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Bishop James L. Connolly, D.D., announced today the a.ppointment of assistants in bW'O Diocesan Offices. Rot. Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, pastor of Our Lady of the Angels Parish, F'allRiver, will serve, as assistant in Catholic Charities Appeal Office ~nder Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, Diocesan Dit'ecbor of the Appeal. Rev. Ed mund A. Connors, assistant He was ordained ,June 4, 1942 Taunton on March 28, 1933. He at St. William's Parish, Fall in the Cathedral by the late Most is the son of Martin Connors and River, will be an assistant , Rev. James E. Cassidy, D.D. the late Mrs. Della Murray Con to Monsignor Considine, Di Monsignor Gomes served· as no ['s.
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Edmund Connors and Propagation Posts
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ANTHONY M. GOM8!:S
ocesan Director of the Propaga tion of the Faith.. The appointments are effective Wednesday, Sept. 20. Monsignor Gomes, son of Mr, and Mrs, Antonio J. Gomes, was born Dec. 16, 1914 in Taunton. Following graduation from Taun ton HighSchool and the Uni versity of Notre Dame he studied theology at St. Bernard's Semi nary, Rochester, N. Y. and <At Angl'a, Terceira, Aio~es. '
assistant at St. John the Baptist, New Bedford, St.' Anthony of Padua and Santo Christo, Fan River. He was narried pastor of Our Lady of the Angels in 1961. He has been assOciated with the Diocesan Family Life Bu reau, Cana and Pre-Cana Con ferences since 1951. Pope Paul VI elevated him to the rank of Domestic Prelate with the title Right Reverend in, March, 1964. 'Father Connors was born illl
He was graduated from Cam bridge High and Latin and made his college studies at the Stig matine Father Juniorate. Fol lowing theological studies at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, he was ordained May 11, 1963 in the Cathedral by Bishop Con nolly. Father Connors served as as sistant at St. Mary's, New Bed ford, until his assignment to St. William's in May, 1965.
JaIEV. EDMUND A. CONNORS
Study Day Oct.,' 1
Bishop Carter To Address
Religious olCCD Group
The ANCHOR ~~U
River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 14, 1961
Newark Schoois Ra ise Tuition" Drop Football
NEWARK (NC)-Tuition regional high schools Religious in Religious Education" il~aintained ,by ,the Newark. ~ ,theple, confreres will take of their tole in the 'Church, 'archdiocese has been in stock consider its effectiveness and cI'eased $100, and the schools at
W'0)t ~ 1, No. 37
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n'lii>7 Th~ Anchor
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father Coady Transferred To Fall River Parish'
St. Mary's Se~iriary, Baltimore, and was ordained Dec. '22, 1945 in St. 'Mary's Cathedral by the Flrancis M. Coady, assistant ]ate Most'Rev. James E. Cassidy, tn Our Lady of Victo'ry, Cen D.D. " Following, ordination, Father r.erville, to assistant at Immaclll ~ Conception, Fall River, Coady ~as as~igned to St. James, Father Coady, who has served New Bedf9rd. He then served at lit Centerville since Nov. 3, 1965, Our Lady of the Assumption, Os""as born on May 12, 1921 in F<A1!ll terville and was assistant at St.' lWver. He is a son of M['S. Mary Peter the Apostle, Prov.inc~town A. Greaney Coady and the late fr9m September 1946 until July' '1958, .when he was assigned to JIoohn A. Coady. The new Fall River assistan¢ St. Joan of Arc, Orleans. fu a Coyle High graduate. He at' &ended Providence College and!
Bishop Connolly announced
~ay the transfer of Rev.
New Assignments for Dorotheans The Sisters of St. Dorothy an llllOunce the following changes affecting Sisters in the FaM Wver Diocese: laev. Mother Superior D. Fer ~ from superior at Mt. Carmel @:onvent, New Bedford, to St. l]Jlorothy's Academy, N. Y.; Rev. Mother Superior Dorothy Costa ~m superior at St. Francis :!'avier, East Providence to l\Iilt. \Carmel, New Bedford. laev. Mother Maria Teixeira Ifi;om St. Elizabeth, Bristol, R][. 't» Villa Fatima, Taunton; Siste1!' :A Silveira from Villa Fatima to ~ Francis-Xavier, East Provd ~llM:e; Sister Juvina Var30 UOIl!A Turn ~ ~age Silx
BIRV. }'RANCIS M. lOOA,][j)'lr
Most Rev: C. Emmett Carter,Bishop of London, On-' tario will be feaJtured speaker at a study day for religiou8 of the Diocese, to be sponsored, Sunday, Oct. 1 at Bishoj{B Stang High School, North Dartmouth, by the Teaching ,., Sisters and Brothers Com mittee of the Confraternity Diocese will discuss local aspects of Christian Doctrine. With of religious education dul'ing th~ afternoon. Displays of catechet "The Changing Role m the ical materials and children's re
which have football teams win abandon the sport after this sea son. .' . The archdiocese maintains U regional high schools with a total enrollment of 11,000. All the schools 'are less than 10 yeal'S old. Oniy four are affected ',!>y the decision to abandon football, since five are for girls and others have not been in existence long enough to field a team. Archbishop Thomas' A. Boland of Newark announced the tuition , increase, which will bring tui tion charges up to $300, not in ch,tCHng a $40 activity fee, for students. Tui'tion is paid' by parishes Turn to Page Six
Appointments Approved The Most Reverend Bishop has approved the nominations by Very Rev. Daniel J. McCarthy, SS,CC., provincial of the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, of one pastor and three assistants for service in parishes guided by the Fairhaven Congregation. Rev. Alan Nagle, SS.CC., pas tor of Our Lady of Lourdes, Wellfleet. Rev., Richard Lynch, SS.CC., assistant at St. Mary's Pal'ish, No. Fairhaven. Rev. James O'Gara, SS.CC., assistant at Holy Redeemer Par ish, Chatham. Rev, Charles Kellagher, SS.CC.. assistant at St. Francis Xavier, ACUShnet. Appointments effective 'om Monday, Sept. 18.
ligious art will be on view; and! als!> on the day's program wiUl ,pe ;m opening scripture service at 10 Sunday morning and III closing Mass at 4:30.
make plans for the future.' Bishop Carter, to speak at 1:30 Diocesan speakers will include Sunday afternoon at a general se'ssion, is' known for his aware Sister Joan Louise, O.L.V.M.. ness of the needs, of the Church Immaculate Conception parish, in the field of religious educa North Easton; Rev. Robert tion, He is author of "The Mod Laughlin, St. Joseph's, Taunton; ern Challenge'to Religious Edu and MI'S. Mary Fuller, St. Mar cation" as well as many perti ga.ret's, Buzzards Bay. mint magazine articles. ' Twelve religious communitiea To be heard Sunday morning active in the Diocese are repre are Sister Teresa Mary of the sented on the arr1ingements comMission Helpers of the SacI'ed , mittee for the day. Further in Heart, from the Rochester Dio formation is available from the cese, and a representative of the Diocesan CCD Office or from Holy Cross Brothers., Clergy and Brother Thomas Mulryan, Coyle religious from the Fall River High School, Taunton.
Judge Mullaney Recipient 'Of Ecclesiastical Honor On Saturday, Sept. 9, at a.
Solemn Investiture Service at
St. Patrick's Cathedral, New
YOI'k City, BristOl County Pro
bate Judge Beatrice H. Mullaney
was invested as a Lady of the
Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem by His,
Eminence, Francis Cardinal Spellman, Honorary Grand Prior of the Order. Judge Mullaney has beenac tive in the Fall River Diocese and is presently a member of the Fall River Diocesan Board of Education, and the Diocesan Commission for Christian Unity. She also served for many years as a Trustee of the Catholic Memorial Home, and is a former President of the Fall River Cath olic Woman's Club. Turn to p~ Six
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'. ".. Mr. John A.c·O'Connor, Director of th~ Catholic ~~ Association, will be' the opening speaker in the ~hnstIa.n Culture Lecture Series at 8:15 Thursday evenmg, Sep.. tember 21, discussing "Has Criticism in the Church GODe! Too Far ?" VlirrY Rev. John J. Gram, Associate Editor' of !he Centre for Ecumenical of The Pilot, will be program Studies in Toronto, discussing "Problems of Faith Today"; and chairman. O'Connor is form- Rev. Robert J. O'Connell, S..J..
OFFICIAL
er, editor of the San Francisco Department of Philosophy, Ford Archdiocesan paper; T.he Mon- ham University, whose topic itor, and the Wilmington Del- will be "Teilhard de Chardm Bt. Rev. Anthony M. Gomes as assistant in· the Catholic marva Di'alog. and the Human Sour!; and Reu. charities AppelM Office. , A graduate of Stan~ord Uni-, Joseph H. Fichter, S.J.,' sociolOo> vermty' School of JoUrnalism, he . gist, Professor of Roman' ~~~()o Rev.' Edmund L .. Connors as' assistant in the Office ,of has been associated w~th Cath- .' lic Studies at Harvard 'Dlvlm~ ·tine' Propagation of the Faith. . olic newspaperS and magazines School. .,.. I .. for over 15 year .ahdhas l?~g' ·~ev·. Francis M. C~adY,' assisi~t ~t Out LadY~f Victory been active in the. eCl,lJDemcal . Dr. Martin. E. Marty, ,Editcn' Church, Centerville, to the' hnmaculate Conception Ch~rcb, dialogue. " : '.', of the ~rotestant. eCllmenica] REV. LORENZ9 H. MOR~,' The Christian Cultur!,! ·Lecture weekly, The Christi~ .Centu~ Fall River, 'as assista~t. . . . I Series is' observing ~ts ~Oth anni, will open the second half ,of the versary. Accordingto·'Rev. Rob series on Jan. 17, discussing "Thfl 'Effective' date of the 'assigmnents UI Wednesday, Sept. ert·' P, . Quinn, C.S.P., Lecture Open World." Other speakem 20, 1967. Moderator, this yea.r's 'program will be Rev. Anthony T. PadCl>-> HO[1'l)@r P@$th~rr is' planned', to help Catholics, vano of Immaculate Conception Seminary, New Jersey, speaking Final preparations are being people of·all faiths and the re lilPously uncommitted under on "Original Sin and AnthropoJ>., made for an appreciation testi ogy," Dr. Leslie Dewart, philo£> monial to be held at 6 Sunday stand authentic Catholic teach evening, Sept. 24 at Lincoln Park ing, Church rE;newa~, and so~e opher of St. Michael's College" Toronto, author of "Future Ci1t ballroom, North Dartmouth, by of the current" debatable reli Bishop Fall parishioners of St. George gious issues. The general theme Belief," discussing "Faith and Church, Westport, in honor of of this year's series is- "The Cbristianity Today," Rev. Rev. Lorenzo H. Morais, pastor. Church Responds to Critical mond E. Brown, S.S. Scripture Issues," scholar and member of st.. Joseph G. Bollea will be mas Father SchiUebeeck Mary's Seminary faculty in Bal-o ter of ceremonies" with Alford Rev. Edward Schillebeeck, timore exploring the subject" Dyson speaking on behalf of , parishioners. William F. Ca)"Iley, O.P., famed Dutch, theologian, "Can Any Church Accept tbe who has written extensively'on Whole New Testament," an£! CHICAGO (NC)-Priests from cussion; structural, problems of will represent the town of Dart 42 dioceses in a 10-state area associations and senates, person mouth and Antone Gracia the Cburch renewal, the Eucharist, Rev. Edward H. Flannery, See will take part in midwest region nel matters, and communications. town of Westport. Both commu-, ' and responsible parent~ood, will retary of the American .BishoP'J al meeting on priests' councils Vatican Council II said. senates' nities are served by the parish. deliver two lectures. IIi bis first Sub-Commission on Jewish lecture 'af 'John Hancock Mon Catholic' Relations, author oil of priests are to be foi'med in here Sept.' 25 and 26. A musical program will in They wiil discuss their expe-' each diocese·to advise, the bishop. clude vocal selections by Ralph .day, Nov. 13, Father,Schillebeeek "Anguish of the Jews," speakin,g will discuss "Theology of Re on "Jesus and the Phariseees.'" riences in beginning and devel Most of the dioceses in the 10 P. Souza and Donald R. Gau oping senates and associations of statefjrea have eleCted senates. dette, 'accordion sofos by the newaland Radica~ Theology." Rev. Christopher F. Mooney.. priests. States represented will A few, such as Detroit. Chi Misses Frances and Marguerite A second lecture WIll be held· at '--S.J. ' of Fordham University, win he Minnesota; North Dakota, cago, St. Paul, 'and Fargo, have Zembo and offerings' by the' New England Life".Hall; 225 clo;e the serl,es on. April 24" 'Nebraska, 'Iowa, Missouri, Illi associations of priests. They dif Bishop Stang High School glee Clare~don Street, ~uesday, N~v. speaking on, "Teilh~rd .~e,.Chal' club. . . riois, Indiana, Michigan and fer from senates in being organ 14, WIth Father Schlllebeeck dlS dill and the Phenomenon of Un= Wiscon'sin.· . cussing "Secularity and Contem belief." , . ized independently, by ""--the Notre Dame Schoon porary Theology." Each senate or association of priests themselves. ' Father Morais has served the Friday, Sept. 29, Rev. Bernard Lectures .will be held at John 'priests in the 42 dioceses has been Westport'parish for 16 years. He Haring, C.SS.R., noted. moral Hancock Hall, 180 . Berkeley invited by a sponsoring com is the 6ldes.t of six children of theologian, recently returned Street, Boston: Furthe:' ,;nf","ma mittee, composed of clergy, to the late Thomas ,Morais and from Japan and Brazil and pres !ion is available from Rev~ Rob send four representatives: 'Aimee '·(Tciuthier);··Morais. After ently on the faculty of Union ert F. Quinn;' C.S.P.; 5 Park The- agenda for the meeting C~tnlce8ebrated attending Notre Dame School in ,.Theologi<;al Se~~tlary, New Street, Boston: ' .' c, focuses on three areas for dis . 'A c~h'celebrated'High Mass of . Fall River, he entered the minor York, will discuss., "r~~ New
,.' Requiem was o:ltered this morn seminary at St. Hyacinthe, Can- Morality." Speakers in October
,. Begin Shared-Time' ing at 10 o~clock in St. .James 'ada" then' attended St. Mary's" will be Dr. Arthur C:' Piepkorn,
Award Church;, New Bedford, for ,the, Seminary, Baltimore' and Cath Protestant historian of Goncordia ROCHELLE PARK (NC) repo~e of the so~ of Mrs. 'Cath olic University, Washington. Seminary, St. Louisr.speaking on Foil' Father Murray The first shared-time program in erine F. McHugh Clark, mother D. C., He was ordained in 1925 "Luther to the Twentiet,h Cen the North Jersey area was inau CHICAGO (NC)-The. second of Rev. James W. Clark, assist by the late Bishop Feehan. tury"; Most Rev.. James P: Shan- . gurated here with 80 seventh ant at St. Mary's Church, Taun Followbg ordination he served non, Auxiliary Bishop,:'of St. anJlual Adlai E. Stevenson grade 'students from Sacred at Our Lady of Lourdes parish, . Paul and President' of St. Award of the Catholic Adult Ed Heart School taking classes in ton. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Wellfleet; Sacred Heart, North Thomas CQllege, discussing ucation Center here will be industrial arts, home economics D.D.; Bishop of' the Diocese of Attleboro; Notre Dame,' Fall "Catholic Education and the Ed, made posthumously to Father and physical education at nearby Fall River, gave the final abso River; and St. Anthony, New . ucation of Catholics"; Rev. Eu- . John Courtney Murray, S.3.. Midland School. George Mont noted Jesuit theologian and lution. Bedford. ' gene C. Kennedy, M.M., psychQl gomery, president· of the Ro Father Clark was chief cele In 1949 he was appointed ad ogist of Maryknoll's Glen Ellyn ecumenist, at a dinner here Oct. chelle' Park Board of Education, -brant and he was assisted by the ministrator, of Holy Rosary par 'College, in a discussion of "The 25 at which Episcopal Bishop said' "these' children are part of Kilmer Myers of San Francisco following concelebrants: Rev. ish, New Bedford and in 1951 Problem of Identity: The Per Rochelle Park. I am delighted Edward J. Mitchell, who also came to 'St. George as pastor. son and People of God." Frank will be the principal speaker. we are doing this." gave the homily; Rev. John Mc- Outstanding among his accom Sheed, appearing for the 10th Father Murray was selected 3lJI Hugh, C.S.Sp., a cousin; Rev. plishments as pastor has been the time and speaking 'on the :theme, the 1967 recipient and the din- ~ Edward J. Burns, Rev. Paul G. establishment' of St. George's "Has the Church a' Future," and ner was planned before his death . Connolly, Rev., Thomas F. O'Dea; School for children of the par Sister Mary Luke; Superior of a heart attack in a'New York FRIDAY_Seven Sorrows of the . and. Rev. Walter, A: Sullivan. ish. It' is staffed ,by Holy Cross General of the Sisters'of Iioretto, .' City tax'icab on Aug. 16. , . , : Blessed 'Virgin Mary. II Cla~s. Mrs. Clark, the widow of the Sisters and has an' enrollment whose, ,subject will cb'e "New White: Mass Proper; Glory; late ii'lmes W. 'Clark, .leaves, in of over 300 ·children. . ,Directions for Sisters"'~"., .... se<iue~ce; Creed; Preface of additio~ ,~ Father ~lark... tbr~ ,Under direction, of. , J o s e p h . ,Father Fichter"l:i Blessf:!:i -Virgin. . ' .. ., sons) .Jolln A. ,o.~ Ne\V York,~Paql Mendes,general chairman, a 'Other speakers will'be.cBroth!,!r, SATUIU').-A¥.. -.,.. SS. Cornelius, and Robert ~. C~arl,l: .o~ N~:w Bell .large group of parlsbioh'ers are G,abri~l. Moran, .F .S.C,,. 'of Man~. Pope"'c'arid . "Cyprian, BishoP" '. "....... . '.' active in.plans for the testimO-:,' hattan.College, New,'~Ol,k, dis .':'~i""" • Martyrs. ,Cla·ss: Red. Mass ford.. 'Interment was in St. :j.\ofary's, nial. They include ·Mrs. J. Roger ',. c\lssing ':The-Future,of,Ca1ecbet-,., Il.en~ ~ Proper; Glo'icy; no Creed; Cemetery; New B'edfo~d. - Forest,co-Chail'JIlan 'and publi- .ics";, Rev. Bernard, J .. Coo~.e. Common Preface. " . Hyannis'" , :' city aide; Warren Johnson and noted, theologian .and ,ecumenjst SUNDA'Y-~xViI1 :'Sundily After ." .. . .; ,David Buckley" tickets;. MiS.. of Marquette UniveJ1sity"sJ)eak.-.. ' Pentecost. II Class. Green: 219 ·Barnstable R«Htd 'HOURS," . Joseph' Bono and Mrs." Warren ..ing on: the topi~, ':~!1craments: _."M.a~·\(~Itopel';,\ ?Iory;·._ Cree(); SP 5-0019' ., •. Johnson, decorations and pro. , SigoPOllts fo'r P~.lgrhn~ge:~; R~v. '. P'fefaceof Trimty. "DEVOTION" ,gram; Mrs. 'Joseph' Mello and'. Gregory. Baum, O.S,A."1.,Director' . ,1VIONDA'Y-,.,St..Joseph of Cuper-'; Mrs. Ralph Souza, subscriptions; ,~' a.... a_._D_-D_a-'L_IDIii:.a_._D_~D_a_._~._a:..a.:..:D_a;,..c._a~ tino, Confessor. III Class. 'Sept.17-'Holy Cross.... Fall, . Mrs. Honore Vaillancourt;- pul>-'" ~ White. Mass' Proper; Glory; ", River." ,. St.. ',;oseph, Attleboro. ., . no Creed; Common. Preface."" TUESDAY-SS. Januarius, Bish , ~St,· 'Louis' de'France" A corps of, usherettes w.ill assist . ,,' .; I!. -..11 ..11 - ~.. t " Il. . Swansea. QP, -and' Companions, Martyrs. ' .at the. program. ' JJecm~ Nndelrd~i'·lf@t!J.' ini~e;r ~nlOl ~g,eC q.rr. ... ~'!f " iIi: Class. Red. Ma'ss Proper; Sept.2~t. Roch, Fall' rover.' Glory; no Cree~; Common ··W.A1[C!rfi!ER~·: ... ~.~.: . .::. , ., Sacred 'Hearl, TaU-nton. WEDNESDAY"--Efuber Wednes 1Nl~<e'Il'@ll@@t .' st Allthony of'Padua, . , day of S~J>.telI!qer. I~ Class. Vi WU~·~ 'b~ ~iB9®$ft' sfP>~tiEker'" 'Bedfo·rd. olet. Mass Proper; No Glory SlEJP'll'. '24 ,.' ASSIrGNMJEN'JrS
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ANCHOR· :lllcond Class Postage Paid, at Fall River, Mas.: 'Published every Thursday at 410 Higftlano Avenue, Fall' Rive. Mass.. 02722
by the :athollc Press o. the I.liocese, of faD Rive.. SUbscription price ~ mall, postpaid $4.00 per year.
