We Happe,nto Do aVery Good Jpb'
AlB children troop back t@ iJChool and Gatholic parents ponder the cost of tuition, books and uniforms, there
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bound to creep into their the' question, "Is Catho lie education .wol"th the price?" In bygone days, mothers and f.&thers put the emphasis on Catholic; if Johnny and Mal'y were well grounded in basic do~ma and equipped wHh suf :{j~ient shatter-proof faith 00 see them through life's exigencies, that was the important thing tl>.Jademic ability was less vital. 1n t6day'srestless, questioning WOrld, faith enters for its share oi scrutiny, and so do the aca ~mic qualifications of the Cath Cl1ic school. And Rev, Patl"ick J, O'Neill, for· one, ,welcomes such e><amination. The Fall River Diocesan school superintendent declares firmly, "We all want the Chlll'ch to be in the world serving people, but we've got to do something if we're going to sel'vc-and we happen to do u very good job at educa'tion. It is really the Church's handle on the world." ~Jnds
Catholic Schools Back in Session
Internationally kllQwn educator: "Catholic schools should be liv ing signs of the Church's con cern for the world." .Father O'Neill gave courses in school administration at Notre Dame University this Summer. There he came in contact with educators from all parts of the nation. They convinced him that Catholic education, far from withering on the vine, is flour ishing in the United States. "It su,re doesn;t look like a system' that's goillg out of business," he summed up. More seriously, he noted that many foreign e,ducators at Notre Dame had come to this country
solely to study its Catholic schools. They concluded that "Catholic education is one of the strongest and most remark-
WThe 'ANCHOR
Vol. 12, No. 36, Sept. 5, 1968 © 1968 The Anchor ~rice 10c . $4.00 per Year ....•.•..
Supporting his statement, he quotes Brother Didier of the ~I-ench Christian Brothers, an
Theol.ogia., Urges Nuns Reach Out tTo Persons
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:remarkable a d van c e in test scores. Most students score in the 90th percentile." able things the Church has in
A whopping 87 percent of sen America."
.So the outlook is not dismal iors continue their education in fur the United Sfates ingener colleges or other institutions of aI, but what about the Fall River advanced learning, continued Father O'Neill, This may be Diocese in particular? Here Fa partly due to the fact that col ther O'Neill speaks with author iyt. "We are not just being lege-bound students opt for' swept along by the educational Catholic schools, but it is due stream," he avers, "We're not more, he feels, to the elements just 'Number 2,' our schools have of motivation and individual ized attention found in the Di real academic excellence." ocesan highs. The thrust is He explains that all students entering 9th r-ade in Diocesan towards excellence, he concludes. Agreeing with him is Sister high schools are tested. "This Mary Urban. RS.M,. who shares test shows us what was accom plished in 8.th grade" As high with Sister Georgine, RS.M. the . schools seniors, they are re-test ·task of supervising the Diocesan ed, "and there is. in general a school system. She was asked, "F:or the sake of argument, Sis ter, what's wrong with an a't rangement whereby priests and Sisters would come into publie school classrooms several times weekly to gi ve religious instruc tion? WOUldn't this save a great deal of money and lift the bur den of educational costs from parishes and Dioceses'? Her responSe was immediate. "In my 30 years as a Sister I have. felt that my greatest suc cesses as a teacher of religion have come in the history, Eng lish and Social studies classTurn to Page Fourteen
Non-Graded Plan Is New Feature In Philadelphia
NORTH EASTON (NC)-' A theologian told more than 450 religious superiors of women from throughout the United States and Canada, "there s!t0uld be more stress on per sonalism than institutionalism." Father William F. Hogan. C.S.C., told the Institute For Local Superiors at Stonehill Col lege herc "religious life has to bc less institutionalized to help youth realize that religion is not institutionalistic. We cannot ex pect youth to reach out to the Persons of God unless Religious themsel vcs reach out to per oons," hc declared. Fathcr Hogan, who served as director of the institute, is a l-ol'mel' Stonehill College faculty membcr and superior of the Col lege di Santa Croce, Romc. Othcrs who addressed the in stitute included Sister Marian Dolores, chail"man of the theol ogy department, Marylhurst (Ore.) College; Father Robert W. Gleason, S.J., theology pro fessor, Fol"dham College; Father David B. Durrell, C.S,C., phil-' osophy professor, University of Notre Dame, and Sister Mary Daniel, provincial superior, Sis ters of Notre Dame de Namur, Ilchester, Md.
Coyle Graduates In Order Rites At ceremonies conducted at St. Joseph Novitiate, Valatie, N.Y., two young men from the Diocese of Fall River partici pated in the profession of vows a!/ld the reception of the habit of the Brothers of the Holy (:ross.
BI'O. James Nichols, CSC, of ~arish, Taunton, made his" final profession of W!Ows and Bro. Robert Caouette, esc, received the habit of the Holy Cross Brothers. Both are graduates of Coyle RiCh School, Taunton, that is lltaffed by the Holy Cross Broth
St. Joseph's
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PHILADELPHIA (NC) A non-gl'aded pl"imary will be introduced into virtually all parochi'al sohools of the Phil adelphia archdiocese this Fall. The non-graded structure pro vides nine levels of learning in read,ing and mathematics on what corresponds to the first three grade levels. It· has been designed to provide more in dividual attention for each child and to give him opportunity ~ progress at his own capacity. Diocesan officials have cau tioned that' the program-which has been used in selected schools for the past two years..:-ctoes ~ot necessarilY involve different teaching techniques. But, they saY,oby grouping children on the level of their achievement, the program offers a framework for coping with individual differ.. Turn to Page Five
Boston Seminary Creates College
NATION'S UNPARALLELED ENROLLMEN'f: Nine of the 11 children of Mr. and BOSTON (NC)~A-four-year Mrs. Ernest Diabiasio of Swansea are enrolled this year in the eight grades and pre-pri mary class of St. Mic.hael's School, Swansea. Starting on the left in the eighth grade •college department in the Boston archdiocesan seminary has been and going down to the pre-primary are:· Dianne Marie, David Michael, Deirdre Marlene, created by' the integration of Donna Michelle, Doreen Mary, Donald Mathieu, Daniel Mark, Dana Michael and Douglas Cardinal O'Connell seminary. Michace. . Jamaica Plain, with the two <>
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Instruction on Saturday
Parents and teachers of children enrolled in element ary COD programs in the Greater F'all River area will go back to school themselves next Saturday, Sept. 7, to learn of new developments in the reli gious education of young chil dren. The occasion is a one-day workshop called "Operation Headstart" that is being spon sored by the F'all River Diocesan Confraternity of Ohristian Doc trine in their Center at 446 Highland Avenue in the See City.
''The "Operation' Headstart" One of these is the increased workshop is primarily designed emphasis on involving parents to give parents and teachers a in the process of educating their summary of the new techniques children in religion in the home, to be used in CCD Schools of according 00' Sister Martha. Attendees at the workshop Religion.. Sister Martha Worde man, nlember of the Diocesan will participate in seminars cov CCD staff, likens the planned ering "The Role of Prayer," training session to those .em "Child Psychology," "The De velopment of Conscience" and ployed in r~ent years to intro duce parents and teachers to the "Teaching the Trinity." These i'new" math "There has been a four topics, says Sister Martha, great deal of research conducted . "fol"m the core of the' new ele in religious education since mentary catechesis or religious Vatican II," Sister Martha notes, education process." The semi nars will be conducted by "and it has resulted in modifica members of the Diocesan CCD tions in our approach to the re Turn to Page Three ligioUs training of tAle child.
year philosophy segment of. St. John's-the major seminary ill Brighton. The board of trustees of St John's voted on this action at a meeting with Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, board' chair man, in July. St. John's was fuunded in 1884, and O'Connell. in 1951. Msgr. John A. Broderick, rec tor of St. John's seminary. has been named president of the' newly established college de partment. Msgr. William A. Granville, formerly rector of Cardinal O'Connell seminary, is now a vice rector of St. John's and vice president of the college department, The formerly independent Turn to Page Two
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THE ANCHOR....; , , ~ Thurs., ::Sep~, ' 5, :1968
f?~~~OO1!~~ T@~~lTft~s'
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..Ordi~'If~U'1r See~S"~EWTOk(NC)-"The~e m4st.'~:' be less regimentation of Catholic 8~~I1i1!SlOdl!' (ClllllnrrTl'~I'l'& P~~Ii'""U\9 "" ~\lfll li"\Wu a .....
R~ce'ive
Eleven ,excep~iollal cip~dreJ.i from ·the Greater: New .Bedfonll area received First Holy Com- nuns.so thby can find their.own municm'in the Bishop' Stang talents'rather than fittiilg into High School 'chapel TuesdaJ!: preconceived mold," a national nighL conferencel of Ca,tholic Sisters was told here. Rev. Richard· Chretien of St., Fathe'r .tohn R. McCall" S,J., ~rge Church, Westport, walil of Weston! College, said' nuns the celebrant of the Mass and! should be ~llowed to take their the Rev. Mr. Normand J. Boulet vows wheb. they feel they are of St. Hyacinth's Parish, New: ready and they should be better Bedford, served as deacon. The educated' land develop' ideas nearly' two hundred persons iD spontaneouSly as a result of to ,attendance sang a folk Mass, ac companied by The Misty Brook day's give-and-take living in Si~gers, a group, from. Bishog, small comrllUnities. .l Stang High School. More than 100 nuns ~f various .orders froniacross the nation ao1-· "', The six boys' Md fi~e girls tended the Week-long Siste'r For-.'" were' prepared at the Center For 'mation Co~feience and for the ' Reta'rded' Children, 247Smitlil first ~ time nuns still in'tr'aining Street, New' Bedford as '15art oR ' were. allowM to attend.: ". ,' a released time religioUS pro l 'Superl'ors l'n' c''onvent's' s'hould" gram. 'rhree seminarians of the eX~,rfise authority with a~ sense Fall River Dioces!!, all from New . of Minor ~nd understanding of ' Bedford,Rev.':Mr. BoWet, Mare their subotdinates, saicl, Father H. Bergeron, and Mr. George c.. Andrew Cu~ack, guidance :direc Bellenoit, prepared the Com tor of Starriford, Corin., Catholic municants. H' I ' . 19h School. 'He warned the The three seminalians are st. delegates I' against" becoming , ' d ' t' . d If ff" t dents at st. Mary s SemmaI'Jlo omma mg I' an se -su lClen •.Roland' Park, Baltimore, Mary and to' "talk ,,' b p'R'ESIDEN'T: aboutencouIjagedthem disagreements with· su o r - .F..,ther" . Jo:hn. land and work with the retard-A .,.. dinates." ! t F Ded S S h been d in that state as part of their F' th . P' El' G' b ri . e,.., as name apostolate.. . ,a er I ' lC? am a , ,president of St. Mary's Uni-' S.M.M., of ithe CongregatIon of . Religious in Rome,\reviewed the v'ersity, Baltimore, where Grant He,~ll'lls, Cancer ·!3ictates· of! the Second Vatican many Fall River' Diocesan Il'" Council whi,ch pertain to nuns. " priestS were "educa-t.ed~, "",, Screening Program ' I. . ST. LOWS (NC)-A $173.747
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': COLUMBUS (NC) --: Support and cooperation were the key notes of Bishop Clarence E. El well's first pronouncement to the 182,000 Catholics of the 2~ eounty Columbus diocese as he became their eighth spiritual' leader. . A score of arcbbishops and bishops, hundreds of priests;Re- . :Mgious and iaity filled St. Jos 'eph's cathedral to overflowing as. bishop J{arl J .Alter of Cincin:,,: D:ati officiated at the installation' eeremonies, '.' , .' ·Bishop Elwell, who has, been', ..., .'. ',., . \ auxiliary bishop, of ·Cleveland. .' J. 'S 'S-} G NED .• ' Br,o,·'the·r db' A ,since 1962, and was name y, ChristOpher Taraska' "C'S C· Pope Paul·VI on May 29 as. ' , " ' . ,'" " • bishop of Columbus, emphasized ", a Taunton natJivean<'l, Ooyle. that his ."chief- ~mmitment is 'High gra.duate;.ll'as ;been',as:-, to my assigned duties and my' signed to teach at the Notre I
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flock". .' t' Dame Intein'ationaISchool, "I come to you today, sen ',as Ro", - . Q shepherd," he said. ~'If 'I··am:. me. properly to' become that, I will need the. wholehearted cooper';' . ommercla ore' ration of each aad every mem-· ~. BENTON (NC)-The building " ber of the flo~k-clergy, He- ,which now houseS Christ the ligious and l.aity alike. _ : . King Catholic chapel~ I'n" a co'm... · t 10 is as Importan . ' Y?U as mereiai neighborhood' of this ~t-Js to me th~t I-do the assIgned. rural Pennsylvania borough' ;pob and: do It ~ell. If .1 am to ,.originally was occupIed by a do my Job, I WIll need 'the help, '.bakery. ' . of all of y o u . : "The 'help 'o~ your prayers, of'
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~~r:'~~~:;.~?~~[~n:SSOCiologists. liear ~arriage. S~rveyReport r~~FE::~:::!i£~
.:r~~~~d~~eO:ee:r~~~::" t:: ~:~~~ Catholics, Pf.ote~tants. Ffihdl' Happiries~·.··in Same' Way ~r:~ri;ett:n~~rL~:e~h;~:: ~OST?N
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(NC)-A Franciscan marriage jrelationShiP' whiie both Denis . SOCIologIst observed ?ere that Catholics ~nd to emphasize and Catholics nayigate ,through sor and chairn:t an of the gyne o ;'rotesta~ts and Cathohcs app~ar home and ~h~ldren., the life space ,of marriage haP-;cology aDd obstetrics depart to naVIgate .through ~he li~e Ide~t1cal Scores piness in much the same way ment at the St. LoUis University Continued from Page One space of marnage happlDess m Father Sigmund reporte~ that and at a very pragmatic' level ,; School of Medicine, is the project minor seminary, with an enroll,,: much the same way and at a Gurin's finding that Protestants he declared ' 'II be very pragmatic level." and Catholl'c:s dl'ffer on feell'ng . R Ii' i F' t' director of the screening pro men t 0 f 80 st u d en ts ,WI . : . F "'h S' d D t i ' e g ous ac or gram, which offers free, pap known as Cardinal .O'Connell , . a. er. Igmun ra,gas n, of adequacyl in marriage as parTh .
e p~est re~,rte~ ~ agree- smear testing for the detection
Hall, and -will remain, 'for the: O.F:M., program analyst of the ents and spouses could not be present, a separate campus in. NatIOnal Institute of Ohild substantiated in the latest re- ment WIth G?nn s. findmg of a of cancer of the cervix and pro
Jamaica Plain. The junior and, Health. and Development, re search sJ11all . rel~tionship .', between vides follow-up treatment for senior :years of the college will.: .~rted'tO' 30th iuin.ual Ail1Eir .. j'No; did we find an interac- cI:t.ur~h attendance and marriage, ~ti~nts who. ~.annot afford it. remain' at St.' Clement's Hall in ican Catholic Sociological Soci-: tion effect lbetween denomina- ,:tI::ippmess ".w.h~n oth~r signifi-', - The pap smear test' isbot:h 'Brighton, where 100 seminarians ety meeting here on' a Study' of tion and church attendance' in ' :. C{ll)t fac,tors ,~e, controlle<I." simple and verY imPortant, Dr. :wm'reside.' rel.igion and psychological well 'relationship Ito marital adequacy. ", 'I'qe,' res~arch ~ll, P.r~testant, ,C~vanagh:,said~. an,d, could savc& bemg· ,based, on data gathered . as repOrted I by Gurin and his:: a~~ Cathohc happme~ 1O. Jt.lar",.. t.ho1:isandB o~ ,lives annually. , .fro~ 2,787, .r~ponden~ by the, colleagues," :the priest said; . pag~ was.. pr~se~t~ m a ~~de.-, " , .,.. Necrology Na~onalOpmlon, Research Cen-. .' "We fou~d that Protestants· ra,ngmg.¥aperon Tp.e ReI!gIO~ , '. ~r.,.,.. and Catholi<:s at every'level Of, . ,Fa~tor .m Structure of . P sycho , .SE~. i s , , Father Dragastin.was associ- church attendance have almost l~gJc~ Well.J3eing.·~ 'fhe paper D•.D. _ ,.Wilfred: C. Rev. Oharles A. J, Donovan"a~ed with the center iQconnec... : identical scOres on conipanion- ~~~ a. report on an attempt ~. Sullivan' DriscoU 1949, Pastor, Immaculate Con tion wit1,l his. doctor!!l studies . ship; sociability, marriage'satis- mvesbg~~ the the,ory a~l;lt the, eeption, No: Eastoil.·.. ., ".. ~tthe Uniyersity of.'Chicago. .faction, marital tensions, the ~aY..religl~n ~ction~. ip meet-, The research of the Francisc~ . marital affed balance scale and mg-adaptive ~d "~xpre~ive", , SEn. -l5 Rev. Henry J. Mussely, 1934, socio~ogist ~nd. h~ associates: overall marriage' happiness,:' the, needs: '. : . "~,,: ,' .:.1 LO'CU5T STREET
Pastor, st. John the Baptist; ~k'1Ssue WIth ~ndmgs reported. researcher reported. . ", '. ~The.r:esean:hers found no rela FALL RIVER, MAss.';
Fall River. by Gerald Gunn and others in . "We concluded that unfair Iflir- tIO~S~IP between self-reported : ~ev.. ,Bren~lln !\il!;Nally,.. S.J.. ,.the 1960r publication of ."Ameri-, ther evidence indicates' other-' rebglosity and anegativ~ .affect 672-3381 1958,': ' Holy :' , Cross .College, cans ' "View. Their ,Mental wise" one' dtust reject Gurin's' . on~ 'well being and ~o relation ~ealth, particularlY'~ conten... subcul~ure 'hypothesis about val": . ship betw~n .church atteJldance :Worcester, M a s s . ' " ,:,.\ 1 ~. - SEPT.i6 . ~on that there are dIfferences ues differen~e in the way' Prot-' , and J)OSSoltive e~ect ~or" most m th~ way. Protesta~ts· an!i . estants . and Catholics achieve . peop e., . me relahon~hipswere , " "'Rt.Rev, Jean A. p'r-evost, P.A., Cathohcs achieve happmess in happiness in marriage" he said. found, for certain Negro' groups. P.R:; 19~5, ',P~stor, Notre Dame, marriage. '.. . Father Si~und said the re,.. . Funeral i1om.e. FaliRiver. ,. Gurin had reported significa~t <' 1 ' '" ." . sea:ch..findings ",:ere sUb~ect ~. 571 second Stre&t ; _. SEPT•. 1 7 ' differences between Protestants Mass Ordo, vaned mterpretahons because of '.1.' ·Rev. ~ii9.inas F: ~cN~lty, 1954, ~d ·C~thoIJcs.; 'He' fnte11?reted ,. ,. , I .- , .the general operatioilal'·metbo4&., ',Fall River, Mass. Pastor S't'Kilian ,New,Bedford. Uiese differences as reflecttions. FRIDAY-,.J\Ilass of preceding employed., . " .. 679-6072 \ : ' . ' , " ' , ' ." :.,:-.' , '. " , of differentvahI~s in the two .. Sunday. ,IV; Class. G~een.·Mass... . j:' .' . '.:lSl!:~~ 1 8 , , : sUbcuiiui-eS~ Protestari~ sup-., - . proper; COmmon Preface. . ,. ,.! MICHAE~,~. 'McMAHON R~v. L~e'.GOlla, SS.~., 1945, Posedly plaCe more emphasis on, SA:rU~DAY+-saturdayl.\filsS of . , -. Registered EmbCllmer', Semlnary:;of "'"8aered,,,, ~eart; ; the -Jnte~rsOnaI 'si<ieof the' the' ~lesse~d Virgin tV). IV,: "BROOKLAWN'~ licensed Funeral Directo: - ' q' '., . Wareham. ; ."" . ," ..... - ' , . ' .' ClasS. White. Mass Pz:oper; .. ,Rt. Rev.: ~dm,und ~'. Ward,'.. " '. - : '" ': . " , '. ,Pr~fa<;e of Blessed 'Virgin. ,FUNERAL HOME. INC~ . ... : 1964" St. PatrICk, Fall River.· CathoIICVoh'l1llt'eers' SUNDAY"':'" Fourteenth ,Sunday .. Marcel ROJ - G. LorraIne ROJ SEPT 19, - "A"·'d P '.' I dI·· : 'After Perttecost.IT . 'Class. Rog8r.. La~rance, "." Rev.' Heni-y , s. Henniss, I oor .In n laJ Green.. M~ss Proper; Glory; FUNERAL ·DIRECTORS 1859,:,P~r, St, Ma,ry, New . 'COCHIN (NCJ.....:.A 'corps of Creed;, Preface of Trinity., 15 "Irvington Ct; Bedford. ',1,000 'Catholic women volunteers' MONDAY -St. Peter Claver.. has been set up heJ;'e to organize Confessor.. ITI Class. Green. New Bedford employment opportunities for . White. .' I ., 995-5166 poor giJ.:lshi ,the Archdiocese, TUESDAY~t. Nicholas of Tol .FORTY ,HOURS of Ernakplam: : ; , 'entine, Copfessox:. III Class. ,Called !'Women, Welfare' Ser-. i . , White. Sept. 15-Holy Cross, F,all vices," .the, corps, under the WEDNESDAY-Mass of preced" DOAN'· 6~AL·AM~ River.. patronage of Archbishop Joseph ing Sunday. IV Class. Green..;, . " . ~, .' ,. I NCOR,PoR.ATltO , ...,. .", . St. Joseph, Attleboro. Parecattil of CQchin, consists of' ,MaSs Pr.op~r; Commori Pref-, fi'unera8· St~ Louts ,de .:rrance" ,750 la!wom¢n~rom',150 p'arisJI ac.e.,.,. 550 ~~uSt S,tr~e* Swansea. units and' 250 Sisters from' some • .: ,OR , 10.0 conv~.nts. . ' s s . Protus arid Hyacinth, Mar~ , ".',": .Fa~ ,Riv~r.Mass.;
• HYANNIS ruE ANCHOR' Immediflte plans to provide tyrs. Red. "672-2391 ',.", ""
Second Class Postage Paid. at Fall .River., ,employmellt to the!girls include ;. HARWICH PORT ~1:IU:RSDAY-,-Most ,Holy Name" ..,' "'" Mass. 'Publlsheo every' Thursday. 'al "4rO" opening a garment-making cen- '. Of Mary. III Class. White. 'Mass .;" ,Rose .E•. SulUvaD., Highleno Avenue, Fall River, Mass 02722 .• SOUTH YAAMOU1'lH by the catholic Press'Of the Diocese 'of Fall ter; .a pickle fa~tory, a PoUltry PrQ~r; ~~o~; .~reface of,' ,-" ',;Jeffrey' E; Sullivan', River. Subscription' price by Il1lIll,postPllId form ODd a horli<nlture n ~ . BI..... ,,# $4,00 per year.
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'Says 100 British Priests Resigned In Past Year
THE ANCHOR . Thurs., Sept. 5. 1968
Elmho~rst
Math Ins~ructor Probably
Only Nun on Government Station
LONDON (NC)' The , Every morning, Monda;y 1ihrough Friday, ,a nun drives six miles from her convent in 9bnes, Britain's' senior daily Ports.mou1ih, for a tutoring rendezous with two Neighborhood Youth Corps teenagers OOW6paper, has reported that W'&l'kingast the Naval Underwater Weapons Research and Engineering Station a high 'more than 100' Cat,holic &y sophisticated research and development facility engaged in classified work.' In fact, priests in this country had re she's probably the only nun '
aigned in the past year, surpass in the nation tutoring aboard il:tg any previous year. such a government station fte Times, after an investiga tton by its own staff, said "the secur~lty pass badge and all! startling figure reflects a grow about the t!ltructure and authority of the , ~ureh in the past few years." 1\ forecast that, following Pope Paul VI's encyclical on birth control, 'Humanae Vitae, iIlthe resignation rate can be exDeCted to increase." , T.J1e Times said that Father Paul Weir, 31-year-old assistant at North Cheam, near London the only priest in Britain 'so far to be suspended from all his duties for outspoken criticism of' ifue papal encyclical-was an ex ception in that he wants 00 re main a priest. Many, including some middle-aged clergy, had '!I'ecently dedded to quit alto gether, the paper said. Birth control, celibacy and other issues had been the imme diate cause of most such defec tions, "but the unl:iending au thorlty of the Church is the root ~use," the Times reported. 'Angry Young Men' , ing disillusionment
~ur inquiries revealed, that fttere is more at stake than the ideas of young reactionaries. against authority," it added. "The angry young men of the Church of Rome have not taken ,their decision lightly or spon 'bneously. Most believe the Roman Catholic Church to be tile ideal expression of Chris tianity but question the atti tudes which are now dominating
it." The Times said that the in crease in defections could be eK plained by the example of one Inan - Charles Davis, a highly respected theologian. When he left in 1966 and mar ried after declaring his funda mental differences on dogmas, "he caused, doubt among,many JOung radieally minded priests about their convictions." In the past, a priest who wished to re sign did so quietly, but the well publicized departure and mar riage of Charles Davis strength ened the resolve of others, the Times said.
