victorioUIJ to continue, to render service.. " '-:Mass' -in- the "chapel" of the cou)d ,not..f',picture a ,generation cause you, are bringing € h rist' ,at. the- ,instiotu,te's concluding, ses­ _si()n. Th,ey took the negative , . Press ,for Aid " .: " '" 'Sacred Hearts· Novitiate 'in, fJf thechl,lrch, i,lI. w:hich ,there ", to the :wQrld." ,'" ," " Prov.ing" tb~ bishop!s· point, ,,~tJe of the question; , "Shoun~ . The report _comes agamst "'"Wareham:' " , . w , e r e ,n4l :~r.ouW,eiS·'" background of, rep:a.ted .war~-, " The'daY before, however,' em­ ' ' Today, 'he admitted, there are ,and, pro\ling that, the .worth, of "C,ongress pass uniform, regu]&.­ religion is in the way' it spreads, !ions to control criminal inveD­ jngs by Cathohc offlC~als In, this phasizirig" his' ,point, '17 young "differences" ,:in ,the way, reli­ ".tate that the ,public lIchools women or' the diocese received giousexpi'ess their views. He­ ~s ripples spread 'whel'\ a Pebbletigative procedures?,", should be prepa:ed fo~ a, large their habitS or' professed tem­ 'spelled this out' :as priests' and is tossed into a. popl,: are s()me <c influx of Sathohc pupJIs whom ,porary or perpetual vows in sisters wpo "get' into picket of the novices who took their tempora,ry vows in Wareham. ;the parochial school systems can ceremonies at Mt. St. Rita Con­ lines, who carry signs." , One was Brother Jerome, :h, .DO longer afford to accommo:­ vent in Cumberland, R.l., the If sisters are determined to get 'IT'llnat Loosen date. hd" f ,th e S" IS t ers '... . t othe PiC . t ure 0 f civil rights, a native of Wahiawa, Oahu, Ha­ ',' ff' . I . Ph'I" 'nOVl'tola t e o u.a. m Arc, IOcesan 0 lCla s In. ' I ­ Mercy. he said, he would suggest that waii. "The Sacred Hearts Fathers, ,tNIeed Not Embarrass staff practically all the parishes adelphia recently bla~c~ a new Both days were filled with "they go down into the slums, MillY wearers or raise teeth sulfer in the islands," he says. eontract won by stnklllg lay sunshine and happiness shared to work there to help people ~mbarrassment because their plates droP. slip or wobble at Just the "They begin exerting their in­ teach~rs for t?e fact that the by relatives and friends. change." , , wrong time, Don't live In fear of IlrchdlOcese, w,, Ill b,e forced t,o At Mt. St. RI'ta'., perched' hl'gh 0 therwise, he, said,'' he feels fhlen~e i,n our schools.~', tws happening to you. Just sprlnl[le n little l"ASTEE:rH, the non-acid . Brother Jerome spent four charge tUitIOn ,m Catholic on a hill overlooking the roll­ that much of the "rights" for powder. on your plates. Holds false IlChool~. The, ~o~e IS expected to ing countryside; eight graduates which people push mereijr are years of the minor seminary in teeth more 'fIrmly so they feel more comfortable, Checks denture breath. result In a dlmll1lshed number of of Holy' Family High School, "exhibition,ism of thewo, rstle,vel. Hawaii. He spent his first two Dentures t.hat fit are essential to" lItuden ts ' " " " years of college in Chaminade h""lth, See your dentist regularly M . h'l C th r h I f eight graduates 'of Mt. St. Mary "u you've nothing to offer Get !<'ASTEETH at aU drug coun~ . , eanw I e a, 0 IC se 00 0 ­ Academy and one graduate of ' College in Honolulu. In Septem": ,fjclal~ here, as elsewhere a~e Bishop Feehan High School dis- but' yourself," the .. bishop said, , ber,. he e~pects to begin his last pre.ssmg ,for somt'! sort. of pubhc COvered a joy unknown to those "you '!1 i g ht just as well ,hang up two years of college at St. assistance to Catholic school . "in the world" as they' "made a your suit. , Mary's,' in Winona, Minn. EVEm"': Enjoy, youngsters. f 'I" h" .".'. ' ,"If you have' nothing ~ offer "",' ,No Tax Relief ~rma, c OlCe of l,ives I,n reli-, but yourself, ,there isn't' much *uaJly,'he wiJl':begin theological ... ·.i IN THE' , ,Tu!'n kl~ Page Ele~~ , The Pennsylvania Catholic gl0!'1. ," , ',' ' . . .. :lor you'1o offer.'

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' -rhere 'isonly', one "'specialty " Spe,a~I,ng ~ the s~!TIm.an~ns m ,W~reha,m, 22 o~ whom are for a priest, that is,'you have 80t' stupymg fo~ the priesthood and, tel be anpther Christ. ' on,e wh~" wll~ become, ,a, Sacre~ "You can't' bdng headli'nes ~oc lJ:arts brother, Bishop, 90nn p)ly mQney,to the General Judge'­ said: ment. It is not' what you, bring ,"I hope, in carrying out this there, it is what you are. commitment, you, realize ,what ' "Many people ,think there is it means togo through a period a s~ort cut to, heaven'--but the of probation." ,He sajd when only rule to, Heaven is simple: Christ said, "Come, follow, me," You must live in the presence He was giving them an opportu­ fJf God. nity to learn what a life dedi­ "If you are going to bring any cated to religion means. ' value to the world," he told the Speaking of, the "changes" in today's church, Bishop Connolly lauded those who are "filled with good will and zeal toward the world," There are many "conserva­ tives today," who want to follow COMPANY Nuns tradition, the bishop said, "if they do, they will have to go' The Ebb Tides wHI be featured back to the Aramaic language." 'Complete Line' from 1 to 5 tomorrow afternoon' The tradition of the,church, he Building,Materials, lit Lir/Coln Park, North ,Dart-, said, "was never to"speak, mys-' ...., .. mouth, at a, benefit performance' tel'ies: "to .. thep,eople, ,of ,the, " ' ",for the' 'bliilding ,furid, ,of' the .church, it was'to speilk',tO: them , .' • 'SPRING' Sf~; 'fAIRHAVEN ,Religious"of, thp Holy Un.io~,'of in a, ,.language, ,which ,Jet them: .,,":' ,". '. _'. ','f •..• :. :; ..' ' '~, /.... '. ,.t '. "," ...•. .the SncredHearts. The,pllblic is " know-what was going"on,',~";,, " 'ip93~2611' ,"~' .. ' : .. .. ... . : iiilvi,ted. '....' • , __ D~BCuSlli!lg,':~~ '''',l:IVreJ!lt f!l ,~ , Conference, for whom the'report was made, is the 'central agency for the eight, Catholic dioceses in 'the ,state. ' The study has been endorsed by a, group of 19 business, .labor lind civic leaders who consti­ 'tuted an <ldvisory group to' the conference.' The report says that' parents who are taxed for public educa­ tion but also pay to have their, children emolled in non-public schools can no longer be asked to shoulder both bUl'dens with­ out help. It says these pal'enbs pay $350 million yearly to edu­ cate their childl'en in non-public schools, and without benefit of tax relief.

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SISTERS OF MERCY F AMElLV: ~ft photo, left to right, Sister Rose Marie Smith, Sister Paul· Mary McKnight and Sister Patrick Marie Donovan make final profession of vows as Religious Sisters of Mercy. Center photo, receiving ,·the Mercy, habit were, left to right,' front row, Sister Mary Alllm:..Caesar, 'Sister Eileen Mary Sullivan and Sister Joyce llarie FOrneiro; seco~d' Sister Kathleen Mary Kennedy, Sis~r Joan t.

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Marie Besham and Sister Carol Mary Jussaume; third row, Sister Anne Mary Picard and Sister Dorothy Marie Morton. Making temporary vOWI) were, left to right, front row, Sister Brian Mary Harrington and, SisteJr Mary Oh'arles ~selin; second row, Sister Gerard Mary' LePage and Sis­ ter Mark Marie .Griffith; third row. Sister :Maureen David Filipek anf1l ,Sister, M()n~ca, Mallie .P«?)~a. ... " ' i'

• . . Reli,gious,. O'rders Pronounce V,ows In Novitiate Ceremonies ,Mrs. 'FUDl'l Yamada, "he has all: ' ,',and' Mrs. Everett Smith olSt. Continued from Page, One

Itudies at, the' SaQred' HeaJ1s older ·brother~nd 'Z\"sister stm" ~Mary :iCathedral' Parish," Fall River.' " Fathers 'Seminary '~Il Jaffrey" -in, .Japan. Sister Paul Mary and Sister ~.H. . , , 'Here Hjust over a year.... ·.. Then, lFatherJlerome hopes to Brotlier bopes to gO back- to' -Rose Marie, taught at St. James $0 loock to Hawaii, where his Japan 10 serve, his own people ,School, New Bedford, last school E!0l1'eVlts, Mil". and Mrs. Modesto after 'ordinat.ion. year. AnaY2J, 2Jnd three brothers, and

Lives of service are the lives Taking two-year vows, as an­ iiiive sisters st.iIl live.