Rev. 'Joseph E. C.' 'Bourque, 1955, Pastor,' Blessed' Sacrament, Fall River. " SlEPT 26 Rev. John. J.Donahue, 1944,"
Assistant, St. William, Fall River•
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'f8~60KUNE '~HfGH SCHOOL AVDITORIUM' welcpme.. ~:,.BROOKi:INE~ MAsS. Free admi~;.jon
Ever.y~ne
,.Ca,dinal· ·Asserts Teachers' Work Noble Vocation
Th,urs.; Sept.' 14, 1967
Cape Cod Parish To Honor Prelate
WASHINGTON (NC) Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of W'ashington told reachers of the Washington archdiocese "your work is a noble and ...... thentic vocation, an essential ~ostolate in the living Church." Cardinal O'Boyle spoke at the annual Teachers' Mass at St. Matthew's Cathedral here, offi mally inaugurating the 1967-68 sehool 'year. The cardinal also celebrated the Mass. '"In your teaching apostolate," «be cardinal said, "you repre sent and imitate Our Lord Him self; for He was looked upon by aD His contemporaries, ,if not as l.ocd, at least as Teacher. He fl8Dle that we might have life and have it more abundantly, md He pointed to Himself as the tray, the truth and the life." "In all your teaching," the .rdinal reminded the teachers, "'you will need a guide; and Our l:tord has provided such a guide lln His Church and her infallible teaching authority. The faith of ~ur young people and many of our adults has suffered much t2r0m the confusion generated Chrough certain public state ments seized upon and sensa-· flionalized in some of the com Dlhunications media. Primary Purpose ""In such an atmosphere, we llleed a focus," he continued, "'and we already have that in Ole sacred magisterium (teaching authority) of Christ's Church. :We must grow in our love for· , NEWLY INVESTED MONSIGNORi.: Bishop Conn~lly, center, invested Rev. Pa the Church, prudently follow her trick H. 'Hurley, left, pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Taunton, and Rt. Rev. Arthur J. ~aching, and in all charity spare tile youngsters foOd that is too Levasseur, right, pastor of,St. Anne's Church, New Bedford, as DOmestic Prelates at .deb for them ~ ••" ' .eeremonies condtio~ed Sundar evening 'in' S.t. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. '. '. -rhe primary purPose of the ehurch is the sanctification of 1Diulkind, . the establishment of things in: Christ," Cardinal 9'Boyle continued, "and the ful ~ll~l!nt of this noble purpose' falls with you, the teachers of our young people. ,By LarF,r Michaud "'The future of society rests wtth you, who along with their, Along a' route. stretching from the Provincial ~ouse of La Salette in Attleboro, to parents, are their teachers.". 1lhe doors of Our Lady of Prompt Succor in Golden Meadows, La. a priest will have Parents First Teachers been driving, his car pulling a trailer. Having departed early this month, Rev. Ferdi : "The school's relationship to nand Langevin,· M.S., was travelling to accept his appointment as pastor in the South flhe home should be an intimate ern ,parish. For the past One," the cardinal said, "for the year, he has been an as- Roland Vandal, M.S., from the in Seekonk, where he assisted parents, after all, are the first sistant at St. Mary's .par- order's house in Montreal, Rev. C. J. Keliher, pastor. teachers of the child, and· they Although still housed at the continue to influence the forma iah, Seekonk. "I intend to Canada. tion of their child as he pro follow the same trend as they The parish, Our Lady of provincial house in Attleboro, gresses through the grades of have in the past," Father Lan- Prompt Succor, which belongs his time and labors were spent y.our schools. gevin said in telling his plans for to the Western Province of the for, and in St. Mary's, where he La Salette Fathers, for the first became engaged in CYO, CCD,
"Home and school together his new post. should maintain a close relation "There will be some in the time will be staffed by members and supervision of the altar boys. "He was most helpful in parish ship with parish life," he con parish. who can help me and of Immaculate Heart Province. t~nued. "It is precisely this I'm not going there to change The need in Louisiana for visits," Father Keliher noted. Seven CilIiRdlren . threefold interrrelationship of them," he said. French - speaking priests was home, school and church that· ~ Although the arrangements to voiced by the Western superiors Father Langevin spoke of his makes our' educational sYfitem . ·that point had been made en- and their call is being answered family" in which there were 'unique." . ' . sevenchiidren. tirely by phone, Father Lange- from Attleboro. , ; "Your primary concern is the vin was able to' describe some ''Those who iuarried, all mar . Bo~n ir:t 'Aldenville, Mass. May weJ1are of the student," Cardi 'of., his anticipated, surr-oundings: 9, 1919; ; Father ,Langevin de- ried Canadians,.. he said. . 'scfipecLhis:early, years as, "Oh! " . .' '" ,. , ~w,. 0'B.~Yle' ~o)d, t~fi! teachers, .., ,"Golden "My ,father is 70 and still', is about '30 ' " .. and thiS involves a desire to iniles.from Meadows the.au'H, and 'about' '. n()~p:t";g :r;i!al special:"· worl{ing; He's acarpehter.. ,He jl6rin him inio Ii mature Chris 80 ihUes from' New Orleans," he ~~e', stuqi~d£p'r .six·ye~.rs in USed to "be a 'contractor, but, de person, competent' to cope, liegan. ,. ,. Enfield," liT: H.··and in 1942 cided not too iong ago to work with the problems he will face . ~h~ church, which was bunt tered the La Salette novitiate in for someone else. He's been in ... our contemporary, pluralilloccupation for 40 years, and • 1959, seats 900, and the parish' Attleboro. His ordination' took Ue society. ,,' . is in good 'health," he reported. iAI made up of some 1,200 fami- place on May 22, 1948, and "Respecting the student as a "Woodw;orki'ng is my hobby," perSon means ~aving a sense' of lieS, ~ of which are Indian, at- followed by service as professor tending Ii mission belonging to and prefect of discipline at'En- said Father Langevin,,' adding eba.rity for him, understanding , field for one year. From 1949 te' .that he .had 'IN'orked .with his' lind ' ·loving , him· rIM it . Unique " tale ;parish. ..' '1953 he was sub-master of' 'the ' individual." .. " . , -rile parish· lies in bayou . novitiate in Center Harbor;'New father· for 'fiv:e Summers when De' ~as going to' school. ...'. . . ' • . ' ' ,. 11" oountry, and the ;'population is' HampShH·e. 'In 1955 he was ap- . . - ., '. r -.; ,. ,In speaking of spo~ Father French speaking-they're nearly poh;lted professor and treasurer . all of. French descent;~· Father '. in BrewSter, and' in 1957 again Langevi", said his favorites were . tennis 'arid water-skiirtg. 0 . said. served as professor and prefect "I've., b~en water-skiing' for ROMBLON, , (NC)·...;. Membera ,~I:' Lady of Prompt Succor is of discipline',at Enfield. about'12 years," he said. . , . til the Knights of Columbus flanked on one side by oil fields, In 1962 he was curate of Im Father Langevin's . appoint CoU'neil' 5840 have" organized and! on the, other by· shrimp. . maculate Concepti OJ!. , parish in ment is effectiye Siinday. In • . htl y wa t c h ~s h ere against in- fisberies. East Brewster, and }'n 1963'was mg calling his 19 years as a priest, Vasion' by pirates from the sea. "Sort of being between· the '. ,~ppointed treasurer at Center he said, "I sOli:letimes think of 'l'hfsPhilippine seacoast town rich and the PoOll'," Father Lan- Harbor. people who do gr,eat things, and was sacked recently by pirates ~vin said. ' ,An appointment to the major I wonder just what I've accom who killed a knight. Since then, AttleooJro Helps seminary in Attleboro in 1964 plished in these 19 years. Of IJOme 60 knights, armed with . Ai!sisting him as curates will in the capacity of treasurer, courSe I believe in divine provi guns, take turns keeping vigil be Rev. Theodore Morin, 'M.S., a post he held for two years. dence, and all I can say is that .ver the shoreline. No encounter also leaving the Provincial In October, 1966, he assumed I am an instrument in the hands Us yet been reported. House i.D Attleboro, and Rev. the role of curate at St. Mary'. of God."
A reception from 2 to 4:30 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 17 at Hyannis Armory, South Street, will honor Msgr. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, on his appointment as domestic prelate. Thomas Laughlin, West Yar mouth, will be toastmaster, aided by a large group of parish men acting as hosts. An honor guard of Knights of Columbus will es cort the prelate to 5 o'clock Mass at St. Francis Xavier Church, following the reception. Refreshments will be served by parish women and members of St. Francis Xavier Guild will be responsible for decorations. General chairman is William Meagher, aided by a committee representing parish organiza tions. Guests of honor will include clergy from places of worship in the Hyannis area.
Chicago Doctor Wins Award CHICAGO (NC) -The 1967 Stritch Medical award will be presented to Dr. Samuel Salin ger, 82, who is still active as an eye, ear, nose and throat special ist. Dr. Salinger was 'named win ner of the award by a commit tee of physicians and laymen headed by Dr. John F. Sheehan, dean of Loyola University of Chicago's Stritch School of Medicine. "Dr. Salinger'" .... is honored for hi~ great contributions in his specialty, and for the selfless dedication he has given to stu dents durin~ his 41 years at Loy- ' ola's Stritch School of Medicine" Dr. Sheehan said. ' Father James F. Maguire, S.J.. Loyola' president, will present the award-a gold medal and citation-at the Stritch School's ~iiitual benefit dinner Nov. 21, here. Dr. Salinger served as chair man of the department of oto larynology at the Stritch School fronl 1914 to 1955.
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THE. ANCHOR
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Cardinan's Plea
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall'River-Thurs. Sept. 14, 1967
Help~ l'EITDd Peru PoIDf/'o~@~ CrrD!)is
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LIMA (NC)-An appeal by J nan Cardinal Landazuri Ricketts, O.F.M., of Lima has helped to end a parlia
By RL Rev. l\1sgr. John S. K.ennedy A book entitled The Medieval Foundation of England (Doubleday. $4.95; 501 Franklin Ave., Garden City', N.Y. 11531) might seem to promise only a dry-as"dust disqui sition, to be of interest only to the specialist, and to have little relevance to our own England, and he is just in his time and place. But when assessment and praise and the one learns that the author blame deserved by the Church. is Sir Arthur Bryant, that impression is i 01 01 e d i ate I y routed. For Sir Arthur, in addi tion to ,being immensely learned, is also a superlative writer. He is expert in mak ing the past live before the reader's eyes, and in distilling its essence. Here he is address ing himself to social history: "the changing social life, habit, and beliefs of an evolving peo ple." He ranges from the earliest settlement of Britain down to the coming of the Tudors in tIie 15th century. ·He does not pretend to be ex:. haustive of this great span, but seeks to pick out and correlate the principal elemcnts of social development during it. The matter is of contemporary Ilignificance in more ways than one. Despite the American Rev olution, there is a strong con nection between our own society and institutions and those of
England. Also, the Christian re
ligion played a major part in the growth of our commoUl civ ilization. Sketches In"asions From what happened in. En gland.over the centuries, we can leam something about both the debt 'we owe the Church and the danger to the Church in too close alliance with the State~ : Sir Arthur sketches the suc cessive invasions of England by foreigners who were ultimately .assimilated and who enriched the English stock and heritage. , The first were colonizel's from Iberia and the Mediterranean, . followed by people from Eastem Europe in the bronze age, Celts ·or Gaels in .. the iron age, and the Romans who built' the
original . cities, Saxons and
Angles who were excellent farmers .md ga\:e the land its shape, monks hom Rome who made 'Engl:lI1n a Christian land in the seventh century and brought Christianity's humaniz ing influence to bear, the Danes, and finally the Normans. . <.
ApJllication of Law The emergence of England as a nation was very slow. Some thing of a ~lational stamp was first put on it by Alfred. the Great in the ninth century. Dur ing his reign, law began to be imposed '. and patriot.ism t.o bud. But the varieg'lted, multi racial, feud re<llm became a truly disciplined land only' under the Norman conquel'or, William, in the eleventh century, and his successors. The gl'eatest of t.hese was pl'Obably Henry II, in the 12th century, wl10 brought all En gland under the common' law. The refinement and general ap plication of the law is one of the most interesting features of Sir Arthul"s book, as is also hi:; ac . count of the gradual definition of subjects' rights and the ma turing of representat.lve govcl'n' ment through. parliaments.. The England of \·... hich· Sir Ar thur is writinl: ~as Catholh:
Royal Bureaucracy . The monasteries played a. principal role in t.he nation's social life. It may not be so com monly realized that t.he- friars, Franciscans and Dominicans, made invaluable cont.ributions, not only by the social effect of their preaching and by the ex ample of representative govern ment and majority rule in the workings. of their communities, but also at the universities, where, Sir Arthur says, they molded· the nation's future. ';rhe bishops were closely as sociated with the royal rule. Like the major abbots, they were war lords, and they were also court officials. And clerics,' those in major or miJ10r orders, were drawn into the royal bureauc racy,. serving as administrators when few others were qualified to do so.
VOTING TN SAIGON: Columban Father Patrick '0' Connor, NC correspondent, right, talks with a group of young Catholic seminarians at a polling place in Saigon during the national Vietnamese elections. NC Photo.
UmJ~on
Rejoins
Missionary Priest, Pro MllDsocian at 13, Sees Jazz Aiding G(Qldl 8 s Work
HOI;;LYWOOD (N'C)-A mis sionary priest who is an ex-mu sician has rejoined the American Federation of Musicians. Engaging, Delightful Father James V. Perrone, The' Church became a great S.M.A., currently stationed at St. power throughout the land, and Odilia's parish here, reported to extremely wealthy. But as its the musicians' union local that political weight and its .holdings the reason he has returned to increased, its spiritual influence · the union ranks is that "I want to identify myself fully with my waned. The abuses inevitably involved fellow musicians." In his professional days, under in its worldly status and preoc cupations caused alienation and the name of Buddy James, resentment. Its decline was evi Father Perrone,' 39, a member dent long before the' Reforma of the Society ot African Mis tion which was to come'. to En sions, played saxaphone and gland' under Henry VIiI. The clarinet. TodaY,he does so oc casionally in his priestly work. melancholy recital of this proc "I . am interested in helping ess can serve as :I warning to my Order, my Church, my com churchmen of our own t.ime. munty, and I see n~ reason why Sir Arthur's chronicle is en gaging and often delightful. It . does get a bit dull in spots, but most of it spal'kles with :descrip I tions of natural and archHectu ral beauty, sketches of notables like Bede, Edward the' Confes MARYKNOLL (NC),- Father sor, and . Grosseteste, and pi . (Lt.) Vincent R. Cappadanno, a quant information about pil Maryknoll Missioner sel'ving as grims, thieves, fairs and word chaplain to a Marilile division in origin.s. Few historians enliven Vietnam, was killed in action and illumine 'their subject as he there recently. does his. ' According to det:;Iils giyen to his family on Staten Island, Battle of the Book N. Y., the 38-year~0Id chaplain A year ago a sto'rm was blow receive!! fatal head and chest ing up over William Manches wounds during Opel'ation Swift ter's then unpublished boek, The at Quang Tin. Death of' a President.' It grew Father Capodarlllo became a to something like hurricane pro · chaplain in December, 1965, portions. In retrospect it seems seven years after his ordinatiOn to have been a hullabaloo with and after having served as a mis out due reason. But it did a lot sionary on Taiwan for six years. ' of damage. At Christmas of 1966, Mary John Corry, who covered the knoll received a letter from the battle of the book for The New father of a Marine who was YOI'k Times, has now recon serving with Father Capodanno. structed it in The Manchester Sent from Brooklyn, N. Y., it
Affair (Putnam. $4.95; :;!OO Mad read: . ison Ave., New York, N. Y. "My son, a Marine lieutenant, 10016). There are key details to told me that Father Capodanno which he is not privy, but" he is the greatest man he ever tells much more of the distaste knew. My boy has guts, but he ful and . disastrous story than told me this priest is the greatest· has hitherto been put ·in pl·int. · he ever saw. The Father is just It commands interest not only as much a Marine as any of because it deals with pl'Ominent them .. people locked in unseemly and Marines Loved Him sometimes downright silly com "Wherever the Marines are bat, but also because it raises Father Cappod~mno is thel'e-': questions about an a'uthor's in the water or in the mud up rights, private censorship, the to his knees-always giving the hon_or of publishers, etc. To one reader at least, the book shows Mr. Manchester liS far more sinned against than sin ARDMORE (NC)-St. Mary's ning, an~ the Kennedy's as pur Catholic scho" in this Oklahoma suing a mistaken course which community is closing, due to . resulted in the very sensational lack of enrollment and the gen ism and injured. renl;tatlons · eral financial state of the par . which they sought t..., avoid. ish.
jazz music can't be made to do God's work," he said. Teaches Music Father Perrone plays at some of his parish affairs,' and also counsels and even teaches music to some of the youngsters in his' predominantly Negro parish. Father Perrone joined Hart ford, Conn., AFM Local 400 when he was 13, but already a pro musician. He worked in es tablished traveling bands when still in his teens and,' allring a hitch with Tony Pastor's orches- . tra, .even became a voca list. Shortly after World War II, during which he served in the Marine Corps, Buddy. James stepped off the bandstand and entered it seminary, He was erdained in 1959.
down
'Greatest Mon H'e Ever Knew' . s· Tribute to Chaplain Marlne
Close Parish School
last rites of the Church te some. wounded Marine when they are in action, and consoling the' fighting men and hearing t.heir confessions. . . . "When they are n~t in action, he is still there, helping t.hem with their problems of life. The Marines love Father Capodann41 -may God bleSs and protect him forever." Father Capodanno was bortt Feb. 13, 1929, on Staten Island, N. Y. He was graduated from ·P.S. 44, "Mariners Harbor, in January,' 1943, and Curtis High School in January, 1947. He at tended Fordham University in New York for one year, and en tered Maryknoll in 1949 to be gin. his studies for the foreign mission priesthood. At Maryknoll, he was awarded the bachelor of arts and master of religious education degrees. He was ordained by Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York in 1958.
mentary crisis that paralyzed both houses of the. Peruvian Congress for five weeks. The election of Julio de la Piedra, a 01 e 01 b e r of the Odria National Union, an opposition party, as senate pres ident in July caused the contro-, versy, which ended with his resignation. A coalition of' the government Popular Action Party and the Christian Democrats claimed that the election was a .fraUd, walked out of the senate and said that they would not return until Piedra resigned. Their move left the senate without ~: quorum. . lHlonors Appeal Two later efforts to muster II quorum failed and President Fernando Belaunde Terry of Peru had to postpone his state of-the-nation message to Con gress. Cardinal Landazuri Ricketts said, "I am is,suing this call in the name of the Church in Peru and in my own name so thatCon gress can resume its vital func tions." A short time later, Piedra stated that he was resigning "to honor the appeal, among others, of .the archbishop of Lima."
University, College To Merge Cou rses SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The presidents of the neighboring University of San Franciseo and San Francisco College 101' worn,... en announced the institutions will put into effect a plan for interchange of under graduate students and other forms of in stitlrtional cooperation in the J967-68 term. In a joint statement, FatheT Charles W. Dullea, S.J., and Mather Gertrude Patch, pl'esi-' l'Ie.nts of the respective schoois, saId: "We are making the re llOurces· of each institution 'avfii1~' able to· the otlier in specified' areas. The arrangement wi)) enable the university and the eollege to share their strengths with each other, for the bene-' lit of students on both campuses. "The immediate objective is tG eliminate needless duplication 8f eourses, programs and facili ties. The end result will be a broader 8{ld deepeI: .educational· experience for our students."
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 14, 1967
Board ChaUenges School Bu~ Law ~lA New .1J®rr~~y
Says
'Elo'tablishmen~
of Religion' estimated 80,000
While an J!)upi'ls al'e benefiting from the IIteW law, some few found they lJI'ere no longer eligible for rides 8Jecause districts which bus only· • a vocational school or a school l!IM' the handicapped are exempt. lirom the law. In the past, such districts provided rides .along· (!8tablished routes although they wel'e transporting but a handful <.t vocational or handicapped. lItudents. In its suit, the Teaneck board asks the Superior Court for in- . iAructions on whether compli ance wi th the law would "con iititute a breach of its public ~ust" because it believes that ase of public funds "to transport atudents to non-public religious schools constitutes an establish ment of religion in violation of Che First and 14th Amendments" 00 the U. S, Constitution. Defendants include the state attol'lley general, state and ltOuntry education officials and GChool boards in Closter, River Vale and Pascack Valley.
Superior General Doubly Honored CANTON (NC)-Brother Eli (Jee Rannou, F.I.C.P., superiO!' ~eneral of the Brothers of Chris tiaR Instruction, has been doubly 12onored by Walsh College here. Brother Rannou was awarded Iln honorary doctor of humane !letters degree at a convocation lln his honor at the college eam J!"I8 center here "in recognition c;rf his excellence as an educator ~ deep learning, a leader of Jl)enetrating vision and a cburch man of strong faith." Brother Thomas Farren. :V.I. C.P., Walsh president, tben in llorn;led Brother Rannou that the year-old campus center bence north would be known as the lli\annou Campus Center.
Psycho~ogy
Ca~ He~!? ChMr~h
HACKENSACK (NC) Thousands of private school mtudents got their first di lC'OOt ride to school as New .JTersey's revised school busing statute became effective, but Illardly were they out the bus door on the first day of school before the practice was being ehallenged in Superior Court here. Testing the law were the Tea neck Board of Education, five of its members and three Bergen County taxpayers. The suit was filed on their behalf by Robert lllJ. Gruen, Hackensack attorney. Gruen is a member of the board of the New Jersey Chap OOi:', American Civil Liberties 1[Jnion, which helped draft the litigation but was not permitted 00 join in the suit for want of standing. On Same IB!nsis 'il'he Teaneck board voted to oontest the law in Ju}y but had ~ wait for its implementation Ioofore taking formal action. The law, enacted after a l!~ngthy controversy last Spring, requires local school districts to bus students up to 20 miles to private schools on the same basis they bus public school students. Where students live more than' two miles from a grammai:'·. c;chool or 2% miles from a high c;chool, the boards are to be re illrnbul'sed for 75 per cent of the cost of transportation by the atate. Heretofore, the law required public school districts to provide busing only along routes estab liished for public schools, with !!he routing subject to state ap proval. Routes established to accommodate private schools ~uld not qualify for state assist ance.
5
WASHINGTON (NC) A Catholic priest speaking to dele gates at the Amedcan Catholic Psychological Association meet ing here called for more cooper ation between the Church and psychologists and placed the blame for the present lack of cooperation between the Church and psychologists on the mutual bias existing between psycholo gists and Church authorities. Father Paul F. D'Arcy, M.M., reminded delegates that "the Catholic Chul'ch seriously re quires the help of modern psy chology and that of the special ists who are trained in it for the growth of its own inner life. This need is not being met, I believe, for two reasons: "The major struggle of Catho lic psychologists over the last few generations has been to dis entangle themselves from the Church; to get out from the domination of Catholic philoso phy and theology."
CAPE COD IDOMJESnC PRELATES: R t. Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor of St. Peter the Apostle Church, Provincetown; Rt. Rev. John A. Chippendale, pastor of St. Patrick's Church, \Vareham; Bishop Gerrard, who was present in the sanctuary during the cere monies; Rt. Rev. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, meet in Cathedral vestry following the investiture of the three Cape pastors.