CCD Instruction
'ilhis'~ctivity is part of her ded kation, her commitment "toward doing something specific, some thing helpful" to assist school dropouts with some of their demic and personal adjustment problems. In particular, she woul<l like to convince them of the benefits and necessity of oontinuing with their education. Sister F'rances O'Connor, a native of Milton, and a member since 1960 of the ReligioUS of the Sacred Heart, 'is no ordinary nun, though she'd be the last person to adlJ:li-t it. Sparkling bright, very intelUgent, viva cious and disarmingly charming. Sister O'Connor sets u fast, hec tle pace-and keeps right up to
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:tt. Elmhurst Math IlIlstructor Tucking under her t'l'im habit a BA and MA f,rom Manhattan ville and now plugging for a,sec ond MA from Cath'olic Univer sity, this witty bundle of reli gious fervor and dynamism set out into the world'-looklng for challenges, se.eking responsibil ities (and ducking none), aiming for accomplishments to move mountains,and recovering from bitter disappointments. That philosophy.is this nun's story. During the regular academic year, Sister O'Connor teaches' Mathematics and English at Elmhurst Academy full-time. (Or is it really· her parttime dedication?) Daily between 8:30 and 10:00 du".ing Summer's vacation, she personally tutors Joan and Hen ry (disguised names) in the pri vacy of the personnel director's office at NUWS. Sister volun teered through NYC for this assignment "to do her part, in her own small way.'" And be cause NYC had no transpor tation nor funds to bring Joan and Henry to her, Sister p'Con nor reached out to them. Being an equal opportunity ~ployer, NUWS, through its own . active onboard station Equal Eni\ployment Opportunity program under Dr. William W. Ba'rtlett, chairman, cooperates with NYC to provide work which is interesting to non advantaged young people and fU~Jlishes the necessary super vls~on. NUWS is the first such eovernment facility in the area ,to parti~ipa:te actively in this program.
Continued from Page One staff who have spent consider able time in evaluating new teaching materials for use in the bome and CCD elementary classes. , Registration for the Workshop begin at 9:30 saturday morning. Seminar sessions will be given I from 10 to noon and from 1 110 , in the afternoon. A Mass will be celebrated at 3:30 P.M. to MUSKEGON (NC) The e10se the session. Participants chairman of the Board of the will bring their own lunches. Michigan Federation ,of Citizens . fur Educational Freedom has en';" Beverages win be provided. Identical workshops are dorsed a proposal that non-pub planned for other areas of the lic schools be included in a gen eral revision of school financing Fall River Diocese on the fol in this state. ' lowing schedule: Dr. 'John VandenBerg -.00: saturday, Sept. 14 at Msgr. Coyle High School, Taunton. Grand Rapids commended State Saturday, Sept. 21 at Ho17 Senator Anthony Stamm, chair 'l'rinity Parish School, West man of the Joint' Legislative Harwich. Committee on Non-public saturday, Sept. 28 at Bishop Schools for urging that non Stang High School, North Dart public school children be in mouth. cluded in any revised school aid Saturday, Oct. 5 at Bishop furmula. 'l'eehan High School, Attleboro. He .said the. "vast majO}ity" of Registration fee for any parents of non-public school :workshop is $1. Further infor children wouldsuppon any plan mation may be obtained by call that would raise the level of ed ing the Diocesan CCD Center ucwonal OPPOlituniity for all lit 676-3036. children.
Mich. Leaders Favor Aid for AU Schools
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Prelate Stresses K of C Service ANAHEIM (NC)-Affirming the ability of the Knights of Columbus to serve the Church in modern society, James Fran cis Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles lauded .the society as reflecting "the blessings of God upon a chosen people" at the 86th annual meeting of the or ganization's Supreme Council. "The Knights ·of Columbus -have flourished with ,an admir able persistency in the United States because the members 'have adhered to the fundamen tals of its foundatiOn and the basic and natural truths of relia gion," he stated. "In history comparable organ izations have· come and have withered and faded because of deviations into fields other than , their basic inspiration. "But the Knights of Columbus ave maintained the discipleship our Savior. They have flour _ ished as a group of human beings ., , endowed with all the blessings of our divine Creator. They have used and cultivated these blessings in living imitation of our Savior. "The evident cultivation of family life, the manifestation of true citizenship in a beloved country is worthy of universal recognition," he said.
Bishop Swanstrom To Receive Award
SISTER FRANCES O'CONNOR ON THE BASE
, On board since February, Joan, in her office position, and Henry, eagerly learning in the Station's intricate Xerox Pho tography Laboratory, are both performing well, according to NUWS supervisors. They have further indicated a desire to ac quire additional education and training whereby they may be come more gainfully employed anywhere and may live as more responsive, productive citizens. Undoubtedly pleased with and encouraged by such response and reaction, Sister O'Connor yet is the first to point out that so much is left to be done - both for Joan and Henry' and for an estima~ed 100 school dropouts in the Newport area. Meanwhile, the indefatigable "nun from NUWS" readies Joan for her return to high school, and is preparing Henry, who does not read nor write-above the second or third-grade level yet possesses average 'intelli gence and' promising skilis, for admission to a vocational school. Teaches Dropouts, " Sister's work, it seems, is never done but rather well cut out for her by choice. When she has finished tuooring at MUWS, she also conducts sew-,
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ing classes for women, tutors another NYC youngster at a Newport service recruiting of fice, instructs two high school dropouts working under NYC at Tonomy Hill housing project, and supervises a class of 35 jun ior high stUdents in remedial reading.
NEW YORK (NC) - Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Relief Ser vices, overseas aid agency of U.S. Catholics, bas been named to receive the first annual Good ·Samaritan award of the Na tional Catholic Development Conference. Father Ricliard J. Drabik, M.LC., the association's presi dent, said "our fir~t award is being given to a man who has devoted his life and his many talents for the good of mankind, following the example of our Di,vine Master." The NCDC, an association of religious communities and in stitutions engaged in raising funds for the activities they sup port, will present the award to Bishop Swanstrom Sept. 19 dur ing the organization's first an-> nual 'meeting here.
It could be that Sister O'Con nor has a little bit of time left after Sunday Mass for a course inoooking. That might just well be, you know (if Sister can first find the time to check her avail ability schedule).
Oblates to Meet Oblates of St. Benedict will hold a day of recollection Sun day, 'Sept. 15 at Portsmouth Priory, R. L The program: will . begin with conventual Mass at 8:55, followed by breakfast and a conference at 11:30. Dinner will be at 1 o'clock and a sec ond conference will be held at 2:30, closing the day. Relatives and friends of Oblates· are in vited and reservations should be made this week with the :priory.
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ST. JOSEPH, FAUUJAVI&N The Association of the Sacre4ll.' Hearts will meet at 7:30 on Sunday evening, Sept. 8 in the rectory. ' Members are encouraged tJi> attend Mass on the First Friga17 and there will be' a special eve
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,By Barbara Ward Today, the developed nations-democratic and Com munist together spend $150 billions of public money each year upon the potentially destructive and infinitely ,\,aste-, ful, piling up of armaments, On the works of development ~md contruetion, .the annual figure is about $6 billions for
the Atlantic nations with perhaps a billion 'to two' bil l,jon dollars more from the So viet bloc. This 'contrast between ,the sums' 11a tioiis speJid" upon so-called "seeurity": with all its'· risk o'f tOtal destruction eild what they invest in lessen ing that risk is Il() unbalanced and paradoxical that Pope Paul made it a cen tral theme' of Popularum Progressio. He urges us to take a fresh look at the pOlicies and expenditures which 'really bring wi th' them the hope 4)f peace. These are not negative and sterile il1struments of de fense. On the contrary, "devel 4>pment is the new name for peace" and he ur:ges us to cut back on our unproductive ar maments and devote the funds ti',us saved to world investment in food' and health,.and schools and literacy.
- Realistic Peace Keepinc Now~ it is true that .a nation
~hat is growing and prospering and spreading its benefits to all its, people does not· have to be peaceful: Rich aggressors are not unknown in history. But a' nation that feelstr.apped, des perate and ba'1krupt and is usu ally much readier for aggressive adventures. Hitler, the greatest aggressor of the 20th century, came to power only after mil lions of Germans had been made bankrupt first by inflation and then by the GI'eat Depression of' 1929.' Since the last war, nine
tenths .of all the conflicts ha've been in the still povel-ty-stricken lands. So the Pope's plea fo~ in vestment in development and consh'uction is based not only 4>n' Christian justice and com passion. It is also shrewdly real istic in terms of keeping the peace. Only for, Defense Yet if anyone proposed ~150 billions a year in public pro ,lrams of development-with laO billions supplied by America Many citizens in the Atlantic, world,' who accept defense ,"needs," however expensive, al most without question, would be in all pl'obability outraged at
,the idea. They would suddenly
:feel the "tax bite." They would insist that the market and the JWl'mal processes of pl'ivate ini-,
will
,Canadians Support 'Biafra Relief Appeal TORONTO (NC)_The Canda d!-an Catholic Organization for Development and Peace is one ef six nati'onal bodies participat ing in the national appea'l l'lUnched here early in August by the recently formed Nigeria :Biafra Relief Fund of. Canada. The purpose, of the appeal is io provide aid for starving vic tims of the conflict between the '6wo African countries. , . I Other organizations participating in the appeal are the Ca Iladian Red Cross Society; the Canadian Council of Churches; the Canadian Save the Chiidi'en Fund; the Canadian' UNICEF Committee, and Oxfam of Canada. .
tiative and enterprise could sat isfy eC~)Jlomic and social needs . on such a scale. They would ar gue that such a program dang.~r ously' iricreased the scope of goverl1lTJent action, In short, they' .would judge it .D()t only visionary but subversive', .. This attitude reflects· a' fun damental fact about much West.,. ern thinking. In the whole field of external relations we' tend to think of defense as the only sphere in which the communfty, acting through its elected polit ical representatives, ~ano take very large governmental deci-. sions' which profoundly affect the whole economy. Indeed, .apart from education and road building, many Ameri can' citizens feel the same' a'tout domestic issues. One of the most startling examples of this bias occurred in 1940. Throughout the 1930s, in' the wake of 'the 1929 Depression, America, like Eul'Ope, suffered from alarming unemp)oyment. Some govern mental H pump priming" was un dertaken -:::' a few millions pere for' WPA, a few millions there. But recovery did not follow.
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ning'Mass at 7:30 in addition te the -morning, Masses.
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PRESS CONFERENCE: Food for starving.Bia'fra was the topic of a p~~ss ,c.Q·nference at the u.S. Catholic Con
ference bllilding~ Washingwn,D.C., at which leaders· of, volunt;lry agenci~s conducting emergency aid program for Biafra included Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, director of Catholic Relief S~rvices,~nd Morris B. Abram, president of American Jewfstl Committee. NC Phow.
HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER . The Holy Name, S,oci~t>,: wiDi, spo.nsor a bus trip to Fenway - Park for an evening ball game . Friday nig~t; Sept.' 13. rhe hUs· will leave t~e school w.ard. ~t .f o'clock. Ticltets are'. a,vail~bJ~' from Anthony, D',Amp~io. "
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Motal.' I·ovolvement Rabbi
:$a~s' :B'iafr~ Situation¢haUenge. /' , To: United States, World I
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WASHINGTON (~Cr--"There is an ultimate iSsUe- we muSt face. There is a &umanitarian,. a moral involvembtt which is a challenge to US and to the rest of the world," Rabbi., Jacob Rudin, preside~t '~f the synagogue Council of America, said tl,ere regarding the Biafra~ cri'I'
War Banished Depll'essioD
• ; ' IF anyone had said in 1939: SIS. Rabbi Rudin spofe at a press "There is nothing wrong with this economy that $24 billions of conference held by leaders of. government o~rs will not the ~.S. volunteer ~enci~s oConcure," he would have been dUCtlng an ernergepey .al? pr?locked up 'either ~s a lunatic or gram to combat ~tarvatlon In Biafra, .the.state which seceded a subversive. Yet the .arms pro from .NIgerIa last :fear, . gram for 1941-42 was '$24 bil The 'cOl·~ference. as held, at lions, with more to follow. Be the U.§. Catholic,. Conference tween 1940 and 1944, war needs took up the whole unemployed headquarters here, to report re- slack in the U. S, industri;l.l con:' !!uIts .of an earlier Jneeting with omy and doubled its size. U.S. Secretary of State Dean . ,1 ' Growth has, continued with few , Rusk. The rehef prograljfl.leaders reinterruptions ever since.
Now, this is not an argument ported that the·, u;~~ed Sta~es had approved an ad~ltional ShlPfor all-out spending .on arma ments. It is simply .a remiilder me~t of l?:OOO ~ns of food to that Westel'l1 democracies accept famlJle-stl'lck~n .Bla~ra. The govlal'ge-scale govel'l1mental aciihns ern~ent food IS ~o be ~ad~ avaIlable to t.he Umted Nations for defense-sometimes with re markable economic c,on'se of quences. But they shrink 'away from other public programs. as ff : . though the consequences would CHICAGO (NC> Auxiliary inevitably be dangerous. Yet is . Bishop William E. McManus of this not complet1!ly unproven? .Chicago said that an' attempted Take the three supposed risks boycott of Sund~y ~asses at st. heavy taxation, undermining pri vate enterprise and interfering Ferdin;md church here had no with'the market. None would !>~ effect 6n the atterldance level. The bishop said so~e 5,700 per- increased by vigorous interna sons came to Parish Masses on tional programs of economic de velopment. . Aug. 25, which isl normal attendance fOl' a Su~day in Au- The poorer lands could not, gust. The pishop is pastor of before_ the mid-Seventies, 'ab j. sorb m,ore tl)an, say, $1~ ·to '$20 the church. A group of parishionel's had billions a year. Such a sum distributed lite'ratute through- -could either be saved by disar mament ,l>r absorbed in the- rise out the parish asking a'll parishioners to join inl th,,: 'boycott of national income. and attend Masses at other Ideological Prejudiee churches in t.he are~. Private enterprise could co The dissident parishioners be
operate with public development long to an organiiation called
programs as.it does, on a huge the Committee of Organized
scale, with the public arms pro Parishes, a group with member
gram. Nobody' says defense ship in ] 9 Catholic parishes on
makes industry weaker. the north side of Chicago. As for, lessening the scope The group is opposed to the
of the market, the mal'ket does archdiocesan ':Operation Hos
not work well among two~thirds pitality" program. IWhich pro~
of the world's peoples because ,vid~ Negro. youngsters from they are too poor to enter it. In ghetto areas with ani opportunity' vestment in schools, roads, pow to atten.d suburban: schools in er, communications and the prl~ other areas, where their needs liminal'ies of modemization wilL. during the school day are pro bring, tfiem, for the first time, vided for by "host'l families in fully into the mal·ket. ,the suburban parishes. Young No. the prejudice against large sters from 38 of the 430 arch development programs is not diocesan elementary: schools will 'pragmatic but ideological. We participate in th'e progcam mu~ examine it further. starting this Fall. II
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Children's 'Fun9 (UNICEF) and Catholic Relief Serviees (CRS); the overseas relief agency.· of U.S. Catholics. It be dis tributed tmder the International Committee of the Red Cross.
'Bootlec, Operation'
Conducting the press confer ence were Morris Abram, pres ident of the Ameriean Jewish Community; Auxiliary Bishop
Edward E. Swanstrom of New York, CRS executive' director; 'Rabbi RUdin; 'Msgr. Marvin Bordelon director of' the divi sion of World Justice and Peac~,
U.S. Catholic Conference; Dr.
John Mayer,prqfessor at· the Harvard University medical"
school' and Father Dermot Dor an, C.S.SP.• and Irish missionary who is the organizer of airlifts into blocaded Biafra. In the meeting with Rusk and Joseph Palmer II, assistant Sec
retary of State for. African Af
fairs, Abram said, the group h'ad . stressed that a "bootleg opera tion" to aid Biafra will not work.
The solution, he said, must be one led by which land and air corridors are established and neutralized. I~ was reported a week previously that Biarlra and Nigeria had agreed in principle on such
corridors, hut that details bad
yet to be' completed. Up to now,
Nigeria, which has blockaded
Biarfra, has' fired on r~lief. planes, claiming they also are carrying arms to the rebels. Abram' said that· the U.S. government is sympathetic and has tried to alleviate the plight of the Biafrans, So far, it has
given $8.7 million .for relief
purposes. The.government is also to use its influence to bring about the establishment of land and air corridors, Abram said.
will
ST. STANISLAUS,
FALt RIVER "...,"
A "Polish"food sale' to'l)e ·tieicl
from 9 to 5 tomorrow in the par ish center 'will benefit the school! building fund. Mrs. Sophie Pin
kowski is chairman.
SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO ,Public school students from gl:ades 7 will register for the CCD program in the parish hall!. after any of· the Masses on Sun;.. day, Sept. 8.
OUR LADY OF THE ANGELI\, FALL RIVER , The annualllr6cession in hon er ot Our Lady of Fatima wiU
be held on Saturday evening,
Sept. 7, at 7:30.
Masses eelebrated daily, Mon
day through Saturday, at 7 ..
t.he morning and 4 in the afte...
noon.
Rehearsals for the parish band
will start on Sunday. morRin,
and' continue on succeeding Sun
days. They will be held at Ie
e'cl04:k iD the churcb hall.
Asks Public Support
For Farm Workers . DENVER (NC) -ArchbishfllJ 'James V. Casey oLPenver has
ul'ged public support for legisla
tion to amend the National Labor Relations Act to inelude coverage, for farm workers.
The archbishop made his ap
peal in a LabOr Day.let'ter reacll
in all churches of the archdio
cese. "At this critioal time ill
our nation's history," he ,said,
"it seems more important than
ever for each of us to do what we can to insure the' right to 1\ dignified life to every wOFkeJr and his family."
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Bishop McCarthy Ne~ Bedford Nun· Composes Details Challenge Sings '. With' Sisters' Sexte t Nuns Face Today' CINCINNATI (NC) - A I!)ishop said here that relig i»ua life has suffered 'from fehe "insidious attack'.' of IlUrreM man-centered thinking, but contended the attack is itself
New Featu"re
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Asserts Supplies Reach BBafrans
NEW YORK (NC) - Relief supplies being shipped by the ( overseas relief agency of U. S. Catholics al'e getting through to the starving peoplll in Biafra, Catholic Relief Services heild quarters here has been assured. The information camfi;. in a cable from Father Anthony _. Byrne, C.S.Sp., who is diI'ecting .. the Caritas lnternationalis relief work for Biafra and coordinating the· effort of Catholic Relief Services (CRS). Father Byrne maintains head.. quarters at Sao Tome, an island off the African coast. He sh:essed that there is no extensive stock-' piling of relief supplies at Sal)' Tome and assured that supplies are being flown from the island to Biafra as speedily as, possible. Father By.rne has been making the flights :from Sao Tome to Biafra. ."Last week 11 flights carrying 121 tons were delivered to Biafra," his cable disclosed. The cable said the first CRS consignment by air arl'ived at Sao Tome on July 30 and was .delivered in Biafra the same day. The cable said the second CRS consignm~nt of supplies. was received in Sao Tome on. Aug. 9 and was being flown int(l) Biafra as rapidly as possible.
P·relates Resign
SISTER BARBA.RA AND MRS. MANUEL PIRES
VATICAN CITY (NC)-PO~ Pa~l VI has accepted the resig natIon of 66-year-old Bishop Phillippe' Lussier of Saint Paul in Alberta, Canada, for reasons of health. The Pontiff also has accepted the resignatipn of Arch bishop Navarrete y Guerrero of Hermosillo, Mexico, 82, for rea sons of age.
in such demand in the Albany area and for the recordings they hope to make thi!; month or next. Last month, Sister Barbara was in New Bedford on a home visit. A~ the, same time, she ai so discussed the prospects of recording the folk song at Stere Where A ophonic Studies on ,Rivet Street. '~At the moment," Mrs. Pires says, "they haven't signed a con tract with anyone. They ~xpect to' within the 'next month." Means A ·In order to promote 'the record album-to-be, the singing nuns have been authorized to continue ATLANTA (NC) - "Toward making their public appearances Tomorrow," a film produced by and to do whatever other work is necessary to publicize their' the National Catholic Educa , tional Association (NCEA), won album'. "They want people to know the grand prize award at the first annual Association Film about it," says Mrs. Pires. The order which Barbara en Festi val here. The festival, sponsored by the tered when she graduated from Sacred Hearts Academy con Amer~can Society of Association Executives (ASAE), was held in ducts just one school in New conjunction with the society'a ~edford - Immaculate Concep tIon School on Eai:le'Street. annual meeting and was de The order and Immaculate signed to hOllQr association films displaying outstanding quality Conception both may become in production, story line' and . much better known in this area within the next few months if achievement of purpose. . "Toward Tomorrow," entered the hopes of a SUccessful album
in' the education and training are realized.
category, shows the modern . If prayers ensure success, the
techniques used in Catholic records should be run away sell
Open Evenings schools, including taPe record... ers-"Because," says Mrs. Pires
"everybody is praying for them.': ings for language tramjng, com pu~ers for curriculum planning and methods of grol)p dynamics. Joseph O'Donnell, exhibit man ager of the NCEA, accepted the BAN~ING award of behalf oil the associa WITIHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING /PROBLEMS tion. ASAE represents 2,700 execu at the ·ti yes who manage trade, profes sional and technical associations in' the U. S. and Canada.
Hearts Academy in F1rirhaven and she served as accompanist for the academy Glee Club dur ing her four years there. "She plays the organ, too," Mrs. Pires injects. For the last two years, Sister Barbara, now 23, has taught at St. Catherine of Sienna in Al bany. In between times, she and her five singing companions practice for the concerts that are
GOOD NAME
Cqtholic Education Film Wins Prixe
"The attitudes of these influ ential thinkers who are sometimes followed naively and Continued from' Page One blindly are' an insidious attack on religious life," Bishop Mc ences that is not satisfactorily Carthy said. pl'Ovided in m rigid grade struc·"Prayers and meditation seem ture. ' fuolish. The three vows no Above-average students will longer have, lih'e tremendolls progress at a more rapid rate, value as self-offerings to God according to Msgr. Francis B. that centuries of Christian living Schulte, assistant superintend have given to them. Poverty is ent of schools, while below aver giving up things that could help age students will be able to ab others. Chastity is damaging to sorb ideas at a slower pace with the personality. Everything of out the stigma. of Toeing "left (,bc world is important-:md sex back." is the most important of all. "The non-graded primary Obedience, surrendering per minimizes the problem of fail oonal freedom is absurd."
"One ,"ight ask,'" the bishop ure," Msgr. Schulte said. "It provides !for the 'irregular' up coontinued, "whether such in fluences. are not' already evident ward progression that is char
actel'istic of almost every child." in it more subtle form-in ne
glect of direct worship of God, The task of evaluating the re ()f meditation, of spiritual exer sults of the non-graded primary cises; impatience with private and of developing new programs thanksgiving after Communion; has been given to Sister Clare ~he. tendency to regard Holy Michael, S. S. J., graduate of Mass less as a sacrifice of wor Chestnut Hill College and Co ship of God, and'more lIlS a meal lumbia University, who has cri communion with men;' the taught. on both the elementary emphasis on God speaking to and college levels. us in the Sacred Scriptures; the No other major 'currlculai' growing squeamishness about changes are being introduced on expending even moderate sums the, elementary level this year lmr places of worship." bu~ an extended "World Cu! tures" program-including Afri can studies-will be introduced
(0" JERUSALEM (~<f)--:"An all1 into several archdiocesan high •
Over 35 Years oolance was presented by the schools. .
A freshmMli "World Cultures" @'i Satisfied Service Variety Club of Israel flo Mother lBernice, superior of ;the Sisters program, including study ci? Reg. Master Plumber 7023 of St. Vincent de Paul here for China, India, the Middle' East JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. their home for underprivil~ged and western Europe, is already 106 NO. IMAOIl1Q SiREFII' ornd retarded childreJll in this part of the standard archdiooa fale Riwli' ~7 5-7497 OO'ea. ~ higb l3Choo! C:Ul.'ricwWllllo
Donate Ambulance
Folk Songs, in Albany
T~e upbeat beg:Jl~ .when Sister Barbara Mary. Pires of New Bedford learned to play bhe ~,U1tar at t~e NovItIate of the .Holy Names of Je~~ls and Mary in Albany, N.Y. . ,She us~ to play ,~o;, the sisters and the!l she started composing folk songs· 'to smg along wI,trn the mUSIC, her mother, Mrs. Manuel .pires of 287 Tinkham St., recalls. The nuns'liked it so much _ -} that l'a8t August they fonn ed ,a permanent group of singers to Mng the folk songs
challenge to Religious "to gi ve witness to the true pereimial !lelcvance of religion." Auxiliary Bishop Edward A. McCarthy of CineiDnati, outshe w:rote. As the exuberant iille<! the challenge to Sisters of gl'Oup of six nuns, got the folk (level'al communities at investisong rhythm, they started giving ~re and .profession ceremonies. public performances in the Al "You must be, as Religious bany ·area. Reception was efl ~Ye always been, the witness, thusiastic and more' ana more· the· sign-to enlighten and en- .of the laymen who heard' the eJOurage all of us," he said. "Un tainted and undaunted, you must six nuns suggested they tape lib h some ,of the songs. ow t e way, give the example; "Some of the Sisters wanted demonstrate to a skeptical age "at in serious devotion to a life them to record, too," Mrs. Pires" ,., prayer, of faith, to the wor- says, "so they could use the iibtp of God, to asceticism; is music in .their 4!atechectical work." . Wttl,. to be !,ound the spirit and ~e grace in'which we wHl also Sister Barbara's sulM!~or !felt (J6Cve and redeem our world." it sounded like a good idea, with 'God Is Dead" an,. profits -realized. to be used Bishop McCarthy called the to expand their teaching mission. jitresent time ,"a period when Now, negotiations are under there is a ,startling tendency to way' for Sister Barbara's Songs lJegregate God out of religion." t() be recorded by the singing "God is dead, they say. The sextect of nuns that- includes her' 9kepticism, the doubts about re- Sister Janet Walton of Albany: "Iity of a Descartes and a Kant Sister Patricia Moffitt of New have left thei", marks in today's Jersey, Sister Kathleen Keller ~endency to question the ()bjec~ of: Clearwater, Fla., and two ti.vity of God, of revelation, 'of cousins, Sister Dianne and Mau fln' unchanging morai law," he reen Baillargeon, both of Cohoes, cieelared. . . . " N.Y. . ."In' post-conciliar circles one Sister Janet has a bachelor's Grequently hears quotes. of degree in music from Catholic prominent, liberal Protestant University, Sister Patricia holds tiheologians . like ,Rudolf Bult- bachelor's and master's degrees mann, Paul Tillich, Dietrich from Sienna College and Sis 18onhoeffer and others. We al'e ters Kathleen, Dianne and Mau indebted to these men for in- reen are students at st. Rose crights into the needs of our College in' Albany. times-for a more -human, pel'Sister Barbara, whose upbeat oonalistic living of the faith," music started the fand raising lihe bishop said. effort, was graduated fr()m St. "Yet the danger is that even Rose College with majors in ed eatholic teachers and write~s, ucation and French. fn a sort of pell-mell adulation Her music background waS ()f these theologians, accept funlaid in New Bedford «Iamental teachings of their's . ,., about God and inan's relation As a student at St. Klh~n s to Him that in no way can be School: the young Barbara PIres reconciled with our Faith," t~ok plano lessons !fr~m the .la.te Bishop McCarthy said. Sister Paul. She contmued plano Obedience Absurd lessons when she entered Sacred
II
rHf;
Thurs., Sept. 5, 1968
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'6
TH~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Sept:
5,1968.