chosen by all the professed and other' step toward their final Brother Nicholas Centeno is by the two June graduates oil profession, were Sister Maureen another example of '''influence." Stang High School, Brother Rob­ David Filipek, daughter of Mr. Brother Nicholas, 26, learned ert Powell of New Bedford lind and Mrs. Frank Filipek of S1. of the Sacred Hearts Fathers in Brother Richard McNally of Kilian Parish; Sister Mary his parish church in Guaynabo, Fall River, who received the Charles Gosselin, daiighter oil Puerto Rico. habits of novices the day before Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. GosseHe had attended public schools the profession ceremony. Un of st. Lawrence Parish; Sis­ in, Puerto Rico. "His" breed,' of tel" Mark Marie Griffith, daugh­ Sacred ,Hearts Fathers were . Anotber aspect of the '''reli­ tell' of Leo Griffith and the late gious revival now sweeping the from Spain. Mr. Griffith of Ho'" Name Par­ diocese was epitomized by the v , ,When Brot.her leaves Ware­ ish, and Sister Brian Mary Har_ '17 young women of the diocese ham, he expects to begin llnd rington, daughter of Mr. a,nd chosen Jives as Sisters end his college and theological who have , Mrs. Patrick J. Har"ington 0" of Mercy. ' .. lItudies in Mexico, because of, the Holy Name Parish, New Bed­ Newest "full fledged" sisters ford. ' Spa1liSh 100,nguage he will be of the order, who professed their ,Ali are graduates Off. Holy using. final vows in ,the impressive Family High School. "Eventually," ~e says, he ceremonieS at ,Mt. 'St. Rita, are !'hopes" that he will be ordained Sister Brian Mary is the sister Sister PatTic~' Marie Donovan, " JI'l Puerto Rico. where his par~ niece of ~rs. John Travis of St. ' eflis, Mr. nrid Mrs. Segundo 'Cen­ Joseph P,arish, .. FaIlRive.r; Sis-, MalUoy ~no and three brothers and two tel' Paul Ma"ie' McKnight, .st.ers st.ill live. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Brother John Yamada,25, is P. McKn'ight. olSt. William Par­ ., NEW ROCHELLE (NC) _ 11 nat.ive of lbaraki, Japan, who ish. Fall River, and Sister Rose Father John Malloy, S.D.B., it; was graduated from Sophia Uni­ Marie Smith" daughter of Mr., the new provincial of- the eastern versity in Tokyo before he en­ province of the Salesians of, Don 'tered the Sacred Hearts Fathers. Bosco. He will begin adminis­ Anot.her member of "my same Carmetiefre. tration of the province's 28 prefecture and same parish" schools -and parishes on Friday, J)()W at Wareham is BI'other At Duk.e Sept. 1. Louis Kawarnata, now complet­ DURHAM (NC) - Duke Uni­ Father Malloy, 48, was provin­ ing his novitiate. versity Provost R. Taylor Cole ~ial of the order's western prov­ Brother John, because he has announced the appointment ince ilor two years. eompleted college before enter­ of a, Roman Catholic priest as ing the order, now is a student visiting professor in the depart­ at ,Jaffrey. N. H. The son of ment of religion for 1967-68.

Fr. ,Is Named Salesion Provinc;icil, '

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Hospitoti to Close LAMAR (NC) - Mother Mary Francesca, O.P., prioress general cd the Sisters of St. Dominic, has announced that the congregation ,.,ill close Sac,red Heart Hospital here in Colorado July 1, 1968. She cited the need of extensive remodeling a!l,cf the iilapility of the Sisters .. provide enough per80nn~1 and funds .. te permit the. hospital to meet the required ' ~d:arde;

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First Catholic ever to serve on the religion faculty at the Methodist-affiliated university. Father Roland lE. Murphy, O. Carm., has been professor CIlf Old Testament at the Catholic Univei'llity lIllf America since ID5Ci.

,.It" 8peeialist' Ian the "Wisdom Literature" Of tbe Old Testa­ ~nt, 'Fafuer' ViJrphy , 'also taugbt m -abe' f'.emitic language depa.i"tmtmt·.' lCl1ltlholic Univew­ .~.

of· ~be Re~. 'Brian, J. Harrington;' 'The Bishop Feehan gradu. . 2nd Sister Ma:r)-"Gilp'atrick' B'nd' ,,.,bv received'ber'habit' was'Sis­ ' . Sister Evelyn-MarY 'Uar'tin'gton, tel' Kathleen' Marie SUllivan, both Sisters of Me'rCy.' naughterof Mr. and Mrs. Ray­ :" Tbe Mt: St.' Mary graduates mood F. Sullivan of St.Mary who took their temporary vows 'Parish; North Attleboro. included Sister Gerard Mary Families and friends' of the re­ LePage, daughter of Mr. and ligious attended the professioo Mrs. Gerard J. :("ePage of SS. ceremonies. Peter and Pau~ Parish, Fall Sunlight filled the skies' foll' River, and Sister Monica Marie the religious services in which Polka, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. young men and women both Stanley A. Polka of Holy Cross dedicated their lives to God and Parish, Fall River, whose sister Goo'v service. is Sister Marie Cecilio of St. Xavier Convent, Providence, R.I. Novices who received their habits included Sister Carol C(Jj)mp/ete Mary Jussaume, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Augustin Jussaume of st. Lawrence Parish, niece of the ' ' Rev. Andrew J'ussaume; Sister Kathleen Mary Kennedy, daugh­ tell' of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Kennedy of St. Frands Xa,iier foil' Brmstol County' Parish, Acushnet; Sister Eileen M,ary S u II'Ivan, ' d aug ht er 0 f M r. ,and Mrs. John J: Sullivan o.f Holy Name Parish; New Bed:" ford, alI'Holy FaI1lilygi'aduates; 'Sister .roan' Marie B'eshara'; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David 'Beshara of Immacula'te Concep:' . tion Parish, FaIr River; Sister TAUNTON, MASS. Dorothy Marie Morton, gl;imd­ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Law­ rence' Corrigan of St. Patrick 'lTHlf BANI,( ON Parish, Fall River, and Sister 'lTAOJlNlTON GREEN Anne Mary Picard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Picard of Member of Fedell'al Deposill SS. Peter and Paul Parish, Fall ilmll!ll!llrZllI1ll0 Corporation River, all gl'aduates of Mt. St. Mary Academ~', Fall River.

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THE ~NCHOR""7

Thurs., Aug. 24,

C~uidi~ud ,Lauds", Slo~GkJUlimBO~I,:':: ,

'1967 . ~

PJUI,.ADELPHIA (NC)-""lra:n ' ha~ I ~roven 'that you are' pro<- I ' pared~, .accept,,~be ch~~el?ge, re­

Continurd from Page One llevels. ' "We had our beginning with ate Christian Family Movement iIi. our parish," Mr. McDonagh

quired of the laity after'tlie 'SeQ> ond Vatican Council,'" John ,C3J;>. , dina! Krol told delegates to tlto 36th. ,convention ~ tllle FimS Catho~c Slovak Union. ,'" ~ardinal, Krol, ,addressed ~.. , gI'OtlP .iJll.. Slo~ during, their.. testimonial dinner Sund8¥ ,ia. hw, bQl,lor., . ' , The fraternal society iD ~adtl" up of 105,000 persons of Slovak 'ancestry. ; 'l:'qe' ,~hiladelphia ca~din~. ' , praised tile Slovak Union for ae-, coPip~~hinen41 in the field" O;f ch~n~, ,and for preserving ,the heritage of Slovakia in ~ United .~tates. He urged them 00 contin,ue their "dedicated lay, ac­ tivity and search for new wayw to ,fulfill even greater expecta­ tions." , In closing, Cardinal Krol re­ minded tbe group of their par­ ticular apostolate" and said: "Continue to help those who ask .in the name of God, but first of all help to preserve Slovak soula and the Slovak character and de DOt forsake your Slovak heri-:,

oaid.

The couple are communicants St. John's in Attleboro. From this they worked into the CCD, to which m,ost of their me time is now devoted. ' , "We really need adult educa- , tion in religion," streSsed Mr. McDonagh. "There are about 1800 "people In CCD work at present in the Diocese and it is hoped that this will be inel'eased to about 9,000 , m. 10 years," he stated., ' Of about, 35,000' students en­ rolled in religious education, ap­ proximately 58 per cent are re­ <eeiving instruction through CCD, Mr. McDonagh revealed. It is expected in 10 years there will be about 70,000 students to be taught. Mr. McDonagh told of the CCD's planning to hold an ori­ entation workshop in the Fan HONORED: Father James E. Groppi, Milwaukee priest 'active in the civil rights fur Sisters and lay teachers. He movement, was honored at ,a testimonial dinner sponsored by 19 organi~ations and at­ ~ge.- ' lJtressed the importance of these tended by more than 1.000 persons Father Groppi, center, talks with Miss Helen Barn­ programs, and the amount of ,hill, left, chairman of the dinner, 'and Msgr. John J. Egan of Chicago, right, principal work involved in their, execu­ ' 1lion. , ' ' speaker for the occasion. NCPhoto. A~"di~ce$e Mr. and Mrs. McDonagh have also been active in the Cursillo movement ;'held at' LaSalett.e" ERNAKuLAM (NC) -..: More Retreat House. Their part 'in thi&I, tl!lan' 1,800 houses for poo~ fam­ has beim as teachers' ~nd Mrs.' Weshavebeen buht so far under McDonagh has recently beel\ eo.';' a program of the Ernakulam l1 ' gaged in II Post-Cursillo pro­ arChdiocese herein India. nu. , gram. MILWAUKEE (NC)-A' Mil- white America' is finally awak- ' "tired:, ~ words, including my was repOrted at the first meet­ "This year ,I'm trying to do waukee priest whose dramatic eiling." , , 'own."I' should have preferred ing of'm pastoral council set, u.-, ~ings where I can spend more here last January. civil rights activities have won Others voicing praise ,lforthe comin'gher'~,bringing as my of­ time at home," Mrs. McDonagh him national c\lriosity and often civil rights leader included local Ifering not lovely phrases and The council decided to "build lJ8id. "I have my own work: to, local scorn was honored by, a' and 'state' officials, Protestant carefully ,chiseled statements, more houses in the project, att~nd to, also," she B1dded as testimonial dinner' here and pre- "and Jewish clergymen, and which was launched in 1961 fol­ but an armfuf ,of jobs and sev­ she looked around the f:!:'ont ,sented a" $3,000 check to aid 'bis '·Father Eugene Bleidorn, pastoreral square' miles of decent lowing 'floods that washed away room. , work with the NAACP Youth of St. Boniface church where available homes, and schools many'buts'of the poor. Also in relation to the ccn, Council. Another $2,000 waS Father Groppi is a curate. The coUncil also decided te that teach a child, what glory it Mr. McDonagh, edita "The set up "educational trust" .. 'pledged. ' , , ' "Tired of Words' ,is, to be a numan being - - - I Pulse," a monthly publication Nineteen religious and civic thank Father Groppi not only helP 'poOr students, to adopt., ' ~r CCD workers. ' ' more families in a "Save-a­ organizations joined to sponsor The Rev. Lucius Walker of beca'use he is what he is ,but be­ "This is quite a 'job," be said, the dinner and'more than 1,000 ,t h e lIl~rthcott Neighbo~~~ caus,e he has helped us to' be Family" project financed by do­ "'but I've managed, to get it out 'pers~)fis oame to pay tribute to ~ouse said of Father G:roP~l, It more than we are." nations' of U. S.' and Canadlaa 00 time every month. Of Catholics, and to help make"the' ,'Father James E: Gropp" who is lSIl't often we se.e a sa!nt m the !: "There wim be aCCD congresa litUl'gy . "more appealing ancI 0' 'E1e"",t N~'w simple... , " ' ", , ihis weekend at 'the University , cUrrently,facing trial for bre~k." ,~esh ~nd I. c~nslder ~lm ..~ of; ing the' curiew imposed on the the samts In the church. • .... <I': e;,f New Hampshire'in Durham. It The Rev. B. S. Gregg of St. B !s expected:thatabout ,3,000 per-­ ,city during,recent race, riots. : The principal speaker, Msgr". MaWlew ,A,.. M. E. ,church, said" " , ~m , "r t~ ,,00-:0 alOns will a'ttend, and it is' fOr " MONTREAL (NC)-A Can.. ~veryone," :Mr. !\1cDonagksaid. '.1ohn ,J. Egan, directcK of tlie ''''there hi lllI1 old Chinese prov"'Office of :ur.ban affairs for the erb: the trees want to be still but diaa. industrial executL~ hM 'Where A 'Chicago' archdiOcese, said that, the wind will not stop blowing.~n chosen" a new, merhber oil Father Groppi has been "ill Sirlrl- ' ' Father' Groppi ,is that' wiqd ' that' 1be' bOard of directOrs: of the . ApproveS MO$$<ell "