Prison Ch@plain Expl ains Expansion 'Need Advocate$ Programs to Prevent Crime MIAMI BEACH (NC)-Ade quate community-based correc tional programs with prison chaplains of various !faiths par ticipating would eliminate need for more than three-quarters of the bed space in custodial insti tutions, a former prison chaplain of 10 years experience asserted here. . NGW corrections consultant to the Iowa' State Manpower De velopment Council, -Father Cyril F: Engler, retiring president of the American Catilolie Correc tional Chaplains' AssociMion and former correctional chaplain at the Iowa Men's Reformatory, urged at the American Correc tional Chaplains' Association
Satellites, Sparks In No. Attleborro Seal"chers, Scopes, Satellites and Sparks will develop program areas for Catholic Youth Organ ization members at Sacred Heart pal"ish, North Attleboro during the coming year. Searchers will plan spiritual activities under direction of Lorraine Lemieux and Suzanne' Ryng; Scopes will take respon sibility for the cultural program with David Pinsonnault and Peter Mayer in charge; Satellites wi1l handle social events, led by Roger Fregault and Alfred Morel; and Sparks will be in. charge of recreation undell' chail'men Richard Deschenes and John Levesque. Threefold Theme Activities will develop the role of youth in society as clari fied through the teachings of Vatican II and the uBit bas chosen as its theme for the yellll' "Awareness, Convinction, Ac tion." The first business meeting of the season will be held in the church hali Tuesday, Sept. 19. till parish teenagers are invited.
convention here that correction al chaplains no longer limit themselves to the "ministry of service within the walls of the· fence of 1Il correctional institu tion" but become active in Wluer iields. Fine Relationship He cited the Correctional Manpower T r a in i n g Act, Amendments to the Manpower DevelopJl)ent Training ,Act and the appointment of the Presi dents' Crime Commission and Amendments to the Vocational Rehabilitation Act. Declaring that the American Catholic Conectional Chaplains' Association "has prided itself in being the leader in ecumenism, If Father Engler, who is the' legis lative committee chairman O'f the Iowa Council on Crime and Delinquency, said "most Catho lic chaplains have a fine work ing relationship with their counterpart in the Protestant chaplaincy." Extend Services "New opportunities open up when we consider the chaplain cy service on the community level. From my home base, I
have had the opportunity of working closely with Lutheran Welfare, Jewish Welf~re, Meth odist Social Concerns Commit tee, American :F'riends Service Committee, on whose Penal Af fairs Committee I now serve," he said. "Along witb this involve ment," ·Father Engler pointed OtIlt, "I am in a better position to contrrbute te the programs of Catholic Charities. The four di rectors of the sta>te of Iowa listen more attentively when I urge the need to take a new look at Catholic Charities and its role
in social service.
"If Catholic Charities extends its services beyond traditional adoptions and unwed mothers to all social concerns, correctional chaplains may find an already existing structure through which they can give service to commu nity corrections."
Michael C. Austill
See Expo Choristers froin St. Mar~ Cathedral,Fall River, led by Rev. William G. Campbell, direc tor, spent two days at Expo 67, staying at Holy Apostles Sem inary, Montreal, where they sang for Sunday Mass. Also on their itinerary were visits to St. Jo seph's Oratol'y and Notre Dame in Montreal.
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CHARLES f. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NfW BEDFORD, MASS.
The Best
"'pkk .".,,11
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Labor Observer VATICAN CITY (NC)-Father Henri de Riedmatten, O.P., sec retary general of the Pontifical Study Commission on Family, Population and Birth Problems, has been named by the Holy See to serve as observer at the up coming International Labor Or ganization meeting in Geneva.
Father D'Arcy explained that the second reason for the lack of coopel'ation was that "those in responsible positions within the Church either have biases against psychology or have in sufficient psychological sophis tication to realize the ways in which this science can helr them."
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6
THEA~(:H6R-Diocese' of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. , 4, 1967
Tlte . T~~ugh!8 ';0/ . . P.f Slvi ·· :. 1{f.RRO MUR.DEA.
I.:..
Again-the Purpose
.j[fJO··.
,Reds' Tanza'nia Efforts ~'ai'" Bed MARYKNOLL' (NC)
China's efforts to make inroadS The purpose of Pope John in convening Vatican dO)lncil In Tanzania have not been sue Pope'~ own cessful, according to aU. S. nil.. words, this W3iS his aim: "To put it briefly but completely sionary home on furlough frODll that East African nation. it is the aim' of theCo'uncil that the clergy should acquire "I cannot conceive of an Afri,. a new brilliance of sanctity, that th~ people be instruct can being a good communist,· ed efficaciously in the truths of the Faith' and Christian Maryknoll Father Richard ,J. morals, that the new generation, who are growing like Quinn said here. _ a hope of better times, should be ~ducated properly; that Africans, according to Father attention be given to the social apostolate, and that Chris Quinn, a veteran of 12 years' tians should have a missionary heart, \ that is, brot~erly work in Tanzania, are basicall;y religious and hold in high e& and friendly toward all and with all." teem the positions of the in~ There is no' talk here of privileges and rights and vidual and the family in thek self-fulfillment of the clergy-as was heard from a group society. a few days ago talking about· celibacy and the clergy. "To ask an' African to believe There is no talk of upheavals in the Faith, of sowing seeds' that there is no God, that the state is greater than the famil¥ of doubt and wonder. and that the individual has no The aim of this Council......:...the aim of every Coun~il meaning," Father Quinn said, is the glory of God and .salvation of men. Certainly, there. "could only be met with refusal.· .-' must be an updating of language, a ,renewal of pupose, a seeking into more impllcations ~nd applications and rami fications of Church doctrines. Certainly must there be cor rection of emphases which-since people are involVE1d~n' Continued from Page One become distorted and· one-sided with the pass'age of time. Judge Mullaney received be!' Of course there must be re-examination of Church teach Bachelor of Law and Master 01. ings, not to change these but to see what they: mean, Law Degrees at Boston Univej.. to see if they are being applied to today's man and woman, G,r.. sity 'and has received Honorai7, . Degrees from Stonehill College .to see all that they. are and imply. . ' . ' . .:_ . . And all must be done in anatmosphere'~f chanty- not ..pittjng. per~on' ag~in~t .person, notu~set1Jin.g.. th~. . •. I "'d.' ., ..... ' '." . , .•••. " . , . the' Board of Advisors of Stonefaith. of. the. uninform.ed Qath91~c". ~ti~ with 'tl)~.~h,ari1;Y , . WASHIN.<:rrON, .(~C)-:-Dr. Willi alm. V. O:J3rien, .. p:r~. bilr.College and is Vice P~ . .that . seeks to. clarify, to in~orm, Wopen J1.P to all the jdent .of the ,~t1l91'c,.As~'c1tio~forInte~~~ion~l p~,. dent of the Boston l,JniversitIY. has . urged' the not to bomb" population rente", iiI National Alumni Association. riches that' God has' revealed. . '" .', . Judge :Mullaney's husband thO n North Vietnam and to keep the war in Vietnam a limited the late Joseph E. Mullaney WM ~ . c . 1 o n e . O'Brien; .chairm;-m o f , ,. .' . . 'died in 1961. Her children an .,; . Now that the Summer of· rioting is drawing ~ 'A elose; Georgetown University's I'l!Pr:·. g Bn~~ asserted ..~ .. whom attended the IilVestitme , 1Jlnd'echnique of' demori-gtrations' and ,pJ'()test wj)l'prooobly, s'titu,te of "Wo:r.ld ,Policy,. is- :~~(s:"~~"fu~ 1ll-,/1l·e ~.a,~~or;,~ "are: Rev. J;.eonar~ M. Mull~n. .. . ).. ed . t te ... M d .~c. a l?n or ,!1. erna IOnaeaee of st. Patrick's,' Wareham' Vm. .". ,turn .tononvioleht 'disobedience ,or,nonvi9 ent rt:all~talice.. su a " sa· meUb" on ay i. ~h~' ha~e su~p'orted't1?e":Ad~n. ... ' cient s. MUllaney of Washi~gtcmc ..•. ; This has; been' caiied the '·'Gaildhian· Way:~ , . .. ,no~~~g ~h~t ina, ~wnm~p'ica.~i~Jl'lstrati9n.s~Yle.tnames~ .:policl~ , : Atty. Joseph E. Mullaney .~ It would'be well for those whow~)Uld:usethis w.ay. :to. ~'l;'reslde~thY~~~i).,B · :-r~~m~!>!l: .~~ve.~PPfeclat~~. th,e )I~!t.~~ ,w,@!."·;·.of,·eleveland·,·Mrs:William·e. ..' ...... ' . . .' . . . . . . and secretary Of State Dean' concepts that have gUIded U .. .know;;what'lt entaIls. It l~"not the Dlerem~~ter.. of Sl,ttillg; Rusk (De~.29,'1966)'·he·haddefimse,poiicies: . ... :.:." Angell, of. ,l'dedia, penJ:l.,,~. on' a' SIdewalk and mot, :meV'mgeven when·one·lS .,carted away··' ·."protested U. S. bombings i in" or· ··."Many'of· us'}:fa\le~·de'plored. ;,. :M,rs" fllJI!.e,!! Panos o~Fall J;t~y~ ,.".. . . bodily;·Nei-ther·isit·the··proeess of·beipg.passi:ye and silent·· near Hanoi as violatjve'of:.th,e radical' and, unfair'!' critici_"~~~ .1.l!}!I~ grancimot~er Of . . . . . , . "m" the face of attack, 'vetoal' aha.' phyi!icat The· GQJidhian ;~idely acce~ted'moral priil.ci~le. w;hiCh.' sOme' . elements ,'. in' : the . arandclilld1;'en.. . .., . - . b' ' . . . h' ;. th' t' . .. '. that direct attacks' on population :Peace 'movement have leveied .. ' ,
Way em rac~s more t ~~ .. 3i.~. : , '.. ,', .. , '''.' : Centers are impermissible·u·nless· a.·.·¢.a'Binus.tt 0t.huer'regOva·.er.ernrna.l.lerittO·o m'' a';n''·y.· .... It is~ basically" a: spiritua)"thingras.exp~ail)ed .by. a an overwhelmingmHitary;neces.:.' 1""II1II
"former' GovernQr' General of India, C.·'Rajagopalachari. It sitY,'such 'as tbe"deterl'tmce of' .signs.·thaithe daYs'of··limi'iecl·',: 'Continu~d from Page One'
'i8 the absence of hatred 'or venom in th'etieatt ··.. The reo:· attacks'of tbe<same'klild' against .'War in: Vietn~.m are 'CO~ing t:e. 'where tti:e' ~tudents reside and nunciation ofe~~rnai.violence~ is notenough; :but must be .' a 'nation's 'own ,Population cen': 8;'1. ~md,..~.d that the.. Adnll.ni~~, :'p.asto.rs are permitteq t·Q. p.BSII.·. . '..."..... " . 1 . .. "f' I ters, can' be demonstrated; ·For a tlOn may bow to the bom».; ·accompamned 'by asepSIS of the. heart ...or the· su~es~ ~time . attacks such as .th'ose Of '. " . '" ',; "'," ,,·*he.charges on to parents. p,oliq . ~ . . I H . 10 he there' l'S Dec. . , 13 and 14, 1966; in· . or 'near them -h mt.o - the - st?ne surgery 01. nonV'lO ~nce. '. ow can one ve w. re.. to th fl t - ha.geh ap-.". d d "ar.i.es,. from parish to parish .but. · 'SO much. cause .for. ha.tre.d.··?The answ .. er lies in eve.ryone's Hanoi, were discontinued.. proac·. e con IC w I.C .. I, :Where parents are unable ~ not. work m Worl~ War II (a~d) meet the costs parishes are. • heart and can 'be ·appealed· to through love; 'and then and . In the past months, at~acks in which has, accordmg to the'Se~- .assume' the burden. rth then only the man 1)e changed." I . or very -clo~e to N9 Vletnam . r~taryof pefeJ?se, "ev~n' 'less . Principals Concur '.' . . . . '. '. , . h d '1 d' . 't' .'. ese populatIOn ·centers ·have fre- .chance of workmg 'agamst" an . . ThIS explanatIon of.a dlstmgUls e n 1.an'1l lZtm ~ quently occu·rr-ed·.·..· O'Brien's un '.' derdeve'1 ope. d'. 'na ti· . h'" .".. . Accordmg P. on' suc . a s ' . hd' to Msgr. Joseph .' '. 11-"" N th V" t . . d whih.!vi·· . TUIte, arc .lOcesan supermten . · not·only enlightening. It',points up that'extern'al'conformity statement continued.. , ' . .or Ie nam, ~n. . b h. . c 0ent of schools, the decision doeS ·without internal"convktion is .ut a s am, a facade;.8 SU-View With Remorse ~ates all of th~ prmclple~ of lim-not affect parochial high sciloo18," perficial reaction;' It a.lflo tells much ,a.botit the' writer~a . "Despite Secretary ofnefense Ited ~ar 'WhiCh strategls~' and: although they may charge up to . mail in hig,h place who' doeS .not hesitate to 'speak of God McNamara's testimony' of. Alig. moral~sts have. b~n ~o~kmg. 14). . $300' tuition forstuden~' fro~ and faith .~ deepeoiIv'ictio;ils of his own . l i f e . . '2~, 1967, before. the ,Senate P!e' lessttabdliShadeand mamtam for the other parishes. Parish hiBb' .f' , ... '. .. 'b .' ' . ' d to th paredness SubcommIttee, .settmg a ec . h 1 fi Id' f tb 11 t "N0 ~>ne . w h' A.ll too 0 ten have men, ecome accustome '£"~~ . e 'fol,"'th in detail the'liniitiltions of . ',... .sc 00continlle s e 109 o. ta'k es senous..,,·· may' to do00so abut earns most pious p]atitud~s of the politician, the dutiful'nod to ovu bombing as a means' of forcing . the SOCIal teachmgof the ·Cath-· 'h ". '. i'" g" d ~p d :' ..i...:. in the political campaign or' arena.. Such' talk' has made North Vietnam to' cease its ag olic' Church on the ·moral·limits·. ave f on smc~ r .pe ..,.., . . f' f . f .' 'sport or eConomIC reasons. many people' 'cynical w·heiI. they hear politicians.·mention: :gr~sslOn in theSoutb, -the .Joi~t 0 de .enslve ~ar ,~re car couJ.!- . Figures' on football costs show God suspicious' 'lth > dwell upo'nHim' w'l)ndering' what .Ch~.efs of l:)taff and~an~ I~flu. tenance counter-cIty warfare m . . ' . , . '. ! ' .. I . ,ese . . .,. . , . . ". . '. . . " entlal members of the Congress Norlll. Vi etnam or, if it comes·'.tO· that the sport costs an ~verage blun.der.. th.eDeltY.·.l.S expected .to .cover up.or. what )weak. are nOw dem.·a.n.d.in it th.at.·t.·h.··e.·. U.S. that in China The only"possi'bl ~ .. ,of $~6,900 a year, ~xcludmg sal "" .' '. . .' '. . .. '.' . . e aries for coaches, and that only H .1:lemg asked·to..hoI s t er..·. argument )8 .e . . . ' ,: . .attack targets suc1l:asH.~ro~and. .Dfc.>ral ~ustlflcatlOl1, for coun.t~r::-. :about 'a third of this is recovered • . The wise Politcian knows -that God,is ·and must' be ,a 'Haiphong i~' :wh~t.~ppa·rent'y .CltY, .warfare would be retalia- :.. ' t· . ts P' '. I £'the part of the lives of men whoin. He has .created." And men' will amount ~o tpe '~c1~Y:-p'~sting: tion iii kind. " '. 10 .~~ ~ rec~lp . nnclpa so. ' '.' .'. I .' 'te:I b" h" " I ' : h' . . . . . 'raids of World' War 'n, which'~'Tlieie -is' pr~sen'tly·· no' basis· . ~eglonalb~g.h schools concur~ must .... . governed. u bma .. . 0'f"·us .. ,.. , In ...,re't"rospec .' ···-t·· 'f'" . ···h·'·· lJl the deCISIon to drop footbalL be '" .y. . y t mgs "" 01. t e splnt o.r · many vIew· or suc a JU"~t'f' I lca·t··.. IOn W·'th I .....~,_. n: ' .' . they ar.e. oot. governed at all-they are,' .ruled or m· servl- :wI'th' r'em'o'r·se. .' . . ' " . . .support . '. . :.of, a maJ . .'onty ....,Of· . my······ . In .1966-67 . . . 'the . 11 regional" . .'. ,. · tude. Yes•. the. wise pOlitician ~ho would rise aboye >the ""This would appear. tobe the board, of governors; "I therefore ~~hoo~s . op~ra.ted ~t. ~ de~l.clt. ~ . 'level of hack Would do' well t<:r think" of 'God" and. tcdook : case: whether or ill:>!' .'the 'avowed . urge'the President ofthe Uniteq, .l.!i mJlho~. Th.e tUlt~o~ raIse will I ' . deeply' into things' spirituaL These are ·.WH· of his business•. ' re,ason ·.~or:. sucf·~t~.a.~:ks.'~s.· the .. S'tates to reject demands for' at cover. about. $1.1 mJllhm of ~. '. . " .,.,.' . ' . .. '.' " .destructIOn of speCIfIC mlhtary' tacks'; on ,population' Cimters' ·lD:: ,And, they ~lll mark hIm 3I!l aoompWte ~an..and ,~neof 'targets'witliinpoptilatioi{cen': :'North Vietnam 'and.. ontarge1a. · understandmg. . tel's:' ." .." . '" '. which, by,·reason of theii·geo . Deplore critiCism graphical location, are likely to Continued from Page One .
"In view of Se~~etai-y' M~Na_cause direct armed conflict with St. Francis Xavier to Mt. ea. mara's 6wntestiWOfly~nd the nations not presently' parties' tG' . mel, New Bedford. . . To Mt. ()armel evidence available hI tbe, 'press," the conflict. . Sister 'Delia Santos from Santa i .. '. ..'; the statement .s~id, ~'it is clear "This plea is entirely separate to me that attacks such as those from proposals.·to cease bombing' Maria, Detroit, Mich. to Mt. cmi now being urged would 'be vio- altogether, temporarily or' per;;. . mel, New Bedford; Sister MaI7 lative either: (1) of the moral manently,"· the statement em Ann Campanelli from St. nc- .OFFICiAl NEWSPAIPER OF TJ.fEDIOCESE OF FAll RIVIER principle prohibiting direct at- . phasized. - "It is separate from 'othy Academy to Mt. Carmel; tacks on population' centers ·as pleas to seek means of beginning Sister Adelaide Canelas from 410 Highland Avenue such--'-a principle strongly. reit- negotiations within. or outside . Mt. Carmel to Jesus Saviomr" Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 erated by the Second Vatican' the United Nations. It 'issimply Newport, R. I. . PUBLISHER Sister Angela Iovino from _ Council-or: (2)'· of the moral a plea .to keep this limited war Most Re~. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. principle prohibiting destru~tion . limited.' Carmel to St. porothy; sw. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL 'MANAGER of nOh-combatant lives and . "If this· plea goes' unheeded, Angelina Roch from Mt Cal1Dl!l . Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. . Rev. John P. Driscoll, .. property in a manner'dispropor- ·limited· war is out and· total war to St. Dorothy; Sister Rita· Bai MANAGING EDITOR' tionate; to legitimate' military ·.is'back in," Dr: O'Brien' deClared from Santa· Maria, Detroit .. ... . '. . .in his statement. :, . necessities." . lIIlt. CaI:w - Hugh J. Golden
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept.' 14, ~ 967
NewmCln,Meetill1lg
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Ulm~tr'Resol~t~crm DE KALE (NC) -The
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MILWAUKEE (NC)-An offi National Newman Students cial of the St. Vincent de Paul Fedemtion endorsed the pro society here said on his return posal made by the Luthei"an from a six-week visit to Africa Students Association of America, that he was impressed with Vin ealling for an "organic reunion" centian work being done there, 0:7 the Roman Catholic and! Lu especially since most of the tllleran Churches. members are poor. Charles A. O'Neill, executive The endorsement was con secretary of the society's Mil ~ined in a resolution unani waukee particular council, made mously adopted at a plenary ses the trip at the request of Auxil mon of the National Newman iary Bishop Edward E. Swan Aposto'late Congress at Northern strom of New York, executive IDinois University here. . director of Catholic Relief Ser · The resolution calls for the vices-overseas relief agency of Catholic bishops of America, the U. S. Catholics. He visited Sene bishops' committee on ecunien gal, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Togo, ism; 'and the bishops' committee Dahomey, Nigeria, the Congo, @n educ'ation for ecumenism "to South Africa, Lesotho, Tanzania silriously' consider the reco'm and Kenya. mendation of LSAA and to ex O'Neill said that since Africa plore all avenues which may is an area of great need, it was lead to an organic reunion of the felt that his tour would be help Lutheran and Roman Catholic ful in gaining more knowledge Churches." and experience in developing it" furth!'lr urges that local mutual responsibilities and coop Newman and Lutheran groups eration between CRS and the St. ~e, epcouraged to involve them Vincent de Paul sqc~ety. ~elve,s in ,joint activities in th.e "An interesting thing I found ,!,ut\lre. "The, resolution, a,lso in Africa,'" O'Neill said, ''is that ;ptated tl1~t the, study of Lutheran the Vincentions themselves are ·~<a ,Roman patholic, ecclesi~IQgy in need. It's' a situation; of the apd a nWVel1].Emt, toward brea.k poor 'helping the' poor; , ,lng,· dQw,n ,t.he ,.del1omi.national O'Neill noted, that ~anyU. S~ bar:dflrs ;Which, separate t~ .. Vincentiil~. g~~ups off.er a~~ to .~u,l;ch,e,s".':is I:lf, primary tmpor their foreign c 0 u n tel' par t s tMce, to th~ r~al f~lfilhri~nt qf through "twinning" prograllL i~he. spirit ,of. el;umenisl'(l. ,ap.~ Through it, couhcil's and confer .l3!tity.': ,. ' , ,' 'J.".' JF AL'L'·RIVJER DOMJES']]'][C IP'RJEJL.ATES:; Four ¥~~(Rive.lt'\;J~a~~~e~ ,ar,e, Jepr~sented ences in aff1l!ent.. c!>unt,ries help ,,'X'he,-Lut,heran students pm ..imong'the nall}ed 'inonsignorUn the Diocese of, Fa,.I,1 River... )Left; ,~o fight,: .Rt. Rev. Vincentians in poor areas of the posal ,was'. made earlier at' the . ~~prge) ,Suliivan of $t,}oseph's Ohur:ch".R t. Rev... Leste.r L~ l{I,III of .SltCredY~~I19}w,rch, 'world by exciia~gin'g' correspon annual 'convention of, tha'tgt'oup dence and, information about in Boulder, Colo. A copy of -it Rt. Rev. John E. Boyd of ,St. Patrick's.Church, and .Rt,. Rev. Robert L. ~tanton of St. their individual groups, and by Mary.'s Cathedral. was. sent to the Newman Con sending what is, equivalent to ..' ( . gress. a,bout $lO to $~5.~ month, l:t.e .saiol. Hope for Ullliltl1 . J
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Tlheatre Conference
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,Survey
Answer~ to V~ca:tiori Students : SWJg'gest:Reciso~s : for'Decline
Surprising'
i.~' the resolution, ,the LSAA
<;:laimed that "the intention of the Lutheran reformers was to reform the Roman Catholic Church and not to found a sep arate 'denomination," and' that ..there, was little reasol\ to con tinue ,the saps,ration. · " The Lutheran students said! ;4Jtat they would urge major, Lu ·thernn· bodies in America,"to ·undertake a strenuous study:.9f Lutheran ecclesiology. and to explore the possibilities that Lu. thernnism and Roman Catholi llrism need not regard, themselves an ,separate, churches or denom 'mations "but merely as different points of view within the West :ern or Roman Catholic Church." The resolution was issued,-it aaid to inject a note of hope for , church unity into the' observance . of the 450th anniversary of the Lutheran, Refonnation.