Hitlkr
., .
.Young People '8
I
'to
wi~£ Nor ..J)EAIJ YET l
1\
~SYJ,mmer
Final Retreat Week Sept. 9
Stalin to Hitler
il
I I
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 ?
if
The newspapers have had their fun w.jih the hippies ..... those poor' creatures so afraid to face life that they have .ereated a life of their: 9wn, uninvolved, unconcerned, flee ing from reaHty. TheTe has been tragic news about young :people joining in looting and arson in many a race-torn American cjty.
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But what of the many young adults who never made the papers ? Those who have given services and skills as volunteer workers in many. governmental and educational program~. Those who have given the Summer to working in slums and among migrant workers 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 aaiIi tuition, money f~r the Fall? Consider and praise these.
Chinese' Proverb . There is a Chinese proverb that says: If there is right
In the' soul, there is beauty in the person; if there is geauty in 'the person, there is harmony in the family; if there is harmony in the family, there is order in the na,tion; if there is order in the 'nation, there is peace in the world. .'
,the.
That wraps the whole situation up into a neat solu tion, but the fact is that families and nations and-the world ~all are made up of. individuaJs. And the s'trength of the
who1e is the s'trength of all itS components.
In the midst of all the activity taking .place today, movements on an area and national scaie to bring about changes in the civic and ecclesi'astical climate of the COun try, it is still good to remember that the individual doos eount .a]:ld can have an effect on the whole. Many people have little confidence in the individual, in his effect on the 'whole, and this causes them to think 'of change only in terms of massive movements, of great sweeping reforms, and not- in the quiet day-by-day progress that individuals and families can and do make. The Chinese proverb has validity. -
mOOQ,lnq Rev. John .F. Moore, St. }oseph's, Taunton /
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B.A., M.A., M.Ed.
THE ,rcOPLE'S 'CRUSADE
I
The politic'a] crusade of American youth came to a shattering haIti in ilheclay vessel of the' oonvention arena., Their voice was quietd' by the dying s'houts of the party profesSis-ional b~t it was not silenced It is mos't unfortunate "In my father's house there are many mansions.'" that the fliarrow lens of the'
These words of the' Lord have been interpreted in televis'ion cameb focused its
It might not be this year. but many ways. But th~y can certainly apply to the many and attention on th'e Yippie and .it ,will come. Just from sheer varied organizations and groups that are to be found in the ~ippie. It i did a, grave numbers alone they will soon the ordinary parish. disservice to the lcoun.try by its , dominate our total socieiy. The neglect of the thousands of various proposals to lower the At times a suggestion ~mes along that just one mas young Americans who had ded- . voting age will add more vol ioated themselves: to our politi- ume to the sOund of their cru ter-plan organization be established to include aU the vary I . .' sade. Iil another fCjur years no ing apostolic and social groups in a parish. It'is good that eal systems. The vast majority of our' politician will be able to escape this is not done. : ..,.' young people want to work' in . from their. influence. Parishes have different personalities. People within, 'the framework of our respected ft<lrishes have different personalities ,too. And so a'. variety' ilistitutions. They Iwant these in- ' . Our youth are searching for r-" stitutions to meet. the demands' 'ideals and principles. Their hon of groups meet .tl~e variety of personalities' and needs. . that the present lage places on esty and oandidness sometimes The only qualificat,ion on any group should be that .their shoulders. If their voice is prick the conscience of us' all.' ignored, the revolutionary. and Because of our own' guilt com-' it does meet a real need, th~t' it is an effective group, that the anarchist tak~ over to fill' plex, we' rationalize their en charity and kindness exist wi,thin it. the void. The reSult is turmoil thusiasm as mere ·folly. We dis and violence. j.. miss them as upstarts and at \ As for the rest, let variety 'be the order of the day. The voice of youth will, be: tempt tolabel them as rebellious. This is unfair and unjuk .' heard. <> I
Variety
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Full'ure pc~icy and Decision Makers ,
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Our young people want to serve. They want !direclion. The' Peace Corps is but a single ex ample of this senSe of idealism and dedication. But, they also want a public forhm to express OFFICIAL NEWSPAPIER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL PIVER their views and ideals. ··Why. should they be denied? Is it be "blished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River cause the professibnal politician has become so stuTtified that he 410 Highland Avenue
is afraid· to listen ,to the truth. Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7.151
Our politiciu sistem will be come. a more historic .relic if we PUBLISHER continue' to ignor~ the political Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. aspirati6ns of our iyoung people.. We mus.t begin toiadopt a ,posi-. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER tive view - a realistic. view of Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll this entire problefu. . \
@rheANCHOR
MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden, LL.B.
l
Party ,doors must be open to them. They must be assigned roles of responsibility. We must not view them as mere workers in a political machine but rather . as a vitalizing influence in our American way of life. Our future will rest in their decisions and policies. Why can't we become partners .in building this new America? The day of the ward boss and party faithful are fa~t disappear-· ing.· The dawn of 'a' new polit ical spectrum is rising.
We ~ust listen now' to the voice Of the present if we of this, people to enter into political' generation of. influence .. are to debate and di~u~ion. ~ve' a' voice in the future. , We must encour~ge our young'
II
Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of F'all River, will preside at the ~econd week of the priests' re treat that is being given by Re\to 'Raymond A Tartre, S.S.S. ~ New York, at cathedral CamD.! East Freetown. The following wHl attend th6 secon~ nd final weak of retreaw Most Rev. James J. Gerrarcll" D.D., Rev. David A. O'Brien, Bto • Rev. Joseph R. Pannoni, Re\!'o Arthur C. dos Reis, Rev. Chris-o tQPher L. Broderick. Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, Rev. Joao V. Resendes, Rev. James E. Gleason, Rt. Rev. Leo J. Duart. Rev. Cornelius J. Keliher, Rev. James F. McDermott, Rev. Bernard H. Unsworth, Rev. Ger ard J, Chabot. 'Rev. Laureano C. dos Reis, Rt. Rev. Joseph C. Canty, Rev. Leo M. Curry, Rev. Get'lrge S. Daigle, Rt. Rev.. Bernard J. Fenton. Rev. Edwin, .1. Loew, Rt. Re.. Henri A. Hamel, Rev. Leo T. Sl,lllivan, Rev. William H.. O'Reilly, Rt.· Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. Rev. Ernesto R. Borges, Re.. Ernest Bessette, Rev. John' Go Carroll, Very Rev. William A. Galvin, Rev. Jolin J. MurphJlp Rev. Maurice Souza. ' ·Rev. Donald Belanger, Rev. William J. McMahon, Rev.. Lu cien JUSseaume, Rt. Rev. An' thony M. Gomes, Rev. Donald A. Couza. ·Rev. William F: Morris, Rev•. Luiz G. Mendonca, Rev. ErneSt Blais, Rev. Daniel A. Gamache, Rev. James A. McCarthy., Rev. Francis M. Coady, Re\l, . Arthur C.' Levesque, Rev. Ber trand R. Chabot,' Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Rev. George E, Amaral. Rev. Edward A Oliveira. Rev .Louis R. Boivin, Re.. Maurice Parent~ Rev. James P. DalzeH, Rev. William E. Farland, Rev. Francis B. Connors. Rev. Evaristo Tavares, Rev.
William F. O'Connell, Rev..
Henry T. Munroe, Rev. Alexan
derZichello, Rev. Luciano J..
Pereira. .
Re·v. Roland Bousquet, Rev.
Edmond R. Levesque, Rev. JOaQ
C. Martins, Rev. Rene R. Le:
vesque, Rev. Casimir Kwiat
kowski.
Rev. James W. Clark, Re'll" Paul G. Connojly, Rev. Paul F. McCarrick, Rev. Armando AD nunziato, Rev•. Adrien. E. Be».. mer. Rev. Clement E; Dufour, Rev. Edward J. Sh~, Rev..Robert W; Dowling, Rev. John "' Magnani, Rev. Daniel F.' Mo"" Borty. Rev. Robert F. Kirby, Rev. Joachim F. Fernandes da Silva;, Rev. John F. Moore, 'Re,." Thomas E. O'Dea, Rev. Agos tinho A Pacheco. : Rev. John J. Steakem, R~ Roger LeDuc, Rev. Martin L, Buote,' Rev. Gil-bert J. SimoeS,' . Rev. John F. Andrews, Re1lo Kenneth Delano. Rev. Arthur T. DeMello, Re1llo
Ronald ,A. Tosti, Rev.· William
G. Campbell, Rev. Joseph F.o
D'Amico, Rev. Edmund A. COD->
nors.
Rev. Peter Mullen, Rev. Don
ald J. Bowen, Rev. Thomas .J.
Harrington, Rev. Americo da
Silva Martins, Rev. George Coleman.
Rev. GeOrge Almeida, ReW.
Tererice F. Keenan, Rev. PaUll
E. Canuel, Rev. Raymond" A; . Robillard. . , . . Rev. Harold Wilson, ~,
James H. Morse, Rev. John.Oli-o
veira" :nev. William F. ()'N~
Rev. Ronald S¥lvia.
:w.
Franciscan. Fills
Government Job
WASHINGTON (NC)-Fatater SIgmund Dragastin, 02.ivI., jlTears a business suit and fig- , tIred tie in his office at the' National Institutes of Health m Gtlburban Bethesda. But he IOQ)l:s more like the F,ranciscan priest he is when he 0"'ders Mass in the chapel of the Academy of American Francis can History at I;learby Potomac' m Maryland. Father Dragastin, who received Q Ph.D. in, sociology this Sum mer from the Universit'y of Chi lCago, is oelieved to be the first 1lJ. S. Franciscan to hold a civil Gervice' post. He is tl progriuim Qilalyst at the National Institute',' @f 'Child Health and Develop.. :ment, established in 19S2 'by PresIdent John F. Kennedy Qs one of the National 'Institutes of" Health. ' lIn Chicago, he was a survey" ~search fellow with the Na tional Research Center while be was studying for' his doctorate. Be wrote a doctoral dissertation Qn his analysis of the influence of the religious factor on psy clIqlogical well-being.' ' 1n his hew post he will study and evaluate reSearch 'and train,,: : .ing in the social and behavioral sciences, ' A Kansas City native, Father' Dragastin was ordained'in 1957. \ He received' a bachelor~s degree ' from Duns Scotus college, De-' trolt and a, master's degree from Ute University of Notre' Dame., He has taught at Bishop Luers , High, School in Fort Wayne. Father Dragastin completed· Il
two-year term as director of the
Friars Club and retreat master
of Friarhurst' Retreat houSe,
both in Cincinnati, in 1964.
As· a eivil aervice employ.ee, be receives a regular salary and maintains his own apartment, m Bethesda. In ~e meantime, he is assist ihlg the National Opinion He aearch Center with a researeh study of the Cincinnati, Francis- , ean province, of' which !lle X'e mains Q member.
NEW MEMBERS ON CONNOLLY HIGH FACULTY: The Jesuit 8'taff BIt the Bigoop Connolly High Schoolfot Boys in F-aU River now' totals 22 with the addi,tion this yea'l" of nine new members. Seated: Rev: John Karwin, sj~ Theology; Rev. Jolm Hanrahan,S.J:, Chemistry; Rev~
to
'Prelate Supports Farm Workers
Says Court Decisions Support Contention .
case
s...r.
English. Standing: Rev. John 'Butler, 8.J., assistant prift cipal; Rev. Richard Wolf, S.J., English; Mr. William Dut'3t, 8.J., Earth Science; Mr. Kevin Gray, 8.J., History; Mr. Ra7 mond Laiesse, S.J., French. '
Cites Legality of State' Aid to Schools
LANSING (NC)-8tate 'finan eial assistance for the secular education of children attending nonpublic schools is constitu tional unde». both the U. S. and Michigan constitutions, Attorney, Leo A. Farhat has told. the Spe cial Michigan Legislative Com mittee, on Non-Public SChools. Farhat, former Ingham Coun ty prosecutor and president of the Michigan Prosecutors' Asso ciation,. testified that the, legis lature, as a co-equal,branch,cof government, 'has the, 'right -'-' if ' " not the duty-to provide ,for the, ~ucation in the so-called secu~', lar, subjects of, all, chilqren" re- , gardless of the '. type of school, they attend. ,Farhat, said· the recent U. S. ' Supreme Court decision in the, New York textbook "is es ,pecially significant" because "'the" "court underscored (its) long, recognized holding • •, c oo, that religious' schools pursue twe, ,goals,' religious instruction and secular education." Cites Case Law The Supreme Court ruled last June that it was constitutional' for the l State of New York to provide textbooks for both pub F~THER DRAGASTIN, O.ll'.M. lie, and non-public schoolochil dren. Farhat claimed this and other Supreme Court I decisions make In Italy, Tanzania it clear that ."the legislature may CALCuTTA (NC)-Ten mem enact laws which provide secu bers of the Missionary Sistero lar educational benefits to chil ,9£ Charity, founded here by dren attending non-public Mother Theresa, world-famous schools, including churc'h-related Y-ugoslav-bom crusader a,gainst non public schools, so long as il? ]!)Overty and disease, have left is the legislative purpose to help • open new foundations m children receive a secular edu Italy and Tanzania. cation." <,7 The congregation already, has - it is also, equally clear," he. h?uses in Venezuela and Ceylon stated, "that the primary: effect 'a~d hl14 plans to expand, tQ of such a law would ,be·to aid Brazil and Bhutan in the com children and their parents to re mg. mon t h s . · ' ceive a secular educat.ion, neither A fi1"§t group of five Sisters,' advancing nor inhibiting reli oatives of tree Indian stateS, gion. In my judgment, such II left for Rome at the invitatiOn Of law would not be in' cOnflict' Po'pe "Paul VI, Who donated wlth any provision of. the United ' $10,000 for their work States. Constitution."
India Nuns to Work
~~rence Langguth, 8.J., Physics; Re~. ~artin Ryan,
CINCINNATI (NC) - .Archm bishop Karl J. Alter ()f Cinc;:in Farhat also noted a ruling by more than 1,200 of theBe' needy nati has endorsed efforts of Cal an Ingham County Circuit judge youngsters attended non-public ifornia grape workers to win which upheld th'e constitutional schools last year at no oost to , collective bargaining rights and ity of Michigan's 1963 Fair Bus their parents," he ~. t ated. achieve a living wage. Law which makes it mandatory "But you know as well as I Archbishop Alter said the for public school districts to pro that costs are rising for both vide equal transportation ser . public and nonpublic systems grape workers are "among the vices for children 'attending, and it will be most difficult if fC'rgotten Americans sufferin~ non-public schools. ' not impossible to maintain the the privation and human indig nity 'of poverty and social injus> Harry R. Hall, president of the' nonpublic effort without finan MlchiganState Chamber of, cial help," Ford declared, adding' tice':" He endorsed support ex Commerce, reminded the com th~,t poor:peQple will be, hllort . tended earlier by the CathoUe bishops of, Cali~ornia to the mitt~ 'that a 1966, report by, m' more than upper irlcome fami workers' request to be included U:S. Chamber' of 'Commerce if'there is a continue<!. de under the National Labor Rela. taSk·force"urged the governinerit' cr~ase"iii." the number of 'non tions Act. to ·'finance' :the education of aU! public schools in Michigan. children, regardlesS of wnethet: Representatives of the United they 'attend 'public or lWnpublic' De~!g.,ate , Farm Workers Organizing Com schools. ' , mittee have been here to present The task 'force said such ,a CU Fo~nders,Day
: the 'workers" side in the stril~e plan would do much to improve , WASHINGTON (NC) - The against California table grape the quality of education, espe-, Board of Trustees of the Cath growers.' cially for, the disadvantaged. olic University of America here In his statement Archbishop , Hall noted the tas!c force re-' have designated April, 10 as' Alter quoted from Vatican II'1ll port has never been formally' "Founders' Day." Decree on the Apostolate of the . adopted by the 'U. S. Chamber The date commemorates for Laity: "Wherever there are and does not constitute,poliey of mal papal approval of the estab people in need of food and the 'national or state chamber. lishment' 'of the university, 'on drink, ,clothing, housing, medi , Helping Disadvantaged' April' 10, UiS7. l.·h~ Catholic cine,employment, education; ~ He cited the report as an at~ University of America is the wherever men lack the facilities tempt to emphasize the disparity only institution of higher educa necessary for living a truly hu tion' 'administered' by all" the man life • (> • there Christian in the quality 'ofeducaiion 'be tween the inner city poor and Catholic bishops in the U.S. and charity should seek them' OOlt the more affluent suburban sUPPo,rted by all Catholics in and ,find them, console them the nation through annual col areas. It concluded tha.t compe with great solicitude, and helg> tition in education is .one way of lections in each diocese. them with appropriate relief." getting changes in the quality of education. But this is difficult 1IIi11111II IIIIIIIIUIIIII1II111111111IHIIIII1IIlltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllIIII11U1L:JI to accomplish when the public schools have a monopoly on ed ucation. As a result, the task force rec ommended that public funds be used to contract private 'institu _ of BRISTOl.. ,~OUN'ft' tions to improve the education of the disadvantaged, . 'o-DAY.NOTICE William R. Ford, state director of the Office of Economic Op TIME portunity, 'told the committee OPEN thlit many of Michigan's neariy ACCOLINT • <Il • 1,000 non-public schools "have Interest Compounded exerted real effort in openin'g Quarterly their doors to the disadvan:.. taged." OHices' 'in: . Affects Poor People NORTH AnLEBORO MANSFIELD AnlEBORO FALLS '''This is particularly true in' the inner city of Detroit where 1IIIIItIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIlIIIlUltlllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllUIIIII11I11UI/III
lies:'
Trustees'
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PAYS
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.,. 8-·-'iif;ANCHOR~D~h~I~-'Jttun.,:~t.5; 1968. t:' . '
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Nuns' Poriic'ipOfe'
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,··'Sohition flO Ha'ir Prob,t~m ·U,n.fold·ed by Readi,ng' Ads -
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City .~f.Ojects
. PH\LADELPHIA ~~C-)-M~ than 350 Sisters partICIpated tbir:! 'Summer in a variety of innellm city projects, :f.rom Philadelpbi1a ·Anti....poverty Commi~sion. '. Coord.inated princip.a~ through ~e Sistl!rs' Committoo of the Cardinal's Commission OJ); Human Relations, the nuns' wor.l! also included work at Commli .nity ACtion Centers, helping to supervise Summer camps, and "chaperoning" day tz'Iips for dil') advantaged' children' from urbain asphalt to 'suburan greenery. The Sisters who partwiapt~ in the program contributed theh' . own :vatcation time to the pro;" ,ects after completing their SuJJlp mer . study and retreat oblig~ ,'lions. Several Philadelphia religio\l5 communities have appointed co ordinators 'for Ifuture ,Summer activities and requests for :In ner-oity invQlvement during the year are still pouring into the offices of the Sisters' Committee, headed by Mother Regina olil ··Jesus, of the Religious Qf tho
By Mar-llyn Roderick
~, A
few weeks ago I mentioned in this column that ,I awfully tired M overteased, broken hair that loo~ed more like a wig than a natural coiffure.-:I'\~ot only was I dIS gusted with the problem but even my hu~band had -taken 1llP the cry and instead of '. .. . . . ,prmenting me when I set tiJJ;le and agaIn., Onent-al !tau eom I , '.,' doesn't hold a set he explamed re~u:r:ned from the ~~l,rdress- and then I under~tood why my 01", he woo oomplammg that, fall that was made' in Hong iii; was looking more ~nd' m?re Kong needs to be set every time like straw and less and less like it's worn. Again the old adage applies-you only get what you !hair. But al¢hough I ,was pay for. ' quite aware Artist at,.Work . rthat the probAfter wrapping myself in one item existed I of' their beige dressing gowns, d'idn't know the attraCtive receptionist hand where to turn ed me over to the shampoo girl to rectify' it. who upon completion' of her FinaBy, while work in turn handed me over to g 1a n c i n g one of the most charming and It ih l' 0 ugh the artistic stylists'·I have .ever met. "~~I.L:.:2;diiE iDewspaper ads It turned out that his name was I "'" , Assum~tion,. lin a Sunday Frank Pillitten, and in true ", S M I S A 1
edition, I came , Italian fashion he discussed ItalCOMPJLETE SUMMER COURSE: r. eo, r.' ue ar' E dJ tqurse Training'
9C ross what seemed to be a iari restaurants, his wife arid ex-' and Sr. Sil~eira the Sis,ters of St. Dorothy, hav~ com-, xpon , pOssible solution to my d.ilemma. pectedbaby with true Italian ' .pleted a ~J)eda' C'<!urse for ~ea~hin~ ~rlug~e' at Vanger- .. Program for Nu~s , ' ,Ads Are Importanl. warmth and charm, but all'the hilt University a The, 'CHICAGO (,NC)-8lsters .up-. '"Fed up with yOur hair?" was, whjle~ bis sci~rs and c~ngcourse will assist them in ,the ljngliistic program. in the ban Education (SUE), f~rmerly the heading of the copy-filled ad razor were cutting and shapmg. Schools they 'I staff, one of which i.s Our Lady of ,Mt. Oarmel, ,'. a courdse tdo otbat was adorned 'with ,a photo: Michelangelo of the· 'Jl'ress,es - , ,., for nursmg an e uca on ef a band holding a pair of, ScisHe used his tools I imagine ,New BedforiL ' ' ' . m a r i l y . i n the inner.. city, .~ !'lOTS. As I continued reading t~e' 'a sCulptor must use his hamm~r been .. expanded to' a full-tune eopy the message that ~esalon' and ChiSel. While he cut, be exi year-r()und program and is now ''MIS trying to get across to the, plained ,where he ,woJ.11d leave . . accepting. applicants for its A., ,:reader ~unded, too good, to be - fullness' and where 'he woul~, ' '.,' tumn session. _ ' · true. The copy""riter exoplainecJiaperlt away, and that rtIrfinal Daughters of Mary Mother General Criticizes, The project bas been operatiRg that, this salon, Enny of Italy:, hairstyle would be one that had .c. f" for two Summers unde.t: sponsor would give 'a, woman s~h, a, the· look of the .thirtieS. While,:lt 1()ur.i&t Pidur~ O'r A r1c,a , sbip' of the' :NaUonal CathoDe "'jood,basic bair~ut that ~he her.,. was' Waitin'g ~ 'combed out ] I . Conference. for Interracial .J9S llelf would find. ~er haIr, more 'had a chance to watch, Frank, SAN FRANCISCO' (NC) ~' she said. "Our order has 50 ele- 'tice,. offering professional traiJr , " JJl,an·.a·.,g~,'pl,e"" !T,,o,m, S!!t to. s~", wi,th.-, .... work on a ·woman who h41dnat- Harboring hok,s for' ch.ariges;h niimtarY aiidfour"Seconda'ry nd
tice e . ' ~"'. . 't h bead 600· ,schOOis.' An'd even the few go,,';' ,ing ·in' the theory' a prac
.," ~u,t benef~~ o,f,O'1.ery llsmg" or urally cur.}y hair .. that, didn " black· nun. WI 0 . s a -' ernmen-t" sc'bools char-g'e' 'hiitiori; of service to minority groups ~ · everspraying. , " : need ,even the'slightest set when' member S]stemood- 1':1 Uganda" ,. ' , , " . 'kl the poor. " 'The l.ure, was ~. ~uC'h ~, he 'completed his, artistry., A . Africa, is, en ro~e. b?me ~fte~ '''The great. tragedy is' that ' Sister' Mary' Sparks, a Fr~ ,.once' Joe and I ,~d . already ;b8ircutat ,Eilny, of .Italy takes at ,study-ingtheoMgy at .tpe Umver- . students disappear from .the ed-eiscan nun ,newly named diF~ mad'e pians ~ ~pend, a couple leaStthree-q'Qarteis of an hour . sity of San lfr~ncisco.this Sum- ·.u~tion: stream just when they ,tor of the program, 'emphasized Of days with ,)lis siste~, Liz in for the cut ",lone' becau~e each -mer. I " ' , ' reach the,level of being able to ',fhe, training. is '.equ~lly,:valu,~bl~,. Neck, L: I". (a ,30 is }i:ldividual", arid' 'Sister Mary I Vincent, mother ,do 'something for themselves arid' nuns who may serve in ,~riy~ from tJ:1e b~g. C]ty) ~ .was he~ bair, stylin:g 18 created on an ,general, ()f' ,! the' , all-:-A~rican' ',the nation. There is only one' communities; , . de~rm!~~ ,to· VISIt tb~ ,sal~n in~ividu~l basis.' "D,aughters of ~~ary"founded in - government--operated, university', "'They can bring, io t,~e white ~d ,I!!~ if th~y couldfulfJ11,thel~, .1 was .~er~ pleas~,at ~.nM-"" Uganda:?n 1910/ Said',befo~elea.v- _for. all East Afr,ica'::"" Makerere'middle_class a, new ,:understand--' · p~mls~... , ' . , '''. uralness of.my&tyle. when 'It, was blg here she hoped some way U~iveisity' in Ktunp.ala: ~ and it' ing of the problems of ,rllcism' ,,~~e salon is h~used,o.~ ,~h~" finished. As Joe: and I strolled could be Ifound! to discourage, the . can't begin to accommodate all and poverty;". she said, "adding rrow fifth ,floor ,?f a ne . QUIld'1,og. ' leisurely down Street a stiff . popular idea that time ,the' applicants for admission,';. an extra' "1& . ,theiJr ~n :W~!'t, 57th Street .that h~~: \?reeze, ",as blowmg and I, :W~8: ,some one 'opens a, front door . sne said. • ~ervices.", its nt;lghbors ,such eh~e stores. ~, : stunned that you coU;1d walk out there's a liOn' waiting on the., .', , , ' , " . ' , HenrI ',Bendel and' 'V:a~, ':leef; of the, hairdressers and l~t yourOOorsie . ~Ister, M~ry, ym~nt, a~ten~ed 'and Arpe~, ~t only IS It S',' hair blOw iJi the breeze without, . P , ,' . , ; , Seatt)e :Umverslt! ~n a sc::hola~, New Magazine beauty salon but it is also t~e - worrying that, a d~Sastrous' rwn Sister, Ma,ry: Vm~ent lS en ,s~ip an,d in, JU~ recei~ed 8 STOCKHOLM' (NC)-A, J)ew , showroolD8 for Enny of Italy, would bef'llll your freShly set . route to Masa~a, not farfro~, . bachelor's degree lD EnglIsh. "It, Catholic magaZine, K~tolsk Ob- . hairpieces and wigs' that' are locks: 'As 'for my'busband, he . Kampalil" the ~llPital of Uganda. , . ~'as ther~in1967, s1}e, l~a,rne~, of. servatoi, '(Catholic Observer), ,handmade of the finest Italian paid me ~ghest cOmpliment T~e country corer~ 93!981 square ~~r ~lection as, mo~h,e.r g~neral. whose .purpoSe is to "observe hair, and sold allover the world. imaginable when 'he said "Now mlles of.~a&t jAfnc~,. populated Nmety young nuns of the o~der the basic principles of t~e reli Ol\e of their,' full .stretch , wigs you look !i.\te tbe girl'i married.." . by 7 ~1]]lOn l~ucatlOn-hUngry " a~~. a~J)din~, colleges out~!de gious' and ].jturgi~al .life" . ~ ,sells in the $220 range' but the persons, 26 ,per cent ,of whom are . AfrICa, TheIr transportatIon thUs to' have "an e.;uJTIenical workmanship is exquisite, t~e - Catholics: The paughter of Mary . oosts alone are hard to meet, she function," hQS Peen published !!Jtyling .superb and, the appearParliament, Debates nuns mai.nly a~e teachers. said..' , here. ance as natural as if you your' . : "Except for a small district in bad 'mo.st marvelous Priest's 'Fvture, " , the north, and' ?irls' •••_ ... head of, haIr ]magInable. NEW' 'DELHI (NC)-A -sharp wear skirts-long skIrts,» SIster, r- ' . _ During my visit here, one of. - clash, among high 'government Ma,ry Vincent said. '''Unfortu~,
the stylists explain~: tha~ one of, officials occurred on the floor 'nately, touri~ts iwant to take pic
the ,reasons the best W]gs ,are of India's parliament here dur- tures of the Africa that was, not
. made of Italian hair:is tha,t they 'ing. discussions on 'the future the way it is.. They. look for the
are able to, hold a set longer so, of Father V)ncent Ferrer, 1:Ihebizarre arid badkward."
