'122Enter
New Boys'
School Jesuits Staff Connolly High
In Fall River A total of 122 boys, repre senting approximately 40 parishes, c;ompi'ise the first Freshraan Class which stud
GOLDEN JUBlLARIAN: Sister Stanislaus Joseph, iI.U.S.C. receives congratulations from Msgr.James J. Dolan, pastor .of St. Miiry's Church, Taunton, as she m~rks . ~ years in relig-ious Jif~.' She' entered the H~ly ,Uniol1.FaJI 'iver novitiate· ye~r8 today . a~d spe~t 'Ip.os~ ',of her re £igious life on the faculty of St. Mary's High School, 1'aun~ ~n, moving with, the school into, Bishop CaSsidy, High ~3. She is.amembe'r of the Ca8~idy mathematics depart-_ 1JIlent.
50
.
i,n
The
ANCHOR
A.. AftoMr of tA, ~. ,... .,..' ,." II.
IT.
PAUL
!Fall Rivell'u' Mass., Thursday, Sepit. 8, 1966
Vol. 10, M@o 36 ©
19M The Anchor
$4.00
per
ies today at the new Bishop Connolly High School - the fourth diocesan regional high school. Rev. John G. Corneilier, S.J., is principal of the new school which is staffed by eight Jes~it priests. Classes temporarily are being held at the new CCD Center at St. William's parish in Fall River. Meanwhile, work is speeding ahead at the permanent school v Turn to Page Twelve
Commu.,iJy Here 'P~ays for.' Nuns, "
Ousted by Reds' Franciscan ;Missionaries of Mary in Fall River are join ing their prayers to those of other members 'of their
Y_
State Is Servant of f~mQ~Y
PRICE IOc '
... '.' The convention had a particularly international flavor' with representation fro m Canada, Mexico, Argenti'na, Peru, Chile, Japan; and Spain~ 1\ sizea?le' Turn to Page Seven
"
Thanksgiving Mass A high Mass of thanksgiving will be .celebrated at 4) :45 tonight at Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton, llU. Rev. Msgr. James DOlan, P.A., pastor of St. Mary's Church, Taunton, has at1l1ounced. Present and past stu ~ents and their parents are invited to attend the ser Cassidy school ca<feteria. The vices. Next Sunday, Msgr. Sll.pper is in honor of the golden , Dolan will be host to all Holv jubilee of Sister Stanislaus Jo Union nuns in the Great~1l." Taunton area at a buffet supper ~ich will be served :in the
Jj~~hop W[fO~~li' Em~~@~a~®~
Yh®m®
'l'he laymen's role in the renewed Church and self criti , eism were centr.al themes of the eighth national convention ~f Cursillos in New York. The Cursillo Movement is a most ~rovidential instrument in the hands of God and a most ~ f fee t i v e instrument for Christian renewal, the Most Thomas Lawton, C.S.C., direc Rev. Joseph Green, Bishop of tors; respectively, of the La and Ston'ehill Cursillo' lLansing, Michigan and Epis Salette Ce~ters. . GlOpal Moderator of the Cursillo Movement, told the .1,200 con 'rention delegates. Attending the convention were n persons from the Fall River IDiocese, including the Rev. Giles
Genest, M.S. and the Rev.
Sees, U.S~ Catholic Schools Entering Seco~ ,Phase
worldwide community for eight of their Sisters expelled eight SAN DIEGO (NC)-The traditional approach to Cath4 days ago from Red .Ch,ina. oli<;: education must change if Catholic schools are to con Mother Mary' of St. Gistilian, superior of St. Anthony's Con tinue to be a vital factor in th~ United States, the superin vent at 621 Second Street in Fall tendent of 'schools' for the Rochester (N.Y.) diocese saidl River, said that Sisters in the convent kne,w the sister of Sister . her e. M s g r. William M. olic education was necessary to discussed Catholic counteract the know-nothing " Eamon, 60 year .old religious Roche who died of heart failure and Philospohy of Education in philosophy of the later 19tk st.rain the day ~fter her expul 'an Era of Renewal at the century, and to protect Catholic .siori from Peking.
San Diego Diocesan Teachers' ,y'oungsters from the Protestant Turn to Page Twelve
doctrine taught in the public Conference. , The first phase of Catholic schools. '.:here is no question but education, Msgr. Roche said, that Catholic education was ex lasted' from the Councils of Bal tremely successful in phase one. ,"There is no question," he timore until Vatican Council II, and'during that phase Catholic continued, "but that Catholic schools were the exclusive teach education was extremely suc el'S· of religion in the' Church. cessful in phase one. The sacri " "In phase one," he said, "CathTurn to Page Six
R~~ce @~ [La~M~~ ~rfill 'ChllDr~h C~[f~0~~@ ~@rro\1e01frD(Q)ln]
THREE GENERATIONS IN ONE SCHOOL: It's rare indeed when ,three generations of a -family are in one schooR at one time but that's the situ~tion this Yl:l~r at St. Theresa'~ School· in New Bedford. Sister Mary Joseph S.S.J., left. principal'" and: ·S~s,ter ~afie' Ernes,t, ·S.B.J., second grade :teacher, are. the.. aunts 'of' Gera.ld' LeBlanc, ~n' eighth~grade pupil. Gerald 'is' the u!lCI~ of YQung Dennis who is a l<:indero gauten pupil,' ,
seph, S,U.S.C., for her long years c.f faithful and outstanding SP.l' vice to St. Mary's oarish.
M~LWAUKEE (NC):-The state should be the servant of the family not its master, says Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh. "The family is first; all othei' societies, the organized state included, are subordinate. It is not the other way around," Bishop Wright emphasized at the nature it must not compete with first Governor's Conference the normal family nor is it .conceivable that it could use for Home and Family, spon its 'authority to undermine. least
sor-ed by the Wisconsin State' Council for Home and Family. . The Council w.asest;iblished in 1963 by the, state legislatUI:e to foster faqlily unity .and the" stability of marriage. Bishop Wright said civil so ciety "has l among its highest APPOINTMENT: purposes and <functions the help of the family; in the order of
NEW Sis t e r Jan e Raymond, S.U.S.C. has been named Diocesan chairman of the Teaching Sisters and Broth ers Committee of the Con fraternity of Christian Doc trine. She succeeds Sister Mary Kateri, R.S.M. The ~oly Union religious, also t~ newly named principal of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, was formerly as signed at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton.
cf all to pervert, the authority and the life of the fam'ily." A civil society which acted otn,erwise, he said, "would have lost its reason for being" and would require radical change'. "The' claims of personality and of the family, as the first school! of personality, should be the last Turn to Page Eleven
Registration for Awards All Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and Daughters of Isabella in Greater' New Bedford, who have been studying for the Marian and Ad Altare Dai awards will meet at 2, Sunday afternoon, Sept. 18, in the Kennedy Youth Center, New Bedford. Lay Chairman John aminations to be held on the D. Silvia of Catholic Scout following Sunday. , ing in the New Bedford area All candidates should submit said the Sept. 18 session is their book' work at the Sept. 1~ for registration and also for the assignment of time for the ex-
session and any other pertinen(J; work preparatory to ~ a1l1ar.d&.
'2:
'., Trock Star, Dons' , New Uniform
THE ANCHOR-Oiocesem Fan River, Thurs., Sept. 8, 1966
'Prelate Says Black Power Negroes' Cry @f DesptQ1ir
OAK RIDGE (NC) - William J. Boyle of Merrick, N. Y., for mer University of Notre Dame track team captain, will don m new unifonn today - the ,reu,., gious habit of a Paulist. With a year of novithite tram.. ing behind him, Boyle with }o(l other seminarians will make l1Ia religious .profession and recei~vG the Paulist habit at ceremonies in Mount Paul Novitiate here i1lil New Jersey. The fonner track star is one ar(l , eight children of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Boyle. He will cOJlloo tinue his studies for the priest hood at St. Paul's College in' Washington, D. C. At Chaminade High Schoo!,' Mineola, N. Y., young Boyle'o. track achievements and scholas.. . tic excellence won him the LOne Island Daily PreSs Student Athlete Award when ,he woo graduated' in 1961. ' At Notre Dame be was voted the most valuable traek athlete in ]~ and was eaptailll of the traCk team in his senior year. He . was awarded the Presidential Meda}Jion by the university anell, the ,Kavanaugh Award for The olOgy at graciuatiOD ill 1965.
WASHINGTON (NC)-The "Black Power" slogan is a crY of despair" from Negroes in the face of white indiff rn-ence and hostility, a bishop told a Labor Day Mass 'con gregation here ""\Ye white people tremble when we hear the extremist cry 'Bla~k Power.' Yet the Negro in this coun , government officials, ,indeed of p,ersons and organizations try is i'aced constantly and all interested in the well being 01 (m every side with what he, our country:' 6\l
sees as the White Power which has lashed him,: held him down, humiliated him for all these many, many years," declared Coadjutor Bishop Peter L. Ger-' ety of Portland, Maine. White Americans are quick to uiticize Negroes when outbreaks of racial violence occur - and ' such excesses cannot be eon doned, Bishop Gere~y iiaid. BUt, he added, whites too are guilty of habitual "evaSion arid' diso bedience" of laws on fair' hous ing, fair employment and other kBues." "This is one of the facts of the Negro's life and yet very few of tile great mass of people in this eountry seem to him to be dis turbed by this deeply entrencb ~ 'lawlessness of which he iI!l Ute victirn-except himse11," he aaid. Bishop GeretY preached at the 14th annual Labor Day Mass in the Shrine of the Sacred Heart. The Mass was celebrated ~ Auxiliary Bishop Edward J. Herrmann of Washington, with Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle presiding. /' ,Religious, Problem 0'_ Bishop Gerety, long active ill the interracial justice movement, depored the "deep and abiding mistrust between black and white" in America., He said this 'problem must 'Ilave "a first rank 01 importance ' in the deliberations of clergy, Of labor leaders, of industrialists, of
It 'is, too; a "deeply religious problem," he declared, adding: "None who has meditated· upon the religious truth of the ,equality of all in the sight of our Maker or upon the responsibility each one of us, has for his brother irrespective' of race, ' creed or color can fail to be ap palled at the implications of. our race problem in this ,Country and tremble at the thought' of' God's inexorable judgment upon us." Praises Movement Bishop GeretY praised the· peaceful Negro civil rights movement, calling it "a truly American revolution in the, great American' tradition of peaceful protest." He likened r it to ~e, labor , REGISTER IN NEW BEDFORD: F,~tper Bernard
movement's struggle for recog nition. "And. as in the caSe of Unsworth, pastor, greets Mrs. Donald Ward and her two
the labor unions," he added, "the children on opening day at St. Mary's parishschool[ in New reactions have been extreme Bedford. Mark Ward, eight years old, and Cher~fl, nine, and frequently violent with the DUB~ (NC)-Irish govem dogs, fire hoses, armored ears, -are enrolled in the spcond and forth grades respectively. . ment officials banned the sale 01 masS arrests, even the detention stones from a crumbling monas of women and litUe Children." tery believed to have been COB Be cited the efforts of church IJtFUeted by st. Patrick, patl'Clilll groups to awaken consciences on, of Ireland. the . issue of 'racial justice, and Herbert Marriott, an 'Englisll noted that archdiocesan schools Yea! estate agent, had announced ' in Washington were' integrated planiJ to sell the monastery,. Ion g before the Supreme DAVENPORT (NC) - Repre~' S. Green" executive "director ~ piece':meal to Irish-Americans at
(:ourt's school desegregation rul sentatives of Catholic 'and Prot;" the Latin American Department, ~ per stOne. With the proeeedD; ,
ings. . estant national grouPs have par-' National Council of the Churches he had planned to build a shrine
ticipated"for' the first time ilia' of Christ in the U:S.A., declared: to St. Patrick and an orphanage
series of 'planning meetings de'-' "Concrete threats t<I' hitinan ' in Northampton, England.
signed to'· provide' increased' IIUrvival in LSt1m Am(!rica dtl ecumenical emphasis !for the 1967 mand an ecumenical ~ialogue''of' :B 0 N N (N~) PatJ:iarcll annual national conference of l'eligious mteraction that is Alexei, head of 'the Russian Or-, the 'Cathoiic Inter-American firmly rooted ill the 'fertile '.oil 'thodox Church in' the' Sovlet Coo~r.al!on,Progra~. "" . of Christiall'iove. ' ' ., , , INSURANCE AGENCY, tNt. SEPT. 16 UniOn, bas warned 'his ~i~hops~ The conference, to, be held in ~We would be grievously, in M WILUAM STREET Rt. Rev. Jean A. Prevost, P.A.. to act against ~~e~~ se~kin~ to Boston".Tan. 26 to 28, will open, error if we let the di:fferenees P.R., 1925, Pastor,Notre Dame, stir' liP trouble between the with a discussion of the "His NEW BEDFORD, MASS. which divided ,1f1S 'in the past Fall R i v e r . ' church and the state. " ' , ' torical Perspectives of Protes SEPT; 1?' 'Thewanung'iS 'an' outgroWth tantism, iIi Latin America." D'r. obscure our, vision and, cause us ,wy 8~5153 WY 7-9167 Rev. Thomas F. McNulty, ISM, of the' 'oontroversythat '~Ose John Mackay, president emeritus to stray from' the path of ecu menical, inter-America:n ' COOP-' PERSONAL' SER'lICE Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bedford. when two priests Of 'Patriarch of Princeton TheologicaiSemf eration." , ' SlEPT. 18. Alexei's 'dioCese wr6te' o~ nary, will bead the pal:\el. Rev. Luke Golla" SS.CC., Sem- letters' to 'tbe' governri)enf' pro':" A joi~t statement issued 97 mary of' Sacred Hearis, Ware- testing anti-religious' measures.' 'The'two priests who h8d at.: Father . ~ouis M., Colonn~, administrative director· of Latin 1Iam. , -.. ,.. "",. .-'.. . .. Rt. ,Rev. Edmund J. Ward, tacked the government for do&- America Bureau, National Ca-:-, . P.neral BOMe ]004, St. Patrick's, Fall River. ing down churches and impeding FUNERAL HOME, INC. ' , . ' .' ..,'" SEPT. 19 ' , the practice of religion have also tholic Welfare Conference,. :lind .. Mllrcel, 1lOlI- &. lorrolllll _ 550 LoctiiJI str""• , attacked the Bisbops for peace- director of CICOP and Rev..Dana, . ~e, !.aFrllllce ' . Fal~ Jiive~. Mass.' .... Rev. Henry E,S"Henniss, 1859; fully 'sUbnuttillg to statedomi FUNElAL, DIRECTCtRS. Pastor, St. Mary, New Bedford. ' '. ,nation and for handiJig ~ :fi-. OS 2-2391 '.M~s~ 115 irvington Q. . S~PT. 20 nancial affairs of the' churCh ' Rev. Simon A'-O'Rourke, 1918, over to state-appointed, laYmen. ' Bose E.; saBwaB " 995-5166
FRIDAY-;-St. Peter Claver, CoD Chaplain; :tJnited~ States Navy. Both priests have been' .'~~I'''fJ7 E.. Sulllval!l fesSor. iIi 'Class. Green. Mass
.New ~C/lrcl ' 'SEPT;'21, pended and' now"Patriarch Pro~r; Glory; 2nd Prayer St. Rev . , :George Pag~r" 1882, Alexei ,haS requested: that harsb i Gorgon1us, Martyr; Commoii I'ounder, . Sacred Heart, New :measures be taken against aI)Y: Pr~face~. . .' ,. JBedford. . , '.. '\ .. . Rev. George JowdY,l!138, p~ other,priests who,critiCize'either SATURDAY O'ROURKE' - st. Nicholas. of tor, Our Lady of Purgatory, New "t?e_, murch 01' the' government. . Tolentino, CoDfessor. IIi ClasS~' Funeral Home ]Bedford. ' . . Whi~. ¥ass Proper; G~ory; ~ FUNERAL HO~~E. Creed;, Common ~face., :'57] $eco'nd Street' ",' , SUNDAY-XV Simday after -4169 LOCUST' STREIT . ·&=011 River,·· Mass. D~minican Pentecost. 1lI Class. Green'. IFALl ,RIvER, MASS•. LA CORVNA (NC) - Fa'ther ' OS 9-6072 Mass Proper; Glory; Creed;, Aniceto Fernandez,OP.,.'·Master OS 2-338W :Preface of Trinity. MICHAEL J: McMAHON
General of the Dominican Order, MONDAY-Most Holy Name cnf
WiIfrecll'C. 'Ja,,"lSE~ licensed Funeral Director'
has been decorated by the Span ~
Mary. 'III' Class. White. Mass u-. Driscoll SUmVClft, Jr. , Registered Embalmer '
,ish chief of state, Francisc:o ProPer; Glory; no Creed; Pref..
Fr~c~, with ,tlJ,e ~r~d ~CrOSB of . Sept.l1-St.·An~, J' III Jl ace of Blessed Virgin.' St. ~aymond 01 Penafort, high River: - Mass of, previouc' est Spanish juridical. decoration. , TUESDAY St. ,.Dominic, Sw:anselll. , ' . Sunday. IV Class. Green: Mass
During the eeremony" held 'at " Proper; No Glory orCreedf
Franco's Summer residence 'near Sept. 18-HolYCross, po a II Common Preface.
here, Father Fernandez prai~ ' River. "the very important work:' the ' WEDNESDAY - Exaitation 'Of .st. JOseph, Attl~boro. Spanish government bas .done: . the HoiY CrOss.' n Class: Red. 81; Louis de France, swailsea.' . . for eultural promotion at' the: , MassPro~r; Glory; Creed; Preface of' Holy Cross. ' " utional level for workers, the" 'poor and peasants.'" TJriJRsDAY-:-Seven Sorrows ,of Franco declared: "'By cleeo-, the Blessed Virgin Mary.lI!,
rating the, Master General of the,' Class. White. M~ Proper;
6$3 Washilngt~n'.'Street, Fairhaven Glory; 2nd Prayer st. NieO
Ordel' of Preachers we are pay mg tFibute' not oinly to his" oWn medes, Martyr;, Sequence; Y.'Yman 4-5058 qualities OiJId serVices to the '. Creed; Preface Cllf - Bleilil~:
country but to the enw:e Orde...." . Virgin. . .' .
••• M .
Government Bans
Sal. ,of Stones
Ecumenical
'Boston January Session. of Inter-Americ'on Cooperation Program to Be Another First
Russian Patriarch' ASks State Loyalty
DONAT BOISVERT
,: Necrology
"
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.
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,JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN '.'
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D.D. Sullivan & 'Sons
'Spain Honors Heacll Of O';der :
FORTY HOURS DEVOTION
-----
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BISAILLON1S (;ARAGE
24.Hour Wre~ker'"S~u'yice
.....
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Theologian Says Mansfield Mystics World's B:igge·st Need € I NCINNATI (NC) mystics are what the world !;reeds most; a Carmelite the (OOgian told the 23rd nation.
me
Missioner Wears Many Hats
Fr. .Kell~y Pastor on laiwan Marykn(J)TIli®r Is JD)mxet«DJr,
ANCHOR
lhurs., Sept. 8, 1966
T~a~her,St®Jr®
c
Manager
OpposesReligious Query ilflj Ce01~MS WASHINGTON (NC) -The American Jewish Committee re affirmed its opposition to a question on religion in the 1970 U. S. census and urged that the Census Bureau study other ways. of gaining religious data with out compulsion. Morris B. Abram, AJC presi dent, explained the committee's stand .in 'a statement to the House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, which is hold, ing hearings on the Census Bu reau's plans for the 1970 census. "The reason for the commit tee's 'opposition,", Abram said, "is that answers to questions in __ .. the decennial census are manda tory under, the law. To compel a person to profess his religious affiliation or lack of affiliation is to deprive him of religious freedom, in direct violation of the First Amendment. ''The subject has never been included in a decennial census, and we earnestly hope that the federal government will not disturb this tradition." Abram acknowledged that in formation on religion "has con siderable sociological, cultural and practical uses." Religious bodies, he admitted, "have been unable to compile adequate statistics about their member.. ships."
81 congress of the National Fed Ijn'ation of Catholic College Stu· Uents here. Jr at her William McNamara, ti)£.D., author and preacher, 1j»'as the keynote speaker at the GPening session. Speakirig on the congress '!lbeme, "The Church in the Mod ~ World," Father McNamara, ~thor of "The Art of Being auman," declared: "No one can be £ Christian. lllltudent leader unless he is au. ' iIJIlt'thy mystic." Like Joan of Aile An "earthy mystic," he 5 Jlained, is one ,who, like Joan .- Arc or Zorba the Greek, loves f:aoth God and the world. 1n fact, said Father McNa IID8ra, Joan of Arc is "possibly . e best patron saint for our Cime precisely because she loved ~ and the world and because She seemed to show the perfect ~lance between eontemplation and action." He described ,contemplation as 'Jetaking a long, loving look at IDeality" and added that "there is nothing stuffy or spooky about lilt" ' 'fhe "earthy mystic," he said, lIB one who "enjoys God and en lfpys God's earth hilariously and ~roariously- if he is an au JREVERBND RAYMOND 1lI. lKJELJLEY, M.M. Ihentic mystic and if he is really IJB..thy." A 'kindergarten, which also chase supplies in another town.
'fhe prayer of such a person, serves as a nutritional clinic, is "The back of my jeep was al
. . added, will' be, "Mayall of one of Father Kelley's latest ready full with peQple I had fIJod's, creatures be happyl" LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET projects. Already 50 children picked up on my way," Father FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD, Love Reality from two to five years old make Kelley recalls the incident, ,eharacteristics of an eartt,.y "Where Service use of its facilities. They come "when a man came running -.ystic include compassion,' sen Is a .. ~er of Pride from the poorest families where calling Sin-Hu, Sin-Hu (Father,
"wvity, and perception, Fatlier they cannot be fed accordingly. Father).
• cNamara said. Like the per Urgent Call Since he did not have space Buys, Sells ' tiwm in J. D. SaUnger's stories, One of those unusual experi 'for another passenger he just lI!'ather Kelley also operates a they are abie to "see through ences most missioners have(:,at kept going. But the man 'caught ;uperficiality and phonineSs" sfKuoe where the parishioners can one time or another happened to up with him when he stopped
purehase goods' at Ii fair price iIIld to "look at reality and love Father Kelley not long ago as behind a bus. Without being cheated, for they he was driving his jeep to pur· "Instead.' of asking me for a
Hie unable to count and do not Pather McNamara, new he'ad ride as I was exPecting, the man
know the true value of products. .. the theology department at told me that' an elderly woman
.arymount College, Boca Raton, At the same time, the missioner . 273 CENTRAL AVE. wanted to'see me urgently."