,bol and a fact of concern iD. a - will not permit the statua quo Knights of Columbus, the 1,%00,­ Rn PrBvCite Homei

,desert of indiHerence, a voice to, be still., ' . OOO-~e~ber fraternal, ~et7 of Rabbi Dudley .Weinberg of Catholic!DeL " BOSTON. (NC)-Richard Car­ 'for ,the powerless whell'! the Means A litinal Cushing of Boston has an­ ,powerful of the,commuJ.1ity were Congregation Emanu-El B'ne Ernest.1. Wolff (Jf Peterbor­ 'GREAT DEAL nounced tliat oHicial appro,val :~ea'f tc'the plaints ,of't,he poor.- Jeshurun, said, "I a~ dreadfu~, ~gh" Ont~reeeived a unani­ ,for the celebration of public lPrlee '01 Neg-Beet ' m o u s vote lor a three-year tena Masses in private homes may be' :: The days'!U'e over, Msgr.Egall Orderr of CII1 the board of directors at the ootained from at:chdioooSIIlR' said; when ~ clergyman can A d R ..II..J1 85th annual meeting here of the thorities. To 0 ettllJli'uelW society's supreme counciL ,~ This authorization, effective avoid secular involvement and NEW ORLEANS (NC)-DeleDelegates from the United Immediately, will be granted Father Groppi has been fully involved with the poor and the .gates to, the 32nd biennial con- States, Canada, Mexico, Puerto l!IIlder these condit,ions: "It, will be limited to ,weekday Negro. vention of the Order'of Alham- Rico; Cuba imci the Philippines Masses; only when circum­ "He listens and is trusted and brn passed resolutions support- reelected six members' of the stances (to be judged bV the becomes a friend. He does not ing United States troops in Viet- board :fo!r three-year' tenns. archdiocesan liturgical cornrills­ possess the poor and powerless; nam and condemning "lawleSll They are Charles .1. Ducey, dep­ sion) warrant it; the practice is he is possessed by them. O f , demonstrations," and launched IA uty supreme knight, of Hamden. oriented to, the parish and the Msgr. Egan also said that "the campaign to raise $500,000 for C~nn.; D. Francis Sullivan, su­ '1001 Hwr.. parish church; positive mean~ ',bloodletting, the destruction,: the aid to retarded children. ' preme secretary, of New: Haven, must be taken to avoid abuses, fear and violence of the past few Each member of the fraternal Conn.; Harold :T. Lamboley, su­ lmd assurance given, that the months across our country ,are ,order, which numbers' about preme advocate, of Monroe, rubrics will be followed; partici­ the heavy price of the neglect, '20~000, is assessed $2 yearly fOlr Wis.; Dr. J'ohn H. Griffin, su­ pation and a homily are both re­ of decades""" The long suffer- support of the Retarded Chil-' preme physician, of Hughesville, quired." ing Negro will suHer no more dren's Educational fund. AlMd.;.1ose Cardenas Stille ,of . OIPil!1i'il IEvenings .. (I .. The Negro has had his fill; though a move to double the as- Mexico City, and Dr. J'oseph G­ IBGstO/l'il he is ready for revolution. And sessment wall defeated lilt tb2 Murphy. ell LaMarque, TeX. convention, members wero "Ire Close ParislJu asked to increase their contribu- _ ~ •• O.' •• t •• ~O ••••••••••••••'•••••••••••••••••• Name 1)pJ«llIr~dle tions voluntarily. BOSTON' (NQ) -The Boston ,,' ' , ~HACKENSACK (NC) - The archdocese :is closoing 72-year­ Since 1959, the Order of Al­ old St. Philip's parish in the Bergen County Federation of hambra has given more thll!ll city's, industrial-slum South Holy Name Societies has ended $180,000 to assist retarded chil­ controversy in its area over dren. Most' of the mOney hall End-Roxbury section. 'But its place will be taken by whether annual Holy Name pa­ been used' ~ train teachers to a neigh borhood center Which rades, should be discontinued by work witl1the retarded.

will include recreational, library announcing that it wm hold its BishQp ;Joseph H. Hodge, 0(

ad study facilities. ' annual march in this New J'er­ Wheeling, supreme chaplailll /Ill

The few remaining St. Philip'lI sey community Sunday, Oct. 8. the order, told the 1,800 cIeIe­

~rishioners--their number has Parade orders have gone to the gates tbat Alhambrans will be 01.

been shrinking since World officials &f 74 societies. Tbey greater assistance to tfne Chui'eh

1I-will be absorbed into the were _ Ule future sialce' ~membersh.

distributed ~.. ' JKs~. <IOfltiguous Holy Cross catbeGir81 Thomas F.' Duffy, :fed.eratioe .. increasing, and the ~

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.Feels-'Top-Grode Schools Biggest Unter.City Need :KANSAS CITY (NC) ­ A Chiea.~ priest active • interracial 'vrork has told t:he delegates to the National

Catholic Conference for ln~ racial Justice convention that tiu; Church's most important iDter-city work may be the r.naintenance of tpp-notCb schools. Msgr. Daniel Cantwell pointoo out that education is the founda­ tion for progress among the poor. He added that in bis own ghetto parish, the people wanted nothing as much as they wanted a good school. As a result, the Illinois prelate said, the parishioners are work­ ing toward an educational sys­ tem good enough to draw back into the ghetto some of the whites who had left. Cillange and

.'.

THE. ANCHOR-:-Dloc:ese of Pan A;v8r-Thurs. Aug. 24, 1967

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13

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AdaJ!P~21tn@llll

Describing his words as the "reflections of a single, rather bewildered priest," Msgr. Cant­ well urged a sense of community in the world. To achieve this community, he added, we must make allowances for change anell growth within the Church. "That parish is best," he said, "which manifests the breadtb of Christ's love, the height and depth of it .. .. .. the Churcln needs, and the Holy Spirit gives, a vast variety of insights and activity." And because we are dealing with people with strengths and weaknesses, we are often blocked in our desire for change and adaptation, he said. "The temptation is great," he admitted, "to say 'to hell with the church.' But if we say this, it is an admission not of some­ one else's failure but our OWIl failure to work with a human bt>ing, wlth aU his strengths an(l llimitations." Ambitious Program

jo'ollowing . Msgr. CantweWfi wlk NCCIJ executive director Mathew Ahmann outlined the future of the organization. Among programs planned fof the next year are: A review of textbooks lindei"-' taken in conjunction with the National Association for the Ad­ vancement of Colored People. the National Catholic Educa­ tional Association and the De­ partment of Education of the U. S. Catholic Conference. A Ford Foundation-funded. program of cooperation for in­ terracial justice among membem of ethnic groups. A series of college consulta­ tions on training teachel'll . . inter-city schools.

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Nearly' aD aile sick of either malnutrition, WOml13, anemia'oil malaria. " ... ,.. .

Over half of the

Catholic SchooBs Bar 'Negro' Gorr6 JOHANNESBURG (NC)-Ati ll-year-old white girl, classified last year as colored by the South Af~ican government and then reclassified as white, has beeJl denied admission to five Cath­ olic schools because her com.­ plexion is dark. Even 42 miles outside Johan­ nesburg, Sandra Laing W8Cl turned away by the mother su­ perior of St. Hyacinth's. convent, because, as Sister said, "we don't ~ant to get involved." St. Bya­ enth's was the fifth school ill'> turn down Sandra's application. In South Afriea, schooling. 10bs and housing are determined by racial factors. Race is deter­ mined by the government. Anell although the government adveJl'oo tises .its classification system &l ocientific, some critics point oWi one member of a iamily as white Wld others as colored indicatefj the arbitrary classification Q2 \) certain lack of scientific )\)ma ciBi!>Jl.