that. in the, long run. f;he custom- Spanish-born,' Jesuit' missionary Lions do not Iwait at the front'
er ]5 savIng m~n~y that s~e 'now' temporarily out of this. stoops of houses _ 'especially'
woulq spend havmg a cheap W]g country. . schoolhouses. Students either;
Mrs. jabanara Jaipal Singh, for that matt~r, she said. In, o
92-Year-Old Catholic who is deputy minister for, Uganda "there I is a, critical
tourism, attacked the Indian h t of h I 0 I 653 Washington Stre~t, Fairhaven, ml'nl'ster 'of sta,te for hom'e' aIf- s or age seloo s. ny onePaper .In I nd··'· la F0 Id s third of the peoplebave had any 994-505'8 . fairs, Vidya Charan Shukla. Her ' COCHIN (NC)-In~)ja's second 'charge was the Shu~da had education. -ldest Catholic weekly and the Great rJl'ragedy :~I ~ ~.~.~ ... ,prompted a member of parliaI " first newspaper in the Malaya- moot, to address that body,' in "P,rivate groJps and ~issionlam language has folded here" oj " opposition to the re-adl1)ission of' aries' rUD most 0,f .the scho s, FIYE CONVEN'.ENT .OFFICES ~ERVE YOU 'after almost 100 years of ex- Father Ferrer. '
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istence.' .! , Shukla denied the . charge, ~-thyanada,m<'(Voic. of Truth), Od page weeKly of the arch claiming that he was' bound' to' four, ,diocese: of Yera.poly;·wa~ cloSed give information to 'legi~lators , lack of who ask for it. The speech' in becauSe of "loss arid funds.'" question advocated that Father . The priest-manag~r, of the' Ferrer be kept out of 'India, and publication said the paper has argued that thoose who want bim , been ,"stopped for th~ present," back are, actually casting 35but declined to confirm repOrts per~ions on' the: ~?~k 00: India's' that it Maybe res~med later, SOCIal welfare. IDlmstry.· Father possibly as a supplement -to, the' . ,F~rrer, !tas. stirred, controversy , KeraJa Times archdiocesan daily, "wlth· ,his self-help movement founded here'·in 1957. ,QmongIndian J)easants. ' e.
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ON'E-STOP" BANKING.'
"v ,,-' "'-,', ' " ' NEW ORLEANS (NCl-Father 'Thomas H. CIa,n,Icy,' S.J., bas been appoin~ed vice-P'resideritfor ,ac 'ademic " affairs ,at . I Loyola Univer•
sity here, and! his ,predecessor,
John -F.. Christman, bas been
. named . vice--piesident ,for ' re search,'FatherC!:Iancy has served as chairnian of 'the department of histOry' and'tiK>litical seience -for iwo years. ! ,,' ", -
"
'FIRST~MACHIN'ISTS'
NATIO'NAL ,,~A'NK
"
Nerton,W.
OF TAUNTON
Main"St.-:-RaY~hain, Rte:
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44:-Taunton,' !Aain
': .North Dighton, Spring St~-North ,Easton, Main St.
Mem~r Fed~i'a' l~u·r~nC:e." ~rporation .'. ...... Deposit . .. ~...'
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Garden" FotJn·tains Possible FQ,r Persons By Joseph and: Marilyn Roderick
'THE, ~N(:Hq~Thurs., Sept, 5, 1968
9
,:S~pp6rt, Grape,,"
Pickers Strike
There is something fascinating' about just walk'ing clown the streets in New York Oity. A certain electricity tJhat is in the air, a feeling of being part of a moving city, • city thlVt has something to offer everyone. Because food fa my passion and bobby, the ' restaurants of MariJhattan eo 1 Inch cubes Island offer 'a strong attrae~ 1 pound of mushooms, chopped tron and both Joe and I enjoy Qr one ~an of mushoo>ms drained
CINCINNATI (NC)-Support of California grape workerS in t~r union organizing efforts and in their boycott of table grapes from that 'state was voiced by the board of the Arch diocesan Council of Catholic Women.
A resolution expressed the IS yellow onions chopped trying one or two new places 2 cloves of garlic crushed lboard's oonviction that every eneh visit. Generally, we rely on 1 Tablespoon salt man has a right to "a just wage the recommendations 'O'l Alvin 1 teaspoon dJIied diU , that will aHow him to live de-' Kerr' 'who reviews New 'York' %. teaspoons basil cently and grow more human.'" restauraDts for Gourmet' maga'If.!' teaspoon thyme and pow "Moved by the injustice evi zine and up to this point he has dereci, sav,ory dent in the treatment of the kept us well Informed lllnd 'well' 1 can beef consommEl alld 2 farm workers by the employers, lfed. .. _, ~. eans (large size) tomatoes the California grape growers, Mr. Kerr didn't fall this time 2' bunches of carrots we affirm the right of the United either when during our recen't' a small onions Farm Workers to unionize and trop to New York we visited 1) Melt the butter in a large negotiate fora living wage," one of the delightful plaCes th8Jl; pan and slowly brown the cubed the board's resolution said. !he had discussed, Casa Brasil. meat. I like to use my pressure From Gourmet's 'column we "We strongly support their ef were even able to obtain the cooker pan for this without its cover. forts to boy cot t California t'estaurant's telephone number 2) Add the mushrooms, onions, grapes." An exception was made and this was essential because garlic, salt, dill, basil, and savory of grapes from DiGeorgio farms, reservatiolllll are necessary due' and saute until mushrooms and PROFESSION AT VILLA FATIMA: Rev. Maurice which have signed agreements to the tiny dining room. When onions are ,tender. ' " Souza, pa~tor sL' ArtthQny's 'Taunton,' and chapJ.aina~ . with, the union. w~ did' call we were~l,)~e ,to; 3,) Add the can of consomme V I F ' I f ' ~ the, t tabl d d'd' • il a aturia, e t, receJ.v~' rary vows, OJ..e _'Sr. In 'other action,' the boa rei PeServe a e an we ~ n t and the 2 cans tomatoes and simrealize bow'luCky we were' until mer' for 3 to 4 bounl' or until Judith Costa, Sr.' Helen Oliyeim" and, Sr. Gabriela ,Lima, of named a committee to study the w~~rrived there 8J)d saw: g~up the ineatis fork tender." , Immaculate Conception'Parish, New 'Bedford~ at ceremonies' possibilities of a merger of the Councils of Catholic Menan«i ~e,r group ~peoplebeilJlg!~rtl.,., 4) About an bour ~foI'e' the : conducted in,'the TauntOn Chaip~I. ' Women in the archdiocese. ed, , a w a y . " ,",: , stew is finished ,'add .the 'cart'ots ",, ", " ' . Owner-Chef" ' ,'" ,,,, that have been peeled and cut I What'CasaBrasillacksbt'area., small. Finally the small onions Australia'n'ito,Address": Jt ,more than makes ,upfOCl',i.n I that have been- peeled and then
ebarm and fine, food" Menus are: cook covered until these vegetL<Jywomen's Congress ",
not available. The owner, isl also .. abies are done. louDsanaPrelate ,Urges I 'PQsit,ive ,'Approach MT. KISCO (NC)-,-.Miss ~ose.- ..
the chef. The head waitress'rad-i-'., Garden Founta~D, " ,'.; \:0 .. ' . , ',' ' , ,,'. ' .. , mary Goidie of Australia, associ.,.. \lI!tes.,a warm welcome. The evel\.. I have been toyfilg with the <0 'Cath~1 ic Education ate secretary to the newly cre-, ings meal opened with a bub- idea of a fountain in my garden ated Council of the, Laity in, bling casserol<! dish of heart fur what seems like an eternity LAFAYETTE (NC) - Confi- is the beginning of a new school Rome, will head a panel of three , of palm in a parmesan sauce with' and whenever I go to New,York dence and calm were" under- year. It is not a time for des- internationally known speakero bardboiled eggs. After fihis, ap- ,I make it a point to visi,t one, scored by Msgr. Richard Moulon, pair and panic but for confidence to address,the 14th national con petizer the ,diner had m choice of the dealers in, garden foun- superintendent of schools for and calm." .." gress of the National Laywom of papaya and ham or a crab- ,tains in the hope that I will get the diocese of Lafayette, at a Msgr. Mouton called a four- 'en's Retr.eat Movement in New meat dish. A :lIresh tasting, salad, Bome ideas for my own ga'J:~en. back-to-school principals' meet- fold emphasis on emotional, Orleans, Oct. 25 to 27"it was an ot: Bibb lettuce' followed. too Gl>od fountains' are prohibitive ing here. mental, moral and religious dis- nounced at the headquartem GIld finally the flow of delicasies ' in price--the ones'~ sa,wra'nged "None of us will deny nor cipline during 1968-69, ' h e r e of the Religious of the Cen- , "Be strict," he advised. "We' acle, who, are sP9nsoring the . Glulminated in an entree choice in price' froin $500 to $1,OOO,~ are we unaware of the real fiof, Beef, Wellington, Roast" Ducic,'" but' are quite' simple to' conStruct'" nancial, .crisis faced ,in :the inde- Ii ve in 'a' permissive society~nd" , nationat congress. or·a"Veal dish. ,'" ' I ' ""'11 " and should be easy 'to repioduce , pendent Christian schools, of: a1>solute permissiveriesS'or that' " ',' .' .' '" With the main dish'the hos... ·· Qt'1!50th of the price.' ' :" " this diocese;" hesaid~"but..this· which approaches it" weiriust· ';1'h~me.ofthe.~ngress.wil~ bc: , tess, served five assoried vege'tOne I' saw; 'waS , PllrtiOuja~ii ' " ,', ,, consiaer' waywa,rd. We "end6rse '"Women Renewed - Worl~ ~, abies "that included cooked ·,GlU_··.. sinip~e and could be ~~st~~~er;l: ,Minnesota, "See ,Plans, ' diScipline beea'use dis~ipline' is ~'v.ed~", oumber,pureed'peasand'.llwar:m', at'a Minimum Of cost. The key: , ,', "h' I ,', one of. the essentials"oheduca- :BiShop" John J. Wri'ght ,~ bit compote. As full as we were, , to"~ fountain a,a 'sub~e*~ibl~," 19, ,Close,', Hi,ghSC 0,0, ,. tion. Its mOdality maY' change Pittsburgh, episcopal advisor'.' z.oe, and 1 managed, to find room" circulating pump which ean. be", COLD, SPRINGS" (NC)....-The., over' the years but it does not:.. ' the National 'Laywomen's He-' for dessert which was baked 'had for about thirty dOllars~ St.,Cloud diocesan board of ed.. ' All tlte'Catholic schools iii o~' treat . Movement, and Fathe'l" meringue, and strawberries, a '!'he PUrhP is 'electrical 'and cir- ucation has voted to close st.., eration during the 1967-68 school' Bernard'Basset, S.J., 'of Engla~' dish of perfect strawberries top- eulates a flow' of water'through Boniface High, ,Schoo}.. here ~- year' wiil be 'operifor 'this 'nev.< retreat master, author and lee- ' pe,d, .wi~h a raspbe;rr:Y :tt<luce or' plastic tubing' to, a' beightol' C8,u.seof .'~~n ~~an,ticiplil~.,tra,ns-, school tenri: However a commit-" turer; are the other speakers. ' ' .,t~~ cake., 'I ': " ".,.';" about five feet. This placed itf'a' fe~, ~,stud~ntjl f!:9Ql St,. ~Qn~,a!le. te~(has been fonned b'y the dio:':', ' ., " StabaUzed Priee ,' . " ,.. receptacle· at, the base' 'of the' to local. public high liC;hQPls !l~nce cesanscnool' hOard to ~nsider" Archbishop Philip M. Hannan, The price :lor each patron is fountain and can'be camouflaged Aug. 1," according ~ Father', t~ Possibility. that "sixsmall'" of ,New Orleans will be official $8.50 per dinner and since fJhe, with pebbles or stones depend~ David Rieder superintendent of rural elementary schools, whos~ host for the congress. Coadjutor owner does not carry 81 liquor lng on the decor of the ~ountain. diOCesan sch~ls here. ' , enrollment has' been .declining, Archbishop Leo C. Byrne of St. license, (glasSes wm be providCost Range T'he decisio~ was reached, after may be closed after ~is year, Paul and Minnea,polis will de ed) if you wish to bring your The simplest fountain I' saw consultation with Bishop George Msgr. Mouton has adVised. liver the keynote address. own wine. The customer seemed could be made for under fifty , Spe)tz of St. Cloud who was 00 enjoy this idea and many dollars including the cost of the consulted by ~lephone in Mar people entered with their choice pump. This was a hollowed out acay, Venezuela and a vote of of, spirits under theil' arm, a tree stump about two feet in di:- the dloce~an s<;tloolll b:oard ap,d, look of anticipation on their face ameter which sat above a wood~ , the, St, BO\li~l,lce High School and a hunger for some of the en trough. The water circula'ted, Corporation "Board. " , 0OQk's f,aultless specialties. It was ,from the trough to the stump bt . The state~ent, )SS,ued. by .t,h.e,. J~ mOre like d'ining in the home of means of a plastic hose which st. Cloud diocesee~phasized () good friend (Who reallly knows entered, the base of the hollowe!l that "parishes' in the aJ;ea must how to prepare food) than i:t was trunk and emerged high up on - provide an adequate"program of FUNERAL DIRECTOR'
like dining in an impersonal the trunk which stood about religious instruction for the.stu:,' OwMf" Director- The Wlrine Home
IeStaurant. ' ' three feet high. A small length, dents' who 'wiil be' aUe'ndin'g, 'the For many years rYe toyed of bamboo waS appended to th~, public 'schoo1 systeni."T~ st'ate SJ!RVINC AU FAITHS with the idea of opening a res- bose and emerged from the ment also announced that three ~urant but Dever have I been' trunk. The wate'r flowed out of other Catholic high schools in IJO tempted as I was when I the bamboo rod /lind dropped the area have agreed to admit oow that a delicious meal can be into the trough below. The students who had planned to at: llerved to a small number of tnmk of an uprooted tree would tend St. Boniface 'high 'school. diners while an atmosphere of be perfect for this fountain while wClrmth andeharm is still re- any receptacle of sufficient size their' arti.stic effect rather than ~ined, as it' was 'at this fine· could be' used for the base of on their intrinsic worth. New York restaurant. the fountain. This' could be ceWinter Project Call1~t Now that there's a nip in the ment, wood, metal or almost We have determined that our Cl~, r our thougbts are t~rning anything available. , , major project this winter, will alore and more to disheS that Another type of fountain con- be'ihe construction of just such Gulf Route Man;s our kitchens with delicious sisted of welded copper strips a 'loUntaln. Our priina,ry 'task' is aromas and 'our taste buds wUh:· which were arranged on a cen- to 'buy copp~r sheetipg, tubing, You~ Service, t ~oughts· of ambrosia. ThiS stew tl'al ~r~, in this case half inch;: a ,~,ide,i}n~ 'i~on an~(' ~o·',#n~'~, . FOR 'HOME DELiVERY'CALl 998-5691 .recipe is one dish that dges ;lU$t : . !)Opper tubing, so that the water, place in the hOUSe w,here our th,at and it has been our families' flowed ~own the fountain in a gre~t' artistic,.',temper'8!J1~nt, ~ii~. , IIlavorite for years. 'I, .." waterfall effect: 'F'rom" What' I ta~ent can come 'to the fore un , Herbed ,Beef, $,tew:, ',Could ~ee the prices were based: di~~rbed»r. tli~:m~l;l(Nngha'qds'. ". cup butter ' on the workmanship which went: of those of our family who can , so. DARTMOUTH,' MASS; , a to 4 pounds of chUck cut fa.. into' the fountains 8ti' well as" nOt appreciate art; n~~l¥ J~OD. I
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SUMNER JAMES WARING
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GULF': HILL",:,:DAIRY
.Nuns Ccmvention Make's H;Sitory
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Th.urs .• Sept. 5. 1~68 •
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Natoclmal Newman .C;:orngress T~eme SeoJlreh for Chr.istman ~~®m'\)U'gfl'y
;1.',.
.' NEW BRUNSWICK (NC) there is no question of public ~he search for Christian identity funds for religious education · is the search for the person, and "no tampedng with aca Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts- demic freedom or religiou lib-' burgh told some 500 delegates' erty." . ~ the National Newman CbnMichael Apgar of Trenton, a gress at Douglass College of past president of the Rutgers Rutgers University here in New' University Newman Club, was :,Jersey. chairman for the .conference
. Bishop Wright, in the keynote which reached a climax with a
address, declared every Chris concelebrated pontifical Mass
¢ian once understood' clearly with Archbishop Thomas A.
Jthat the source of his dignity . Boland of Newark and Bishop was in the fact that 'he was a . Ahr as concelebrants. person, that each person had a The homily at the field Mass
vocation - a mission' to fulfill was preached by. Auxiliary
that he was sent by God to cio a Bishop John J. 'Dougherty _of
4:et'tain' work. Newark, president of Seton Hall
Theme of the four-day con University, South Orange, N. J.
greSs, . which brought· together .At the congress'· closing ban Catholic . college and' university quet the 1968 John Henry' New students"from secularca'mpuses man Honorary Society award across the nation,' is "Search :for went to Danny Thomas, singer Christian Identity.;' entertainer-producer and unsel Bishop Wright called for fish contributor to charitable , reStoration of the sense of per:' causes. The ;lward has been preA l' EqCHARISTIC CONGRE$S: Bishop Augustin sonal vocation. He reminded his' sented annually since 1950. Remy, auxHjary of Port de Paix, Haiti, dish'libutes bread audience of students, priests and . at an "agape" held in Assumption Parish, Bogota, ColomSisters that each is called as I were Abl'aham, I~aac,. Moses, to O' OW. C I bia, durj~g the recent I~ternatio?a} . E~c~~r~'st.ic Congress. do something no orie"'else is ~. !,.hes~rVI.ce lnc..lude~ a BIble read.mg, dIstrIbutIOn, of. bre~d 'ealle<l to do.' , . . , Op~, and WIne, fo~k son¥s and prayers. NC Photo. ..' In this way,' he said, ~ll will AN.AHEIM· (NC) '._ The. . . I ' " eeme' to .realize that' God is a ' personal God...:....t11e God of Jesus Knights of Codlumbus'.pledged JII_ Christ, o'fthe mystics and ot the ·p":~i:a1t~~~i~~?::re2rtl::':~. '-T '. . l!llIints. . . . prem.e Pontiff and of the:'bish'-' .Ph·iladelpllhia S~'mbolic Meeting r.chdioc'e.san· S~perirU.endent' ops in all: those matters pertain... tii:~~;h~a~'~:~:o;::~~~~ ;~:I;e";: .,)ng .to the benign discipline. of' '. Notes jReasori.s for Fe'w~'r' 'New. S~hqqls .. .respect the ...machi.rie· . . . rather than Christian .faith· and .Christian '. ,"; ,,,-'1' . ::....., ' . ....,..' ... . . ,
morality" at the 86th annual P~ILADELljHIA (NC)-"We . 'years, no new 'high schools are iflhe man who made it, .who pro meeting CY1. thesociety's Supreme . can' no longer conclude that. opening in the" Philadelphia "fams i~. toserv~ man. .