INa., warned, against "activity, buys from them whatever crops went the~ to her shack'
itley ,have, which constitutes JRthout contemplat1on~" andf.ourid Ute woman, sick.
WY 2-6216 "The great need today isn't' tbeir (H\ly so\Jreeof income. Father had seen her. in Church
.WORCESTER (NC) T b e aadiscriminate activity, but for Worcester diocese's Council of often, st!J,dying the doctrine. He
:rictivity into which' we NEW BEDFORD len~dictine Catholic Men and Council of baptized her and five minutes
. ckiven by love··· If I am not Catholic Women are passing into later she died.
Christ marching in Selma ()l' h~story. ~icago, or teaching in the class The Oblates of St.' Benedict ,They will be replaced, effec DOOm, or preaching in the pulpit, then I'm a fraud and a phony," will hold their first meeting of tive Sept. 14, by a "Diocesan the season Sunday with a Day Council," who s e governing ~ said. Of. Recollection, at Portsmouth boa~ will include priests and Nory. Religious as well as laymen and A. Conventual Mass at 9 will lay women. ~urch be followed by breakfast. The The new council will coordi ill Schedule' also includes a con,. 'nate· all activities of the lay ference' at 11, dinner at 1:15 and RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)""':Ap apostolate in the. diocese. It will pointment of a new military afternoon ~onferences at 2:15 not be the "pastoral" council or iJOvernor in the troubled north-' and 3:15, with final blessing and "lay apostolate" council envis:" eastern section of Brazil and Benediction to follow. aged by the Fathers of Vatican Guests and friends of the II, but, according to Father Leo ~lks between the nation's presi .nt and the' apostolic nuncio, Oblates are cordially invited. Barry, diocesan director of the ~chbishop Sebastian Baggio, Further information may be ob lay apostolate "it takes little IWve brought some hope of tained from Mrs. Frank S. imagination to see that it could peace to Brazil's Church-state , Moriarty, OS 21439, evolve into such an all-inclusive ~flict. council." Archbishop Baggio says his The distinctive feature of the flalks with President Humberto new Diocesan Council will be Castello Branco will definitely the direct affiliation of parishes • ntribute to a lessening of the of the diocese, rather than of NEW YORK (NC) - A survey parish organizations, as in the OOnsion between Brazil's mili flary government &n d the among U.S. Protestant clergy. past. ' men disclosed a majority' are Policy will be determined by e"urch. opposed to the admission of a board of directors, composed oommunist China into the United of six officers, chairmen of 'the Nations. four major !iiocesan committees, The Rev. Dr. Daniel Poling, and chairmen of subcommittees SAN JULIAN (NC)-A church • HEARING AIDS 0 ZENITH • ACOUSTICON • UHEX llonoring the Sacred Heart will board chairman of the Christian supervising major diocesan-wide • COSMETICS • BIOLOGICAlS • 1f61'AMfllS be built on the site where Mass Herald magazine, said the pub-' programs, 11 area coordinators Ucation polled some 30,000 Prot (laity) and 11 area spiritual di ~as first offered on Argentine estant clergymen and found rectors (priests) the bishop's ~rritory, during the expediti()n 'ft.4 per cent against Red China's representative and a public re ~ the Portuguese explorer Fer (Jinand Ma'gellan to circumnavi admission. He also said the poll lations chairman. All will have IRENE R.SHEA, PROP.
showed 93.7 per cent against at voice and vote, except the pte the world. Magellan's ex Prompt, free Delivery in fAlL RIVER, SOMERSIET. i~YmOti & VICINITY
pedition arrived at !tan Julian expulsion CJf nationalist China bishop's representative and the ZOZ IlOCO( ST. (CORNER OF ~INE ST.) March 31, 1520, and left Aug. 24 to make room for the Red re public relations officer, who will IFAll RIVIR
[III( that year. ' gime in the UJll not vote.
RICHARDSON
LINCOLN.
MERCURY
r
BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY
'
Worcester Plans Diocesan Council
are ,
He
Oblates To Meet'Sunday "
Peace Hopes Improve Brazil
Clergymen Oppose
Red China in U.N.
Church at Site
615-1829
4.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., Sept. 8, 1966
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To
~~~~DS~milltfB~M Pw~~~em
By Msgr. George C. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC) . Several' times during the past few months reference ftaS been made in this, column to a controversial socioloiical study by Charles Y. Glock and Rodney Stark of the Uni. ver-sity of California, Berkeley, entitled "Christian Belief'S and Anti-Semitism (Harper or not he bimselfbe and Row, New York). In whether lieves that the Gospels are the summarY, Glock and Stark Word of God, but I think it conclude in this important would be perfectly fair to infer work that there Is a significant that he most certainly ,does not. correlation between religious The New Testament writings, ,be says, must be reC!d in "their beliefs and anti torical context, for the valuable Semitism. And, btit limited, and~ often fallible if I have under and even destructive (sic) writ stood them cor ings that they are." rectly, they also TOWAlRJI) lRlETHlREMENT: Eckhardt and Harrington are seem to assume Archbishop Edward D. How to be commended for their vig that anti-Semi ard of Portland, Ore., has an- . orous, not to say violent oppo tism, if cojoined nounced he has 'taken steps sition .to all formsofanti-Seini wIt h religious tism, tbe most monstrous of to abide by Pope Paul's new opinions unfav- , , which, of course,-is tbat diabol orable to Jews, document recommending vol ical contradiction . I n terms is alwa)'s the untary retirement of bishops known as "Christian" anti result of the beyond the age of 75," Still Semitism. latter. A num ber of competent scholars, both On the other hand,their pro active daily in .the adminis Catholic and non-Catholic, have posed remedy' for this terrible tration of his archdiocese, questioned this assumption and, evil-namely, the complete re-' .Archbishop Howard recently :.>eyond that, have aIso ques writing of the Gospels -is al 'ioned the overall methodology most too bizarr-e to be tak-en -completed. 60 years in the priesthood and 40 years as 01. the Glock-Stark study;. ' seriously. AF, an .amateur sociologist, I, If they were cOBtent ttl say Archbishop of Portland. NC in pfulsIng too, ha·ve certain, reservations as Harrington Photo. tbat, the. New (as well -as 'the' about the methodology employ edby Glock and Stark. On the Old) Testament writings must other' hand, I have no reason to be read in theb; pr-oper historical context, they would find wide think that they have exagger 'ated the extent, of Christian spread, if not universal. agree anti-Semitism in the United ment on the Pilrt of Catholic and States. On the .contrary, I am Protestant scholars alike. The building committee of the It's perfectly obvious, in other Fall River Catholic Woman's inclined to think that, if any words, that our exegesis or ex thing, their findings on this Club will sponsor a· fur arwl score may prove to have been planation of.certain New Testa millinery fashion show at 2:30 ment references to "the Jews" somewhat conservative. Sunday afternoon, Sept. 25 in the is in need of refinement. Dangerous, Turn ballroom of White's restaurant. ,More Harm Than Good Be that as it may, the contin-' General co-'-chainnenare Mrs. At long last, this problem is Anthony J. Geary .and Mrs.' uing controversy over ,the Glock Stark study is now beginning to now being tackled seriously ,by Michael J. McMahon. In charge take a very superficial, not to 'Catholic and Protestant exegetes of special prizes ,is Mrs. James. say potentially dangerous turn. throughout the world. Hopefully 'A. O'Brien Jr., and Miss Jean
the impetus given to biblical Dnal is' chairman of hospitality.
In recent weeks two well known Protestant commentators scholarship by Vatican Council Models will be club menibers.
have publicly stated that the II will embolden them to get on . ricke.ts are available' from ,the
Gospels themselves are the root with the job without delay. chairman and aU club officers.
Cardinal Bea, incidentally, has cause of Christian anti-Semitism. And at least one of them has set the pace for them with his semi-popular but scholarly com Semi1llttBr en. ,1F'ao,w(ll1T\l
concluded-with a kind of in exorable logic so doctt'inaire as mentary on the council's Decla For Action
ration on Christian-Jewish rela as to be rather frightening-that \) tons, the English edition -of the only way to eliminate Chris HSINCHU, (NC) - Because tian anti-Semitism is to rewrite' which will be published this -:';'aiwan is becoming more indus Fall by Harper and Row. the New Testament. trialized, "it is extremely impor But to exegete or explain the t1'.nt 'that the Church train lay The two men in question are Prof. Ray Eckhardt of LehIgb Gospels in their proper historical men, especially young workers, ,University, Bethlehem, Pa. (of context is not to edit or rewrite to become apostles to their fel all places), and Dr. Donald S. them, nor is it to agree with the low "",ork~rs," Archbishop Sta Eckhardf-Harrington 'ass'umption nislaus Lo Kuang of Taipei told Harrington, pastor of the Com munity Church, New York City, that. the Gospels are the root '\ seminar on Catholic Action cause of Christian anti-semitism. here. Favors Rewriting . As Dr. Albert Polack, a pr-()m Professor Eckhardt, speaking The seminar, ol'ganized by inent Jewish scholar from Great Fatter Rene Petit, S.J., national at a recent international Jewisb Britain, told the recent Cam Christian conference in Cam chaplain of Young Christian brfdge conference-in, direct re bridge, England, is reported to Workers (YCW) movement in have attacked the Gospels rather ply to, Professor Eckhardt-any Taiwan, was attended by 150 such accusation wquld do more. persons, including priests, Sis bitterly. Indiscriminate denun ciation of the Jew's in the New harm than good for interdenomi ters. and lay persons. national relations. Testament, he said, is linked in The sessions put special Reject Thesis extricably with the most anti emphasis on the work of the It sh... uld be noted, in this con Semitic diatribes of modern YCW and the Christian Family nection, that Glock and Stark . Movement. 'rhe YCW in Taiwan times. themselves do not make this was formed by Father Petit, ,who A few days later Dr. Harring ton went even further in his accusation and do not advocate IS fJ;om Belgium, in 1958. Today the rewriting of the New Testa denunciation of the New Testa it· has 23 groups, with 200 leaders , ment. In the very first sentence ment. On the contrary, they ex and 1,000 members. about half plicitly reject the Harrington of his review of the Glock-Stark of whom are Catholics. study in the Aug. 20 issue of the E-ckhardt thesis. \ A number of Jewish scholars Saturday Review, Harrington asked: "Is there any way short in add1tion to Dr. Polack - for' . . . ·Select Canadian of the complete rewriting of the example, Rabbi Marc Tanen Christi~n Gospels and recasting - baum of the American Jewish ROME (NC) - Quebec-born Committee, speaking with Polack Father Fernand Lacroix is the of Christian theology to elimi nate the monstrous evil of anti . and Eckhardt at the Cambridge new superior general of the Semitism?" IT.eeting-have also rejected the Eudist Fathers. The 47-year old, Eckhardt-HalTington "solution" former Canadian superior was His own answer to this ques tion is a very emphatic "No." to the problem of. Christian chosen at a general chapter of' . rhere is no possible hope of anti-Semitism. the Congregation of Jesus and eliminating the evil of Christian It is to be hoped that many Mary, the official naine of the anti-Semitism, he says, until other Protestant scholars will Eudists. "the poison in, the Gospels is also repudiate the 19th-century, . recognized as poison, even if it rationalistic approach to Holy :loes occur in what is believed Scripture currently being palmed the better' it wHl be not only >0 be the word of God." , off as authentic Protestant doc for' the cause of Christian Bizarre Remedy trine by Harrington and Eck Jewish relations, but also for the Harrin::ton Qoesn't indicate hardt. The sooner this is fine, cause of religion in general.
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Jim Fah~Y{f Author-Garbage Man, To' Get Worldmrn~$5@n Award WASHINGTON (NC) - Don"it
talk to Jim Fahey about the sweet smell of success. Fahey is author of a book, ..-acific Wllr Diary, 1942-1945," wbich has sold more than a mil lion copies. He is also a Waltham, Mass., garbage collector· and has everF intention of remaining
me. "I'm not an author," Fahey" "I've been a garbage man
"'8.
for tbe city of Waltham for 16 rears. I still· drive a garbage truck and I ·guess I always will." Modesty isn't the only re markable thing about Jim Fahey. All the royalties from his book bnve gone to a priest he has never met to build a church he bas never seen in a country he has ne~r visited. lIlelps 1Illldnan Priest·
The ehull'eh is Our' Lady of the Seven Dolours constructed at a cost of $65;000 (it would have been far more in the U. S.) ili the towo. of Mettupatti, south Inolia. As the result of a conversation with one of the' clients on his garbage route, Fahey for years !!las been sending money to an Indian priest, Father K. S. Mich ael, in Mettupatti. Before the «:hurc~ project, he paid for a dispensary which he still keeps aWcked. with medicines.
Wall nt Sen It'ahey wilt: be honored latell' this month with the annual Worldmission Award. presented to a layman for outstanding ser vice to the missions. He 'will get the award at the 17th annual
FOliJr
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 8, 1966
meeting of U. S. mission-send.ing
societies, to beheld here Sept.
19-21.
Ia'ahey's book, "Pacific VI ar . Diary," gives a sailor's-eye view of the war at sea .£Tom the Solo mons through the llIIariannas and Philippines toJapan.. . The book was turned down by 15 publishers befor-e noted naval "historian Samuel Eliot Morison
read it and recommended it to
his publishers, Houghton Mif . flin. The hard. cover edition ap peared in 1983 and hit the best seller lists. A paperback edition followed. Yet Fahey insists: "I'm not a writer, never was, never will be. The bo~k was a literary freak." Wet Presilllent JK:el:lI:il~Y Many honors have come Jim Fahey's wa·y since fuen. In Sep tember, 1963, two months before President Kennedy's assassina tion, he met the President at the White House. He gave Mr. Ken JFITJRS'J[ HELLO: Rev. John G. Cornellier, S.J., principal nedy an autographed copy of of the new Bishop Connolly High School in Fall River, greets "Pacific War Diary" and re"; members of fIrst freshmaD class. left to right, Gregory ceived an autographed copy of "Profiles in COlirage" in return. Sullivan of St. Mary's Parish. James Benevides of SS. Peter In 1964 Fahey was named· and Paul, Timothy Duffv of St. Mary's, Robert Fortin of Garbage Man of the Year by the St. Patrick's, Somerset, and Paul Audette of St. Jean Refuse Removal Journal and Baptiste. was honored in a ceremony- on the steps of New York's city hall. The sponsors of the award ruw. wanted to call Fahey "Sanitation D ~<e$\PIOrm$e ~@ DILQvariil9j [t@(IDm DOrallogjues Man of the Year," but he turned thumbs-down on that. SIiJIO'PilllSStaS lE:zq»tecttatooll'fts "After all," he said, "the kids say, 'Hey mom, here comes the COLLEGEVILLE (NC) - The areas of common belief among garbage man.' They_ don't say response to the "Living Room Christian denominations and ac 'Here comes the sanitation Dialogues" iRitiated last Winter ,cording to Father Greenspun .man.''' by the Paulist Press and the will be followed this Winter by National Council of Churches a second book in the dialogue has surpassed expectations of series which will treat major both groups, according to the differences between Catholics co-editor of the book being used and. Protestants. as a guide to the ecumenical disA third book in the series is planned to involve non-Chriscounted more than 10,000. souls." cussions. Father William B. Greenspun, tians in common discussions on The four Sisters began with efforts to "create'a community C.S.P., reported on the success the mission of the Church in the of worship among the people." of the informal inter-faith modern world. movem.ent at the Ecumenical "We baptized in case of emer gency," Mother Irany said, "and Laymen's Conference held here What Y«n~? we organized prayer at funerals. in Minnesota:' He said that more than 100,000 With the Pope'sopermission, we copies of the guide book have gave out Communion." The Sisters trained lay leaders already been sold and that at to visit the poor and the sick, least 600 groups around the aid the dying, teach Christian country are using it for inter doctrine to the young, and to faith' dialogue meetings. The book, which Father bring adults to class for Bible study. They established a social Greenspun edited with William center, a cooperative, a' crafts A. Norgren, .executive director class, a club for farmers, and a of the council's department of parish unit of Catholic Relief faith and order, is' a guide for informal home discussions aimed Services. at pro mot i n g understanding New wOlI'na "For us Sisters," she told among different Christians. Jrather Considine, "it was like The I:ook concentrates em ••• A franciscan Sisier~ the discovery of a new world. Each day the human problems GfVING YOURSElF to a Iifli1 com plerelY dedicated +0 the salvation ot around us helped both us and souls ,. through prayer. wort. sac the people to see what beauty rifice and joy ... by using VGur tm Christianity can give to other ents as a Nurse. Laboratory and X-Ray wise drab lives." Technician. Secretary, Accountant, Di She also reported that· the etitian. Seamstress. Cook. as well as COMPANY Sisters now are working io the in other hospital departments and in same manner in half a d07leD a· new extension of our work in Cate parishes of northeast Brallil. 'chetical and Social Service Fields. Complete line
Father Considine citedtihe There Is No Gl'eater Charity! work of the Sisters as "one tiny Building Materials
, facet of tbegreat resurgence of (It you are olHlr 16. write to Sister Mary the Faith taking place in the Ctark:e. G.S.F. BOK 111. Catholic Sisters' 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN vast areas south of us. College. Washington. D. C. 20017 for fur·
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.Revolution in BrazBI Po.rish N0TRE DAME (NC) - Four !!luna, assigned to a parish in I:'.Grtheast Brazil visited by a priest only- a few times a' year, uooomplishedl a "spiritual revo !JlJ.tion" there. Toe accomplishment w~ de taUeol here by Father JOM J. Considine, M.M., director of the National Cath.oli-: Welfare Con £erence's Latin America Bureau, 1:1; ,the 22nm general conventioR (i)f the Catholic Students' Mission ~ade.
He related the exp¢rience afa Brazilian nun, Mother Irany lBIlilStos, who, with three other MissionaI'ies Q:f Jesus CruCified, was assigned to the parish of Nisin Floresta in the archdiocese en Natal. The 'Maryknoll priest said in a recent meeting the nun told !Jlim:
Gi ve Communion "The bishop charged us with the entire wark of the p.arish ex cept th0se acti vities reserved exclusively tQ priests. No priest lived in the parish, which
Study for Degrees In Sacred Theology WASHINGTON (NC) - Two have become the first 1ill1'ODleft in the United States to \:)egi.n ..rodies in a university pro g ram leading toward a d<tclorate in sacred theology IlUftS.
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He said that in much of Latin America, "vigor has replaced apathy and hope has replaced despair, The Latin American ~.T.D.). The nuRS who are studying Church is becoming a vibrant m the Catholic University of world of reform and reorganiZa, America here are Sister Dismas tion." N ~vertheless, he continued, ~·gan and. Sister Damian Marie Carusillo of the Holy Cross large sectors of the continent "remain in deep trouble," and Sisters. Catholic University is the na-' .0 "giant repair job" is needed·. Pointing out that more than llional pORtifical university in America and the only university one-third of the world's Catho granting ecclesiastical degrees lics are in Latin America, he warned CSMC delegates.that Wl recognized. by the Sacred Con til the major work of rehabili gation of Seminaries and URi \lersities. Holders of the degrees tating the Church in Latin ore ~rmittcd to teach iln semi America is achieved, "the entire '. oaries aolll are recognized as . body of Catholicism must be ~ IilU thorities i.rr their Jres'leC1l.i vee gamed as suffering from mall fields.' ~ . nukitieu."
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6
THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fat1 River, Thurs., Sept:
Teaching
8,
,PoPe'EncOtWages
1;~
Stud-eAt' Mission'
~@chine'
Cruood@ -Efforts
A timely articie in The New York Times went into ·much detail about a new era in education. It spoke of the Age ~f Techndogy overtaking' education, with the class :room of the future an imposing array of television screens, films, tape recording!'! and language laborato_ries. It intro duced the reader to a "teaching machine"~a mechanical device which presents information and questions to the student. The machine has three windows-one giving' the question, the second for the, student's answer, the third which presents-at the turn of a knob-the' correct answer.