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~~~~:,'" . . ·t • There is a 'lack of commun - ca'tiop, 'b'etween priestS a 1\ d ,mupg ·,v.e0ple today.", . . "Young peQple are more fu terested in materialistic' goals." ,.~ ':"S~~ is thrown ~t teen.a:ge,:, sO much that many feel It IS "the only' thing to live for." ',. These are but a few of the ~~~58:,a~wel's gh;en by students 'of .Philadelphia's Car din'a 1 : bqug~e'rty High School to the " ~ues.~ion;, What .is t~e reason for the present-day decline in re ,lig.i~us, vocations? . The, .question :W~ part af llI. .;s~vey, conqucted among stude~lts themselves illl an. effort :~ solVe what vocation reC,ruiters , can:, ~a serious problem in an -:~ge when so many with the. nec ,e.ssary.mental and.physic~l qual ~itications ref.us~ to, accept the highest vocation." . " . , I ' , ·Th4i!:·survey· quest[onnaire was ..'set, up to allow, students the ·rgz:eatest· 'possible freedom, in •their response. Four seniors at , Cardinal Dougherty High'School Ispent 884· volunteer hours dur "ing> the Summer months reading 'and categorizing the individlilal 'replies.·· " A- !full· report, scheduled' to -be 'pUblished ,in· October,· will 'in "clUde an evaluation of results, as well as suggestions to help increase vocations given by the
Father -Gabriel Stapleton, S.D.S., was '00lected pL'esidentof the National "Catholic Theatre Conferenee at "11 .meeting, here. He succeeds ,Father. Gilbert V. Hartke; O.P. ,()£ the: Catholic, University of America, who held the PQst for l';be last six years. Father Stapleton, a SalvatOl1' faJ\. prie.st" Wh.o IS president of Mount St. Paul College, Wauke 'Sba., long 'has been interested in the theatre iUld h·as taught dra liIlatics at" both the high school college level for 15 ye~rs. 0pce before he has served 11 teno as pl,'esident of the 6,000 ']Prelates ~ember NCTC. BALTIMORE (NC)-Lawrence · "I'm interested in taking over ,Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore ,,()lIlCe again because we have the , Qi'l.d Archbishop Iakovos, Primate Cilhallenge of updating ourselves 'of, the' ,Greek Orthodox Church CilI beefective in the ecumenical in North and South America, ~ and to reorganize ourselves were honored for their ecumen tnt '0 mote democratic' basis tZor ic&1l work by the parish coun (jreater grass roots partlciplIl cils. of three Greek Orthodox uon/.' Father- Stapleton said afteR' . .churches in Maryland at a testi ~ l€ ectio!Ao monial dinner here Saturday.
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,',' i,a1l'g~s~HigbSc:hool .: , ,The'.students polled ,remained anonymous; '. identifying, them ','selves only by, sex and grade.in order, to better categorize the re sponses. , The students ,working on, the proj«:ct are -under the supervi sion of, the. school's two voca ti@n :dkectors-Father John :J. Foster and Charles· H. Diamond. Father, J,.ouis J. Luzbetak, S. V.D." .difl'!Ctor of the Center for Applied Research in the Aposio late, .Washington, has pointed out that such a .survey will be valid not pnly for Cardinal Dougherty High Schopl but for any Cath olic. secondary . co-institutional schoo.l drawing its student pop ulation from similar cultural and socio-economic backgrounds.. " <QUlaJUfiecll'to Explain C a r'd i nal Dougherty High School, with'almost :6,000 stu dents,' is" the largest Catholic , high school in the United States.
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mnt.egrated Schools RALEIGH (NC)":-Two Catho lic schools in downtown Raleigh were ' combined . when classes resumes ,th,is month. One had been an all-Negro school. The schoo~ ·involvedare those at Sacred, Heart Cathedral and at St., lYlonica'sparish. Students froll) ,both will. 'now attend classes at the' cathedral.
BEfORE YOU BUY -TRY
PARK
M,OTORS OLIl)'SM©~~lLlE Oidsmobiie-Peugot-Renauli j. .'. Cii1 Mkli:lla Street. Fairhaven .
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S'<eminar' for Police
NEW. ORLEANS (NC) -1ft an attempt to improve commu
~'l'he survey was conducted on nications between policemen anell
the high school level:" Father the community, Loyola Univer
DiamoneJ said, "bec·ause it was sity held a Police and Commu felt 'that ,in 'th~ high schodl age nity Relations Semii'lar here fol!' groups' would, be fouild a truer police ahd, citizens. JO'ining 'the inSight into the problem, This is university in sponsoring the ,the age' gro\lp th.atsbould be. session were the Flaming Shield. a police fraternHy, and the Na~ ~aking. ,V;oci';tio,n d~ci.sio~s to day, and it is they who are best tional . Conference of Christian. 'qualified. to '. explliin any de..; and Jews.
cline."
~A. sur-ve}' alOne is not going to solv~ todaY's vocat~on pr~b lem," [atiler Foster said, "but we do hope that it' will create . interest 'and . bring' .about' dis O~L cussion among priests and Re ligious, parents a'n d young peop)e. , "The present-day high school students, despite the fact that they are advanced scholastically and in other ways, don't seem South • Sea Streets to be ,able ,to make mature va eation decisions., Our purpose let 49-8] Hyamllos is to try to help ourselves and ail who a~ interested." '
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'iRE AN~QR-:-Di.oce5eof FaIJRive,r:-,:T.hurs.Sept,
Women
14,,19~7
Spons~
Radio Series
Poet Thinks He'll Nev,e r Se,~' Thing As U,gly As ,A ,Knee
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NEW YORK (NC)-"We, Women," a new weekly radi~ series featuring five-minute monologues by Cornelia Otis Skinner and produced by four By Mary Tinley Daly national women's groups, will! be broadcast by 80 local radiCl? lUAs good be out of the world as out of th~ f'ashion." stations from coast to coast dup Current quotes? And from a 1967 couturIer? Guess ing the, fall broadcasting season. again. It's from a play, "Love's Last Shift," by Qolley Cooperating in producing the Cibber who Jived 1671 to 1757. The same thought no doubt series are the National Council! of Catholic Women, ,Church existed long before that,
beIt devotees. (Belters will have Women United" the NatiOJ~all dating back possibly to the
their beloved encirclement back Council of .Jewish Women, anelL time Mot-her Eve iiwesti this' Fall.) the National Council of Negrc gated variations, of her mini
Then 'along came Mary, Mary Women. leaf. This time of year particu Quant, that ,is, young British de Cooperation among the fo1llli' larly, following the showings of signer who introduced ~he wom'en's groups originated three the Paris col
"Mod" look and miniskirts. years ago in the founding' of lections, pages
Mini, Mini, Mini! PRONOUNCE FINAL VOWS: Three New Bedfordites, WICS, Women in Community of newsprint,
That did it! The minis have all 1960 graduates of St. Anthony's High School in that Service,' an interreligious, inter whole issues of
been' getting minnier, as, the . I . racial, volunteer organization most casual observer can notice. city, are among Holy Cross Sisters making fma vows III un'der contract to the United magazines, pro
'.Fhe clergy have ,spoken against ceremonies at Notre Dame College, Manchester, N.H. From States government to recruit aJ.ld grams on tele
Vision, 'fashion
the fad, and rightly so; office left Sister Anita Desrosiers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. screen applicants for the WOIn-' Shows in stores
managers have:)iad ,t« set up , Ad~ien Desrosier's St. Anne's parish; Sister Cecile La-, en's, ;r~b C.orps: ' , and at "charity
rules. Now' the 'inffw:intiiill\l1lle.· 'fla me, daughter' of Mr. and Mrs~ Albert, Laflamme, St. " The~r continuing joint ef£~ iUncheons "all
Coco Chliriel,'deart'ofPiu1sh:cou-,m " . . 'd h f M d in theWICS poverty program n t hon y's; SIster Madeleme Or~teau, aug ter 0 turiers, voices Ipud6Ppositi()n to r., an 'cau~ed the four organizations t& attest to ~om
an's interest' in
mini~kirtsanc;l. ~Ii~4Rth¢ss~#in~, 'Mrs. Wilfrid' Croteau, St. Anne',s. recognire additional area~, ~ whai ' will lxi" ", " ,
her Fall hemlineS 'one ,.inch be;;' Jnutualinterest in the widening worn' the coming seasoJl" The . ~ow the··k'n~ .. :..". :-~,:::::,~_ ,~":~'.; .' . ' , .', world 'of .women today.' ' ... lilies of thefi'eld an,d th~i~, un
€ h aThe' new radio series will ad eoncern 'for "what,ttiey, Will pu~ nel: says of mini'cI6th'es: "W\>men " dress' the '~lUdience first'as ciU en" 'concern, her not.' , :,'
doii't gain an~tiiiIig' by: t,hem: " ' zens,', then 'as :women, w~he , Most' women' . we've ,observt:!d, Women, need to,use:,: ex.po~ure ~ By MARILYN RODERICK, ~ ~tressing the theme that 'l-VomeJ!i are,keerily , ;ware of' "'what only, when " th~i1r~' short have as 'much responsibility, ~ .,tbey'r~ we.aring;" 'njodifying: the charm. Let the,s'iiI;v,yQun'g,inings men sha'ping' the wp,rld wi exaggim~ted fir~t' trial, balloons wear, their ' ski'ris . ba~hing-suif '
come 'and in coping with todaY;1l to suit'their ~ste, needs, agll'and length jf they'~arit. 'TheY'Fel/f the fashion designers are
'The fur trimmed, look doesn't : probiems. ' , , pocketbook. ' '. ' , ' bored, a~d they, ,wlint t6 amuse any' barometer 'of' the weather stop ~ith the ,«:oat o,i, dressd~:.'Miss'Skinner, actress and au ,ManY of us, r~member 19:4'1 themselves. But d6n't bring them ahead~ then we are in for, a ::;ign for this year., The, Czarist: ,thor' of the best-sellingbiogra when . the "New L~ok", :w,as , (miniClothes) iiito' :the ,haute' cold' cold Winter. Their designs influence on our fashions, has re phy "Madame Sarah," will Ji'ar lBPrung on us '~y ehristia~ Di?r, couture, 'which isn!sporisiblefoj-' (Sh;OeS of Dr. Zhivago) swathe suIted in,a renaissance of tha~ ate stories of what is being done a revolution in style WIth Its supplying 'elegance 'foJ,", 'the us in fur from the top of our unnecessary luxury, the fur in 'communities by women and full skirt and, pinched-in lo~k, world." -" heads 'to the muff. They're fluffy, warm, 1-0 will advise listeners of where , We agree wholeheartedly with Ii leaving us with a Closetful ~f .' f mantic":looking ana quite expen sive but what flair and drama and how they ;m~y join commu short'skirts passe within months: Mlle. Chanel, .who comments m'el,mdl,lllen:g\~co~~~. they lend any costume. nity acti,on programs. that' lesson has resulted at o1;1r that "women ,who, dress too And ,the part of
The four sponsoring groups house in hems that may be too Y oung look pitifuL'; Goodness the ' leg th,at is Don't you remember the little represen t a com b'me d mem b er knows there's nothing more pit bulky for high fashion but cer exposed below white ones little girls used to h' f 29 'II' tainly thrifty enough' to furnish iful than a pair of old knees, the hemline is wear when we were children? s IP 0 some ml Ion women. let-outs if Dame Fashion again particularly' from the back. sheathed Some were decorated with dolls' pulls such a fast one. Knees, are great, just great. How 'in knee-high or heads while others had fake er-' mine tails hanging from them. Attack law Sharing Dior's subsequent changes else would we get up and down above the knee They were probably made of Sweepstakes Revenue were less drastic: his H-Iine 'in stairs, scrub, garden, pray or supple leather genuine rabbit hair, but I did 1954 his A- and Y-lines in 1955. dandle a baby? But as the late and suede boots. CONCORD (NC) - A newly One thing we long for one with all my little The~ came Cristobal Balenciaga, Percy Hammond wrote in a dra the Spanish designer, creating matic review, "The feminine won't have to girl's variityand they 'did keep enacted law which would give church-related shools a share in the chimes or sack dress in 1957, knee is a J' oint, 'not an entertain worry about this coming season your hands warm. the revenues from New Hamp a fashion that has caught on al ment."
is being cold, The main worry The romantic look of Anna shire's sweepstakes has been at most universally because of its, 'Knees'
we'll have is how to afford all Karenina' even extends to head tacked as "plainly unconstitu This brings us to a verse, au that beautiful luxurious fur that coverings with fur-trimmed comfort, even among die-hard tor unknown, parody of .Joyce trims and accents mos~ of the hoods and high cossack hats tional" by the National Council Kilmer's poem, "Trees," entitled really fashionable Wint.er clothes. seemingly' the most popular. of Churches, the American Jew ish Congress and the American "Knees:" Even the younger set is not These are quite marvelous for Civil Liberties Union, I think that I shall never see neglected in this wonderland of New England Winters and you The attack was made in m A thing as ugly as a knee . elegant fur-trimmed clothes. The can look glamorous while still memorandum of law for the Above whose gnarled and . f other day, while shoppmg or keeping warm. State Supreme Court, which in knotted crest school coats for the girls, a vited comment from all inter , The mini hemline comes to rest. saleswoman showed me an ex ested parties when Gov. John Or one that's even worse than t ' quisite miniature design coa 10 Plan Study, of Denver King asked the court for an ad that the 7 to 14 size range. It, was
visory opinion on the law's con When padded with repulsive fat. made of the softest pale grey Catholic Schools stitutionality. A knee that may in Summer suede imaginable, beautifully
DENVER (NC) - 6ffi'cials of The three groups objected that wear ,' 'trimmed around' hemline and Denver's Catholic schools have the law violates First Amend Nothing at all b,ut be quite bare, neck with real fur. announced that a nine-month' Behind, whose flex there oft' Instead of buttons it closed study of the Catholic system will ment restrictions against estab , remains with silk frog Closings and was be made by Cepsus Man,agement, lishment of religion, since it au A net of blue and broken veins. truly' the stuff that little girls' Inc. of Washington, D, C" and thorIzes direct per-pupil grants Some knees continue to perplex: dreams are made of. The price, the University of Notre Dame's to public and non-public school How they can form, the letter X administrations alike. 'While in another set one sees however', was only for little office for edtlcational research. princesses or dreams, $135. Can Planned to include data 6n school A pair of true parentheses. ' h ' you imagine a mother's c agnn and local p'opulation, school staff Small nuts write verses such as when her little darling spilled ing, curriculum, construction, these an -ice cream cone on this fab finance and adminisJr~tion, the But greater nuts display their ulous creatio,n? study developed from the real knees. ' ization that the area's Catholic More Realistic ,The prices for big girls are a schools are centralized in the Methodist Bishopu
little more realistic, taking into city, even though the population consideration the fact that they is shifting to the suburbs. Cardinal Honored
Msgr. William H. Jones, su won't outgrow their $135 invest for Bristol County PHI'LADELPHIA (NC)-.John ment. This Ilrice is close to perintendent of schools for the TO nOME: Mother Bea trice, R.J.M., daughter of cardinal Krol of Philadelphia what most of the very lovely Denver archdiocese, said the and Methodist Bishop Fred medium - priced fur - trimmed study is expected to set the path Mr. and Mrs. Adrien D. Pic Pierce Corson have been named' coats are selling for. Of course, for Catholic education ift the ard, Westport, will sail for CO'-recipients of ,the newly es I'm not referring to designer's area for the next several years. COI'~n~ty
Rome Saturday to spend tablishe'd John Wesley Ecumen originals, these run more to the ical Award. $1,000 range, but a handsome eight months at the Jesus The medal will be presented copy can be bought from any Mary Motherhouse making the first time at, the ninth where b~ween the aforemen ORTU~~S
an Ignatian retreat an9 tak for TAUNTON, MASS. annual St. George's award din tioned $135 to perhaps $220. ing courses in theology and ner hereon Oct.' 10. One I particularly like is,' by Supp~y
]psychology. She has t;:tught '!rhe medal, named !for the Ginala, a lovely pink coat, trim THIE RANK ON
at Notre Dame School, Fall founder Of Methodism; -is being med in, black persian lamb. It, 245', MAIN STRIEET TAUNTON GREEN
presented on the 200th anniverI sells for $160. I'm' afraid if !, River, and, Jesus - Mary FALM()UTH'-548- ]9)18 sary of historic St. George's run into this, particular design Mem~er of' Federal De))ostI Ilchools in Rhode Island and Methodist church in this city-' in an area store that I'll be un ORTI~S,;rop.' iDsurance,C~r))OraU8D' J'Tew ;YQrlc .9u'ring the past , ,the oldest Methodist ',' church in'" able; 'to' resist adding it te' my lQ years. the United States. w a r d r o b e . ' .... -.
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'There 18 somethi~g S'~i~l about dividing plants and getting several plants from one original. Maybe because ~ am watching pennies OR' because I enjoy the slow proc~ss by which a garden takes shape, but I get a special thrill from buying one plant of 3 kind and then reproducing it tor stands pen in hand writing out the birth certificate. over the years until I have Nine years ago, when Joe and 001· I need. Sometimes, of I discovered we were going to (Wurse, one may fail as I have be EJarents for the first time, we done repeatedly with pyracantha had no difficulty pickint~ out a which I find impossible to re- name for a boy. Christopher produce under ordinary garden John it would be. We liked the oonditbns, but on those occa- soft sound of Christopher with l1IiOn8 when you do succeed! the the harsh sound of Roderick and £ailures are all forgotten. the John would be for Joe's godlNot everything is difficult to father. Like many things planned !:eproduce. Poppies are a good well, it wasn't to be, and Meryl example of an easily reproduc- arrived. £hIe plant which can be rewardHer quickly chosen name cami fng for the most careless garden- from the society pages of the, er. Last week I dug up and di- New York Times and I have had vided' 'a' very pretty unidentified' to spend the past eight yean pink poppy. I bought it two spelling it for anyone we come pars ago ~ a Barr's White but in contact with and I'm sure • turned out to be pink but it she'll have to go through life .. a large beautiful pink of su":, spelling it out for people. A perior quality to the ones I own strange legacy to give a child. 1Irtd therefore proved to be II A Boy at lLast ~ investment· even 'thoUgh ",' Christopher John was stiU irl IIOt the variety I ·wanted. ," .. ~' our ~inds when. 'lYe had Meliss& Row to Do 'n Romaine, named for' a favorite Tlie' . more eOmInon varieties" aunt. However, when we real eI. pdppies 'reitroduce very' quick- 'Ized we were going to ha":'0 ~ fr'om seed, but some Of the' "number three we were certain &ewer hybrids are less apt to 're- ' we would have a chance to use produce'thiJr way. Rather, 'Uter" "the n~m~ ,of ~r ch,oice: .During produce tap roots around 'the' the tl~e we were walhng fol[' .riginal plant, which must be' the arr:iv~ f!l our .lhlrd ba~sr lifted' '6ut of the ground and there. am,ved on the scel!J.e a 41ivid~d; This is a simple job but 'television. commercial in whictt llltill must be done carefully and the b~by w,as called Christopher . .ickly. John.. . . Dig the maIn poppy out of the ImmedIately afterward in ~e l:l'Ound, being sure to dig deeply- personal column of our d~lly 110 as not to break the tap root newspaper there appeared birth ~uch likp. that of a carrot) and aftc:r birth with the baby being plunge into a pail of water. The chrlStene~ the name that ~e ~ad RM>ts can be divided while they held speCIal from the begmmng. &tre immersed in the water and We had no choice but to search Uten planted immediately. They for another boy's name. Jason iihould then be given a gooo Griffin was our choice and we ooaking and shading if this is have been quite happy with it. possible. ~f course nothing ever remains The foliage of the poppy will Just your ow~ for long, for both (jroop and probably die, but the Barbara Strelsand and one ~if plant will produce new foliage the. Beatles have na':l1ed their. lin the Spring. The first bloom babies Jason. And I Just know Ml8y be small or the plant mlilY when someone says, "You'll IlOt bloom the first year, but never g~,ess what they n.amed <tnce the plant does begin to the baby, what the name Will ~. Ilower It will do so with vigor Of course you can always Watt 1IIld soon match the original until the baby is born and find parent. out on what saint's day ~e or lff ou do not have an iea lIhechose to appear. Th~ of y y popp. course could lead to more mdeIII your garden, by . all means 1Il•• 'f th . f t · bo f . CIS IOn I e In an' 15 rn on, Yest a few doI lars 10 a ew var:lJ 25 the f east ()f St . A r If f sayan., . etles and prepare yourse or te F b 17 Un f ast if St Ia surprise. Poppies bloom when .mas or e. ' . e e o . Ute garden is resting between Fman and St. Regmald, (1111' even the Spring color and the Sum- March 20th when you ~~>1.dd be lDer bloom and so they come for~ to make a deCISion 00 into their own at a very impor- tween Cuthbe;t and He~bert. .nt time. They are short-lived ][ al~ays lIke to ~hmk that but beautiful in flower and are the reCIpes that I ~ut 10 the 001 worth three times the going urnn are good recIpes a?d well ....·ce ,worth my readers' attention; but .... 1 • every' now and then I come In the Kitchen across a fabulous recipe and the ""hat's in a name? That which - following one is just that. I we call a rose came' across this one at my hair my any other name would sme1lll dresser's, for this was where IllS sweet." Mrs. George Habib of St. AnWhen Shakespeare wrote these thony of the Desert Pal1'ish in fmmortal lines he couldn't have Fall River was disclosing to known the indecision and some of the other customers thought which goes into the some of her favorite recipes. !!laming of a child. "What are we Spanish IFlaln going to name the baby?" is 1 cup sugar generally the first question ex4 Tablespoons water pectant parents ask one another II eggs ..hen t'hey find out they're go- % teaspoon salt jog to have l!l baby. lk cup plus 2 Tablespoons oi' Sometimes the answer is quicii: sugar III coming and the parents-to-be 3 cups of milk - Mrs. Habib ean sit back and relax for the Illses Ilk cup of evaporated llext six months or so and jWlt milk and llh cups ofregulat:. wait for the appearance of theit:' 1 teaspoon vanilla .ttte junior or Debbie. But moi'~ ~inch of lemon rind eften the ease is that the parll) This is the most difficult _is spenci their waiting period llan. In a skillet carmelize the ....ning through every name 1 eup of sugar and the 4 Tilble -.ey and their helpful friends spoons of water. You do this by . . . iCOnjure up. Often these un- ceoking the sugar ancil water (jrec-ided people end up picking.. (weI' medium heat until it takes II' 9A!De o~t of thin.air asth~.de.~an Ii light 'golden brown col()£.