·Council. every new p~rish will have a archdiocese. ... liAn .age surt'ounded by ma-. ~ T.he·· pledge of adherence to .newparochial school," the Phil Msgr. Hughes said there is no <thineryserving them," he said, . "is less likely' to develop' mys the Church's 'magisterium, adelphia archiiiocesan superin policy not to build parochial tical instinCts in themselves," so. adopted by Co'uncil, said in. part: tendent of sc~ools has asserted.. schools in new parishes "and Nam.e Nuns to Work ·Msgr. Edward 'We are' convinced that the tJiey will be aware of God ilnd ' T. Hughes . . said there is no recommendation of · a full exam the archdiocesan Board o'f Edu': Full;.time in CeD ¢heir dependence on God." . Catholic Church founded by that in the fu~ure, , :Bishop GeOrge. W. 'Ahr oJ.' Christ is not one in; which each i~atio.n of thelChurch's financial cation or the superintendent's. PHILAI?ELPHi,A' (NC) - For Trenton, in' .whose diocese the m'an is his. own t.heologian 01' his _ and personnel .resources will ~ office that· the' old policy (of the fir~'t time in the histol'y 01. · building a parochial school in the PhH;tdelphia archdiocese; eongress was held•. welcomed the own confessor * * • ,We believe needed in each , ease to deter of the Gos mine whether a parochial school each parish) 'be abandoned.'" . . , . , .delegates in his' own name and tnat the implicatio.ns nuns have been appointed to pel of Christ are not so much will I;>e built in a newly estab ' in the name of ·the bishops of' d t . . ed b . I ' t . II' lish.e.d .pa,!'ish. But, he explain~. "one of our' full-time work with the archdi tlie'province of New Jersey. . .e ermm y popu arty p~ s main concerns is the lack of suf ocesan' Confraternity,' of. Chris .. ., .the tian. :poctri~e .(CC,P). The" "con"g"'I'es's' was 's'p'on'sored '., .o.f today.as the by co.n.stant m.. The .' Superintendent , ,. also .'.' noted ~Iclent Religious to expand by 'the New' j~rsey province of ter.pretahon . " of the ...Church. that, for thefil.'st' time in five system." '. . . The principal tasks of the Sis N.ewman Clubs and was held for' througll' th~. ages ** *. We em ters will be to develop and pre the first time on tne campus of· brace,. the . basi~ ten.et. th.at. .the Archdl·ocese S;ac'ks' ' Msgr.Hughes cited a· dimin-· pare curricula, to train lay cate S preme Po t ff 1 d 1 el ishing number of. candidates ,for R.utgers; the state uniyersity of . u p .• n.! .... s IV~.y I .. the religious life and increased chists, to supervise CCD pro New ·Jersey. . c~arged. WIth f.?rmtng .not Jl;Ist Anti Biasi Program' , grams in' parishes, to de\'elop i I (NC).:...... T'he ~ep;arture .from religious com · Ina' welcome in' behalf of the hIS own c~nsclence but· WIth '. CIN-CINNAirr guiding the consciences of all -l munities are contributing to a· CCD. t.raining programs in local univei'i;ity 'faculty, Earl W. Clif .... .." .." Central Planning and' Bud'get Catholi~ high schools and col , ford, dean of student affairs, members of ChTlst s. Church. personnel shortage in the Cath-, leges, and to provide advice and Commission of the Cincinnati olic. educational system. said 'the fil'st meeting' of the . The Council also· voted to dis archdioc~se h~s committed the guidimce on the use of instruc "However," he said, "if I were tional materials
G:Ongl'ess at the state university pense with a .30~year-old rule of archdiocese ~ membership in was ·"symbolic that· a new day the association which obl~ged Ohio Project !Equality for one to single c;mt one problem as the
.is dawning fo!; religion and its pl'ospective members between year "with' certain reservations." most grave; it would be the fi-'
role in education." The individ the ages of 18 and 26 to purchase I • nancial problem. Our .people
UIal's education, he declared, "is Iif insurance with the fraternal The reservations, according to aren'.t convinced of the need to
incomplete without adequate society qS a condition of inem the commissiori chairman, Msgr. increase their contributions. Un
recognition of his religiouS' bership. Ralph A. A.sphin, were based on less they hecome convinced, the
.•.. concern that .tHe proje.ct's "buy,. • future of religious educlltion' in heritage'." Honor Danny Thomas ers' guide" might exclude some the archdiocese is' dim." This proves, he stated, that it Diocese Questions firms with unbiased employ . The Philadelphia archdiocese
is perfectly workable - that I ment practice~ and might in rlests . rotes t .elude som'e whose practices do is planning to hire a full-time
FRIBOURG (NC)-The chan- not yet measur11e up to the proj- . de.velQpment director for Catho
lic 'schools. He will have the task
Establish Office cery officeol the Lausanne, ect's criteria. • 365 NORTH FRONT'STREET Geneva and Ft:ibourg diOCese The Planning and Budget o~ developing new financial re NEW BEDFORD sources for the schools in the
n., ue~to ICO nas described as "question- Commission at the same time' SAN JUAN (NC)-A national able" the request by a gl'OUp of endorsed the program of Plans comOlunity' at large, among
992-5534 4)ffice for the social communica- priests for a review of the nom for Progress and of the National business. leaders, and with
foundations.
tions 'media' has been established ination of Bishop-elect Pierre Alliance of B~sinessmen, both here by Archbishop Luis Aponte Mamie as' auxiliary bishop of of which also ate concerned with ' of San Juan, chairman of the' the Swiss diocese and for a eliminating racial discrimination Puerto Rican' Bishops' Confer-postponement of his colisecra in employment. ence. tion. Members 6f these two pro The office, located at Sacred In a letter to Jean Cardinal grams will be included with the
Heart College here, compri.ses Villot, prefect of the Vatican Con "buyers' guid~" of Pro j e c t
sections of .cinema, press, radio gregation of the Clergy; the Equality when 1 it is distributed
INCORPORATED 1937 and television. It is staffed by priests, who claim to represent to pastors anCl administrators a group of lay people, a priest a majori,ty of the clergy 'of the throughout th~ archdiocese. . and a ReIigcius, who are mem- diocese, made their request on' .: . R d · Ad ' bel'S ·of Puerto Rico's' Commis- the grounds that the appoint . ho esui sion for the Social Communica- ment was contrary to the spirit amant tions Media,- representing each.of the Second Vatican Council; SALISBURY (NC)-Francis 4)f the different media. because the priests of the dio- can Fathers from Waterfalls who At a recen~ meeting, the com- cese, even those ~ost cll?s~ly·as~ won permissiort :IIrom a "govern JAMES' H.. COI.LINS,C.E., Pres. IIlIssion agreed to promote di- sociated with the bishop were ment school ~rincipal to' offer RegistereqCivil' and Structural Engineer' alogue' with the hierarchy; to' . not consulted. .Sunday MasS at bis school have' evaluat~'. . present .use., of .. t~e. . The, chancel'yoffice .statement . now· dropPed!· the.· project. .- '·Member Notional· S'~ciety. P~ofessional Engineers media; to contact. the pastoral said 'that Bishop FraJUlois Char" NeighborhoOd ~esidentSobjected ,FRAPilCI$ L. COLLINS, .offices' . of the entire ecclesias- : riere' of Lausan'ne, cen·eva. and . to . the· mixed-race'.congregation . . . .. ·:JR., . ·.Treos. · tical province of' the,island, and. Fribourg. has' received .'!numer- at -the Masses,· a'nd·the Rhodesian . - '. THOMAS K. COL"INS, Secy•.' . h9Id.. discpssion,1il, .with . other. . ous mesSages of ,sympathy" I.n .MinJstr-y of ii:d~cation ruled th~t c ·A~~QEMY. BUI(PIN~, " ·f.ALL .:RVER,·. persons engaged ·in. the media connection. with the ..protes~.by. ·~~o .coloredpet90neoul~.set foot · ind~~~ry_., . ',:';' . , ' ," ,.it~e. pf.iests-. ,'" ;;.'.~ ,'." ..-:•.,. '., .,:' .. ' ,inside.JPe.SCh1L ,,:, .., ,'.;., . -
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PITTSBURGH (NC) - Tbe historic National .Black, Sistel'l1l .Conference here at Mount Mercy College marked the first nationo wide assembly of Negro nuns. The conVention's aim was till discuss America's racial crisis and the responsibilities of black nuns to. their peOple, their Church, their country and theiJ? religious communities. The week - long sessions brought 160 black nuns here. They represented 76 communi ties in 22 states, Uganda in East Africa and the Virgin Islands. The nuns are educators, admin istrators, social wor~ers and missionaries. . One nun remarked: "I neven knew there were so' many blach Sisters in this country." . . All tJhe Masses during the con ventiQn were folk Masses, with , a combo of Sisters playing gui tars, tambourines, bongo drums. The white -Sisters' of Mount Mercy College and the Sisters oj! . Mercy motherhouse did' not at tend the conference sessions, but assisted at the Masses. .Sister Martin de Porres of the' l,Oc~1 Sisters of Mer~y commu nity, who organized the ,confer ence, was the only Negro nun whO attended' the Black Clergy Caucus in Detroit last April. She . compared the t~o conventions. "It cannot be compared to the B.l~ck Clergy Ca~cus," she said 9t~J:l.e c;urrent sessions, "because QUI' purpose is largely. educa tiopal: T.he clergy caucus was called to enable' all black priests to take a stand on the racial is sue."
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Prelate Says Reds Increased
Infiltration in South KoreQ"
CHICAGO '(NC)-Communist North Korean communist forces infiltration has intensified in June 25, 195{!. From there he South Korea in the last year, fled to the countryside. but its citizens are as deter Later, he reported, he heard, mined as ever-despite stagger that priests were taken captive ing economic problems - to after: the communists took over maintain their freedom, a South the seminary. Korean bishop said in an inter This he knows for sure: He view here. had friends who were captured "South Koreans are one of at that time and he hasn't seen very few groups of people in the or heard from them in the inter world who have lived under vening 17 years.
The prelate noted that wher communism a~d have won their_
ever t'hey attack,. lihe commu freedom again," said Bishop Vic nists seem intent on taking all torinus K. Youn of Suwon. He said the diocese of Suwon religious and secular leaders is in the norlihwest section of with them when they withdraw. His parents are in. the north Vhe republic and that its bord ers touch close to 'Seoul lind \ and he hasn't heard from them since 1950. The same is true of Inchon. a sister. ~~callil)g lihe whol~ p~ninsula was' 'under co,minu'li~t cl;mtrol ,during the Korean war, exc~i>t for' II slim perimefe'r" around
Pusan, Bishop 'Youn' 'cI'edits his
people with great resolve in continued cooperation with au LOUIsviLLE (NC) - Msgr. thorities in rounding up infiltra-, Alfred F. Horrigan, president of tors. Bellarmine - U"suline College here, !laid the civil rights move "Though they see some dan ger," he said, "the t:>eople of ment, as such, is dead.
Msgr. Horrigan', ~ho ,has re ,South Korea are confident; they
signed 'a's chairman the Louis don't' think' irlfiltration will suc ville and Jefferson County Hu-' ceed." ',The' bishop sai~ th'e' people man Relations Commission, said (~nd 'he made it'plall1 that he he believes the old civil rights movement has given way to a m~ant 'all the people; 'the des new movement aimed at giving perately poor as well' a's those in black people cultur,al and' psy_, a 'much better economic posi ~ " tion) "can see tllat the)' ,Wouldn't chological' identity.' '. , have 'any' freedom under com- . ,Accqrding to Msg!'. ,H6J;rigan, munigm." not only is the movement dead, but "the word.Negro, is dead!' : : False Propagandists ., .' "The problem ,today is not ,What particular, freedoms' do just black power ,but black iden they value? He seemed surprised, tity and black fulfillment," he then answered: "Why, all free said. . doms - job freedom, political Msgr. Horrigan said today's freedom, freedom of the press." young black militants resent the Historically, his reply rings traditional welfare services,. true, because the Republic of vie:wingthem "as S', way the' Korea was strongly pro-demo white, community was salving its cI'atic and anti-communistic well conscience" and, as a· "substitute befol'e the 'communist invasion for real solutions" to problems. from North Korea. In fact, cur "What the'black militants are rent history records that it has 190k ing ,for is a total change in been a staunch 'suPJ?orter of the mentality. ',rhey're' looking for free world since it was' ol'gan a whole new aiigllment of Anier:" ized 'in 1948. He put"it in this ican society-a whole' reversal of fashion: ' ", this trend that Ui(l Kern'er Report "My people have lie'ard ,so talks about, that America is more many lies ¢ 0) ¢ that the PUI'pose and more becoming a' place of justifies the means" * .. seen and two societies (white and black)," heard so many false propagan he said. dists ¢ .. ¢ that they, the com muilists, al'e going to 'liberate' South Korea') 0 * but the people know that world domin'ation, by expansion, is still theil' aim." CINCINNATI (NC) "':"Jesuit Pueblo Example operated Xavier University here He I'elated the "commander will offer a course in African ing of the Pueblo" to the stepped culture and history in its grad-' up infiltration as, both being uate school and evening division "evi~ence of increased aggres in the first seminar of the sive activity." coming school year. Bishop Youn took j'efuge in a William A, DUPree, assistant minor seminary in Seoul when principal of Withrow High South Korea was attacked by School, will conduct the course. He said the three credit hour courses' would inchide the gen eral history 'and 'cuiture of Afri ca and would focus on the baek- ' ground Of'the West coast area LEWISTON, (NC)-First inter where the slave trade flourished: community experiment to be Also to be treated are shivery' tried in the Portland Diocese as an institution and contribu will begin this Fall at st, Domi tions of the black race both in nic's co-educationaf Regional Africa and in America. , High School here iii Maine. "Few people know that the The teaching staff will in smelting of iron first was per clude two Sisters each from the formed by Africans," said Du Sisters of Mercy, Sisters of the Pree. "Equally unknown is the Holy Rosal'y and Sisters of the fact that American Negroes are Presentation of Mary, One Ursu largely responsible for the de line Sister and one Sister of the velopment of the means 6f puri Holy Rosary. The staff will also fying sugar' and of obtaining include 11 Brothers' of the Sa plasma.
cred Heart and six lay teachers.
Thurs., Sept. 5, 1968
Priest :. Schoo!
Rence' 'Movement,
of
Universutyto Have, AfricanCcurses
Try Inter-Community Experiment in Maine
C N NCE h BLA K' NUNS' CO FERE : One of t e few 8is ters who o came to the f,ir~t iuttional Black' Sis,ter'confer
ence with an Afro hairdo was Sister Laura Ma·rie Kendirks,
a·H:o,ne Visitor of Mary from Detroit. 1'he Siste'ts in her missionary order do not, wear veil$.'NC Photo. ""
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;.',.,
~
$~[t\7ey
,"',
'"
"Continue Dispute
.. On Sc hool Law '
COCH1N' (NC)-Charges by
the Catholic bishops ot' Keralo
"" slate that a proposed law affect ing higher education will harm the freedom of privately-oper ated schools have been denied by C, R. Mohammed Koya, Ker ala's education minister. M. Janvier, Congregation of the The bishops had indicated that Most Holy Rosary, Chicago; Sis they may decide to close CatholilC tel'. M, Marcellina, Oblate Sis colleges if the law is passed illl tel's of Providence, Baltimore; it~ present form. Koya said that Sister Antona li:bo; Sisters of St. this opposition was onlY, loosely Mary' of the Third Order of St. based, since the legislation haell Francis, Baraboo,"Wis.; and Sis not yet been officially puplishedl. tel' Ann Barbara, Sisters of He said he would entertain ob 'Charity of Nazareth, Louisville. jections based on speci£ic aspects The' week-long meeting of the proposed law. brought 160 nuns· here from 76 Although the bishops have not Teligious communities in 22 listed the provisions they want states, plus Uganda in East Af changed, it is believed, theil1' ric'a and the Virgin Islands. Position pallers from the.con- main criticism centers on pro posalsaffecting college staff ap ference were to be sent to the pointments, These proposals Major Religious Superiors· of would set up an appointment Women. Sister Martin de Porres including government ,refused, however, to 'release panel these papers to the news media. members, and set seniority anell Sister Mal·tin de Porres said: professional qualifications as the only standards in hiring. "The Sisters deepened their un dcerstanding of themselves and became' more cognizant of the various moods of black America and they have chosen to seek more effective ways to bring
about a Christian living rela
tionship between blacks and
whites on a socio-econonic level." 273 CENTRAL AVE. She said about the cQnference:
"The Sistem were informed,
awakened and' inspired ,to a new
992-6216 se.nse of responsibility as black'
Religious women and were
NEW BEDFORD united in their solidartity and
purpose."
.",
Permanent Conference
Black Nuns From 76: Religious Orders Initiate First National Insll'itute PITTSBURGH (NC)-A permanent black Sisters conference has been established. A' president and a 10-member board has been elected to for- mulate the aims and objectives of'the permanent conference, . 'Sister Martir~ de Porres Gray,' the Negro Sister of Mercy 'of Pittsburgh who initiated ''the first national black Sisters con- ference held at Mount Mercy College here, was elected presi-, ,dent. The board will meet period- ically before t.he next conference expected to' be held during the Summer of 1969. Boal'd members are Sister Sister Gregory Fews, School Sisters of St. F"ancis, Chicago; Sister M. Letitia Senegal, Sisters of the Holy Family, New 01'leans; Sister Joyce Williams, Order, of St, Benedict, Chicago; Sister Jacinta Marie, Franci,scan Handmaids of Mary, New York; Sister lVI, Francesca, Sisters of St. Francis, Indianapolis; Sister
t=arm Workers Win, Contract, Pay Raise
'SAN JOSE (NC)'--:The farin workers won a three-year con tract from a wine company here which will raise the pay of vine yard workers to $2,75 an hour
and give them other benefits.
The' cOntract was won by the
United Farm Workers Organiz
ing Committee, AFL-CIO, led
by Cesar Chavez, from the Paul
Masson Wine Company.
The grape pickers and other
workers in the area' had been
paid an average of $1.80 an hour. The contract also specifies the Previously girls' and boys' di Company will contribute 10
visions were taught separately.
WASHINGTON (NC) The cents an h9ur to finance health
Spechil permission has 'been granted ,the 'Brothers: of' tAle U.S. Department 'of Housing and ,1>enefits; wi~l grallt the workers
Sacred Heart to, teach mixed Urban Development has ap- ' thl'ee ,paid holidays a, year, plus'
'
classes by the congregation for proved a' $1.08 million loan for, paid vacations. religious in Rome. The dispensa- ' construction of' a new' women's' "The contract also 'provides all
tion applies exclu:;;ively to 'the' dormitory :..&t.. ,the; College . of Vlol'kers hin;d by the company'
'locnl school and not io other Santa Fe, Santa~' Fe, N.M., opel':' 'mUst join the union within 10
sch<w.ls ,staffeM, by . ~'e Jllrot~~rrv. &)ted by t./ne, Christian Brothers. days of statti'rig' emplOy~ent.
Gets Loan
H<e~g$
DETROIT (NC) -Archbisho~ John F. Dearden has named Father Joseph B. Blinstrub, principal of Port Huron Catho lic High School, to head a "fi nancial and practicality" survey of over 100 Catholic high schools and 260 elementary schools within the Detroit archdiocese. The survey results will guide decisions on possible school consolidations and clQsings. Father Blinstrub will work as an assistant 'to Father John B. Zwers, archdiocesan superintend ent of schools. In heading up the survey he will C()Operate with pastors, local school bodies, educational associations and various com mittees already studying aspects 'of Catholic education, as well as with representatives of the four major teaching' orders in the archdiocese: the Sisters, Ser vants of the Immaculate, Heart" ) of Mal'y (IHM), the Detroit Province of Felician Sisters, the Dominican Sisters of Adrian, and. the Sisters of St. Joseph oil Nazareth, Mich.., and, selected , membel's of other orders. 1'he suryey grew, out of fl meeting several months. ago Oi'll the future, of archdiocesallll schools. ,'.
Priest Sees New
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1,1
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·12,.~ TH~ ~(~~~.~~J?~.~~~~:~~~9.r}i~."7" ~,u~;! ,~~P.t: ~': J?68".' . . ...,., f'
'S~:ys
TeleVISfbrt<'Metworks'
-Scm~whatLess Than· Fair'
By Msgr. George G. Biggins~
On the .eve of the Democratic convention one of the .
.Party's hopefuls. facetiou-sly remarked on te~v'ision' th~t·
a.ince political conventions as we knoW them, with all of
their traditional hoopla, represent such an irrational way of
Illomina,ting a Pre&idellltial
~ndidate, Chkago is the was faced with a serious dilem-.
vious place in which to hold mao By ·that I mean that he
them., As. a Chicagoal1l-on- would have been damned if he
ob-
leave; I winced a bit when I heard him say this.' And. yet I had . to admit that,' for this year . ad; least, he had a point. I didn't attend the convention itself, but I was in Chicago while
Now! Pray 'Later!',I
did and damned if he di<ht't.
He could' have been much
more relaxed about security.
But if things had then' gotten out of hand either at the con vention site itself or in the downtown area where the con vention delegates were" being housed, he would have been
. The nights of darkness have been ll'epllacedby days of SDD light; the age of hiding our talents. umder a bushel due to fallse hUmility, or 'more frequently to lack cf courage, has 'passed into the ·full emergence of ·ma.n into· the world. the age of prayer aJlllll1 conte.mplation; of listening to God and seeking Him in solitude have finally. been put behind us, and we can breathe. we move, we can, act. ,
can
'
severely criticized. by all conJUBILARIAN: : Sr. Filo'11he cry is action! Let's go out and get 48 hours out of M. cerned and not least by the it was going media :themselves. I don't think mena Chaves commemorated T~ 'more we do the better off we will be and tlH! better off on, and I must there is any doubt a.bout. that.' her 50 years as ~. member the Church. will be. After all, action 1.3 what the ~cil waa say that the . I all about, wasn't it? city gave the \ Mayor's .Viewpoint of the Congregati<>n of the
appearance of :It would appear tiult some of Sisters of St. Dorothy BIt
True, there Is nothing wrong with action as long as we keep being a .well the city's policemen enforced the ceremonies conductied at ViI- . it in its pl"oper perspective. To be sent out into the world by security. measures with 18 F 't' . "'- ~~ P rotected madhouse.. I have Mayor's . 'a Ima In 'Christ, we have first. of all to spend tile right amount 01. tbn4'J .• aever seen so 'many security": eXcesslve muse1e and. 'III such a . ·~'dunlll1n. i with Him. But, unfortUDa~1y maD)', of ns, now that we have ' agents ·in anyone citydn· aU my',. w.ay as to limit tile right of free '.' '. :' "I. • found our place in the world. tell ourselves the training eourse llife. It wasn't a very' pretty speech and free assembly. For has'lasted lonienough.: We'·are flDished 'with ~ontemplalioDo" 'sight. this were roundly criti~izM 'J '. TJiIs self-eonvictlon ean be dangerons. For beinS" on one's way -\ On the other hand,' I .~in~ . by the media, and rightly so, of I from God to the world ean be' aD authen'Ue Christian vocation. "at the media~d espeCially eOu~. .. 0 'IS 10"S (jjhe nationaltel~vision Qet~~r~; M~ only ~laint is that the NEW' ORLEANS (NC)-The _but 'it ean also ~ •. Bight. from God. fear of the seandal au sacrifice of the cross. EveryihinS" has .its other side; only OUr !. -may have been' somewhat leSs media made little o.r no effort . challenge of a disorde~ed world Lord is absolutely straightforward.; thanfllir in putting 'the ~nti~, to look at the ~u~ty pro~lem should encourage Chrlstiansto blame for this' unforlurtate' from the ~yor s, pomt 'of ~llew. stand 'together lest th~y be scat
on;1\'I:iyor Daley•...,.. ..;.... ,." "',, It was on~.t~ing for th~ media tered and fall sep~r.atelY, '21
We must th~ put fl~ things ~it;*. graY;~~en a~~.. F~r)~ ,. , . ",J ". .' """to have crItICIzed the CIty ad- G k 0 I Faeecl DU~~: ;.", .,1'~, ministration for beirid 'almost'· ree ' r.thodox,·clergym an told effect of prayer ,In ,Our lives is to prep,ar~ o~rselves, to make I us more, ~l~n . ~ tile .!!u1?tl~.. nuances' :of hutrian'telationships,' to' ' a.,<;9,' ~gregation :in, ·~t.1 HOu,is,).The media took ;.~bvious 'de;. oomp~Ils~vely:' cOncern~: 'abo'utthednil . he.re.: " I. . . the possibi),ities ~or brotherhood we may:' have' been blind ~ .. llight in portraying the mayor ;secu~ty, but it was qwte anoth.-' er thing for these sa ed Very Rev. William G ,Gaines, Prayer' helpS 'usto become spontaneous, more realistic and open.,_ as a nazi dictator who had de.. . .' . me m la 'dean of the Hellenic cathedral of more discerning. Unless we go forth armed. with prayer and un liberately turned Chicago ·i~to to have left ~he imp~ion that ~he Holy Trinity, s~oke at a less we take time to listen to God in. tQe ~idst of all the a totalitarian police state. so. as the whole .th.m~ was a Joke and hustle, we may be sadly deceiving ourselves. Prayer is .riot a mir "'_ suppress ,u"e right of free that the sec,urIty problem. was. . noon Mass on Christiar unity in
... will fi t of th Christ-the first clergyman.. of ror in which we look at ourselves" It is a glass through which
speech and free 'assembly" at ,arge. y a. . gmen. e Mayor'lJ another faith to speak from the we 'look at God imd bey.ond Him to the world and its needs.
least for the duration of bhe Imagmation. pulpit of 'the cathedbil in' its
Democratic conventiom' , Not Mayor's Fault 17'5 -year h'IS tory. I''
. The eiry of" action, more participation, being in the midst In my opinion, that was':over-' There was, potentially, at of things' is not new to our missionaries. They "are' indeed fa doing it and, after the second· least,'a genuine security prob"How can a hopelessly divided ~r third time around, ceased to lem .inC:hicago duripg ~~e con- . Church m~ke a po~erful ~mp'act ... miliar with what we have labeled "active 'conte'inplatlon." The,. are.,awar~".of·,the, prese~t ~mphasls 'on 'aetlon'being the proof .' be"amusing.." ,'J • YeJ,l.tion. ,~t :r'~yld ap~!lr .. ,that. ' on .t~~ ~mds,,o~ .J.Dl'!~ w.pep. a. Perhapllthe Mayofls. :secur'ity " the Mayor o~e,-:-reacteQ ,,~.,the., mono~~,t~lc~n:ununI~rIl;~~~ilts . of.one's mat,nty as, a Ch~is~ian:. But they kilow'too, that every:. thlng ,has· its otbilr side. Day, .~r day; year III 'and year out, measures 'w'ere''too''rigid: They" p~b~~J,l1, q~~ It ;;J;l~u~<l be eq,ual- the~.?,i asked. ra~er g~~es., they have beell a~ting. They" more thab' we, know that iii their;" " ~Only. a Church which recog- .' ceJia,in,ly apP'~.so.,~,.tq.e",~ ly c;,lear. ~at .~ ~cl. not, .create... · wearying aad ..often ,heartS.oreaposti.late,"uU,· "jn'e'elousJilomentli " th!=:,:9t./1er·~!f, op~ d,~~~~\~ay~", the.,p.ro91em'Jj~~lU;1d!as ,i,ndi-:-· . nizes.and!d~9nstrat~s ,her es they ~.,spend.,with God·each day iii'pnye': are·thefwhole life'''': flo 1'~0,!, ., ¥e.J1'.,.'mU~i!!:,!>p;ut, ~at¥, .. a.boY~, W'~uld .. ,ha~e. been., sential unity in Christ Ican speak th~;.~!l~:ts ~f):),I~' C1t>:,~~,~" ~e" .., oastigilt~ b:r, .,t~. ,m~·1o& .. i:f; h~, ,. convincingly·.of God's ?rderin,a and .sostaining strength of .theil" service to ot!iers: 'Even to 'giVe Ii au hour'•. day ·to prayer. and eoatembl&tioialS' for' sOme • Ionged~' U:mted states In .~:~.,~t;t0.4 ,"L'.:~let ~e Situation get out of,,:, worldtorn,byracial.tersio~~; ..bY . for rarity.· .:: ..... ;1 • . '. ' . : , . . . . ":', i·'·· .. ·,··, ' ... ' : .. ' 'l'101ence to recogmze llhat he ...• ,,,. :",., " .... ,,,"" ; '. class struggles; a worl<J. dIVIded . ~ r . • . .:.. ,' ., 'J;'he' reat blame}o~ .~~. ~u,r~ _, by iron ..and bamboo I· curtains. ity, ,prc>blem; W~l<1b:.; e~I~~. not· . O~y the·Churcbwbicli,is,one,in· Ttirougb' ~e' Soci'ety' for··the PrOp'~~~~On :O!.:tbE!',:F~tb, ~~ -~on~ributes onl~ ~. ~c;.ag~ b~~, .P. ,every,. I:' Christ can prov,jde a truly UBi.. '. eaJi . 'help our' . miSsionaries 'the world over. First jlDd foremost . T,o .'Ag' o~~r maJor¢.ty,~f tbeUnite4 fying.Cpr;istialdellowship which. by y~ur"'~iif prayers' fot· them an~ ~~' ~~y,serv~ in,~ ", ., . Stat~ r;a.~not ~ ,pi!lned "I,IPQn ,transcends all, the.· fr6ntiers of" lebOrs. SecondlY 'by your 'continued sacrifices you can help·~. ALB~ (NC) - Bishop Ed- . ?D>: ~ne in,dividu~ or gr,oup of ~ emerging natiorul of the lighten' thOse'labOrs.Think aboUt it! Pray! Act! . ward J. Maginn, liP9Stolic ad-': Ind~V1duals. '. '. . . world in our' generation," he ministrator of the Albany dio-' In other wo.rds, it isn't Mayor iJaid. I. . cese, presided at a meeting at : Daley's fault or the fault of t.he ... I. the chancery office Ilere at secret Service or the FBI _ . Ando~ly. the Church whIch SALVATION AND SERVICE ARE THE WORK of the S.. elety for tIIIe Propagation'of .the Faith. Please cutout this eolUD'ua which checkS totaling $32,500 which were both represented in ~ detennmed to· s~yl toget~er were distributed to four agen- Ohicago in' great numbers-:-that' In the ,bonds of Chns~,~n umty and. send your offerinS" to: Right Reverend Edward T. O'Meara. cies working towards improved our political leaders have to be can WIthstand the vlfIOUS at National Director, 366.Fifth Avenue. New York, N.Y. 10001, or housing for the impoverished. guarded so carefully against the tacks of the renegade apostles direct.,. to ,.our loea!, diocesan director, The Rt. Rev. Msgr., T~e money' was raised by the danger of assaSsination and that ?n her very ~anks;'wh? emerge Raymond T. Considine. 368,Norih MaiD: Street-'FaD River, ~ , ·1 Diocesan Development Program. armies of security agents have to . In troubl~ tun~ to sllout r~u.: aehnseUs 02720.' .. " ' Each of three ':igeilci~ were be> pOsted' . around ~nvention cously their .slahde~ of atheIsm ~ all,ocated $10,000: Better'Albany halls to make sure that the del~ . an~ .commumsm ~gam~ the r.eal
L!ving, Inc.; Better Neighbor- gates. can carry on the business spIntual leaders. " : '. ,
.,. ! h~ds,i,Inc. of Schenectody; and· of selecting. a Presidential e a n - ' .!.
