•
Constitution Sets Educational Policy
'Bishop ConnoUy' Approves Authority Guidelines
selled the Education Board In the drafting of the new consti tution. He then submitted it to the Ordinary. The Fall River Education Board is similar in most respects to other advisory committees being established in tQe various
sets forth cleady the duties of the Board which comprises seven members of the laity and six priests from aU sections of the Diocese. ' Rev. Dr. Patrick J. O'Neill,su~ perintendent of the diocesan schools, worked with and coun-
Most Rev. J,ames L. CoR n'Olly, Bishop, of Fall Rivey;, announced today he na6 ap proved a oonstitution fOll" the 'newly created DiocesQn Board of Education. The School Board COIlStitUtton
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Sees of the United States and it is ,in keeping with the pro nouncement of Vatican Council II urging a greater voice of the laity in church affairs. The, con stitution assu.'res conformity in the operation of all schools. Turn to Page Thirteen
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Qualification For'A Good CeD Teacher
Is To Be Just 'Ordi.nary Parishioner~
0
The
ANCHOR
V©Uo lOu
~@. ~1
• ©
1966 'he Anchor
. By Dorothy Eastman ' The phone rings. The housewife answe'rs and the voice on the other end of the lins says "Good morning, Jean. This is Mary Smith, the chairman of teachers for our parish COD. We've been wondering if you'd like to be a teacher for one of our classes thiS! year." A stunned silence. What Je;:tn 'answers to that question on this bright Fall morn ing will affect profoundly But the odds are that the an is praying very hard not only her life, but the chairman in the pause, that the answer swer will be "No"-for a variety lives of many, many children' will be "Yes," because the need of reasons, all of them valid. These are busy days and a moth over 'the years. That teacher for teachers is great. ers work is all consuming. Her children are too. young or if they're older the housewirfe is going back to work. The men are just as busy. The business world drains them of all their time and energy. There's so little left for their own family-never mind a classroom of somebod~ else's children. Turn to Page Eighteen
$4.00 per Year PRICE lOe
LaSa~®liU'e' Superior P~ans Chur~~ Liturgy ProSJram
C C D to
Teo~~elT' Course
:On Doctrine
Rev. Donald Paradis, M.S. superior and director of Thta Salette Shrine in Attleboro, will present a series of 10 lilasses on the Vatican Council II Constitution on the Liturgy with which many changes in the Church today are identi fied. The New Bedford na
tive, a graduate of St. An
'thony's ,HighSchool, will
stress the major' Council doc uments,. interpretatiog them so all levels of the: faithful can understand and appreciate them. The LaSalette Father will be . gin the series on Wednesday , night, Oct. 5. AU area adults aloe invited to the "grass roots lever' series. The Attleboro Shrine director, a brother of recently ordained Rev. A. Paul Paradis, S.J., re ceived his theology degree at the Angelicum University in Rome. Turn to Page Fourteen
l' h e Confraternity 0 f Christian Doctrine of the Diocese of Fall River will present a basic 20 - week course of Doctrine and Meth ods for the teachers invol ved in various C.C.D. programs throughout the diocese. The :Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Director of the CCD, announced that this basic course will consist of one hour of Turn to Page Fourteen
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o
o
WIW. DONALD ll"ARAlnS. M.s.
Bishop hulorses Ext'ension Work Bishop 'Connolly has des fgna ted Sunday, Sept. 18, as Subscription Day for the (Catholic Church Extension Bociety magazine in aU parishes. Envelopes are to be brought tl> Church on Sunday or may I'1>e mailed directly to the Soci ety's address as written on the GIllvelope. On last Sunday, the following Retter from the Ordinary was read in all churches and chapels fm. the Diocese: Beloved in Christ: :WOII" over sixty years, the Cath 004: Church Extension Society Jms supported our Home Mis Turn to Page Two
o
PREPARING CCD PROGRAM: Seated, Mrs. Anna Con nors, CCD elementary teacher and Rev. Th'Omas F. Neilan, of St. Ann's Parish Raynham, Taunton Area CCD Director. Standing: Gary Cartwright, teacher in the high school religion program, and Leo Long, president of the executive . board in the Raynham parish.
Mourn" Death of Two ,Priests
0
During the past week two priests with a total of 102 ,years in the priesthood died. :Rev. Hugo E. DyHa, pastor emeritus of St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, a priest for 67 years and ~he Very Rev. James F. McMahon, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, Oak Bluffs, and dean of the Islands, serving the Diocese for 35 years, passed away 'during the week. Father DyUa, kmg a leader in Polish affairs here and abroad, received a 'special commendation from the Po
i
I
,I
P[i'®$~~t
OJ
lish Government-in-exile for his bitter attacks against Commu nism, His charitable works dur ing both World Wars and his protests against the injustices toward the Polish people also brought him recognition. Born in the Province of Silesie, Poland, the son of t the late Constantin and the late
. i
Jadwiga (Michalski) Dylla, the
ftRll REV. J. F. McMAlIJI(J)M'
late pastor studied at the Uni versity of Cracow and was or dained a priest at St. Mary's Church, Crakow, by Cardinal Count de Kozielsko Puzyna on July 23, 1899. A, missionary to Brazil in 1903, Tum to Page Two
,Pope Reserves ,Reti rem~nt Approval Pope Paul has reserved ~ ,himself the right to accept or reject resignations submitted by diocesan bishops. The announcement was em phatically made by a special bulletin ("clarification") issued by the Central Commission for Coordinating 'Post-Conciliar Work and Interpreting ConcWiar Decrees. The communique was read and explained by Archbishop Turn to Page Two
.!Principa~s Meet ~rm T~MrJ'l)fr@lrn
S)@U'tl!J[i'@@)f The principals of elemen. tary and secondary' schools in the Fall River Diocese will meet at Bishop Cassidy High
REV. HUGO
~DYLLA
School, Taunton Saturday morn ing at 9:15 for a Principals' Insti tute. , "Principalship as a Professioiil -Elementary Schools" .(a report on the NECEC Study of Elemen tary Principwls) will be deliv ered by Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Tum to Page Ninetee!!!!J
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D~op Compulso~
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 15, 1966 .
Mas! Attend(n~c~
lP@bIDe ~~~"ai~$ Refr5!l'®m<eUTlfr ~~f9>~@v«llfi.
,
,
. DETROIT (NC~The archcll~ ocesan school board h~re,. willi 'approval of Detroit;s Archbishop · John F. Dearden, has' adopted a new policy which eliminateB ~ practice of compulsory aio tendance at· Mass on school daya ·for all grade and high scho~ students. The new policy went into ef..b feet with the opening of tho 1966-67 school term. It had beelG WIder study for more than n year. Instead of "compulsory" at-. ,tendance at daily Mass, tM board recommended to - pastol1lJ and principals that one day 0 ,week be set aside for volunta117. participation by one or .tw~ £P'ades. at a time--such as thQ .seventh 'and, eighth grades em ,Mondays, fifth and sixth grade!:) ',liii1l Tuesdays. " Masses should be schedulEMll either at 8:45 A.M. or later b the morning, the board su&, !Jested. . The board also reeommend~ that first graders be excusOO ·from attending Mass on a reg., ulay basis. But, the board saiclls. "they should be· given sufficienib preparation to enable them ~ · participate in this corporat€ J 'worship program O'D special O€ ?
Continued from Pafe One A great many problems must ':I .Feriele Felici, the Commission's be faced by the individuals con Secretary-General. cerned and their immediate On Aug. 12 the Holy Father superiors, however.' Both the published his motu provrio Ec Council and the Pope demanded clesiae Sanctae which put into that adequate provision be made effect the Decree on the Pastoral for these men who have 'long Duties of Bishops in the Church. served the Church; vocations In the papal pronouncement ate lagging; other difficulties (no. H) the Pope earnestly re have entered the picture.' quested all diocesan bishops and· The Holy Father, who speaks , others equal to them to present loudly through symbolic ges spontaneously, not later than the tures, emphasized his decision completion of their 75th year of by making a pilgrimage to the age, their resignation from their shrihe of Pope St, Celestine V own office to the competent the only Pope in history· who authority which, having exam retired., Paris rumors were al ined all circumstam..e s of each ready jabbering overtime that case, will take a decision~ the even Pope Paul had'stated that 'archbishop explained; he would retire by·1972. . In fact, the Pope officially '. So, in the past, the Holy stated that he and' he alone was Father has illustrated and anti that "competent authority.".. ~~cipated Council deci~ions in a - The s t a te'm e n t explmne~: dramatic way. The' Church "Given the importance of this should enter the ecumenical matter, whether because of the field (Jerusalem visit with Or venerated persons of the dioc thodox Primate)' she should esan pastors or because of th~ir consider 'the po~r and their 'dioceses ,as well as the entire problems '(India visit),; she Church, it is well to understand should enter into the problems that the Holy Father, in what of the modern world and e~ regards the. Latin Church, re phasize peace (U,N. visit.) SOLDIERS GIFT: Father Victor Berset, Swiss Vin serve? to himself the. right. to Though there has been no date centian priest,- sz:niles approval as he lookS over ,sound examme . ~a~b case. 111 View set for a retirement or even a of a ~efmlbv~ .solutlOn, to be real order for it to occur, the .equipment donated recently to St. Joseph's LeprOsarium tak~n Jl1 the sl?lnt of the Sec~nd ,Pope's strong recommendation is at Ben San, Vietnam, by Air Foree men at nearby ]lien. easJons." . V~tican Co,:,ncil and duly consJd important. Various dioceses _ ermg all ~Jrcumstance.s, ~~eth like our own-have begun study Hoa air base. M. Sgt. Leroy F. Untiedt of Chiengo demon er. regardmg each mdlVldual programs so as to fi n d means of strates the equipment. Air Foree Ph~ .' .. ~~~e or each bishop 111 QUe5-establishing pensions and priest FORTY ,HOURS ti()n. ly work for those whO would Problems :Retirement from.active pastoral reach retirement age. - DEVOTION oltice, intended for both bisho}nl Pension pians, hoUses of J'e-' eontinued fr~m' Pale One Peace Corps came bdo :\Deinl/. Wld priests, entails a complicated ti~ment for. priests, and all sions in the South, Southwest Most of' us are well aware of J)Focedure. kinds of proposals are now being and West. Over these yearS it young neighbors, anod even ma-r , SePt. 18--Holy Cross, F 8 BJ advanced so as to better answer River. haseollected and distributed ried couples giving' n year 01' both the demands of the Vatiean over $50,000,000.00 to needy St. Joseph, Attleboro. mor-e of their life to help these Council, the recommendation cd st. Louis de Franee, dioceses,' for support of mission th~t cannot well help themsel ves. the Pope and the expressed . Swansea. nuDAY - 55. Cornelius, Pope, wishes of many priests and aries, and for building of Our Diocesan p a pe r, - The Sept.25-St. Bocb, I'all Riveli'. churches, mission centers' and Anchor, has «lften instanced and Cyprian, Bishop, Martyrs. prelates. Sacred Heart, Taunton. schools. Very ,few of our people this € h ristian brotherood, as i& 'HI Class. Red. Mass Proper; Many bishops, however, are know of this, and a very good helps' us ·help our neighbor. New ,st. AnthoD,y of :Padua, Glory; 2nd Prayer SS. Euph~ New Bedford.
mia and Companions, Martyrs; . faced with a serious problem of reason is that they aJ:e not at all · England is· not classed" as lil wishing to acceed to the desires acquainted with Church Exten home-mission area, but it eer no Creed; Common Preface. of elderly priests· but having no sion Magazine; · tainly is an area able and willing
SATl.JlIDAY - M'a s s of the priests with which' to replace Today, in each church of the to 'help. "
, Blessed Vir~n for Saturday. .them. Thus, the' whole'problem diocese, envelopes are to be dis .May we all fOrJl:la "family ' ! .
IV Class: White. Mass. Proper; of vocation recroitmentmUst be distributed for subscriptipns ·to more attached to the Home ~s No Glory. or c'reed; 2nd re.'tudied and Strengthened. Extension. ,S u c h envelopes, sions by wanting to knowmore.p'aint,~nd w~npa~r Pra"yer ImpreSsion' of Stigmata PobDd" . about them. F.or thilJ, we eould Dupont Paint , signed with address and S\,!b of St. Francis; Preface 'cd In some Co~unist'cou~tri~ "scription' ~ m 0 u n .t t;ncl~d all well, 'uSc"'ChurctL Extension., ~. 'cor. Middle. St" i BlesSed Virgin. . , i !.. the problem of few priests is .!!houl~ . be . returJ?ed to 1~ur . Magazine.'·:.,' . OR "Faithfully yours ill Christ", ~ compounded by 'the interference church next Sunday,. or sent ,di . . :" :a;:. ....2,2. AC,U.5. h.. '.A. Ye.'." Jmpression of Stigmata of St. from the outside in· the Church's rectly on to the Chicago address. ,,JAMES L.. CONNOLLY.;", '" ; Q.C"N '. ~, B~dford I Francis" Confessor. W hit e. hoPeful arrangements., In Po ',:. Bishop of FaU"River. ., . 'PARI(IN~ " I heartily recommend this pub Mas s Proper;' Glory; 2nd lan~, though~the priests' work is lication.. It has a" widely' va"ried . . ;.J!\~' . , : Rear.of .Store,: Prayer Blessed Virgin for Sat already difficult, ,tno!ie priests .appeal for. young and 'old. ''But .' V ~t,i«:aro. St.Jmp~~'.. lJrday; no Creed; ·Common 'who because of .ageol' illness lire it ' is . chiefly worthwhile td" all VATICAN'Crry (NC)~A<ser Preface. prevented from. exercising ,their of' us because it keepS' the Home jes of. Stamps' cODlIne~orating . " SUNDAY. .XVI Sunday after .office. are "truly ~a,rers. of the Mission field before our eyes. the closing of the. Second Vati Church Extension .had .estab Pentecost. II Class. Green; Cr~." can Council 17.ill be· issued by , The Polish government has lished' a system of.'. volunteer · ~ Vatican ,post oHi,ee. Mass' Proper; Glory; C~eed; ' seen pensions given to aged or support for needy areas.long be Preface of Trfnity. U1 priests as a luxury and has fore Papal. Volunteers, or· the Hecro~og'y . Il/{ONDAY-SS. .Januarius, Bish applied a 68 per cent' taxon op, and Companions, Martyn!. pens\on funds. Thus the retired SEPT. 24 ... ' III Class. Red. Mass Proper; priest will 'obtain only one-third Rev. Joseph E, C: Bourque, 1955, . There ,will be a 2nd Ann.i"el' Glory; :noCreed;'. Common of the allotted and· two-thirds '. , Pastor; :Blessed ~tJJient; i'Fall! , . saryMass, Monday, Sept. 19 at " <River. Prefa~. ' · I will go to the CommuniSt Gov .• Preparation for HOI. .A.M. in St. Patrick's, Church, . TUESDAY - M Ii s s of previous ernment. license bam. ,,' Fall River,. for the repOse Of the In this'manner the;Polisb gov Suuday. IV Class. Green. Mass soul of Rt. Rev. Edmund J. • Real Estate Appraisal : ernment to drive a wedge Proper; No Glory or Creed; Ward. between bishops and priests. 2nd Prayer SS.Eustachiils and Cosey·Se,.;ton~ Each Course 20 Hou~ Companions; Common Preface. Sinee the bishops administer 1he $50 Per Course funds and the pensions have • •• Cleansel'S •• ~ OR etaases Start 'lues., Sept. 2'8 fallen drastically, it is thought 5S. Eustachius and Compan SEND FOR BROCHURE ions, Martyrs. Red. Glory; No thpt priests would then blame' DIY.... Contlnu1ns Educatloli the bishops for their 1088. The. Creed; Common Preface. M fRlWONlf STRmr
ruse has not succeeded. ,tAUNTON, MJ~ss..
retired priests J;lO longer WEDNESDAY - st. Matthew, l1li. Easton, Mass. . 238-2052 Apostle and Evangelist. n receive assistance assured by,' W. VA~yke 2·.0621'
Class. Red. Mass Prope,r; their parishioners as while they Glory; 2nd Prayer Ember Wed were active. ·However,. bishops nesday of September; Creed; have sought to channel money Preface of Apostles. to these priests from other sources and have asked the 'lrHURSDAY - St. Thomas of, Polish people to help inactive Villanova, Bishop and Confes priests. It. ,6-Betwl~n ·foUl River and New Bedford
sor. In Class. White. Mass If the Holy FathEit'i recom Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer St. mendations were sUddenly p~t One of the 'Mst fcit:ilities in Southem New Enshllnd
~PHOLSTERING SHOP
Maurice and Companions, strictly into force 22 Cardinals; Availabie for: .