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THE ANCHOR-Dioce~~ of fc;ii1liVer~ThurS.Aug:24, 19~7 , : . , .. . ;...~,

f

traveler Offe~,s Excerpts From European \'Notebook Rt. Rev. Msgrr. .John S. Kennedy Unpacking after a m~nth spent wand~ring through Italy, Spain, and Portugal, the columnist is diverted from ,the dreary business of clearing out his luggage by the note­ book in which he jotted from time to time. The entries are sporadic and triv~al, but ions made long retreats' in com-' perhaps some readers would {ortless caves. / be interested in looking a.t , But the Portiuncula, down in the valley, is bedizened like them. Samples fiollow. ]By

grotesquely over­ .' We left silvery Venice late 'one someone 'morning, 'to drive to Florence. dressed, and is surrounded, if not quite obliterated, by the By noon we enormous and appalling medi­ w ere passirig ocre basilica of Our Lady of the . through thriv­ Angels. ~g farmlands. Times change. In the years ;Women work­ John F. Kennedy's presidency 02rs in the ·fields and for some time after his as­ were leaving sassination, my name, when for midday given, always evoked interest, a break at home. quickened glance, an eager in­ lEach was' rid­ quiry about the possibility of re­ ing a motorbike, lationship. This is no longer so. IS putt-putting The only time anything of the procession along sort occured was when someone ~e highway. No ' longer for them the old way of mistakenly thought my name kudging under the fierce SUB, or, was Carnaby. , Traveler's cOnsea~_, llf lucky, tiding a burro, In Tuscany, there are stiR ex­ In the Apennines, swooping !!alcons. Also, a small deliciously asperating waits at gr&de Cros&­ ings long, long before a train ap­ fragrant yellow flower resem­ bling an orchid. Great clusters pears. Gypsy children spring up of these, having a very 'tough from nowhere, their black hair curiously reddened by the sun.. otem. We stopped somewhere in the They go from car to car, begging hills to see a twelfth century for money, for cigarettes. Some ·Church. It stood alone, almost of them offer a sparrow for sale, '2 tiny, frightened creature moof, on a rise, in an area re­ mote and silent. It was locked. fluttering and cheeping in the But the climb was not pointless, , small, grimy hand which artfully keep its captive. :DB we saw something of the . Th~ traveler's consCIence is.n twentieth century. On the path to the church was peculiar thing. He 'may be fa­ a row of trees just attaining real 'tigued, his eyes gluttecll with growth. Each bore a memorial sightseeing, his bones crying plaque to' a local youth killed .out. But it keeps nagging at him: 'during World War II-most,on "Remember how much this in the-Russian front.' Leaving, one costing you! There is so much was haunted by the bizarre fate to- see, so much to do, and your which had awaited these sons' ,precious days are streaking ,of the remote, peaceful hill away .. It will not be silenced;. and so he gets up'and goes 00,' m coountry. flogged cart horse. 80t1o in Mon&0 ,The opera to see ,In ·the open In Pisa, an old man in' a nori­ air theatre ,at the Baths of Cara­ '<llescript uniform and 11 battered calln iJn Rome is Aida. It offern eap stood at the cathedral door .roughly refusing admittance to rich opportunity for spectacle, , women wearing sleeveless and this is exploited to the fulL Evidently that is what the audi-' 'dresses. Inside, one of the' sup­ enee comes for; .The singing, . ports of the magnificent pulpit is a figure of a woman unclothed though not brilliant, was not tabove the waist. This figure rep- bad. But the crowd seemed whol1T resents the Church. ' indifferent to it and was miserly 'Pope John's birthplace, sot­ in applause. The biggest hand 00 it Monte, is an untterly com­ was given the team of four whit0 monplace town. Its Dame sug­ gests the picturesque, even the horses which dashed down the romantic. But the town is com-' deep, ramped stage and almost pletely prosaic." Wisely, nothing into the orchestra pit during the has been done to dress up the triumphal scene. The camel in house in which the Pope was the Nile scene. didn't 'do too 'badly, either. born. Vatieall C ~ It is 'more ,touching, 'in' its :,. homeliness, than any basilica. " Entering a cab in Reme is like r LOoking down from the balcony ,~pi>ing into, a.. Keystone ,,: off which the stark sparsely fur­ , '~medy. Breakneck speed, m:4~h ':' nished rooms opeo, we saw' a grinding and jerking, dasl).ing boy standing in the sunny court­ ,40w;n streets, ,teetering around yard, a sturdy, round-headed lad !fUrv~ gesticuiatioo, argunien­ of six or seven. In looks and t8tion-all frantic and absurd. dress he could have been the , , ;', There is marvelowi young Roncalli. b.etween theVati~ chaPellJ . In the church where PoPe,; decorated, respectively, by,Mi­ John was baptiZed, the small, chelangelo and Fra Angelico. plain font is identified by a huge Michelangelo's frescoes are com­ tablet incised with a prolix and plex and forceful. The intricacy tortuous inscription. An, Italian of the composition is astounding, man (the pilgrims here were all no matter how often' one sees it; 'Italian) stood beside me, and. the flow of energy is breath­ scanned it, then turned to me in taking. I do not mean to suggest scowling puzzlement to ask that there is any excess or that whether this was the font. the work ever got out of hand. The great masfer had it, and left Mediocre, Basiliclll Demythologizing is much it, beautifully controlled.' Memorials to Popes heard of today. In some of those

sacred places one can trace the Fra Angelico's painting, along­ process of mythologizing. Assisi side this, is almost naive. But its is an example. There some of the loveliness is in its simplicity, re­ primitive Francicsan loci remain pose, luminosity. Michelangelo's unspoiled: parts of San Damiano" is, undoubtedly the greater f~at, for example, and the. cil-rceri, but the humbler work breathes high on the mountainside, where peace. Two 'angels differing·.im. . 81. Francis and his first' compan-' glory.

of

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cOntrast

MOURNED: Father John Courtney Murray, S.J., died in New York City Aug. 16. He had collaborated with the late Fr. Gustave Wei~', S.J. in many efforts to forward the ecumenical movement and ,to clarify' thoological concepts of Church-Sliate ~ 1Jations NC Photo.

A$k CoOper<DJU'D<crllm With Luth~~HI'@Im$ WUERZBURG (NC) -Cath­ olic-Lutheran cooperation ilZi world mission work was envi­ siotlEid 'at a meeting held in con­ nection with the annual sessiorw of the Association of Superiorn of Religious Orders in Germany. The/Catholic Missionary Coun­ . dl in Gel'many held its meeting at Himmelspforteo, while the religious sU'periors- met here. The missionary meeting was marked by the attendance of III representative of the Lutheran Church for the first time. He was Prof.' 'Niels-Peter Moritzen of Hamb!lrg, who holds the chaIr of missionary science at the Uni­ versity of Erlangen. Relations between the Cath­ olic ',and Lutheran world mis­ sions was the subject of the mis­ sionary council's meeting. ~ council is composed o~ repre­ sentatives of missionary orden! and, cOAgregations,- lay institute:J and the papal missionary work of German . ' . . dioceses. Discussions' on .possible waYli in which Catholics and Lutheraoo

could cooperate in mission work . were, held in a "non-committal and fraternal" manner, accord­ ing to the missionary cOllllCi:l'1I pre!iid~rit" Father Klaus DIlund of Aac~en. He said committeea ol "specialists were formed to de­ ,Ye1op. Il).eans fi)r pract~cal' ~ oper~tio'n.' . ., ,"The newly installed memorial '. 1;0 Pope,,, John in St. ~eter'a; is worthyaf the m,m. It is .not, thank, heaven, just another, mar­ ble nullity, but a soaring ·bas­ relief in bronze. The figure of the 'Pope is not a blare of tri­ umph, but strongly suggests .in­ volvement with the sad business of ordinary' folk, and solicitude for them. In the background there are prisoners, in the fore­ ground women and children. Artistically good, this speaks to the heart. The monument to Pope Pius XII is something else again. Also im. bronze, it consists mainly of III vast, enveloping cape and a towering; heavy mitre._Between these splendid things, there is a head practically a fleshless skllll, stem ..and staring. What the -SCUlptor is saying here is 'scarce­ 4r complimentary. ,I:.'

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THE ANCHOR-

Canadian Holy Name Society Changes Name, Organization BENOIT-DU-LAC (NC)-The Holy Name Society, as such, bas ceased to exist in Canada. The general assembly of the Canadian Holy Name Society's first national convention bere approved 37 resolutions dealing with all phases of the society. Included among them was II ehange 'in the name of the Canadian affiliate of the 761­ year-old archconfraternity to "'The Council of, Catholic Men (of the Name of Jesus)." In other resolutions the new­ ly named CCM: Abolished the office of epis­ eopal moderator, placing itself directly under the Canadian Catholic Conference lay apostol­ ute office; Established a national execu­ tive and the first national char­ ter for the organization; Approved ground rules for parish affiliates of the society; Approved a change in the Holy Name medallion to be com­ pleted within six months; and Changed the old law requiring the second Sunday of the' month as Communion.Sunday. Cooperate With Bishops Principal push of the resolu­ tions approved by the general assembly is to realign the new Bociety to deal with all the ar­ ticles of the Second Vatican Council's Decree on the Lay Apostolate.

Thurs., .. Aug. 24, 1967

Sean Tobin, the national exec­ utive secretary for the organiza­ tion and convention chairman, said that the convention "by studying the lay apostoiate res­ olutions, requested that the na­ tional council, and executive loody, work in close cooperation with .the bishops" for the re­ newal of the' society and the Church. He said it would be left to the Ordinary of the diocese to give specific directives to the groups in his territory. Communion Sunday Tobin also said the designation "of the name of Jesus" was re­ tained in the new name because it "has to be kept because the society is an art;:hconfraternity approved by papal bulls in 1264.". The Holy Name Society was founded in the 13th century and around 1600 John Vercelli began forming the parish organizations we know today. The change in the Communion ~unday eliminates an unwritten rule which "goes back to the 1700s," according to Tobin. The new resolution; he said,' indicates that "as much as pos-' sible the organizations should move toward a corporate Com­ munion that suits the men and their work week." . The idea, he added, was to re­ turn the Sunday Communion to . the family.

Former CU Assistant Seek! Of .Profes$ors Association

Cuban Christians Endure Camvary

Share-the-Church Plan' Work.s Well MONTREAL (NC) - About 400 French-speaking Catholics are going to Mass on Sunday in • Protestant cburcb under a lIbare - the - church arrangement worked out bere recently. The CatholiCs, members Of St. Louis de France parish hi Don, Mills, ore trying to raise money enougb to build their own church, but meanwbile bave Be­ cepted an invitation from Park­ woods United Churcb to IlbaR their churcb on Sundays. The Catholies have their Mass lit 8 A.M. and the Protestants take over at 9:30. Both the Catb­ otic pastor, Father Benoit Jobin, IlDd. the lJnltarian church'll Rev. hmes Campbell sa:y the __ JIIlDgeJDent if! .working out flIIIa tIIeIDeq wdl.