~INCINNATI (NC) Pope Paul has given approva:l and encouragement to the ~incinnati - based Catholi~ St.udents' Mission Crusade. In a delayed' message to the CSM~ • 22nd general convention, the Holy Father praised the CSMq program of prayer, study and sacrifice for the Church's miSe sion apostolate. 'He also called on all Catholi\\l. The EncyC'1opaelHa Brittanica Films has announced youth, "especially all the mem..' that it is adapting the entire high school omathematics bers of the Crusade" to "ptrl; forth their finest combined eio eurriculum, a large share of college mathematics, and' eight forts" for worldwide moral re years of foreign-language study for machine instructiol\. form. Means Mid Pei'SOnneD . , The basic reaction to this machine teaching is that it ,' The text of the m~ssage: ean not do what a teacher can do. The most important re "To' the Catholic youth of , hltionship in education is still that of the student-teacher, America, assembled in generd the influence of 'mind upon mind,of personality upon per convention of the Catholic Stu sonality, of ch'aracter upon character. dent!" Mission Crusade, the Ho~ Father sends warmest paternal At the same time, the machine can be an invaluable greetings. He approves and eri>D eourages their efforts, by meane tool in the school room by giving information, by providing of prayer, study; and sacrific~ facts, by giving the student the incentive of an immediate to pIomote the Church's missiori: :reward for a 'correct answer. The machine presents one apostolate. item at a time and grows progressively more difficult in "The Crusaders', new undei> takings to assist students in the material presented. Mrica and the work of the But let ,the advocates of the machine keep it 'in its Church in Latin America are a praiseworthy development of ,place-as' an information:giver, as a fact-provider. It can their fundamental program. 'Nolo Dot educate-for that can be done 'only by the workirig of have they neglected those areal! PROFESSION: '1'hree Sisters made temporary profes mind upon mind, by 'the c~mtact of 'person with person. o,fy,ou,r own counW ,where t~ sion at Villa Fatima as members of the 'Sisters of 'St. Doro Church suffers from lack eI thy. Shown with their ehaplain, Rev. Maurice Souza, aPe, means' and perSonnel. ' left to right, Sister Mary Mendonca of ;Mt. C~rmel Parish, Constructive Measures Fathers~~~Arise New Bedford, Sister Arlfme Paiva also of Mt. Carmel,and "His Holiness Strongly urge8 Most Rev. JohnJ. Russen of Richmond onCe told dele Sieter 'Filomena Agtliar of Our Lady of A~gels, Fall !ij,veJ:. eatholic' ~uth, and 'especiallw. gates at a National Council of Catholic Charities that the all the .members of the' Crusa~ to :put forth :their 'finest eOt'G growing secularization of society has made th~ home ":not bined efforts to secure the rec~ as sweet as is used to be." , ~tion, of the ,standards of Chrl~. tianity, and the observance at . The Bishop pointed' up the growing 'problems that this Rochester, Diocesan Superintendent,Sees the moral teachings of the lias brought about-especia:lly the rule in the ho~e by ~ne Catholic School! in 'New Situation, Church, in the civil, economte ehildren. "The chIldren rule the, house ,and Christian ;md sociai life' of the enti. modesty and decorum are outmoded. One s'hudders to think Continued from Page One can council "as the framework world. Prudently and wisely a&. what sort of' bedeviled beatniks'the little darlings will grow !ice of dedi<;ated bishOps, reli- ,within which the Catholic faith cepting the guidance of lawtul . , . f h I f' t th ' gious communities, priests ana ' authority,. they will be able .. up to be-reared to thmk 0 t em~e yes Irs, mo er sec people, ad resulted in the mag'.. is taught.", Such separation of the formal:re-make 'the world in accoT~ ond. in the home, .. an~ dad. at the bottom of the totem, pole.», nificent system of Catholic teaching of religion 1:rom the ance with ttieteachings' of Oar in this country which are Catholic school system, Msgr.Lord. By, working ,toget,her ~ So downgraded has' the father of the' family been., that 'schools unequaled anywhere else in the Roche said, would alsl() dictate, ,H:s spirit they will'promote c~lii a group in New York City has been organized calling itself world." abandonment .of, relea:;ed time structive measures for the gO.>CI "Square Deal for Dads." Its purpose is to e~ert pressure on ' Truths off Faith programs 'which 'have "con- of all niankind and for univeroHl television producers so that their programs will show more - Turning from past to present ,vinced wholesale' lots of childreJ1 peace in love and justice. enrolled iil public schools that "Praying ~hat Goq may fa".. respect for, the father. The members,are tired, they say, of needs, Msgr. Roche said "Amer being cast in t,he role 'Of clown, in what is the maJ'or edu- ',ican Catholics somehow survived religion is an ~lfterthought" ail and direct these high purposes, the shameful days when their ,end-of-the-day routine, a pun-the Sovereign Pontiff ioving. eational influence on their children. ,faith made them suspect, and so ishment to be suffered." He Said 'imparts to you, 'to the office. now we must determine, the ,it would also dictate halt to ,and' members ~ the Catl;lol~ Perhaps this is indicative', of a ground-:swell JliQvement aims and objectives for phase :religious practices SlecondarY Students' Mission Crusade, their among the fathers of th~ country ~ protest against t~e 'two of Catholic education." schools which "operate in direct :families' and 'lovea ones,' ltSurpation of their rightful position as he~d of the fami~ "In harmony with the tone of competition with the pa,rish." , speCial paternal aPostolic' ble... The end. to such practices, he ing.'" ' " and the bulwark of fam~ly strength, and discipline~' Vatican Council II," be continued, "our posture must get us ,said, should in no way spell the The fami}y~to quote a time-worn but true cliche--: away from the defensive. And end to Catholic schools. Commenting 0Ill thE' "eom--', Sudan Favors Bette~ is the basic unit of society. TlIat cliche must be dusted off ' that is why I make the sugges and its content re-evaluated. it is time th;at the fathers Of tion that' Catholic elementary pletely, materialistic" IP ubI i c ,and secondary schools no longer schools of the 20th eentu,rY, be Christian Relations the country'made up their minds where their true role in be considered the only bonafide said, "We ought to, teach our , KAMPALA (NC)-An attempt the family is and must be. For the family is an integrated teacher of religion." children the arts and sciences ,to improve relations between unit of father and mother and ~hildren, with each element ' He suggested that the bishop within a frame of reference Christians and Moslems in the having a role to play and a function to perform. Let the in each diocese "teach the truths which is designed to tea.ch them Sudan has been made by the , of faith" through a department how to apply Christian princi Sudanese minister of interior atJ balance be upset and the roles distor.ted and there is bound of religious education which ples to our democratic society." a Khartoum meeting with se900 to be strain and tension and trouble. 'wouldbe responsible not only "A school," he said, "whose eral Christian leaders. , for teaching to children in curriculum is permeated with 'Abderr3hman Nugdalla toM Catholic schools, but also to this (Christian) philosophy is the religious leaders that the chiidren of pre-school age, Chil- truly a Catholic school, even if it Sudan, government wants to ~ dren in public schools, students were not to teach formal reli operate with the Christiari in colleges and universities, and gion. On the other hand, a churches "to build a clean and all Catholic adultS. school that faithfully taught re honest society," to, help the Council Documents iigion every day, without apply churches to open theolog~cal Claiming that the Baltimore ing its principles to everything schools to train Sudanese cle,rgy catechism "no· longer answers ,~ught, would hardly deserve the and to allow foreign teachem title 'Catholic school'." to staff seminaries in the SUd;m the need for a curriculum in re and to permit the Sudanese ligion," he further proposed that . "In my opinion, America 'des QFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DlOCE~E OF, FAll RIVER such departments of education perately needs the continuance clergy who fled to other. co~ ~::.... of Catholic 'schools where geog ,tries to return. use the documents of the VatiAl0 !iighland Avenue
raphy and morality go, :band in hand ,* *lJ Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151
, •Catholic Week ,Dialogue Serm,ot:l "I would respectfully suggeSt LIMA (NC) Japanese Ca 'S HERTOGENBOSCH (NC}... to ,the American people that the PUBLISHER tholics, members of Peru's larg ,Catholic ,schools, the Lutheran The pastor of St. Peter's chur:ch Most Rev.' James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.~ , est foreign colony, ended their schools, ,the Adventist schools, l\ere iil The Netherlands h{18 GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER observance of Catholic Week at the l'teformed Church schQols, added something new to tl;te , a ,Mass celebrated by Bishop and any others that offer a God Clialogue Mass' - a dialogue Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Sholloo, M.A. ' Rev. John P. Driscoll Romolo Carboni, Apostolic'Nun.: centered curriculum, ~Ire the sermon. At two Masses each ." ',. _.. -,' ~ ." eio to" Peru. The 'week was ·or only defense our young. \leop~e Sunday, members of the cOng~ l~ _ ' _ ' --~-=-"':"'~AA~~:roR-"",' .~'~;;;;;'-~-;;;"==-.;;.;~ ..........= _.= . sl:!rving .,.J ' the - have --"""'jamtea-oy puests against the imminent death gation speak on Church l.ift!l Hugh J. Golde ~anese community. ~d burial of God in America." from a platform near the DuIDit.
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TtR: ANCHOR Thurs." Sept. 8, 1966
Califomia Prelate Scores False Solutions' for ProbleMs' of Needy
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Role of Laymen
BALTIMORE (NC)-A bishop lng, crutches for,the crippled but warned here against "pseudo flo providing ways in which the Continued from Page One oolutions" to, the problem ()f weak shall be able to obey the Spanish-speaking contingent at flbose in need. ' command,_ 'Rise up and walk,'" tended. Addressing the annual eon he said. Dr. Eduardo Bonnin of Spain, 'irention of Catholic chaplains of Bishop Maher said the chap one of the movement's founders, trorrectional institutions, Bishop lain: in a correctional institution delivered a major opening Leo T. Maher of Santa Rosa, "mUst never see his flock as an might address on the "Evolution ealif., said the objective 6f mM card nor as a Social Secur of the Cursillo Movement". He € h ristian charity is "not a tem ity 'number n,or as a sociological spoke a second time on "Per porary contribution of relief but case, not even as a soul, but as a spectives-Future of, the Cur !l permanent increase of oppor person," sillo Movement" and assisted in tunity." "We must somehow learn to ~losing the convention with his "The aim of charity is to give deal with each person as if there observations of the conclave and not only comfort but power; not was no one else in the world • III • its accomplishments. merely a greater equality of cir And our meeting as persons must lOr. Bonnin emphasized the eumstancees but a greater equal be penetrated by love. One movement's ,direction for the llty of opportunity," said Bishop cannot really know another per living by Christians of Christ Maher, the chaplains' episcopal son unless one loves him; and like lives, and said he welcomed moderator. only love can touch the pro the criticisms of the movement. The Bishop recommended the found depths of personality, the This criticism, he said, has been J)ractice of Christ as the model impenetrable core," he said. with the methods introduced by for Christian charity. man and not with the Cursillo Declaring that Christ "deals or its philosop~y. almost exclusively with individ S Bishop Green, a friend ()f. Wlls," he said: "His compassiOD: ' Ilil..I1 e Bishop James L. Connolly of the 1!or the beggars, the blind; the Fall River diocese, in his keyJ)OOr, the sick, is almost invari e Dote address cited the growth Ilbly an individualized, pains u~g of the movement in the United ~king pity, with special adapta tion to each separate case." ',MILWAUKEE (NC) _ A states since its birth in 1957. lFundamental Problem MSlwp . pleaded .here that Phenomenal Growth , Over these nine years, the "In every case, therefore,'" he total of Cursillistas or persOIllJ eontinued, "t h e fundamental nuns remain in the teaching who have made a' Cursillo has problem is that of converting field in which they have been swelled to more than 100,000 helplessness, self-distrust and highly successful, eonscious incapacity into cour Auxiliary Bishop JeroDie J, with secretariats established in age, power and initiative. Rise- Hastrich of Madison told the 88 olE 145 dioceses. Bishop Green stand up on your feet - opell annual meeting ·of the ConferMASS IN JUNGJ....E: Father Charles J. Watters, Army <=aIled this groWth phenomenaL your eyes - walk: these are the ence of Major' Religious Su- chaplain' from Newark, N.J., offers Mass for paratroopers The Cursillo movement has great words of Christian., chat~ periors of Women's Institutes of the 4th Battalion, 173rd Airborne Brigade, on iin- matured and is coming of age as tty'." , that "American Catholicism !Snrovised a,ltar of C ration cases in the juligle 50 miles north_ a result of clearer relationships 'He told the chaplains their the 'envy of the world" due to JY with the hierarchy, establish 'apostolate "does not satisfy itself the ,work of nuns during the past ,,~~' C)~ ,$aigon, NC :Phoro. ment of a National Secretariat by offering temporary relief but century. with a permanent office and a by the pepnanent elevation of . ' General Secretariat, adoption of , "~Please do not leave. the field ilke, level of desires." ip..which you hav.e, been, so, suc. ~"O, yeS se 0 . s Articles of Operation, and a "Its, care is ,devoted, toprovid.. clearer determination of the -
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:S::lwha:e~~~~~:~ni~o~"rd~~ C@m~osed by Navy~ Chaplains'
Ih;hops Raise' FMtm<dJ$ sai~he greatest distinctIon of the T\G fight Poverty . Ame,rican Church is its educa-. NEW DELHI (NC)-A cam EtSign to collect funds for the Indian hierarchy's fight against hunger and disease is to be held throughout, the I:lOUntry. ' The funds are to be rinsed through 'parishes, Catholic edu *aUonal institutions and lay 01' 'ganizations and through dona tions sent directly to the bishops. Card parties, fetes, film sbows, _ncem and stage performances l1Ie 'also among the fund raismg lJ.I'Ograms. , , An announcement 011. behalf .t the one-day drive said the money would be used to set up a permanent fund "to minimize the need of help from-· abroad 'flo fight poverty; hunger and,dis ease 'in India and to shoulder an' increasing measure of, our :responsibility: for succoring oUr GWo poor, sick and hungry l>rethren."
SclheduWe'Masses 1F«»1l' AInlQ18Versary BALTIMORE (NC) - As pari M' the lOOth anniversary of the 'Congregation of the Most Holy :r:tedeemer, ~ h e Red.emptorist Jl)riests at SS. James. and John parish here have scheduled . ehree special Masses at their 0hurch, site of the oldest image 3i. Our Lady of Perpetual Help fa the United States. Father Ronald G. Connors, Redemptorist provincial supe Il'ior from New York, Auxiliary Bishop T. Austin Murphy of Bal timore' and Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore will be the , ~lebrants, Sept. 16, 17 and HI.
Religion i., Sweden NEW YORK (NC) - "Sweden Today: A, ReligioUB Puzzle,'; atll 'examination of the general stiite rtf religion in that country, Wi1.ll be presented on the "Look Up and Live" series from 10:30'. :n a.m. Sunday 011. $be CBS te10 Wiien aetWoR:.
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Marine 'and to ~ccept my share oil carry out the work of VaticaD the responsibilities with vigor n," said Bishop Green. and: enthusiasm. Grant me the, Bishop Green and 20 otheK' courage tn ,be prof1'c1'ent m ' my priests each day concelebrated '< ' fQ; d'l rf K a CurSl'II0 M ass a t a rnak esh1 a1 y pe, ormance. eep me altar in the hotel's Grand Ball Greene, Jr" Marine Corps com- loyal and faithful to my supe mandant. . ' . nors' and' to the duties my room. 'A Marine in a letter to Ma- coUntry and' the Marine Corps , Workshop Sessions rine Corps headquarters here have entrusted to me. The Thursda7 and Friday con urged adoption of a prayer for "Make me considerate of those '\'ention ~genda provided for ad general use 'by all Marines. The committed·W my leaderShip. dresses by the Rev. Alan Cavan sl,Iggestion was passed along fIG Help ~to w~ar my uniform., a,ugh, C,P., ¢ the Brooklyn CUtr the· Navy Chaplains' Division with dignity, and let it remind lIill~ Center on, "Spirutuality for which composed the foliowing me daily of the traditions which the Christian in the ,World To pt"ay;er: " " I inilst uphold. day" and the Rev. Thomas Ber , "Almighty Father" w h C)'s e ' ' ' l f I' am ineiined to' doubt" ry, ,C.P., of the Seton Hall lac eommand is over' all and whose steady my ,faith; if I amtempted".ulty, on ''!f'he'Changing World love never fails, make me aware Ulake me "strong -. resist; if I, ,Challenge, ~ .' ~e Christian"• 'Gil Thy presence and obedient to should miSs the mark, give me These were diseussed in sma!ll Thsr'will.:Keep me true 'to my courage to try again. groupings. ' best 'self,' guarding· me' against I ' "Guide me with the light of' , Workshop .sessions, in English dishOnesty in purpose' and deed truth and 'grant 'me the wiSdom' and Spanish, were conducted em and helpin'g me to 'live so that by which 1 mayuriderstand the 'various phases of the Cursillo as '3ft can' faee iny' fellow, -Marines, answer to' my, prayer. Amen." ' " : it exists generally and sectiOni my loved:ones arid Thee without A copy-of the prayer, on speally.. :, , ShaO\e or"fear. :.. ; ','i cial paper suitable for framing, Panel discussions comprised t! '''Profect'my family; Give me aPpears in ·the current issue, of major' portioo e.f ·the' , ev~ tate will to do 'the ,work of'il Leatherl1eck"Marine magazine." programs. , '" , ,
WASHINGTON (NC) - ''The Marine's Prayer," recommended for ·members of the various reli' f 'th h s been approved g10US a for usea1bys Gl!neral Wallace M.
(If, all evil, -as St. Pius X reminlied us," he said. , ;Bishop Hastrich, who said that nuns may find proper direction, in the decrees of Vatican Council II, emphasized that "the Decree on Christian Education assures us there is no substitute iior', the Catholic schoo!." ·The modem, sisterhood Illan contribute best 'to the Church in the, United, States; he 'said" by 'making "every ,effort, to, train as many as 'possible in religiously oriented 'schools". and, by helping 'to F1train lay people to educate all those not in Catholic schools/" '''lLai~y Organization' " 'Speaking of the work of Religious in helping to train 'lay peOple, the bishop stressed that nuns "are not to do the work of the 'laity. The decree on Reli 'gious says they are to' leave t6 the laity the things,that can be well done by them." "The Confraternity of Chris tian Doctrine," he said "is am organization 'of the laity, by the " laity and for the laity.''' Lay responsibility for CCD administration, 00es not, how .ever, lessen the need for Reli gious contribution to ihe effort, he said. He suggested that all wrn muiiities of nuns have at least
two teachers in their mothell" bGuse "thoroughly trained Em theory and practice of CCD;" that nuns act as CCD moderatom in. parishes where priests do not ,Wive the training or time fui' such 'Work; that the Confra ~mity program be the subj~ 'matter for at least a semestelI'
OOurse in the training'of nuns;
:that older Religious· be trained! fa CCD work through SUmmel!' institutes; and that as observe!'\ll nuns attend CCD executift
board meetinilS M1d discussi~
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Continuing' Education
EVENING CLASSES TUESDAY EVENINGS 7:33 ll<J 9:30 i>.M.
(Non-Crecllt Coursell3
Liberal Arts:
lIusiness:
Cri",inology And The I'uIoIIe
Accounting For N....Acoouot_ Insurance Prep For License W,lting Far,
Cr_tive Wriling Labor.-y Hectlve English ......lic Speaking Reading Program I'w Adoolto 'WovI<shop hI'Ading Drawlotg & Painting Connr..ti...al Fr...cIt ,.ycIooIogy Of "e_""r
Y... And Y.... Child e--porary 'naeaJawy ...._ 1_e1:"Why, WIoat, iIew4'
Special Interest: Coa,",d
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In...... DMorating ' - H t y ....ro. . . . .
Fall Semester
Sapt. 27th to Dec. 6th
REGISTER
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,....in... & hld••try P.......... ' ..... Training For ·Supervi." . 1001 E.'ate-Prep For Lic_ II_I Estate Appraisal
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11'...-, Stonehlil College, INortt. Easto... Moas, Ph
'"'"-tary .............. ( . . . ,
m·2052 (IocoI), ~oston Iltoo). "
Other Programs: Write Few Special Brochures Onl
~9050
IN PEIlSON
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In.tltvte For Ivsin_ _ e.p,A, 1.,,1_ P,ag,ano 'eotlnti & C_..lln. Serv...
STONEHILL COLLEGE North EClston, ~ClSsClchusetts
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1HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fat! River, Thurs., Sept, 8, 1966
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Today's Sh(Q)!pper Must Be 'Ma~h GeB'UiMS fr@ !FBgO,Qr~ P/ruce$ By Mary Tinley Daly A magazine picture of an old-time grocery store always brings smiles. There are crates of eggs, the well known eracker barreL the sugar hin, coffee beans to be scooped oot and weighed into a brown paper bag, later to be ground at home, piles of fresh fruits super, giant, jumbo, colossal or and vegetables. In one corner mammoth and the smallest tube if! the "butcher shop" where of toothpaste is often marked the meat man in a blood "large size.': Even liquid content
Dtained apron cuts right before your eyes the roast, steak,' chop.s, whatever the eustomer want ed and usmilly tosses in a soup bone for good measure. Pre sid i n·g , .fJIf course, Was ~!l owner· of ihe store" re sponsible di·rect )y to the cus tomer, We of Ute older' generation remember well such stores. In 'the little town where I grew up, it 'was Mr. Nelson who was "Owner and Prop." We de pended or Mr. Nelson and· his' spring-type scales to provide us with good food, fair weights and reasonable prices. Neighbor, friend and fellow citizen, Mr. Nelson never failed us. He knew' the food tastes of all of his cus tomers, sent along "a little treat" when somebody was ill at home, a~d invariably added to the order a bone forthe dog. L ike practically everything else in that unsophisticated era, the neighborhood grocery store . has almost 'passed out of the pic ture. And probably all for the' better.·As customers in vast su-' permarkets; we are on our 'own, pushing carts up one aisle, down' another, picking and choosing among the approximately 8,000' items on the shelves, an increase cd 6,500 in the past 20 !ears.
seemingly cannot be noted sim ply as 16 ounces, for instance, or one pint. No,. it jogs you into thinking you're really getting a deal with its designation of "giant half quart." If you re member to disregard the adjec tives and carry around in your head a table of weights ·and measures, you know the bottle holds just a pint, no. matter bow it is shaped to fool you. Another computer-type' ebal lenge to the shopper is' when she must figure whether she is getting more for her money in buying 20 ounces for 35. cents or 241h ounces for 40 cents; com paring three 61/3 pound eon tainers with two 8% for the same price. Then there is the "giant econ omy size" which may, in fact, be more exp.~sive than the non economy size; the "10 cents off" label that makes her wonder, lO cents off what? Former price, present price marked by the store, price it will be next w:eek? Perhaps someday our children will smile at a magazine picture of the 1966 grocery store and the games people played trying to get 100 cents worth 0(, ·value out of each food dollar.