Martyrs; no .Creed; Common nearly 200... Diocesan . Bishops Cosicm ~ade Upholstered .~lIrDittlm
Preface. ' Ceupllolstering , Guality \.'Jorllm211S1!1iJ and 9,500 priests :could retire. I8AINQUIET$ '. c. © .' 1iESTIMONlAlS
Large Selection Fine FabriCS' .. Giacomo Cardinal '. Lercaro, the mE QImICQ ';:,ASI-{JION SHOWS aMSPECDALPARiB.fES· ~orll Guaranteed ' Free EstimateS Archbishop of. B010gha, Italy, SecOlJ(l Class Postage. Palo DI fa/ll ~. has sUbmitted his resignation as "R£MOLOELING OUR SPECIALl\"" . lfO~ C:OI\>UDLIEV~ 'nN~RMATBoN CONTAClr: Mas,. PubllsheL every Tflursdll' at 410 Archbishop 'and one:-fourtb of ., . 992·26g1· WYMCllI'1l ~-€l984 ~. MErcury 6-2144 ~ig~l:tn~a~~I~~epr::~1 OIR':t:'D~::e of~· the Bishops of Italy are 'either WIm lleuslillet ~~ Ei3w .~~ .Rtver" Subscription prlco 111 Clall. postpaid as oMi 01' elder than he. ' $4.llIlDl!l'-'
I~shop
Praises Ex,tension
Mass Ordo
CE.NTER
<
REAL ESTATE·
COURSES
IN DEPTH
Anniversary
d"
seeks
.~
The
1lendrles
Inc.
Stonehill College
l~NCOlN
7f A"vARiES ~
PARK B.ALlROOM,
College Official Asserts Unrest Healthy S~gn SPOKANE (NC)-Unrest Catholic college eampuses will increase in the next few years bUlt this will lead to a
001
~althier concept of religion, an official of Gonzag~ University told membeFS of the Spokane
Berra Club. William J. McLoughlin, newly ClPpointed director of student ac tivities at Gonzaga, said that un C2st is not necessarily unhealthy. "On the contrary," McLough un said, "I believe that unrest shows an awareness and a via ~ility and will produce a much more significant product of a more effective educational sys
tem."
~
of Marykno'"s quietest· Missioners'
Fr. Toomey Stationed in Hawaii Chinese Reds Expelled New Bedford Priest One of Maryknoll's quietest missioners is the Rev. Edmund A. Toomey of the Fan Biiver dioceSe who has been stationed in Hawaii for more than 10 years. He previously was,in China 13 years. Flather Toomey modestly describes himself as an ordinary priest who Tuns an ordinary parish. He was born in New Bedford and attended Holy Family J!l:igh school from which he transferred to· Maryknoll's seminary at Clarks Summit, Pa., in his senior year. Upon completion of his seminary
studies .in 1930 at Maryknoll's
major seminary near Ossining,
N. Y., he was ordained to the ~iesthood.
Regiona.l Superior His first mission years were in
ehina. Among posts he held
during 13 years there were those
of 'special adviser to the society
superior in the Kweilin area,
and acting regional superior of
Kweilin between 1938 and 1939.
Father Toomey was expelled
from China by the Communists
in 1951. The 52-year-old mis
sioner· was assigned to Hawaii
ilive years later and has done
missionary work there since that
Catholics have always been proud of their institutions of education, he noted. In them they GaW a continuation of the 'en Vironment of their . religion :which included the home, the trehool and the Church. But along with this, he added, was an underlying precept that th~ r&tatus quo should be maintained at all costs. . "A generation ~go we ire «Uently disagreed witl) some as time. pects of the Church but it was !xl our 50th state Maryknoll
unthinkable to speak out. We has 40' priests and Brothers sta were, with few exceptions, a . tioned on the·islands of Hawaii docile generation, good products and Oahu. They conduct four of the system but less honest primary and two secondary than we might often have schools, and have charge of 17 wished." parishes and. nine mission out . '. Foundecll on Love stations. McLoughlin .gaid this is not The total population of the true of the present generation. areas served by Maryknoll is More and more they are speak 169,000 and more than one ing. out. They reject authoritar ~urth of them are Catholics. ltanism, want authority based on lLocal Voca.tions :r>eason and question what ap lOne special problem encoun )}ears irrelevant. tered by the Maryknollers hi "To them life must have Hawaii, in fact one of the main meaning and must be real and reasons for Maryknoll going they are finding this committ there in 1927, is the wide· variety ment more and more outside of nationalities, customs and the official structure of the traditions represented on the ~urch. They are a generation islands. There are native Hawai~ ;Which want to love and be loved ians, ;hinese, Japanese, Puerto and they express this in the Ricans, Filipinos and Portuguese. <l!:ivil Rights movement; tlie . Maryknollers, trained in each l'eace Corps, Vista and, within the Church, in organizations Bishop's Suit ....ch as PAVLA and Extension ~lunteers.
"In the long r~, I think there iii a healthier approach to Chris Uanity and is one' founded on Imre rather than on law. What Jre as adults must be prepared 60 do is to listen and perhaps be p:epared to learn with them."
Returns to DiOcese After Mission. Task BRIDGEPORT (NC) - When Pather John V. -Horgan retu1'l)8 60 diocesan work here after m "ree-year volunteer stint in Santa Cruz, Peru, a strong tie be helped to establish between the Latin America mission and the Bridgeport area will contin • to exist. Father Horgan became first '/lKlstor of the mission church in ~une, 1963. Assigned by the Bridgeport diocese to assist him i :'iWere Fathers John Tomis and . :/Robert Luther. As the mission :work grew, Father George Bal dino joined the team. During his years in Peru" lPather Horgan, with the finan cial assistance of Bridgeport fi::atholics, completed construc flion of a rectory and a convent with an attached clinic. Recon ~ruction of the church is almost ~mpleted.
Takes Office Today JACKSON (NC) Bishop ~seph B. Brunini will begin ad ministration of the Natchez .Jackson diocese today. He will present the papal decree of his appointment as apostolic ad ministrator to Bishop Richard O. Gerow, who has headed the !IAocese for nearly 4a years.
M ANCHOR Thurs., Sept. 15, 1966
Seeks Trust Revocation
BIG SPRING (NC)-Suit has 1ltas been filed iii District Court b&e in Texa~ on behalf of Bishop 'Joseph H. Hodges of Wheeling, W. Va., to revoke a trust and secure for the Wheel~ ing diocese about $900,000 in earnings from an estate. According to the petition filed :lIor the bishop with the court, Sara C. Tracey of New York in l904 left a fixed portion of the iDcome from 66 sections of land lit west Texas to· the bishop of Wheeling. .'!'be petition says that from ~ to 1938 Thomas S. Riley, Sr., was trustee of the estate. Since 1938, It says, 10 per cent of the income or some $900,000 has gone to the trustees. The petition contends that the original will makes no such provision. Named as trustees and defend ants in the suit are Robert J. Riley, Sr., and Robert J. Riley, Jr., both of West Virginia, and Arch W. Riley of Wisconsin..
OpelfllS Second Home
For Unwed Mothers WEST PALM BEACH (NC) -Sisters of Our Lady of Charity Oi the Refuge of Wheeling, W. Va., have accepted the invitation of Miami's Bishop Coleman F. i6arroll to staff a second resi .dence for unwed mothers in the Miami diocese. . Sister Mary of St. Clare will be director of the new residence here. The first residence for un wed mothers in the diocese is St. Vincent Hall at Mercy Hos pital, and is staffed by Sisters of at. Joseph of St. Augustine.
3
Priests Needed .As Mediators PH IL AD E LP H I A (N C) -Priest-scientists are heeded as mediators between the Church and the world of science, the dean of Fordham University's graduate school told a meeting of Jesuit scientists here. Father Joseph J. Mulligan, S.J., at the American Association of Jesuit Scientists convention at St. Joseph's College, said: "If the priest is to be a mediator be tween Church and the world of scientific thought, he must be fully a member· of both commu nities. Only tlien will he be sure to represent fully the views of both parties to this me diation." "There is a great advantage in having scientists who are also trained in philosophy and theol ogy, and can therefore translate the discoveries of science into language intelligible to the the ologian," he .emphasized. "If it was important in the dark ages for priests to be copiers of manuscripts, and if in . the golden age of exploration and discovery it was important for priests to be missionaries," FatherMulligan said, "then in an age of science and technology it is important for priests to be scientists."
Two
C@U~~es Of~®ff
Excl}o(QJInl@~ C@M[j'$~$
MlISSWNAIRY'S FRIENDS:· Most of his parishioners are· as gracious and friendly as this Hawaiian grandmother and grandson, says Father Edmund A. Toomey, M.M., of New Bedford. of the languages, attempt to re place barriers 'of mistrust and
Sh'e~se$
Influence Of Courts Today NEW IBERIA (NC)-A bishop observed here that c 0 u r t s through their decisions on major current .issues have increasing influence in shaping the lives of Americans. - Auxiliary Bishop Warren L. Boudreaux of Lafayette, La., .said race relations, prayer in public schools and procedures in arrests and trials were among the major issues. ''The need for Divine guidance in jurisprudence and law en forcement is all the more im portant today," the Bishop as serted in his sermon at the an nual Red Mass in St. Peter's church here. "These (issues) are vital to our·constitution, and·rec ognize the dignity and value. of man," he continued.
Oregon See Plans C~ergy Meetings PORTLAND
(NC)-A sterles
of monthly clergy conferences
will begin here Monday, Sept. 12 as the initial stage of a pas toral renewal program aimed at archdiocesan implementation of the decrees of Vatican Council
antagonism with mutual under standing founded on solid devo tion to Christ. Another special problem is finding and encouraging local vocations. In Maryknoll areas on Hawaii and Oahu now there are. 24 young men studying for the' priesthood and two Sisters in training.
OAKLAND (NC)-Two Cali fornia area Catholic liberal arts colleges in' this archdiocese have announced plans to open classes to each other's under graduates. , The cooperating schools are St. Mary's, an all male college operated by the Christian Broth ers in Moraga, and the College of the Holy Names, a . women's school run by the Sisters of the Holy Names in Oakland. For St. Mary's;' it will be the first time in its 103-year history that women have studied there. Holy Names, which will mark its centennial in 1968, has admitted men to its graduate and evening 'divisions for several years.
First at Meeting FLINT (NC) - Two Catholic priests will be observers at the Sept. 13 meeting of the Greater Flint Council of Churches. It will be the first time Catholic priests have attended a meeting of the Council, comprised of 85 Protestant and Eastern Orthodox congregations here in Michigan. Fathers George A. Zabelka of Flint and Robert T. Palmer of Swartz Creek, the observers, will be permitted to take part in dis eussion but will not have a vote at the ~eeting.
"He who follows arpother . is al~ays behind.~
Can't Always Make the Bankl
St. Franci.s Residence IFOR YOUNG WOMEN
196 ''Vhipple St., Fall River . Conducted by Franciscan Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquira OS 3.289'
II.
The conferences which will be held in 17 "pastoral zones" with a member of each representing his zone on a diocesan· coordi nating committee, were called by Archbishop Edward D. Howard. Among items on the agenda florr early action are formation of a diocesan senate of priests and a pastorar council of clergy, laity and Religious. Other areas to be discussed include spiritual formation, continuing education for parish priests and parish fi lllance&.
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-J)iocese of rail River-Thurs. Sept. 15, 1966
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By l\'Isgr. George C. Higgiris (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWe) In the July 11 release of this column I referred to the "black power" controversy which was then just beginning' to get a big play in the daily press. I tried' to make the point that while the drive for "black. power," properly un derstood, ,is unobjectionable "Stokely Carmichael," ·Mr. it is dearly indefensible Raspberry wrote in the Aug. 29 when used by demagogues issue of the ·Post, "is gi ven to as a rationale for black using rhetoric, and he doesn't
always. mean exactly what ,he says. That ,perhaps is a charita ble way to view his remarks (as qu ted above). "'... The fact is that even if Carmichael doesn't mean it all, he certainly must be aware that some persons in his audience might take hiin literally. And he repeated his rerriarks at a sub sequent rally in Anacostia." Out of Sympathy? If I understand Mr. Raspberry correctly, he is saying that, if this is what the drive for "black power" really means to Mr. Car michael, he wants no part ·of it. Neither do I. , ~ it make any sense to in terpret this to mean that Mr. Raspbeny and I..are out ~f touch with the ,Negro community and out sympathy with its legiti mate aspirations or that we a·re opposed to the drive f~r blai:k power as such'! I think -IWt. As a matter of fact, I happen to be in, favor of the -drive f()r "black power" in the sense in which this terroG being used by responsible civil rights leaders. Moreover, I share the view-ef those w}lo say - as Coadjut()r Bisoop' Gerety of Portland, ' Maine, pointed out in his forth right Labor Day- sermon in Washington-that th~ call for "blai:k pOwer" is born of mis trust ·of the generality of whites and is an expression of ".<Jecp seated emoti.onal resentment in the hearts of black Americans as they face White Power." White Problem This is another way of sa)'lng t.hat the so-called Negro pr()blem in the Unied States -is really a White Problem. 'In August, 1965, this proolem was studied from various angles in a special issue of the Negr() magazine Ebony, which sold over a million copies and won a certificate of special recognition in the Columbia University <:;raduate School of Journalism's national magazine awar-ds "for imaginative and forceful treat ment of social questions.'" This special issue of Ebony is now available in book form under the title "The White Problem in A,merica," (Johnson Publishing Co., Chicago). To make my own point of view on the ·dl'i ve for "black power" as' _clear as possible and hopefully, E'Ju:ns PDlot's to forestall any further ,misun-' LONG-BEACH (NC)-Young derstanding as to where .I stand sters at St. Matthew's parish on this is~ue, let me emphasize, school here have an added re in recommending this b'ook, that spect for' their principal"":"Sister I completely agree with the Rose Eileen now is licensed to publisher's' introducto~y state fly an airplane. ment which reads, in part, as Th~ Immaculate-Heart of Mary follows: nun obtained her pilot's license "For more than a decade to fulfill a desire she has cher" through books, magazines, news:" ished since girlhood. After grad papers, TV and radio the white uation from high school, she man has been trying to solve the sought to join the Women's Air race problem through studying Force, but was too young. She the Negro. We feel that the an then became a gym teacher and swer lies in a more thorough a year later joined the sister study of the man who created hood. But she never lost her the problem. . ambition to be a flier. ';In this issue we, as Negroes, Sister Rose Eileen said her look cit the white man today community has no immediate with 'the hope that our effort need for a pilot but her superior Will tempt him to look at himself C}bserved: "Since the, world is more thoroughly. With a better moving so fast, it won't do any understanding, ,of himself, we harm." Sister Rose Eileen began trust that he may then under t2king flying lessons in 1964 aJ1d - stand us 4etter-and this na now has logged 92 hours of fly tion's most vital problem cafl ing-32 solo. tben be -solved." racism ()r black violence. A Catholic layman, who is prom inently identi fied with the c i v i -1 I' i g h t s movement and for whose judg ment I have the highe~t regard, has interpret~d this to mean that I am out of touch with the Negro com munity and out of sympathy wiht its legitimate asporations and a Negro correspondent has assured me that. what I referred to in my earlier column as too demagogut!ry ()f some of too more reckless "black' power" boys isa figment of my lily white imagination. Both of these ch;uges call f()r at least a brief rejoinder. Let me take them up in reverse order. FQr Example ..• _Wh.at I meant by reckless and demagogic use of the "black power" slogan can be illustrated, 'f()r present purposes; by the f()l lowing verbatim quotes from a speech delivered by a prominent Negm leader at a recent civil tights rally in Washington, D. C.: "We're .gQing to ol'ganize and fight for" our free elections in the District the way the boys in Viet Nam are fighting lor elec tions over the'i-e ... If we don't get the vote, we're going to burn down the city. If we don't get the vote, you aren't going to have fi() more Washington, D. C." The same s~ker also .admon ished his audience not "to apol ~gize for what 'our brothers did in Anacostia," except that they didn't go far enough-Anai:ostia having ,been the 'scene, a few days earlier, of a minor but po tentially danger()us riot. 'rhese irresponsible statements by Stokely Cannichael are not a figment of my imagination. They ~'ere widely quoted in the Washin~ton pre'ssand, I might add, se'{erely criticized, by a distinguished Negro journalist, William Raspberry, who writes an informative and thoughtful column for the pro-integration, pro-civil rights "!c>.shington Post.