:MIAMI (He) - Christians m Cuba are enduring II "~lvary" of trials and sufferings, Father Manuel Lopez, 8 ..7., oaiq} here. .

Residing here, Father Lopez ill in contact with many of 'the ref­

ugees arriving from Cuba. FO'i' III months he .bas conducted

~

"Prayer Crusade" for Christians !In Cuba, in a daily broadcast over Radio Continental here. "God, in His economy of gov­ erning His people for their puri­ fication and greatness, permits the trials, martyrdom and CD!­ vary that Cuban lllDd its Chris­ tian ebildren are now undergo-. ing," Father Lopez said. "'In going through IlO much suffering and trials in Cuban jails, labor camps and the 'un­ dergound, as Cbristian witnesses, they will be able ,00 see II free

M!Id Christian Cuba

Chicago Schools

Give laymen

New Ro;es

CHICAGO (NC) - The laity will receive new im-' portance in a newly reorgan­ _ired Catholic school system in Chicago, John Cardinal Cody has announced. As his statement was released, the archdiocesan school board announced the appointment of the first lay principal of a Cath­ olic high school in the arch­ .diocese. He is James J. O'Brien, who was made principal of St. Philip's High School. In his statement, the cardinal referred only indirectly to the recent controversy over religion textbooks in the Chicago schools. While the role of the laity will be stressed, he said, they should not presume a right to "dictpte the content of the Chris­ tian message. F AMU.. Y VHS.l!TATWN: Xaverian Seminarian. John "It is the bishop's responsi­ McDermott of Penna., a student at the Xaverian Major bility to make sure that all text­ Seminary in Franklin, Wis., talks with. children during a books and teaching methods comply with the official stand­ family visitation which forms part of the Christian Appa­ ards of orthodoxy, and also 00 l'achian Project, a Summertime program of assistance to the fulfill the Vatican council direc­ poor in which hundreds of volunteers from throughout the tives." On the reorganization, the c~ country participate. NC Photo. . dinal said this: . "In the near future I shall an­ nounce plans for a complete re­ organization of the archdiocesan school board along lines sug­ gested mainly by lay members of li~~d CGMfPDetem ,yearus the present board and other lay persons. Witlu Pe:.isSi9E:nnDst Fathers "Present plans for the reoll'­ also wants to do mission and re- . ganization envision a large in­ DETROIT (NC) - A 19-year­ old California youth, blind from treat wOlk He is also interested crease in lay membership; open in counseling individuals and meetings on most matters, much birth, has been granted permis­ . sion from .Rome to study for the small groups. more responsibility for arch­ priesthood here. . "The priest has· to get to the diocesan policies, and other pr~ Gilbert Pries, who has just individual," he said, ."and work cedures to gather the best wilil'o completed his one-year novitiate with small groups and not be on dom in the Church .for delibera­ tions and decisions that will . with the Passionist Fathers and . a pedestal as a judge.... Father Michael Joseph Sten­ chart the future course of Cath­ Brothers at St. Paul of the Cross MonasterY here, took his first gel, C;P., master of novices at olic education." vows Saturday. His final vows st. Paul of the Cross Monastery, The cardinal also had some would come in three years, and said "naturally, we feel honored. advice for pastors in connectiOD ordination to the priesthood in We have seen how well he has with Operation Renewal, the adapted:-not only to our reli­ aeven: archdiocese's $250 miliion ex­ ' Pries had applied to three or gious life - and have seen the pansion progt'am. "I have recommended that four religious orders and to sev­ possibilities of the. work he can do. pastors organize a lay building ~ral dioceses before applying to, "The whole community of committee whose duty is the re­ and being accepted by, the Pas­ priests here votes on each new view and appraisal of parish monists. Officials at the monastery member, and they voted him in building programs, including those for the expansion and im­ stated that permission had to be with flying colors," he added. provement of the parish schooLIl first obtained because of the

Operation Renewal enCOUll­ "unusual" nature of the request,

tered initial rea'ction from many but that it is not unprecedented.

laymen on the grounds that they One blind man, they said, had

had no voice in determining how been accepted as a candidate for the money was to be spent. the priesthood in Canada, an'd

MADRID (NC) Spain's there have been 'others who have 'Catholic Workers' Brotherhood been . allowed to continue their bas initiated III law suit against preparation, and to be ordained, the nation's minister of informa­ despite the' handicap. tion, Manuel Fraga lribarnei fol­ In high school in Los Angeles, lowing what the brotherhood Pries won honors in debating, ealled illegal confiscation of its bulletin. Latin oratory and foreign lan­ . Agents from the information guage contests.' Be is also all. WYman amateur radio bug, likes to swim ministry, acting without advance 3-6592 . notice or warrants, seized a and· fence and plays a guitar.. 5,OOO-copy edition of the bulle­ Community Votes CHARLES F. VARGAS ti~, despite the brotherhood's Be has insisted OIl studying compliance with a law that de­ 254 .ROCKDAlE AVENUE fG!' the priesthood, because "I m~nds .presentation of advance am too outgoing and being a' ec>Pies to the ministry. NEW BEDFO[qD, MASS. monk doesn't appeal to me." He Although the lack of due proc­ essess meant that agents did not give a reason for the confisca­ Religious 0111' Minn. tion, brotherhood officials said they believed it was a reaction Scholarship Panel to an article criticizing the ST. P~UL (NC) - Brother Falange, Spain's government­ Gregory, F.S.C., president of St. backed and only legal political Mary's C(}llege in Winona has party. been named to a three-member

panel appointed by the Minne­

BOta Higher Education Coordi­

nating Commission to oversee

the State's scholarship and loan iNSURANCIE AGENCY, INC. program created by the 1967

Legislature.

96 WILLIAM STREET Other panel members are NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Peter 8. Popovich, St. Paul at­

torney and member of the State

998-5153 997-9167 College· Board and Edward Her­ PERSONAL SERVICE big Jr., retired Waseca business­

Studies f@r Priesthood Youth.

WASHINGTON (NC)-Dr. Jo­ After that· meeting, a faculty seph M. Hernon Jr., former as­ spokesman, Prof. Malcolm C. sistant professor of history at the Henderson revealed that the Catholic University of America university had indeed rejected the candidate-but not for reli­ bere, wh9 was censured in Jan­ gious reasons. He said that the uary by the university's gradu­ board of trustees' executive ate faculty of arts and sciences, committee had turned clown Dr. bas enlisted the aid of the Amer­ Richard Kay of tbe 'University ican Association of University of Colorado because he had been Professors. divorced and remarried. Kay, an The AAUP has written on be­ Episcopalian, was divorced and ~alf of Dr. Hernon, now a v~it­ remarried in a civil ceremony in fung assistant professor of history at the University of Maryland, 1965. Hernon said that he views re­ &> Dr. James P. O'Connor, dean jection on the grounds of divorce ef the graduate faculty. Dr. O'Connor rellponded, expressit:tg and remarriage as another form of religious discrimiilaUon, since a willingness to discuss the mat­ it involves the application of ter, and it is expected that 0 meeting will take place later Catholic standards to non.. Catholics. this Summer. He does not consider anything . In January, Dr. Hernon that he has said in the contro­ e1larged tilat the university re­ ;Jected the leading candidate £01" versy heretical and feels that a vacant faculty post because his position is supported by the be was not a Catholic. He said Statement on the. Nature of the Contemporary Catholic Univer­ that the board of trustees' exec­ utive committee' had turned sity issued last month at a sem­ inar sponsored by the North down a scholar selected by mem­ bers of the bistory department American region of the Interna­ tional Federation cOOl Catholic to be professor of medieval bis­ held at Land tory and had advised the depart­ . Universities, O'Lakes, WiB. ' ment to hire a Catholic. . On Jan. 24; the graduate fae­ 1I1ty voted 69-19 to adopt a reso­ lution "deploring" Hernon's charge.

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-16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese Gf Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 24, 1967

Skate for Charity

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Presenting a survey of main trends in Latin American Gducation today, Rev. Gust...wo Perez and Rev. Issaac Th. J. Wust suggest an approach that the private sector might ~ke fA> forin an intelligent policy that will correspond to the challenges and needs of countries there are a number of Latin America. We hope, . well trained physicians and iShey eay, that these obser.:. nur!ies in large cities, but what vatioll8 will serve as guide­ is needed now are new, short tines for those freIn abroad who {lihe edueational Illlevelopment of Latin Ameriea. lSefore we begin we want to make clear'that \lITe do not in­ ~nd to give a G1et~led and lita tistical de­ ~ription Gf the present situation . of education in H.atin America ethel' in private or public sec­ ,Qors. This ill not yet possible due tit a lack ot'sUfficient and acc\!­ Irate data. A recent esxperience at the first seminar for planning fill. Catholic education in Latin America held in Melgar, Colom­ bia, with well-known educa­ Qional expertB revealed this dearly. We wanted to spend the first Cita,. <Jf the six-day conference discussing the actual situation of Latin Ameriea from collected </iata. After the first long and 80mewhat heated discussion one of tbe experts stood up and said .at such procedure was counter­ !productive because at this kind. of meeting no one would be able OlD agree on the statistical facts· because DO complete studies \Yere available. , Therefore, we intend to sketch ... broad outlines the panorama <Ill Latin American educatio:a llritlll some suggestions for pos­ tIIble approaches that the private .ector might take to assist iR ita _pid development. Uueatloa for Develop~lIIt First, we would like to cladfy • semantic problem so that we \Yill be speaking the same lal\­ euage when we talk about edu­ sation ill general and private _ucation in particular. Educa­ Cion in ,general, in tenns of Deeds, does not mean the same ating in the United States a's it Iioes in Latin America. For the U. S. you have a high­ IIy developed society with an in­ tegrated, highly organized edu­ <tatiooal system. Although even ibn the United States you al'e in Q process of soCial change. you alIo not need reforms in Y0l.\r so­ ~ial structure or in your educa­ tional system as rapidly as we ao in Latin America. We need more than a devel.., @pment of education; we need C!ducation for development, as was stated in 1963 by the Brazil­ nan Minister of Education, Paulo One of the reasons was that ed­ acation became a question of the America has been, up to the present, a copy of what was thought to be the ideal in the highly developed countries. For example, in Colombia the lInstitute for Agrarian Reform needed topographs for simple measurements. But it was found that graduates with five or six :rears of university training were 1lIDabie to do the job because all flhey had was theory with no practical experience. Now the lInstitute trains, in six months, (peOple with only secondary education to do exactly what is lIleeded. In almost all Latin Am.ericaa