Prison mmates Adopt Ecuador Yo~ngster . CANON, CITY, (NC) - Art eight-year-old girl living m the slums of Ecuador has some ,2,200 foster fathers here. They are in mates in the Colorado State Pen itentiary. '
Mr. Anonymous "Owner. and Prop" is t~e ' board of directors of n vast chain of such markets; the store man ager is the only one to who we The prisoners "adopted" Geor may go with complaints; the gina Flores, ,who with her "meat man" does his butchering . 'mOther and' six other children' behind sliding doors and we re- lives in one room of a two-room ceeive the products '- good side' can rhack in Guayaquil, Ecuador. liP, bad side down, .wrapped in Thrctigh f~nancial contributions cellophane. they are helping her with her The brown paper bag has educa'tion and providing 'food, . given way to packages, packages clothing and medicine for the and still more packages. There. family. is no "~r, Nelson" to guide us as .. "The "adoption" project was to qualIty or dollars-and-cents initiated by the Inter reter a value of these package contents.'· ... p '. W h I th I b I t h ' pnson magazme, 10 cooperatIOn .e ave on y e a e s, e pIC- with Foster Parents' Plan .Inc tures thereon, the oftentimes of New Yo k G ' t'h k" 't' f th r. eorgma an s exaggera t e d d eSCl'l~lO,n o. e her. adopted foster fathers contents and the pnce Impnnted through thl by the store. a ~on y progress re port she wrItes and many of the prisoners correspond with her. Supermarket Ma~
CHICAGO (NC)-Msgr. James H. Fitzpatrick of Brooklyn, N.Y., said here one of the best ways to alleviate the health service situation of the nation is to pro vjde' ffiOl'e hospital nursing schools. Tl!e Monsignor, 42, was elected a member· of the board ~ trustees at the 68th annual! · American Hospital Associatioii Convention here. He now is directing a $60 million hospital f1'lcilities development program in Brooklyn, where he is·diOll esan director of health and ho& pitals. The Brooklyn diocese has been graduating 160 nurses an nually and is planning to grad · uate at least 300 nurses a ye~ ht: revealed. "This' program", said MsgJ7. · Fitzpatrick; "will help us buck j . • ' the mounting. staff sh{)rtage and . : help.. us meet. the long-pressing . . .. " ." . ' ,.' demands made on the hospitale AT PROFESSION, ·RECEPTION: Two 'Diocesan young, by medica'ie arid medicaid." : W{)men took part in the reception and profession ceremonies' In such an enormous project, of the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity in he explained, federal aid iIJ h' S'IS t er MaUl'een Josep, ' h M.S.BTl necessary, but "such aid doe€) Ph 1·l·ad eI pIa. . . , e.f t, ·pro not 'mp an fede 1 tIs" : Sh' . ThI oseI ta y ra eon 1'0 • · t vows. nounce d f IrS e IS th e f ormer K a thl' een)Fl.anagan, e vo un ry - f e d era 1 pro A Fl H 0 Iy Gh os t ].ansh, t- gram in the Brooklyn diocese in daughter 0 f Mrs. J eananagan, tleboro. Miss Marie Frechette, right, was receivt!d and will cludes a $17.5 million diocesan be known as Sister William Marie. She is the daughter of grant, a $5 million buildings Mr. and Mrs. Willie Frechette, Our Lady of the Assumption fund· and t~e$5 million federal Parish, Osterville. At center is Reverend Mother Marie GIl grant, he S8ld.
the Holy Trlnity, .M.S.RT.
Church Communities
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]lion-federal grant and construc. ST. PAUL (NC) - A $1 miltion plans for a fine arts ec.mplex on 'the campus of the College of St. Catherine have been announced by Sister Fides. Huber, president.
of ''The New :Pentecost" the con WASHINGTON (NC)-Arch bishop John F. Dearden of vention program will relate the lOetroit will be the featured results' of the' Vatican Council II speaker at the first general ses-' to the lives of women and to the objectives of their apostolate. sion of the 33rd national conven tion of the National Council of More than 5,000 women are Catholic Women which opens expected ~o attend .the four-d~' Oct. 5 in Miami Beach. sessions. In his address, "Vatican Coun cil II Speaks to Church Cominu- , Former Parish Church nities," Archbishop Dearden will present the broad scope of the Becomes CCD Center first area of apostolic activity PITTSBURGH (NC)":"'St. Wal 2S described· in the Vatican Council Decree on the Lay burga's parish, founded 63 years Apostolate.. A f{)ur - member ago to serve German-speaking families in suburban East Lib p~nel will respond. . erty, has been disbanded. Its fa-, ether speakers and their eilities will be turned into a di topics will include: Margaret (icesan Confraternity of Chris Shannon, of New York, execu tian Doctrine center, The parish tive director of the Department congregation has dwindled to 65 of United Church Women, Na fnmilies. . tional Council of Churches, The, closing was requested '·Renewal in Christian Life;" unanimously by the parish comSister Clair Marie, Sociology mittee. Parishioners will a<ffiliate iII- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • department ch;airman, Alverno. with. the parishes where· t hey III College, Milwaukee, "The· New reside. : : Nun;" Father Parnell McCarthy, The church' building will be _ III EI Sobrante, Calif" "Revolution III in the Parish" and Mrs. John A. ~ntral headquarten; of the • • • Paddenburg, past president, El Mission Helpers of the Sacred • • Paso, 'Diocesan Council of Ca-' Heart nuns, who do CCD work III . and will undertake liturgiCal: So. Dartmouth : tholic ~omen, "Opportunities in and Hyannis • the .Church Commumties, Myt~ and . «:d~C~tiOll111 pr9jl~cts under. ' III the dIrectIOn of Msgr..John L. _ •
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t eo ogy as we11 as dc~gmahI~. urc t· ISthory.1 . . Plata College IS one of many education centers run by Opus Dei, a Spanish~founded lay ?rganization dedicated to help;wg the Chul"ch. , .,. iT {'
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.HOUSTON (NC)-A membe? of the cathedral parish liturgical commission in St. Louis attended the 1966 Liturgical Week here as the result of a meeting at a Christian Unity Week confer ence held in St. Louis in June. Gertrude Barenbrugge was fl del~gate to the Unity Week con ference from the cathedral. While attending she met· Mrs. Earl Martin and Mrs. William Parker, Episcopalian delegates from Houston. The three women attended several sessions togeth er anci during free times Miss Barenbrugge showed the two Houston wo~en around St . Louis. On returning to Houston, Mrs. .Martin and Mrs. Parker decided ~ return Miss Barenbrugge's J:1ospitality. They sent her ~ round trip ticket to Houston so that she could attend the LituF~ . gical Week in their city. Sum ming up her surprise and delight, Miss Barenbrugge commented, "I think this is real ecumenism.
National. Council Conclave to Study I~esults
Of Vatican Session U on lives of Women
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Developing the seneralfi\eme eer~ainly plits a strain on' the Study.!ng_ Renev.:a.l .' .
old' math wnich Hi all: that mOst
MAPLEWOOD (NC)~No~ . C II n.I Th I of '\IS h'aveto go on.. ~ :finitive .changes were made but ..0 ,ege nans .' eo ogy.. . First 'of' all, we have to tUm an informal renewalprog~am;. Course .for- Mothers . . !'e ·.:p~~a~e . this ",a)' al~clt~at to find how much the box 'eOn:' ":e":e MONTEVIDE0 (Ne) ..;.:. Plata tairls.. '.'~erves four,;' it. :may Sisters from org,anize here iin. Uruguay 8tate, imd when we get· it. home . tion SevenGfpriories.in four .different a series of' eourseswiq i~ '. .' .. . theology for mothers; citing t~ and cook the· ~nteri.ts, :i 'meager states. .... helping for' .two,we wonder . . . . importance of training those who "serves four what-'-babies?~' Ddul'Infgththe I CORIlfngtheyeBar a are "the first preacherS of 'the. ~n~faith, the first teachers of Chris And the descripti'ons: ·You. . s t.u.y 0 . ep a~e. o. eouldn't buy a bottle of"srruill'~ . SIster. In . the. thins." . .The courses, directed by Opus QIives ,at _ ~ny .price. ''l1hey're ~or~~ and a self ;st,:,dY' ~lleacbeh o e. seven. prIOrIes ~I. Dei officials, include liturgy and . ma~e. Renewal.experlme~ts, social teachings this year, and partIcularly allowll1gmore ID '11 d t·· 1 dId' . Fine Ar:ts Complex · " I 'b" f . WI expan 0 mc U e mora an d
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THE At-: '"r: ::r>
Difficult to Use Effectively Trellises, Statuary~, Furniture
Thurs., Sept. 8. 1966
Social Workers o Meeting Today
By Joseph and MadByn. Roderick We have been toying with the idea of adding some iltructure to our· garden with the use of trellisses for climb btg roses, some good garden furnitq,re and some garden atatuary. ThesE' are all devkes which give the garden form and which are very effective
ftf used correctly. The diffi Morris and Matilda Moore and published by the Macmillan Co. eulty is in finding how to use ttle connection between good them. Too often these ad health and good eating ,is
~Wlcts to the garden add very Mttle and even detract from the larden. Garden architecture is 11 las anating field. There are all sorts C)f garden types: formal, infor mal, modern, traditional, one flower gardens, wild gardens etc. Sooner or later one must choose one of the types ....a nd begin working toward its implemen lJ;ation. I should like very much ~ end up with a garden contain ing modern sculpture cased on the German and Oanish gardens II have seen, but in the meantime ][ will have to be· satisfi~d to lay the groundwork for this type of. garden. , The groundwork involves first '8 mental plan ·of what is to be the final appearance of the gar !Jen. Garden architects· suggest dr'awing a scaled plan of the gal'den and then working from there. I have tried this any num ber of times and have drawn a !!tlank. I have decided to ap proach the problem by starting with the materials which I can afford and which are easily available. Worn beach pebbles are· excellent materials for a l'atio, for instance, and these are easily had if you are located Dear the ocean and can manage· to cart them in. Used brick is· !nexpensive and can be used in ,;any number of ways to add form and structure to the garden. At any rate the point is that any available material can be used' if one has the creativeness to \!lISe it in good taste. , On a recent trip to New York: City we made a point of visiting ·itne of the large producers of fJarden ornaments and our (ireems were shattered by the prices asked for good garden sculpture. Prices 011 modern lICulpture which we particularly 'itdmire were out of an propor tion. As a result we have had to flItart thinking about designing ana making our OWft pieces l1ather than buying them ready made. This is part of the fun of gar dening. Nothing is ever quite finished. There is no boredom here, As long as we live the t.J3rden is never complete and Dever satisfying because there is always something new worth baying and something wortB <.Aoing. . . In the Kitchen The stockmarket is tailspin Ding down and the supermarket b skyrocketing up and the poor bousewife is caught some where 'in l.Jetween.· As hel' husband Makes his head dejectedly over the Wail Street· Journal she cheers him up by reading the food ads with such cheery news as "bacon $1.09 a pound, butter ,,' "$.85, iuia;"eggs '·75'(:"'3' d·o'zen;H, There really doesn't seem to be much relief· in .sight for, either one's problem but the 'Depart ment of Agriculture did suggest fA few things that the Americaui t!:Ollsumer could do to relieve the :ising food cost, other than to 3top eating. The major sugges tion was that the wise buyer use 1llIer food dollars to get the most f!ood value for her family by /Avoiding buying luxury items nnd sticking to those inexpen lllve but nutritious buys such as l'Oultry and fish. The latter is of Jl)articular food value in our modern day diets. In a marvelous new cook bOOk 'tile Savo.r Of The Sea':t;:f Dan'
9
WASHINGTON (NC) -Deiee gates from around the world. will hear U, S. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota at the 13th International Conference of
Social Workers here under the auspices of three Catholic organ~ izations. Joint sponsors are the International Conference of
CathQlics Charities, the Catholic
stressed, especially the good. eat
International Union of Social!
ing of the treasures of the deep.
Service, and the National COQ
In one chapter Dr. Frederick J.
ference of Catholic Charities.
Stare, chairman of the Harvard
McCarthy's talk will be the University Department of Nutri highlight of the conference'a
tion gives this advice to those
public sessions today whic' will
who feel fish is' a Friday only
open with a concelebrated Masn item. "We recommend," says Dr. at St. Matthew's Cathedral. Pr~
Stare, "That fish be included in
siding at the Mass will be Arch·
diet four'times a week.'Seafoods
bishop Patrick A. O'Boyle o~
fulfill the modern conception of
Washington. Lawrence Cardinali good nutrition. They are high in Shehan oC Baltimore will be
the protein that contains the im.:.
principal celebrant.
portant animo acids, high .in
: Addilig an ecumenical touch to mineral content, low in fat-and the· day'S· ·events will be an Clt WHITE MASS: Participants· in annual White Mass change Of greetings between the those fats that fish do have are of the polyunsaturated type," , at St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River,'are,' from left, Barbara conference sponsors and the World Council of Churches. If you agree with Dr. Stare Westgate, Sacred HeHrt parish, Taunton; Mari~ Perry, St. Dr. Henry Whiting of the that fish' is an important part of Mary, Fairhaven; Sister Madeleine Clemence, directr ~ of Lutheran, Church in America a good family nutrition plan but f! .nne's Schooi of Nursing; Gail Charbonneau. S~ .. l' "1lU, and the department of socia! find that fish and chips from a welfare of the National Councia local drive-in or tuna from .a New Bedford. of Churches will deliver ames can are the only seafood that sage from the Council to the ye« are very familiar with other conference. Concurrently, Moth. than an occasional splurge on 8l er Mary Charles, president of lobster dinner then this cook the National Conference of
book mentioned above is for you. New Habits Give Sisters of Charity Catholic Charities, will brinlE
Neverl--"e I seen any cookbook greetings from the conference to dedicated to fish and shellfish. Lighter 'Winter Burden' a Consultation on Social Work that was so thorough from cleaning to cooking. Perhaps this SPOKANE (NC)-As a result Only familiar item of the new which will be held the same da,.. is because Mr. Morris is quite an of changes in religious garb, a . habit is the silver pectoral cross . under the auspices of the World Council ()f Churches. authority on fishing and his co-· Sister of Charity of Providence, which bears an effigy of the author Matilda Moore certainly without,dieting or strenuous ex- Blessed Virgin as Our Lady of. St. Anne's Alumnae seems to know the cooking of ercise, will weigh pounds less Compassion. Skirt length may them inside and out. this Winter. be ankle to mid-calf, as the in Plan Annual Mass Not only does this book con Mother Charlotte Marie, pro- dividual Sister decides. A simple St. Anne's Hospital School of tain a large' selection of delicious vincial superior, estimated that veil replaces the "calalily" head Nursing Alumnae will attend recipes under sucb clear head the Winter garb worn in fonner dress worn by members of the Annual Communion Mass at a in~ as oven recipes, broiler recyears, in material alone, weighed community for the past 102 P.M. Sunday in Notre ~me . iPes, and top of the stove recipes about 10 pounds - 1Il "Winter years. Church. Supper will be serve<!! so' that oue may not only choose burden" which nuns of slight Pumps may replace the ox at White's following the cere the type of seafood she wants to stature found difficult to carry. ford-style'shoes now worn at the mony. ,cook but it also tells the novice She said the new habits are Sister's option, and a chanel Co-chairmen are Mrs. Lor buyer how to buy her fish and the" direct result of Vati<:an type jacket maybe donned for raine Raposa, Mrs. Claire Melano what fats, oils, and liquids cer Council II's decree which . street wear. Nursing Sisters willi son and Miss Janet Gonet. Thesr bin seafood have an affinity for. 'stressed that religious habits wear identical habits-but in a1l will be assisted, by the Class Gl Foe those of us who are watch 'should be simple, becomin·g, white. 1954. ing our food dollar cautioUsly Synthetie Fabriea "meet the requirements l'If. there is a chart giving regional "We got rid ·of so. many health and be suited to the cir Fall River Nurses names of fish, when they are iB cumstances of time and place things," Mother Charlotte Marie season, and most important of. as . well as to the services re A membership drive is beifit? aaid. "We'd ~ken out a great all when they are the' cheapest deal of material. Tapered sleeves implemented by the Fall Rivet" quired by those who wear th.em." to buy. . Catholic Nurses' Guild. Plans tQ replaced the old bulky, move further the program will be dis The illustrations by Peter ment-hindering sleeves. Light Landa are not only charming b\\t Sisters Receive, CCO weight synthetic fabrics were cussed at a meeting to be beld Thursday, Sept. 22 in theCO:l!l informative as weU; one Bet of. Master Certificates used instead of hot, heavy serge," plates illustrates clearly waat ference room of St. Anne's Hos
the superior said. such cuts as fish' steaks, fillets, WASHINGTON (NC)-Twen The new habits are the end pital. Miss Clare Sullivan will
and fish sticks look like and tv Sistei."S have become the first preside. It. is noted that guild products of designs by "our own what part of the fish they come persons in the United States to membership is' open to all reg. Sisters" modified by professional from in case you're doing the receive Confraternity of Chris istered and licensed practicsll cutting and cleaning yourself. tian Doctrine master certificates. dress designers-:-including one nurses, whether or not they are· man, she added. Deadline for There are sets of photographic The certificates were issued to actively engaged in nursing. instructions on how to clean a 13 jointly by the' CCD National donning the ne~ ha·bit is Jan. 1 and each Sister will wear helt' lobster, shell and devein shrimp, Center and the Catholic Univer RECTRICAl and open oysters. r cannot rec- sity of America; and to seven own outfit as it is completed, she Contradcm; ommend t his book highly, by the National Center andMt. said. : enough. It will have its publica- St. Scholastica College, Atchison, tj()ll date Sept. 12 and the 6.95 Kans;' that it will cost will be saved The master certificate' is not a over and over again as you .wOo master of arts degree,· Father ,your family away. from the· Joseph .B., Collins, S.S., national beef steaks to the eod steaks. CCD diresctor stated, but "it i8 , This is a delicious sauce for,. marked b~.. a total catechetical . "approach. It combines modern for any type of fish .but it is at catechetics with special educa-'· " its best on crabmeat and lobstell' tionai traiing." 279 Barnstable load .~ea~.. ,. ' . ,,,,, '.," The Religious completed the'·· 944 County St• $P 5.,.0079 . Momay Sauce 'required courses in ·four Summer ' New Bedford Z Tablespoons butter sessions at the two colleges. 4' Tablespoons flour flltlllflllll!lHlIlIIllII"III11I1"lIIt1l1l1ltllllll\llIl1l1l1l11l11~llIIIIllIlIll!l/Ililllllllll1l'lIl/UlllmmlIII1I11r.tl!i:t!!!Il"i 3 cups boiling milk Yi teaspoon salt . frequently for 30 minutes. Strain 2 white peppercorns == STORE H'OURS: == ·mnd pour back into. saucepan. § '2 egg yolks 4) Over a very low heat place ~ == 1/4 cup cream the saucepan and stir in the egg == Mon. & Tues. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. . 3 Tablespoons grated Swiss <lii' yolks that have .been beaten Wed. 9 a.m. to .5 p.m:. Parmesan cheese with cream (You can put the Thurs. & Fri. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 1) In a heavy saucepan melt two egg whites in a tightly cov the butter over low heat. ered jar in your freezer to use Sot. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. . - 2) Add the flour and stir untii at a future time). it begins to turn golden .. 5) Add the grated cheese and C~osed a~1 day Sl\J8'\ldllOJf 3) Gradually stir in the boling stir until smooth. Pour sauce milk and continue stirring until over prepared fish or shellfish. , the sauce thickens.. Add the sea Sprinkle with a little more ~ UNiON WHARF, FAIRHAVlEN TeO. 991-93Sa ~ oonings (the salt and pepper grated cheese and brown under 'corM) and cook slowW "stifring .;; bot broiler. ~mUllliIlUIIIIUIllIlIIIIIWlllllllUlllljlllllulill!J!!J!!!IIIIlIlill!lll!lllllllllllllllll11111111l11111I11l1I1I11!!l1l1l11m!1l:~
Shed Pounds
"Real ,: Estate Rene Poyant Hyan"is
Macleo\rll°s Sea foods
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12,000 to Attend'
. THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 8, 1966
MiUenniMm Mass'
O~$<eti"VefS fe~!r. Re~ CthlOIl1Q Reigjln Of T<elrror
PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arch bishop John J: Kroi of Philadel.. phia will offer a Solemn Ponti fical Mass here in, Convention Hall Sunday in observance of Poland's Millennium of Chris-. tianity. .
HONG KONG (NC) - A :reign of terror for all people of Red China associated with IImpitalistic and bourgeois ideas rather than a !fresh perse a:ution of the church is involved in the closing oi Peking's famous (Catholic South Cathedral by the Communist party's youthful Red Guards. . IThis is the opinion of Hong Kong's most experienced ob eervers of Catholic affairs in Ch ina. Despite their agreement, they said it is too soon to attempt 2 full assessment of the new situation there. But they added filat they wonder how far Peking ean rely 'on the stability' of its "deliberately stirred up" revolu tionary students and school'chil oren. The current attack on' the Church comes as no surprise. It lias been building up for more than' a year. . Bar Reporters The Chinese capital's cathedral
Some 12,000 persons are ex pected to fill the huge audito rium for the Mass which origi nally was scheduled to be cele brated by Stefan Cardinal Wys zynski. The valiant Polish Pri mate, who was refused permis sion by the Polish Rers to leave his native land, will be repre sented by his auxiliary, Bishop Wladyslaw Rubin, who will give the ~ermon in bqJh Polish and English. An honorary degree will be conferred on Cardinal Wyszyn ski in absentia by Villanova University. The degree will be received for the Cardinal by Bishop Rubin tomorrow in cere mon~es at Archbishop Krol's..
STUDENT LEADERS: New leaders of the National Feder~tion 'of Catholic College Students,' elected at their national convention in Cincinnati,' with,· their chaplain, Father' residenc~. More than 1,000 guests will Fidelis Dunlap, O.S.B., are, Betty Jean Mattingly, a 1966 graduate Of F on tb onne co II ege, llonor Cardinal Wyszynski in St. Louis, executive secretary; Anne .Schneller, St. Jose'ph's college, Brooklyn, N.Y., ex- absentia at a 'dinner to be given ecutive vice-president; P~ul Bukovec, Manhattan college, New York, programs vice-presi- by the local Polish community. dent; and Robert Grossman, St. Benedict's college, Atchinson, Kan.; president. NC Photo. Saturday., Bishop Rubin willi "
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'
,
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again be guest of honor, substi-. for the Cardinal.
iu~ing
"
;:~Sng~~~Snin::~po~rOf7::~0;= Urges, Dialogue With. People of Red C~lina new drive against
Gets Fellowship
ernment's
~;I~~f:~~sR;~f~~:;sC~er~l~~i~~:~
Distinguishes Bet~een People, Ideology'
over the cathedral's dome and NOTRE DAME (NC).:- In a one of detesting the .evil: of a western tower. strong, plea 'for a sympathetic philosophy, but not the men who , The ,youthful demo,nstrators .understanding of' the people of . believe and' live by it because :refused to . allow repoi·ters to Red China, a priest urged college while the evil system of ideas <enter the church, but newsmen students to op:ri a dialogue with never changes, men and govern 8aW that some windows had been that nation's hUllareds' of mil- ments do. Ilmashed and -that communist lions. "In the case of Red China," slogans had been painted on the Speaking at the Catholic Stu- Father Richardson said,' "the eathedral ,walls. The biblical dents' Mission' Crusade here, evil of atheistic communism as pictures that had formerly been, Father' William J'. Richardson, a philosophy remains unchanged, IlIlJ the walls were mutilated '. M.M., editOr of Maryknoll pub- but the men and women who are A Protestant church was ~lso lications and. a specialist in Chinese communists· are subject iaken over the same day. Chinese affairs, said "we are in- to other channels of thought." , Peking's South Cathedral volved with' the i>e,ople" of Red Communism, he said, has not aating back to the time of Father ' China' by our very own Chris- b r 0 u g ht. heaven-on-earth to '~atteo Ricci, 16th-century mis tianity "':'" '" we ..•ust' give' wit- ,China during its 16-year· rule monel' in China - was kept open ness to our concern and 'let the much to the disillusionment' of, by the Communist party to mis . people of ,China know we are the Chinese people.