, :: Troy Rehabilitation and Im- didate in an orderly and peaceBenedicti~e,He~ds:' prove~ent Piogram.· A gaa~' of fuI .manner. . .,' I $2,500 was' presented· :t<t:' R~v: That's not. the, 'Mayor's' fault~· '. HQward J. Hubbard of ProviSecurity Problem NEW BRUNSWICK I(NC) ~ dence House, Albany, to conduct It's the fault of American so- . Father Charles Forsyth~, O.S.B.. an experimental housing advis- eiety as a whole. We can criti- of. Boulder, Colo., wa~ elected
OI'Y service. cize the Mayor all we want for president of the. Natiorial. New-
Msgr. Edward L. O'Malley, di- the way iIi which he handled the man Chaplai~ .Association for a
rector of the Diocesan Develop- security' problem' in Chicago two-year term.. II ment Program Said: "No need is during the Democratic conven~ ' mQre apparent than the need for . tion. The fact z:emains, how-:.: The .Benedictine, wholis New ....d no ever, that there is a much great- man chaplain at the UnI·versl·.... I, hou's'I'ng amon g th e poor an -;, ~~rovement can be a more er security problem in all of' of Colorado in Boulder, succeeds ..
her Phi!ip' ~ranan, ~chaplain
Vl!jll;>le example of our concern America's larger cities than'. fo~ .each other than this funda- .there is; for example, in a city~.. the. UruverSlty ~ yennont ...
~I),talneed. . . " .' ,'. i . • like' London. .... . . ' : : Catholic Center,. BurlIngton" Vt. ' .:: j'~p~ beha~' of the peopl~ ~t· Why? That:s the ~rt ~f ques-:: T~~ ~l~~~iqn \y~~ndU~t~'b~. t¥; idlOcese of Al.ba~, pf, B-U!hj . }ion . to, WhICh .our television: mail among the 1,2()O ~e~bers of. o~;¥aginn, the ptiests.a·nd ReU:' commentators-who were right..' the .ass9cia.ti9,n. Ther.e:hiit. I, ,'..... ,· .. '.i:.·' gl.O~, we .pray .~flt.~h~ gi~t may '11' indignant ab~u~, some pt :the,:: annour:Jc~ he~~W.h~r~ ~e' ;New-, be'; :?CCepted as. an IndicatIon of' ab~es they observed in Ckicag~' i man.. chaJ.?l~i~, ~J:;e, •.m~e.iin~· .~ .,
~,:lov~, to bnng others to the.:· ,;-:-wIll address.~emselvesonc~·· Dougla~·,Co~~eg'.e, . R~~g~"!, .Un1~ ...
. " ',' ~~~za~on of the ~,reat needs they have flDlshed knocking'; ver~!ty ,i,r;t,C?nju.n.~~i.ol,.1,'W~~!t. ,the: . J~",~~.~JU1.'~ " .1 ~ exJSt amollli us. Mayor Daley. 1968 National NeWman qongi~,sa. " (. ; , ...::. ~':' .j'.; ..,;, . . ,:".- ' . \ ~~
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POSTULANTS IN
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SUM~mR
EMJ?LOYMlENT:Left ,Sr. Marie San
terre, RSM, Our Lady of Fatima Parish, Swansea, and Sr. J'anioo Mary, R~M., of SS. Peter 'an'c:l Pa~l Parish, Fall River, dil,i clerical work ~vidence. Ce~tei: Sr; Mary Jeannette,Pivin,RSlvt, direowr of postu
Brady, in
Maturity Key To Formation
Of Priests
· .-S"siers.'
l-ants, and ·Sr. Sus,an Marie Jenkinson, RSlVl. St. Michael's, Swansea, servoo ·as dress salesladies. Right: Sr. Mary GraceHen Murray, St. Joseph's, Nfl\, , Dighton, was employed as a file clerk. Twenty-one postulants participatoo Dn the Summer projects.
711 ,n l l'.lercy £081,u ants Participate JF. 'R' d · ' S u.mmer .rrogram· D' .l!.R, . ewa~ '.ng
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MEMPHIS (NC)~Bishop If, D9thingelse, it was 'unique-the ,summer program of work-study inaugurated by. , Jos~ph 'A. Durick of Nasli a group <1f 21 postulants of the Sisters.of Mercy. The young postulants,whQ this month ,ville told the seminari~ns' begin a year m' spi:ritual preparation for the religious life as canonical novices at Mt. St. wnventionhere that the . Vatican council's Decree on Rita Novitiate ,in Cumoorlapd', R.I., 'went 'to work this summer. They moved o~t of the Priestly Fonnl,ltion constantly , wytower-if sometimes e x - ' emphasizes the idea of 2 "Chris uoorant-life of the noviti- of St. Michae11s Parish; SwanSea, ooll,ege. This year, they wUl con-, tian maturity and all that it im · ate situated em the cre&t of _ turned into a Sl,lleswoman in the centratf;) on religi~)Us training , '. " basement Coat· and dress d--...rt and next year they will'move to plies."
· a. rolling hill in Cumberland' . '.' .' " .. ,-..... . .. '.,... .' . , ment at Cherry and Webb Salve Regina College to comThe widespread idea of free dom of conscience in the Church today, "the need to free us from too many fetters of poSitive eaw t.hat have become like barnacles on Church structure and canon law; the need to restore to world : Catholicism ,an added sense Of per~nal responsibility~' are all - t.ied up with the idea of matur .ity,', Bishop Durjck88i~. ',He, 'quoted the,. theologian Father Bernard Haering; C.SS.R., OD this concept, saying that Father Haering puts forth the 'proposition that "the law must in reality gi ve way ~ loving co operation, with God's law of love." , • In the Church today, Bishop Durick said, we have many in terpretations ,of St. Augustine's maxim "love and do what you wJ'll." There are those who wish to experiment with liturgical forms and those who think 'of the Church as an ec!clesial de mocracy, many of whom. have "forgotten that the authority to teach and to rule is a divine charism."
mto the hfe, of, the work-a-d~y , world:. .. ,.. earmg t!be fl.avy .blue skn'i, ~h]te blo.u&e ,.and navy bl,ue Jacket WIth blue and ,white · h ked" I 1........ t',' th'
·c ~ ape S, .. ,a JB., e habIt of: tb~ Mercy ~ulant, .19 of the ,.21. f)~ed out mto th~. city of ~rov]dence eac~ _day ':from their, Summer .home.at · St. M~~th~w s C,onven~ ].n Crans · wn, wfi.ere they. paId room from their salaries," Sister Jean nette Pivin of . Bristol, ;1\. I., dl rector, of postulants;. emp~asizes. Two others remaJn~ m. the convent, ··to clean, shop for food an~ prepare 'mea~s.. "They were ~d reg~l~r ~)]nJmum wages WIth ,contTJb.uti~,ns from. the others, salanes, . says S],stez · Jeannette. The Mer~y ~'fi.r~~ is an '.~ tempt to give relIgiOUS a first hand look zt· t~e' world they have renounced, m ?rder to help them better .cope WIth the prob lems they WIll meet as professed nuns. . It also IS an at~empt to .h~lp the order cope wIth ~e r]s:mg Added Impetus cost of college ~ucations for The difficulty. in the Church po~tulants.an~ novIces. . today is drawing a fusion 00 Education ]S so ex,pens]ve to tween the "status quo" Christian day, even those from the richest and the progressive. . families have to work," Sister Semi.narians must rememQer' Jeannette says wryly. T~e postulants-now novices ttl bear patiently the burden 'of the experience was inval their charism, Bishop Durick · -feel uable. " said. He stressed that "Sincerity Sister Mary Gracellen Murray and faithfulness have to be the of St. Joseph's Parish, North mark of mature, reliable priest." Dighton, worked in the business . For some, the bishop said, department of Gladding's De '"the maturing process' will be partment Store.. that of adjusting to a parish"'; Janice Mery Brady of elerical life" which, 'as of now 85.Sister' Peter and 'PaUl Parish, Fall bas not caught, to 1he "new' River, and 'Sister Jeanine Marie whether learned or acquired in ' Santerre of our Ledy of Fatima the seminary." Ia conclusiOJJ, :Bishop Durick Parish, Swanse.'i;' both workoo at Imperial lK:i:iife Comperiy. l'eminded the Tennessee semi ""i was in ibes8les' ~ narians that "it was Christ who ehose you-not you who chose ment, _doing ~ biDing ~Dd Christ," and added: "it is this typing," says Sister Jeniee. Sis ter Jeanioo, worked to .the time . llentence that gives an added im . petus to seek to ,aequire the Study depart.ment. . ~teE Susan .:J.l/Iuie ~nsol) maturitw CIIf ObriBt's <Sel'V&nt.to
· "Y
Soviet Reds Revive Atheistic' Theme'
OJ'
BON,N ,(NC) - Pravda, orgQIll of tbe Communist party in the
Soviet Union, has broken a 10nal
' silence on the subject of athe 'ietic propaganda. . The paper, in an editorial, b:l!J
:::r:~relrgi<>~~lid::t"o~~w~r: has not been heard in the RUD sian press for some time.
'It warned the party, govern you'~" .... . organizations that they must re maJn "neutral" toward religiOB . and additionally recommended that atheistic propagami'a Qe , rected toward the formation of . bl..' b ." t od . ' pu.]C ()pmJOn y]~ r, UCJ!l8 "new traditions and customs.'" The paper said the Soviet . people should 'be "armed witAl . JDl,lterialistic ideology and edll . cated in a 'spirit' of implacabiljQ; , toward religion." '
"And I· was pretty ~"she plete their lest. three years.. of Says. . , eollege.' " Stm Other poStulants' were Will they work next Summer? employed in other Ptovidence "We don't know yet; says Sist· ···d·' tit ti . 1 d' . ..- J .... s ores an ms u pns, mc u mg """'. eimnette. "We'll have to Shepherd's, Ann: and Hope Dis deCide leter." .' , .. Count Center, the Outlet, Roger - Sister Jeannette and - other 'Williams Camp,.. Our Lady Of Mercy direc.tO:rs feel' the pro:' . F'mima Hospital and in Warwick gram of liv.ing' arid'working;with Shoppers' World. ~rs outside' the community '~,Mostpeople I met thougbt mey contribute'to' the growth1.Of tt was a good. id~" says Sister .tile Sister. . Susan" An important question' ~e Sist~r Gracellen recalls h . have to ask, she explains, is biggest problem was baving to . what means can be UBed to aid' leave. ''They' wanted to know the development of a woman of why we couldn't stay longer ' prayer.. love and 'service? She end whether we'd come back.'" feels the responsibility' 'and ini "We were not only accepted, ti~tive ..displayed by the young· but welcomed," .says Sister postulants. this Summer bode . Jeannette. "One employer' told well for' their future lives as me that· whenever you hire professed nuns. . oomeone you're taking a chance .' "Their lives;" she says, "have -but the chance lessened with 1lheir foundations in dod and the . women from this background." people of God with whom we. . Another employer told the di live' and work." ' rector of novices that "he bas 'alVl(ays had a dream of an inter The postulant habtts have dis faith chapel in. his plant. He appeared from Providence hopes having postulants there . streets and buses and stores and this Summer will convince pie plants. pIe it would be a good idea.'; However, they could very .Last year, the 21 postulants. well be back on view again next' completed the\r first year d Summer as another group "lives on a budget" to better under Vietnam Aid ,..OpS stand the problems of working _ people.
m~ht, trade unions and
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5,~50%
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TERM DEPOSIT CERTIFICATES Daily Interest Units of $1000. One Year Maturity
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Bass River Savings Bank Bank by Mail We pay the postage e SOUTH YARMOUTH
• HYANNIS • YARMOUTH SHOPP'ING PLAZA • 'DENNIS" PORT . • OSTERVILLE
CRS Activities
,SAIQ9N (NC)-One of the largest single programs of the U.S. Catholic Relief Services. (ORS) is being~ (far-ried out in VietI!am. In the fiscal year ending June 30, CRS helped over 40 million . . needr . personl) ill oro countries of Asia, Mrica and Latin Amel'
ilc~~ Vietmim', CRS Cathollc lie Jlef Services carried out its ac tivities il1 cooperation with Car itas-Vietnam, the relief agency of ~e Catholic bishops in Viet »am. It also works in close har mOny with the Vietnam Ministry of Social Welfare, Health and BelieL
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-WHITE SPA
CATERERS
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• WEDDINGS
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• 'CGMMUNION BREAKFASTS .1343) PLIEASAMT STREET
FALL RIVER
993-7780 -1111
'Pope Paul,. Greets .World 'Assembly'
THE ANCHOR-DioceSe of. faR ·River.-lhurs.,;Sept..5" 1968 I..
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Catholic Schools Resume Sessions
Of Pax Romano
( Continued from Page One '"If some form of aid is not rooms. Values can be taught forthcoming by 1975, we would PHILADELPIDA Ne) :much more worthily as part of certainly have to reassess our 1m a message to the 20th Ihistory, for example, than as position.in the Fall River DioWorld Plen<ary Assembly of lIDsembodied principles." cese," said Father O'Neill, pointbhe Intern<ational Catholic I lFrance Pagan ing, out that per pupil costs, al Movement for' InteHectual and l "'The Catholic school system," th()ugh low in compariSon with Cultural Affairs (Pax Romana), lJ'he said, "is the basis of the public school figures, are rising Pope Paul VI said: ''The duty of <Catholic faith." She cited France . yearly. He did not wish to spell belping the poor to help them os a country where there is no oufwhat a "reassessment'~ might selves obliges.in a special way :widespread Catholic schoolsys- mean, but it would certainly in. the members of your movement." ¢em, and where thousands have volve a curtailment of Cath()lic' In a message to Joaquin Ruiz oost their ancestral .faith.· school services.' ' . Gimenez, president· of ICMICA, What about the quality of. On their present slim budgets, which is holding its first world ;:Catholic teaching in the, Fall Diocesan schools ,are producing assembly in the United States River Diocese? Sister Mary 'Ur-' spe<;tacular results on the pri at St, Joseph's College here, the !bail said that it's at" about thE: . mary as well as secondary level. Pope sent his blessing to the aarrie level as thaJt ..of. publie : A "very strong", testfng:program . delegates: He said: SCltOoIS, as measured" by ,aca,. shows' that, students are well "First, as' Catholics, they (the _demic qualifications of teach~rs. above the nationai norm in every Pax" Romana members) have ""We .have about the same per.,. grad'e and als<> provides,the plus heard the words of the Gospel ~entage of condltiomillY. a:p;. " benefit of pinpointing, curricu:.;: and of the ChurCh, most recent proved teachers, that is, those IUqJ.·weakriesses~. . .... .... ~ ly in our encyclical letter, On :who have 'not yet earned"de"Five' years ,ago, for' instance','. the Development of Peoples. grees,'" we realized that our science pro ,Secondly, as intellectuals, they' In general; lay teachers in the' gram needed strengthening, 'so' are most highly qualified to ~,eatholic school system earn sal,:,," we provided inservice science' .. conceive,' consider, judge and aries comparable, to public scltool courses for all elementary teach propose the most fitting and ef ~eachers, and fringe benefits ern of the subject. Now the sci feCtive means of 'solving this ' , ,I . . cruch as hospitalization and pen:' ence gra~e level' has been con w()rld problem." . lSions are' in mOst 'cases:'simillir. siderably improved," said Sis MOST TRt\:1VElLlED"l?OPlE: p'opePa:.~l VI rel~~es. wiW,," "TO"o~ercOme 'world' pOverty iFather O'Neill' has 'stressed good !', ter Mary UI:ban.. a book, onhi~tPJ{L'lle retuming to Rome "from Bogota,. Co.., ' in' all'" its" aspec'ts, the integral iiml~cial maliagen1~hi of sl::hools ': Individual lFocQllS J:ombia, where ~ set the tone of the· Church's'awstol~te development of "man' and 'society ill?d'. in 't!le case: of' the :r;>iOe,e~~an .' A new' educational t~nd, &aid for' the future of Latin America. -The Pontiff ha,g, now com.., is required. Modem teChnology, ~.l~h schools" he c;an pol<nt .~th. t'he supervisor, is emphasis on if'wisely used, bas 'given man pnde at a centra1i~ srsten;t o~ .' the child as an individual, rather ple.ted. air joutnhs to.the Holy Land; to Bombay-,'India; , the means'·of 'removing serioUs budgeting and acou~tin~ that than as a .member of a class. bo 'the United Nttions headqu<arters,in New Y?rk; 'to.Il[lta~, wailt, while' modern communi has the schOOlls operatmg'In the This concept will be developed bul and Ephesus in Turkey, and oow to Latin 4merica, catiQIlS have", made hiM fully black. " . in Di<>cesan schools b.y increased making him' thel most firaveled Pope in hist-ory. NC Photo•. aware of the wide' economic dif "We get requests tor our' ll4>- eommunication.betwee~- teachers ferences ~tween nations, an«' , I .. 1 '. ' between various' sec1lors' within lIounting system' from' all ever' and parents. "We'll tiy meet CINI.e aDd the same country." ae country,'" said Sister Mary with parents problems come 1lJl'ban with pride. it was· tailor up, rather than waiting for 're 'I ,. . LoVe for Poor made for the Diocese by Father port card night,'" said Sister' Referring to his trip to LattR O'Neill, but it is proving its Mary Urban. • I America,',wbere, he said, the worth in many other oommuniThis, she continued, is a praeproblems of poverty "are of spe ties. tical interpretation of 'how a cial urgency and of particular His message was brought by -CINCINNATI (N:C) -.. Arch "Our per pupil cost w from teacher can bring Christ to her sound and color film to a 1ieach- concern. to .. the Church," the bishop Karl J. Alter ,told teach $1.00 to $125 in the elementary classroom' community. . ers' institute here and w.as re- Pope ~ncouraged Pax Romana c.chools, and $250 in the sac6rldAnother innovation she noted ers in !the Cincinrtati, prchdioc members "to contribute, with all esan school systerh "we shall peated at a similar' institute in possible zeal and erithusiasm, ar.y schools," said Sister Mary Is that of non-graded or mul,ti , I Urban. This contrasts wiN!. pub-, level classes, in which children continue ,to operat~ our schoo)s Dayton. Some 2,000 teachers at- to a practical and earnest discus lic school costs of from $400 advance at their own. speedS. to the extent that our resources tended the special institutes for sion of this problem, and to a permbt and' to the e:ktent that the elementary and high ·school rapid, and at the same time $900 per pupil, with the differ- At present these classes are pri ence largely accounted for by marily in reading,·· but it is . Catholic community is willing teachers in schools of the arch- prudent, execution of the reso diocese. . lutions reached." iIleacher salaries.' ho'ped they will extend in the fu- to support our efforts." At the same tun'e he praised' Archbishop Alter pointed o~t "Our. Lord Himself showed Such figures" says Father CY- ture to the entire ~urricll1um.. Neill and' Sister Mary' Url>an, The curriculum iJt§elf is,· con- the teachers and the schools, de- ' that "there has been' oonsider-' special love for the poor," the Po~ declared,"apd claim~ lSlioultl prompt consideration by stantly updated with .the .aid . elaring: "There is rio alterna'tive . able discusSion froIl\, time . alate and fede.ralgovernments as of . committees in. each subject program Q/. educati6n w-hich"can' time, in the ranks of educators that the .preaching of the Gos .:to Whether -it is:. better 'to :~ve area, ~hich met frequently ,to offer comparable aij,vantages in· and,in,the,p~licPfel!S, whether pel 'to them was a proof of His, the Catholic schoot..is still,. the '" fulfillment ()~ ancient prophecies, 'oopport to efficiently re- evaluate courses and make rec- creatin'g a Christik persohal iligious ,schools or_, tQ, counten;'; . ommend.ations 'for changes. The ity or 'one' whic~ adequately' answer to· Ute'needs.of tbe cath- ~d ~f hi!! identity as.the prom lSed :ReQ~~er. '~e .taught that. ill!ice ~heir e.ventual· closing and ,principle of de~rtmenta'lizalj;ion prepares the ~tuderit to face the oli~ community... · . ,. '". .. intellectual and motal problems Peak'oflEil:eelleIllCle .. ...., He will Judge each.human soul' the consequent influx of their : bas been' largely' applied in ,ele society.'" ," "W'ask' '. . '". ' .. " according to the loVing" aSsist", pupils ,into· the'·.jniblic "school : mentary . schoools, ,:noted Sister ofobr contemporarY I '" e.,: ~se,m >~9se:,,~194~. , anCf;l'g-iverC'tO,' or" withhheid ~stem. Mary Urban, permitting teachers,: , ", _,·:i.,"'·' .' 110 'concentrateon their -strong.. ' th~re. ~ ~~, ~bt .. con~.rm~~ :- froDi, tll'idlungry;' thirsty' fiaked,:' Drop"" thu,; ~~e, .. h~, ,~d", "tQ,.r::on"su,lt ,. sick' andimpriSOne<t.., , ' . ' ' . : est subject area and prepare'" the parents of.llChool chl1dre,o,., .' . '.: . ' . ' , themselves' mor.efullY :for' ·their CCB'Ilti'lI'cm who in unm.jsta~able· terms . classes. . RALEIGH (NC)--tNorth ;Car~ mak~ kpownto theii',pastors ,and, 'W~~en In .secondary schools' expel'l-" ~ISLE (NC)'...:.. St. 'pi-ocopius ments are under': w-ay in team·, lina has been ordered by the' to school officials. that our . must ,cOntinue 'in ," ex,,:, College, here .in Illinois will .. teaching" large 'group and indi.;. U.S..Department of!Health, Ed.- . schools is~nce. .... . . , ' . . . . , ',' admit women as' regular day" . vidual instruction, advanced' ucabon and· Welfare to drop its" requirement thatw~lfare reciplThe archbishop noted that, students· for its fall term. The' placement, and flexible 'schedul:' ",there is corrobol'ating evidence' previously all male institution" ing. 'Several sChools" have gone' · ents . take birth control instruc so far .as to computerize their ,tion. The state's Departmentot . fro~ .01'her: sources, such as the. has been ,operated by the Bene- ' r e c e III t . authentic,·. research dictines for 81 ~ars.· 'scheduling' and preparation Of Public Welfare -since·' last- May' studies. . ...., bas reqiured the: irultruction for· report cards and Sister St. Mi all women receiving aid ·to :de-" "-:" "W~ respect and enc~urage
chael, vice:'principal of, ~i.shop other substitlitep,rograms; such
/Stang, ,High School in North ,pendent childr~n.· i Bernard McCusty' of Cl:J,arlot-' as 'release:d ~e' or CCD
. Dal'tmouth, bas herself· done the .. iNSl!RANCE AGENCY, INC. programming for her school's ,tesville; Va., HEW's Iregional di:.' ciasses. · rector, told rn>"i. Dati K. Moore . computer ope'rations. . "It is strllnge that ·the value • 96 WIl.UAM STREET and st"ate welfare 6fficials "the of Catholic~hoolsystemSshould Unwillingly to SchooR practice violates f~eral .laws. , be' questioned at· the very' time .' NEW BEDFORD, MASS. With an updated, 'vital educa · These laws provJde! that birth , tional system awaiting .him, does control instruction may be made when they have reached a peak' . 998-5153 997-9167 of excellence and measure to' the Diocesan schoolboy still ,available, but that ho one 'can IPERSONALSERVICE - the best 'standards of education8I "creep like snail, unwillingly to be ,required to take it. ' achievemen,t," he declared. school"?
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Cincinnati Prelate Cites' Advantages , "Of Catholic Education ' ,
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"I'm afraid he does," chuckled Father O'Neill, sympathetically, commenting that on the Sunday before school started he'd driven , by 'an area beach' and spied BISHOP OF ROCKFORD: several Diocesan students, "hap and tanned in their bermudas Msgr. Arthur J. O'Neill, pas. py and batbing suits. I thought bow tor of the Ohurch' 6r St. Sad that Summer must .eDd." Peter, Rockford, Ill., and ed Maybe it's. bis appreciation of itor of the dioceSan' news.. youthful inclinations that ha.1 paper, The Observer, has enabled Father O'Neill to .pursue been named Bishop Rock ~uccessfully and realistically biB twin goals of .academic and spir ford by Pope Paul' VI•. NC , itual e-xcellence f()r the Diocesam Photo. achool system.