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr.· Frederick G. Hochwalt, who died Sept. 5 at the age of 57 on a ship en route to Venice, was 'the' proverbial m8ll of many parts: educator, administrator, iJmo vator,' polemicist and ·.advocate. To all his roles he br()ught ai, urbanity that disarmed more than ()!lC opponent and Made him ()oe of the ~tknown and lilted figures on the national -educational -scene. As secretary general ()f the National Catholic Educational Association and, for nearly 22 years, director of the Education Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, he was called on repeatedly to act 4is spokeSman for Catholic schools ina· time of epochal change. - On many ocasions he defended the rights of Catholic schools and their students before congres sional committces. He W@5 clos~ ly identified with the long bat tle to win equal treatment for Ilonpublic educati')n,.in -, f~del'al aid programs. . . Fiualllcing- SCh04lIs He constantly supported ef forts to improve the perform ;mce of Cathelic schools. Typi cally, he was one 'of the direclol's of the recent University of Notre D~:me study of Catholic educa tiOI;, a "lTlassiveeffort to uncover the fact about Catholic schools as ,an -essential preliminary to' making them better. One of his last public state ments was a call to innovation in ()rder that Catholic schools could meet new needs and changing times more effectively. In the introduction to ~n NC EA booklet, "Support Programs and the Private School." herec ommended dropping 'the tra ditional parochial ilPpro'ach to financing p a I' 0 chi a I schools which relies on tuition, individ ual contributions and drives tn favor, of more professional, bet ·ter organized efforts. Dual Structure . The keystone of his career was conviction that nonpublic schools are needed to preserve the "dual structure"-public and pl"ivate -of American education and thus respect the realities of a pluralistic society-. Coupled with this was a com mitment to the rights of the nation's 5.5 million parochial school students, both for their own sakes and for the well be ing of the country. ''If Congress concludes that the erlucational standards of the 'country- demand an upgl'ading and that this must come about by federal aid and encourage ment," he told ji) Senate sub committee in June, 1963, "then the general welfare of the coun try and the national interest dictate that all children receive this help and enco.uFagement."
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ANCHOR-Diocese of !Fait River-TluH's. Sept. 15, 1966
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MAKING FINAL, ARRANGEMENTS' FOR GOLDEN JUBILEE CELEBRATIONS: Rev. Felician Plichta, O.F.M. Conv., left, draws up the tllinal plans for the 50th anniversary celebrations ,of the Holy Cross Parish,
Clergyman ,Asks·'
Closer Re~ations With Orthodox DAYTON (NC) -
Cathe
Ie e1ergy in America Me making progress in ecullleRi . . oontacts with Protes
~ but have been neglecting ... WOl'k for closer relations with those with whom they have most fa oommon-the OrthodOl!t Chris
tians. The view came from Father Philemon Payiatis of the Greek Orthodox Church of the Annun dation here, a leader in both ecumenical and civic affairs. He . said: "It's up to the priests to eKplain the' facts about' Ortho doxy to their people. Some have done this, but most have lagged behind." The Orthodox priest,~recently ~turned from a Europea . visit, during which he had an audi ~mce with Pope Paul VI, ob oorved in an interview that it was not until the reign of Pope JJ'ehn XXIII that U. S. Catholics showed any significant interest fml Orthodoxy. Now~ however, they are be ~nning to read· mQre about the Eastern faith al\P exhibit a curi osity abouts its' sacramental life, 1lhe said. FatheJ; Payiatis' said Catholic pastors could do much m advancing the interest to the otage of fruitful dialogue on the meal level. Common Views eatholics and Orthodox al ready share much of their his (:ary, traditions and beliefs, he observed. They hold common views on' silcramental life and ~!he Holy Eucharist, and both pay honor to the Mothel' af Sod, he added. He said the close Catholic I0lrthodox ties have been under scored by the Vatican Council, fi)y Popes John and Paul, Ortho 1lI0x Patriarch Athenagoras, and Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos. But their actions, according tG Father Payiatis, need to be im D!emented on the local level.
Fall River, with the help of Rev. Matthew Kotkowski, O.F.M. Conv., assist ant. The front exterior of the Fall River Polish Church is in center and the interior of the Franciscan church at the right.
Holy Cross: Church Marks 50 Years Service To . Polish .Community September 25 Sunday, Sept. 25 will be a gala day 'for members. of Holy Cross par ish, Fait River, marking the official celebration of the Polish congregation's golden jubilee. Bishop Con ROIly will celebrate a Pontifical Mass for parishioners in the morning and a banquet will fol}(~w in the Dwelly Street Armory. Holy Cross parish WliIS fooItded in 1916. Previously the only Polish Catholie At his requiem Mass, Rev. chwl'ch . in Fall River had his. assistant, Rev. Anselm Kwi los. Father Kwilos served the George Roskwitalski, provincial been St. Stanislaus, and it parish 13 years, concentrating of the Friars Minor Conventual, was difficult for Poles in the on paying off the church debt said:, "Wherever he was assigned, Pulaski Street area to travel to' its RQCkland' Street 'location. Therefore Rev. Stanislaus Bona of St. Stanislaus was assigned by the then BIshop Feehan to shepherd the new .flock and for 1 a years ser~ces were heid in the parish h~ll' of nearby SS. Peter and Paul Church. Father Bona served the new parish for trn-~e years, being succeeded in 1919 by Rev. An drew Baj and then by Rev. Hugo Dylla. In 1922 the Friars Minor Conventual assumed charge of St. Stanislaus, with .Rev. Peter Rajna, O.F.M. Conv. the first Franciscan pastor. Temporary Buildings
and making various improve ments in par ish properties. A mortgage-burning ceremony, long looked forward· to, was held in: April, 1955. Father Wolski In 1960 Father Kwilos was transferred to :::Ioly Trinity par ish, Montreal, Canada, succeed ing Rev. Vincent Wolski, who came to Holy Cross, accompa nied by his Montreal assistant, Rev. Joachim Dembeck. Father Wolski made numerous improvements and repairs to Holy Cross properties, following the policies of Father Kwilos. His death came with tragic sud denness May 31, 1964, while he was attending a testimonial dinner honoring his 30th year in the priesthood.
Father H a j n a inimediately undertook the building of a temporary school and convent. He accomplished this task within two years. Following him in the St. Stanislaus pastorate were three "pastors in the next two First Deo'n years: Rev. Sylvester Parzych, Rev. Raymond Marciniec, and NEW YORK (NC)-James R. Rev. Bonaventure Santor. Dumpson, 57, former city wel The next Franciscan assigned fare commissioner, has been ap to the parish, however, remained pointed dean of Fordham Uni versity's school of social service, at his post for over 20 years. He which he once attended' as a was Rev. Raphael Marciniak, part-time student. He is the first and his accomplishments in cluded building the present Negro to be appointed a dean at the Jesuit university. church, a convent for the Fran The school of social service ciscan Sisters of St. Joseph is one of the university's grad staffing the parish school, reno vation of the old convent for use . 'uate. schools. Dumpson will take over his duties in February, giv as a rectory, and, in 1.929, pUt' chase of an unused public school ing up his post as associate dean building from the city of Fall of the social welfare school at Ri ver for use of the parish Hunter College' here.
school. Not content with this, in 1945, Father Marciniak sparked construction of a hall by men of P~lUmMtrng the parish. Located-behind the recto D', the hall is used for H0~~irag (@og NEWARK (NC)-Archbishop par~sh activities, social events 'JPhomas A. Boland of Newal'k and . meetings. The energetic Reg. Master Plumber 2930 dledicated a new 27-bed stroke' priest was also an ardent musi GEORGE M. MaNTlE I:!nit at St. Michael's Hospital cian who developed an outstand Over 35 Yeors £1lere Tuesday. The unit comple ing choir and orchestra at Holy of Satisfied Service ments the hospital's pioneering' Cross. . 806 NO. MAJN STREET eardiac treatment center and is Father Marciniak died in 1947 !full River OS 5-7497 ~e first' of its kind in ~ area. and WillS succeeded as pastor bzr
Hospital Addition
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the image of Christ was always left. Wherever duty sent him, Father Vincent was the mirror of the love of St. Francis for all." Rev. Felician Plichta, the present 'pastor, a native of Fall River and Holy Cross parishion er, follow.ed Father Wolski. His assistant is Rev. Matthew Kot kowski. They note that parish organizations include the Holy Rosary Society, Third Order of St. Francis, St. Stanislaus Kostka Society, a unit of the Polish Roman Catholic Union, the Holy Name Society, Children of Mary and St. Vincent de Paul Society. Also the St. Hedwig Society, St. Gregory's Choir, Polish Girl and Boy Scouts imd the CYO. The parish school, staffed by five Sisters, has an enrollment of some 56 boys. and 54 girls.
'Crash' Program
For Vocations SANTA FE (NC)-The Santi Fe archdiocese is undertaking "crash" program to find, ways f aUract men to- a life as priests. Msgr. Francis Tournier, arch diocesan director of vocation ac tivities, sajd: "I will soon be knocking on the door of every rectory in this area to ask every priest what he thinks we can do to help more men decide tQ serve the Church as priests. "I plan to form a board of ad visors to assist me in this task, and it will include laymen--es peciillly parents, who- understand young people better than we priests ever ean," he said. The New Mexico archdiocese will use "commercials" in the campaign, the monsignor said. There are some 135 priests in the archdiocese now, Msgr. Tournier said. He added: "We don't have enough young men in our seminary now to replace the men we will lose by the nor mal attrition of age and death."
Pre-School Centers BUFFALO (NC) - Thirteen area Catholic schools served as centers for a Summer program designed to prepare deprived children for first grade.
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: THE .A.NCHOR....::Dioc:ese of,aIt River-,Thws. ~Pt. 15, 1H6 " .. . "
Lefs, YoliFight,
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CCD Classes Now that schools have resumed their class~, an the parishes of the Diocese will once more begin their religious mstruction classes for those ~ttending public schools. Sis ters, priests, seminarians and, zealous lay 'persons have prepared their classes, with true concern for these children's ' spirituai welfare. Ali that remains' is for the youngsters ' to Come to class on Sund~y or Friday or Monday what ever day works out best in the parish.
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And here is tl}e .difficulty. How to convince children of the importarice of spending an hour a week learning their religion in a formal systematic way when their class mates and playmates are playing baIlor roller skating or flying kites? The answer seems to be that children can 'not be expected to arrive at the proper answer for them selves. They cannot appreciate the value of learning their l"eligion. They cannot See why they have to learn sacr~ ments and commandments when tbey are, going to Church and receiving Holy Communion quite well as it is. The ariswer, of couies, lies in the parents. Th~y must exercise their parental' authority amI insist that their sons and daughters attend catechism classes or discussion clubs or 'whatever program the parishes supply for the reli gious education of children attending public schools. The parents must further realize that by doing this they are not helping the' parish. On the contrary, theirs' is the first obligation to ,see to the complete spiritual train ing of their children. The parishes are helping them toful fill this most solemn obligation to which Almighty God will hold them in strict account.
\
Say. C.atholic ,Schools Have Adequate Teacher SUIPply
Asserts POvertY' Primary Conee.. Of Chur~
HARRISBURG ('NC) _ A priest-socioHgm a8serteCj here that the poor must be the primary concern of tM Catholic Church if it intends tet help prevent eommunity ~ Jence and chaos. "The first citizens of . . Church must be the poor anc) .the first concern of the Churd must be the poor," said Fathtm Geno C. Baroni, executive seCJ'ea tary of the Archbishop's CCJDto.> mittee on Community RelatiOllB in the Washington, D. C., a~ diocese. Father Baroni made t~ comments after addressing so~ 100 special education superviso~ invited by the Pennsylvania1Deoo partment of Public Instruction to consider the needs of disacJl vantaged children. "I think one of the impol't.aJd J'oles of the Church is to raise up issues such as civil rigbtD and poverty," Father Baroni sai4; "We need equalopportunitiev in housing in the suburbs, mole rE!alistic minimum wage lawD and massive' adult literacy ami training programs." He suggested that Catholic iJI;u stitutions use some of thei:ll . "green power" to inspre justiC10 for the economically/ weak. Bti cited a case where the KnightIJ of Columbus and other grouPlJ threatened .to withdraw the~ money from a bank unless Neo groes were hired. The threat worked, he said. ' 'Great Seandal' "There's a great, dangeYf! Father Baroni continued, "tbafl the Church hal; become veJ\1t middle class '" '" '" and the great
scandal of our times might weD
be that the poor may be lost to.
the Church. I'm talking especi~
ly about the poor minoritiess.
just as in the 19th century Pope Pius XI said the scandal of the Church in Europe was the loss cd! the working poor. "Families are crippled and scarred. Many have lost hope. This is what I call the scandal of, our society. We' have the money, resources and brai~ power to put every man, woman and child on his feet. But do we have the will? This is the great challenge to a newly ar ~ved ~luent middle class," _ said.
If the children .are attending Mass and the sacraments I regularly, they need religious instruction to give them, in WASHINGTON, (NC) - Catholie school authorities the words of St. Paul, "reason for the fai,th that it is them." across the country have reported their schools are exper For they soon reach the stage when they begin' to ques- tion the practices that they have been attending 'to all iencing nothing comparable to the drastic teacher shortage affecting the nation's public schools. The Catholic school
along, and unless they have the,.answers to why they wor picture was brought. to light ship God and should attend Mass, then the practices them through a hopscotch poll snortage is apparentJly solved ai selves will be, at best, just formalism and, at worst, ne eonducted by the N.C.W.C. though "not with the kind of glected completely. " professionally trained people we News Service, made in the would like to have,'" he said. This goes not only for children attending the elemen Father Clark said 'the'Catholic wake of a survey by the New tary grades but for those in the high school years. There York Times which disclolled schools of Camden generally ex is a strange idea thflt entering high school absolves a public schools are confronted perience some diffi<:ulty in re young man or woman ·from the obligation and privilege with the' most severe teacher cruiting lay personnel because shortage in 10 years. they pay onl~r 75 to 80 per cent of learning religion. This is an idea in which many par But the N.C.W.C. News Service of what public school teachers ents ,concur. If there is any age gro1,1p_ that needs to con check of Catholic agencies in the are paid. . template and think through and turn over the great truths national education field, plus "Every time we try to raise it school superintendents in some to 90 p~r cent the public schools of our faith it is the high school group. Children are get ting away from home and all that home means, they are 15 key archdioceses and dioceses also increase salaries, and we're throughout the nation, brought out in the cold again," he stated. beginning to assert themselves and their own views oil reports that in most areas there 'Very Optimistic' things, they are entering into a wider cirCle of places and is an adequate supply of teachFather H. Robert Clark, assistacquaintances, the opportunities to question values and ers for every classroom, while ant superintendent of schools in principles that used to be taken for granted are expanding. in some localities ther,e are aC.'the Chicago archdiocese, 'said relatively small number of va- there are some 4() temporary or We are not afraid of young Catholics "going out into the cancies which soon are expected provisional teaohers 'in elemen world.." We are fearful, and their parents should ,be also, to he filled. ' ,tary schools. The Catholic high of their facing new aspects of life without soliQlY-founded' Of Catholic school offices con- . ' schools in Chicago hHve an ade religious ,and moral convictions,' without standards and' tacted, those reporting the worst quate, supply of teachers, he Pla,n Cooperative shortages are in the New York- said. A values rooted in knowledge and loyalaceeptance., ' . ':New Jersey area, and in the Los Msgr. Raymond P. :Rigney, so- Ad· for ,Vocations ." , . 'CHICAGO (NC)-A "first" iii " ,Nor does the reception of Conf,irmation' sigDal the end Angeles and Chicago archdio- peri~tendent of schools for the New ~ork archdiocese, said the Catholic advertising will be Pre:. of religious' instruction. :lif anything; this sacrament is ceses. Father Joseph Bynon, director CatholIc schools had E':ll;perieneed .. sented next month with a full . an aqded reason and incentive ',and obliga~ion, for young' of elementary, curriculum for some "critical situations" recent- page advertisement cooperative people ~o be mature CathQlics n,ot only by 'the dedication of the Brooklyn diocese, reported ly, but he was "very opt!mistic" lysponsored by more than 50 Confirmation' but by the corresp<mding knowledge, of the that 30 to 40 more teachers are that all te~cher vac~lncies soon coinmunitie~ of priests and Brothers. truths of the faith 'and courage, in living these out in needed in the Catholic elemen- would be fi~le~l. " ·tary schools of that diocese. Split Spo~esman for th~ following The joint effort to attrad daily life. sessions will be used for about a archdIoceses and dIOceses Jle- young men to religious vocations All of which adds up to this-those attending public week, Father Bynoh said, after ported a full complement of is bE!ing launched by the Mid the diocese expects to teach~rs: Hartford, Con?, Phila- west Religious Vocation Ditee schools should be wise enough to attend religious instruc- which have the needed teachers. de~phIa, .B 0 s ton, ]l.Iilwaukee, tors Associati9n. Traditionally, tion classeS:> to learn what heritage 'of the faith is theirs. Bndgc::po~" C~nn., ~ewark, N. J. each communjty has advertised 'No Problem' And the parents must cooperate to 8e~ that this is done. Father Paul McVey, assistant and Cmcmnatl, OhIO. indiv~dually as part of its own 5 superintendent of Paterson N.J. recrUItment program. The MRv' DA insertion will be in U.s. diocesan schools said 10 'to 12 Session to Discuss more teachers a;e needed at the F °1 R n Cat~olic magazine. ami y euatiCllns MRVDA was formed two yean elementary level but there is' "no problem" in the high school's. WASHINGTON (NC) _ The ago .to provide mutual help to: Father John J. Clark, superin- family and the relationship of solvmg problems and sharing tenderit of schools in the Cam- individuals as family members experiences. Currently, there aRe den, N. J., diocese, said one high will be examined at one of the 101 members representing 53 school is lacking a math teacher general sessions phmried for eommunities which have 11,000 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER -Of THE DDOCESE OIF FALL ROVER and a science teacher. At the the 33rd convention of the Na- priests and Brothers. The group elementary level,' the teacher tional Council of Catholic Wom- a~so works closely with diocesan en Oct. 5-8 in Miami. ' vocation directors and with l~ 410 liighland Avenue Principal speaker at the fami- groups who seek to foster vo Fall River, Mass. 027~2 675-7151 Hon@r Co~Oege$ ly life session wili be Father cations. PUBLISHER WASHINGTON (NC) - Two John J. O'Sullivan, theology pro For Retired Priests Mas t Rev. J ames L. Canna II y, D.D. , PhD Catholic universities, Loy 0 1a fessor, St. Paul Seminary, St. ., U niversity, Chicago, and Ford- Paul. Joining the discussion will PITTSBURGH (NC)-The dl GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER ham University, N. Y., were be a panel composed of Mr. and ocese of Pittsburgh will build a , among 27 schools honored for', 50 Mrs. Charles O'Neil, Bryn Mawr, 12-unit wing for retired priestG Rev. Johr. P. Driscoll years or more of scholastic ser- .Pa., Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Calla 'Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. at suburban Vincentian Home " , .. , , , . vice ,to social work training at han, Hastings-on-Hudson, New for the Chronically Ill. The MANAGING' EDITOR the 13th International Congress York; and Dr. and Mrs. George $180,000 structure will con~ Hugh J. Golden of Schools of Social Work here. A. Simpson, Miami. 12 private rooms.