·lead tourists into believing there interested in 'them,!' '0; Pope John's Remark
is religious freedom in Red Chi..: Father Richardson, a news
. ",The very fact' IDa. oorrespondent during the six ' that China is " n'ow undergoing' a very serious ' 'years he' was stationed in ·Tai Red Propaganda ' 'ideolo.gical crisis' in which her wan, ~at. of. the Republic of ' l e a d e r s in the fields of. politics; .A Europea'n wo~an tourist Free . '~hina, told the, ~llegians bId the' NCWC ,News Service that Christians must, make the lIere she attended Mass in the same distinction between the ,Evicted Indians Get enthedral on Aug. 14, She said people 9f <i.hina, and' tha, t' na,. ·"· ,several hundred Chinese were at d From D. 'locese tion's ide()logy ~s didPQpe John Lan,. :Mass, mostly old people, .but XXIII' in hispast~ral letterlTELLICHERRY (NC).:-About Pacem in. Terris.
' " IlOme young men and children.' 1,500 peasants evicted from their People .Disillusioned, :
: If. they were not Communist' , , ,,"
farms by the Mysore state gov Thatdistinc~ion, he s~id, waf!, ernment are" being resettled on ]l>arty ~'actors," they lwill",su:Uer I!lecauseof. their religion, labeled' land bought by' the' .Tellicherry a feudalistic and· capit~listic tool: diocese' here in India. Prefer Abolishing
" The tourist returned Aug: 20 . The' 1,500 are among 3,000 after tourin'g Peking, Canton and F~iday Abstinence
evicted in May from forest lands Hangchow. 'She said: "By .the EDMONTON (NC)-A survey: they had turned . into farms. ~nd of our tour a few of us They were the ta'rgets of a cam':' conducted' b~' a Catholic news were disgusted with the contin p.aper here in Alberta ciisc~osed paign by Hindu communal groups llOUS .stream of cultural revolu a majorit~' in favor of abolishing picturing them as "the Catholic tionary propaganda' the guides the custom of Friday abstinence peril from Kerala" or as'butch felt ,?uty bound to cram down from meat. ers 'of cows and thus violators of ' Glur collective and· individual The Western Catholic Reporter Hindu tradition. About a quarter throats. A couple of us dished it conducted the polh among 100 of «xl those evicted are J:lindu, the back but could not g~t the Mao its readers.' The result-52 in Pest Catholic. lIieedle off the sound track. If favor of ,dropping the abstinence ,Announcing' the resettlement,. law; 28 for its retention and 19 Bishop Sebastian, Valloppilly
undecided. One reader answered . said he took action after Chief
,Providence ,. to: Have he, was "not concerned." 'The Minister S. Nijalingappa of My
editors emphasized the pon was sore had failed to' make good
Project Equa'lity to be valued only as a "random on a promise to provide alter
PROVIDENCE (NC) - Msgr. , sampling of public opinion." nate land for those evicted. Daniel P. Reilly, chancellor, an nounced the PrOVidence diocese, ,which includes Rhode Island 'Will establish a "Project Equal~ ON CAPE COD . ity" program to help combat ra e:ial discrimination here. ' .' The p~oject, devised by the, National Oatholic Conference for BUILDING MATERIALS. .interracial Justice (NCCIJ), puts ihe economic power of the SPring 5-0700 Church in the fight for racial equality by requiring all com e> panies doing business with a di «ese to avoid discrimination in tl\eir hiring practices. It is cur , t, AMPLE 'PARKING rently oPcl:dting 'in about' 19 archdioceses' arKI dioceseli. . ,
JOHN' HI NC,KLEY .&'SON (0.
education~ literature and the arts -people who wield great influence over the hundreds of millions-are being purged from their positions, is ample proof of '. Pope 'John's remark that men. can grow weary of a false phil. osophy and turn away from it," he said. ""i have nO simple, pat solution to the 'question of China and how we as Christians must act towards her, and I am aware that the' People's Republic of China' is 'an aggressive nation ,bent on· nationlll power. and ideological subversion, and that firmness and strength ,and cour- ' . age 'are absolutely nece!;sary ie ''-aJt t'-is aggressl'()n " " ' ,. , "But'I am equally aware that 0\"; own ignoran'(:e 'and 'callous-' ness and a' refusal to ,face up ie 'realityare wrong, Prudence," he said, "is an absolute requisite in dealing with China, biJt not a . prudence that' precludes 'ChrisUlt» love and interest, and sym . th 'd th " pa y an empa, y.
H~~N~E:;eid~~~r;'-::~t ~~~ many, is the third recipien.t of the Richard Cardinal Cushing Fellowship in chest diseases at Denver's National Jewish H06 pital.
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Pope Paul Warns Agamnst Dangers Of Weamth
THE ANCHOR'Thurs., Sept. 8, 1966
PBedge$ [f[(Ge~dlom'
Of Relo@o©U1 .
e A S '1' E L
GANDOLFO f,NC)-Pope Paul VI has warned against the danger tJ.ltf riches which, l:le said, "in many cases can be more harm ful than helpful to the Church." llt is a paradox of paramount Dmportance, he tl)ld his weekly general audience, that "Christ established the moral li!fe of His followers on a foundation which we would call negative :renunciation, abnegation, sacri fice and the Cross." "is temporal pr~perity the eause of the well being of the Church?" He asked, continuing the exploration of the reasons :!lor the Church's vitality which has been a recurring theme of his recent talks. "Whoever wishes to attain an ~uthentic concept of the" Church OOday would immediately answer in the negative," the Pope re plied. "He would find instead that an ab'undance of economic goods ii'l. many cases is more Inarmful than helpful to. the Church. The pages of history document this !fact. The words of the Gospel proclaim it.' "Temporal means are indeed necessary for the life of the Church, but only insofar as they JIu'rnish bread for its life and Cire always rigorously kept within the bounds of the purpose of its spiritual mission. , Gospel Spirit "And fortunately it ean be tlaid that now this is the men tality and practice of the men of the Church. We thank God. And we credit this disinterested ruttitude toward economic mat ters, this poverty which the Lord has taught us, for the discovery that such an attitude is not in deed an impediment to the true prosperity od' the Church but a source of spiritual strength, 01f freedom, wisdom and courage. "Thus we can draw the con ~lusion that it is not from tem poral power that the Church draws its 'vital energies." The doctrine of renunciation , ::md the Cross" the Pope said, is one of the fundamental moral principles established by Christ fur the Church. He continued: "If any of us believes he' is renewing the life of the Church· by suppressing mortifications and vexations, 9Jl1all or large, which are part of it because of ,moral exigencies or recognized 'ascetical practices, he would not be interpreting as he should the fundamental law of t~e Gospel ~pirit. And it is precisely from this spirit that the' Church re ceives it!; vitality."
Iowans Planning New Catholic Conference DUBUQUE (NC)-Archbishop James 'J. Byrne of Dubuque. has announced the formation of the llowa Catholic Conference. Purpose of the conference will be "to coordinate the activities, of the Church at the state level and to maintain an active coop erative effort with other reli gious groups, labor unions, poli tical parties, social wel.fare agencies and government in de '!'eloping a society devoted to the needs. of the public," the arch bishop s a i d . ' , It will also serve as an infor mation agency on public policy ~uestion15 affecting the Church and the public interest. James McNally, Sioux City attorney and state senator, has been named' executive director of the il!onference. The confer a.-nce offices will be ilIII. lOes ' Moines. '
11
,MARYKNOLL GENER'ALS: General Council of the Mclryknoll Fathers, who will guide the 1,400-member society of priests' and Brothers for the next five years are, left to right, the Very ReV'S. Delbert W. Robinson, Canton, Ohio, assistant general; William A. Bergan; Plainville, Conn., vicar general; John J. McCormack, Yonkers, N.Y., superior general; Arthur J. Dwyer, Somerville, Mae., assistant gerieral, and John J. Stankard, Belmont, Mass., assistant general. NC Photo.
BERLIN (NC) - The Soviet government's top official, on re ligious affairs defended freedom of worship and pledged non intervention in church affairs, but at the same time warned that no violations of the strict law on separation of Church and stat.e would be tolerated. Vladimir Kuroyedov, chair man of the government commis sion on religious affairs, said that Soviet law guarantees reli gious freedom and that efforts to suppress religiou would be wrong. "H has long been established that any kind of ban or adminis trative pressure IS not an effec tive means of struggling against religious ideology," he told the government newspaper, Izvestia. "Atheist convictions, like any other convictions," he said, "cannot 'be impose'd by force, by , decrees, or other administrative means."
(ASA BLANCA
.Dust Across The
~ggesha" St. Bridge
State Should Be' Servant of, Family
o
SEAFOOD
"There are forces loose in the world which are anti-life, anti love, anti-child; but it is still a world of expanding programs of social security, m"aternity aid, child guidance, parent and child education, housing action, social justice and family welfare under, the auspi,ces of municipalities, provinces, national and interna-. tional government agencies, as well ,as of continuing private initiative and philanthropic ac tion," added Bishop Wright, a Massachusetts native. "Supernatural forces" are also at work on the side of the fam-, illy, the Bishop pointed out. These include the renewed awareness of the Church to, ;family needs, Christian family life movement and a growing number of publications con fam ily liturgical life and:spirituality. ,
',ope Aids Victims
Of Earthquakes
CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) Pope Paul VI has sent a mes sage of sympathy and an undis-' Closed sjJm of money. to help sur viving families of the ear'tn quake ihat 'struck nOl'thern' Turkey. The message, and money was sent by way of' Archbishop Francesco Lardone, Apostolic Internuncio in T,:,rkey.
·'·~'·"···"'··'~··~~1
ORTINS· Photo Supply
.i I 245
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MAIN STREET
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FALMOUTH-KI 8-19 '18
ARMAND ORTINS,
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!Finest Variety of
Bishop John Wright Tells Governors
CContinued fro~'Page 9ne privileges and sacred rights." to be, changed or challenged; Turning to positive influences thosp od' the civil society should on the family, he welcomed the be the first, especially when "new pre-occupati'on" with fam ily life in contemporary discus there is question of conflict be tween the claims of society and sions. the rights and purposes of the "Some of the things said are family." he stressed. not without scandal and some of the solutions suggested are not 1lJndermine Stability without sin ... ... ... but no small Describing the forces "pres part of the present discussion ently working against the' fam and the preoccupations behind it ily," the Bishop scored the in fluence of the "totalitarian is honest, ~onscientious anClloyal state." to the divine values and human "Rightist, leftist or otherwise integrities at the heart of family li,fe," the Pennsylvania Ordinary statist," he said, "those domi nafed, even unconsciously, by de~lared. totalitarian concepts tend, to Confident Optimism judge, the 'worth of the family. On the ','level of :nature," by how it serves 'the necessities Bishop Wright said, there are , of the state' more than they tend strong forces on the side of the to judge the worth cd' the state family. by how it serves the necessities "The laws of nature and of .of the family." , nature's Go!! '" "'.,. wait ready He deplored influences which to reveal themselves, still there undermines the stabilij.y of the and stUl'dy, When the storms of family. Among these he listed moral crises and debates pass,'" easy divorce, !'regimes of con thE: Pittsburgh prelate observed. traceptive orientation with re Supernatural Forces spect 10 the social purposes of : "That is -why we always have family life," regimes of' "im more reasons for eonfident opti personal legalistic orientation" mism that we have for moral and such things as, "economic defeatism as we face the future," laissez-faire" political indiyid be ~dded. ualism, technocratic scientism, mOI'al n'eutralism."· Positive Influences Ext~nd New Jersey The ~ishop stressed the rela Discrimination Law tionship betw~en spiritual and physical evil and called for TRENTON (NC)"':"-A bill ex effC'rts to eradicate problems like tending New Jersey laws against disease and "degrading involun discriminatory e m ploy men t buy poverty." practices was signed by Gov~ He condemned concepts of Richard 'J. Hughes. marriage which "exclude or The measure eliminates ex deny its special sanctity or emptions previously granted to ,. * '" which deny the exclusive '.businesses which employ lesS" ness of the love in marriage or than six persons., More than 200, which, cheapen this by 'trial 000 ,additional jobs will come mal'l:iage' or' pre-marital coun under the law, as a result of the terf.eits of marriage's unique measure sponsored by Assembly , man Arnold E, arown, a Bergen Negro. The bill passed Holy See and Iraq, County both the Senate and the Assem bly without significant opposi To Exchange Envoys tion. VATICAN CITY (NC) -The Holy 'See and the Middle East ern republic of II'aq have agreed ~1I"11111111111""II11I"I""IIII11I1"I11I1I1I11I1I11""""1E ~ DRY CLEANNG ~ to set up full diplomaticrela tions. ' ~ and ~ An apostolic nunciature of the Holy See will go to Iraq and an Iraqi embassy will be estab lished at the Vatican. Until now the Holy See has had an apostolic delegate, Arch bishop Maurice Perrin, in Bagh 34-44 Cohannet Street dad, ~ut delegates have no Taunton VA 2-6161 ~ efiiciill diplomatic stat~. ?oilll!llllmUlllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlltlii , I
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., Sept. 8. 1966
few Willing liands
God 'Love You
B
SIIeed $ Offmce Politics' First Rate Comic Novel By Rt. Rev. ·Msgr. John S.
By MIDst Rev. FuRton J.
Sheen,
D.O.
When Our BlessE,d Lord sat down at table the night of the Last Supper~ the Apostles fought with one anoth,er to have' first place. Our Lord reproaching' them by example, lll'OSe from the table girded Himself with a towel, washed their feet and wiped them: It is interesting that, though the Apostles fought for chairn, not one them foul~ht for the towel. Honor is - desired by all, service by the few. Yet He Who was Lord and Master did the humbling work: of a sllave and in the end He ehose the most dif ficult of all work, bearing the Cross of our sins. By this act 'Our Lord made authority and superiority inseparable from service. That is why He said that "Not eYeryone who says 'Lord, Lord' will enter the kingdom of heaven."
K~nnedy
No nonsense about the title of Wilfred Sheed'g new Called, briefly' and bluntly, Office Politics (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 101 Fifth Ave., New York. :$4.95), it ill about office politics. The office is that of a liberal maga zine, The Outsider, and the . h th the editorial newcomer. At the politics have ~ do WIt e end of the/day, he is invited by. 'succession to the post of Twining to have a quick drink editor-in-chief. But, as is with him. This means a .long, said s eve r a 1 times in the long evening in a bar, during wurse of the narrative, similar which Twining talks endlessly pOliticking for about himself, his early life, his We do not save ourselves alone, but olllll:\T in' the context position or ad obsessions. These seances are of suffering humanity, As Catholics you already have'over 300,000 vantage goes on boring and can be repulsive, and, missionaries in'the poor countries of the iIi every sort of by keeping George away, from world. You have !fiO,OOO schools for office. The mag home until the sip-all hours, ,in children and 5,000 orJl,hanages; You help azine is 15 years tensify the strains on' his mar to support 400 leprosaria as well as (j)ld, a p pea r s riage. But can, they mean that ,26,000 ' hospitans lIlnd dispensaries. Can
e'v e r y second he 'is being groomed for the top you not gi~e up a desSerl, a" 'eoektail
week, has never spot? HEADS PUBLICATION,:" 01' the equivalent 'of any, luxury jUst
had a large cir o' Deadly Serious, . eulation, and ·is Disillusionment a b ou t . the New' editor of 'the St. Anth: to serve those who' ai'e' helping w save
in decline. Sev magazine and ab9ut Twining in the world?'Oull' 'natiolJlal office has bun':'
ony Messenger, national en years before' creases. Besides, the in-fighting' dreds, millions of towds-towels for the
~h e develop that goes on in the office, the Catholic family,~ magazine sick, the ignorant, tile, slum dwellers,
ments of which Mr. Sheed. alignments and realignments published by the Franciscan but we h~ve f,ew wil1ling hands. Would
writes, a new editor-in-chief that are taking place, the ani Fathers of the Cincinnati you like to do a littlt~ washing for as?
. had been imported frOJJI En mus against him asthe tempo province, is Father Jeremy gland. Gilbert Twining, then in rary fair-haired boy of the boss, . " ,. . Or maybe ,you would, like.. to turn Harrington, O.F.M. NC bis late 40's and with a still in mystify and vex George. He has your blessings into ,a noble serviCe by' taking out an Annuity Photo. dustrious reputation (in' credu- had' enough. which will pay you returns during life, reduce your taxes and at Jous America at, least) as,m Then comes Twining's trip. death the principal wm go to the Holy Father for the pool' of brilliant jO)UD.alist.. He is to be away for .five whole the world. H you want to help ever:yone, everywhere, then have Twining is something of', a days, in California .. It might not , your alms distributed by. the Holy' Father who knows where, the stage Englishman, not the silly appear that anything very novel' Continued from Page One . need is greatest. Writ.~ to me, including the date of your .birtb. ass type but the public school eould happen in the office, that "Her sister is Mother 'Fergus," God Love You! and university smoothie. He is any crisis could occur, in that 'said the Fall River superi9r. &1Il impersonation, rather than a' tiny interval. But once Twining "She was formerly mistress of person. He is suave, clipped of is 'gone a power struggle gets novices at our American noviti GOD LOVI~ TOll to G.J.M. "Enclosed you wilt find a ODeck speech, ornaments his conversa under way. .' for $15 which represlmts dessert, tips, partial stock dividends ate at Fruit Hill in North Provi tion with expressions which This ,is .probably' the best ,dence and she is now provincial and other small sacrifices made in honor of Christ for the poor probably have become 'obsolete eonstructed of Mr. Sheed's four 'of the Australian province of, oftbe world," . , . tel, Jeanne M. for $2.50. 'CJ[ am only H but In Britain but still impress the novels, although the least glit our community." Mother Fergus it won't: hurt to send half of what I've saved to the Missions." American hearer. .. tcring, The outrageota remark, is at present visiting her own .~ •. to Mr. and Mrs. J. '1-. fo... $100. 'I • . • the sum 01 tbe gUts given Polished Manner the widlly funny statement is . mother in Ireland, added Mother to us for our (iolden Wedding anniversary... . There seems to be nothing in here, but ' not in the, prodigal Gistilian, .and was with her at' eisive or original about .his plenty to which' the previous the time news of Sister Eamon's magazine. What distinguishes it works. have accustomed us... death was released. Send us your gold and jewelry-the braclet or ring you no fG less its ,matter than its man-' , There are the doldrums in,·the Saga of Persecution longer wear,. last year'~l gold eyeglass frameS, the cuff links you , Der, which is much like its mas middle passages. of this lengthy Persecution is not new to the never. liked anyway. We 'will resell them and use the money to ter's: coot: ironic. knowing, pol- book, but the beginning is brisk Franciscan Missionaries, s aid aid the Missions. Youlr semi-precious stones will be wInning Ished. Twining's great eontribu and the concludina portions, in-, Mother Gistilian. Foun~ed ia , preciouS souls for Chri,t. Our address: The Society for the Pro tion apparenJly is his ability to genious and suspenseful. It is '. ·.India in 1877 by Mother Ma.y pagati()l\ 01. the Faith, 386 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. raise money from rich boobs. deadly serious, as only the first of the PasSion, the community He is a tyrant .to work for. rate' comic, novel can - be, and, received its 'baptism of blOOd in Rot a frowning or a roaring ty while making one smile or 1900 when seven Sisters Were mnt, but of the deadlier smiling, lQ~h, i,~duces, too, a ~dn~ss beheaded in China during, the Cut oat Uris eelunlD, pin yOUI' sacriff.;e ie It alUl mail It .. lJOft-spoken type. One of his' em WhICh Wltne~es ~ the ~ldel~ty Boxer Rebellion. The SeVeR Most Rev. FuItOlil I. Sllleen, National Direetor &t the 'society lor ployes remarks of: him that he ~nd ~netratJon wl.th. whIch hfe were beatified in 194!i by Pius Oae Propagation of the Faith, H6,Fifth Avenue, New York. N.Y. XlI.' ' iii foul 'but pleasant about it. _, IS beIng presented 10 Its pages. . 10001, 01' to YOU DiOCI~au Diredor, at. Rev. )Isgr. Raymond '1'. Only a few years ago, said These employes are said to have Santa Vittoria Secret. ' Coll8idtDe, 368 llilortla ]~lrin Sired, Fall 'Biver, MassaehuseU8. been picked "on Some 'principle Robert Crichton is strenuously Mother Gistilian, three Sisters were killed_ during the' Congo at interlocking eompatibility," seeking to be comic in his 447 uprisings, and 17 Sisters were At any rate they don't get on to page The Secret of Santa Vit gether exc~Pt under Twining's ~ria (Simon an~ Shuster, ~230 killed by one bomb in Algiers .<tirection.· SIxth 'Ave., New, York. $5.95). during World War II. In Fall River the Sisters staff There are two senior editors But to read his nove) just after' Espirito Santo School and oper 'With equal status. The one longer readmgMr. Sheed's is to real ate . St. FranCis Residence for' (oJ in service is Brian Fine. "People ize the difference between buf , thought that Fi~e w~s a Jewish foonery and burlesque, 'on the 'employed women.. Iltame and· this made' him feel one hand, and genuine Comedy, 3ewi;h-, but not real-Jewish, on the otlier. parody-Jewisp.." Fine has been· Santa Vittoria is an Italian hill , Continued from Pafe One .. drained of enthusiasm, hope, and' town famous fo! its wine, of site in the northeastern sectioa even his pristine ambition., He . which it produces at least a mil drags on in a familiar but savor ' lion bottles in' a good year. But of the' See City. Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, supero ' less routine:' if famous, Santa Vittoria: is com:. intendent of, diocesan schools" Twining Treatment pletely isolated;' so that, when I " His peer -in pos'iti6n is' the Mussolini falls in -1943, and,the co~celebrated aMass, for· ' the.. , Tel. W'(.6-8271'" New Bedford :Jounger Fritz Tyler, once an ar Germ.ans ta.ke over in Italy" the' first year students, and..·.,their··. .·640: Pleasant, Street ,parents, at St. William's ,Church dellt" demonstrator for 'liberal ' town,is long-left alone., : eauses, but now a plausible imi The ,people depose, the' local .this morning. Fr. O'Neill d~iv tation of Twining, a slick per Fascist bosses; .elect one Bom , ered the greeting ,of Bishop Con former in the circus of fashion boUni mayor, and ,proceed about nolly for whom the new educa- ' able liberalism, enjoying the their p"al~ry ,business: Then, with· ,tional institution is named.... , The Connolly .High ' principal world of the weaithy in which, the ·Allied a,dvance up' the pen eame here from Bishop Cheverus, , .. WiTHOUT & PARKiNG . PROBlEMS '. he moves' chiefly because he insula, comes word that a Ger flatters and 'gratifie's a 'patroness 'man' force will6ccupy the town,. High Sch~l in Portland, .Main0. .' at'the ' , .. Qf the magazine. '~:, The, frantic concern of every'I' Low man on ,the editorial sid~, onc: becomes the .con~ealm?nt of ' ~" Q itS, ' e,~SllJJs .. ...... . . . fllI George Wren, who has,given:, the~r st!;lre of wme, lest It fall : "CAMDEN (N())~A,complete StC?MIERSET, MAS£. tllp a $15,000 a year job at,CB~:. into.t~e-~~nds of t?e.Nazis. " :.house-to-house census of. every for the privilege of identification Mr. -Crichton ~mngs off some:dwelling in the. six-couJity Cam with a magazine which repre s<:attered.. strokes of, wit, soine-" -den dioc.es~,will be held :Oct. 16, • mcs1t, frieneRly; dlemMm9ic' BANK offe~ sents his great ideals:"':" 0.1', at ~imes touches off hilarity, btit il,l Archbil;;hop Celestine J. Dami-, !east, did when he made' the the main his ,bi:>ok 'is labored. ano, bishop of Camden has' an- ' ll:hange. His wife, Matilda" was TJ;lE~re' is striking contrast for nounced. Bot keen 'on. his~'vitching jobs, ,example, bet wee n Giovanni e1ub Accounllg "Auto loans" Wld he feels more and more Guareschi's really funny Don Checking AccoulU'ds Busine~ Loans guilty about the reduced stand':' Camillo and the caricature of a heavy-handed and goes to far Savings AccounOs Reed lEstate loaM GIrd of living which it has forced priest which Mr. Crichton 'pain cical excess. Ai Somerset' $h~pping Arca~Brigh9man St. laridp t1pon her. fully parades through his book. Indeed, excess is the principal George is being given the Guareschi launches many a fine fault of this over-long and ill Member Federcll' Deposit fnsurance Corporation litan~rd Twiniri&' tre".ment for satiric shaft, but Mr. Crichton in proportioned novel.