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300 Diocesan Delegates Attend Religious Education Congress Approximately 300 priests, religious and laity from Fall River Diocese were among the more than six thousand
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 5, 1968
15
Erilterr C@U'[}u'(~~([a.
played throughout the campus of the University of Bridgeport, site of the 1968 Congress. Sebas tian Temple, singer and lectu rer, performed a song written especially by him for the Con gress and bearing the title of the theme of the meeting, "The, World in Our Hands."
DGIJ rl'B tru~J M@ ~~
ST. LOUIS (NC)-A group of persons who attended the 22nd demonstrators, led by a .Chris New England Congress of Relitian Brother active in the peace gious Education held recently in movement, entered the St. Louis Bridgeport. Cathedral during Sunday Mass Led by the Most' Rev. James and appealed for support for the HandicaPJlIoo L. Connolly, the diocesan dele principle of selective conscien gates were part of a program The Congress of Religious Ed tious objection. featuring theologians such as ucation included a special Congress-within-a-Congress "to Gregory Baum, Anthony Pado A demonstration in front of vano, Richard McBrien and, cover the 'apostolate to the han the cathedral had initially been Richard Cardinal Brother Luke Salm, along with 'dicapped. planned as Ii supportive measure a large number of, outstanding Cushing delivered the opening for Brother David Darst, a catechetical and communications address to special education del Christian Brother in St. Louis specialists. egates who attended seminars who had J;>een cliarged here with ' Among the specialized semi dealing with the problems of the refusing to report for induction. nars' were those offered" on retarded and the hearing-im Last week, charges against Group Dynamics, Film, Music paired. ' Brother Darst were dismissed at and Sensitivity Training. Inno the request of the U. S. attor Rev. Cornelius Van derPoel, vative Liturgical art was dis- CSSp., a theologian currently ney's office. ~a<!hing in Norwalk was the Brother Darst led a group of NEW CLASS AT NURSING SCHOOL: Mary Good principal speaker at one of the special evening meetings of the fellow; student nurse at St. Anne's School of Nursing, Fall J7 of the marchers into the church after the Gospel had Fall River delegation. The eve River, welcomes three members of the new class of student been read by Father Robert ning discussion sessions of the nurses. Ann Lupica, Immaculate Conception, No. Easton; Corbett, associate pastor of the Fall River group drew large The Education Department of Elaine Golimberti, Mt. Carmel, Seekonk; Jane G'Otham, St. cathedral. crowds: Among them were dele Slionehill College announces the Joseph, Taunton. . gates from several other dio The .demonstrators remained establishment of the Campus ceses, including a number from in the sanctuary during the School. Unique oppwtunity is Baltimore. . reading of a pas,toral letter by offered to advanced students on Fall River delegates to the Re ~rchbishop John J. Carberry, one hand or to those with un In support of Pope Paul's ency usual educational problems or ligious Education conference clical on birth control, and dur remedial needs on the other were easily identified by dis ing the homily. hand, at both elementary al)d tinctive buttons labeled with the high schooi levels in this area, inscription "I am Loved". The At one point, Brother Darst to <""take ,specially designeq. buttons, which were supplied went to the microphone used by throu'gh the courtesy of the courses on an individualized PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Sup Among reforms approved, the lector and spoke' briefly basis in classes limited to seven Wells Manufacturing Company about the need for peace in' Viet port for black and .Indian-owned were the option to wear' a con of Attleboro,. were an immeQi students. The Campus School is nam and for selective conscien temporary religious habit or to. businesses, the employment of ate hit with, the diocesan dele offering 30 courses for the Fall tious objection. The demonstra gates and served to enhance the black persons and Indians, and retain the traditional habit, op Semester. tional use of a Sister's baptismal tors left when Father Corbett Each course will be conducted feeling of community which community boycotts of all busi ness establishments whioh do name, the use of the title returned to thE; altar for the rest by a teaChing team of senior· pervaded the Congress. . "Mother'" only for the general of the Mass. not offer equal employment op o students of Stonehill's Education The New England Congress of sl:lperior, annual home >visits, ' portunity were among the reso Program under the supervision Religious Education is an annual Brother Darst is one of the of college faculty members. The event sponsored by the CCD lutions adopted by a special and wide experimentation in nine anti-war demonstrators convents regarding facing trial in federal court in courses are carefullY structured organizations of the eleven New general chapter of the Sisters,of local community policy. the Blessed Sacrament here. both to supplement and aid reg Baltimore on charges of storm England dioceses and hosted The 39-member chapter of the ,Spiritual Life ular school work. Special atten ing a Selective Service office in each year by one of them. In a community, which was founded tion will be given to students' meeting held during the Con In regard to spiritual forma Catonsville, Md., and burning educational needs. \ , gress, the New" England CCD by the late' Mother Katharine tion, the chapter reaffirmed the some 600 draft files. Drexel to work with American responsibility of each Sister to In the case of advanced stu- ' Directors] disclosed 'that the Negroes and Indians, also de deepen her spiritual life and de dents one of the major aims of' campus of the University of Ver cided in its month-long meeting, the Campus School will be to mont had been selected ,as the to establish a formation team creed continued full participa tion in the liturgy and the con site of next year's meeting. challenge their interests by en for Religious in the congregation tinuation of scriptural and theo In a statement issued by the 'a·bling them Iio explore new and to decentralize the exercise logical studies for Sisters. fields in topic areas such as- Ad1ll1t Religio1lls Education of authority within the commu In preparation' for the' fi¢ The . Roaring Twenties, The nity. session of the general chapter, Modem American Novel, 'Director, attention was called Four area coordinators have to the fact that, despite much the 550 members of the commu French, Creative Writing, Ele been named to assist ,the -com nity-assigned to 52 convents in mentary Art arid' Psychology. talk to the contrary, little or no munity's general superior, Moth WYman serious effort had been made in 47 states--participated in study Remedial woJ.'k will also be con 3-6592 er Mary David Young, in the the area of adult religious edu-:. sessions which began in 1966. ducted as needed. IOvernment of the congregation. Alumni of schools conducted by o CHARLES F. VARGAS The Umited enrollment In cation. The CCD Directors the Sisters of the Blessed Sacra each class coupled with the called for an objeCtive national ment were also polled for their 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE 1eaching team concept of two study of religious educatioh with views. teachers per clw;s will permit Il view towards redistribution of NEW BEDFORD, MASS. At the chapter session, dele
much individual attention to be available resources iii :favor' Of gates heard-in addition to con-
~ more balanced effort with VATICAN CITY (NC)-:-Act IPven to each student. spect to children and adults. 'lngon a mandate of the Second' . ferences in theOlogy and canon Course of TeD Weeks They cited the increasing need Vati~an Council, the Holy See law-talks by black and Indian The Campus School will meet lor' professional religious educa leaders on the "emerging image !or 10 weeks on one weekday tors at all levels along witii oos created a special rite for the of the Afro-American" and on baptism of lnfants. ' evening for secondary courses stepped-up training of special the "changing patterns of life and on one weekday late after ists capable of utilizing, the ' : The new. ceremony, as pub-· affecting Indians both on and Ji~ by the Consilium for the noon or Saturday morning for mass-media off reservations." communicatioll6 :Jmplementation of the Council's
elementary classes. The admin tools, becoming available. Liturgy Constitution, consists of
istration of the Campus School four principal parts: a welcome
is currently accepting applica to the child by the Christian
tions and in view of tHe strictly community, a celebration of the limited size of the classes inter word of God, conferral of the ONE STOP ested prospective students or sacrament itself, and a proces SHOPPING CENTER their parents are advised to en NEW YORK (NC)-The Cath olic Daughters of Amer.ica have sion with a final blessing. roll promptly. There is no tui • Television .• Grocery The rite is designedly elastic,.,.. tion for the courses. marked their 65th anniversary .. Appliances • Furniture allowing discretionary powers A $10 fee only will be charged by launching a seven-fold pro to the local hierarchy and mak lor registration and materials. gram of involvement during a 104 Allen St., New Bedford
For further information, list of 14-station telephone conference ing room for local customs.
997·9354 courses,' and enrollment, call call that linked newly elected No. 67 of Vatican II's liturgy
Stonehill College, Phone 238 officers and directors ~rom all constitution called for a revision
2052-Extension 163, Education over the country. of the rite for the baptism of in DepaI1.qlent, and ask for Miss The program to be implement fants. It made the fact that those Worth of the campus School. ed over the next two years was receiving tne sacrament are in designed to involve as many of fants the guiding principle of ·the organization's 200;000 mem- such a revision. bers as possible. a BOGOTA (NC) - A'.Denver T~e seven areas are personal born Jesuit was the only U. S. Involvement, civic involvement, AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATTLEB'bRO
.epresentative amOng ~. 150 ecumenical involvement, educa DETROIT :(NC) - Sister M. eemfnarians receiving )loly 01' tional involvement, charitable Emeline. O.P., has been appoint 4Y.1% on all Savings Accounts
ders here &-om Pope Paul VI involvement, social involvement ed 'assistant superintendent of during the International Eucha", and involvement wUh youth. schools ,:lor the Detroit archdio Jtstic Congress. Father Raymond The program was adopted last cese, with'responsibilities affect .4% % on Time Certificates
A. Pease, S.J.. Is the son of Mr. month during' the Catholie ing more than 140,000 pupils in Attleboro ~ New Bedford
end Mm. George A. Pease of St. ~u~ters' ~~D~ ~n~ntioo m 0 r e than 260 elementary I'h»omena's parish, Denv"• Cleveland. llIchools.
Stonehill Lists Unique Courses
Adopt Resol utions
Blessed Sacrament Sisters Support Black, Indian Businesses
SAVE MONEY ON
YOUR OILHEAT! .,
re
«de
Creates' New Rite For Infant Baptism
CORREIA & SONS
Catholic Daughters Mark 65th Jubilee
fetfllkk .".,,11
~~~
HEATING 'OIL
First .Federal Savings
Jesuit Ordained'
Nun Administrator
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept. S, 1968 .~
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CLIP AND. SAVE
WHEN IN DOUBT
fOR GUIDANCE
CONSULT LIST
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$ECTION D
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.)\OIALlV UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR
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GENERAL PATRONAGE
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Africa-Texas Style' Arizona Bushwacker Around the' World Hi SO Days Attack on the Iron Coast Ballad of Josie Bible, The Big Mouth Brighty of the GraM CanyOft Buckskin _ Charlie. The Looesome Cougar .~ C1antbake Daring Game
Finian's Rainbow Did Y~u Hear: the One About Flaming Frontier, The the Traveling Saleslady Further Perils of Laurel Frozen Dead: & Hardy, The Charlie, the Lonesome The Gnome-Mobile Cougar Half a Sixpence Countdown I .. 40 Guns to Apache Pass Doctor Dolittle · Gentle Giant, The Double Man, ~he Goal!. . . Double TroUble Heidi Endless Summer, TIte High, Wild and Free' .Enter Laughing King Kong Escapes Fantastic Voy~ge Last Safari Fastest Guitar Alive Man Called FIiMtOAll Finder's . Keepers ,
They Came From Beyond
Midsummer Night's Dre8lli Mrs. '>Brown, You've Got II Lovely Daughtet Never. A Dull Moment Palaces of a Queen Ryssians Are Coming, 1M .Russians' Are Coming Seventh Continent Shakiest Gun in West Sound of Music, The' Sullivan's' Empire Tammy and the MilliOllM Tarzan and Great River Tarzan and the Jun&le lor
Thoroughly Modern Millie Three Guns For Texas The One and Only Genu. Original Family Band Track of Thunder Two of Us, The Wacky World of Mother Goose ~ War and Peace ' Where Angels Go • • 0 Trouble Follows , Young Americllft5 Wttd Season
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SIECTION 21
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MORAllY UNOBJECTIONABLE POR
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African QueeR Battle Beneath the Earttl Ba!t1e of Algien; Big City Blackbeard's Gtlost Camelot Chubasco Come Spy With Me Counterpoint Custer. of the West Day of the Evil Gun, The Death of TarZ31i1 Devil's Bride Don't Look Bad!
Don't Raise :the Bridge, "Heart Is. Lonely HuRter c Lower the River Hellbenders, The Eight On The Lam Hostile GUM ' Far from the Madding Crowd <..... Hot Millions . Fathom . How I· Won the War Fever Heat I How to Succeed in Business Firecreek . Without, Really Trying Five Million Years to Earll! In Like Flint The F1im-Flam Man Jack O'Diamonds Gone With The Wi'nd Jokers, The (Br.l Great Sioux Massacre The La Vie de Chateau IFrJ Guess Who's ~oming to Lonl; Duel Dinner ,i Man Who Finally Died, ThI1l Guns for San iSebastiaa Operation Kid Brother
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Treasure !If San· Gennn, Gedipus, Tile King Private Navy of • The Up the Down' Staircase Sgt. O'FarreH Up the MacGregors Robbery Vengeance of Fu Manchu SCalphunters, The Sea Pirate . Vengeance of She, The Wait Until Dark .~cret War of Harry Fria , War Wagon, The Se,rgeant Ry~er Speedway' Warning Shot Way West, The Torture Garden Whisperers, The To Sir, With love Who's Minding The Mint!' , Thirty Is a' Dangerous ~ With Six You Get Egg Roll Cynthia · Young Girls of Rochfort ,
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Accident 18rJ , ~litUIIIIIIIIIIIUJIIIUI\IIllIllIllUltllltlll!ltl4lll11l1tlllllllllllllllllll",n Anzio = '. e Assignment K . Assignment To Kifl ~ o . Barefoot in' the PlIfk ~ Berserk 8o-Bo, The § lJye, BYe Bravermllft 0:: SECTION 31 , Caprice 0:: e Casino Royale MORAli.V UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR Climax; The Comedians ADUllS Counterfeit Ktlier Charly.' ~ /§ Charlie' Bubbles 'Crazy Quiit, T~ 5 Dandy in Aspic aallllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllll\lllllltltllllllllllllllllllJllI1II Danger Route' 'Day Fish' Came Out
'CLASS A
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Decline and.F~lI How Sweet It Is House of Cards ". Desperate Ones Interlude Divorce American Style Doctor Faustus Inspector Cfouse211 Isabel.' Elvira Madigan" I<ilt A' DragOft Eye of the' De~i1 Le Depart ' Exterminating ~ngel Live for Life Fearless Vampire Killers Lost' Continent· Five Card Stud Love-ins . Flea In Her E2r Madigan For love of Ivy Games Minute To Pray, SecO!1d To Die Girl General , More Than A Miracle Grand Prix Grand Slam · Nazarin Hang 'Em High No Way to Treat a l.adu Hills Run Red ~ 'Our Mother's House How to Save a Marriaga ..... The Party Pawnbroker, The and Ruin Yo~r Lif~
I'e.tulia Planet of the Apes 'Power . . President's Analyst Pretty Poison .Psych-Out Quilter Memorandum, The Rachel, Rachel .. Rosie Rough Night in Jericllo Sand Pebbles, The Sebastian Swashing Time Snock Troops Sol Madrid Spoiled Rotten" Stay Away, Joe Tale of the Coctr Targets
.Cool Hand Luke; Darling 1 Dirty D6'zen, The The Family Way' lBfJ Georgy' Girl (BrJ: . Graduate, The I
l'JIarat/Sade Persona ISwed.l Privilege . . Red Desert Stranger, The • Ulysses
, Tender SCoundrel That Man George Thief of Paris This Special Friendship Tiger and Pussycat Tiger Makes' Out Time for Killing, A Tony Rome 1rygoil Factor, The Two For The Road Upper Hand, The Violent Four We' Still Kill the Old Waf Where Were You, When tlte Lights Went Out? Wild In Street.s . · Work Is A Four Letter Wcmt · Young Runaways Young Torless
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Alfie Bedazzled Birds, Bees and Italians Bonnie. and Clyde China Ie Near Closely Yfatclied Trains
Hawks llIldttte Sparr. Helga . Inadmissable EvideOO!l . L-ong Day's. ,Dying Luv . Maiden for P,inco
Uninhibited, The Up the Junction Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? You're A Big Boy Now
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Africa Addio lltlll) Ambushers, The . Anniversary, The Banning Bell de Jour Big Enough, Old Enough Biggest Bundle of Them All, Blue Max, T~e . Boom .Born losers Bullet 'for General Champagne Murders Cop-Out
Impasse Corrupt O~, iV!03 Dark of Sun I<iss Other Sheik Deadlier Than The lVlcla Kona Coast Deadfall Last Challenge, llIe Don't Just Stand Thsro Last Shot You Hear Dori't Make Waves Legend of Lylah CIaQ Duffy ! Maroc·] . Fistful of Dollars Lovely Way 'To Dei For Singles Onl~ Matter of Innocence, ~ Gunn : Mini-Skirt Mob Guide For The Married ~& ' Murder Czech Stykl . Hired Killer, The: Pistol for Ringo Ut~ IPJ.I Hammethead
1
L-oint 81anlt Poor Cow Producers Pruderice 'and PliIl Queens Ride to Hangman's Tree, . . Rose for Everyone" Ii Run, Hero, Run .. ;. Shuttered Room Sorcerers Stranger III TaWIl, /li, Sweet November _ Sweet Ride, TMi
Tan Women . Thunder Alley Two Wee~s in Septem,* Valley of Dolls Viking Queen, The Villa Rides ..
Viscount, The
Way • _ • Way Out!
Wicked Dreams of Paulo SChultz . Wild Racers Wild Eye Young, Evil and Savaje'
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Game Is Over (f,!~ Here We. Go RoolWI (1iJ) Mulberry Bush i High Infidelity (It~ Hurry SUndown Hell's Angels 00 IWIl3eC:J Hugs and Kissesl Jig Saw i La Fuga lItalJ l La Guerre Est Finle ~ 'La Mandragora u~clJ
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Il.-e 80nheur lFr~ ....·Love aiid Marriage m~ love In -4 Dimensions O~ Loves ofd! Blonde' (Czech! Loving Couples ISwedistd Man with BallooM Married Woman, The ~ Masculine·Feminine ~ Mondo Pazzo (ltal.)· My Sister, My Love .~ ~jght Game§ (Swecij
lFenthousa lPlaygirl AfterDalt t9Kll lPIease, 'Not Now! ~ . Il'ort of Desire ~ Bouille ll~ ~~ . !leach Red' lteflections ~. ~ ~ RepulsiOll ~evolutiCIQ ' Rosemary's '~ $av~
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Strange Affair Sweet and- Sour IFrJ Swedish Wedding Night Tales of Paris (fr.l' Temptation IFr..ltalJ 10:30 P.M. Summer IOte Trip Therese ami tsabell3 r rans-Europe-Express What's Up Tiger Lily' ~bjte Voices UtelJ
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Vote to Finance, Four Projects En De~roet
Bishop to Adress Canon Law Society
BOSTON '(NC) ~ Bishop Jo seph L. Bernardin, general sec-' retary of the National Confer ence of Catholic Bishops and the United States Catholic Con fl'cnce, will give the opening address at the 30th annual meet ing of the Canon Law Society of America. The meeting, startinc next Tuesday will draw some 450 of the society's 800 members. They will hear discussions and hold seminars on the changing status of women, Western Church law and Eastern Christianity, prob .lems of authority and the parish and other subjects.
17
Po r~shes Merge
In
DETROIT (NC) - An archdiocesan com m it tee overseeing the spending of a million dollars to combat ur ban problems has given approval to four projects-the first to be financed from the $1 million collection asked in May by Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit to help meet "the crisis in our cities." The committee approved: A $74,000 loan as ··'seed money" 10 test the feasibility of having housing prefabricated by the hard-core unemployed'for erec tion in the inner city. A $101,000 graht ,to' start an' educational center which ··will pioneer a method to .aid children culturally handicapped by their early environment. A $5,000 grant to continue a volimteer . program aiding the poor of Pontiac. A $30,000 grant to, help fi nance interfaith suburban action centers seeking to undermine the basis on which racial pr~ju dice is built. . Learn Job Skills The housing loan would h~lp establish a non-profit, ~mmll Jlity-owned manufacturing firm, employing workers from "the underdeveloped sector" who will ~ learn job skills under, various existing training programs, both government and private. Six lots on which to erect the first units bave been reserved and an in ventory of suitable mamifactur lng plants has been made. Shop fabricated one-story units-eonstructcd to be stacked into two-story units -.will be made of wood and steel mem bers, with plumbing, heating and electrical equipment meeting code standal'ds, Various makers of prefabricated housing have been ~ntacted- to ~ooperate in manufacturing operations. Handicapped Children The pilot project is expected to. produce 15 two-bedroom units stllling at from $9,500 to $9,800, plus $2,500 a unit· for land. It is estimated that the plant planned could produce 100 housing units a month, giving work to approximately 250 persons. Mortgages would be obtained,' permitting retUl'n of the arch diocese's loan so the money could be used in similar projects in other cities within the eigh! county archdiocese or be used for other p'rojects now under study. The project to help children handicapped by early environ ment is the crelltion of the staff of Father John A. George, as sistant superintendent of arch diocesan schools for special edu eation. The heart of it comes in searching out the individual motivations and interests of each child and develop training re lated to them, rather than con centrating on progl'ams de,signed to help children generally.
ANCHOR
Thurs.,. Sept. 5, 1968
REWARD JLEADERS WITH CAPITAL VISIT: Youngsters who 'have helped other youngsters enjo;5T a hearty breakfast before beginning a big day in Washington. Sister Catherine Tobin, C.S.C., executive vice preSIdent of Dunbartom College, offers piping hot pancakes to Jesus Ramirez, right, as Luis Castaneda anticipates hi!'. Jesus and Luis, with 18 other boys and girls, are enjoying a week's visit to the Nation's Capital, spon soretl by the Inter~agency Committee on Mexican American Affairs. None of the group had ever before been away from their hometown, El Paso, Tex., where they have dem onstra.ted leadership, among their peers. NC Photo.
Scores Prejudjced Views About Negroes . . Priest Quits Inner-City Job, Charges Bias'
PATERSON (NC)-More than 200 demonstrators marched in front of the Cathedrai of St. John the Baptist here in a dis play Of support for a priest who, resigned his innercity assign- . ment and took a leave of ab sence from. his priestly duties. Father Louis J. Simonet, 31, asked only that the leave be granted for personal reasons. His friends reported he was increas ingly discoul'aged because many 'white persons in general, and white clergymen in particular, were unwilling to change their prejudiced views about Negroes.. Friel'lds also said he felt his pro grams were not backed suffici ently by the diocese. Bishop Lawrence B. Casey of Paterson expressed regret that Father Simonet had applied for the leave. 'Detlieated Worker' ::No one has more admiration than I do for the work Father Simonet has been doing in Pat erson's Negro oommunity," the
Catholic Systrems
Join State Study
COLUMBUS (NC)-Four of Ohio's Catholic school systems are participating in a statewide research program to increase ef fectiveness of educational man • age~ent in both nonpublic and public school systems. ·The non public systems-in cluding those of the archdiocese of Cincinnati, and· of the dio ceses of Cleveland, Columbus and Steubenville-have joined with 62 public school systems in support o! the research. The sponsoring school systems have invested OVf!r $5QO,000 in the three-year program being conducted by the Ohio School Boards Association (OSBA), the Columbus Laboratories of Bat telle Memorial Institute, and the School Management Institute (SMI).
bishop said. "He took on a job that was loaded with hardships and has made a go of it under the most adverse conditions. I know of no more dedicated worker and hope that he'll be back working with us before long." The show of support organized by the diocesan Catholic Inter racial Council and other groups included a march in front of the cathedral and a brief prayer ~er vice inside.' Several priests took part including'Msgr. Fra'nk J. Rodimer, diocesan chancellor. For the past' two years Father Simonet has been director of the Catholic Community Center, a store-front operation 'located in one of Paterson's ghetto areas. Living in the same building, the .
Laity on Seminary Board of Trustees
DOUGLASTON (NC) - For the first time, six laymen are among 13 new appointments to the board of trustees of Cathe d,-al College of the Immaculate Conception here in New York. Cathedral is a four-year resi dent liberal arts college founded in 1967 by Archbishop Bryan J. McEntegart, retired' bishop of Brooklyn, for future priests of the diocese, Its facilities were recently made available to semi narians of the New York arch diocese and the Rockville Center - diocese.
As such, it is now the only
institution in the New York
metropolitan area which pro
vides the specialized college por tion of the program in prepara tion for the' Ilriesthood, The pew appointments to the board include members of both' the Brooklyn and Rockville Centre dioceses. As future open ings occur in the board, it is anticipated there also will be representatives of tbe New York archdiocese.
priest has organiZed classes for neighborhood youngsters, led civil rights marches and rent stl-ikes against slum landlords and has served as ·the Church's chief spokesman in the civil J'ights field. Alienated Supporters He achieved his most spectac ular success with "Opel-ation Vacation," a program in which ghetto childl'en were given two week stays in white subul'ban homes. Some 400 children par tiCipated in the program in 1967, its fi.·st year of operation. This year the number tripled to al most 1,200. A frequent speaker before parish groups in st!burban areas, he often was cJiit:icized for the harsh and uncompromising tone he took when' discussing the nleial issue. Critics said his charges of "white' racism" alien ated potential supporters. He was asked ahout that point in an interview sometime ago. 'They're going to hear it straight from me," he I'eplied, "01' not at all. These people have to know what it's like. You go out to these things and you hear comments like 'I think the col ored people are fine but I don't know if I'd 'want them next door.' Well this just turns my stomach." ./
Nefrh~[{~@D1ds
ROTTERDAM (NC)-A grqui>' of 1,000 Roman Catholics ancll 100 Old Catholics in Rotterdam'o inner city now have a singlca parish church. The merging of the Catholie St. Joseph's and the Old Catho. lic Paradise churches marks af!l<o other step forward in the rap prochment between the schis matic ' Old Catholics of the Netherlands and the Roman. Catholic Church. . ' The merger of the two pall'- . ishes was dictated by the exo 'dus of residents' from Rottell' dam's inner city, which has de populated the parishes and made two churches unnecessary•. The selection of the Old' Catholie' building for the amalgamatet!! religious' community was made because St. Joseph's has been m need of extensive and costly He pail'S and was due to be sold. The agreement between Bisb op'Martin Jansen of Rotterdam and Old Catholic· ArchbishOf) Andreas Rinkel of Utrecht ~ form' the single parish chureb' here is in line with a joint pas toral of' November, 1966, by BemaI'd Cardinal Alfrink 4l!l Uh'echt and ArchbishOll Rinkel in which the tw€> churches in the Netherlands ac knowledged each other's sacra 'mental life and outlined guid.... Jines lor eventual reunion.