training programs for the rural areas where there is practically no medical care at all. What will we do, if we do teach everyone to read and write in five or 10 years, with 40 to 50 million young people if there is no means of integrating them into an adequate economic sys­ tem that provides employment? In other words, Latin America's educational system should be adapted to the concrete needs of today within a framework of future development. - Secondly, we ought to mention tbe increased role of governmen­ tal and inter-governmental agencies in overall planning ac­ tivity. Historically, the develop­ ment of education has been the result of private initiative. But this has changed greatly over the last 10 years, especially since 1958 when Gabriel Betan­ cur, former Minister 'of Educa­ tion of Colombia and now As­ sistant General Director of UNESCO, presented a program of overall educational planning to the first meeting of Ministers of Education of the OrganizatioR of American States in Lima. One of the reasons that educa­ tion became a question of the "to be or not to be" of the whole -cOntinent. So the fact that more and more educational responsi­ bilities go to the state as the executive organism of the pe0­ ple is quite a natural process, Priva.te Seetor But - and we want to stress this emphatically-this' does not mean that.the private sector can '8t~p or diminish its activities la' the educational field. On the contrary, generally· speaking, we can say that there will not be educational develop­ ment as rapid as Latin Ariteriea needs without an extraordinary effod on the part of the private , sector in whatever field we con.;. sider: economics, Politics as weH as education. There are many arguments foe this: lack of politico-administra­ tive structure, lack of clear ori­ entation as to where develop­ ment should go and the lack of funds, even when we take into account the international funds available for this purpose. We can derive another argu­ ment for the importance of the private sector from the, follow­ ing example. In many places people are reluctant to send their children to school because they lack motivation. A father of six boys told me: I have taught five of my sons -to farm, why should I send the sixth one to school? It is not only a question of not having any money to pay for classes nor even of not enjoying the income from the child's work but primarily it is a lack of understanding that going to school means improvement. Therefore educational devel­ opment ,should be based on com­ munity development techniques in which the private sector can do much to provide the all im­ portant element of correct moti- . vation, If the community recog­ nizes and. feels a real need for education, they will surely put their efforts into paying, at least partially, for building an ad.e­ quate educational system..

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. LANHAM (NC)-The premiere of the 1968 Ice Capades, to be held at the'Washington Coliseum in .the nation's capital Jan. 17, will be a special benefit per­ formance to help raise funds for the Divine Savior ~eminary here in Maryland. The seminary, conducted by . the Salvatorian Fathers, was scheduled to close this year due to financial difficulties of the order. The benefit show will be the seminary's first step in attempt­ ing . to convince the American province of the Salvatorii:m Fathers and Brothers, with head­ quarters in Milwaukee, to re­ consider plans to sell the Mary­ , land ,theological house of studies.

Fromm. ~'Sociai JRevol~tion im the Latin' America"

Edited by JOhllil J. Considine, M.M.

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Brother David James Hel1i1l­ merling, S.D.S., seminary pub­ Hc relations director, said the benefit performance "has beeIrl set up specifically to help raiS2 a sustaining fund to keep the seminary in operation for On2 year, in order to give us the op­ portunity to raise the $1.7 milliOOl necessary to keep the seminary open." Milwaukee superiors have in­ dicated III willingness to recon­ sider plans to sell the Maryland facility if even a portion of the ultimate amount is raised. . A voluntary interfaith group., .called ,Project SOS ("Save OW' Seminary"), has been assisting Brother David and the seminaiT ,in their fund-raising efforts.

LUCKY

ENOUGH

TWO POSITIONS: Amle­ to Cardinal Cicognani, form­ er Apostolic Delegate to the , United States, and present­ ly Vat i c a 'n Secretary of State, will assume the ad­ ditional position of Prefect' of the Sacred Council for the Church's Public Affairs as of Jan. 1, 1968 in accordance with the reforming of the Roman Curia. NC Photo.

TDDIE

THI HDLY fAT~IlA!8 MIBBIDN AID TD TH~ DAla.TAL DHUADH

"The luc~ ones are those who died," sal(i one reporter In the Holy Land last week. "1 have seen war before, but 1'1/ never forset the humaR horrors this war left behind." •• , The "humaR horrors" are people like us, healthy and happy four months ago but now forever scorched. 111elr faces are burned, lIome have lost their arms and legs, some of them are blind. Once you have seen them, thE! ehlldren espoelally, how can you walk away? , •• We thank God you haven't seen nil them. But let us not forget them. War In the WAR Holy Land can trigger World War /II.', • : Tha 18 $31 war veterans In Martinsburg, W. Va., dropped NOT In the poorbol( In the VA Hospital In July will OVER help Carol Hunnybun give one hot melll to boy. and stria when school reopens Irr Jerusalem next week. It'. our way of making peace. Only $1 • week gives a child one hot meal eaehday, holpe keep him In school•• , • Befonl you forget, won't you sen~ $1 now to feed a hung!)' child' We'll thank you for your gift, whether It's $1, $2, $fJ., or $1,000. Wenead you, and .0 does God. We want you to know us bett«.

PAVlA to Hold first Convention CHICAGO (NC)-The Papal. Volunteers for Latin America will hold· their First Nationl.li Conference, Sept. 14-16 in Chicago. . Out of it, it is hoped will come an effort to involve established professionals in the work of the organization. The meeting, which is ex~ eli t~ draw representatives fr_ 113 dioceses, will review PAVLA's goals and methods. Ita theme is Ulnter.,.American Dia­ logue, Our Christian COnCeI'R.A preparatory committee has prepared two working propesalls for discussion at the eonference. they urge that PAVLA: ' "Collaborate in awakening the conscience of Christians to the responsibility which their skit811 and Professional competence impose upon them," and ' "Establish and encourage pro­ fessional collaboration and ex­ change within the Americas."

.

Thinkins of the months ahead, why not send us yourMua requasts 111M now? Simply IIat the fOIl intentions, Inetlcatethe datee, and then you cen YOU rut auured the MHMS will be offered by HDly IN Lend prJ8Ita who receive no other Incom..... THE Remind to send you information about Gre­ HOLY ,orlan Masses, too. You can 81T8np now to have ­ LAND Gregorian Masses offered for yourself, or for another, after death.

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In four years POps Paul vlolted flva countries, three of them ours. Your atrlngleos gifts ("to be used whQreneeded most") have helped him help the poor. Why not tel/your lawyer to remember the Holy Father's charltlco in your will? Our legal ftltle: ~THOLIO NEAR ~ WlZ1l7ArnI AGOCW:IATIO~

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HARRISBURG· (NC) - The House of Representatives paSsed a bill strengthening the state'a fair housing law by including, private dwellings in the ban against discrimination in selling or renting, exempting only rooms or apartments rented in an owner-occupied housing. Passage had been urged by tbe Pennsylvania Catholie Confer­ ence.

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"~OR-Diocese.offaR ~iver~Thurs.

Aug. 24,1967

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HOLY UNION OF THE SACRED HEARTS' CEREMONIES: Left, 'll1taking their final profession' in the presence of Bishop Gerrard were, lBtanding, Sr. Donald' Eli~abeth, Sr. John Evelyn, Sr. Bart~olomew, of . !Sacred Heart P.arish, Fall River; Sr. Helen Daniel, Sr. Mary Frances of 'Immaculate Conception, No. Easton; Sr. John Evelina, St. John of God, Somerset; Sr. Joseph Thomas, Holy Name, Fall 'River; Sr. Bernard Cath­ wine. Seated: Sr. Joseph J'ames, Bishop Gerrard, Sr. T~omas Maureen,

Facang Challenge Mnnnesota Ps,ychiahost P'oints to Problems ConfrontRr.gj 'Seminaries and Convents

Immaculate Conception, Taunton. Right: Receiving the habit and taking. first vows were, standing:' Sr.. Paul Mary, St. Anthony of Padua, Fall River; Sr. Mary Gerard, Sr. Mary Justin of Sacred .Heart Parish, Fall River; Sr. Grace Maria, 'and Sr. Margaret Paul of Holy Names Parish, . Fall River. Seated: Sr. Paul Marita, St. Joseph's, Taunton; Bishop Ger­ rard, and Sr. Mary Ellen. The ceremonies were conducted on Tuesday . morning in Sacred Heart Church, Thll River.