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'NEW CCD CEN'!'ER: Members of three parishes that will use St. William's Oatechetical Center, Fall River, inspeet premises during Sunday open hQuse~ Participa,ting' parishes are St. Elizabeth, St. Jean Baptiste and St. William. The structure will a180 temporarily house the freshman elass of Bishop Connolly High School. 'Left, Elaine Boutin, Edward Caine' and Veronica Medeiros chat with Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, pastor of
St. William. Center, MTS. John F. Mendonca, Mr. Mendonca and Mr. Wa~ ing inspect new school. The latter is co-chairman of the Fishers Committee' for the Diocesan OeD. Right, Peter Dufresne, Michael Francoeur, Steven Levesque express approval of the new center to Rev. Edmund A. Connon, curate at St. William.
• Fall River Establish Catechetical Center Three Parishes In In an effort to meet the Jieeds of the times for our 20th century youth,' three parishes will, pool their re-, sources - finances,responsibili- ' ties and manpower - to estab '!ish a high school eatechetical center in the Maplewood section of Fall River. The three parishes involved in the new program, entitled "Op portunity for Christian living", are st. Elizabeth's, St. Jean Bap tiste and St. William's. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond Considine, pas tor of the' latter parish' has. made available the new, ultra modei'n St. William's Center for this pilot-project. The program will begin ~t 6:30. P.M. Monday, Sept. 12. The thinking behind this joint, effort is that since education and recreation are, for the most part, ' held jointly, there is no reason why religion cannot be taught and discussed in the same type' of atmosphere. The end result should dispel the mistaken notion that religion is merely something to be stud ied in preparation for First Holy Communion and Confirmation. a'he students will be brought to II realization that religion is II part of life and should be lived. Three Directors The project is under the lead ership of the three parish mod erators of the Confrate1'l1ity of Christian Doctrine-Rev. Thom as Lopes, Rev. Mauri~e Jeffrey
III inois Pha rmacists
Fight Pornography
CHICAGO (NC)~The Illi~ois Pharnlaceutical AsSociation bas enlisted the aid of parents in a move to eliminate pornographic lIterature from, magazine racks; A. sign provided by the asso":' eiation for display in drug storell selling' magazine' asks parents and other cu.stomers to report , IIny. magazine found objection-. able' which may have been Over looked. .. "It will be removed immedi ately. and its sale discontinued," the sign promises. '
Institut~
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TROY (NC)-A Vocation In
Illtitute for the Friars and Friends
Lf St. Francis will 'be held at
Immaculate Conception Serni
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institute was called by Father
Matthew De Benedictus, O.F.M.,
minister provincial.
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lmd Rev. Edmund Connors. The moderators will consti tute the teaching staff along with Rev. Thomas Morrissey of St. Jean Baptiste as well as sev eral lay ,teachers from the three parishes. Des i g ned, specifically for freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors attending public high schooIS, the program will be open to area Catholic high school students as well The pilot project, ~hich has been encouraged by the Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Di rector of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, was insti tuted after much thought, delib eration and discussion ,with pro fessional 'educators. It will de part from the standard diocesan course. The students will be en couraged to use the catechetical library ;tl; St. William's Center to deepen the insights derived from the course as well as to prepare their peri'odic assign ments. Trimesters and' Eiectiv~ Consisting of 30, sessions, "Op portunity for Christian living" will be divided in, three trime sters. First trimester compulsor-y
Dl,nstructionai TV"
Courses in Schools
, NEW YORK (NC)-"Instruc tional Television," tailored to. the needs, of both students and teachers will be available in many of the 437 schools in the New York Archdiocese during the coming year, Msgr. Raymond r. Rigney, archdiocesan super-' intendent of schools, said. Eventually all the schools will benefit from the archdiocesan educational programs offered Oft,' ,this "closed-circuill-on-the-air" TV network,. ' The Instructional, 'TV eourses will originate in a, modern muni,cations' 'center recently' , oompleted onth~ campus of St., Joseph's Se~inary, .Dunwoodie. The, service makes, ,it Possible, to telecast three different 'pro-' grams or eouises &t the same time.' '
eom
subjects will include History of God's People arid God's people at prayer. A special course on Marriagli! will be offered to' Seniors. ' Electives-subjects open to the students' choice-will be offered to the sophomores, juniors and seniors during the second and third trimesters.. Electives may include such subjects as: Does Man Come From the Ape?, The Good News, Teenagers and 'the Mass, the Sacraments of Initiation, the Sacraments in review, Racial Justice, Modern Social Prob lems, World Religions, Teenage Problems; Great Catholics in American History and Commu nism. 'Experience Nights' In an attempt to make religion relevant 10 daily life, each trimester will include three "Experience Nights". Such a night will be spent in one of several ways. Once each trime ster, the initiative ~ well as-
Korea Model Farm Gets Five Heifers SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Aboard the S.S. President Mon roe when it departed from here were f i v e Holstein heifers bound for the Catholic San Seung Model Farm in Pusan, , Korea. The heifers were the gift of Heifer Project, Inc., a non profit agency providing livestock and .agricultural aid to develop irig countries. Earlier in the month Heifer Project sent five Holstein heif ers, one registered Holstein bull and 10 Landrace pigs to the model farm where they are used io upgrade present livestock and to form a pig and row: "bank" for loans to small 'farm-. erg.
, Both gifts, were made in eo Operation' ,with Catholic Relief Services: - 'National Catholic., 'W~lfare ConferenCe.'
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Benedictines Serve In Chaplain Corps
ATCHISON (NC) - Father Fidelis J. Forrester, O.S.B., 38, has been granted a leave of absence from St. Benedict's Abbey to serve as a chaplain in the ,U.S. Army. The monk, a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserve, left Kansas for Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, N.Y., where he will receive basic training in the Army's School for Chaplains. Two other monks from St. Benedict's Abbey are currently serving in similar capacities. Father Jerome Merwick, O.S.B., a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force, is chaplain at Oxnard ' Air Force Base, Calif. Father Boniface Moll, O.S.B., is serving as civilian director of religious education at Fort Sill, 'Okla., where be had been Q' l'haplain' with the rank of lieu ten,ant'colonel before he retired :reCently frOm, the Army.
the need for equal opportunity for all American citizens. Dia logues with youth of other fafthll should develop a better under standing and deeper respect fOli' the rich heritage of all otheri' religious communities.
Guest Speakers' Other "Experience Nights" will offer the talents of religious, civic and lay leaders on topics designed to stimulate thought and discussion. Motion pictures will also be shown to promote 21 critical approach to the recrea tional habits of the students. The priest-directors of this new program feel confident that these "Experience Nights" will be the needed yeast which win cause the Bread of Life-God'o Word-to rise in each of these, His children.
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Named Bishop WAsiUNGTON (NC)~Father Brian Davis Usanga, a priest of the diocese of Calabar, Nigeria, and a graduate student at the. Catholic University of America here since 196' has been named titular bishop of Ubaba and Aux- ' ihary to Bishop James Moynagh of Calabar, according 00 word <received here.
originality of both teachers and students will be challenged in thinking-up experiences which will lead to fruitful discussion· and a better understandi'ng of the personal commitment that is inherent in a living faith. For example, such things as a visit to one of the nursing homes or homes for the aged should do much for the high schooler in· meeting the suffering Christ. A visit to a jail or house of correc tion should make him more aware of the need society has of "other Christs", not "other gangs". To be welcomed into §l convent or religious house should enable the student to , draw his own conclusions as to whether it is better to "Serve' time" or to "serve Christ". To meet with Negro youth groups should help him realize
FOR IESERVAliONS
PHONE
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Questions I·lidia's ·Right Oyer Goa
THE ANCHOR-Diocese ef Faf.l tfv.er, lhws., Sept... 1966· • • ' , . : • • ;::'.
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Attributes Americans' Discontent , To Lack of: National Goals DALLAS (NC) - Widespread .iscontent within society was attributed to the lack of national goals other than that of material prosperity by the executive di rector of the' Texas Catholie ~onference.
Callan Graham told delegates
to· the National Newman Con gress that great wealth and dis eOntent are the characteristics wpich distinguish the current mational situation from any ~ther period in history. Discontent exists, he said, among the' prosperous as well as the poor, among racial minori ties, the churches, the young and the old. There is, he noted, the same intensity of discontent among the radical right and the Hdical left. !Extremists in Agreemen¢ "It seems to me," he said, "that ehe extreme right and the exverne left are in perfect agreement that nothing good is hap pening in this country." . 'Material prosperity accounts' fur some of the discontent, Gra 'ham told' the delegates. During · the 1930s "the country was' tanited in a common desire and; eommon effort to extricate itself' . fi-om the grip 'of the Depres '&lion," he said. . From the great depression the nation went into the war; he noted. "There was tragedy, grief, fear, separation of families, and much sacrifice, but little or'no discontent * * * little or no self <liritidsm or' self.. . denunciatiorr as lJl people. As during the great depression there was a unity, :a <iiommon goal to be attained," he oaid.·. -.
Something 'Wrong , . The postwar years, he said, b.~ 0 u'g h t prosperity, weaith, wQrld leadership, and unbeliev able scientific advances. ., . . . ,,'It would seem, then, thlitwl! bave every reason to be happier and more contented than ever before. But' we are not. We are ~~happy" more resUess" aDd more discoIlt~nted than ever,': Graham said. .. .
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Xavier Faculty Has" :lEcumenic~1 Look" ,
· ., CiNCiNNATI . (NC) -XaVi'~r 1lJniversity's theology depart .ment 'will have an eCumeniCal riiok this' year when a .JEiwisb. rabbi and a Serbian Ortnooo'x priest join" the' facuity. ,., " " ;, . Rabbi Albert Goldman of 'ltebrew tJnic>n'College will teach 'i;m evening course on '''the Ihhd leCtual DeVelopment of Judaism 8S Studied Through Biblical and Rabbinical Sources." Fat her Dusan Petrovich, pastor of St. George S e r b ian Orthodox ehurch, Cincinnati, will lecture 00' "The Meaning of 1054;" the year of the break between the Eastern and Western Churches. 'Sister 'Jane Stier, O.S.U., of the Brown County Ursulines will become the first Sister to · be a fulltime member of the ; Xavier theology faculty. She · will teach a course on the Church and will give instruc .; Cions in CCD methods.
"I would propose," he contin ued, "that this unrest and dis content arises in part from the
Goa,.;-
fact that we have no identifiable goals, no chiillenges accepted, no great demands thrust upon us, and no common undertaking which we consider worthy of ourselves as a people. • • There is something wrong with a peo ple or a community when it has no goals and no aims· • • and a community without a common goal is dangerously near to not being a community at all.~ If, Graham observed, the great goal has been material prosper:' ity, it has been attained and th0 question is "Where do 'we go from here?"
Father li!'. X. Monteiro ap pealed to the Chief Judicial Commissioner's c 0 u r there against a judgment of the ses sions court turning down a suit challenging his conviction by the magistrate's court at Mapuca for· not leaving Goa as required by Indian law. The prieSt appealed to the . sessions court after serving a sentence of 30 days' imprison - . ment and paying a fine imposed on him by the lower court. Father Monteiro was brought HE~RS ~OMPLAINTS: Governor J-ohn Connally' of to trial before the Mapuca court his refusal to comply with Texas, who drvve out from Austin to New Braunfels to 'after At Crossroads an order by the lieutenant gov meet the farm ,workers marching on the capital city, listens Graham !laid that he sees the ernor of Goa to leave the terri United States at a crossroads, as Father Anthony Gonzales,' O.M.I.; of Houston, explains tory in 15 days. faced with a critical decision re The order followed the priest's the worke!s' complaints. In the center is Texas Atty.Gen. garding our future as Ii COnlmU- . rejection 0( the government's Waggoner Carr, NC Photo. . nity and our 'place in history. offer to have his residential per · mit readily extended, if he 9G "We may have reached a point applied. where the nation is. wealthy He had chosen Portuguese na .enough,' big enough, skillf.ul tionality, but refused to register enough, and strong enough to himself as a foreigner as re lead the human race in one. of . Two. laymen Are Appointed for .First Time quired by the Indian Citizenship those rare 'leaps in being' that As Vice Presidents ·o.f Hol.y Cro's~~ Act, .which applied to Goa can take mankind a giant step after the termination of Portu nearer to that final goal of 'at-· . WORCESTER (NC) - For the ChariesJ. Dunn, S.J., viice presi tuning itself to the Divine,'" he first. tim~ in the 123-year history dent for student affairs and guese rule by Indian militar,r action in ·1961. ' or, said, Father' William' G. Guindon, af Holy Cross College, two lay "Leadership,. and ·a citizenry .'inenhave been appointed to ·S.J.,vice:·presidlmt and dean of . that shares in the vision of ita ·serve ·as vice presidents. the Jesuit college. Vigil :Draws leaders, are esse~tial to the suc"; The college board of trustees REDWOOD CITY (NC)-An cess ·of such an undertaking, aas announced appointment of Communityo Have all-night prayer vigil for peace Graham asserted. George F. Dinneen, Somerville, · drew about 1,000 Catholics and N.J., automobile' agency head,. U~S. ·Ccrn'ent; non-Catholics to Our Lady of as vice president for develop Supports Mount Carmel church here in MONROE (NC)-Three mem ment and college relations, and ' bers of. the Daughters of the Californili. o~ John'. F. 'O'Keefe, former 'To PrivCllte CoUege$ Church 'will establish the first DETROIT (NC)-5en. Robert Worceste.r banker who has been convent of their community in Griffin of Michigan noted with director of the college's business .. this . country. in Our Lady of and' 'fiitance since 1961; is vice llPproval here that recent state Lourdes,. parish here iln North legisll,ltion has .served to riuike . president for' business affairs. Ca~olin,.~. . '" '. . ,.,' ONF STOP . ' The board also named Father· scholarships and grants equally SisterS Lia, Lina, and Lidia SHOPPING' CENTER ~vai1able .to students irrespective 'are members' of a cOlnmunity .• Tele~ision' • Furniture of the college or university theY' .rDaDry· lFolf.mer, 62,'
founded in Italy in 1938 to serve , • 'Ap'nl!flftces,. Grocery clloose to attend. parishes in a· variety of roles. Its Becomes Brother
'. "Let. me say that I applaud HILLfVIAN (oNC)"':-"Only time mainwQrk has been social ser 104, Allen St., New Bedford ttiisprogress - as wen as' the will, tell where my superiors vice, but some members hav~ WYm"" 7-9354 principle of encoura~rig diver-' think I' c~m be of service' to ~ratea' hospitalS, dispensarieS, and .retreat' houses, while others_ slty and promoting· freedom in God and my commUnity." ".'This . was· the cOmment' of b a v e'conducted 'clltechism education- ·the prinCiple of' aid ling '~e individual to choose Brothe'r Eugene Dames' as he Classes. The community ,current ly has tOO· Sll?ters in ltal~7, Spain, . according to his consCienCe .m:l interedthe Novitiate of the Mis "WJbere A eonstitutional . rights, . withGut sionaries of the Holy 'Fainily 'France; Switzerland a d South America;' '.' , . . discrimination either fOr race or h~re .in Minnesota at the age of religion,"'he stated: . &2•. The .' oldest member ever " Father' William Pharr, 'paStor of Our Lady of Lourdesi parish, In the keynote .addr~ss at.the 1lO'OO received by the communi ....;. 'Means ty, Brother Eugene had already has'asslgrted .the 'Sisters to teach ~ichigan .Republican' state con oompletedhis' postiJlancy in two catechism and begin a v.isitation veritioD. he remarked that' pansh~ Sister Lina,' though he' is usually associat~d· months,·~.reduced period of time .Of allow~d' because of the candi:" superior, has'il ·theology. degree with the' Laridrum-Griffin .Act Regina' Mundi School 'ill ' . ':" I·' "the wQrking man's' bin . 0; (fate's a g e . ' 'BrQth~r 'Eugene, who lived 'ia Rome, arid 'Sister Lia bEIS stud ngl!-ts," his product achievement 16 . 'oo':sponsoring the National O'Fal1on,Mo.,has .beena dairY ~e4" ~t, ·t.~e·· ~egina .Assunta Student Loan Proglilim. 'which former for most c>f his life .and ~,h09~. also, in Rome. has' emibled over' one million i~ working at the llOvitiate' in needy students to attend college. farrhlng 'arid gardenihg~ After profess19n, 'however, .he 'hopes ;.' : ' he' may be' able to' engage catechetiCal work. 'Pakistan Re«llSSM[I'lB$ ~
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,KARACHI (NC) "- President Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pakis tan declared that his govern ment is pledged to give full security to all religious minori ties.. Speaking here at the birth (lay celebrations of the founder of the Zoroestrian religion, the president said that this security has been fully provided for ilia the country's constitution. Represent Stang He asserted that his govern Richard Walega, Mary Quinn. ment's ultimate objective is to :.lLee Kavanaugh and William see Pakistan a strong and pros :' Sullivan were representatives of ·perous 'country in which every , Bishop Stang High School, North eitizen, regardless of caste and , 'Dartmouth, at the third annual creed, gets a fair deal. The fail' · leadership training workshop aAd equitable· treatment meted ; Sp(msored by the Mass. Assn. of out to Pakistani minorities lIlO , Student Councils. The six-day far; he 'added, Blust have re , session for student leaders from assured them about their future . ' all parts of the commonwealth ·prospects in this country. ! bad as theme "Student Council: . : CatholicS number 340;8 'illl ,Workshop for Leadership 1a PaKistan, which has a 1;etai (-"'j, TodaY'i Wodd;" t,; 1~~:ati~~t·.::~·l8·~t2..~! .... ' ; E.:
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PANJIM, (NC). - A Catholic priest has appealed against the dismisal of his lawsuit challeng Ing India's jurisdiction over the former Portuguese territory of
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WINt.:IPEG (NC)-The Greek Orthodox Ukrainian Church of Canada is the eighth Christian church to join in the Christian Pavilion at Expo 67, the uni versal exhibition to be held dup ing the 1967 world's fair in MOR keal, The other participating Christian denominations are the Catholic Church, . the United Church- of Canada, the Anglican, Presbyteriim, Lutheran, Baptist .lIIIldGreek Orthodox Churches. \
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lME "NCHOR-Dioceee of fall Atver, Thurs" Sept. 8, 1966
15
i
I
(:
FROM FALL RIVER TO IRAQ: The first Sister to graduate from Baghdad's AI-Hikma University was Sister Joseph, of the Holy Face, a Fall River native here receiving her degree from Abdul Rahman al-Arif, President of Iraq. To the President's right :is Rev. Richard McCarthy,
St. Cloud Bishop Favors Sincere Unity Effort
S.J., university president. Right, Sister Marie Therese of the busines8 department of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, standing, enjoys reunion with her sister,' Sister Joseph.