Nuns Help Hospitom To Rem.ain Open XODARMA (NC) Sisle..
'mm 'ive congregations, volun
teered their services to stave oJ!
1\ threatened closure of a Iw&pi
tal here in llndia sponsored by
t.he American-founded Medim
Mission Sisters.
The Sisters came forward til
sen'e at the Holy Family hospi
tal which was about to be closeiJ
as a result of the loss of 11 key
stMf member in the death ~
Amel'ican-born Sister Constan~
Zimmerman, the illness of SiB
tel' Leonie Tummers, also Amer
ican, and the urgent need •
prepal'e Indian Sisters for higb
er studies.
Refusing to give up, Fathet' Edmund O'Connor, local Jesuit superior, issued a national ap peal lor personnel, and withiEl two weeks eight Sisters from Ii ve congregations were workinll at the hospital. Meanwhile, it "Was announeetll that the hospital will be handed over in November to the Fran. ciscan Clarist Sisters Gi tbe Syro-Malabar rite.
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18, ..
Left Stl'C;)ng Impress~ On Participants in Cong·ress
THE A~CHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept. 5, 1968
Pop~
Reviewer Comm,ents Briefly Itt'8 00 k5 ,O n '-.:1I~une n .eres Ing
BOGOTA (NC)-While the Pope Paul left an unforget 39th . International Euchristic table impression upon millions -Congress placed the emphasis on as be traveled more than 200 soCial justice and the need for miles during his visit here, de change, Pope Paul VI,reminded posited a veritable treasure of By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy the participants that true devel- updated rteacbingll-amazingly , Not exactly lazy, easy summertime reading is Christ 'opment can come only from a,' realistic-for leaders and people renewal of the spirit and a to apply in the next decades.
in the C ommunist Prisons by Richard Wurm,brand and Gospel-like brotherhood of man. Preached Love, Peace
Charles Foley (Coward-McCann,' 200 Madison Ave., New Pope Paul also dramatically The Pope extended his re Yotk, N.Y. 10016. $5.) It is an unsparing account of o~e drew attention to the poor, plac marks to embrace the whole man's long ordeal by, b r a i n - · ' ing protocol and dignitaries, in world. . . washing and torture, and his ,artistic expression; if he had the background of his three-day In his appeal to return to the "'urvival through the suste- any ~eni~s at all it was !or, ~he visit here. way of the Gospel, he again ... . ' - explOitahon of technological m In exchange, the common man stated his hatred of war and so nance of faIth. W~ may for-. novation." Mr.. Schickel's book lavished his love and hope on cial strife,' and preached love, get what has gone on! what on Disney is certainly not au him. ,peace, and' justice among men, , still goes on, behind the Iron .thorized for it is the reverse of .. ~ The ,Pope' returned to Rome stressing his concern for the €ux:t ain . This is admiring. obviously moved and, convinced ,'poor and underdeveloped. a grim remind It shrewdly analyzses the'Dis- , of the' great potential for a liv Instead of violence as a tool er, ~ut it is also ney product,' depicts the career, C H ,A I R MAN: Bishop ing faith in' Colombia, which is of· radical change - and many a source of re and personality of the man, representeative of many' areas Christians join this cla,mor-he fres,hment to the and declares "In this most James ,A. Hicky-, Auxiliary in Latin America. counseled decisive, yet organized eph:H. The anchildlike of o~r mass communi of 'Saginaw, M~ch., has been There was a 'sincere show of and painstaking efforts for so Cil i e n·t I r ish cators I see what is most child named by Archbishop John faith, civic maturity and civil.:. cioal and economic development e h !1 ~ c h men ish and therefore ,most danger F. Dearden, president of the ized enthusiasm during the' con~ and education. He warned the certaInly "'o,t . a11 0 f us W h'0 are h'IS f e I-. Na,tl'Onal Co"nfe'r'.enc.e of Cath gress. W:hat's more, J'udging rich of the need for true struc " . b ous In around:, Col ." low Americans."
from' press comments and from tural reforms. um6anus down '
olic Bishops, to be acting the first' sessions of the Latin Instead of the complacent rou t:):1- into Italy" Co . . . Power, Game .
chairman ofttheU.S.' Bish- American bishops' general as tine of a pietistic religion, he lurriba across to Co 'tt P' tl ,sembly, the Church in this con urged the practice of the mes ' ThiS IS the year of the mstant Britain, and Brendan, perhaps, ' 1y obsolete campaign biography, ops', !p,ml e¢ on rles y tinent intends to take the Pope's 'sage of Christ, strengthened by "1·1 the way' to ~er1·ca. The and it might be suPpos.ed that a Formation. Bishop Hickey ,,:counsel,seriously. '. th l·t s'gn l'f1' . . , . e,. E uc,.ha r l'st t 0, make'.1 Compassion for Poor charming story' of these formi 'book about Lyndon B. Johnson : will serve in, plac·e of the cant. dable saints ,is told, by Brendan ~ould be the most out o!. date late Bishop Loras T. Lane This most valuable of all con- . E~charistic congresses will Lehane in The 'Que!1t of Three of them all. This is not'true of until a new Ichairman is ,gress aspects stems directly from not 'be the same after this one. Abbots (Viking, 625 Madison the Rowland Evans - Robert h . . bod f the addresses here of the Pope, In 'fact, some believe this one' y o . , Ave·., . New York, N. Y. 10022. N.ova.k collaboration, Lyn.d<i11 B.. chosen by t e entIre , who gathered his ideas for them could have been the last of the $6.95). Mr.. Lehane has ran 'Johnson: T?-e E~erc1se' of U.S. Bishops in November. after'months of careful consulta traditiQnal, religious, triumphant sacked, ,the available sources, Power" now ISSUed m a paper ~ tion,'research and mediation. In congresses,' as a new type of Eu separated fl!ct from myth, and back (Signet Books, 1031 Ave. his 20 some message/l here Pope charistic congress-with a social ", Spun a delightful account of the of the America~! New York, N.Y.. ich~91arll~ Paul stressed the need for social ·emphasis-appeared'he~. I, , doings and the 'goings of three 10019 $1.25). , justice, his compassion for the legendary giants of the Faith. For, while it deals in detail poor, praise for .the parish' Saintly King with the career of the retiring . , ,priests and the need for pastoral President, and is packed .with WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxil. reform.. Lots of Lou1ses have sat ont-he anecdote, it is most meaningful, iary Bishop Jame~·A. Hickey of 0 throne of France.. But only <;me 'as a study of the' ways of Amer-, Saginaw, Mich., pas been ap-. of thoem is recognized as a samt; ican politics. This makes e.nter,. pointed .by Archbi,shop John F. Vat."can C."ty, P'aper Friends of the Holy Union Lo UlS IX .' A mong ma_ny other. taining and instructive reading.' Dearden ,of Detroit, 'president of Sisters will sponsor their sec things, he was the founder of the the National Conference of. Answers Critics· ond annual dinner dance at 6:30 Sorbonne. He was also a warrior, Global Problem Catholic Bishops, to be acting Sunday night, Oct. (i at Venus which may make the present 'Barbara WaTd returns, to ,a .chairman of the Bishops' Com VATICAN CITY (NC) - .The de 'Milo restaurant, Swansea. A, . bostilities at that venerable in favorite thesis in The, Lopsided mittee on PriestlY:I'Formation. ' Vatican City newspaper, in con cocktail hour is scheduled from otitution not entirely anomalous. W()rld (Norton 55 5th Ave., New tinuing to publish letters in sup 6:30.to 7:30, followed by dinner ins life and times lire vividly, York, N.Y. 10003, $3.95). For Bishop Hickey will serve the port of the, papal encyclical on and dancing. Dress will be semi depicted in Saint Louis by Mar some .years now,. :me has been committee in plac~ of the late birth cpntrol, has defended it formal. garet Labarge (Little, Brown; 34 speakmg and writing about t1}e 'Bishop .Loras T. Lane until_ a self against a charge 'of one ", General chairman is M;onsour Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. a~palliI'!g contrast J:>etween, the new chairman, is chosen by the sidedness. 'Ferris; aided by Mrs. Marie nch and .poor natIOns of the ,entire I;>ody of ti. S. bishops L'Osservatore Romano's edHor Charlene Boyle, secretary; Ed ,02106. $6.95), which is well re searched and well written: earth. This, she sees as ,·the meeting in November. Bishop Raimondo Manzlni replied' that' ward Machado, treasurer;:;; and Phil 0 her ' grounds of present and future Lane died July 22.: ' ' his newsp'aper's publication of' Rev. James A. 'McCarthy,' St. trouble. , parish, Swansea, os P , . Because many m~nths 'of study letters favorable to the' encycli- ' 'Dominic's One wonders whether Mon She argues the 'inescapable and consultation on the, part of cal merely served to' set the' rec':': chairman for clergy. ,, sigiior Fox has plet, or read the. obligation of the rich nations to the bishops' committee will be ord straight. . Fall ~River . parish chalrmen writings of, Father Robert Jo come ,to the assist'ance of the coming to a clim~x this Fall, "The many columns '(of favor-·" include Mrs. Lillian COrreia, St. hartn of Fordham. A b~tch of pOOr, and here indicates prac:" when guidelines for seminaries able 'letters) in our ~ewspaper 'Michael's;"Edward Metras, Holy Fath~r J~ann·s.es~ays IS now tical wayS in which the lot of at ,the theologate l'e\(elwill be rebut the one-sided narrow and N!1me, 'Mrs. Francis W. 'Regan, published 10 Bul1dmg the Hu-:, th~ latter can be greatly im-, established, Archbishop Dearden pejorative presentation of reac';: :' Sacred Heart. In charge ~fTllUn man. (Herder' and Herder" 232 proved, with benefit to all man;;'", made, the' appointlnbnt to insure tion to the papal dOcument," ton area promotion is Rev. Nor Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. kind and the peace of the world., . continuous direction it was Manziril a~rted. : . man J. Ferris of St. Mary's par_ PolUics Today, . 'stated.' . ,I' "This offers a platfOrm't6 the:', i s h . ' .. ", 10016 $4.50). He ,is an acut~ philosopher, with many p e n e - , . . . I . ., , , " Tickets are available from aU . trating comments to make on 'One ffilght 'feel that a, book ThiS m~nth alone, f~ve sepa-,conserisus Of the lowly and the chairmen and from Mrs. Barbara the present human condition called Bobby. Kennedy and the rate. adVISOry cO~~lUUees of great that has not been given and itspotentiallties. New PolitiCljj baS- ~n outmoded se~l1nary an~ ~duca,hon e~perts publicity, and is not being given COUlombe, who may also be con Of creativity, m;. writes, man's by brutal events. But ~is study Will be sUbm1t~11'~g nr~rtsln ~e publicity." ~~t;;ta~~oli~~~:u~~n~:::~~ -encounter .with his surround by Penn Kimball (PrentIce-Hall, areas of I admm.1str~.tlOn, cur? tion with. the event. ~, logt; is meant to be a creative Englewood Cliffs, N'. J .. 07632 c~l~m, co~~umty ~fe ~nd dls P'opal Legate Visits' process which both they and $5.95) is well worth ~dmg. It clpline, ,sPlrltua~ forplatIon, and Bogota Prisoners he are fulfilled. This means that reviews the late Senator s career pastoral formatIon. I ~ ELECTRICAL' the world of man is essentially in an objectively .critical wa)'. Bishop Hickey was recently "BO~OTA (NC) _ 'DEispi.te a v...~ Contractor. ~ll to change. It is there to be But the i1uth?r's, chief int~rest, appointed, a consultant of the 'greatly crowded schedule" Gia transformed ,not merely en ,is in' th~ new Politics of the, Sacred Congregation for Cath~ cOmo Cardinal Lercar.o, Pope . "" dured." , present time: for example,the olic Education; and :has been a Paui VI's iegate to the, 39th In-, Communicator importance 'of television, the in member of this NC€ B Priestly ternationli~, Eucharistic Congress A thesis of Robert Schickel in dispensability of vast' sums of Formation Committee since his here . , t.ook ~ime to visit, prisc:mers The Disney Version (Simon and ,money, the ,effect of polls, the consecration in April) 1967. , ' ,in a Bogota jail. Schuster, 630' Fifth Ave., New function of charisma. Mr. K~n Previously" as reJtor St. The former archbishop of York, N.Y. 10020 $6.50) is that ~y'S ~ory is used b~ ~~y of Paul Semina~, Sagiri~w, he had Bologna, Italy, told the, prison~ Walt Disney "was not as.is com IllustratIon of some, SlglUflCant served as special assiStant to the ers ·that he had written a talk monly supposed a 'genius' for developments. committee. During Vatican for his visit but decided' instead 'b~ New Englander Council II, he served as peri·tus ,to "speak from the heart." He 944 C!ounty St. Louise .Andrews Kent is' and, advisor to the <:ommission recalled that he had once been' New Bedford • Honor I Mes;en,gerQ ' known as the author of a num Ii prison chaplain in Bologna, whicl,l drafted the council's De of novels, unpretentious but cree on Priestly Fo~ation. ' and that therefore he knew inti For Youth Work' tangy, . which capture the au I' mately the 'problems and an , CHICAGO (NC)-The Nation thentic New England scene and guish of the prisoners. H~ said al Catholic Action Conference • spirit. Now she has written her pecla_'eac;: ers that his heart is with them and (NCSAC) has presented its 1968 autobiography, Mrs. Appleyard LOS ANGE:LES (N~)-Forty that he will always rememt>er Social Action Award to Young and I (Houghton Miflin, 2 Park inner-city public 'Scnools here them.'Catholic Messenger magazine for Street, ,Boston, Mass. 02107 will' bave 124 new specialized The prisoners heam the car-' its "excellence in the field of $5.95), and it has the same teachers added to their staffs dinal's words with deep emotion. social education of youth." The homely chami as her fiction. this September as th~ result of Following his talk, Cardinal award was made at NCSAC's an She tells of the particulars of a training program conducted by Lercaro embraced one of ,the nual, conference here: daily living in Old Boston and ,Mount St. Mary's Oollege in prisoners and said that the Receiving' the award for 'in the Vermont countryside. cooperation with LoS Angeles "abrazo" ,.(embrace) was meant Young Catholic Messenger's pub This she does simply, unaffect city schools. Each of~ the new for all at 'them. He .then em ,lisher, George A. Pflaum, Pu~ edly, but with an exceptional teachers was recruited by the braced prison personnel present, lisher, Inc., of Dayton, was skill in recalling and recreating city school, syste,m specific/llly . all of whom' were eager to shake James T. Feely, editor of the definitive detail. This is a quiet for service in the city's disad the hand of the Pope's represen magazine for the ',ast 19 yeara. book. wmtaged a r e a s . ' tative at the congress.
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I ---"-,,,,--_._..J \ CATHEDRAL CAMP BECOMES PRE-SEASON FOOTBALL SITE: New Bedford vooartiOnal footbafi aspirants· altt.end Cathedral Camp as a unit to become the first footballers in the area to use the camp. facilities for pre~on practice. StudyilIlg the playbook are Ro~rt, Woodacre,
Liturgical Group Finds Revolt Within Self
kneeling; Walter J'anialk.~school's athletic director; Coaoh Jeff Riley an~ Eric, Ramos, full back. Mlddle: Wesley Roderiques and John Spencer tackles, are following the instruction "charge low"~ Right: Gary Pope: left halfback, and Dennis Forgue, .quarterback, returning punts.
Sale of Candy· Bars Finances NB Yoke's
PreaSeason S~ssion at Cathedral Camp
" Ohooolate bars-even the' 50 cents variety-and a successful :football season seem to 'have no connection' whatever unless you're Jeffrey E. Riley football. ooach ·of New . . . ' " • . . ~ Bedford VoeatlOnal HIgh School. Jeff RIley has used one III an attempt to get the other. Only the future will tell. whether his tri·al was worth while. The story actually b~gan tian Responses" at its annual last year, when Jeff, Riley, meeting here, has found a revolt a member of St. Anthony's blackboard meeting. Then we because they want to win so on its, own doorsteps. was practiced from 3:30 until 5:30." ' badly." ParI'sh I'n Mattannisett, 'I'" H is as&skmt . L>oOch. Dinner was at 6:30 and ancoaches "did Q Five of its 31 board members named Yoke football Cva. other blackboard meeting was fantastic job, too," Riley empl}a
WASHINGTON (NC) The National Liturgical Con ference, which recently dis cussed "Revolution: Chris
have resigned in a policy dispute with the conference "administra tion."
Lutherans Reflect·
On Revolutaon
GENEVA (NC)--.:.churches are obliged to take positions On so cial and political issues that d@ not automatically exclude 'rev ,olution as a me~n~. of social! . change, the CommissIon on The "ology of the Lutheran WorIell ,Federation said here in formu l?tin~ a summary of its "reflee tions on the subject. A key issue raised for church~ , by the commission's document involves their possible alignment with forces that woul~ engage in violence as a revolutionary tool.
His first season, he admits scheduled for 7:45 P.M. "Then sizes. "They worked as hard as dolefully, was far from a dream we had movies or recreation," the kids did _ and that was one. "It was 0 and 8," he says says Riley, sounding as though hard." grimly. this was adequate compensation Financing the week's expedi , Two charges stood out among , This year he's hoping for,' for 'grueling, hours on the field. -, tion was the sale of 4,800 candy . Christians, it said, "could, find many in the individual letters more, favorable odds, .like "9 and, :The menu during the Voke bars. that raised between $900' of rf!Sign'ation: th.at ~ conference O?" ~e says, his voice .trailing, 'football camp' wa~ one many a and $1,000. We ,sold them last themselves in an exceptional sit , pledge to follow Mass practices Ani<>, a question mark. male resident of the area would "Winter and during the Sp~ing." uation ~n. Which, for the sake of the legal' rights of .their neigh approved by the Washington' The secret, he hopes, is the . like to follow on' a regular basis, bor; they' have no other choice archdiocese or else hold no Mass' <w. -~ocolate bars ' ' Far From ,Sweet • • " 'except for 'the' 'assault on the at all waS violated; and that a "Last year," ,he 'explains,,· family food budget. The (:andy funds and the $5 than to attack perverted legai . committee report urgi'ng that the "when Cathedral camp closed "We had meat three tlines fees paid by each member of the structures. conference take. a serious new' for the season, Old Rochester, day," says Riley, "sausage, bacon team and the'adults who accom "The use of violence to carry look .at its finances arid day by Regional conducted football or 'ham for breakfast, 'with 'pan panied them provided 'for the day operations was treated in iii practice there. This year they, ' cakes'or eggs; cold or hot meat week's training for 40 boys, six out II 'revolution with the' goal ,of bringing about a more 'just "cavalier" w.ay. didn't want to.",' , sandwiches at noon, wUh soup,' coaches and a trainer. That was all, tb~, Boston, Col- ,,' and either steak or roast ,beef : 'A, 'photographer who visited legal structure presents such an The focal point of several let : ~ege gra!iuate needed.. for dinner." . the camp' during the training exceptional·situation. There are ters of resignation was ,the Mass , Yoke soon blossomed mto a " ' period came' back with glowing "cases 'in which Christians" can . Praises A!Udstanfs ,news about the spirit of the' conceivably approve the use of celebrated on the final ,day of candy concession, with f<l<>tbaU , Despite the daily workouts- , Yoke team. ' , violence and in fact· participate the liturgical week during which players cheerleaders ·and facul, ty me~bers selling' candy barS 'or perhaps because of ~hem ~. Riley, a native of St. James in violence." , II modified'velsIon of a '~nding but as yet unauthorized Canon to pay for a week of pre-season "Spirits' were high," says the Parish. in New Bedford, 8fI4 his was used. Resigning Father traini~g for the Voke team at coach.. "The kid:. had one heck ,wife, the former Kathleen Healy . . . .11II. .11II " of ,a, tim,e~. I .te~l, you, ,and there :of ~t. 4wrence 'Parish, both ' Aidan Kavanaugh's reference to Cathedral Camp. were no InCIdents at 'aHas far have their fi!1gers crossed. it capsulized other reactions: as discipline is concernea. They , Chris, 4, and Mark, ~Jh, still t:ast week, the team - "like Disregard regular pros"-moved into its" worked awfully hard on the ' lire. a little young to be rooting football'field; but living at camp for any team, but in~ications -An the elements of that eel week-long training camp. . ooration I have publicI)' urg~,"" Along With veteran members seemed to· give them an idea" are they will be Yoke fans as " , 1Iheywere like a pro team. They soon their father can mold he said. "Yet the disregard of' of the squad appearea five universal and local Church law . team memberS. "They didn't put '~~ a: job to do Bnd ''they cUd it, them' into the proper frame of 'mind. in the celebration can only re:" up 'the' '$5 leach that' lest year's" the mellniime, candy' may , suIt in increased difficulty on team members did'," he explains, Cardinal Says, Mass have made' their. pre.,.season , PRINTEr AND MAlLEI).
the part of Church offieers ,tak:' "so tney worked out their share . " training program possible,' but ' ing the liturgical conference: -serving mthe' cafeteria 'and For Czech Victims from the looks of things, nopody , 'Write or Phone 672-1322
serious~y. ' cleanillllg up afterwards." ' .. RIO DE JANEm() ..(NC) . , . The week's training period Jaime Cardinal de Barros -but nobody-had better at "Why should' ,the Catholie was 'Workand'rnore work,alon, ..Camara of Sao 8ebastio do Dio tempt iabeling the Yoke squad 2314 Second Street - Fall River
"The candy Kids." - because bishops take .the ,con~erence Be with fun.' de Janeiro celebrated a Mass @ riously when the conference The daily 'schedule, Riley says,' in the city square here for the ' they're :&Ir from sweet. does not take the bishops seri 'began with Ii' mOrning call at victims of the Soviet invasion of ously? I not infrequently cUs 6:45,. breakfast at 7:15 and a CzeChoslovakia. agree,~~ ~~..l,>ishops. yet l can blackboard meeting at 8:45. About 1,000 persons, including bardlysee how they, can be igrepresentatives of communist DOrea • • $ had the 'loclll1 diocese. PI,zuty of Meat ; made it impossible -to' ~~lebrate From 9:30 to 11:30· each countries, the United States and a good ~ucharist, the 8wroprl- morning,. the Yoke football team ,the Brazilian government, par INDUSTRIAL and DOMESl~C· ate *hing to do would h~ve been practiced-,~der the driving ,.ticipated in the ceremonies. After the Mass, some people to·.observ~ fln- e~oquEiJit silence' directions of Riley and. his three gff1dJ
about a bare .altar;" -the priest, ~stant coaches" Henry Cebula· burned two Sc?viet flags in front. said. ' o f Fall, River,· Jack Risgin of. of ,the altar. . . . Dar:tmouth and .Bill Constant of ' The Mass, organized by sOme The Liturgical Conference hi , New. Bedford, all fellow faculty reactionarY Brazilian groups, did, a' 28-year-old private association meJDbers. not have the support of public , of Christians concerned about, After a 12:30 lunch, the Yoke ' opiniqn here. ,Many preferred',' 3~2l:fillman'Street 997-9162 ~ew Bedford liturgical renewal. It numbero students "had :free time until non-liturgical ,expressions of,
more than 5,500 members. 2:45, wheD, we had • aJIJIother . ~approval of the Soviet action. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~ • • 99~ • • • • •
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ANCHOR-Di~cese
of Fall River-Thurs., Sept. 5, 1968
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NEW LANGUAGE LAB AT CONNOLLY HIGH: Students at· the F'all River's Boys' High will develop proficiency in hearing, speakJrg, reac. g and writing German and Fren.ch thro~gh the use of the new l.anguage lab. Left: Rev. William J. Cullen, S.J., sends·out·a program via
'the new cartridge reoorder on the teacher's console. Middle: Father Cullen, in the presen(le of Rev. John G. Cornellier, S.J., principal of the school bses-the monitoring system. Right: Father Cullen shows a student how to place'the enclosed tape reel into a student·recorder.
Youths Protest
Biafra 'Genocide'
BONN (NC) - Catholi<: and Protestant youth organizations of West Germany staged a dem- . onstration march in front of the Soviet and British embassies here protesting against "geuo eide" in the secessionist republic of Biafra; In the course of the march 2,000 youths carried posters and . petitions urging the end of Brit iSh and Soviet delivery of weap ons to the federal authorities in Nigeria, that Biafra's independ- ence be 'recognized and that all economic aid to Nigeda be malted. The marchers first gathered at the Soviet embassy and sought w deliver a petition: bearing 25,000 signatures to embassy of ficials. When nO one appeared to receive the petition the demon strators pushed it under' the. front door. Another group of about .l00 demonstrators went to the Brit ish .embassy, shouting: "Wilson, murderer." Police prevented the youths from hoisting' a 13iafra ·flag on the embassy grounds out a member of the embassy staff accepted the petition they car ·ried and gave them a statement setting forth the British position on the Nigerian conflict. The marchers ended their demonstration with a meeting in the square in' front of the Bonn cathedral and recited the "Our Father'~ together.
Catholic Institutions !Receive Bequests CINCINNATI (NC)-Catholic institutions will receive more ~an $200;006 in bequests under the will of Anthony C. Elsaesser, Cincinnati businessman who died Aug. 13. Largest of the gifts is $200. 000 to the Society of Jesus, Chi cago province, of which his son. Brother Herman Elsaesser, is a member.. , Other bequests are $10,000 each to Archbishop Karl J. Al ter of Cincinnati and to Xavier University; $5,000 each 'to 8t. Xavier High School, Cincinnati, and to the National. Shrin,e of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C.; and $1,000 to the Perpetual Adoration shrine, at Holy Name Monastery, Cin_ cinnati•
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