Wrhe ANCHOR
THE ANCHOR
Urges Guidelines \For Teachers,' ! ' '::
Thurs.,
Sep~.
15, 1966
.,.. ,Educator
Of :~e,iig~~", ':'~;
7.
Favors
U,,5.· mn ,:Vietnam
MONTGOMERY (NC)
'A Catholic educator' urged
ST. LOUIS (NC)-A univel'oo sity president chC!racterized this , nation's participation in the Vietnam conflict as "charity on . an international scale." > &es for use by religion teach .. Father Kenneth F. Slattery, • (li'S in Catholic schools. C.M., president of Niagara The practice of periodically (N. Y.) University, told the reformulating these gufdelines eighth annual Marillac College would serve to narrow the Summer commencement: lmowledge gap which handicaps "The United States is waging a many of the religion teachers, just war in Vietnam and in do :Father William B. Friend said. i~g so is' exercising charity on Tile priest, who is, cha'(rman an international scale by de ~ the religion committee !for fending South Vietnam against 'diocfsan teachers and adminis aggression and, ultimate enslave trative assistant at John Carroll ment at the hands of the Viet High School, Birmingham, sPoke Cong and the communists." :, to 500 delegates' attending a Father Slattery told graduates ., di~esan conference on the of the Daughters of Charit, school the, n. S. has pledged its tea~hing of religion here. :', support to the Vietnamese and Evaluate Programs, that the virtue of fidelity obliges The delegates met to evaluat~ nation to keep its promise. religious education programs in "In view of the complexity of tile diocese of Mobile-Birming modern warfare and the sophis ham in the light ot the Second tication of modem weapons," he Vatican Council. The priests, Sis said, "the above statements ters; Brothers and lay teachers CAPE COD' CYO OFF~CJElRS: Regional officers elected at the~recent general meet- . seem to 'oversimplify the issue. represented the diocesan school And yet, so long as our military aystE'm, the ConfraternitY of ing for the 1966-67 season are: Jeanne Craig, Our Lady of the 'Cape; Parish, Brewster, forces do not directly attack Christian Doctrine" and the vice-president.. Standing: Elizabeth Naylor, St. Francis, Xayier, lIyannis, secretary; non-combatants, our govemNewman Federation. J, James Barrows, St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis,,,president; Dennis Elliott" Our Lady ()f the ment's commitment in Southeast in his talk, Father 'Friend' Assumption, Osterville, t r e a s u r e r . , . Asia harmonizes with the moral C1rew on the study completed law and what our country is recently at the University of doing there 'is a courageous and! , Notre Dame, "Catholic Schools noble thing." '. In Action." The diocese of' Mobile-Birmingham was one of , 13 studied in depth for the N'otre '. ' Enronrnl'll~lfllt ~lOlM[bU®@1 ,MHQ)&,® J!)ame report. He also spoke of ' SAN DIEGO (NC) - Fresh Ws independent work in testing' man class enrollment at the the religious attitudes of high KENMORE, (NC) - "I am an senate ,is "organized and func orgy, the lay apostolate and men's college of the University school students and of evaluating emerging bishop-that's not just tioning properly, "according to other matters. of San Diego will be doubled jl)rofessionally gathered informa- window dressing either. I have Archbishop Connolly, Brothers, The Archbishop noted that for the second consecutive year tion in order to determine pres:" drawn up a series, of new facuf.. · Sisters; laymen, laywomen and, deanery meetings of all pastors in the 1966-67 term. College of Olt and future teaching needs. ties in an effort to share my teenagers "would be added to" will be held the week of Oct: 25 ficials estimated more than 2QO Neellis TIteinlloreemelllt authority with you in view of, ,each, sub-deanery group" and, to discuss the results of the freshmen will enroll, bringing the new decrees on the pastoral charged with the task; of imple questionnaire and to finalize the the student body at the 12-year J;i'ather Friend said that the office of 'bishops and the priest- menting the conciliar documents divisions of the archdiocese into old institution to some 500 stu degree to which students under- ly .ministry of souls. in their respective areas on ecu dents. The men's college is con a specified number of sub stand religious truths affects "I am asking for information, menism, Christian education, lit ducted by the diocesan clergy. deaneries. t2leir religious practice. He advice and counsel, I am sharing added that Catholic school stu- my episcopal authority with , ,dents do not reflect a ghetto you." rn.entality, as is often charged. 'The policy was detailed by Noting that parents have com- Archbishop Thomas A. Connolly. l;iUained that parochial school of Seattle, Wash., in making the education does not equally ministry of priests in the arch l>2r\'e all childem in need of diocese "more fruitful, effica !religious education, the priec;t cious and convenient. recommended that guidelines for His announcement waS ap-' ~ligion teachers be drawn up by plauded by some 200 clerics at-' oaPE'rts and regularly revised. tending a three-day theological . The generally favorable view institute for Seattle archdiocesan which Catholic parents have, of and religious community priests fue parochial schools "is not a at St. Thomas the Apostle· Seril guarantee that those yOU.lg, lnary here. ~ople who are products of the Wants lFrank Answers Catholic schools will become tl~e " . The faculties, grants and. con- ' pillars of every parish," Fatlt€ t ' cessionS, which the Archhishop , "llrien!;l said. ' "Education is a process, not a is pe;rmitted unq,er law to, impart ,...,. t·IC Sl·tua t·Ion. I f theproce.'s to concern such mat ....a t his, priests, th lit . g t; not, reinforced in the home; ~r~ as,. e urg:y, . marrIa. e, C'b.e parish' the community, th r1 e~um~msm, an~ ~hnshan burIal. , , e", ~'I am also glVmgyou a ques illie work of the school cannot be 't·'· :'." Ax hb' h 11' , 1l>rought to a successful con<;'u,:";: ,...l!>ll,?ar.re, '" c IS .op onna y. Dion.'~ he stated .' ' ,con,tml,led, on the Implementa \. , . tion of Vatican II on the local "le,~el. The questionnaire' need' C@\\lifrndm DOC.Mm®U'Bft~ ," no~.be, signed. I want honest and' , fr.ank; answers," he said. $QDfbD(g<Cti' of COl!JJ!l'~® ' The 23-page . questionn!lire' WA!?HINGTON (NC)-A new also included a projected list of two-year program based on the ;"the divisions of the archdiocese oocuments of the Seco~d Vatican into SUb-deaneries. The sub-deanery plan is ex 'Coouncil will be inaugurated in the school of sacred theology at peeted to give priests, Religious the Catholic University of Amer- and laity a strong voice in shap ~ here, Monday, $ept. 26. ' ing the destiny of the archdio· Described as the first program cese. of its kind in the nation, the' The plan, envisioning 2Q or c=ourse will be opened to priests, more' such suqdivisions in the Religious, seminarians, qualified Archdiocese's.f 0 u r deaneries, hymen and non-Catholics, Bish- calls for the election by priests OIl William J .. McDonald, univer- before Oct. 1 of one among them (lity rector, ;lnnounced. The pro": : to 'be "sub-dean" or' representaPHONE THE GAS COMPANY'S HEATING DEPARTMENT· Ay 675-7811 gram can be taken for credit . tive on the deaneries level. or contact r~ur M~5ter. lPdumber or HNting 'Contractor .for fun C1etails Ooward a master of arts degree. Discuss Results .. licentiate in sacred theology. ,These representatives ~ill also' ,.Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle assemble at the call of their re «Pi Washington, university chan- ' 'spective dean and elect' a desig <Zellor, said be discussed inaugu-, nated number of priest-delegates' Imtion of the program with Law,. , as additions to the archdiocesan , irence Cardinal Shehan of Balti":' consultors; 12 new positions are, 155 NORTH MAIN STREET - PHONE OS 5-7811 more and Bishop John J. RlASSell being considered for delegates. . ''''.., '~y'~n,~':lC!lly ~hen P1ep.F~ests:J , , ~ ,Ric1uUop.~•• Va..
here that dioeesanauthor : £ties c9mmission theologians to formulate periodic;llly guide
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'JlHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fort River-Thurs. Sept. 15, 1966
Cefhal1e Corteges
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P~an CoOperot~o~
Ho~ds O~d Time Trrofi'0~~ Q!F©)f C@h.!HM B'i) D$if~ Grr~ ni)d~rro n'~cdJ fi'®ri
Fair
IMMACULATA (NC)-Teach ers and administrators from seven Catholic colleges met here in Pennsylvania to discuss ways of expanding cooperation in the utilization of academm resources.
By Mary Tinley Daly O"J've taken my fun where I've found it," said poet Jitudyard Kipling. Well, ·this time of year; the place to find fun-real fun for the .whole family-is 31t a good old fashioned county fair where "something for everybody" Ji2 amply demonstrated. Hav Itls a happy folksy -atmo mg been reared in a semi sphere, everybody relaxed, from lrnral com m l! nit y, wh.ere infants in arms to the aged in eounty fairs were a part of wheel chairs. Two year old Tara Mfe, I ,attended .and participated in many lo~g ago in the Mid ;West. Matter of fact; the only prize I ever "Won in my life :was, at age 12; second p r i z e :lor an orange
cake at the
oounty fair back
home, though I baked five cakes ~ achieve that ane red ribbon and the long-suffering family never again cared for orange ~ke.
After years of living in a met':' 'ropolitan area, I'd almost for~ot ten the thrill of a fair until daughter Mary and her family 8uggested we drive out to a fair in a nearby county. In this, a more sophisticated age, the ur ban blending with the mral, we expected a 1966 versiOll of a iair, and we found it. Old, New And yet, inside the fair grounds, we wer!! surrounded by the familiar carnival atmo sphere as of old: the milling crowds in casual rather than "Sunday best". dress, the yawp· of the pitchmen, the same "Half Ton Man" (or his ~andson), the "Head-of-a-Girl, Body-of-a Snake" illusion, the dancing ·girls, the tinny music of the merry-go-round, the s tic k y .sweet taste of webby cotton candy, the caramel apples haz ardous to tooth fillings, the acrid smell of pigs and sows.. In a switch-about from the long-ago rural fairs when latest Tin Pan Alley songs were· fea tured, now country music is the in type. Instead of taking' a chance on a hand crocheted tablecloth, we signed up for a chance on a share in a mutual fund, for a lot in Florida, for a custom fitted wig. The beaded gypsy in. a stuffy tent who would read your palm for a quarter has now been re. placed by a computer tapping out, for 50 cents, a complete an alysis of character as revealed by your signature. Politicking candidates, peren
nial habitues of county fairs
prior to election day, modernize their vote-seeking techniques. Oh, the .handshaking, backslap ping, baby kissing and passing out of pamphlets are still stand ard procedures. Added are new gimmicks such as free key ehains, headbands with feathers, shopping bags, lapel pins, ballpoint pens, balloons, lemonade, lollipops and cookie recipes. Moreover, "getting on the bandwagon" has become lit erally that: loud speaker atop station 'Yagon.
and her brother Tim, 3%, kept up untiringly with' the rest of us as we walked for hours, watched judging of lambs and sheep, horses, cows and bulls, and inspected goats and rabbits, and were fascinated with the hatching of a tiny chicken from its egg. . , Hot JI)ogs, Popcorn
In the spirit of ecumenism, we bought hot dogs from the Episcopalian boo t h, popcorn .from the' Baptists, cokes from a Catholic church stand until Tara finally refused another, hot dog with, "Well, everybody don't like something!" We were intrigued with many of the 9,000 exhibits, calling to one another, "Do come ::;ee this!". -be it photography, oil painting, arts and crafts, a gilded papier mache Nativity set of figures, ceramics, woodworking. In the gathering dusk, while the Head of the House, Tim and the children - retUJ;ned outdoors for the horse show, we of the· distaff side stayed ·in the exhibit hall for the 4-H demonstrations, particularly those 'of the girls. In sewing: a Winter coat per fect enough to grace the corner window of an exclusive shop, dresses, suits; sweaters of the. finest knitting,' embroidery work. And in the culinary department, prize winning cakes (even non prize winner·s that would have· put my orange cake of long ago to shame), cream pies and fruit pies to make our mouths water, light golden brown biscuits, fine textured bread and rolls. Then the home grown fruits and vegetables, every imagin able variety, even a luxurious potted orange tree, not native .to this locality. In this day of demonstration, young Americans demonstrating against t his, demonstrating against that, it is heartening to see the results of positive dem onstrations, you n g Americans . expending their talents and en ergy, perfecting skills in whole some, productive channels.
Start Women's Junior
C;:ollege in New Jersey WOODCLIFF LAKE (NC) .....
The new Alphonsus junior col
lege founded here by the Sisters
of St. John the Baptist will
welcome its first students'
Sept. 12.
.A class 55. young women
ia expected. The New Jersey
college will award an Associate·
in Arts degree to,a graduate and
prepare students for transfer to
a four-yea/; college. Eventually,
the Sisters plan' a capacity at
400 Btudents.
The faculties of Chestnut Hin. Immaculate and Rosemont Col leges met at Immaculata, whei1e they were joined by presidents and deans from Cabrini, Gwyn ned-Mercy, Holy Famil:- and Our Lady of Angels Colleges fOll' an all-day session.
37th NURSES' GRADUATION: Three ~f the ~~8 gradu ates of this year's class at St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing, Fall :River, meet Bishop Connolly prior to the exercises. Left to right: Barbara F. McManus, Swansea; Constance(Helen Loranger, New Bedford; the Bishop; Don na Cheryl Murphy, Taunton.
Of~ers
S·uild.ings
Oklahoma Prelate Says Closed School
Convent Available for Povert), War
TULSA (NC)-Bishop Victor J. Reed of Oklahoma City-Tulsa has made the facilities of a closed Catholic school and an adjoining convent available to Tulsa's poverty war organiza tion. In a letter to the. Tulsa Eco nomic Opportunity Task Force, Inc., the bishop offered .:free use of St. Monica's school and con vent in the predominantly Negro section of Tulsa. The school was
closed in June and its pupils en
rolled in adjacent parish schools. The offer of the two buildings was unprecedented in the Tulsa area. The 30-year-old brick school contains seven classrooms, an office and a library. The convent which was vacated less than·,a month ago, has 14 rooms. Father William King, a mem ber of the committee named by the bishop to coordinate the offer, called Bishop Reed's plan "a meaningful expression of the Church's concern" for the poor and its willingness to wor!!: in eooperation with federal pro grams for the poor."
He said that Tulsa's war on poverty has been hampered by "the reluctance of man y churches to ~(et· involved .in poverty programs."· Mrs. William Thornton, dep uty director of the Task Force, said the buildings will make. an ideal.location for a multi-service c e n t e r . "We are. certainly pleased and encouraged by this offer," she. added. .
Two Federcll Agencies'
Aid College Project WASHINGTON (NC) -'- Villa Madonna College in Covington, Ky., will become the first col lege in that state. to undertake a tandem housing-academic tfa cilities project with financial aid from two federai agencies. Secretary Robert C. Weaver of the Department of Honsing and Urban Development announced approv~l of a $1,580,000 College Housing Loan, to be supple mented by $252,410 of the col lege1s funds.
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Coltoctive BargaiflliRg . Data Processing InveatIRentl-Sta.k & 8oncJ" BUline.. & Indultry Perlon"el ' ' ' ' Trailting For Suporvi.on Roal Eltalo-Prep 1'0. Real Eltate Apprailal
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Men's College Opemi Gates to Women JERSEX, CITY (NC)-To h outward consternation-and in ward appreciation-of male stu dents, St. Peter's College here has become a co-ed institution. It took the girls two yearsw breach the wall at the Jesuit operated college 'after the ides was first broached by the ad . ministration, and put to the faculty for a vote. But there was no hesitation on the college's part once the decision was made; out of 530 freshmen, 120 &..e girls.