Sister 'Joseph 'ot Holy Face Finds Vocatwn In Arabian 'Nights City of Baghdad
COLLEGEVILLE (-N-C-)--,' Say' "Baghdad," and most people think of the AraJbian Nights. Not Sister J~seph The rift existing in' the of the Holy Face: She knows the capital of Iraq as a city of some 400,000, below freeizng Christian world since the in Winter, 120 degrees in Summer, and dusty all the time. The Fall River native, a Do 12th century and causin~ the minican Sister of the Pr~entation, has' lived in the arid Country' for 28 years, and haB "declining influence of ChtJst 'ju'st completed a home visit' , ' " ' end His teachings in the western during' which 'she stayed 'learn to drive a car," she con- pillow." It's no good to take ref world" has been deplored before with a brother' and sister in fided. She does hold a d'river's uge indoors, she said, because d h . license but says that Baghdad dust "finds its way everywhere. · Catholic a n d Protest ant 1aymen, Co nnec t Icut an' anot er s Is- presents ' special problems. There Studies in U. S.
here by Bishop Peter W, Bartha- 'ter, Sister Marie Therese, at St. are no traffic laws." lome of St. Cloud. Anne's Hospital, Fal~ River, Yet She said, that Presentation Sister Joseph is proud of her ' h op rna d e h'IS com'" another S'l'ster belonged .·"e H'Ig' h h as about 1200 students, former studen~s who have gone The BIS ..,... ments at the ecumenical wor<ship same community as Sister Jo- all iirls except for a few boys on, to advanced study in the 'ph and, Sl'ster Manoe ,Therese. . United States and elsewhere. service opening the Second An'- se In an international class on the briesuch hi Bahia Deloomy, who Dual Laymen's Ecumenical En- Assigned to Iraq like, Sister primary ievel. This class is com- is working for' an advanced de counter sponsored by the Min.. Joseph" Sister Amedee Joseph, posed of children of the Baghdad ' Desota Council of Churches and dl'ed there I'n 1 9 4 ' 1 .diplomatic corps and UN repre- gree 't in 'chemistry at the Univerhosted by St, John's University, "I expecteQ. to be,a nurse when sentatives. Sl y of Illinois. , . '. " ' I joinedSt. Anne's Dominicans," Also, among the students are '''Life here!s very fast," writes Bishop Bartholome haIled the, recalled Sl'ster,'Jose'ph, "bu't I ' v ' , 150e refugee children from strife , Bahia" "~nd thete is' no time to ecumenical moyement, for its . always taught English to Iraqui , s i t down and think and feel'sor ° th·.... mrls," She dl'd study nursl'ng for ' feeds torn northern Iraq. Thechildren school" ry,',b, e,',c,aus,e' there i,B always progress i n overcommg IS :"lL ... and clothes these' and asked for continuance of ' 18 months in a French hospital and attempts to find jobs' for so,m,ethirig to do. ~erican grad unit)" in spirit despite difficul-' at the beginning of her religious 'older members of their families. 'uate students' are very hard ties encountered in areas of life,but..then went to Iraq with Ten Year Old GirD workers and we have to keep dogmatic differences. ' ' , Sister Amedee' Joseph and be Sister Joseph recounted the ' up,' the 'paCe. ' Succeeding Generatiollfl eame an English teacher, "learn story of a family discovered by "I 'must' say that the American ing methods as I. went along." Sisters making home visits mO . way of living is very convenient. "There are very serious 'bas.c
President Awards a slum section of Bagtldad.' Th ey h ave many f aCI'l't' lies th a t differences" he said, "i,n the dC'g-,
we do not have I'n Baghdad and She finally squeezed time "There were six children, the ' I do lloke I't except that some matic field, the field of truths
from her teaching career to ac oldest 14, who had been living that Christ has taught • • .. in quire a' college degree at, AI- 'alone for a year. A 14 year old times' I think I am' becoming basic concepts, such as 'Whai is Hikma University' in Baghdad, boy managed to attend high la zy, so Ins . t ea d 0 f s t an d'10 g s tOll I the Church.' operated by the Jesuits, She re school, a 12 year old boy earned on escalators and wait to be "Let us not refrain from dt<; eeived her'degree June 3 of this money shining shoes, and a 10 taken up I l;ltart escalating' it eussing the' real, basic dlffe' year, with Abdul Rahman al- year old girl cooked for the myself, and because of the odd ences, honestly and fairly," the Arif, President, of Iraq, award family and cared for ,three glances I started to get I Minnesota Bishop urged "If we ing it to her. She was the first younger children." The Sisters stopped! People tell me it is a do not fairly converse with each Sister to graduate from the Uni managed to place the four waste of energy to, do things othel, we will end up talkmg versity, she notes, and at times youngest children in orphanages, that machines can do for us, and about each other. We have done "it was a little embarrassing to and they keep a motherly eye on I think I am starting to agree with them." that long enough. be in class ,with girls I'd taught the two older boys, , in school." Such families, said Sister 'Jo One Problem "Let's try to understand e';ulO ,Surprisingly, her degree is in seph, suffer keenly in the ex Sister Joseph returns to Bagh other. why we do things ani' why we believe certain thing;;;, business administration, a field tremes of' temperature suffered dad with one crucial problem that will go a long way toward which doesn't exactly enthrall in 'Baghdad. "Everyone sleeps unsolved. She explains that assisting' a development towad her, but she explains that she on the roofs in the Summer," she money cannot be sent out of . Iraq for any purpose, therefore Christian unity in the years thr.& had little choice. "The only other ' said. degree the University offers is Roof sleeping has its, perils, it is a ,great problem for the lie ahead." in engineering!" however. Sister Joseph said that Sisters to obtain necessary "We oldsters," eoncluded the ° Upon Sister Joseph's return to early in' the season one can books. "We haven't any money St. Cloud Ordinary, "have Iraq, following ill stay at the awake in the midst of a drench anyway," she adds frankly, creater difficulty in making that French motherhouse of the Do ing rainfall, "We pull plastic But her school desperately change of heart. CI • • But there minicans of the Presentation, over the beds and go on sleep needs some 500 books, which, is a new generation rising who she will head the English de ing,", she said nonchalantly, Less will cost about $1000. Anyone, will not have OW' background partment of Presentation High easily coped' with are sudden wishing to help solve Sister and this question of Christian School, located in the Bah el dust storms. "When you get up Joseph's problem can send dona unity will be a question ht' ,Shargy section of Baghdad. after a dust storm, your whole tions to her in care of St. Apne'll l'theM' and' 'snCc'eMUig' gerle'ra ' ~"Tiit ·'ltI:so'· gain'g' to 'S~A1"li- t'bed'~iS '~ov~rE!tl'e'X~ept"' 'Wl'fel'e Hospital;" 795 "'lViiddie- . tioDs-" bie, and Islamic history" and your head was 'resting, on your Fall River.
-Stree't,
{ ,
Permits Changes
In Fun-eral Mass
ST. LOUIS (NC)-PermissioD
has been given for evening fu
nerals in the St. Louis archdio-
eese.
A letter to aU priests from the
Archdiocesan Liturgical COJDo>
mission specified other changeB
possible in funeral Masso They
. included: • An option to say a low Mass for the sake of partiCIpation. Lectors, and the use ofoa choir rather than a solo voice if the Mass is sung, were also sug~ , gested. Permission to use the Mass oi ,the Day or a I'suitable" votive Mass for the funeral of a chiid of grade school age. The color of vestments could correspond ~ the Mass said. An opportuni,ty to modify some of toe expressions in the Ritual for Absolution "as, long !U' , the meaning is retained," The' 'guidelines were based ,p a r t1 y on recommendations 'C' made by, priests themselves at deanery level meetings earlier this year.
$259,358 To CU WASHINGTON (NC) - The Ci;tholic University of America l:>as received five grants total~ ing $259,358 from the National Aeronautics and Space Admini stration (NASA) for space-re. lated programs.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River, Thurs" Sept. 8, 1966
Army
~i1ld ChM[l~h ~~[9Y~W
Pre~$U~® ~n
Lm\iocru· ADim~[f~C~
From "SocnaH ,lRevolutionu fum Ute New Latinu' America" Edited by Johlm .JJ. Considine, M.M:.
Dictatorships appear where intermediary societal lJtruetures are lacking. These intermediate groups act to «Ishion the tensions between the individua!and the state. When society is well balanced, the pressure groups are well balanced - economic ' . t upon them. So long as the gov d t groups, ra e umons, s 11- ernment acts within the limits dent groups, churches, the fixed by the army, it has liberty. military, and so forth. But An example of this: A few
\
when any of these groups be:", years ago the army in Argentina ~mes
excessively powerful, we exercised its power of veto on face a sort of the policy of Frondizi, actually die tat 0 r deciding his policy on relations S hi p fro m a with Cuba. group or from The third role of the army 'is II person within purely professional,.. as is the a group. An excase in Chile and Uruguay. The mnple of this army in' these countries has a' kind. of power specifically military role relat seizure is the ilig to the national' defense, rise of 'Peron, though they also playa subsid backed by the iary role in integrating the peo powerful trade pIes of their countries through union movement adult education and technical In Argentina, a assistance programs. oountry with a very large Unfortunately the army has, middle class. _ ' often over-played' the first role It is evident that caciques and described - the para-political caudillos, each a type of dicta and _too often in collaboration tor, must rely on the use of force with the oligarchy. Md must therefore have, at their It may be asked whether it is disposal some' agency that will necessary or advisable to main provide it. The first pressure tain such well equipped armies group that we shall consider is 'in Latin America. An indication the armed forces. of the view of the United States Edwin Lewin in his book Government may be found in Anus and. Politics distinguished its expenditures on military aid the different roles of the army to the Latin American nations, in Latin America. First, we have alth'ough for many years there what is called the para-political have been no wars in Latin role. Here the army prepares, America. Ute way for the government, , Role ,of Church supplements and jealously ,guards The second pressure group to its action. consider with regard te dictator It 'purports to guarantee the ships":-let us be very frank-is stability of a country hovering the Catholic Church. We know 'between revolution and return that the Church, or more pre to constitutional normality. Dur cisely, the ecclesiastical author ing this time between the over ity, has played an important throw of the dictator and the role in Latin America. return to constitutional govem The influence of Christianity ment, <the country needs strong as a set of ideas and values must hands to maintain stability. be distinguished from that of the This function of the armed structural Church with its own forces is quite common in coun propet authority. We shall deal tries where popular revolutions only with this la&t aspect, not Clave ended caudillisin'o. Vene with the ideological aspect of zuela after the downfall of the Church. Perez Jiminez was a case in The Catholic Church, has al point. The army took over the ways tried to maintain good re government in the interim be lations with all types of govern fore elections. The same thing ment since it has continually . happened in Colombia and sought a structure for fostering . Brazil. Catholic education, the avoid~ The anny also can prevent the ance of propagation of error, and QScendancy of one partieular the teaching of Christian moral greup as it did in Argentina. ity to the populace. "After Peron fell, the army was The influence of the Church in control during the transition in Latin America varies widely to Frondizi's government. from one country to another. In Army Inlluence some countries the Church and Intervention of the army may the state are still united by con be brief, but it always presents a cordats, in others ,they are not. danger. The pledge to relinquish In some countries the influ power once normality has been ence Gf the Church is diminish restored may be slow of fulfill i-ng unde!; the impact of secular ment siace experience has shown ization. Pluralism witll regard that it takes time for the army to doctrines and morals places to realize that constitutional the various ideologies more 01' government has indeed been re 'le~ on the same level. So the established. ideology of the Church no longer The army claims that the carries the weight that it has in country . will be prepared for the past. ' democracy when there are evi In those countries where caci dences of perfect order, disci quism and caudillism still pre pline and uninterrupted work, vail, the ecclesiastical auth'ority aU .of which are; circumstances has given a limited importance difficult to find. to the legality of their status So the hold on power is pro and has looked with some be longed. The army thinks of itself nignity on the caudillos and dic as the source of order and the tators, showing friendliness pro protector of individual rights. It vided they do not attack the will remain in power as long as Church but leave her free to iIt sees fit. teach morals and doctrine. The second role of the army is In general, the Latin Amed demonstrated in countries where can Church has not been preoc there is a more or le-ss stable cupied with safeguarding indi <IlOnstitutional life. The army has vidual liberties as are Christians Q purely politicai function of n9w in the 'communist states.' veto. That is to say; it has al The consideration of the, Latin lowed the governments to work American Church was undoubt Within t~'lr constitutional limits edly the common good. The les but imposes its own policies ser 'evil was chosen; since the
BISJHlOP-ELECT: Father Brian Davis Usanga, a priest of the diocese of Calabar, Ni geria, and a graduate student at the Catholic Univers~ty of America, WashingtQn, D.C., has been named titular bish op of Ubaba and Auxiliary to Bishop James Moynagh of,.. Calabar. NC Photo.
NEW YORK' (NC) Rep. Abraham Multer of New York said here the charge that paro chial schools in New York are havens for persons seeking to avoid school intel~ration is "simply not true." , Multer, in a statement in the Congressional Record" said such charges are "irresponsible" and ridiculous" and shoulld be re tracted. Allegations t hat nonpublic schools are a "last haven of seg regation" ,have been made by th~ New York Civil Liberties Union in opposing state ai,i to such schools. ' Multer piaced in thl~ Record a 's~tenient by Msgr. George A. Kelly, Secretary of education for the New York' archdiocese, detailing integration in Catholic schools there. ,Among other sta «sties the statement cites the fact that in Manhattan 50 per
~ Afr\l'@ml~
~@[;i)tiism~ OW [K]@a~and UTRECHT (NC) - A Dutch bishops' c I erg y instruction stressing the importance of Bap tism has granted permission for infant baptisms to be postponed until both parents can attend. The instruction and permission point out that the practice of baptizing babies while still in the hospital has lost its practi cality due to the reduction in infant mortality rate.s. A request for a revisE!d liturgy of the sacrament of Baptism accompanied the bishops' in struction.
,
AFR~CA=
WHY, WE WORRY milE, IlI1QJI.Y IFAVllfllilR'll\ MOSSDIlIl~ ADlllJ 'IT<<ll TOilE @Ii!UlENVIl\I. CHURCH
THIS VILLAGE, WHilCH
HAS NO
CHURCH, SENDS
BOYS TO THE SEMINARY'
Why do we worry about our Catholics in Aggaro, the secluded mountain village in northwest Ethiopia? We worry because without our read· . ers' help they cannot have the church they need. The soil is windswept and rocky, and the crops they raise are not plentiful enough to sell•••• Still, afull·sized church will cost only $3,245 (tor materials only), since' our Catholics will 'gladly give their labor free·ot·charge. Write us ril~ht now if you'd like to build it all by yourself (with a permanent plaque requesting prayers) in in~mory Of your loved ooes.••• "When I of; fered Mass outdoors there August 15 the people hald not seen a priest since Chrisbnas," writes newly-ordained franciscan' Father Juniper. "I heard' hundreds' of confessions, baptized the infants, blessed the recent marriages. Aggaro will have a full·time priest once we build a church."••• The people are devout, family life Is healthy. Some boys already are studying tor thl! priesthood in Adi Ugri.••• Won't you do what you can at least? We'll send your gifts in any amount ($100, $75, $50, $25. $10, $5, $2) , to the Holy Father, requesting he forward them to Aggaro. The stones for the church are already ,pill!d high. If we act now, construction can begin ne)tt month.
....
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~f8 'can threw $5 en tha IlJar. Uguess n Il:2ln
aff<lI'd$5 for the HclSf faUm"'13 ~. Here it is•
"- T. B. Erie. Pa.
OS
Mout many people will $10 1eed
rn Dayton, Chi
$10 'tCagl). Seattlel It's enough In the Holy Land to I\lWAYS feeGl • family of refugees for on~ monthl In $10: 1.tIar,lks, we'll send you an 0live Wood Rosary_
Pleads for ClhtQlrch Liberty il1l PoHand
from Jerusalem.
BERLIN (NC)-Stefan. CarlIt 1\al Wyszynski of Warsaw made a 'plea' for ''freedom wi. the Church in CKlr homeland," at Czestachowa, Poland, at cele brations marking Poland's 1,000 y~ars,of Christianity. SPeaking to thousands of pil grims who came to the natienal Marian shrine despite a heavv downpour; Cardinal Wyszynski said, "We shall come here anell returJ;!. here in the second mil lennium of Christianity to pray fur the freedom of the Church in our homeland and in the world." IIi a, reference to the Polish: government, the Cardinal 'at tacked persons who "forcibly in: troduce atheism" and called fOR' '''freedbm of conscience." Police and local authorities made effort to interfere with the miJl.. lennium celebrations.
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Re@ffarrfM VO~~~GftJ Of Exe[l'c.d$eS; LOYOLA (NC) - Jesuits here in the home town of their Hith century Spanish founder, St. Ignatius, have reaffirmed' the vitality of the order's 400~year old Spiritual Exercises. ' One hundred and fifty Jesuits fl'om all over the world met at Loyola to discuss updating of the exercises before going on to Rome, for the September open ing of the second session of 'the Jesuit general congregation. The first session of the' con. gregation, closing July 15, 1965, outlined the future work of the community, reorganized its ad ministration and elected Father Pedro Arrupe, S.J., to a ,life,term as superior general. Disturbed by the length of the first session, the priests at the' congregation appointed Father Paul Reinert, president of St. Louis University, to speed up this year's session. Father Rein ert expects that the September session will last about foUl' weeks.
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Estimates 55.9 M~nBOlnl S~udents 1m Nation'~ S~h~@~~ u[h)D~ fall WASHINGTON (NC) - Some cent of the gross national prod 56 million persons-three out of uct-was spent on all schools in every ten individuals in the the U. S. in 1965-66, and that the United States-are expected to total may reach $48.8 billion in be enrolled in this nation's the coming year. Federal conm-' schools this Fall. The estimate butions in grants alone to all schools amounted to $6.1 billion includes both public and non public schools of all levell!r--ele , during the fiscal year 1966 more than two and one-half mentary schools through col times the $2.3 billion granted leges and universities. in the fiseal year 1964. It will be the 22nd consecu tive year that U. S. sehools have The office says just over' 70 had a :record enrollment. This per cent of persons in their 20s year's total of 55.9 million will had at least 1Z years of school be 2.6 per cent above last Fall's ing as of this year, while about total of 54.5 million. one-eighth of those between the The U. S. Office of Education, ages of 25 and 29 years had fia noting that its figures for the ished four or more years of 1966-67 scholastic year are all college. estimates, says 47.2 million are expected to enroll in public schools of all levels, while 8.7 million are expected in non public schools. C@a.\1Em~&B No prediCtion is made regard WASHINGTON (NC) - The ing the enrollment in Catholic Catholic Council on Civil Liber schools alone. Pupils in Catho ties has been formally dissolved lic schools will make up the pre ponderance of pupils counted in' by action of a committee repre senting its board of directors and nonpublic schools, however. The U.S. education office es national advisory council. The com~ittee, meeting at timates that 36.6 million pupils said will be iI. elementary schools, Georgetown University, kindergarten through the eighth diS!Wlution of the CCCL was a grade, public and nonpublic, witb recognition that "the minimal and many times non-existent I'e 31.2 million in public schools and 5.4 million in nonpublie somces of the CCCL do not place it in ~y potential of eon schOols. cluding influence in either the' Silt Millioll in Vollege It is expected that 13.3 million Peligious 0lI' eivil community." T b e eommittee's statement will enroll in all the country's secondary ,schools, grades 9 u~d Catholics to join existing voluntary and official greups, through 12, public and nonpub lie, with 12 million in the former dedicated to individual lilMirties. The Catholic Council on Civil and 1.3 million in the latter. Six million are expected to Liberties was founded in Oma ha, Neb., in 1959. Its members enroll in colleges and universi ties, normal schools, etc. Of these were said to have included at least two bishops, several mon 4 millions will be in public in signors, dozens of clergymen, stitutions and 2 million in non and deans and professors at sev public. eral Catholic law schools. Such A survey made by the Depart well known figures as' the theo ment of Education of the Na logian Father John Courtney tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence for the last school year Murray, S.J., and the Trappist put the total in all Catholic author Thomas Merton were schools at that time at 6,010,907. among its members. The late President Kennedy, ,Of this total, 4,533,771 were in Catholic elementary schools, then a U. S. senator, encouraged the original group in its effort 1,060,021 were in secorldary to foster Catholic commitment to schools and 417,115 were in col civil liberties concerns. leges and universities. Elementary schools showed a decline in enro'llment that year Stage for 'the first time. The pupils dropped by .3 per cent. But the' secondary schools, and institu SAN MIGUEL DE ALLENDE tion's of higher learning revealed (NC)-A famed Mexican singer increases that put the grand and film star who became a total above the year before. Franciscan priest has returned to Federal Graats his home town' here in Mexico The U. S. Office of Education to direct a home for poor chil projects a 2.6 per cent increase dren. in all schools for the upcoming Father Jose de Guadalupe, year. If this factor can be ap plied to Catholic schools, their formerly Jose Mojica, has spent enrollment fc the 1966-67 year the past several years in Peru -where he. established the Santa might reach 6,171,191. Maria de Guadalupe school at The U. S. Office says an esti mated $45.1 billion-or 6.7 per Arequipa. The Franciscan started bis show business career as an op eratic tenor in 1916 and later became famous as an interpreter of popular Mexican music. He FORT WAYNE (NC)-Twen entered the Franciscan order in' ty Third Publications, a new 1942 in Lima, Peru, at the height Catholic publishing company, of his success as a singer. has been founded h-ere by C.J. Father Jose de Guadalupe has Kluepfel, who has been sales also devoted much time in en promotion ma';ager of Our Sun couraging religious vocations, es o"y Visitor Press. pecially late .vocations to the First magazine to be publish priesthood. eo by the new firm is the Re ligion Teacher's Journal, which will be isued in February. It will appear 10 times a year the May-June and June-July h,sues will be combined. It is TAIPEI (NC)-Father Daniel intended primarily for Confra Lyons, S.J., of Gonzaga Univer ternity of 'Christian DQctrine sity, Spokane, Wash., has re te;:chers. c.eived an award from Nationalist The Religion Teacher's Jour China's government in recogni nal will use the services of the' tion of his services to <freedom. CCD Activities Coordinator for He received the medal from Our Lady of Victory Missionary Yen Chen-bsing, Chinese minis Sisters and a committee of key ter of education. Father Lyons personnel from the Mission il> secretary-general of the Free Helpers of the Sacred Heart. Pacific Association. and a mem Several diocesan CCD directors ber of the Sout' ast Asia lle will serve as associate editon. seardl Institute.