Scores Trend Toward Unity TRANQUILITY (NC) _

Unity Service The

CllnO(:(QJgo Planning for Sepi' U. S. Visit 'Of Archbishop Ramsey of Canterbury

trend toward religious unity "at any cost" was criticized here by

CONCEPTION (NC) - ' The from the pri~sthoodorthe'9is- W. Melvin Adams of Washing­ . Challenge facing seminaries and terhood,' . . '. ton, associate.directorof public . CHICAq() (NC)-Jo~n Ca~di­ Ileld ~ se~ttle, Sep~. ,l"-~. Be eonvents' today "calls for' the· "This has led," he. said, "to. affairs for" th~ World Congress na~ Cody of Chicago, Archbishop will vis~t nine U. S. cities. The Chicago unity service .­ wisdom' of a Solomon, the spir-.·· ~heir being consi~ered too fre,.. of the Seventh Day Adventists. Iakovos,' chairman of the Stand­ ing Committee" of Orthodox being planned under the joint iiuality of·an angel, the .vision of lIuently l¥l.. part ofa machine..... Speaking at'the annual mee~:­ Bishops ii:l North.. America and sponsorship of the. Protestant _eagle, the coura'ge 'of a lion They cari..~.~sily becom~a name.,..' lng'of New Jersey' Seventh Day other church leaders will pill::', Episcopal Diocese of Chica~ lIIld the 'strength .of an ox;" a St. less, faceleSl!lcog in' the .machin- .Adventists here in New Jersey, 'ticipate in a service of Christiaa the Roman Catholic .archdiocese, Cloud psychiatrist h~s told the. ery of t.he Church, incapable of Adams said "there is a greater Unity at the International Am­ Eastern Orthodox Churches, Social Science' arid Educa'tion- ttll~ir own opinions, dedicated sin than separation and that. is phitheatre here, Sept. 14• and the Church Federation of . Psychology sections of the' Amer- completely and entirelY' to .the the sin of compromise." . . The service will mark the. Greaier Chicago. lean Benedictine Academy. " Ch';lrch's. <!ogma.. and .policies-· He criticized the ecumenical The order for 'the service wiD "There is no greater challenge . as if t~elrfunction~ d~d .not in- movement as' a threat rather visit to Chicago of the Arch-· of Canterbury," Dr. include Scriptures, prayers, ,. .the Church," Dr, John Mc- volve. perso~al CO~VICtion or· than a help to churches bec:ause. bishop hymns, greetings and an address ,lIamara said, "than .the chal- commitment. it jeopardizes the freedom of. the Michael Ramsey. lenge facing the seminaries and The primate of the Church of by Dr. Ramsey. The Bible read­ the convents. What to do with individual as well as that of England and .titular leader of ings will take the form of a ihe candidates for the Sisterhood minority groups. . the worldwide Anglican com-. Scripture vigil in which Catholic lind the priesthood? How should . ~ "In unity," he said, "one must munion, embracing the Episco­ and' Protestant seminarians ~of ihey be handled.?- How should surrender his' convictions and pal Church and 17 other au­ the Chicago area will participa~ lUIey be trained?" theology." He charged that tonomous churches, is coming to . The Minnesota psychiatI'ist . churches "will stand for 'less and the United States to attend the _----~

~arned that "unless we cope ST. JOHN BAPTIST" less in order to be' more widely 62nd general convention of the ~ ~ith the ways in which modern llJIEN'll'RAL VILLAGE. merged." \ . U. S. Episcopal Church, 10 be

liOCiety, including our churches, The Ladies" Guild will spon­

eon,vents, seminaries and 'par- sor a food sale at ·the 'church SIlIPPol/'ting

eilts, oppresses the individual hall following' all Masses' this

l'ce«ll(:hell's in Plhlilly

:we shall lose the creative spark . Sunday< Chairman is Mrs.' 'Jo­ Chat renews both society' and seph Willette." PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ONE STOP men, adding:. . Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO _ So. Dartmouth ­ SHOP~UNG CENTER . "Unless . we foster versatile; llIOLYNAME;'. has voted to back collective bar-' _ and. Hyannis _ Innovative and self-renewing FALL RIVER gaining efforts of lay teachers in • Television _ Grocery. men and women, all the 'ingenu­ A Boy s~o~i' troQP is in proc- Philadelphia ' Catholic' 'high .• Appliances _ Furniture ous social' 'arrimgemerits .iii the' eSs of' formation and. further Schools. ' : . So.D<ilrtmolllth 997-9384 : :wodel ,will' not help us. Unless announcem~nt will .be made of, UM Allen St., Bedfo", The move reversed a Council • H,annis 2921 • we attend to ~~ requirements. enrollment. information. decision of last April when· it 997-9354 .t renewal, aging institutions ~ ••m•••••• _~ __ ••• A census of parishioners in the was decided not to aid the Asso­ lIIld organizations· will eventu­ 'Presid~nt Village a~ea is ,in elation of. Catholic· Teachers in ally bring. our civilization·fA) progress and Win continue be~' .tlieir dispute' with the:' Arch­ :!JlIlIlIIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIlIIlIlIIllIIllllllltJllltJlltJltJllHtJllIIllIUIIIIIUIIIUIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUlUUIIHIIIIIIIHllllllm~ laDoldering ruins." tween 3 and 5 today and tomor~ diocese. Since then, the teachers' Dr.. McNamara warned the. row .afternoon., group has joined the AFL-CIO Benedictine-conducted Missouri 'rhe Holy Name Society invites ':. and is now known as Local 1776, workshop againSt a ten~ency .in' parish' adults to a Red Sox game' Philadelphia Federation . of the Church "to think of the Friday night, Sept. 15. Bus ,Teachers.. priest Or. nun as a functloqarY, transportation will leave' the II'8ther than as a human being schoolyard' . at 6 o'clock. In :with their own identity apart charge of arrangements is An­ MOll1lt~e thony D'Ambrosio. ..

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L~,!! from Pap One Young Cathedral Camp Head Counselor .::::::e:~~tbb~ Heins Handican~,ed Kids E_n;([)~f Outdoors to point out again, for 1:be ,... r :rr '.I J

=:: =. Mm

of deploring them o:nce more,

ll::gi:f;:: ~d arbitrar)r initiatlvell,-" Jetter said.

A lot of pooJPle have met Reverend Mr. Edmund Fitzgerald roll" the first time this Summer. &me @f them have seen the tall young deacon for the first time as he bent over thcil!' sickbed to give them Holy Communion. Tiny babies in their flowing white baptismal robes have met him as he welcomed them into God's family at baptism. Boys at Cathedral Camp illl Free­

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 24, 1967

Pitt5)BJ,~ll"gh

Strroke

19

!Rent

CaITtJ~eUed

PITrSBURGH (NC) - Pitts­

burgh's four - week - old rent

strike-which extracted prom­

ises that sium housing conditiontl

would be improved-has been

called off to give landlords and

the city time' to fulfill their

promises.

But strike leaders are quicll:

to say that so far, only the prom­

ises have been delivered.

"We're - satisfied with the

words, but until we see effortG

to fulfill those words, we won~

really be satisfied," said William

Haden, head of the United

Movement for Progress, a con­

stituent of the Citizens-Clergy

Coordinating Committee whicb

called the strike.

The promises were wrung from city officials and the Greater Pittsburgh Board of Realtors-many of whose mem­ bers own or manage slum prop- ;... erty-as tensions mounted fol­ lowing violence in other Amerl­ ican cities.

'"'I'bey are gravely tbreateniq the future of the whole lItuI'­ ~. ~_...:.ted h·l.1~ ~cal reform.- Pointing out that IoVWn, .n:wuu e 1 un::n at Ite bad written OIl the II8IDe Camp Fatima in New Hamp­ Abject in 1965, Cardinal LeJI­ shire, parishioners q>f Our caro eontinued: "The situation III Lady of Fatima Church in New • «rent deal more alarming than Bedford have all had the same two years ago because of the problem when meeting him. ~reading of these initiatives. They don't know' what to call Many priests permit themselves him. to modify liturgical gestures and His family, ond old friends telrts, to follow their own lncl.l­ from St. Mary's Grammar School natioDB , their own personal in Taunton and :Msgr. Coyle High taste, the desires of some group School have always called him of faithful. They mutilate tradi­ Jack although he is named Ed­ tions deliberately approved by mund after his father, Taunton episcopal eonferences and eon­ dentist Dr. Edmund Fitzgerald. finned by the Apostolic See. WheQ he's wearing his Roman Cardinal Lercaro repeated the collar at Union Hospital in New Pope's recommendation of last Bedford, where he spends most. April when the Pontiff urged of his mornings making sick bishops to see to it that the ealls, counseling and bringing dergy and 11111 the faithful avoid Holy Communion to the sick, encouraging unauthorized innG­ most people mistakenly call him vations in liturgical eeremoniell. "Father." VllJi¢bbold JRellll¢ The cardinal added: When be preaches at Mass, The demands actually were "May all understand well that baptizes and distributes Holy won with a strike that existecll liturgical refonn cannot be C8!'­ Communion at Our Lady of Fat­ chiefly on paper. City-wide, only ried out arbitrarily, m disorder ima parish most people call him about 150 tenants withheld rent and with inconsiderate haste; "Father" too. by the strikers' own estimates, but that it, on the contrary, :re­ He's found that..the problem and only a few of these paid the quires order, obedience and pSl­ of how to address him has . money into an escrow accoun.~ tience." plagued most. people since he as demanded by the leaders. The cardinal's letter touched! was ordained a deacon ·in BOston on 0 Dumber of other points.in­ last June 5th. . Yet so tense were the ghettoo eluding the organization cd For his 24 years ~e has had here in the wake of rioting iJm mixed commissions to produce a more than the usual share of re­ Detroit and other cities that Bingle vernacular text for COWl­ aponsibility. Besides his work at even the threat of a strike WaD tries or regions using the same the r>arish and the hospital; both enough to pressure the city anell language. In this area the letter Summer assignments, he is head realtors into substantial com­ made specific reference to trans­ counselor of Cathedral Camp for mitments. City officials knew lations of the Canon into the the second year in a row. This is that even a few eviction.s, if me% vernacular and particularly of his fifth Summer at the Camp with the demonstrations prom­ BUSY DEACON: Sick calls at New Bedford's Union nsed by the strikers, could spark the need for care in translating where he is in charge of 24 full the pray~rs of the consecration time counselors' and eight Day Hospital are a priority item on the ·busy agenda of Rev. serious trouble. Strike leaders of the bread and wine. Camp Counselors. . Mr. Edmund Fitzgerald, deacon who is serving for second had the plans and neighborhooc'll "One must prepare ::I new Be­ The Cathedral Camp program support to expand the strike but Summer a6 bead counselor at Oathedral c..amp. =rnte I!llld worthy translation,­ has expanded Do all directions· it proved unnecessary. ~ oaic!l. "Moreover, the trans-. this ·year, he says, sitting for a lotion must be literal and inte­ rare ·relaxed moment. at his desk counselor says as he· introduces The camp is sponsoi-ed b th . co:- _. n m Diocese ·'of Manchester OnCUOy'e gli'm. Oae ,.must ,take the textl in the, head counselor's. ·office. the. boys. ''That includes arts and ~ they Me, Iwithout mutilatioDII· . "We've opened up 12 mew .22. rifle crafts, IndIan craft, athletic field, on.·il non-"sectarian basiS·. iii ran~ ([Xl simplifications, of ,any IIOrL range, for· one ·thing, and a ,pro- rifle ·range, archeiy· nnd··swimd, , . ' .. I . • ,.. ' Ti)e adaptation to the',nature ol fessional riding,.jnstructorl .Tim'. mihg.'" ' . , . "About'125'campers-:-alleither"··· S~ FRAN.¢IS~O (N~)~The the spoken, language must, be Travers, 'has -joineddour.,staffo" . . A twelve year old redhead, retarded' mentally or handicap.. , American Catholic SOCIOlogical ·Tu&or:ing JP.ro;:grams" eorifitled'to his wheelchair with' ped physically-'-are given 'one·'" S1>ciety will hol~ its 29th ~nnuall rerioUB and proper. "May the experts accept .wIBA tutoring program ,was begun' spinal bifi'da that has paralyzed'· ,week'just'1l8'cked with fitn:-The " three-.day meetmg, here In SlW ingly this nonn, the applicatiOll' .this. year under th~. competent him from the waist down says ' workeJ1l 'are all volunteers _ FranCISCo, starthlg, next Satur­ of which is actually. necessa1'7. direcijon of Jamell,Nicoletti.,The ' that·he's enjoyed the swimming priests, "':DunS,' schooltea-chers, day, Aug. 26. . It is not opportune to go too fast. . children are tutored, ~ne . pupil . and boating the' most of'· all ac- ' doctors;' housewives, btisiness-"!· Dr. Ralph Lane· Jr., program When the moment will come for to one teacher, f()r,an. ~~yr, each tivities'this Summer.