THI:
,1I'Iluu~s~" Sapt. 14. ] 967
BENEFIT FOR DlISCALCED CARMELITES: Mm. Joseph McNally, Fall River, chairman of the oommittee of Friends of the sisters, exhibits some of the ceramics 1lhwt will be on sale at the V.F.W. Hall, Bedford St. near Robeson, on Saturday from noon to 9 in the evening. This cloistered order resides at Sol-E-Mar, SO. Dartmouth, and the S"dle of ceramics is the sole mea~ of~e4' sUjpport. .
Girls Town',' . Enlarge Nebraska Home o,f Good,' Shepherd To Meet Area Needs ., "-..
."
.
OMAHA (NC)-l.'Tow there's II Girls Town to go with the world famous Boys Town in this area. . The Home of the Good Shep herd, four:tded here in 1894, is moving into new and larger quarters and the name.of the in Stitution was changed to Girls Town. An impressive list of trustees to serve the institution includes Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan of Omaha; Father Carl M. Reinert, S.J., president, Creighton Uni versity's . development founda tion; Mother Mary William, su perior, Home of Good Shepherd; and Msgr. Nicholas H. Wegner, director, Boys Town. A. F. Ja cobson, telephone company head, was named chairman of the board.
Home For - Aged . SAN JUAN (NC) - A $1.61 million home fOI' the aged will be dedicated by Archbishop Luis Aponte of San Juan on Sept. 16. Thel20-room edifice will have a capacity for 150 persons. (don't let it get too dark or it will have a burnt taste). This process takes about 4 minutes and you should keep your eye on the sugar and occasionally shake the pan, cooking it until
it is of the right shade.
2) Immediately coat the inside of your baking dish with this burnt sugar swirling around the sides if you can before it hard ens. If most of it settles to the bottom don't worry, it still comes out looking beautiful and tast ing even better than it looks. 3) Beat the eggs in a very large bowl, until fluffy, add the
lh cup plus 2 Tablespoons of
sugar and beat well again.
4) Add the milk and give it II
final beating. Strain into the
baking dish with the carmel
mixture on the bottom and sid~
and stir in gently the lemon rind. ' I) Set the baking dish in (l pan of hot water in a 350· oven . for about one hour. (I use a roasting lan about half fulD. ef
water for the baking dish to rest
in.)
{I) When set, refriger.ate fot' II
least three hours or until it is
thorough.y Chilled.
BURLINGTON (NC)-A s~aoo education official has joined 0 task force of the Burlington di ocese which will make. an in depth study of Catholic educl1l tion in Vermont. Daniel G. O'Connor, acting commissioner of education in Vermont, was appointed to tha force by Msgr. John A. Lynda, superintendent of d i 0 c e s a III schools. When the group is com pleted, the make-up will b2 balanced between clergymen and! laymen, the monsignor said. The total picture of Catholic education in the state will be studied, including the aftel1' school and night-school sessiolllJ in religious education. This year in the state,~n0 private and two diocesan high' schools closed, an elementary school was abandoned and an other was cut back from gra4iOO 1 to 8 to grades 1 to 6. All Catholic schools in the state experiencing financial diffiC\!i. ties. '·1-'
are
'Sisters. Le~ye SmaU 'Canadian . . . Community '.,'
GREENWOOD (NC) T~ Sisters of. the ,Atonement have left this small' Bi·iti~h Columbia' , c:ommunity, and they won't be Mother William said "the fact coming back to teach school we are forced to· tUI'n away a after' 25 years of service to U1e great maily needy girls each area. year 'seems 'sad evidence of the , Sisters Dorothea, Bernard and pressing need for larger faciliMary Paulinus have closed their ties." , , convent despite petitions from Jacobson said Boys Town and local residents to keep them .the Masonic Home for Boys have here. The Sisters of the Atone done remarkable work so it "is ment, like many small ordern, now time that we paid more at have been hard hit by retire tention to the rehabilitation of ments and a vocation drop and the area's troubled young wom were forced to call the Sistell'3 en. w to other duty. The Sisters 0 !fthe Atonement first came to Greenwood illlI. Nun Teaches Special 1942 with 1,200 Japanese fleeing the anti-Japanese feeling of th~ Classes, in lowell·' West Coast during the first yearn A former North Attleboro of World War II. When they aJI' teacher is conducting special rived here, however, they founell education classes at 142 Chest that the city would not ta!re nut Street, Lowell. their 800 children into the puG Physio-therapy and speech lie schools. Instead, the Sistem theaphy are being given by Sis opened a school in a public hail. ter Gabrielle Lucie, who was as They also taught religion in <PI!~ signed to Lowell after spending lying districts.
30 years as a teacher at Sacred
By 1954, the Japanese commtl Heart School, North Attleboro nity was dispersing, and the and as principal from 1960-1966. public school finally accepted Sister bas ~en working with their . children. The Sisten the retarded for th,e past nine stayed, however, and conceR years. She holds her Bachelor's trated in religious education aoo in Education from Catholic oommunity service. Teachers' College in Providence and received the Special Class Education at State College at Bridgewater.
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Esteem, Catholic Agency's Work ~n Vietnam,
THE ANCHOR-. Thur~., S~pt. " _I·, 14, 196i .' j: ".••
Editorial Scores lag in School Aid Program
SAIGON (NC)!'~ Catho]jjlfj Relief Servi<;es (CRS) i oveTiio seas aid organi2!ation,of v.a CaJtholics is regarded by th$
PHILADELPHIA (NC)In a front-page editorial at tack on the administration of R,epublican Gov. Raymond P. Shafer of Pennsylvania, the Catholic Standard and Times,' Philadelphia archdiocesan news paper, accused Republican legis lators of "starving out" a pro'- / posal to aid non-public school .children. , The editorial said Republican members of the Pennsylvania House of Represent,atives were ~'willing to risk scuttling the administration's entire tax pro gram" rather than 'support a Democratic - sponsored proposal to earmark a small part of a cigarette tax !for establishing an authority which would pur .chasG, instruction in secular s U b : - , " jects for non-public school chil-, PAPAL BLESSING: Holy ,Father' bles ses a group of blind' pilgrims oren. visit lli,in. NC Photo.. A separate bill to establish llUeh an authority is, currently , ,'
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Vietnamese as "the best" of tb~ voluntary agencies .in Vietnallmo according to one of the U, S. ob-. servers for the recent elections in this country. Dave Sullivan, vice-presidem!; of the AFL-CIO, said that Dllii talks with Vietnamese tradci1 union officials he was told abomfS the CRS charitable activities. ~ said that the organization was highly regarded by everyone im1i South Vietnam. "The trade union and the BuQ>. dhist groups told me CRS comes through every time with help"~ Sullivan said. "They can cw(j through red tape and get help when people need it. They reallsP: appreciate CRS and say it is the best' of the voluntary agencies.1!? Sullivan expresssed pleasur~ over 'his' experience on hearinlll Sunday Mass in the ImmaculatQ Conception .cathedral here. He Said that, among other things, he
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. Clas"s''e's' a't 'ho'm'e are c'onsl'dered 0 d'ICII'1] Y' "t0 b'" Before starting his:'presidentiall tour. of ob ., ' ' 'Continu'elI Contempt': ~ 'roLUMBIA (NC) ,.;...,' Sehool rmg t'h 'e:'. c~h"l'd "I ren ,'servation '.for .', " Cath~li~~wel'e ask~d'to 'm~kechildren of. Columbia in' Howard' the first stage of the system"ac into church for a liturgical sel::", and senate elections' on Sept. ~ '" their opi'nions know'~' immedi- Coun~~. h~re, in' ¥aryland ~ill.cording to F~ther c<io~, vc'hiCl'e·d.':r·Tenhefeiedleat'hiaSt ttOh' I'Sll1~l;skethtehel.'r"',', he attended the 6 A.M. Mass at l . The second, h'e' sal:'d, I'S peri . . . . , .an '. "d' 'J egls:. "J:eceive' religious instruction I W'th . h'1m was h'IS , mtely to' "the governor , ...... , .this. ch' urch." . : ' th e' ca,th;.J e,..ra.1 ',' : .. 1atol·s.. :. year un!;ier plan as new as the 'J·t " Third]y, Fat'her Wals'h.· will ml I ary escort, M' . aJ. B en' V] a.. "We CatholiC' taxpayers' have commun.ity i t s e l f . , . . , ' .. of Jourdanton, Tex., also a Catn.. 'been patient with ,this adininis,;, Religion classes will be held in bring in the parents of aU the' olic. Both' received Communion.. '&ration too long; we 'have' 'fallen, homes. The· children,', ~ivide4 . children "to give them, an idea ,All observers 'had' 'a Viet: for the blandishments and prom-', into' small'groups,willpe taught.' of what the instI.:u~tion"is all namese' plain clothes' esc~ri . by' volunteering parents. about.'" . ises of crass, double-tongued· Ex, plaining the, Plan, Father HARRISBURG (NC)-Inten-' ._ Oraganic Parish whose duty it was to keep his poJiticiims too often. ' charge ill full 'view at all, times. "]f we lack the courage to Paul G;' Cook,Baltirpore arch sive efforts are ,being, made to, "This kind of thing is going to When Sullivan turned to 'wa]1!: oemandfrom our representatives diocesan di~ec.tor of the Confra kill a ,bill th&t would provi<le, draw the parents irito the parish back to his seat after' receivin~ . . ternity' of,. Christian Doctrine, state ' aid. to private schools in in an:.active ,way," said Father' .. . in Harrisburg justice for our·' , . Communion he was somewhat ", ehildren' , said;, , Penn l1ylvanja. ' ' " Cook, and "it's part o.fan effort . then we richly deserve Doctrine; surprised to see his 'Vietn.amese . , . "If you have 30 children in . stanc;Jing ' ",in a ,s!lcontll, " ""hat we, shall undoubtedly get ' . ,WiHial):l L. ~all, genera~ coun- to create an orga.nic ,parish. You "sh;Jdow" the first, grade" you. 'will have' sel for the Pennsylvania Cathreach·:the childre.n, thro'ug'h the ',;' ~their continued contempt for ' ' Ii'OW -pew k,eeping Ii 'Close' eye eur welfare," the editorial said. three"first grades of 10 children . o}ic . Con~er~nce , has' said that parentS."
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each, ,meeting in 'three homes . "tremendoI,lS" .'statewide support "The,,~dvantage the Columbia. '00· 1m:·
and beingta',-!ght by parents." , of th~ a.id., measure, whi~h,is, ...p]an must have over this· (the,
Mi'ssioner, Returns This concept for formal.teach-" ~ing .Iwld ,UP. by ,~pe, J:louse,. regu]a~ CCD program), ,lies in ing ,of I'ejigion .is, ~]so'designed Appropri~,tion CO!J1mittee,. ha.s, ,ti:Ie fact, that the present struc '. W'ith Bo,~';'Top. }ee'p to d~aw,in' tpep'arents', of the,!l~used_.. m;Jny legislatol~s, an4", tun~ ofCCD has onl-y,a ,miJa.imum,. T~CHNY, (~C) :-'" Fatherl J.o.-" new St." John,' the Evangelist' ~al ,.po~itici~ns to endorsei' }n~olverrient.of parents.in a par Americciis EconOmy King h K' , . 'S V D' .... parish in Columbia: Fafhei' John' priva~e~y. . , ' ish. ' , ',' . F"r t,be Best Deai Come To i' .. :~ of :;~:~~ci~t; :hr~~~~~~ Wa]sh,'execl-itiveseci:et'ary Of" But. tN!! support' :~has M$O il).~ '.' ' Among ,Father Cook?s hopes is B'roadway: .Word; is 'reh.ir~illgtohis'moun,;,-theChristianUiiityCommission;' . ~nsif.i.!!.d ,behind ,ti:I~, scenes ,ef-:, . th.l!t. "the CCD may prove"to be INC. ' 'lain area 'ITiissiol-ls 'in New Guiri:'" ·.is' pastor ofttie parish which will . fortst!? killt!le bill;" he Sai 9. , " mor,e t,han a child e.ducation pro': ~athis'month;with' a' bra'nd: hew' beformec:l. t~is Fail: ,:'," ''Tile ~ould:'be killers kno:W,gram at Co]umbia.'" ' 768 BROADWAY Jeep .i'PUrchased" wit\l 600;000 'Worked,'Well .that. Wis is. their. ',only, chance, . ~'l~ is an exp,erimeiit. N.othing RAYNHAM, MASS' Rt. 1'38 'eerMI and flour coupohs'," ',"'Because theparishha~:no per':" .sjn~e the bill>wiU;'win .if'.pep-:: e}fje is' prac;tical at"this point" 'he CHARU';SJ. 'DUMAIS, Pres; . The cou'pons'were collected by' , 'rnallent operatIng fac.i1iUel'; yet,· p.le's, representatives are given d e c J a r e d . . " friends in the U. S., Mr. and Mrs. the classes will,' be conducted th,e chance,"', Ball ·said. "'. .Joseph McClean of Columbus, out of necessity in homes. The ,proposed legislation au ...- .....--------!"""--""!""--~----------Ohio, who spearheaded a nation ,The program, Father, Cook thorize's. establishment of an au ~ide drive to, help obtail1 a said, was begun also 'out of nec thority which would purchase, .1eep for the missioner. essity, ,by a priest in ~ah 'Jose, secular educational' services' The McClean family "adopted" Calif,; Father Donald Casella, from non-public schools in Father Krimm back in 1952 who found it impossible,: in his Pennsylvania. when their children were in parish to continue CCD 'classes 'The services would be pur high school. A "collection" was by th€ ,usual "method. . chased with funds, derived from taken up at the end of each Attendance was dropping off. one-quarter of the state cigarette week at home, comprised of The priest called off classes. He tax fund, In addition, a $26 mil money obtained from babysitting then ,appealed to parishiollers to lion annual funding would be and newspaper route's, and each take children-about, 10 :each-' required. ' into their homl;ls and teach them lIJlonth was sent to the mission ary. Then came the jeep. religion .. . The' idea worked so well the Schedule Congress
, priest 'presented it in a 'pbper to Of Sacred ,/Heart
'Man in Jerusalem' CCD directors at their 31st ari KANSAS CITY (NC)-A Na 65, S.wiss. Catholic nual convention in Los Angeles ,tional Sacred Heart Congress last Spring,'. " will be held 'Oct: 2-6 here in UNITED NATIONS (NC)-A Columbia will be one 'of the Kansas' City's Municipal AUdi-' prominent "Swiss Catholic lay first cities to try the ide:i: lIJlan has been selected by the' Father Cook said the small torium, Theine wfll be "Renew secretary general of the United groups 'will "insure the teacher al in 'the Heart' of Christ." Its a'iin is to direct' renewal in· the 'Nations as his "man in' Jerus'a- knowing the chiidren ihdivid Jem," , ually and the children knowing Church through the Sacred Heart. . Secl'et!lry General U Thant ~n~ <:!,~~ther. So there you have· announced that he had appointed' the nucleus ~f a community . The congress will feature spe:': Dr. Ernesto A. Thalmann '0£ right, away. . cial workshops on the liturgical Firs.t Stage Switzel'land as his pel'sonal rep aspects . of Sacred .Heart devo ZENITH • AcousnCON • UNIX' nsentative to study ,conditions i'n. "The ,.number,'of 10.1'0 15 is tion and . other .'means of inte • ~IOLO&I(AlS • VITAMINS jerusalem under ISl'aeli rule. ·lisual,:for,'CCD instruction any . grating '. devotio~ to the' Sacred . , Dr· Thalm<lIl" 53, ,¥ilI head a way,';, he said, 'and the usual or Heart. wi th various forms of ~e mission In Jerusalem. to assess ganizatioI;l. of the ' ceQ •parish newal. the effeCts of' Israel's'adminis- " ooard"wjll be .retained; . ,Honorary chail'man of the ,b'ation of th~ Old City and the "F"!ther, Walsh'" would have congress is Bishop Chal'1esH, IRENE ·R: SHEA, PROP. possibility of enforcing United parent-teachel's' in once, every .Helmsi l1g 'of Kansas City-St: Prompt, Free Delirery ;,,' FAll RIVER. SOMERSO. TlVERlOll ~ VICINITY Nations resolutions that would two weeks, When he meets with . Joseph .. General chairman is
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Wage Battle Over PO. School' Bill
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,Isl'ael's permanent anilexation of. the 'area.
them,. he .will go over ~aterial {\uxili"ry Bishop Joseph V. SuI'" for ()ne.. o~. two classes at a time.'" '!ivan ,of: Kansas City'-St:.Joseph. ,
202 ROCK- ST.
(CORNeR OFf.IHE ST,)
,ALL R/VIER
GlJenma:ry Nuns
"'lHfE ANCHOR
lfhIUITS., Sept. U, 'i 967
Continue Work ~n Appalachia
GioVell"nm®ml~ Ask.s
rnNCINNATI (NC) GJenmary Sisters who have decided W remain in the Glenmary community have
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given their reasons for staying and their hopes for their order's lIuture. The Sisters, who have served as social workers, nurses and Confraternity of Christian Doc trine instructors in U.S. areas where there are few priests, will be stationed at missions in Ports mouth, Ohio; Statesboro, Ga., and Hayesville, N.C. Recently, a large number of Glenmary Sisters requested dis pensation from their vows or Jet them expire. Some o:f them have formed the Federation -of Communities in Service-a lay organization. Many of the nuns who are Il'emaining in the community are veteran missionaries, several with as much as 15 years experi ence in the mission fields, Sis" tel' Mary Joseph acting coordi nator of the community; said in an inter:V:iew in the Catholic, Telegraph,' Cinciniloti ' archdio ·€ e san newspaper.
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S~6es 'Goal,
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"Clenmal'y bas a, 'mission the Church, and I feel ,it bas one now; and in the, future;'; another Sister who is remaining'
COt-lift
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~D~miss
'TGXpaW®Ir~ £u it WASHINGTON (NG) The Administration has askG ed the U.S. Supreme Court to diRmiss an appeal by seven New York taxpayers chal lenging Federal aid to church related schools under the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Edu cation Act. Acting Solicitor General Ralph S. Spitzer argued that the appel lants attacked the law "in the abstract," rather than as specifi cally applied on a local levei, and that they had failed to make a case for court intervention.
MID-WEST MONSIGNOR HEADS AR MY CHAPLAINS: General Harold K. John son, right, .ArmJT Chief ,O'f Staff, pins the s tars of a Major General on the shoulders 4Y.( Monsignor ]l'rancis J. Sampson of Des Moines' as the latter'succeeds to the post o~ Army Chief of Chaplains. General R~lph E. Haines, Jr.,. left,is Vice Chief of Staff~ There are more than 1,800 U.S. Army Chap lains now on active duty throughout, the , :world .NC ,Photo. , " :
Consolidation" Marks' School 'Open'ings
,ooid. • "I believe we're cotniilg oui of .~ good 'history' lind' 'going, , 'WASHINGTON (NC) - When . R. Deneen, associate secretary schools have an eventual capac somewhere ,with it," ; added~, the more than five' million for NCEAA's school ,superintend- " ity of 2,500 pupils.
Means
Strong~r
Education mn ~nne" Cities
A suit by the New York ap pellants was dismissed by a low er Federal Court, which held that the Supreme Court had ruled in 1923 that Federal ta» payel'S do not have legal stan<1}-,. ing necessary to sustain such court challenges against the law.
Want Injunction , The Senate has passed a bill which would, give Fe'del'al taJ! ,payers right' to, sue in COU(lt, bu~
the measure has rel!ei ved J)()
House action. The New YorE
taxpayers ariuedthat ~hethel!'
Congress acts or not, the ,Court
could change the rule. '.,: Spitzer argued that the Ne~ ,York case did not constitute all appropriate occasion for depart-> jng from the rule.