College admimstrators admit the move was not altogether al truistic, although the desire to make higher education available close to home for young womelll in the area was a factor. How ever, they also noted that the former all-male policy had den ied the college the talents of some outstanding scholars.
WnDlilClJms' ft!lJf1i)~fI'I1JD
Home
EST. 1870 Reg. Funeral Director GOld Embalmer
1 .Washington Square NEW BEDFORD TEL. \NY 6-8098 PRIV ... "'E PARKING ARIEA
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Fulbright Winner A Fulbright .grant for study
8t Cambriqge Unive.rsity has
been received· by Miss Ann
Mary Turner of St. Joseph's par- ..
jsh, North Dighton, a June
graduate of Trinity College,
Washington, D. C. Miss Turner,
who ranked first in her gradu-·
ating class, was also recipient
of a Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship. Classical languages
and culture are her ~eld of in .terest. " ., '1 !1' . • I ' 1-, ']
Father Victor Yanitelli, S.Jfoo president of St. Peter's College, Jersey City, addressed the group i)n "The Future ChaAe lenges the Catholic College." Most of these colleges have - been cooperating with others in the area for such purposes as awarding scholarships and in re ciprocal agreements with local men's colleges for ·free tuitiol'il for sons and daughters of fac ulty. The exchange of facultw began last year among Chest~ nut Hill, Immaculata and Rose... mont.
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Fall Semester Iept. 27th to Dec. 6th RmlSTER .... MAIL Send for 8Ncf>ure: Db_ ... e-tiftulng Educoti_ .....9rOlll. StOnehill Collego, North Easton, Mo... phono,
!lI8-2052 (loco'), 6K-9050 ....ton IIno). IN PERS.ON AcIm. Bldg. 7:30 P.M.-ll:30
i'A beginning llept. 19Q.
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Sept. 15, 196&
lilies Flower 'That Will Make Gardener Forget An Else
Vo~unteers Work ~n Washingron
By .Joseph Mtii Marnlflll Roderiek Nigh~ are getting a bit cooler and the lawn has re ~ined ·ita eoIor, so bulb time is not far away. In the past ~o seasons we have been 0Xperimenting with a bulb we bad never really planted 1\lefQre, the' lily. I have always admired IWes but £r-ankI)r, for anyone like myself with my the prices frightened me Scarlett O'Hara "I'n think about away, so I was much l!IlOl"e it tomorrow" attitude, ail effi willing to spend my money ciency expert is needed. on other plants. But three ,sea DOns ago a friepd gave me Xiw Jlegal Lily bulbs . which \In planted in front of a red rose. The results were 00 delightful ~hat we invested in six Aure1ian lily bulbs and the following IPaU we managed to buy some Olym pic Hybrids. Both the Aurelian Hybrids and Olympic Hybrids oost about Q dollar per bulb but are really worth every penny invested in them. Given reasonably good condi Mons, lilies will thrive and re produce very quickly. Those ][ !'llave listed above are especially good for beginners because they are less susceptible to disease and they are extremely hardy. They are ll1so trumpet lilies. which lU'e more appea·ling to gardeners just beginning to grow lilies. Lily bulbs must be given spe dal attention. Everything I read about lilies stresses the fact that € h ey are never really donnant and must be planted as soon as possible after they are re lieived. Most lilies are planted at I.l depth of about three times the f!)ulb height allld must be given good dcainage. This may be accomplished by digging a hole about a foot deep, removing some of the soil from the bottom of the hole and replacing it with sand· and gravel. This assures at least some drain age. Without this the bulb will lrot. Lilies do well in fuUsun or pat'tial shade but prefer Ii Bituation in which the base of the plant is partially shaded. We are eagerly awaiting a new shipment of bulbs containing JltQyal Gold, which is much like flhe Regal Lily but gold in color, Stardust which is a large lllowered white lily with come 0range in its center, and some Mid-Century Hybrids, another (ilasy lily for beginners. I really should not recommend lilies to gardeners because once they see them in bloom they will never give their other plants another thought! Above aU, plant lilies near roses. Their pale tones are lovely next to a vibcant red rose. This year we had some Olympic Hybrid lilies grow to a height of about six lEeet and bloom just above a New yell·ket· red rose. TJ1e picture was magnificent. In the Kitchen A recent newspaper ad for llneating systems pointed out dra matically that carefree Summer days are over when it stated that fn less than 30 more days we will need heat in our homes. Quite suddenly the idle v~cation days we· enjoyed only· a few short weeks ago seem far in the ]J)8st and the hectiC pace begins once again. School seems to be ~e signal for the return to nor malcy (if that's what we call it) and once again mother becomes II combination of chauffeur, cUubwoman, and homemaker. In our household I add work tng mother to this list, for the c>pening of ·school not only sig lllais the return to the classroom of Mer~rl and Melissa but' also my return to· the teaching pro fession. This is a job I enjoy tmmensely but no matter how ('IDjoyable a jQb, most working llnothers will agree that combin ling home and work takes 11 bit i&f organizing: ThIs seems' 'iii liOme eaq tilt Dlany womea but
There are a few things that I have learned over the years that make working lJ litUe easier. Getting tl great deal done the night before helps cut down on that early morning rush. I have learned (the hard way) that a few minutes spent getting the children's clothes out the night before, even down to their hats and the inevitable mittens seems to save hours the next morning. This also gives me the chance to replace any lost buttons or to observe that that pair o~ leotards I planned on having Melinda wear is unwearable. Meal planning also needs to be streamlined come September, because that salad that you molded in the early hours of the morning and that stew thld bubbled em the stove all day now have to be concocted on the weekend. _ Making .oot two weeks of menus and then doing my shop ping seems to be my most suc cessful method of handling my cooking chores. I find nothing more aggravating than to start on a recipe only to find you haven't all the ingredients, and of course this aggravation is doubled when you're tired' after Q working day. Planning seems to help alle viate this situation and the hour that you spend poring over your cook books pays off when you think "What am I going to have fur dinner?" ·and your answer is no further away than yoUr plan book. Meatloaves and spaghetti sauces are two items that should be included in quick menus. Both can be whipped ·up in ~ jiffy and both can also be pre pared that "evening before," One night a week I always in clude a casual meal such as pan cakes and bacon, or fried eggs and hash. These give the cook a bit of a night off and are also a nice change of pace fcom a diet of heavy meals. Any tricks that you can learn to save min utes eventually save· you. hours so be constantly on the lookout . for them. Finally, two essential ingredients necessacy to survi ve as a working wife are an under standing and helpful husband and a sense of humor. This is a recipe for a quick dessert that I find my family gobbles, up and asks for more. . Quick Turnovers leftovec uncooked pie dough use recipe below-it is still the best pie crust recipe I know) jelly or jam 1 egg
sugac One Egc Pie CFUSt 3 cups flour
Jh pound of lard 1 egg 1 Tablespoon vinegac 1) Put the flour in a large bowl and with a 'pastry cutter cut in lf4 pound of the lard until the particles are very tiny, Cut in the remainder until the par tides are about the size of peas,. ·2) In a half cup measure break the egg and fill the rest of the measure with .water and the tablespoon of vinegar. Toss this lightly with the flouc-short , ening mixture until' all the 'pac tides are moist and they form a round ball, This dough may be kept in a plastic bag and used as needed. This amount of flour makeS-' three· pIe' ·sht'!lls. 'Me· o~' bwo crust pie and one shell or a
ONE YEAR LATER: Marie Giang Thi Yen, now re stored to health, became famous a year ago when she was pictured widely in the press as a we'eping battle-wounded child, hobbling ,barefoot with a cane in one hand, the other swathed in bandages. Now a student of Sister M. Christiane, right, of the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul, at Queen of Peace school in Saigon, Marie is pictured with Father Robert Crawford, Philadelphia V'''lC' "ltian priest, chaplain at the school. NC Photo.
WASHINGTON (NC)-Peace Corps volWlteers training at Georgetown University for ser vice in Brazil are making a com promi,se between classroom anell off-campus training. The volWlteers are supple menting book learning with field lVork in an attempt to get a realistic idea of their future as signme~ts, according to Fatheli' George . Dunne, S.J., project director. Many of the trainees are spending two weeks with D. C. famil,ies of all income levels and with repcesentatives of commu nity agencies. Others ace Ii ving '\'Vith Portuguese-speaking Bra zilia·n families here to pcepare them for some of the practical problems they will encounter ~ater this yeac in Brazil. "Georgetown volunteecs are engaged in assisting anti-poverty workers, analyzing community structuces, learning family bud geting, and studying farming methods in the U. S. before going ~ Brazil," Father Dunne said. At the Georgetown training center, returned volunteecs with first-hand experience in Brazil and other countries ace meeting with discussion groups. College professors deliver lectures on the social, economic and political life of Brazil.
Bar Seeks to Reform Canada's Divorce lawllb
WINNIPEG (NC)-The Cana dian Bar Association has given approval to a proposal for , sweeping reforms in Canada'/l divorce laws. Wounded Vietnamese Girl at Home The reforms,. as proposed by 'With Si.sters of Charity the civil justice section of tAle SAIGON (NC)-Her picture sador (recently transferred to . CBA, would enlarge the ground8 for divorce by including cruelty. went around the world :a year .Berlin). ago. It showed a weeping, . It was found that while the desertion, insanity, voluntary wounded, disheveled Vietnamese father and two little brothers of separation and refusal to con child stumbling from the scene the girl had been killed in Dong _ summate a marciage. At present adultery is the only of battle. The crucifix Qround Xoai, the mother and two other grounds for divorce in most her neck told that she was a children had survived. The fa Catholic. The caption said that ther was a Vietnamese soldier. Canadian provinces. Cruelty is her parents had been kilJed in The family had come from North an additional grounds in NOVlll Scotia, and some provinces will the night conflict when the com Vietnam refugees. grant a diVOrce to a wife 0ilIl munist Viet Cang attacked Dong The mother and the other two Xoai military post and mortar· surviving children are living evidence of certain forms of per version. Quebec and Newfound fi.re had taken many victims. now in a home maintained by land do not have divorce Courts. Today she is a bright, though the Sisters· of Charity on farm serious, little girl in Queen of land outside Saigon. Marie lives Pecsons seeking divorces from Peace school, Saigon, where the and goes to school in Queen of these pcovinces have to takl2 action through the fede·cal gov Sisters of Charity are in charge. , Peace. ernment. She is Marie Giang thi Yen, aged The Horst Faas picture in 12, unrecognizable as the war victim of a year ago except for spired the Chicago firm of Platt, Inc., to use it on its Christmas the slight scar on her cheek. card and to decide, in lieu of Refugees From North . Christll].as gifts to its customers, Horst Faas, Berlin-born Asso to send a donation foc child vic ciated Press photographer, who tims of the Vietnam war. The, has sillce won· a Pulitzer prize president,· F.J. Platt, happened for his work in Vietnam, took- the to choose the Sisters of Charity picture last year. It aroused to apply the donation and thus worldwide interest and sym it arrived in Queen of Peace pathy and prompted further in school here, where the child of quiries. One of those who took the picture has .already fOWld CHARLES F. VARGAS a practical interest in the child a haven. 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE was Mt·s. R.A.G. Etherington Sister M. Christiane, who takes Smith, wife of the British ambas NEW BEDFORD, MASS. special care of Marie, comes of a S~igon Catholic family; that number of turnovecs depending has given two Sisters of Charity, two Carmelite nuns and one on their size. Christian Brother ~ the Church. 3) For the turnovers, roll the dough out to about lis inch thickness. Cut· fouc inch squaces ,. ELECTRICM. and put a teaspoon of jam or jelly in one corner, Foln one fJ~ Contractonl corner over the other into a tci angle, sealing edges with your fingers. Further seal edges by pressing closed with the pcongs of a fock. . 4) Cut steam vent in the top of the turnovers, place on a cookie sheet, bcush with a beat en egg and then sprinkie with ~~ sugar. 5) Bake in 425· oV,j':n for 12 9~4 .(,.ou,n.ty ,St.. ...~~ ; t()15- minutes ~ oc:: ~ntil golden " ell New Bedford Il'cown.
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Toward World TOLEDO' (NC) - "The Sacrament of Daily Living". ·might be a good description of Vatican· Council II's Con ·stitution on the Church in the Modern World, according to the assistant director. of the Social .Action· Department, Natipnal :Catholic Welfare ConfeI;ence.·' F.tom the very beginning' of the Christian era, believers coil. :fronted the problem of the rela ''tion between religious faith arid :daily lives, Father' John' F. Cronin said. Their solutions often took such forms as flight from the world and total sep aration of religion and worl.:lly activity. , "But encyclicals of Pope John XXIII, and the major pronounce ment of Vatican Council II Pf!. the world, took a totally dif ferent position," the. priest con ti·nued. "The world Qf business, e:.f cuiture. of science, of th~ arts _ this too is th'e world that God created and proc1aimd good. ."Here is where. God me~ts man' everyday, just as truly ,He' comes to us in prayer 'and . -formal' worship. In' this sense ·we can call our day at: the ·.factory,· the office ,01' the' hOTn':l .as ·the sacrament of daily .tiv..
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COURSE ON COUNCIL: These La Salette Fathers will offer a 10 week course 0J1I. the implications of't;he VatiGan Council, beginning in October and open to. all adllltS. Sessions will be held at the La Salette Shrine, Attleboro. From left, Rev. RogeI"Brisson, M.S., program c09rdin~tor; Rev.. Leo Thiba ult, M.S.; Rev'. Donald Paradis, M.S., superior ~n~l shrine director; Rev. Arthur Chabot, M.S. .. '. .' ". ' .
INurses. Adopting More' Militant Stolr1ce Exploited,F rustratecll Say Council
Official!~
WATERLOO ~NC) - T w €i priest ecumenists are acting. as official observers at the General! Council being held here by the U';ited Church of Canada. The~ are Father J. J. Keating, C.S.P", of Toronto 'and Father Irene_ Beaubien, S.J., of Montreal, wh~ respectively head the EngJis~ and French language divisions oS the National Commission 00 Ecumenism, Canadian Catholi() Conference. . This was the first time an offl. cial invitation was sent 'the CC@ ~y the Uniteq· Church GeJle.r3li. Council. In addition to the Catn,. oJic observers, there are also ob servers from the Anglican and Presbyterian Churches, the Ba~ tistFederation of Canada, the Canadian Conference of the Eva'ngelical United Brethren and the Methodist Church of Gre~ Britain. Dr.. James Brown, assistanll ·general of the 'General Councilp referring to the Catholic observ ers, said: "We are delighted that we are going to have the com pany of Father Keating anell Father Beaubien. It is a ve~ significant development." . The General Council brings together some '400 commissioneBsl from aeross Canada as well' atJ .some 50 guests.' The council will consider 'tiIe' principles of union approved ~ the Anglican General Assembly meeting' in Vancouver, and de termine the course of future dia logue ·on union with the Ang]j.. ean .Church of Canada.