THE ANCW\D.. Thurs., Sept. 8, 1966
CYO th'() ~n~tall, H@~d OMfrOO1l21 Diocesan CYO officers will be installed in chapel ceremonies at Cathedral Camp, East Freetown. at 2 Sunday afternoon, Sept. U. Following the' installation, the first annual Diocesan CYO Outing will be held at Our Lady of the Lake Camp, adjacent W Cathedral Camp. The day's events will be unde!' direction of Rev. Walter A. Sul livan, director of both camps and in charge of Diocesan CYO ae tivities. I The outing will begin at 2:30, lasting until 6, and the program will include swimming and sports. Participants are re quested to bring their oWill equipment for softball, basket ball, tennis and volleyball. Eic nickers may bring their own lunch or purchase it from the snack bar on the camp grounds. No admission fee will be charged for the' day, and all Diocesan youth are invited to attend, regardless of membev ship in the CYO.
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Former, Star Heads.OrphCllnoge
Plan New Magazine For- CeD Teachers
China's Governmel'llt Honors American
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,BACK FROM VIET NAM ON FURLOUGH: Lt. Col. Mary Donov311 is proud of a citation she received for her heroie services as' an Army nurse in Viet Narn. She shows the citation tv her sister, Mrs. Ralph E. Donovan of New P --u"rd. The Army Burse is enjoymg a wen deserved fuJ'
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Faith· Is There Polish People Steadfastly Maintain Trust In God Despite Efforts of Ruling Reds MILWAUKEE (NC) - The people in Poland still have faith in the future beca1,lse they trust in God, Bishop Ladislaus Rubin has told civic and religious leaders who gathered here to honor Poland's 1000 years of Christianity. Bishop Rubin, a Polish prelate himself assigned to Rome, spoke at a convocation' at Marquette University where he accepted an honorary degree in behalf of Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland. An empty chair trimmed in red was displayed on both occa sions to symbolize Cardinal 'Vyszynski's absence due to his inability to obtain a travel viSa from Poland's communist gov ernment.
Bishop Rubin, whom Cardinal Wyszynski had named as his personal representative, thanked those attending both fetes for America's understanding of the problems of the Polish people. Milwaukee Archbishop Wil liam E. .Cousins lauded the courage shown by the Polish people .in remaining faithful to Christianity in the face of great adversity.
I..;sh See Expands Mission in Peru CORK, (NC) - Bishop Cor "elius 'Lucey of Cork bas an !)ounced the expansion of the d iocese's Peru mission to include 25,000 more people. At the same t ime, he announced the assign ment of three more priests. and five m()re nuns to the mission. The nuns 'and priests, all vol untt:eFS~ will join three Sisters and six priests already there. Tht>y will be working with a population of 65,000, all nomi nally Catholic, in two huge slum areas.
University Names ,Priest to Faculty CHAPEL HILL (NC)-Father Joseph A. Devereaux, S ..1:, has been named assistant professor of English at the University of North Carolina here. He will be the first Catholic priest to serve on the university's faculty. Father Devereaux, a native of Philadelphia, has studied theol ogy at Woodstock College; Md., Louvain University, Belgium, and the University of Meunster, Germ: ". He holds a doctorate in ::nglish from the University of North Carolina. He has been an assistant pro fessor of Renaissance literature at the University of Scranton.
Pepper Monastery With Rifle Shots PATERSON € N C) - A poliee investigation into· aetivities ef • suspected sniper here uncovered an apparent systematic attack ell! St. Bonaventure's Franeiscall monasteFY. A house, 'parked ears and III manned patrol car were hit with rifle shots. Police ealculated !he shots came from a vantage poinfl high up on Garrett Mountain, Il bluff which overlooks a residen tial section. Police com bed the area foo clues without success, then ini tiated a house-to-house canva~ it was found that 21 windows in the monastery had been shat tered during t,he previous week, apparently by rifle fire. St. Bon aventure's lies in the area of the suspected sniper attack, bUifl police 'have not been able 00 link' the incidents.
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254 ROt;KDAl.I AVENUE . NEW BEDfORD, MASS.
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234 Second Street - Fall River
Application
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·the life of a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUl. Love Goo more, and give to souls knowt€dge and low of God by serving Him in a Miss ion- which uses the Press, Radio, Motion 'Pietures 'l111it TV to bfing H!s Word tQ souls everywhere, ~ealous YCl:lng : gIrls 14-23 years interested ill this Ilnique "postolate may write to:
REVEREND MOTHER SUP£RlOI BAIRttTEIS Of 51. PAUL 58 ST. PAUL'S AVE. BOSION 30. MASS. II
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l'HE ANCHOR Thurs.,· Sept. 8, 1966
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The Women's Guild -meet at 8 tonight in the school hall. En ~rtainment will be provided by , accordion school students. A new school library will be @pened next month; with books !ii<mated by the Men's Club.
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BUZZARDS BAY
The Women's. Guild will open l1Is Fall season at 7:45 Wednesday evening, Sept. 14 with Benedic Cion in the church. Guest speak . . will be Rev. Walter A. Sulli van, Diocesan Director of· Lay Betre'ats. . New ·officers for the year are Catherine H. D. Bowen, president; Miss Ursula Wing,· .0 irice-president; Mrs. Pauline Sanna, treasurer.; Mrs. Marion Ellis and Mrs. Arlene Waters, llIeCretaries. At 8 Saturday night, Sept. 24 Ole guild will sponsor a public . Whist at St. Margaret's kinder garten hall, Main Street, Buz Bards Bay.
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The Couples' Club announceS an Indian Summer dance at K of C Hall, Route 6, Mattapoisett, at S:30 tomorrow night. The Silver Liners will play for dancing and. buffet meal will be served. In ~arge of reservations lO!re Mrs. Roger E. Kelley and Mrs. jJharles A. Crowley Jr.
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'lOyMAKERS ·MAKE JOBS: MatteI, Inc~ Hawthorne, Calif., world's largest toy-: .maker, is among those responding to Cardi nal McIntyre's appeal for jobs for minorities, MatteI has hired 100 workers and listed an"ther 100 joll openings with the Ca.!,dinal's. Arohdiocesan Job-FindIng Bureau, which in 10 p10nths of operation ha:~ f?und 4,000 iob offers.· NC Photo.
War~ on- Divorce· Cites Rising· Rate of Teenage .Marriages
Colorado Judge· Urges
Past presidents of the Women\' *uild will be honored, at .the Brst meeting of the season at 8 &ext Monday night in the ShamBOck Room of the Corky. Row {elub. The Altar and Rosary So dety will sponsor a cake ,sale from 8 A.M. until noon on Sun day, Sept. 18. in the school. Doughnuts and· coffee will be" ierved.
LONGMONT (NC)-A Denver District Court judge advocated here that a vital segment of the Colorado war on poverty pro gram include provisions fOr . uwar on divorce." N~ting that one out of every two Colorado. weddings now end in divorce, Judge Sherman G. Finesilver said': "We are on the ttlreshold of ,a divorce epidemic iii Colorado· of such ·great pro 11'1.'. ELIZABETH'S, portion that the very pillars .of iJALL RJ,VER family stability ·\1i7ill be sOrely The 16th ·annual clamboil will· llffected in Colorado fOr. many be held rain or shine, 'Sunday YeM'S· to come." .. .. ~ith serving from 12 until 2. ~ . He said that the state war on ftere will be games for children· poverty programs should udefi :ind music. nitely include programming 011 .UR LADY OF THE ANGELS, the war against divorce by.sta "ALL RIVER bilizing family life and parental responsibility." I' . .Confraternity of C h r i s t ia f1 In an ·addrel!S to the Long Doctrine will meet" every Sun mont Lincoln Club, Judge Fine .~ tiiay after the 9 A.M. Mass. Reg~ silver deClared that legislative- . iBtration for CCD classes will be inquiry jitto the adequacy of ~ld Saturday morning at 10 in state divorce and marriage laws fibe parish hall. The CYO will is "crucial" because: . oonduct a clamboil Saturday in Broken Homes Ute parish hall. Holy Name-Soci "F·ft· . v·en,'le , y per cent· 0 f our JU ety will have a Communi\>n . breakfast in the hall Sunday. fol delinquents and well over 50 per , cent of the inmates in our state lowing the 8 o'clock Mass. The penitentiary '.come from brolcen parish Council of Catholic Wom homes." ~ resumed meetings last night. "Children are involved in nearly 65 per cent of all divorce n. ANNE'S,
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''The Colorado yearly budget The first Fall meeting of the St.. Anne's Council of Catholic for aid to dependent children is more than $19 million, with i :Women will be held in the par Ish school hall next Monday !!light, .Sept. 12. A 7:30 Mass in file upper church will· precede ~e opening Council meeting. ll!irs. Bertha Anger is chairman. BONN (NC)---:<;erman Catho lic laymen are asking this PATRICK,·
country's Bishops for a larger·. WALL RIVER
role in decision-making regard The Women's Guild will open. ing general Chu!'ch problems as fils new season Sept 12 .with the well as financial matters: ;Po-Murrahs. Mrs. ioseph Emard The Central Committee of and Mrs. Raymond Pimental are German Gatholics, a federation ~-chairmen. It will be an open of most of the nation's lay or ~ting and both old· and new ganizations, has worked out a " members may attend. Anyone plan to attain this goal which is wishing 10 join the Guild is to be discussed at the meeting urged to attend: Refreshments of the German Bishops" Confer and coffee will be served. ence ill late September.
Gell'manLaymenWant Voice in D.ecisions
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NEW YORK (NC) - A group elf professors dismissed by St. John's University has appealed a Brooklyn diocesan Tribunal ruling that the case cannot 00 settled by an ecclesiastical court. The 15 professors, led by Father Peter O'Reilly of Chica go, appealed the matter to the Metropolitan Tribunal elf the New York archdiocese. If that Tribunal dismisses the case,it can be, appealed to the Sacred Roman Rota, the Church's high est court. The Brooklyn Tribunal ruled Aug. 9· that it does not have the competence to decide the cas~ because no "spiritual" question is involved, because the i~ue can be settled by a civil court, and because the university "does not enjoy the privilege of the ecclesiastical· forum." The professors challenged an three reasons in their appeal, ad dressed to Msgr. Stephen J. ·Kel leher, officialis of the New York Tribunal. .They said it is clear ,that the dispute at St. John~s has been·. "harmful to the proper end of. the Church," citing the censures. of the university by three pro fessional groups. ·They argued that the charges made in the civil court and those in the ecclesiastical court are: different. The civil case, they said; is based on the charge that the university violated the con- . stitution of the state of New, York, which grants the right to organize a union. The ecclesias- . tical court, they said, was asked to decide a "moral and ethical issue," the breach of contract.
Council Reforms
QUITO (NC)-:MOFe than 400' people, inc 1 u din It bishops, more than $3.5 million going to Judge Fi~e~ilver also :said that pliests, ReUgious and lay people, mothers unde~ 2 4 , " . . preparatory courses should. be . met at Quito to pilot the course The Denver· judge, who has taught in junior high schools. of the Church iii Ecuador in the uOur best efforts to stabilize light of the reforms of fuq. Cee-· : repeatedly warned ·that the stability of the U. S. on a state and, family-life.· must be directed to oDd Vatican Council. riational level hinges on family young. people," he declared, stability, attributes the rising uand.I question if we are giving divorce rate to teenage mar- more than lip service to this es riages. sent"l aspect!)f community life.".. - . JEsse.!Kial Aspect· . . . . This problem, he llsserted,
on . He .l1rged reevaluation of the "transcertds every ·religion. and
effectiveness of ·family·-life facet of Our community, and
courses currently taught in high .. merits the· highest degree of in":
Schools and' stronglyre~om-terest and effod·by ·,alll ·eOn~·
mended making "basic, sound cemed. .. and professionally taught fam-, ·"Of necessity," - he added, 'ANO ily-life courses a requirement Ugreater responSibility DIlUSt" be for graduation. assumed not only'by the .legal, j~diciary and medical profes sions, but also by church,es, syn-. , In Units of $500 or More agogues, educational and ·civi.e Clarey~ groups, parent-teacher llssoCia HonS ~nd··tbe e.ntire communi~y" · . Minneapolis,Mi~nesota ATLANTA (NG)-Four prie!!ts
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CATHOLIC CHUROI
INSTITUTIONAL BONDS
Spread· 'GoodNews' !n Home Meetings·
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from Ignatius House, Jesuit re-. treat Center, spent the Summer here spreading the "good news". of· Vatican Council II to homes throughout the area in a pro gram called Operation Under
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The priests-Fathers John 1.. Hein, S.J., Edward Goss, S.J.. Edgar Tiblier, S.J. and Charles Bartles, S.J. ~ conducted some 130 of more than 160 home meet ings held under the program. Most meetings were attended by about 15 people who heard Mass in a private home and then joined in disc;ussion of the docu ments of the council and ·con cerns of Christianity in the world today.
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WlI'eatjl cd Statue WASHINGTON '(NC)-Under. Secretary of Labor John F. Henning, representing 350 Serra Clubs here· and . abroad~ partic~ pated . in wreath.:.laying cere monies. in honor of. Father Juni.. pero Serra in Statuary Hall of the U; S. Capitol. Father Serra, a Spanish Franciscan missionary is known as "the apostle of Cali wrnia."
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TtlE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 8, 1966
President Notes latin America's Many Needs' WASHINGTON (Me)
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WHAMl BEACH (NC) The role played by a uni versity president is crucial to the growth of the univer
e2t down succinctly by no less ali official tbam Presiden! Johnson himself. He sees a lot to be done.
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Pre$iden~'s Role
V'itlQl i tl'o GC'ow~E1
W hat the administratioo ~ere thinks needs '00 be dOne m Latin America has been
A talk givenbere by the President has been given various Jnterpretations, including one that n was an appeal 00 LatiJ& America to cut down on the money it is spending on its mm- . tary establishments and 00 devote the savings to economle nod social reforms. The speech, given to the Pan American Health Union, to mark the fifth anniversary of the AU-' liance for Progress, did' eon tain such ml appeal. 'But" it con ~ined much more. The President said' we liN encouraged by. what the AI . Hance for Progress h8fl' already' achieved, but that the "needs of today" are '"but 11 fraction Cf Ulose of tomorrow," and that the Alliance can be strengthened and ' earried forward by "specific !'e forms." "Thim means," he added im mediately, "democratic stability b. which free men ean labor without tllpheaval and eha08; tiscal responsibility - an em dent public administration, II .ensibly managed debt, realistic exchange ll'8tes and a market unhampered by artificial monop ililieo; and progressive leader l!lhip-a government wise enough to insist on modernizing reforms and the most effective allocatiOlll' of public resources." , Personal Freedom -This meano above all, per sonal freedom and dignity,'~ be oontinued. "For it men are DOt truly free, if i~dividuals are not protected against economic and political exploitation, tbeywin turn to violence and extre~sm, whose first victim is progret!8iye reform." Some 01. the challenges faced by Latin America In the re mainder 01. this eentury, the President said, are these: Farm production 'muSt' m uease by' 6 per eent every yeIW -:. double the present rate; at least 140 million jobs'should be ereated; over one million homes should be built each year; more than 175,000 new doetal'll should be trained to meet mini mum requirements; htindreds of thousands of new classrooms mhould be constructed;" annual per eapita growth should in crease to the 4 to e per range.··' ," The President' Mid,. it is liIP to the individual, ,countries of Latin America whether they economic progress "in unity or isolation," but that "we be lieve that effective unity' kl vital to the' heeds of expanding populati<:lDs." .
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TRAIN MISSIONERS: Msgr. Theodore E. McCarrick, center, president 'of Catholic University of Puerto Rico, chats with staff of the Inter-American Center, where clerics and lay people are trained for service in Latin America. From left: Father James F. Mc Niff, M.M., executive 4ireetor of the center; Fr. John D. Ring, Chicago, in charge of physical facilities; Msgr. McCarrick; Fr. Frederic Cameron, director for . intercultural oommunication, and Fr. Alphonse Schiavone, student counsellor. NC Photo.
Shifted Church From Feudal to'Modern Priest Says Counci I Brought Transition
sity, Father Andrew M. Greeley told the American Sociological Societ.y convention here. Fat.her Greeley, president oX the society, recommended that Catholic universities appoint academically qualified adminis trators as presidents, and giv~ them freedom from cramping }'estric;tions- imposed by religious superiors. He said the most rapid aca_ demic growth coincided with the administrations of ·the stronge~ presidents. He lis'ted these five essential! 'elements of presidential leader ship: HIt was necessary for him io symbolize in his own person and ir his activities the goals which the institution had set for itself, and ,tG radiate confidence and hope that these goals WCIre achievable." "The presidential leader hatll to be an extraordinarily skilled ,politician to achieve consenSUI:l among the diverse and often opposing groups that constitu~ the university social system" "The president_ ought to haW! the knowledge and ,the skiUlll. necessary to determine what Mil ed~cational institution is and how his partIcular school oughi to become one." . "The president had to play lil key role in selection of the lower level administrators and faculty. Only he seemed to ha"" enough prestige and influence iill the ~hool to legitimize the necessary professionalization ,€ I the .operation." "The president was, iil m~ instances, the. primary repre- . sentative of the school to the world of contributors, founda- , tions and government agencies." All.the presidents under whom growth occurred were master fund-raisers, Father Greeley
INch a worldly and secular 2lt MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The and' from feudalism to func 'D1losphere," be said. Catholic Church is going through tionalism." There will be many, he 'said, the same transition that all of "But the truth about the sem Western Bociety' has been under ,who will consider "this secular inary at Carroll College is that ,oing for the last century and ized Church" as un-Christian, it is, as far as I know, the ,only. 11 half, Father Andrew Greeley because they have identified the lileminary in the country with 1\ told the American Catholic S0 "transitory feudal forms" of the . negative defection rate, which Church "with the 'essence of has more seminarians at grad ciological Society here. This change, he- said, is a shift Christianity." uation time than it did in the tirst year of college." from. "gemeinschaft" - a small, But he said "the traditional friendly, informal grouJt. - ~ ists, those who resist the emer And, be added, the students, "gesselschaft"-a large, impex: g~mce of a post-feudal Chu"rch, "Seminarians and non-semina IlOnal structured group. are fighting their last desperate. rians," have "a profound and mature understanding of tbe. Father' Greeley, 'president 'of· rearguard action." the society, made that observa He pointed to Carroll College, priestly and· lay vocation§, 'as tion in ·his presidential address Helena, Mont., as an example. well as the meaning of the. celi to, the society's three-day eon "Carroll," he .said, "is the only, bate state." ventionhere. . eoeducational seminary. I know The reason, ne said" is "that in the world in which the di~, the seminarians are a far more -The Vatican council-' repre IJeDts the Church's definitive' ' vinity students and the· pre.,.' important influence on the cam break with the styles 'and ·pat.;.· divinuity students are integrated pus than anyone else; and be terns of a feudal and renaissance eompletely into the student body cause they are so attractive and world and its assumption of the . save only 'that they do 'not date so admired,' many 01. the non : seminarians have a'much greater· styles and patterns of behavior the coeds at the school." " insight into· what the priestly, of the modern world,'" he' said. Negative Defeetion 'R~te . life means and find themselves· The' ChurCh is putti~gaside Traditional Catholic' theology "'the 'static, tribal, higlily 8ym-' "would say that priestly voca-' attracted toward the priestly vocation." bolie, ritualistic relationshji)s" that have characterized iUri the tions would' hardly survjve ' . past arid adopting "hie dynamic, , , Dedicate Memorial ll'8tionalized, flexible;"snd tech nological relationships. ' till' the To Irish Prelate. eontemporary world/', ." . ". NEW YORK (NC)-Auxiliary
Bearruard ~e~n " ., , It is moving, he said, ~rom Bishop James P. Shannon of St.
iamilialism to professionalism, Paui left here by plane' Sunday from paternalism to collegiality, ~or Ireland to dedicate' :a me~ morial to Archbishop John Ire..; / land, first archbishop of St. Paul.
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LANSING (NC) --.,. Michigan's four major religious orga'niza tioDS iavefiled joint brief CTAU Reaffirms here supporting the jurisdiction of the, Michigan Civil, Rights Anti-Alcohol Standi Commission in an open housing ATLANTIC CITY (NC)"'-The dispute.. ',. " , Catholic Total Abstinence Union , The brief was filed in Ingham of America rededicated itSelf here "to promote the virtue of County, Circuit Court by the temperance loy the practice of Michigan Catholic Conference, total abstinence through moral the Jewish Community,Council lluasion an.d with the ~id' of .the of J\:Ietropolitan Detroit, the Michigan Council of Churches sacram,nts." . , At Its· 94th convention, the and the Council of Eastern Or . cr AU also voted to '~condemn thodox - ChurChes. 'The dispute' aroiie ' .when Dn and deplore tlie practices and deceptive devices used to 'adver: '. East Lansing realty company re tise intoxicating' drink which' fused to rent an apartment" toa Negro student at Michigan State tl:lrough radio and television, in vade the privacy of the home University. Richard C. Clauch nnd harm family life." erty, owner .of the firm, ad The eonvent:i.on affirmed Its mitted at a Civil Rights Conunis "'loyalty to our beloved country Bion hearing that he told Wil in these troubled times" and liam M. Smith, the student, and eondemnt:d "those forces 'that are Gerald Bray, fA friend, that they openly and subversively opposed ,eculd not· ren· the apartment • ClUI' Americal! way of We.-cec:ause you are colored." ,
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A dedication Mass will be con celebrated next Sunday; the an niversary of Archbishop' Ire land's baptism, at the merporial site. Archbishop Ireland died at 80 in' 1918. .
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The memorial, a 10-foot,Celti~ cross, i$ at Archbishop Ireiand's birthplace' in County Ki~k~~iiY. He ~came ~ishop of St. Paul.bi 1884 an~ the first archbishop when the See was made an arch,. diocese in 1888. He founded the College .of, St. Thomas in. St. Paul, which Bishop Sha~nOllll fonnerly headed. ..
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.NOTRE DAME (NC) - More than 3,000 delegates at the 22nd general Catholic Students'. Mis Ilion Crusade convention here ,ledged support of a "conscience lobby" in Washington concemed :with the needs of the· world's poor.
A resolution . unanimously adopted at the clo.sing session stressed the responsibility of "have" nations for "have 'not" countries. The conscience lobby" was proposed by Father Ronan Hoff man, O.F.M. Conv., missiology
professor at the Catholic Uni versity of Americ.a, Washington, D. C.,. who addressed the con vention' at the University of Notre Dame, on the world pov erty situation. The resolution urged the lob':'
by be formed "on a broad ecu menical basis" and emphasize the "responsibility of the rich" nations to the poor nations." The resolution noted that the Holy See, as a result of acti9n of Vatican II, is attempting to set
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