TJ:te appellant taxpayers rep third, Sister. Catholic school pupil's return to ents' department. Many of the old schools had resent the American Jewislll "Our goal is to help make the school,this month, they will find, Not only do they replace'mar- between 50 and 100 pupils, and 'Congress, the New York Civill Church present in the missions,", more than 100 brand new schools ginal education with' good eduvery few had more than 200. Libel'Ues Union, the United Me, rontinued, ..to" show the aW1!iting them.,T1)ere will' be, at cation in- most cases; many of Even the largest of all the ,re;' FederaUon of Teachers, and the People there that the Church is least 80 Catholic grade schools them also serve the vital purpose placed schools-a high school United Parents Associations. ~oncerned about human nee(Js and 25 Catholic high schools op-, of strengthening the' Catholic had only 360 students last year. They want an in j u net i 0 III and 'problems, as well as to build ening their' doors for 'the fin;t contribution to' education in the Despite signs of growth and against the Federal' goverillne»t and show a Christian communi-, ,time. . ,inner "cities where the needs to-vitality in the Catholic school giving any assistance to religiolltl ~. But the predominant charac- day <Ire most 'dramatic;" he system, NCEA' noted that its sur or sectarian schools under tbfJ -rhe religious woman must teristic of the 190Z openings is stated. vey does not' attempt to assess ]005 act. be 2vailable to the people who consolidation a large new NCEA learned that the smaJl- the effect upon total enrollment
:need her," she said. "She must -school built to replace a' num est of the 'new' ,consolidated Of the 'dropping "of grades in
bt> a 'consecvated woman, alive" 'bel' of schools ·that are too oid' schools will hou'se 225 pupils,' 'some a'rtitis 'of the coulltJ;Y. Com
l Iilnd.' active in the service of 'tole' "and too small to' !:ive good' edu'-" and the largest of the' new high plete "figutesfor total' Catholic
Cburch,.~.: '" ' IOOtion ,3,t a reasonable pe,r""pupil ' .. .. . " . .. sC~oOl enrollment ma'y TIQt I>e , \COst. ,. College "', Gives ,Leg'. a\Ta,lIable',for sOlTle time; Fath~r: •. ' '. "e. '.' ·According·· to- . a prelimintlry" .' Deneen said. ' "rescriptions 'called f~r Opposes State Aid ,,', survey' conducted 'by the' Na;;' Control' ,to ,Lqym¢n , '.. NCEA. said I,ti;"survey showed Clind delivered ' ,. S h i ' ..', tional Catholic, Educational As CinCAGO ,,'CN-e)-Mundelein that while.inner-cj.t~ y?,~ngster~" , LOft. T" ~ p.' . ,':"Y,at~ . ,c 00 S ' sociation,' the' nation's' "'cbief' a,oliege has, turned its full ,legal '"are th~ mal,?- b~nefIClaf1eS of th~ CHOCOLATES , NEW. ORLEANS - (NC')-A· Catholic-· school ,organization;;' control over to a bQa,rd, of, trus- new 'consoh~ated schools, these, 600 Cottage St. , .994·7 .4~~ -panel of three U.S, 'Circuit Court· four out' of- every .10- of the' new' , tees' consisting of ~o 'prominent" )'oungsters are 110t the only one~ New Bedford· ~ who 'n . ' ,of Appeals judges held, Loui- gl'ade schools, and' more', 'than laymen and five Siste,rs of Char WI gam, siano's gl'ant-in-aid program half of the new high schools ity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. for financing private schools rep I:esen t consolidations. Lay members of the board rep unconstitutional, calling it a "These consolidated schools resent various religious beliefs. link in the 100-yea,r chain of may represent a greater contri The chairman of the new state laws to keep sc~ools racialbution to quality education than board will be' elected at the ly segregated.' any other form of new school board's first operational meet The ruling was handed down construction," said Father James ing in the Fall. by Judges J.M. Wiscl0m, Robert' In anno'uncing the organiza A, Ainsworth, Jr., a'nd Herbert tion of the new board, Sister Catholic Education W. ChristenbelTY, a,id criticized Mary Ann Ida Gannon, Munde the program set up in 1962 un lein presiqent, said it was part Helps Open Mind der theadministJ'atio;l of former of an effot't to enable the college SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The ~v. Jimmie Davis. : "to keep pace with the changes more Catholic college education PER ANNUM The pwg"a'm established the occuring in society and in the' Louisiana Financial; Assistance a Catholic has, the more open ChUl·ch." minded he is likely to be, two Commission which !administers sociologists reported here at the a $4 million program., The judges Minister 'to Teach 'said unless the granf:system was cQnvention of the American So ciological Association.' destroyed it would shatter pub SeminaryStud,ents: Deposits Welcomed! in Multiples of , The findil1gs of Dr. Jame.s M. lic schools for both bces: I Fendl'ich, assistant professor of PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A .'$200.00 up to $3'O,OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts ,i sociology at Florida State' UniBaptist minister will give les '" Up to $60,000-for Corporations Order Plans Period versity, and Dr. William V. sons in preaching to students at DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TmMES A YEAR D'Antonio, chairman of the so- Philadelphia's St. Chal'1es Bor Of Experime~tation ciology depa;·tm~nt, University romeo Seminary, this year. February, May, August and! November Dr. William D. Thompson, pro NEW YORK (NC), _ 'The of Notre Danie, conh'adict the All Deposits Insured in Full lH!oly Name province bf the Third widely heid belief that there is fesesor of homiletics at Eastern Baptist Seminal'y, an institution Order of St. Francis has initiated a high correlation between the just aCI'oss the street from the II program of expe'rimentation religious involvement of a Cath 1101' its 8,000 member~. olic and personal closed-niind- Catholic seminary, will teach hOm i let i c s 'on a' part~time , The period of eX):lcrimentation ' . edness. ' ' i:; pl'eparatory to dnJwing up a The two cautioned that their basis ,in the major seminary. Msgr, Thomas J.' Welsh, semi new Rule for the la~ oj·der. The survey did not compare educa ultimate goal of the', r~newal is tion at Catholic versus secular nai'y rector, said appointment of W' "make' the Lay'. Franciscan colleges and 'universities. It is Dr. Thompson marks the first movement a best possible means possible that level of education time a Protcstarit 'minister has for realizing the directions set itself, rather 'than .the specific been on 'the faculty of the 135 year-old institution. Dr. Thomp by the Second Vati~an Council ethos of a univI:rsit.y, is respon Main Office: 4 Winthrop Street. Taunton
for both the Church and' con- sible for the increase in open- son is a' member of the Catb Branch Office: 1-400 Fall River A"e, Seekonk
'olic Homiletic SoCiefy; iempol'ary societ,y." llIiliWedness, they agreed.
lARIVIERE'S Pharmacy,,·
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3%NEW HIGHER
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INTEREST
PAID QUARTERLY ON PAID-UP
SHARE CERTBf6CATES
Taunton co-operative , ".bank
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THE ANCHOR , Thurs.,-," S.~pt.. 14". ,1.967 " I ',' "
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PITTSBURGH (NC) -Father Daniel Lyons, S.J., of New York, ,. wti:ter, lecturer,. and .al,l.~hority on ~~@[f® ~~[p>(l1]D~o@uu' ·'tlie Far East;.'waS presented the Award Of' Merit, of 'the· Young Ainericans for Freedom at aD. awards meeting here which ERNAKULAM (NC)· highlighted the. youth group's Catholic bishops and laymen annual four-day convention. ' in Kerala state have protest., '. The Jesuit priest was honored ed to the Indian central gov for his "outstanding contribu tion to the cause of liberty and ernment against 'the expulsion freedom, and for dedication to Qf foreign missionaries by the the extension of those ideals," Assam' state government. . A memorandum to India's according to a citation accom · patiying the award' - a sman . Home Minister Yeshwantrao B. bronze Liberty Bell .
Chavan was signed by 16 prel ates.
, Father Lyons is cbaionan of The memorandum said - that the lO:-year":old F.ree Pacific As Christians, who are' ;l. minority in' sOciation, Inc., which' .wdrks for India, would like to "give an peace with fr:~edom.and. justice acid test to the" observance of' for all Asia; founderoHhe Asian the constitution' and see if oilr ,Sp'eakers Bureau, and' associate religious rigbts' would .be re-~ director of the East Iridian Re CJPected and n~t· trampled ~pon search' Institute.. All. are ··located ~rough specious .allegations." · in '·New YorkCity;~,".
The Assam ;stat~ gov~mment
. A former sOciology' "professor Qbis month: ordered ,.~isl1-op. and dean 'of students at Gonzaga Orestes Marengo,' S.D..B., .of Tez-· University; SPokane, .Wash., Jur and three9f: ~i~ priests to, V~ETN.A~ VOTES: Catholic nuns, Sisters of St. Paul of Chartres, housewives Father Lyons is a' columnist for leave the coun4"y- ..before Sept.· and members of tl~e Vietnamese Army vot e in Saigon. NC Photo. "Our 'Sunday Visitor;": national iI. In August the ASsam :gQv.ern,-,; eatholic newspaperj',and several ment ordered ..~I:1at· C;madi~ " · seCular daily newliPll'perii.'" He is, alSo ' co;'~l\itlior, :·of·:tw.()~ books defiling :with·. 'lhe:':Fa~.::-.East <iistriet of the ~te.·.· : .::; '.: ....:' .. ':'> .' ": ' , ' . "Vietnam. Crisis":'. attd .~UDange!' on:the'''Left/' il.nd~,i~ 'on-the strat ,' .... ' .. '. . ·.. egy staff of the' American' Secur lor the expulS1ol}s.--:-:,.pa'rU.cipa..: '. " : . : ' , . . . . ; . ' . . ' -: . for scnool desegrega~ioo,'" tbe.. ity Council. ; . :~:; Qion by missionaries in' activities . ;.'JVA~HJ:t:iIqTON .(NC),,,,:,,, Edll- ,"encmg a student's perfOl'ffianCe . " : F-~iher'~ Lyorts' h:1s $poktm and prejudicial to ;th~·.stat~"rItight\ . e8f;Ors. are: ~inning,to' "d!stiU ""as-·hisattitude toward himself, commissioner.:added. Observing that tlie"great de- w,.-itten extensivelj.:i1rs.upport of 'Very well haV'e':b~en':l~~eled:_af;; . ~~ :m~ny ~ndings" af a ·sllrvey.·, his own estimate ,of his chance bate about remedy'ing . the deSouth· Vietna~'s:fighi'fo'r free 4lndigenous 'CHristianS' weD." lDlbated two ~ears .ago am.0ilg· succeeding in life. More with as little '01' rto·:fotindatioo·." 500,000 school-. 'chi1dren~ i~ the_ oyer, his attitudea.epended to a ifeats of inner-City sc'hools" cen- . dODl agai~stc~mrriuiiistQccupa tion andtyz:an~y. In i965/he was at a l L " . . ..' . ROpe of pro~~ingpoliciesthat significant degree on the atti- ters around two' brOad. notions iiivited by ~he Defense 'Depart The bishop$' ',as~ed~ tbaf·the:. will improve, the q\lality of .the .tude of other children in his -:- "Compensatory education" and desegregation . of gtietto ment to make a' tour ilf.. Vietnam order for the "IndiScriminate ell:'-' ..Datio_n!s ~edueation', claSs:" . ': With three other newsmen. pulsion" of the m{ssiomities' De The·survey. was ..direCted by. 'The' commissioner said that, schools-the com·missioners· said the problem is that debaters !reScinded. independ~nt authorities: fQr the. simply .stated, "this finding Anti-Christian Fa:IIlat6cli U.S. OffIce, of EducatIOn, and means that it does make a dif-' "are choosing ·up sides .acting A similar .memorandum to U.::). Commis~ioner. of Education ference whom you go to schaol as if we must try compensatory
education or school desegrega India's Prime Minister Indira Harold Howe II SaId a few days with." 'Schooa~
tion-but can't. move toward'
Shandi by Joseph Vithayathil, ~o "it is. the most, co.mprehen Strong Argument NEW ORLEANS (N9)-For both." president of' tlie AII-Kerala Slve ~tudy anyone has, made of· "It· means," he continued, He said compensatory educa-' the second time. iil '10 days, the Catholic Congress, said that the' Amercian sch901s,." "that .if you live in a ghetto' tion tries to compensate - to New Orleans archdiocese has an Christian community can only . Of pa!1icular interest to a where. almost nobody goes to make up for -the disadvantages nounced that it turn over regard the expulsion move as a layman are two survey findings the ghetto child "brings to school: a parish school to· public school Rtlow aimed against it. on whic~ Commissioner Howe' college, where most of the fa thers have menial jobs or none authorities. with him" by making.his schools , "To regard foreign mission- f9cused attention' on as being at all, wh'ere there simply are particularly good schools, sensi The latest. is St. Linus school ariesministering'to the spir:itual' "particularly relevant to 'any no examples of success on dis-· tive to his needs and committed inSt. Tammy civil parish lIleeds of Christians in India strategy for. improving ghetto play-you have r~latively little to developing his pote·ntialities.· (county). When it opens this as a danger to the security af the schools." chance of self-realization." Fall it will be known as Bayou land is altogether unjustifiable One. finding, he said, "indi-. Liberty school and will be run . ~ And this, I need hardly An its aspersion on the Christian cates tl'lat fa~ !from helping stu-' . by the St. Tammy public school point out, is a. strong argument religion itself," his memorandum dents overcome cultural. hand i board, which will rent the build lIBid. caps, ghetto 'schools maintain the ing. Vithayathil ~id there is rea- g~p in scholastic achievement' Magazill1le NEW YORK (NC) - A panel The Holy Family Sisters who lIOn to believe that the govembetween. children' fro in low-'in-' of professional and lay counsel DOW teach in the school will re ment is being influenced' by come homes. !,tnd those from more Opell'a ors will form a panel to help ad main to operate religious in "'certain anti-Christian fanatics." fortunate fl;lmilies. BUENOS AIRES (NC)-"Bo minister ·the new New York struction classes. The week be In Bangalore, the 'local CathaAttitude Toward Sellf fore announcement of the St. lic Association called the A'3sam' "After a ghetto child has been marzo",'a Washington premiered divorce law, which went into opera, has been ba~ned by the effect on Sept. 1. The law pro Linus school closing, the arch IJtate action an "insidious form -·10 school six years he' is about @f religious discrimination...· a year and a hall behind his mayor of Buenos Aires, criticized vides· that no divorce may be diocese revealed 'it would close by the Cardimil of Buenos Aires granted until a conciliation ef Annunziata sch091 in Houma. ggainst Christians. midole ip~om!,! peers in readi,ng and banned' by the President 'as fortis made . Annunziata, too, will become • achievement. By ninth.grade, he "too obsessed with sex." : George :T.' BelQock, Pres'iding· public school has fallen two and a half years "Yet,' "Criteri~", 21 Catholic J'.ustice of the appellate division's Blr'i(jj~:""'orrt IBWlDUd behind, and' after 12 years of Illagazine ,of the 'city called the' second department; established school, he is. more than three ~52-Ufl'1}itt ~t:lousill'llg guidelin~s for the administratiOllD. ELECTRICAL years behind .in the normal banning of the opera an "aq,i t,:,ary" decision. The argument of .the 'reformed Domestic Rela STAMFORD. (NC)-Construc Contracton measures of scholastic achieve concerning "obsessive· sex and' tions Law. Couples seekinga' Gon is expected to begin soon on ment." divorce under the law must first violence," Criterio said in' an a 352-unit middle-income hous The other finding Commis inadequate in-"this appear..before a conciliation' bu ing developme~t to be built' hElre sioner . Howe c:al~ed. "startling, editorial, by the diocese of Bridgeport and rather than shocking.." "Re-' arbitrary exercise of power" be':' r~au in their judicial diStrict. . Justice Beldock announced the $ne of its StaJtuord' parishes. searchers found," he said, "that cause ·the"ban "igriores other ob vious artistic values to unjustly' creati(;m of the advisory panel, A mortgage: 'insurance com-' the greatest single factor influ-. which will be made up of social
mitment in the amount of $7.4 con.den:!D this ~orJ:e." million has been issued by' the '~IJ'i)[I'!l«IJo C@DDeges O~~Iiil.The magazine said"the reasons' scientists, and psych,ologists, as
Fe.deral Housin'g Admiriii;itration. for ·the ban could equally be ap- well as community and religious
leaders. The'Panel will assist the
The development will be the New 1" e«:!ldllon91 Cel11l1l'fJIi' plie.: to many othei-' operas of district comJ:l1issioners, who will. l1irst constructl'on ,in an area in 944 County St. IMMACULATA (NC) '.:...-. A the' traditional' repertoire, in supervise· the conciliation bu-. downtown Stamfo.rd set a;ide for New Bedford € e nter for the Teaching of the eluding works. by' Puccini and reaus. orban renewaL It will consist of Americas will open at I~acu- Wagner. "Bomarzo" is the work three 16-story circular towers lata College here in Pemisyl- of two' Argentinians, composer and will include some profes vania this month. Alberto Ginastera and writer aional office and· commercial The center is a cooperative _ Manuel Mujica. AlPace in addition to the housing. ON CAPE COD venture of three colleges _ The opera was given a wodel .llIIlits. Chestnut Hill, Immaculata and premiere in Washington, D.·C. Rosemont - aimed at spreading about three months ago and waa knowledge of the Americas in 8' critical success. BOULDER (NC) - Delegates' schools and colleges and ift the ~tonio Cardinal Caggiane ~ the Lutheran Student Asso·Philadelphia area. criticizes' the opera, sayiftg "The 5~0700
<Illation of America, meeting here Classes will be conducted. em libretto has been wr.itten as 4n Colorado have adopted a the' campuses of Chestnut Hill ~hough morality was somethiag fuur-paragraph resolution call- . and Rosemont Colleges by Latin nopexistent." The' maga:cine mg on Lutheran churches 1llt. ;~eri,ca' specialists. They are .' stated, '''We. are afraid' that "'support members who cQnsci- geared' primarily to "the' adult' wcal 'policeafe showing '11' aim AMPLE 'PARK,'NG entiously object to . specific community 'of the' area 'ancl ue gerous paternalistic, erratic inl .1:U'li." , open 1.0 the public. pulse. in enforcing mQ~alit.v.."
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·St~~,s~.JF.~ndings on Ghetto Schools
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BUILDING MATERIALS
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SAN SALYJ\l>O~ ,·GNC~ -,-,:-.A new leadership. training center which has .operled. here' 'in" E1 Salvador, witli'the aid of"G'er man Catholics,will' c'ombine' 're search on so~io-econo~ic.prob lems in this cOl.mtry with courses for labor ;md.. rur!\l "iife. '1~l,lderS, officials of <;~op~r.atives ~Q(J lP.'" cia! workers. .
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ress of the synod of Bishops-to open in Rome Sept. 29-will be issued to the press. It is expected that a special commission of Bishops will be· set up to deal with press matters under which Msgr. Vallainc will function. There will also be dif ferent language sections,' with Father Edward Heston, C.S·.C., in charge of the English part. Father Heston was the English language press officer at the Second Vatican Council. In addition to the daily bul letins, press conferences will be held "often, when opportune," Msgr. Vallainc said. The conferences will be given by Msgr. Vallainc or one of the Bishops of the commission par ticularly charged with a specific topic on the synod's agenda. Msgr. Vallainc said that jour nalists covering the synod must submit their dames'to' His office .. along with the :na~~."of..ti:le· pu\:l : licationor 'otlwr 'Ile~s :;t,Jl~dillm they. repr:esent. T"is 'is simp~y to provide a 'mean~ '3f'cH.ei:ldrlg those aHending'the p~ss·~i}nfel"':'. ences, he said, "so that the press hall will not be overcrowded.~
ease I ran into any long delays. Times,published on Labor Day, But airports, alas, are too crowd the prospect of a strike' or lock ed these days out,.is "indispensable to collective a1:i.d much too bargaining, and collectlye bar noisy and dis gaining.is "the best process any tracting to en .. society.' has ever developed for able the average voluntarily settling the relations w'eak - will e d of workers and their employers." trav,eler to con ' Indeed, Mr. :Rheel continued, centrate for any the prospect of a cessation of length of. time work "is the most effective oil serious read strike deterrent ever devised ing. To while even though it goesn't work 100 away the'bours, per'cent of the time." then, I :took the . '. ~o Workable Alternative easy way out .It 'Vas. hardly necessa,ry for .'an4, sp,ent my time·.sampling th~,. : Mt:'Khe~i to add, ihthe'coul'se Labor Day editions of a dozen . ' .,. . .' . "or-' so' 'metropolitan newspapers;.', of··tus' lett'erto. the. ,]llmes,t~at Id'ciuding the indispensabli New" ~,t~Oi wPuI(JI~~e to quce t,he Y'or-k!"'Titnes which along',:witb"~ tpcl~!1pepf JnaJo~ stJ,',~es~nd " . that ne spends. a good porbon theWallStreetJournal,hasbe-.· f h' t· ·''''C·· g't c.,: \1'" . £. come a national paper and is ~ IS ~me rym 0 pre en now available early in the momTem. t' t t i ' t ". t . '" . .h a s pu ng ~ very ml'ldl y. Ptllg.Ill almos every maJor cr t Y 'Th fact···· 'th t M \ Kh 1 h !In' the United States. IS. a r . . ee as . e P~RISH SClHIOOL: AsCension .parish in' Oara done as much as almost any ~, VeIl,~zq.~,l,a,. is . opening the first pari.~h school in the .,:.. " ",Industrial .~&ri'~ll'e'? ,.,." ... ~"'ng American to r,esoly~:~aQor lo'aned by' 'the'!huij.'iCij>ar"itotetnmerit.· , ,I if( discovered,' as I might have . m~!lageJ;lleflt . Aisputes ,a~4, ..,to be staffed Car:' \i:elcp~cted, that· the Ameri<:,an bring, ; llpq~t lI" gt:eate,r ,m~ll;$l1re of industrial peace in the United .'ondoIet' 'from' St.. Louis', Mo., wi,th Siste.f 'Mary' Kathleen, p.ress~assuming that the· papers . ..,... , ... ," :"M . II F 'th V·nken' t T M I ,',l; .. ,read .over the 'weekend: a.re States. ;. a :..' ThU! . being the case, he de . Center, as' ·j:n'lllcipal.· arykno' . a er ~presentative of the press ~ a y,rhQle.- is beginning to haye ·se'rv'es to·· be listened' to very ion is p~~or and at right is Sister Pa.trick· Richard. NC " ,'" ,,'.. , , serious doubts about collective carefully' whehhe says" that' . PhQ'OO:..· . ",," ,. ,,' '. '1".1 • • . • . ; ,; .. '"there"w' no workable illterna 'bargaining as fair and"reiiable .m\:!ans of himdlirig 'labor-nian ·tive to collective 'bargaHng at'td, ,Ia'gement relations in the Urn'ted therefore,' the' prospect of' a "States. . '. I .$~~eqr a .lo.ckout."". .. .:,' To' be slire, not· one of the Plans ~titute. 'k}apers . I' sampled' dune dut 'for ""Mr. 'Kheel's . pOint,.·m .. ··my '''Cl:'l'inpUlsory arbitration, but al .judgeinertt,· is' very well"taken. .,. I' ·f.~,~crs,~i~n.ers' .~arnmng~:~,~ ~~.r.e~ti~i~~$'·.· most all of them said, iri one ., Surely" .it would be a '. serioUS ;,,!,t"Venture toRedWl(;e"Mo'm:tgag~...... " way or another, that the current mistake "to' outlaw the' right ·tG "",! ,:" .• '~l :;',! " labor-management crisis in the strike Gil', in a moment of panic, , ,l ~ . ',;, I' .' t' ;I -,t.l ' . . :'. ~. .,1 .; automob\le industry poses a ,'to; restrict' its exercise ·uluiuly. ., ~~S9l1T(NG)-Past~, foId, for ~ New York l!-~~~rtlsl~g ': secious threat to the institution "Wlilit' -We need to do, as Kheel .stuff al\d ,mail. " .. fi~~;, . !,,! .;i;~~ f:, " : \ : ' . " .' ;.9f collective bargaining. ;'sllggest8, . is .to make ci>llective " .. !l'.hat'~~hen~west ~und-raising The, a~en~T ,~, ,:p,~rin~, $75,000 'i" E;;e~ the sophisticatedTim~s bargaining, with' the prospect of Ifoll'lDula· ~naugurated at Assump to Assum~tion, church. for the ';' has taken to' characterizing · lqtri~~ or ~ .lockout, .w:oI:'~ even tion.chu~h ilE~re in New Jersey. work. Fa~herca~ar orriCo, pas ;:. major' strikes as a kind of ' "war .~tte.r~...· tor, $~d'$.5.0,OOO"will be'u~' tG So~e,..l,@O ,.parishioners, . ,JD . . . . . fa.r.e/, which, if allow~ by the .' " ~~~ ..Am.erican Foundation Oil teams of.,fo.W:'i .are mailing out reduce :~tie:'.·.m.Qi:tg!l~e·:9o ~e gq1:'~rnment to.go .on.m~ch long parish'~ '. ~o-)':e~r.-ol!l .,chllrch, .~utq.mation and EmploymeQt, of 2(t m~~o.~ j;)rqchures for a com er, will do irreparable-harm to which Mr. Kheel is president, is ·merc,i.a! ,~dve.rtisingventure. and the, ~s~ will.. ~ ilP,Ut up :' the economy. .' planning to establish' aD Institute amolIg the.~?rk~~.. !: .: . Volunt~rs, 'V::a'rking in shifts, .of CollediveBargaining for this The job ,is slated to, be .com Best Process are on band for 15 hours a day pleted by, ,~. ,1~theri·.~ ~l very purpose. The mailing ad Is the current labor-manage:. dress of the Foundation, for at parish center. They paste . lion persons will getll8mple of ment situation really as bad as those who may wish to keep full pactrets' to brochures which hot drink in the maiL all that? I think not. abreast, of its findings, is 280 'folded. and stuffed' in enve "Sixteen more projects· like Strikes, . of' course, are gener iopes" 'prepared by ~n agency. this and: we·U 'h!tve the mortgage Pa~1t Avenue, New York,.~: Y. :, a~ly:·a.;· ',Vasteitii~\iVay' 'of doing .,Th~. ~or~ing'.mder contract paid 'off," said, Father Orrico. I ~u,sinessi and, mlljor strikes of ;. the .kind that -we'are now 'wit So~i,~ty'to Co,n'tinue' ' B ' ' . '. , Ii~.ss\ng in rietr61t'are nothing. to .' , i,' joke: abo"Ut:· <""'"'. . lP'ara'd~s i~ ·i: But that doe~~~t mean' th;at . NEWARK (NC) ':-The annual Ij'they represent a form of eco- Holy 1'larrie .'S6.ciety parades ill • '.' :1 •• ' t." I.; Bomic. "warfa're';"whicb should thil;'Ne~j~rseyArchdioce~ win '1 " ~'outlawed by the· government. be held' as .usulil·this year not ,'" i: ~ll·.the contrary, ··as Theodore ~i&standing' a recommendation Kheel-qne o~ . the nation'lI ·by;:lhe. ~Jate.ofl'ri~sts'that the i' : socie'ty'·e'nd. the parades. . PlI'elates' Hel'p 1b..1 ...... S· ,The Newark ArChdioceslm ;." .......... Federation of Holy' Name Soci RUin' Parish in Chile eties decided to sponsor the ;1 parades again in observance'of "' !' WASHINGTON(NC)-'Fina~.,.;..the Year of Faith proclaimed by eial aid from the United States Pope Paul VI.' Bishops' Fund for Latin Amer-' In June, the priests' senate ica.· is helping a group of nuns called for an end ·to the parades " to 'run a parish in rural Chile:" because of cost and dwindling Bishop Carlos GQnzalez of participation. The senate action Taka, C\1ile, who faces a grave came one week after the soci shortage of - clergy in his di ely's executive' committee had ocese, has placed the day-to st.ggested their continuan~. day conduct of a rural parish in :Traditionally, the parades have ~e care of religious Sisters. been held on the second Sunday Bishop Gonzalez has expressed of .October at nine locations in his appreciation ·to Bishops Cole~' the archdiocese. The first was man F.' Carr.oll of Miami;.;he·ad 'heHt in Jersey City 63 years ago, of .the. bishops' fund, for ihe and at their peak some 100,000 'bfSh6ps' $5,000 donation ·to· the" me~ participated. Each march is pilot project., followed by ~ religious service.