Order Opens College Students
Father Cr'onin gave the ser mon at the Labor Day Mass at WASHINGTON (NC)' r- The cials' agreed that ,,'hile' salary is who is going to take care of the St. Francis de Sales church here. nurses' are angry-and in more a major problem for nurses it is patients when the hospitals were )"0 Lay CATONSVILLE (NC) -WiDi Gospel Command built. This is very discouraging and more places they are doi,ng not' the only one. Lawrence· Cardinal Shehan dl Nurses, they said, feel ex- to nurses.' They are not able to Bajt.i~ore presiding, U.S.. Sen.: ··itJach of us can l!e. a' minister something about i t . . ' give the kind. of car·e· they've Of this sacrament. by livirlg up Throughout the country newly ploited and .frustrated. They are Robert F.KennedY of New Yopi! . '. ·10 the demands of one simple .militant nu'rses are speaking up obliged to wOl'k long and incon been taught to give:" gave the welcoming .address teo q~estion: 'what can I do' to make against low pay and poor work- venient hours, frequently. called' . Crisis Is Hert' ~he .charter class of lay studen~ the world about, me more truly . ing con.ditions in New York ~nd on to do non-nursing jobs, and .. For years experts have been at Mount Providence Junior C~ San Francisco registered nurses faced' with the fact that the predicti'ng ac'risis i~ the riursing . iege in this Baltimore s'uburb.. : liuman?" Father Cronin said.. · ···",rhe Gospel con~mand to IOYe recently threatened" inass. resigquality of patient :care in many and' other' health professions~ . For 10 years the college b~ '. . one's neighbor as oneself. is ,not nations' from hospitals.· Else- places. 'is poor. Now the ~risis :1s here, A lirow-. trained' members of the Obla1e where nurses.have been .weigh"Patients; are not receiving ing . pop:ulatioh is' demanding ;flls~ ~o P~lt' into . pr~cti~e ifthi.s Sisters' of . ProVldel1l:e; whos.; quality care in hospitals today,," m'eans' personal con~ern.·f~1.' ing. unionization; ' . ' more health services; and" the me~bers. are" pred~fllir13ntlY. person' with ,whom. .'r~ , At Hi; June convention in San Miss .Kelly said. "We've built· new Medicare' prog'ranl' has' in:: Negro. With the arrival of 7§ · h~ve' meaning.fut COl1tact: This Frilllcisco·the American,Nurses' hospitals hand over fist, but we creased the demand. At'the same i~y studentS,' the majority .~ isa high 'form of religion that Association, the, nurses'. profes- . : haven't given much thought io . time;: relat'ively fewer" young whom' are from. the. St~ Agnee . .. sionalorganization, set $6,500 as ~o often goes unpracticed,". he Women' choosing 'nui'sfng Hospital' School of Nursing iio lJl;ated. .. . the: goal for a m.inimum. st~rti:llg with a care~r or sfaying' in it . Baltimore, it Decomes' the fir9d ~alary, . Registered" nurses. in " ~'The ,council'telis·.'us particu 4)nce they have chosen: it. ., Roman Catholic' institute' in tbti P,riest ..Assigned .:',' li.rly ,to be concerned w.ith the metropolit<in hospitals ·now .ov "We have to face the fact that United States to be· s'ponsoi-ecl TUCSON (NC)-When Father young . women today have so poor, and. the neglectedt ]~ather erage about $4,700 a year.. by a predominantly Negro ve.::. Peter Moga arrives here in Ari Cronin continued.. "Poverty is , Complicated Situation many careers open to them that ligious community. Most of the zona to take over his new duties c'lifficult enough ·to bear at any Nurses in Catholic hospitals the nursing profession will never new students are white. . time, but its hardships are multi have as many problems as other at St. Bernard's Church, a mis attract the relative numbers· that The 25-member faculty m. plied many times over when it nurses if' not more,. two officials sion of tl}e Cathedral of All it did when the only careers cludes Oblate Sisters of Provi is accompanied by discrimina of the· National Council of Saints, .he. will be accompanied open to a woman were nursing, dence, Josephite Fathers, J'esuiQ by his wife and. one of their four teaching and sodal wo'rk'!' Miss· tion and neglect. Cathoiic Nurses said in an inter s~holastics, . laymen and women~ sons. "Each of us' might profit by view· here. : Kelly said. The president of the college iIB . Father. Moga is a convert. to broadening his daily examina . For the Catholic nurse work That means, Miss Langdon . Sister Mary of' Good CqumeD, tion of conscience and asking ing iii. a Catholic hospital' the Roman Cathol{cism from the added, that if nursing is to re
the former principal of St. FJ"a~ 'some hard questions, 'such as !lituatioh is "compliCated by our Romania~ Orthodox' Church. He main competitive w.ith other oc res Academy high school, Balu,. was r~ceived into the Catholic I Christ wili put to 'us o~. the day .feeling for priests and nu.ns, and cupations salaries' must· rise to more. ,tlf. judgment," 'Father Cronin this gets into the question, .of Church in 1959, at which time a· comparable level and working
one's relationship witr... the the Holy Office determined that conditions must improve:
i saJd . Church-although (Or. think it is he had. been validly ordained pure nonsense that it should," by a validly consecrated bishop. Do.rninican CoU~ge said Dorothy N. Kelly, editor of Father Moga, according to the custom of the Romanian Ortho The Catholic Nui·se.. ' ·Has New Program NCCN executive' secretary dox Church, had been married SHEET MET All BLAUVELT (NC) ~ A neW while a student for the priest Hene Langdon said many Sister progl'am in the field of special hospital administrators. also do .hood. On his conversion he was J. TESER, Prop. CITIES SERVICE education was inaugurated at not know what it costs a nurse allowed to continue his priestly RESIDENTIAL DISTRllt. ·-,")R.S Dominican College here in New. to support herself and honestly duties as' a married man. INDUSTRIAL York beginning with the Fall believe she is doing well when He is now a priest of the By COMMERCIAL Gasoline
semester.. iIi fact she is underpaid. zantine rite, and was recently 253 Cedar St., New Eledford Students enrolled in the p~o granted permission from Rome Other Problems Fue' and Range
WY 3..3222 ~ram study education for the "In many, many areas of our to adopt the Latil,l rite also. He mentally retarded, emotionally country,'" has been serving since his COll Miss' Kelly com disturbed, deaf, cerebral palsied, mented, "a nurse after a good version' in St. Mary's R9 mani ;m a blind and mulitple handicapped. day's work can still qualify· for Byzantine Church in Dearborn', , . . - - -...- Oil BURNERS In addition to' bachelor of science Mich. the poverty program." . degrees, students will receive . f~r pr..:-"Iivery
In common with other f)ursing . state certification as teachers. of spokesmen the two ·NCC·N olfi':' & Day & Night Service
the blind and visuallyhandi-' (J . . . 'apped. C' G. E. BOILER BURNER UNtTS M;cha~1 Director of the special edu . Women i., h~ii'S ~ation program is Sister Jean .prITSBURGH (NC) - Inclu Inc.
Rural Bottled Gas Service Marie, a. teacher at t'he Lavelle sion of women in parish ·.choits School for -the Blind in the Bronx has. been' authorized for .the FUNERAL SERVICE
61 COHANNET ST. for the p~st .18 years; The 'Do- Pittsburgh diocese by':Bishop TAUNTON minican nun haS done many John J: Wright. Official policy NEW' BEDFORD, MASS.
rite Folinoutlt National Bonk' studies· on' the education of for the .diocese for·.many.years ~ttleboro - No.. Attlebf)" . . rF~ln,outh. '~a&lf.: physically and" mentally handi:.n .. haS'i e~ellided ''Women' .:fJ'~ '. ". " .. 5... COUNTY·, STREET , • " '1 IIr tile ,_~ If,... llaee '111I1 • T]unton: ,.., npped children:" ". '~.' , «bun:h ·elloi,. " ":1',:<'<;,~l...,•. __ ~__ .•. .•.•1_.·:: / '..;,,: ,;;,..;,:_ ~...,:.:
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THE ANCHOR-
Express ConcerliT Over Atrtacks 0111 Bsshops
Thurs., Sept. 15, 1966
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MIAMI BEACH (NC) . The Knights CJf Columbus have eXpressed "serious eon rem" over public criticism by Catholics which questions tlhe authority and leadership quali ~es of bishops and makes them "objects of ridicule." The ].2 million-member Cath olk £' rat ern 8 I organization adopted a unanimous declaration 2t the 84th Bnnual meeting of itS I) u pre m e Council affirming "deep respect for the fullness' of ~e priesthood in every bishop" alld pledging to guard and honor tsheir "sacred dignity." , Another K. of C. resolution <e () n d em ned discrimination against minority groups and a:alled on local Knights of Co lumbus groups to cooperate in ~nti -discrimi nation efforts. 'rhe declaration on bishops did not identify those who have rid iculed the hierarchy. It stated that the Supreme Council of the ~nights of Columbus "notes with serious eoncern that in, re a:ent months' some members of ~h~ Church, ~pparently . en dowed w~th a special gift for fault-finding and possessed. of ENTER PREP SEMINARY: These Fall River boys are among entrants at La Salette .~ver J'eady media of. expression, ba~ publicly questioned the prep seminary, Enfield, N.H. From left, Robert Verrette, Paul Bernier, Maurice Demers leadership qualities and author and Roger Cousineau are initiated into mysteries of language ~ab by Rev. Franklin Major, ity of the bishops and portrayed, M.S. ~~m ns objects of ridicule.", Support 11. S. Poliey The K. of C. Supreme Council lave unanimous endorsement to II resolution deploring discrimi Hation against minority groups" ~ "the most serious social problem facing America iOday." that of ,his dependents," Bishop isaical! - the Christian who is It urged that all units of the MIDDLETOWN CNC) A ;Jware of this problem, is. able fraternal organization "every- bishop emphasized here in Ohio McC<)rthy said. to do something' about it, but where participate in cooperative that both labor and management "The labor movement faces ignores it! . efforts'aimed at eliminating dis have 11 duty to solve the critical throughout the nation a complex crimination of all kinds. ' probiem of racial diSCrimination and serious problem-as indeed , ~'In, the Christian brothevhQod "The Council underscored' its in employment ranks. " , does management and society in of labor, there can be no step general," he continued. "It is'the brothers,. no ,privileged class," support ·of A.merican 'i,ivoive Auxiliary Bishop Edw\lrd A. problem of racial discrimination he said. ment in Vretnam by adopting McCarthy of Cincinnati ',' ac in employment ~ of hard-core three sep~rate relloll.\tions· sub )mowledged stePIl are. being Referring to the Last Judge bringing de mitted by three different state taken ')y lapor, management an~ unemployment; ment, Bishop, McCarthy specn grading poverty to Negroes' and aelegations. ' , , , g!lvernment 'to. ~bolish , racial lated': "Will there not also' be certain other minority· groups, , One resoiuti.on sai~l .that t1)e bias in hiring and training lIIe :-: those to 'whom the Lord wiU in the midst, of bounteous Supl'eme Council :'wholehear.tl'" g~oes and other victims of pov say, 'I wa.s desperate, w.ithout a '~ly supportS" the present'U: S. ~rty', but added '.'there still !s ., 'plenty." job; 'and you gave' me a break Prayer, .Reflection, fl~and" aft~.r' noting th~t' ~he ~on~ 'way to go." , ."',. .. * * You hired me • * '" You took an interest in m'e, made a' good '.country "is in 'the midst of peace He urged that Christian men He added:·"How un-Christlike mechanic of me so that I would marchers and .pickets opp,osed "who are in positions of ,influ -one might even say" how phar .. qualify for the job * * * you ~. i~ being in Vi~tllam." ' ence in either· ~abor or manage judged me on my own merits, AI1f;)ther resolution expresse5l. ment, true to the teachings of Benedictin~ not by prejudiced stereotype "support for those men in Viet- our Lord; their Master, interest you moved me up and promoted Dam who are fighting and dying th~mselves in this problem." me when I was wOl'thy of pro for the principle of freedom and Bishop McCarthy cited the VALYERMO (NC)-One of JJ:lotion .. • .' " for the oppressed but stalwart Second Vatican Council's Con
Bishop McCarthy. called for people in the Republic' of South stitution on the Church in the the largest outdoor events· of its hind in California will take mutual prayer and for reflection Vietnam whose courage and Modern World.
upon "the dignity of work and valor in the face of ~ppression "It is' the duty of society, ac place Sept. 24 and 25, when the the personal, dignity of the represents the highest: order of cording to circumstances pre Benedictine monks of St. 'An working man, and on the respect eQurage ~nd dignity llmong· free vailing in it,in keeping with its drew's Priory' here stage their for labor taught' us by 'Jesus, men." . role to help the citizens to find 9th ,annual Fall festival On the 400 - acre' monastery - ranch whose own- hands were rough sufficient employment; and re with the callouses of tools." " muneration for labor is to be grounds near Palmdale in Los such that man may be furnished Angeles county. Originally planned by the the means to cultivate worthily
his own material and social and monks in gratitude for their safe NOTRE DAME (NC) A cultural and spiritual life, and arrival from Red China a ,decade hundred yeal's or so ago Charles, ago, this year's festival will wel ONF STOP
'Dickens penned a book, "Great come 50,000 guests. The entire SHOPPING CENTER
Expectations." He couldn't have Valyermo community and 600 been think~ng of the 1966 foot volunteer w()rkers ,are preparing .. Television • Furniture ball fortunes of Notre Dame, fur the colorful activity. Probl~m • Applionces • Grocery but that just about sums up the One of the most attended at LOS ANGELJ!:S (NC) - An fever-pitch intel'est of "Fightin' swers by experts will be at 104 Allen St., New Bedford tractions is frequently the art Irish" followers-great expecta show. This year the work of such tempted for the benefit of par WYman 7-9354 tions. ' ents to such problems as guid-' well known artists' as Sister All tickets for Notre Dame ing children to maturity in spite Mary Corita, LH.M., Gerda With home games ha've been sold out and. Arthur Ames will be dis of LSD, sexual freedom and al since Aug. 12-em'liest sellout cohol. played. ' . ' date in the school history. The The experts ~ili take part hl Irish are among, five teams picked by pre-seasoil forecasters a score' of panels 'scheduled this CO.
FaU'throughout suburban· 'areas to battle for the natio'nal eham of the Los AngeleSarchdioc.ese. jpionship. The panels are being organized by alumnae of ail three Catholic ·womenls cOlleges here and are paFt of a continuing' program of CORK (NC)-Archbishop Pat 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ]Tick F. Ryan, O.P., 85, retired education they hav~ called "Con NEW BED~AD Ordinary of Port of Spain, Trin frontation." They' will present idad, has retumed to his native authorities in· three fields-mod ,WYmon 1.5534, Ireland after 39' years ill 1De ern marriage; ,adolescent p.rob,., , ·,;,·For Your Cor .•1..1. West IJ1di~ 'lemfJ, _betiCE.
Appeals for Fair Play in Hirin·g. Negroes Ohio, Prelate Sees Labor Management Problem
,
Monks' Plan Fall Festival
Notre Dame Home
Games Sold Out
PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A study which grades the librarieo of 669 liberal arts colleges in thea Unite.d States has been prepared by Prof. James'T. McDonough, Jr., .of St. Joseph's College here, under the auspices of the U. So Office of Education. The study rates ~ollege Jja braries according to the numbell' of volumes, the ratio of the num ber of volumes to student enroll ment, and available library budget figures. Computers were used to di\ gest, sort and grade the reamtJ of data obtained from the survey forms. McDonough said that al though much of the statistical1l information was available pre viously, this was the first eHoi.1 to "grade" college libraries. "With the study just com pleted, a college can determine just where its library stands on a nation-wide basis," he said, Next step, he said, would be W prepare similar studies for uni versity and junior college 'Qjp braries.
Plan latin Arne.. ic41J Rosary Crusade HOLLYWOOD (NC)-Fatheii' Patrick Peyton, C.S.C., directOO' of the Family Rosary Crusad~ wm train 15 Central AmericDil priests next year to contimHl the crusade in their own COtllfta bies. At a meeting of the Centya'i American hierarchy in PanaiOO City, . he secured pledges from ihe Bishops of Guatemala, Hon-- dums, San Salvador, Nicaragoo and Costa Rica to provide priesW for the crusade. The training~ Father Peyton said, can well be fi second Spring for the crusade «i prayer that he began 25 years ,:biro next January. If the training program is sue;> ~essfl1l, Father Peyton noted b will be expanded to meet Rosa~ eommitments around the, globe"
Honor Ccudinom' '. JERSEY CITY (NC) - Jlliifflj Cardinal Doepfner of Municb_ Freising, ,Germany, will receiVE an honorary degree from ~ Peter's College' here at a eon vocation in October.
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T:iE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 15, 1966
Nove~' [Depicts
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DivineDesign
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By Rt. Rev. Msgll". John S. Kennedy Gerard Robichaud's' novel' The Apple of. His Eye'
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Rev. hIt-cm J. Sheenp
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- 'rhe consolation tbat Ow Lord gives is ·1DOt alwaya eo oooi fevered brow or heal a broken limb, but to give a v.lsion of :ma purposes so that we will use every suffering to save oou1IJ. N~ where is this better I't~vealed than in a letter we received from a priest in charge of all. Aaian leprosarium. He wrote: "I was- about to send you the good news of the complete of one of oar patients when sudden l~ragedy struck our leprosarium. Fire broke out in the stillness of the night and within three. hours moot of the 65-year-old compound had burned to the ground. The men'liI ward was completely destroyed and with it the dental and ele:a-' trical apartments, the phamiacy and. all the medical supplie3, the library and barber shOI~, half, of ~operating room and the roof over the kitchen. The men lost the few meager possessions thesr had but· the patients helped each other wonderfully. Those with sight led out the blind,. others carried on their backs those with out legs. Although they have 'lost everything, the men have lW other thought, no other· words but to thanK God that no livetj' were lost, They feel t,bat this sacrifice and hardship was needed to save the world." Q
(Doubleday, 277 Park Ave., New York. $4.95) takes its title mm a remark 'made by Sister Marie-Eugene to 10-year-old Michel Dumont, the principal,character. "There is an order to all things! All of us, good, managing Mrs. Quackenbush's bad, and indifferent, are a theatre, which she is prompted part of the Divine design. to offer Victor, as a result of No one has He forgotten, Michel's talk with her.
.
io Save ,The Workl?