men. Th~Y·'give up one week of ,ehainnan, and head of the Uni­ new creations, then it will. DOt morning. John Sullivan is math· AD eight year old boy who" their vacations to staH the· camp ,versity of San Francisco's ,:so­ be any longer necessary to sub­ 1ea\=her, MrS. Carol Travers and a victim of cerebral"palsy proud­ as counseloJ1l or as workers." .eiology department, has an­ mit to the structures of literal John Grant are, hotb· remedial ly displays the Xndian· rlecklace nounced that issues programmoo traditions. But ·for nOW we are reading teachers .~nd· Mr. Nice­ he's making. ' "'This year there were 350" for discussion include Catholie still at the pc:iint .t whiCh one letti teaches English. .. people on the .staff-every singh! attitude on nuc]ear war, sociol­ must better discover all the Another ambitious' program The children with chNnic one volunteers. We work with ogy of ecumenism and racial richness of the liturgical inher­ initiated this Summer inVolves asthma, like the. crippled chU­ the kids on a one counselor to integration in parochial schoolD. itance and live it." about 20 crippled and asthmatic dren are taking part in the camp one camper basis and each' children from Lakeville Hospital. activitieS not only for ihe phys­ counselor has the same young­ ElECTIUCAL The children 14l the camp leal benefits to be gained, but ster for the whole week. ·You also to give them contact with can't im"..rlne the boost l·t· gl'Ves " Contradors ....,. each mornmg In a 1lnlck, chil­ U dren in wheelchairs accompan­ children, who are Dot bandi­ ~ose IUds who are usually, con­ NEW DELHI (NC) _ A Dun ied by an orderly. . capped. fmed .~. a hospital all the rest !rom New York is among high "They participate in all activ­ Student nurses who are on· of the year,.and will be for the school teachers .from, the United !ties of the camp,- the bead affiliation training at Lakeville rest of their lives." States attending an illstitute m Hospital come to the Camp in Indian history and .-'lture here. groups of 10 each day as part of In the Fall the young Qepcon a th t turns to St. ·;rohn's Semina.... . She is Sister Mary Kelly of .......

. I n no er thi new program OJ ...., be M' a G. was 10 B nghto.JIl to complete his last .' Divine Compassion Sisters. The ..... gun R Ns year.' ISS . . race I I0. Kehler h' , . year of studies. In the Spring he·· institute, is j,~int.ly; sponsored bJ' ' "w 0 18 super::vlSlDg will be the U. S. Education FoundatiOil MADRID (NCj"'::-'A ~up fIIf" the . program that, involves 30.. bo ' or1ained. The Confusion ...., L' nsed a ut whal; to call him will"then . h '''4 County St. ill India and the Fulbn'gbt ~ ~ho'.- S.. pams laymen' win send its own' N prospe""..ve be over. ·Everyone can Il:ll1l him H' 'al" f CIce C d,. Practical H '._1 New Bedford • arship program. uno ICI delegation to the urses rom ape 0 OSpl...... Father.' '. The nun·· said, she' became . in­ W~rJ(" Congr~ .of tbe ,~ity in and Di~an Vocational,Sch~1 ill. terested in Indian culture ami Ro~ because, the laymen claim, Fall· ·River, says the tral~ees civilization while stud:ying f6r _the list of delegates published by­ come to camp to observe normal " degree in world history befO':· the Spanish bishops' committee gr?wth. ~and development, in RESIDENTIAL . becoming a nun. OIl the lay apost.olate does not children. ' "But all that I knew about the represent them. Head Counselor Fitzgerald bas SCHOOLS. ,CH'URCHES, eountry was through OOokll _ The official delegation to the felt a special calling ·to work TV," she said. congress, to be held Oct. 11-18, with handicapped children for ~NDlJ)STRIAl .'·aUNKEl'f includes four priests, 15 laymen many years. He looks forward and 12 laywomen. The dissident all year to the third week in -D ADSON Oil BURNERS lay group, I1epresenting mostly June when he goes to Camp CompUete Heeting Installations AACHEN (NC)+Nearly $250,­ youth and workers' movements, Fatima in New Hampshire as a 24. Hour Oil Burner. Service 000 was collected on the feast of contends that the official delega­ counselor. For the past two years the Epiphany by the Star Sing­ tion is dominated by -conserva­ he has been head counselor at ers, caroling on behal! of the tive thinking. the unique one week camp that Mission Fund of Gennan Cbfi­ The president of Spanish has generated so much enthusi­ dretl. The largest share of the Catholic Action, Santiago Cor­ asm that it was recently Jre­ money will be used to buy and raJ, a member of the delegation, ported upon in the Journal of operate three Cessna planes tor said he will not attend the con­ 640 Pleasant Street Tel. 996-8271 New Bedford the American Medical Associa­ pegs. tion.· thFee Brazilian dioee6ea.

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20

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug ..24, 1967

N&Jw- ifork State C@nvent50n D®f®@fr~B~Gine

ArlfU@ndm®mJt

ALBANY (NC)-After six months of sidelines debate, the New York State Constitutional Convention got down to its most sensitive business-and promptly defeated the so­ called "Blaine Amendment" to the state constitution which stood in the path of attempts Robert Wagner and State As­ to aid children in church­ sembly Speaker Joseph Carlino related schools. The. vote­ also spoke against the HalTing­ 130-48-wa:s against a mo­ ton motion. The Blaine Amend­

ment, said Wagner, caused a tion to retain the Blaine Amend­ "confusing and conflicting dou­ ment in the state's new consti­ tution. The motion was made by ble standard" governing aid the Rev. Donald Harrington, from state and Federal agencies. One of the major supporters state chairman of the Liberal . Party and a Unitarian minister . of Mrs. Saxe's Blaine repeal move has· been the New York in New York City. AID FOR HANDICAPPED: Officials of the President's Committee on Employment Defeat of this measure cleared State Catholic Conference-the of the Handicapped, .observing the 20th anniversary of the founding of their crusad~ the way for subsequent 'votes organization of all the state's include, left to right: William P. McCahill, executive secretary; Bishop Paul F. 'I'an­ fo.rmally repealing Blaine and bishops-,-and Citizens for Educa­ substituting the language of the tional Freedom, who argued that ner, general SeCI"etary of the U.S. Catholic Conference, a member of the board; Dr. ban discl'iminated Federal Constitution which says Blaine's ,Dorothy' Stratton, also a member of the board; and Harold Russell, chairman of the that "no law shall be enacted against pupils in non-public President's Committee. NC Photo. schools. a; respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exerciSe thereof." For All Childll'·ellll The Blaine language forbids the use of state funds "directly .. or indirectly'! to support church­ . Open Daily 9 A..M. ito 10 P.'" related schQols, or institutionli. . The,' F.urnitl:lr~ Wonderland. , The vote 'followed hours of de­ .,. ,. ~ndudin9 .Sahlll"dGly'11) . bate whicIi,' as"6iiedelegate 'said; . . . •· •. 1 "Repeated all . the . arguments; '., heanl for the last six ,months·and 4idn't change a single vote." - ·But it did .get it on the record. Mrs .. Blossom Saxe of New YOl'k City, sponsor of the pro­ posal to repeal the Blaine, told the delegates .that "Reason and hard economic practicalities, . faith in the wisdom of our legis­ latUI'C and our courts; and love for all of God:s children demand the passage of. this proposition." Mrs. Saxe·had literally left her sick-bed to address the conven­ tion. 'Double Standarllll' Dr. Harrington m.lintained that elimination of th!e Blaine amendment would enable reli­ gious schools to expand enor­ mously, ·forcing the public Schools to "become wast.ebasket Schools for the leftovers and re­ jects." Former New York City Mayor "

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Mass lFacing Pec\PlRce .!Rule ilnl Walming\t<Ol1lTl WILMINGTON :(NC) - "Pro­ vision must be made in all churches for the celebrai:ion of Mass at a clearly visible altar facing. the .people," according t<t a new· directi.ve issued by Bishop Michael W. Hyle of the W:ilming­ ton· diocese. .. . . ,-~. The directive, published in the .August issue· of Chancery Digest, also· said: "At all Masses on Sundays and holy days every ef­ fort must be made to have the people participate fully and' 'meaningfully through resoonses,-· ttrayers and hymns." Previousiy, Mass facing the people was encouraged but not Il'lequired.

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi­ dent Lyndon B. Johnson greeted some 40. members.of the Paulist . choir of Chicago during a sight­ seeing' trip here in the nation'lI capital. Representative Barrett O'Hara of Illinois, the House's oldest member and Father Eligene O'Malley, group leader, aCiCom­ panied the boys to the White House. President Johnson sb.ook ll1ands with each of the boys. Father O'Malley told the President that the choir had sung for the late President Ken­ nedy during his last appear<lnoo m' Chicago in March 1963.

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