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VATICAN CITY (NC) The Vatican press officell', Msgr. Fausto Vallainc, says bulletins on the daily prog
By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Sedan Adnon Dept., USCC) I spent a good deal of time lounging around bustling aIrport terminals over the Labor Day weekend-and what a glorious end-of4he-Summer ~eekend it was, at least in the MiddleWe&t and up and down the Eastern Seaboard. As . usual, I stuffed my brief leading experts and most' suc ~ase with current books and cessful.practitioners in the field a· sampling of current peri of labor.Dlanagement-p·ointedly otilical literature - just in observed' in a letter" to the
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DEDICATE NEW BEDFORD HOME ADDITION: Mrs. Clare Antil, in one of ·the new rooms in the $900,000 wing, being cared for by Mrs. Joseph Daley, LPN. Center: Bishop· Connolly blesses the new addition to the Sacred Heart Home. Right: In cOnjunction with the dedi:" _ion, the Sis·ters of Oharity Of Quebec al/M)eelebi'ated :'f;heir 50th year
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of service to the Greater New Bedford area, and sharing in this paR of the' day were, Atty. Louis A. Peras, master of ceremonies at the banquet ~ Mother General Marie of Grace, SCQ, .Quebec 1 George Vigeant, ge:ne~al chairni'an. This 'new wing has 84 private· rooms with an· auxj)i.. aiy' service; room each ·floor.
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in interiflity and' an anticipation that' 8Urro ounts all,the problems~-That ,was the' story. teach several years before their side at the formal ceremonies
Connoll.y High School 'last week, t be day before the. new .nearly $.8 mHJion ed_ordinations'- he expl~lin'ed. .... ~a~kibg the s·chool opening and
of Bisbon Y ',' :.,' t~he.is hope that the new Apo&ucationaI plant at EIsbree and Langley Stl' eets, near Ro~, 24. hi Fall River, opened' its Pickup Games 't()1ic . Delegate to the United doors for the first time. ,. . . . "; ", Leading the way into the vaSt ·~tatell •.. 4 rchbishOpL\ligi, RaJRoad grading eQ,llipment was' residence at one· end ·tel .the,li'U~' ,", ·As ,he wove a .path t~r~ugh .the: ' gym that will Seat 1,000' specta-, )llQ,n~i" may 8,lso participate. blockirig one aecess' road. A' ditorium a~ the ot~er. ',. dutter, the principalseeme~.iJn- ·lors; Father said the.schoolwill, . 'Meanwhile, the Jesuits ue . 'of' . 'k' " ,'. ,.The' quarters are constructed mune·lo, hiss~Jrrot.mding!L ,.',' be. ,looking for '~pickup, ,games""., '''shaktng· down" 'thel'r'. new res' 8warm ' ts·d"·' ,wor men o'f steel-reinforced concrete: The" "Eventuall'y, ,we'll, L.'o"r'gan.;.' d 1 were 'i g' """ thois. coming year. .. "dence', :into 'which they moved"
ra ki ng dirt ou I e DD c ean n up debris from the huge eon struction project..' , ''T'he lan·dscapl·n'g' 'is supposed ._ be" done bef'ore' tom'orro\v,"'
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rest of the seven-section build- ized," ,he,said.'
ing, J'oined by cOll',ridorsis of' I- _ 'T,n the 'librarY,',Rev.--Josep·h P'. . "We can't get into a leagQe fo~·'· from their temporary quarters at
- " . " " " " . ,.'. Round'" 'Hill" Mission House jQ beam construction....,.~ .. ' ·_Walsh, S.J., was .• buri'ed·~in .. ·~a ,D~ -le,ast another year, he sa~d, . SoiJth Dartmouth and 210 pl'" ory claa"I'oom and f th 5 000 1 th t· admitting he's looking for mem-, '. .' - 1':"" Th t 0 st , e w ~, ..' ...,w, 0 e " ,·vo ~me!l, ' 1,\" " . ' boys are shaking down the w MI " administrative wing contains 28 everltually will· be arrayed on bership in the Bristol County:,' .. ~ Rev. John G. Cornellier, S.J., classrooms, a 'guidance suite 'and shelves lining ..the walls ·'of'·the 'League; "but we're looking ·for· hlgh·school. prin~ipal of the ;..u' 'OUi ' a basketball coach n, ow," He did not looknew as school thoughsaid. he ., a d" mIDISt ra'ti ve ""ulcell. er' circular building and' in; pie;;' believed it as he stared out his "buil(lings" of the complex are shaped stacks that will jUt out .. · He said the school expectS ~' 'th . td' one story. " flrOJ~ the walls to provide quiet have freshman and sop'homore·, office win d ow a t , e ou 001' Included hi the, plant are an·. study places for. students. .' confusion. . ,; basketball;. baseball' and track ,P~int and Wallpaper "What's the plumber's name?" '874-seat auditOrIum, a gymna Throughout the. school, named teams this year. sium that will seat nearly 1,000 for the Most Rev. James L. Con Dupont Paint . a man's voiced called, his voice speCtators--UWhen we get the ' .nollY, ,Bishop of Fall; River,' Football? He shook his head, echoing in the long corridor~ bleachers," Father said, sui'Vey- there is color and there· is .Ught, and grinned. "Next year?" he cor. Middle Sf;. "Will the plumber please come ,.'" . . 422 Acush. Ave. asked. Forinal dedication of the 10 the office?" the loudspeaker ing the vast empty spaces that ,Skylit Roems . . . will house two basketball courts Cinder, block walls are painted new school is scheduled for, . ~t.:..t New Bedford system blared. :. -a cafeteria, activities rooms pastei tones and the asphalt tile "som~ time" next ·rnonth. ... PARKING " Father Cornellier shook bis and a100-seat lecture hall, a flooring is in matching ehe'cke.r~' Bishop Connolly, who offici"; Rear of Store head, "It's one thing after an bookstore and a circular ,library board squares. ated at 'groundbreaking cere ,other." building reached throug~,a,short 'Skylights in many of' the' Jesuit lFaeult.Y passageway from the main, rooms provide a combination of The young Jesuit, a native Off eorridor. . natural and artificial lighti.~g. ' .. Lowell and a graduate of Bos Workinem RlIIsh The long corrid.ors, tha~" J;lOW , ton College, was, a member of " " are resounding to the, trampiIig " the faciJlty of Cheverus High The d~y before, wo~kmen of studerit feet, were quiet the 'School in Portland,' Me:, before ~e~e rushmg W complet«: m~tal- day before school openedi' A 944 County Street being assigned 10 the ~edgling ~atio~ of seats in the. lludltor~u~., custodian was.' pushing a wide NEW BEDFORD. MASS. Fall River school, .which oPened ~oles had been drIlled. in one .broom along the grouvc,l tIo~r, I '. last year in temporary quarters SIde of the ~~ge area .and sup-...hall, trying. to keep up with dirt WY 2-6618 at St. William's Center ~ in' Fall ports etched 'dIagonal lme!! from being tracked in from' 'the River.. . " fro~t 10 back. In .the :rear of, th~t " sid¢. " .': ('.' . He holds a master's degree in ~c~on,. B~me 8!ats 'Il\'er~,'~ Young' future' priests-;-Jesuit philosophy and ·.'hopes" next pJa~. " ' ,. ,.,' '. . <. .scholastics, addressed,. by, "stu-. year to' have a master's in mod , "Th~y haven't eve~ d~lled the. dents as "Mister'.' ,~r·, ~·.~ir.,~ em languages. h~les 1JIl the. other SIde, Fattu~r . Father Cornellier said _ were Rector of the new Jesuit com SaJd, .explaming ,the accurate .'working with sleeveS 'rolled up munity is Very Rev. Charles l.. . J!larkmg, !lysteJ!lll. ~e<;e~$ary ,~ at'any job that cameal'ong. ' ..' ....... , Dunn, S.J., formerly dean of stu 1\Irn blank fl~r ~I!a;ce I.n 1o, ev~n . All college' graduates with dent activities at Holy Cross rows of seating. '. . .\. ' In eorridors and nooks and College. . crarmies throughout the' vast 'RESIDENTIAL
In Switzell'land The Connolly faculty":" "We have a 15-1 teacher'student ra structure, men were 'uricrating Paul S. Murphy, Centerville, SCHOOLS. CHURCHES tio," Father Comellier reported, furniture and equipment, steel son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. lockers and books. . ' . -eomprises nine priests, six Murphy, is among Georgetown INDUSTRIAL • BUNKER scholastics, young men prepar With his 210 studenis due 10' University students spending ing for the priesthood, and one arrive the next morning" Father their junior year at the Univer D ADSON OIL BURNERS ! brother. Cornellier was still "hoping" for sity of Fribourg,. Switzerland. He Complete Heating Installations j All members of the faculty delivery of cafeteria chairs' in is now studying French and Ger 24 Hour Oil Burner Service , have graduate degrees; time for the opening assembly. 'man in Europe in preparation for the mid-October start of Leafing through architect's It is fortunate he had made university classes. The 10-month drawings of the new educational alternate plans to split the in plan~ "athell' explained the com coming students into two groups Fribourg academic 'year offers students the opportunity to ob- . pie]! is more than 900 feet longin the lecture hlllll. -.rhree football fields long," he Cardboard cartons,· tall ones· serve ;European economic, poli,t New Bedford ical and social condition~ as wen . 640 Pleasant Street. darifJed-etretching iD' a long and squat Olllles, were every as to improve langu~ge skillS. BDe ..... 1M tiu'ee-ato.,- Jesuii' , :where. 'JL.,
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CENTER
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CONRAD SEGUIN'l
BO~~i~~~~~~Y j:
out:'"
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FUEL OIL
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16
Supports Human Relations Unit
THE ANCI"~- ,,!)iocese ofF~1l River-Thurs. Sept. 14, 1967
,
Students R®@JMOlf~ ~ntel~®~frQE@~. V;ew '@f [f@~frh
Says
l@fr~rru
From "Social Revolution in th~ New Latin America"
Edited ~)y John J. Considine, M.M.
European and North American students are very dif ferent from Latin American students, writes Rodrigo Guer rero. These differences many times complicate our efforts to understand and help each other. Our students study against a backdrop of our understand clearly the injustices problems, of revolution and , and the problems of the sociey socIal change. These are in which they live. Usually they things that you ,don't talk react in a strong way against
-
of in the United states. These, problems are reflected in the stlident field in o very special way. They con ~ribute to the differences be tween our stu dents. We need lllot judge these di:fferences. But we must discuss and understand them. The Latin American stu dent is a priv ileged person. In any country where the level of illiteracy rnriges from 30 per cent to 50 lPe'i- cent, those people who have IlOme education and specifically e university degree are distinct JIy'privileged. Special Class This education makes the stu cllel~ts a, special class in our 56 cie,ty. In Colombia; for _ example, on~Y', one tenth of one per cent ef. those who enter primary ochool reach the university. To achieve this level, they must overcome many handicaps, espe cially economic. Many of them have to begin 00 work very young, some at about 12 years of age, to support tlIteir family which can mean as , many as 8 or 10 p<:ople. They 'have to overcome the inherent Jl}l·()ble.ms of Qur schools where, textbooks and the techniques of, education are not well devel-" oped. ,The student who survives these obstacles and reaches the Q4niversity is a pl'ivileged person. this, is not the situation in the more highly or.ganized societies of the United ,States and Europe. Th~ree.dueatio,n is a possibility fo; t,h,e, maj!>rity of the, people., The only obstacle to, progreso fIlormally is personal limitation. Accol'ding to CEPAL (Eco Illomic Conference for Latin America) iir'195'7 only ten per «lent of the population in Argen tina betw'een 19 and 22 years, the normal age for university students, were enrolled in the Argentine universities. In the same year this percent age was two per cent in the Dominican Republic and four tenths of one per cent in Haiti. In Europe the figures were well over 30 per' cent. It is ab vious then that we have a small number of people who reach the university.. and even fewer stay there. , ' This fact is sufficient to make a social leader of the Latin American student even before ¢he conclusion of his studies. Student Radicals A further and more -crucial cause of student involvement is that our students,' receiving a' better professional training than ¢heir fellow citizens, therefore
Honor Cardinal SCRANTON (NC)-'I'he Uni versity of Scranton will confer an henorary' doctorate of laws on 'Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of Washington at its convocation Sept. 22. Cardinal O'Boyle is a native or-Scranton and a gradu ate of St. Thomas College, now the University of Scranton.
those injustices and problems. They, have the. time to be in volved and they perceive the I NEW SECRETARY: problems. They .know that they are privileged and they sense Archbishop Sergio Pignedoli, a moral obligation to help solve former Apostolic Delegate to the problems. In many ,cases Canada, has assumed his they engage in public affairs duties as Secretary of the eve'n before leaving the univer Cohgregation for the Propa sity. This 'is not the case with a gation of the Faith in Rome. student from a developed so NC Photo. ciety where injustices and prob lems are not so striking or I:!. 0 ffi) n [l, severe. In this type of cultl!re ~!p>[p)©DUilU'~ [[®U@U~ a student can dedicate all his tr 0 0 duties at the university with @ ~@[]'i)i)[]'i)i)D$~D@[J1l the intention of rC5haping so TALLAHASSEE (NC)-Bish ciety once his stud!1es are com op Coleman F. Carroll of Miami pleted. is one of 30 Floridans appointed This is a general view of the by Gov. Claude Kirk as mem situation of most Latin Ameri bers of new Commission for can students. From' a Catholic Quality Education in 'Florida. point of view there are some ad-, The bishop is the only mem ditional problems. bel' of the clergy named to the One of the most serious prob- commission, which is charged lems in Latin - America is the with producing a program to massive lack of faith among stu- make "Florida first in education den~s. They forsake reli~on by 1975." durmg the last .years of hIgh Other members include college school and, re~aJ.n a~art from -_and university presidents, edu the Church durmg their p~o~es- cators, labor leaders and busi':' sional and postgraduate trammg. ness and professional men and In spite 'of our homogeneous . t . L t· A women. Catholic socle y In a In mer-, As 2 535 public school teachers ican co,:ntries, s~udents almo~t seeking highe~ salaries submitted automatically begm to lose their their resignations in Broward faith. The majority of. our s~u- County, Florida's, governor, in dents aba~don the ancient fal~h a 30-minute statewide TV pro a~d lapse m~~ ~ type of. a.gnostr- gram, called for abolishment of Clsm, or 'POSItiVism. RelIgIOn ~- the elected state superintendent sumes a cultural value for cnt and Board of Education and re ical, detached study. placement by an appointed non , Not Intellectual political .citizen board; paying Religion instruction in our teachers on merit, not by years co'untries is not adapted to the of service; alternate methods of intellectual level. It is presented . paying, for, education; consolida ifl ,a chil'dish way, based on fool tion of county school systems; iog rather ,than reflection and higher minim.umsalaries for thought. teachers by 1969; a statewide A student reaching intellectual purchasing system and business';' maturity demands a solid base like procedure for all schools; fOI' his beliefs. Unable to dis and' constant evaluation' of aU cover such, he drops his commit schools in Florida on the basis of ment. We need to develop a pas achievement. tOI'al program for students to solve this problem before it is Religion Teachers'
too late.' Most of our graduate students Attend Institute
do not practice their Catholic NEW YORK (NC) -Experts religion. .,Even those from the in sociology, anthropology, the strongest Catholic backgrounds ology and psychology are meet lose their faith when they be ing with secondary school edu gin to study. cators involved in religious edu Further postgraduate training cation, at Fordham University for Latin American students in this week. this country, and especially in The ,Institute for Teachers of Euwpe, is often not beneficial. High School Religion is directed, In some cases it is certainily by Father Joseph A. Novak, S.J.. harmful. A number o~ students di rector of Fordham's religious who come to North America and education department. Europe have serious religious Father John M. Culkin, S.J.. problems. Religious crises are caused by_ director of Fordham's Center fQllr' the new patterns of morality. Communications, will lecture oa film study. The Christian Study Many Latin American girls, un accustomed to th~ American of Man will be 'the topic of ideas of freedom, without the Father James J. DiGiacomo, S.J.. protection of society and parents, chairman of the religion'depart ment at Brooklyn Pl'epartorY become victims of pressures be School and a Fordham faculty yond their comprehension. Many of the Latin American member. students are no longer Catho New Library lics when they come here. They are not practicing CUholics. TARRYTOWN (NC)-Francfe Nevertheless, there .is Cathol Cardinal Spellman ,of New York icism in their- hearts' and if they win dedicate Marymount Col are appwached, or spoken to lege's new library Saturday, and have some kind of lectures Sept. 23. The $1,475,000 project or courses in what Catholicism was ,started' in November, 1965. means very many of them will The building has a seating come back to their faith out of pacity of 503, and a book capac this program. ity of 175,000.
NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch bishop Philip M. Hannan of New Orleans has strongly supported establishment of a city human relations committee, and said th'e archdiocese will furnish two persons to work with such a committee: Many people in New Orleans, he said, "need housing, need better education, equal employ ment opportunities and adequate training for employment op portunities, better recreation facilities and encouragement to use properly 'their right of suf frage." "These needs are pressing," he said, "they need our immedi ate attention." An official human relations committee would demonstrate the "active concern" of the city for these people and their needs, he added. The archbishop then named
two persons who would be avail-, able to work with the committee in the areas of housing and hu man relations. They are William Connick, director of an arch diocesan - sponsored low - rent housing project, and Mrs. Kel11 dall Vick. a human relations expert. New Orleans Mayor Victor Schiro has named a steering committee-which includes six clergymen, among them the archbishop and two priests-to form the city committee.
~~11'@ \¥(Qjpp@
[F>!hlo
ST. LOUIS (NC)-:i\ chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national hon ors fra~ernity" will be installed at St. Louis University here, Dr. James Collins, philosophy pro fessor and chairman of the uni versity's Phi Beta Kappa faculty committee, has announced.
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'U'1IIlf! IIIlDLY FATNER'Q MISBIDIlJ Aillll '\I'@ '\I'llilll laIRIGlNVAL CtliURCR
HAPPINESS 18 GIVING A CHILD A
CHANCE
You hold It In your lap, cuddle It In your armg, give It a gentle kiss_ The baby laughs, you hug It and suddenlY you smile. How can you not I~e a baby? • . • How can you refuse It milk and medicine, even If you go hungry Instead' · •• Only once In all our 18 countri,es have I heard a native Sister in an orphanage complalnl Evenings you see the Sisters hand-washing diapers by the hundreds because there are no washing machines. You see them making coats and dresses out of rags, "walking'.' the babies, who are sick, putt/ng soles on worn·out shoes. correctIng school~paperlJ for to'!'orrow's class. • •• When food Is scarce the Sisters ~t last. Do you wonder the orphans love them? ••• Hap" plly, you too can have an OI'phan's lova, simply by 'adopting' " boV or girl by mall. We'U send you the child's namo and photograph, you may write to him (or liar) whenever you wisll, and the Sisters will keep you Il'lformed8S- often ,as,' they can ehout hll. progresl~ All your child need., - for food. cIothlnlJ, schooling., 'and meclJcal .,.,-18 $10.• monNl, l... than • smoker pays for cfprettesl ••• Can you pan up this appor· tvnfty to rove? MaH the coupon below with $10 for on. month'. support, aM you'll "'p ,b8l'o tIIr. tunrPt You'" inow aMn,. • chffd •
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INDIA:
STICKS AND ,I1'ONE8.