God Lo"e You By
lAs _Instantly Perceptible
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Nor is this the end of the series of marvels which solve all problems neatly, except that of poor Francine, who goes quietly . off to the hospital and apPears to be quite forgotten in the gen eral rejoicing. Does she recover? We don't know. We have to be content with the assurance that . God's grana plan has worked in RADIO-TV: Charles E. mysterious ways to secure every ReillY, Jr., has been named good thing for Michel. the first executive secretary We cannot, of course, rest con tent with that assurance. It is of the Radio-TV Office re all too perfect to be convincing, cently established by the' all too mechanical and immedi bishops of the U.S. in line ate to be consonant with life as with the ecumenical council'g we know it from experience. declaration on communica There is indeed a divine design, and it does work out in the life tions media. NC Photo. of each of us, but never is it so pat and instantly perceptible as 1his novel depicts it. Ridicules Exeesses. There is bound to be a great deal of cheering for' and' hand- ' wringing over, St. Fidgetta and Other Parodies by John Bellairs, with illustrations by Marilyn r NEW BRUNSWICK (NC) Fitschen (Macmillan, 60 Fifth -Middlesex County has ask Ave., ,New York. $2.95). Both ed h St t f N J will result from the fact that Mr., t .e a e o' ew ersey Bellairs has done something to help it save the birthplace seldom if ever done before in of poet-soldJer Joyce Kilmer. this country; he is a Catholic -County freeholders applied for' who hilariously ridicules ex"; $3,500 from' the· Department of cesses and aberrations in Catho.. Conservation and Economic De lic devotions, hagiography, ed.u- velopment as the state's share of cation, etc. ' 'purchasing the two-story home Most of the time he is right at 17 Joyce Kilmer Avenue on the target, although, occa where the author of "Trees" waa sionally he, too, is guilty of ex born Dec. 6, 1886. cesses or errant aim. He is ~itty, If the aid is .approved.- the has a, delicious sense of the ab county will match it and buy surd, and adroitly does bur lesque imitations of everything the home wIY ch will be main trom pious biographies of unhis tained and preserved by the Joyce, Kilmer Foundation, Inc. torical saints to the hairsplitting of old style theologians. . ' Currently there are two plans . Thel'e is nothing wrong in Mr. to save the house. One is to Bellairs' parodies except for keep it at its present location. some momentary lapses in taste The other is to move it to a dif~ and probably inevitabie repeti ferent part of town. tion of the same devices and Killed in Action. tricks. His work is not nearly The birthplace is now the so clever, subtle, and polished headquarters of the Joyce Kil as, say, Ronald Knox's, but it mer American Legion Post and has bite and relevance. has been since 1929. The legion Adams Uncles . naires want to build' a new Abigail Adams Homans' Edu home on the site and have the cation by Ul).cles (Houghton, old home moved elsewhere. Mifflin, 2 Park St., Boston. $4) according to Joseph Puleio, post promises more than it delivers. commander. ' Mrs. Homans, a direct descend The legionna'ires first pro ant of John Adams and John posed to demolish the house but Quincy Adams, sets out to tell protests came from all over the us of the influence upon her, as state an'd the foundation was a girl and a young woman, of , formed to save it. her 'celebrated' uncles, Henry Kilmer was killed in action Adams and Brooks Adams. In July 30; 1918, while serving with this she succeeds, but iri a way , the "Fighting 69th" in France. all too scrappy and reticent. , 'He piiblished ''Trees'' in 1914. This is not because of any He attended Rutgers University stuffiness. For all her excep-, and, it is said, wrote the poem tionally. .distinguished back about a campus oak tre.e since ground, . she is quite unureten 'chopped down. tious. But either she determined not to tell all she knew of the matters she undertook to treat. or her recollection are spotty. For, Handicap'ned After giving us some account II'" of her ancestry and of her im DRUMCAR (NC)-Bing Cros College Faculty mediate family, as well as ..of by has sent a check for nearly ERIE (~C)-Canon Warren L. , the Boston and the Quincy of '$1000 to the Hospitaller Brothel'll her youth, she recalls periods' Ot St. John of God who have Starrett, theologian of the Epis copal diocese of Erie, has been' spent in the company· of, Henry 400 mentally· handicapped boyS named to the faculty at Gannon Adams and in that of his brother in their care here in Ireland. Brooks. The Brothers had asked Bing . College, conducted by the Cath elic diocese of Erie here. Canon She represents a precious her- to be guest star at a concert Starrett, who also is a consult itage and tradition which is 00- in their home. Unable to fit the ant to Episcopal Bishop William coming ever less visible' and ac- concert into his schedule, he Crittenden of Erie, will also tive in Americ!ill life. That is sent the check for the'am.9unt he serve as an instructor in the de why one wishes there were more estimated the Brothers would partment of theology. 10 her book. 1&ave gained by his appearanca.
but He has also made men free ta choose. And for those who ob &arve His commandment to love one' another; there is also the promise that He shall keep them as the apple of His eye." Young Michel certainly needs some such encouragement. His happy world, in Groveton Falls, Maine, is falling to pieces. A few months ago his parents were, killed in an automobile accident. He has since been cared for by ·his spinster aunt, Francine. But now Francine is going' to ~e hospital for a major opera tion which she may not survive. Michel is to be sent to an orphanage. - It is doubly deplorable that this should happen to such a good youngster. Michel, while I lively, is kind, t.olerant, helpful. He is the mainstay of his ,friends who belong to a club meeting in a shack in his backyard. He fa thoughtful of older people. Restitution Required And he is conscientious. He bas ·considerably enlarged the dub treasury by a sum of money' (about $50) found in an old coat among his father's effects. Now he learns that the coat was ROt his father's but belonged ~ an old man without name or kin, Whom his parents had be friended shortly before the old man died. Michel feels he has been guilty of stealing. . . He, goes to confession, and so presents the case that the priest believes restitution is required. Since it cannot be made to the dead, his non-existent estate, or his non-existent relatives, it will be done through charity. , For example, some roses are bought for aged Mme. Leduc, in her last days, 'and a new hat ,pro eured for Denise Michaud, the f')"" town laundress whose reputation is unjustly tainted. Mr. Seigel berg, who owns the department store, is presented with a sum possibly matching the value of articles pilfered from the store, and rich Mrs. Quackenbush is given the equivalent of ,evaded payments for admission to the ' movie theatre which. is' among ber profitable properties. Series of Marvels This policy. works marvels. For example, Michel's uncle Vic ~r. briefly in town on a visit from Boston, sees Denise Mi Maud wearing the new hat, is irresistibly attracted to her, asks her to marry him, and decides to stay in Groveton Falls, pro 'riding Michel with a home. But what job is there for Vic tor? None other than that of
1NIeed~!d
As;ks State Hel, SaVe Birthplace Of Joyce Kilmer'
"This sacrifice WllS needed to save tllie wornllll!" I!llll. I1fuemr' deprivation, these lepc~rs have found the dJivhae lJ!lI1lrJlllCS0. 'll'nnesr have' united their nails anllll thorns with those of Christ .for tllIe redemption oil the world. Thein is not a. plaintive" What have we done to deserv~ this?"" But how hard it often is for VIS to see in the accidents aDd trials of Iile--in sick ness, Un bereavement, ':bi financial loss, ill' lepeTous Hmlbs--GnS' divine purpose. Today, few understand self-denial, sae rifice and liviite: for oi;hers. Yet we do reeeive letters, many lc~tters irom ihose wbo undeTsta.nd, those who know .&hat there ean 1M:! no Cbrlst without a Cr4lSS and who see lIIim in their S'tarvilllA', Imprisoned, sick brothe,rs in mi S 8 i 0 1II lands.
You who seldom help heal a wounded body, comfort a weaq 86ul, make a convert or do something concrete 'to save the world -we address this column to you -in the hope that you will hear and heed. the words of Christ, "Whatever you do to these, the least of my little (>nes, you do it for Me.", Write to us! God Love You! GOD LOVE YOU to Mrs. E.R.G. for $5. "Enclosed is th~ money I receive.1 as a )lJrize (or a 'bonus eard' from my groee17 store. I couldn't decide ,what to buy but I knew that you wouU have no trouble rllecidb:ag what to do with the money." ... to 9. B. MeG. for $'70. "This i:~ the result of collecting dimes from loose ohange at the end of c~h day." ••• to Anon. for '$2,000.
--_.
The C<?lor of each of the WORLD MISSION ROSARY'S deeadee symbolizes ·one of the five continents of the world where mis sionaries are laboring to bring souls to Christ. Those of you who cannot· go to Missions <can slren'gthen thos~, whQ work in your place by praying for them. To reeeive the WORLD' MISSION ROSARY which has oo~n blessed by. Bishop Sheen, send your request and an offering of $2 tQ The Society for the Propagation of the' Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. . Cut out this column, pin' your saerifiee to it and! maiD 6t eo Most Rev. FultOllll J. Sb«:en, National 'Director of The Society few the Propagation ,[)f the Faith, 366 lFifth Avenue, New York, N. '!f. 10001, or to yonI' Diocesan Director, Rt. Rev. Raymond '1'; ColllS5 d,ine, 368 NorthM:adn Street, Fan River, Massacbusetts.
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'mE ANC,,",ORlnurs., Sept. 15, 1966
Education Board Constitution Continued from Page One The Board of Education of the
Diocese of Fall River is now
working within specific educa
tional guidelines as stated within
the new Constitution that was
accepted at the meeting of the
Board on Thursday, Sept. 8 at
Bishop Cassidy ·High School,
The Constitution states th~t
the "purpose of the Board con
eerns the application of Chris
tian principles to the educational
programs, and such other mat
ters as the location, establish
ment and closing of schools;
standards of education; classes;
teachers; finances; salaries; and
educational, athletic and related
programs."
While the Board has six mem bers of the clergy, the lay people predominate with seven mem bers. This is typical of the rec ommendations of the. Council that the laity be given some of the responsibility for the deci sions in policy-making t,hat af-, feet the growing Church. Although the Board is made
up of non-teachers in accord
with the best administrative
theory, the teaching profession
will be represented in a special
way by an Advisory Council of
at least six persons who are
teachers or are in some related
profession.
This group may attend aU meetings, but have no voting power. They will serve as con llultants and advisors. The selec tion of this Advisory Committee . is under consideration until the next meeting. The Board elected Il8 its offi cers: President, Dr. Clement Maxwell; Vice President, Judge Beatrice Mullaney; Treasurer, Mrs. Eva Maria Dane. The agenda for future meet ings was set up with high pri ority being given to the drafting of a statement on the purpose and current status of Catholic education and the consideration of lay teachers within the paro chial system. \ The Superintendent of Schools was directed to prepare reports to keep the members of the Board up-to-date on such mat ,tel's as federal aid, teacher quali fications, curriCUlum growth and innovations in education. ARTllClLE ]I Name, Purposes and ][)uties Section 1. There is hereby es tablished a Board, under the name of "Board of Education of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River," having the purpose and duties of governing all mat ters pertaining to education in the said Diocese of Fall River, including all matters pertaining to the Diocesan Department of Education. Section 2. The purpose of the Board of Education of the Ro man Catholic Diocese of Fall River, hereafter called the Board, concerns the application of Christian principles to the ed ucational programs, and such other matters as the location, es tablishment and closing of schools; standards of education; dasses; teachers; finances; sal l'lries; and educational, athletic and related programs. Saving the provisions of Canon Law, Vatican Council II, and Diocesan Statutes, all decisions of the Board shall be binding upon the Superintendent of Schools, the Department of Education, and -\)the pastors; princi pals and staff'! of the Diocesan schools. ARTICLE n MEMBMERSHIP OF BOARD Section 1. Number and com position. The membership of the Board shall be composed q:i seven (7) lay members and six (6) members of the cle.rgy, and shall be named with proper re gard for the geographical areas (l)f the diocese. The Bishop of the !Diocese of Fall River and the Superintendent of Schools shall ~titute ex officio members 4!iI I
~
t;
~~
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tbe Board. Section Z. Election, Vacancnes, memovaJ. The members of the Board shall be named by the Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River from persons recom mended by the Board after con sideration of nominess submit sideration of nominees submit schools. Vacancies in the Board shall be filled in the same man ner. Any member of the Board, other than an ex officio member, who is absent from two consecu tive meetings of the Board, un less excused by action of the Board, cease to be a member. Section 3. Tenure of Office. Each member shall hold office for the term of three years, pro vided, however, that in order that the terms may be staggered, 'and that one-third of the mem bers of the Board may be elected iln each· year beginning three years from the date thereof, the initial appointments shall be di-' vided so that four (4) members have a term of five years, four (4) members have a term of four years, and five (5) members have a term of three years. The present and future members of the Board shall hold office until the Board shall elect a successor, or until prior resignation or death or until prior disqualifi cation by absence 'of two consec utiv:e Board meetings not ex cused as aforesaid. Section 4. The Board shall' ~ame an Advisory' Council of at least six (6) persons represent ing the teachin"g. profession .or other related professions. The said Advisory Council may at tend all meetings, but shall not have voting powers. ARTICLE :m
Officers
) Section 1. Creation of Officers.
The officers of the Board shall
consist of a President, a Vice
President, a Secretary, and such
assistants and additional officers
as the Board may elect. Section 2. Election, 'Fenu1/'0, Vacancies and Removal. Offi cers other than ex officio mem bers, shall be elected annually' at the annual meeting of the Board upon nominations sub mitted by a nominating commit tee appointed by the President and by any member from the floor; and shall hold office un til the next annual election and thereafter until their suc~essors are duly elected and qualified. Section 3. President. The President shall act as Chairman of- the Board and of any Execu tive Committee; shall be the executive h.ead of the Board; shall appoint all committees un less otherwise specified by the Board; shall execute on behalf of the Board all written instru ments excepted as otherwise directed by the Board; shall re port the actions of the Board to the Bishop of the Diocese of Fall R~ver; and in general shall perform all duties incident to the office of a President and such other duties as from time to time may be assigned to him by the Board. . Section 4. Vice-President. The Vice-President zt the request <Di the President or in 'his ab sence shall perform the dutiet:l and exercise the functions 00: the the President and when so act-' ing shall have the power 00: the President. Section $. Secretary. Th@ Secretary shall keep the minutes of the meetings of the Board; shall see that all notices are fully given :illl accordance with the provision of this constitu~ tion; shall be custodian of the records of the Board; and in gen eral, shall perform all duties in- cident to the office of the Sec retary of the Board and such other duties as from time to time may be assigned to him h:Y MMl President of the Board. 'ilJwm M> Page Fourteem i~' .)"~ ,t a r: ..4:; i
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Prelat~
Anglican '!l'®da~t$
UfiBt)1
ST. JOHN'S (NC) -Anglican Archbishop Michael 'Ramsey of Canterbury observed here: "I believe that ultimately there will be one 'Christian church, though' I'm sure it will be a church containing varieties of eustoms and varieties of forms." The world leader of 44 million Anglicans now touring Canada ventured at a press conference his view of the place which the Papacy might have in such a church. "I think that in the united church of the future, the Bishop of Rome might have a place as presiding amongst equals - a presiding bishop among equa1s," he said. While exprE:ssing belief that eventually there would be one Christian church, he said unity no~ is prevented by doctrinaX differences. He added these dif ferences can be overcome, but not quickly. He cited as examples of such differences the Roman Catholic doctrine of Transubstantiation and the Assumption Cl>f the Blessed Virgin.
Chinese Book
YOUR DONATWNS BROUGHT SMILES: Palestine ref'ugee brother and sister in Beirut, Lebanon, await a dis tribution of food by f.ield workers of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, which helps provide food, cloth ing and shelter for families ynable to support themselves. NC Photo.
SOU THO RAN G E (NC) --Seton Hall University here ~ received a $20,000 grant from the U. S. Office of Education tG prepare and publish a characteli' textbook of advanced Chinese con versa tion.