FOR GOD
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C At Enpndlyur's Boys' 'Town In India our 155' orphan boys have no place to pray. $1.950 will buIld apemtanent chapel., In memory of your loved ones (your children and grandchlldren?). Nama the cl)apel for your favorite saint. e $2.000 will enable Sister Macrlna In MlcaYe. India, to replace with a stone building the mls· erable sheds now housing the Bethany Sisters' llchool. Most of the studentu are Jacobltes, and a new building Is II 'must' If the school Is to rBoQpen. Write to us.
If. never too late to remember children In your YOUR will. The Holy Father knows, where children are
WILLI the neediest. Simply tell your lawyer our leg,1 CATHOLIO NIAIt IAIT WeanRI AUOClAnON. '
BABIES? title:
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Telephone: ali/YUkon tl-S840
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Canada Demegate Says Religion Big News
THE ANC' Thurs., Sepi. 14, 1967
New r:[L~~@~®!phia
Sdln@@r:s: (Q) [9) Ge [J1
OTTAWA (NC)-Religion is hot news today and is be ing talked about everywhere, the new Apostolic Delegate to Canada said on his arrival here. He found this to be good. Archbishop Emanuel Clarizio also said that controversy and discussion of religion and the Church should be encouraged. It is better to question openly than to follo'w blindly, v." " '1ut thinking, he reasoned. The 56-year-old representative of Pope Paul VI in this country said he plans to see as much of Canada as he can. He is starting on a two week tour to meet and talk with the archbishops in an the provinces, visiting 12 centers across the country and stopping off for a visit to Expo 67 in Mon treal. Good Relations The archbishop said the Sec ond Vatican Council has had the effect of bringing to public at tention the good relations which have existed "for years" between Catholics and persons of other faiths. It was noted that his res idence in Ottawa is a prime ex ample of ecumenism, as he has a Lutheran doorman .md a Calvin ist gardener. He said he thought the Vati can's decision to set up a com mission concerned with non believers is an important step. "Non-believers have existed be fore, but no one in the Church has been in contact with them," he said. Archbishop Clarizio succeeds Archbishop Pignedoli, who left here Aug. 27, after a thl'ee-year stay, to take up duties in the curia in Rome. Archbishop Cla-' rizil) bas served the Holy See in diplomatic' posts in Washigton, Paris, Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan and, the Dominican Re public before coming here.
17
PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The
last high schools planned in the
archdiocese of Philadelphia's
five-year secondary school ex
pansion program opened here
this Fall.
Named for the first American
bishop, the two Archbishop
Carroll High Schools are de
signed to accommodate a com-·
hined 'enrollment of 3,000 stu
dents, 1,500 boys and 1,500 girls
each. Only freshmen and soph
omore classes will attend the
schools this 'year - and almost
700 students are expected in the
schools' first year of operation.
The Brothers of the Christian
Schools will administer and
staff the boys' school, together
with the lay faculty.
Four communities of Siste.·s
Sisters of St. Joseph, Sisters of{
Mercy, Sisters of the Holy Child
Jesuls, and Sisters, Servants oj! the Immaculate Heart of Mary will be joined by lay teachers on the faculty of the girls' higl1l school. "With the completion of Arch bishop Carroll High Schools, w~ do not contemplate any addi tional high schools in the fore seeable future," said Msgr. Ed ward T. Hughes, archdiocesan
superintendent of schools.
"We recognize that some local
communities do not have hig1ll
school facilities as convenient as they would like and as close as we would like to have them, but
there are now high schools illl
every area of the archdiocese and our financial limitations wm not permit us to expand further."
INTERIOR 01'" ST. PETER'S CHAPEL A T SAN FRANCISCO NAVAlL SHIPYARD
Fr. Galland, Navy Chaplain, WinsPraise From 'Parishioners' in San Francisco "I've never met a more dedicated ma n than ollr very own Cmdr. B. R. Galland, USN, Catholic chaplain at Mare Island. He alwa~'s has time to lil~'ten to anyone's prob lems; runs his chapel like a regular paris h with even a CCD program for the children. "He teaches the teenagers and interes ted adults doctrines of the Catholic faith. He also trains his own altar lain of the Vallejo Council, boys. These are only a few
Knights of Columbus. of the many tasks he per The chaplain says that St. forms. His job requires an
abundance of patience and ttn derstanding with a great love of God, something we mothers surely need. "I think what I admire most in him is his love and under standing of children. And our children all love and think the world of him. "This is a man who gives so much of his time and self to us. TEHUANTEPEC (NC)-Bishop '~ bless you, Father Galland, and aU others- like you. God's Jesus Alba Palacios of Tehuan tepec told newspapers here that people need you." The above letter to the editor the Mexican bishops are consid appeared in the Vallejo Times ering the ordin,ation of lay dea Herald of California, the news cons. paper serving the San lrrancisco "There is a strong possibility Bay Naval Shipyard al·ca. It was' of having lay deacons in Mexi from a very satisfied :'parish can parishes," Bishop, Alba de ioner" of Rev_ Benoit R. Galland, clared. "We already have affirm CMDR.B. R. GALLAND ative answers to our request to Fall River native wh'o has been a U. S. Navy chaplain since 1944 the Holy See." He added tbat at the recent with the exception of a six year I!l civilian parish" with added iluties including office adminis period when he returmld to ser meeting of the bishops' confer tration for both Protestant and vice in the Diocese. ence a detailed report was Rlade Catholic chapels. Counseling, he Varied Career on the ways and means of traiJ\ notes, takes a large portion· of Ordained in 1940, Father Gal ing lay deacons. his eight hour office day, and he Mexico, with some 38.5 million land was a curate in Notre Dame supervises three other Navy parish, Fall River, before enter people, has 7,600 pl'iests, or' a chaplains. He is presently plan- ratio of 5,000 persons per priest. ing the Navy. He was in chap ning construction of a new Deacons would help in parish lain school and served in the Admiralty Islands of the South Chapel and Sunday school build work, education and some litur Pacific before returning to tfie ing. He also serves the civilian gical ceremonies. population of the area as chapDiocese and work in St. Hya cinth's Church, New Bedford from 1944 to 1951. . He returned to the Navy in 1951 and his assignments since HAVERFORD (NC) The, then have included 13 months in WASHINGTON (NC) - Tb e Catholic Library. Association Japan, service aboard various president of the American Fed ships, shore duty in Key West, eration of Teachers has proposed headqual'ters here in Pennsyl Fla., Quantico, Va., Kodiak, i hat vania announced the 1968 Cath minimum educational olic Book Week will be held Alaska and his present station 'at standards be required of alA the San Francisco shipyard. Febl'Uary 18-24 with the theme schools receiving federal aid 141 Father Galland has earned education.
"Multi Media - Multi Vistas." tliree promotions and now holds
Charles Cogen, the labor UR Since its inception 28 years ion head, madc his proposal m agu, Catholic Book Week has the rank of Commander. He says his· work in San Fran .an opening address to the feder been designed to focus attention cisco is similar to that of rlHulinc ation's annual conventif>n here. on good books. He suggested that such stand
The Catholic Library Associa ards include a pupil limit per
tion, sponsor of Catholic Book Week, has been. joined by the St. Mary's Catholic Women's class of 30, ceilings on' teacAeFs'
workloads, regulations OR li
Catholic Press Association, the Club of Mansfield will meet at I brary services, and the eventual National Council eif Catholic tonight in the parish hall. Rus Men, the National Counctl 01. sell Curry, Boston entertainer, establishment of an $8,500 min Catholic Women, and the Na will speak on the toi?ic ''There's imum teacher salary. Such
ilonal Office for Decent Litera Rhythm in Your Bones." All standards are, necessary, he !l8id,
ture in promoting the aims ef pa~ish women are invited to at 19 prevent the waste of federal
Catholic Book Weck. funds on poor education. *end and join the club.
Bishops Consider Use of Deacons
Library Association Plans Book 'Week
'Proposes Federal School Standards
Peter's Chapel at the Naval Shipyard is unique in that it ill the oldest· Navy chapel in the United States and the first mil Stud~nt itary chapel to be used for both WORCESTER (NC)-Edwaflfl Protestant and Catholic services. H. Lloyd, III, of Weston, Mass., "There in the midst of a euca ill the first fourth generation lyptus grove it stands-this Navy student to attend Holy Cross Col-' chapel-church," writes one of lege here. He was among the .)]5 ' those who wOI'shiJj)S there. 'incoming freshmen who :regis-' "Apart, and yet l!O near to the tered for the elass of 1971. houses around about it; so near Lloyd's father, Edward Ill. to the shops, the ships, the bar racks of the men. Its great rose Lloyd, Jr., was graduated m window mirrors back the light 1M2; his grandfather, Edward ,)J[. Lloyd, in 1907, and his great- . of setting sun; its steeple lies r half hidden in the wind-swayed Il andfather, George H. Lloyd, iI:l ' branches of the trees, the steeple )650, from Holy Cross, wNeh ., eondueted by the Jesuits. cross-crowned. llts summoning bell indicates it as a harbor of refuge to those who come iJ:l from the sea, an anchorage, good 01 II "STOIAlIC holding ground, III place where • 10 year Uvu.1 weary men may ll'eSt before they IIONTHLY D£POStJS ~ back to the sea." Father Galland is the latest ill a long line of ehaplains whe 101ICE ACCOtIHTS have made' it possible for wor shippers to write thus about the II 1fGVl.M chapel. year UVINCS
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l'Il"QlITtlS~@l[® rf@ ctr~ ,I Into A~l[M@~0~Y, i "! Prenate (lJJ~~e§ '\
W ASHINGWN (NC)",,-Final results of a survey con
ducted among U.S. Cathomc clergy indicate a heavy ma
jority favor a firm policy by the U.S. government to win the war in Vietnam. There are some 60,000 bishops
and priests Jinthe U.S., and
the poll questioned 48,000 ing to the poll results, favor re
lying "primarily on United of them. Replies were :re military sfrength to keep ceived from more than 7,000 States peace, rather than on Soviet
-a 14 per cent return.
Final results of the poll were announced here by Father Dan iel Lyons, S.J., chairman of the Free Pacific Association. The poll was conducted for the ass() ciation by Catholic Polls, Inc., of New York. Eight questions concerning Vietnam, Red China and U. S. defenses were asked. The Free Pacific Association is a 10-year-old, non-partisan in terfaith, international group working for peace, freedom and justice for Asia, with headquar ters in New York. Asked the direct question: "Should the United States adopt a firm policy of winning the war in Vietnam?" 6,252 indicated "yes" and 927 "no" on their bal lots. , , The poll disclosed more than 70 per cent of the replies oppose admitting Red China to the United Nations (2,168 "yes" and 5,212 "no"), and are against increasing present United States trade with communist natioJUl (2,165 "yes" and 4,996 "no"). Almost nine out of 10, accord-
19
THE ANCHOR'~I Thurs.. Sept. 14, 1967
Clergy Poll Favors firm u~ S. Policy in V~etnam
,~'
JOLIET (NC) - BishOJD
Romeo Blanchette of Joliet nrges greater effort in trans~ · lating faith into an actual
promises" (6,326 "yes" and 824 "no"). Just under 85 percent favor letting South Vietnam mine the harbor of Haiphong to cut off Viet Cong supplies from communist nations (5,876 "yes" and 1,,098 "no"). A bare majority - slightly more than 50' pet cent~pposed cOJ)tinuing,the pre!1ent U. S. pol-' icy of not using Free Chinese troops from Taiwan to help fight the communists in Vietnam (3,381 "yes" and 3,495 "no"). A majority of 84 per cent fa vored building defenses against a communist missile attack 5,755 "yes" and 1,135 "no". Ballots were mailed to every bishop and priest in the 1966 Of ficial Catholic j)irectory by Catholic Polls:-About 12,000 of the 60,000 ballots sent out were returned by the U. S. Post Office
Department marked "insufficient
address". This left a polling base
of 48,000.
The Pere Marquette Press of
Alton, nt, which printed the
ballots, also tabulated the replies received from Catholic Polls.
,
,
i
'~I
ity-making it "more and more II living faith." The Illinois prelate who waD principal concelebrant of a MaSl;l in St. Raymond's cathedral here, said: "All of us who labor in some way or another, whether 8lJ Religious or laity, whether in the field of labor or management, are called upon to do something here in our area, and now, in the year 1967." In this connection, the bishop cited certain problems which" he said, "need everyone's atten tion and cooperation." These in_. eluded: better education for all in the community; equal oppor tunity for employment, and elimination of discrimination in housing. "We exhort all in labor and management to study these
problems and to join with other
leaders in working out solutions
that will be effective, lasting and
uplifting for the dignity of all
men," Bishop Blanchette said.
"It is only when each one doetJ his part that we can say that we are listening to the voice of OUE , faith."
DOUBLE PltOMOTION: S~nior Catholic chaplain for Air Force servicemen serving in' Southeast A!'lia has recent European, ly been promoted'by both' theChtircJi' and the Air Force; · Aft'fh!ll(Cks '[j'enatl'~gs he is now Monsignor (Colonel) ThornasM; Jellico, seen
, a ng~r offering Mass in the base' chapel' of, Tan 'Soil Nhut air Amltfo- War ~(f@Uil<cl1
OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) _
"Catholics in general are ex- 'base, Saigon. Msgr. Jellico" is a..prie;stof the diocese of , An anonymous group in a news posed ~ a barrage of journalism, :' Charleston S.c. NC PhotO '.
Viet Official Cons;dJers COlthoDics BI~nd to R®d D
SAIGON (NC)-"Many Eur, opean Catholics seem quite blind to the communist danger threat- radioimd television which, in-' ening South Vietnam," Educa- tentiori31ly, ,or "tmintentionally, tion Minister Philip Nguy\'!n vail- does' no~ ,reJ!lee!, the, real facts Tho said here on his return from about,tbe' war in ViE:tna'm:':, ' Europe. ' ' ' I do Ilot mean that all' the He had just made a 19...day pr~ss ,and' 'TV people are c'om journey that took him to munis'ts... 'Bui' lhave the'imptes neva, Brussels, Paris and ';Rome. "~on thaf,tlle intE'..J'nati6nal coni He headed the Vietnamese deie- munist ,~or~anizil~ion ha~~ peen gation attending the Geneva very succes11ful in steeI:ing pub conference of the International lie opiriion' illl the direction it Bureau of Education, which is wants. sponsored by the United NatioJUl This iii done so cleveriy that Educational, Scientific lind CuI.. many intelligent persons do not tural Organization (UNESCO). recognize that they are being Representatives of some 80 coun.. influenCed. No intellectual will tries and the Vatican took part. admit it. But r have met some In Rome, Dr. Tho was received who obviously had been-shall by Pope Paul VI in private au- l[ say?-brain-washed. dience. "On thi~ :front, public opinion,
the communists so far are more Born ~ years ago in True: successful than we are." Giang (formerly Ben Tre), south of Saigon, Dr. Tho is the first No reporter for any Catholic Catholic to be minister of 00- newspaper or review sought an ucation in the Republic of Viet- interview with Dr. Tho in any nam since it was established in of the European capitals he vis':' 1955 by the late President Ngo ited, Ro~~ included. ' dinh Diem. SOrPnsinll' Theories steer Public Opinion In general,' he found no reall No stranger to Europe, he is awareness' of what is happening o graduate of the medical fa~ul::'- , under the' cOmmunist regime in ty of the University of Paris. >, NO~'Viebi~In;:}j:uropean Cath "I found Catholics sympathetic'. 9li'~,' 'he ~ajlii; do, 'not seem to toward Vietnam, but many of ee>nsider whaf 'would happen if them do not understand the the communists succeeded in Vietnamese problem," he told taking over South Vietnam. NC News Service here. He heard some surprising the ories advanced' by Catholics: for blstance, that the U.S. does not want the war to ehd or that'the'~ U.S. insists on impossible con Mas~ ditions fop .negotiations" PHItADELPiuA.... (N'C) ...:... A "Most of the people I talked Mass entirely in La'tiil' wi'll be to didn't want.to ~o into detail," the minister said. "They just offered each Sunday in the ca thedral of, ,Sts." Peter and Paul have 0 )itE1~Eiral attitude.~ " here. This, he believes, makes them Msgr. James T. Dolan, pastor, easily susceptible to communist persuasion. The a'tti'tude, m his' said John Cardinal Krol of Phil adelphia gave permission for-'the opinion, is partly a result C!f a Mass in response to I€ nurnbelt' o:f iraditionat" Eliioplian: " COhtpiei reqlj'gsts. " ' regarding the United States. The Latin Mass will be offer.. There are Europeans whd'frankly led 'hi'll1e' main 'body of the 00 recognize what the U.S. has done thedral at the same time a Span.. iIor Euro~ during ood 11ftell' ish-language Mass !s being ofi World War n. Many, however, refuse to sell Ifered in the adjoining Chapell mU it or, while enjoying i~ Cl<f Our Lady of the Blessed Sac rament. liruits, seem to resent ~t.
Ge-:
Schedules :Sunday in Latin ,
,
, .
Peace Mission, 'Two, Nobel ,Prize Winners Head To ;Me12t~,'Parties .nyo~,vedl "
OSLO (NC)---:A peaCe mission headed by two Nobel prize win ners is slated to meet" all parties involved in the Vietnam conflict, the Norwegian li'oreign Ministry has announced here. ' Father Dominique, Pire, O.P.. of Belgium aild philip ,Noel Baker of Great Britain, Nobel peace prize winners, will bea(l the delegation.
'College, Lauds Pope For Turkey ,Visit CHESTNUT HILL (NC) - A cablegram sent to Pope Paul VJl, signed by more than 500 faculty, staff and students at Boston Col lege here, expressed'their appre ciation for his "historic visit tG Orthodox Patrhirch>AtheQagoras l! of COnStantinopl~'in Ista'nbul, 'JruTkey. "The university community of ' J39ston College expresses its ad.. miration and affectionate grati tude :for the magnanimous spirit of your rec~nt visit to o\,!r be loved brethren of the Eastern Churcpe~.
We 'are grateful' also 'for" 'the i~piration of your devotion to the Mother of God 'at 'Ephesus, so filled with joyful memories for our Churches. We beg your paternal and apos~olic blessing," the message stated.
'CORREIA & SO'NS
ONlE $liOI? $tiI0PPING tC1EJi\II1I"IE~ @ @
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V;~tl[j1JtOlm'"
T~' governments of North ~d
South Vietnam, the Viet COI'lg and United state~ authorities have expressed a willingness to meet, the delegation:, a foreign office spokesman said. ", ' '
paper 'ad attacked for the see · ond time the stand of Bishop Victor' J. Reed of Oklahoma City-Tulsa against stepping up 'the war in Vietnam by the U.S. The group, using the name -Oklahoma Gatholic Laymen's ,!Association iit an ad in the · Sunday 91dahoman opposed the -bishOp's 'support Qf Negotiation Now, a pational '-organization seelting a halt to U.S. bombing of North ,Vietnam and favoring peace eff(lrts.
No date, he said, had. y~t been ,!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIrg, seHor the delegation's departure § ~RY CLEANING § but he said that it will, be some time this year. § and § A group of Norwegians.origi-·§ FUR STORAGE § nally suggested the idea of D § §
peace initiative by Nobel peace . § § prize winners. Their suggestion '.~_= ~I ~_ was made to the Nobel commitfj~ teewhicb is composed of mem- § "llA A" C h ., § § "".......... 0 annet ..,~reot El..
benl of the Norwegian parlia- § 1l'aunton _ 822~1I61 §i ment. , "In, March, Father Pire and . ~lIIl11l11l1l1l1l11l11l11l11l1l1l1illllllllllllllllllllllllmlll'§ Noel Baker attended Ii, meeting " he;re,-·to. discuss the ,project;
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,THE 'ANCHORThurs., Sept. 14, 1967
Chicago ' ~re~ate Approwes Pub~~c Sclho@~ Pi@n
'-.M.
fincluding' Sa~urdGY$ ..
of the East
CHICAGO (NC) - Auxil iary Bishop William' E. Mc Manus of Chicago, superin , tendent of the city's Ca,tho . tic schools~ has announced ap proval of a plan calling for iffi.. mediate efforts to·mesh progl;arns <tf the area's Catholic schools with the activities ofihe Chicago. public school system. commenting on the plan proposed by public school super intendent James E. Redmond, the bishop said: "My reaction is ()ne 'of admiration for the' re port's wisdom, its tone,' its. re straint and its frankness. It calls ior vigorous efforts to enlist the <cooperation of the non:"public schools in a massive program for . . :oocial integration. "Our response," Bishop Mc Manus added,' "is to welcome the recommendation, and to measure (in board delibemtions) the 'an10unt of cordiality wito. which we can respond." 'Tile Redmond ;plan, which has been adopted by the Chicag<t , !JOard of education, calls fot": '
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, Busing Program Estab~ishment of racial quotalJ.
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, to achieve racial balance,
t~·.
Building of educational com plexes along' the waterft"ont at Lake Michigan-on piers or io. special parks-and on the outer rim of the city, to enroll up to 2lO,000 students each, all of whom would be bused to school. An immediate redistribution , program for teachers to upgrade , the quality of education in cen '&ral city schools and to insure :l . balance of teachers in all schools by, race and by educational , tiainiI~g. . Immediate efforts to mesh cer tain activities of the public achools with 'those of the school system of the' Catholic at'chdio cese of Chicago, aria the estao:" 'lishment of an exchange pro gram between city and suburbam llChool systems. '
..
..:....
-
"
'Love Thy NeighllDor'
Creation of high - stan.dard -magnet'" schools in the inner <r:ity, in non-residential areas, which would insist on racial bal-, ance even of school rooms have 'to be' kept empty and which would give training in, special liubjects 'above normal SdlOOl standards to attract white stu dents. ' . Teaching' teams, captained by highly qualified master teachers, 1Iior schools in the inner city. ' Bishop McManus, following his J?raise of the Redmond plan, admitted that some of the loud est opposition to the plan has leome from Catholic parents whose children attend Catholic schools, '''1 admit the fact," he said, "but I will not attempt to probe the motivation." Then he added: "The clergy, carefuily examining their 'Own consciences, must intensify and make more effective their preaching of the' traditional gospel of 'Love thy neighbor'."
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IF~IEIE
y eaIl'D@li'il~ Synod SANTIAGO (NC)-The Santi,.. ago archdiocese will hold~ the first of a one-year series of meetings to apply the directives of the Second Vatican Council , to Chile in concrete ways.' Tile ~ synod will be attended by about 500 priests, religious and lay people, "Some call it the biggest religious event in Chilean his tory," said Raul Cardinal Silv:a , Henriquez, S.D.B., "but my hope is that it will 'be' the most deci sive for'the future."
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