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Nett' Bedford Army Nurse Vuits Family Aliter, Tour of j[)ut,Y in Viet Nam
THE ANCHqR-Dioc:ese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 15, 1966
~ntinued.
from Page
Tb,ir~en
cies filled in the:':manner '1Ieter-" ....
mined by the Boa;td: iIi the ab~Five of the six~etnb~~~'6:f the:>iJonovan clan' got· ttfgethel"';'lMt week".when the
ARTICLE lIV sence of other direction,' the-traVeling lilembe:r; of the fa~ily 'arrived' home from a year's tour of dtity in Vietnam. Lt• . Meetings President shall apP9lnt all com Col. 'Mary E. Donovan, 5 feet 2 an<L'i12 pounds, an Army nurse for: 26 yea.rs, is the ... '" I'aid mittees. . ",ect'ion 1. Regular, ';pe~ . "widgW' of the family, ,but she's big.. enough to face up to any situation and her lepre ARTICLlE VI l) n d Annual! Meetings. The Board shall meet monthly, Sep .chaun sense of hum 0 r tember to May, subject to change Department of lEducatiorll brightens the path of t~e'" ~.t::.: ; by the Board itself or to. post~· ~ec~ion 1: Constitution, Staff, - patients with whom she f ponement by the President. SPe":' ApllDomtment. There shall be a . '. eial or additional regular meet Department of Education of the . comes In contact. Almost mgs shall be held whenever J)iocese of Fall River; a Super ~wallo~e~ up by a big chair ealled by the President or the inteIident of Schoois Assistant In.the hvmg room of her sister's majority of the Board. The reg 'Superintenefents, and 'such other home at 81 Sutton Street, New war meeting held in the month '·staff positions as' the Superin":" oBedford,wearing,a brig1;lt blue Gf.,september .in 'each year, or if tendent may deem appropriate' ,dress and high heeled 'pumps,' .. t none is held in that month, then. "an'" h~ving such compensatio~ She's as unlikely a Viet Nam in the next, month in which. a, other .terms of employihent' 'veteran as you' can find .. r-egular meeting is held, shall be the 'Superintendent, subject'; She admits she likes civi~an ,i .~signated the annual ,me~tillg . to thE!" approval of the Board' clothing better than the Army for the purpose of election of .maY,.deem proper. The Bishop of' :,fat~gues' d , boots that were members of the Board ofoffi,.t~e. Diocese .of Fall River shall': umform '. of' the day in Qui Clers and any ~ual ;eport.;·: 'ilppo4tt. and m~y reqiove, the 'Nhong, where she was chief 's.. 2 Tim'·e, PI" d .' Superintendent a n'd Assistant "nurse at the 85th' Evacuation ace a Il. • H ' ta I, "b u t they . were prac """ •. ec.lon. All t· . b : ISupermtendents after consultmg OSPl .....O.lce. mee mgs may e 'th th B' d tical" she sa s held at such times and places, Wi e oar. ' . Y '. • • '. within the diocese, as may be . Seetion 2. Dnties and I?cwers.· Now, she IS vlsl~mg her family fixed' by the President or by a Subject to the fin~authority of :e~ before. m~vmgon to new majority of the Board upon not . ·the Boai'd and saving the prou y .' at . J!'ltzslmmons General less than 3 days notice. Notice of visions' eff Canon Law, VaticaIl" ,·Hospltal In Denver. the place day and. hour of all Council II, and Diocesan Statutes' " St.·.Tames Parish .. 'IinEkiings 'must be delivered Iii' the" Department of Education ,1..: -The Donovans started out in' " writing. However, if an emer .shall' be' under the directioil"'of", St. James Parish. Only one sis gency arises, written notices may -the Superintendent, and, 'under"', ter, MiSS Anna Donovan: R.N., be waived by the Board and "a' . his. 'direction shall have imme.:.'a member' of the nursing staff at oolephone call will be considered • dia~e; charge and_ control 'of 'the' . St. Luke's Hospital, and their sufficient notice. .... . "general administrative' super"'" 'brother, Daniel F. Donovan, Se'ction 3. Quorum. A majot~' vision 'o~ the Diocesan schools. ,.' still live in ~he family home at ~ <:>f the en~ire Board sh.aIl b e ' AR'll'lICLlE ·.474 Rockdale Ave~u.e. ,During "VJE.~"'i\TAM NURSES: Sister Karen, former Army necessary for the transaction of ' . her New Bedford V1Slt, she has nurse, and Lt. O>I:":Mai'yK' DOnovan olNewB'edford; Army business at "meetings; and a Amendment· of Constitution been staying with another sis Nurse Corps, meet during one of their rare moments of majority vote of those present Section 1. Amendment. This ter, Mrs. Ralph E. Moore, at shall be sufficient for any deci- constitution may be amended, ., the Sutton Street address, and rest in carin,g fQr, the woun~ed•...N,:C. Photo."", ,. " ' ,.. ' sUPPlemEmted, suspended, or re;';'" 'catching 'visits on the :fly with' mon or election. S~ction 4. Rules, of Procedure. pealed, in whole or in part, at . still another sister, Mrs. Paul quate staffs Qf medical personnel. the original complemen't was '.il'he 'Board may fix its own any time by a two-thirds vote of Couture of Assonet. . rotated back to the States. "One, .reason I think things roles' of procedure, ,but in" ui.Ei. all theme~bers of th~ Board" She alsQ has vis~ted the sixth went so welV' she sa~'s, "is that The hospital compound had absence of such rules Robert's concurred m by the B1Shop of m~mber of the famlly, Mrs: John helicopters got casualties back developed from a tent city in Buies of' Order Revised Edition the Diocese o~ Fall Riv'er; pro- . Wllson, ?ne of the four sisters to us in a ..hurry." Another help to a sparkling world (inside) of shall apply. ' '. 'vided' that notice of the proposed' of the fIve who are registered ful change was that '.'we had Quonset huts. 'amendment shall be given to the nUl'ses, who now lives in Shel two neuro-surgeons on the staff Acres of pavement hid the ART][CLlE V. Board at a prior' meeting. - ' ton, Conn. who couldd,o. things like blood mud flats through which they Seciion 1. lExecutive Co~nt- .' , Duty in Viet Nam, the trim vessel .repairs ,before getting had plodded in the early days . and petite colonel recalls as she ' back to big centers." "and permitted us to use wheel ~e. The Board may provide for ~~[Q) ~@llil[j'~® . 'talks about "the best hospital them .First patients were admitted ed litters instead of having to an executive committee of five unit" in that war-torn' nation (5) or more members, the Presi-Continued from Pafe One . was a combination of heat and to the, 85th, hospital "five days carryall the' patients." after we ·got, there," she recalls. Now Col. Donovan is getting dent and Secretary to be ex offi-. Christian .. . . , Doctrine and one mud and heartbreak. "Ten days after we got there used t9 civilization again and is do members, and the other hour of methods at each session.' When the'85th,.the'first Evac member or members to be elected The past division of eight weeks uatl'on Hospl'tal to move l'nto we received our first casualtY."· reveling in it. "I'm not the Girl Aided Children Scout type," she admits. b the Bo~rd and to' serve at the . of doctrine and ~ight weeks of Viet Nam, arrived complete with In addition Amedcan ser Girl Scout' or no,. word from p easure 0 the Board, the Pres- methods-two hour .long classes' personnel .supplies and equip vicement, the" to600-'bedl . hospital those who visited the 85th wliile Ident to be Chairman thereof. . -has been changed to the more ment, it faced the task of set-. 'also cared for Viet NaI:l1. civilians, Lt. Col. Donovan was chief During intervals between meet ting up a first-line medl'cal fa including'·children. "We aver irigs of the Board, the Executive compact course. The entire group of teachers, . cility in "a big, open field" in aged' about 12 at a time," she nurse is that the petite Army Committee shall possess and ex t' t h 'll'" the coastal fishing village of nurse from New Bedford did a ercise all of the powers of the . or prospec Ive. eac ers, WI a.- . Q says. whale of a job. That's the kind Board conferred in this constitu.:. tend ,the first hour together and ,: ui Nhong. , The "S5th 'personnel also main '. r e c e i v e doctrinal instruction ',' "It, was, hot," Col. Donovan tained .a .dose' relationship with of, perso.n she, is..' .. . tion, to the extent authorized by , the resolution providing for the "from one of the Area Directors.· recalls. "The temperature July a leper colohy operated by the . ,., .,,-: Executive Committee or by sub For the second hour"the Meth-<, ,4. just before :we came back, Francisetui 'Missiomrrie'8 of ·MarY.:' ',. ".' sequent resolution. The Execu ods Course, the group into Ele- was 130 degrees:" . "The nurses and doetors did INO JOB roo BaG tive Committee shall meet at the mentary Methods or Secondary It seemed even warmer during what they could there," she says. INO~IE TOO SAAAll.Il eall of tqe Chairman and ~shall .. Methods (High School) ,depend-. the early days, of operation qther ..ne,w: frieJ1.dsl):ips " were. 't I 'd "'ing 'their ,own level of teach;,;'" there when personnel lived and dev.l;!loped with ROK nurses fj , ~x .1 sown ru es or proce ures . ," . ,.' se t t· ' t ' " t ' ts and notice to be given of its meet '. ~gAn': . "d' ddt' .' . , .. ,,: Ai. up oPd~rt?l~g SUles m eln . stationed 'n~arby, with a New a vanc:,~c rme 70urse.·.. r. con 1 IOnmg ,came a ~ng :Z~~lanl:i, Sl.v:giqal team that "did ing·. A majol'ity shall constitute ,~;.,' D quorum. ' ",,;: ~Q 8.fl:cre? Scnpture s~all als()'b~J later, b.ut 'hundreds. of bl;lttlefleld a tf:em~r;td,ous job working in a Section 2. Other Committees;.,.. t o~~ef.~.,m two locatIOns ~~.~re .... casualties ~ad flo~ed' through ,,~ocal 1l0sp.~ta+'j.n the town," and 'i'qe Board, .may, by resolution, pioc~se for those ~ho h~veaJ.~,>Jhe te~ts by"t~e :lme:'.modern with.. a , nup, ,.Sister Karen,' stlj:' .Main .O~ice ClInd fUant
pr.ovide fo'r such: other commit_... J;~.adr ,c()mple,t~d:~hel:r,balll<: <loc.,. ." convemences ,ar~lVed. . tioned. at.~oly, Family Hospital 95 IaridSJe St., Lowen, Mass.
,..... ,tees as it deems advisable .and~l'l~e and methods course. It .... " Mass Casualties.,,, tqere.. .... "'.. ' ,'.' "let 458-6333
may discontinue the same at its sh,ap. l~st 10 ,,:eeks. . . . : Twenty-thre.~of the 57 nurses Sister, Karen. and C,.1;- 'Don(t...· pleasure. Each committee shall ,.',l'he, .locations and op.eniqg, ,for whom she. was :reliPonsible van had"a l!trong bond in com ,Auxi!iary IP!CQlnb have such:powers and shall;per-,' li~tes for the courses are a& fol.,...... :"were 23 or younger, ~ust out ,mon, . the. I),1,1rlling nun was' a , .', form such duties as may be as-' lows: . . . ., of SChool, and it was difficult former" Anny :purse. BOSTON signed to it by the Board and ~all River Area: Mount ·st•.. for them. Not.only did they have Althollgh.. .living conditions CAMDIEN, N.J. ahall be appointed, and vacan lVlaryAcademy, Wednesday, Oct. ,to get used to being in a foreign were primitive when the 85th OCEANPORT, N.J. . ~.:.., . , country, doing Without the mod- first, ar,riy~d; and were com MIAMI···· ' New Bedford Area: Bishop ern facilities tliey had become pounded when the rainy Season' Stang High School, Tuesday; Oct. used to in American hospitals, began a month later, Col. Dono PAWTUCKET, R.I. 4. but this was the first time they van thinks the unit built a migh PHILADELPHIA Continued from Pafe One Taunton Area: Bishop Cas- ever were in a mass casualty ty fine hospit~l before. mos~ of He specialized in French litera-· sidy High School, Tuesdaf', Oct. situation." ture at Boston College, the Uni . 4 . , However" the young nurs~s ,versity of Montreal and the In Attleboro Area: Bishop Fee-' handled themselves well, she stitut Catholique of Paris. Fr. han High School, Thursday, Oct~ says, "they· were nice young Paradis, the son of the late' 6.' . .. sters." . Roland and Antoinette Paradi~' Cape Cod Area: Otis Air Force' Morale of young' GIs in Viet I : , has been a lifelong student of Base, Thursday, Oct. 13 and St. . Nam "really was very high," ':.".: llhe liturgy, its history and re-Joan 'of Arc School. O,rleans;" 'she recalls,"They were' young, .
Thursday, Oct. 13. .. 'interested and eager. RE!al nice
Illewal. The New Bedford native has ,The 'Advanced" Courses m" kids."" . .' , .., .
t' , • given many liturgy lectures·· Sacred Scripture will' be' held '. One of the bright spotS in her
throughout New England in the " at Bishop Stang High School,'" tour ofduiy with the 85th was past several years, and, in under- Tuesday, Oct. 4 and' at St. Mary's' " that' she saw' so many' battle taking the up-coming series,' is 'Parish"- Center,Norton, ThW's":" field casualties, who might have
.presenting a study that many day; Oct. 6. " died with 'World War II trans
"dioceses throughout the country·' .A:ll· classes will, begin lit 7:30 .' PQrtation and 1;echniqIies, saved
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Alice of Wonderland mParis And Now Miguel Batman Batlle Of The Bulge Birds Do It Bolshoi Ballet, Tile ~.) Billy the Kid vs. Dracula Bremen Town Musicians Capture That Capsule Daydreamer . Don't Worry, We Will Think of a Title· Dr. Who and the Daleks Evening With The Royal Ballet, An
Fantastic Voyage Fightjng Prince of Donegal Fantilmas IFr.-ltal.! flight of the Phoenix Gambit Ghost and Mr. Chicken, lIle Gulliver's Travels Beyond tile Moon Hansel and Gretel How to Steal a Million Invasion Quartet Last of the Renegades lassie's Great Adventure Man Called Flintstone My Fair lady
My Son, the Hero Mysterious Island Namu, Killer Whale Night of the Grizzly Paradise Hawaiian Style Pied Piper of Hamelin Pirates of Tortuga Plainsman, The Purple Hills Queen of Blood Queen of the Pirates Rare Breed, The Redeemer, The Russian Adventure Russians Are Coming, 1IIe
Rings Around the World Secret Seven Sergeant Was A lady Singing Nun, lhe Sleeping Beauty Sleeping Beauty, The (RJss.) Smoky Snake Woman Son of a Gunfighter Sound of Music, The Spinout • Tarzan and the Valley of Gold Those Magnificent Men III Their Flying Machines
Teenage Millionaire Texas Across the River Tiko and the Shark Trouble With Angles,The Ugly Daschund, The Voyage to the Bottom of* Sea When the Clock Strikes White Mane (French) Willie McBean Winnie The Pooh Years of lightning, Day fI Drums You Have to Run Fast Vulture, The
·After the Fox Agony and the EcstacY. b Alphabet Murders, Tbe Apache Uprising Assault On a Queen Atlantis, The lost Continent Big Hand for the litlle Lady. Big T.N.T. Show, The Blindfold Bounty Killer, The Boy Cried Murder, The Bridge to the Sun C'mon, let's live II Ibittie ·Die; Monster, Die
Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine . Doctor Zhivago • Dracula, Prince 01 Darkness Eye For An Eye, An Frankie and Johnny Frantic Glass Bottom Boat, Tile Great Wall, The Uap.) Guns of -DarknesS Gypsy Girl Heroes of Telemark Impossible. on Saturday It Happened Here
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daugtlter Johnny Nobody Johnny Reno Judex Judith Kid Rodelo Kwaidan Uapanese) la Boheme let's Kill Uncle little Ones, The .lollipop Cover, The Mao Executioners. The Marco the Magnificent
Merry Wives of Windsor, ltle IBr.) Mystery of lhug Island, 1be IBr.> Naked E~ge . One Spy Too Many Othello Out of Sight Pit and· the Pendulum Plague of the Zombies Planet Of The Vampires Psychopath, The Reptile. The Sardonicus
-Scream of Fear L.. Secret of Deep Harbor Slender Thread, The Spy In Your Eye Stagecoach Sweet light in a Dark ROllE The Uncle Traitor's Gate Trunk, The Twenty Plus Two Waco Walk in the Shadow Wrong Box Weekend With Lulu
Ada Alphaville IFrJ Alvarez Kelly Ambush Bay Any Wednesday Arabesque . Armored Command Bang, Bang You're Daad Blues For lovers Breakfast At Tiffany's Bunny lake Is Missing Cast A Giant Shadow Chamber of Horrors Claudelle Inglish Couch, The Enough Rope
Great Spy Chase, The Great War, The Harper He Who Must Die Hustler, The Idol, The (Br.) Inside Daisy Clover Johnny Tiger Kaleidoscope King Rat "iss tile Girls and IVIake Them Die La Visita lost Command, The liquidator, The Madam X
Main Chance . Mall: L""'ilanion IFr.> Mickey One Mister BUddwing Modesty Blaise IBr.) Moment To Moment Money, Money, Money Id Morgan Naked Prey, The Nanny, The Not On' Your. life <Sp.) Pawnbroker, The Pad and How to Use It, • Picture Mommy Dead Panic in Year Zero Promise Her Anything
Ride Beyond Vengeance Rocco and His El, ,)lllerS Utalt) Rotten to the Core (BrJ Sands of the Kalahari Season of Passion Second Best Secret Agent im the Whole Wide World . Secret Agent Super Dragon Shakespeare Wallah (India) Shop on Main Street, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, The Stop the World, I Want Tlo Get Off Sucker, The IFr.-Eng.) Susan Slade
Ten Little Indians Thousand Clowns, A Three On a Spree Thunder of Drums Thu nderball . Times lost and Time Remembered To Trap A Spy Town Without Pity Two Women lItal.) Up To His Ears Walk, Don't Run Weekend at Dunkirk West Side Story Where The Spies Are Wild Seed (was; Fargo)
Atfie Anatomy of A MarrIage .~ Collector, The Cool World, The Darling Divorce, Italian Style ma~ Dr. Strangelove Eclipse IltaU 8~ lItalJ
flame and the Fire Georgy Girl Girl With Green Eyes (BrJ Hill, The Important Man (Mexican) Intruder Juliet of the Spirits (nab) Knack, The (Br.) l-Shaped Room; The
Life at the lop lBritisM lolita lord love a Duck love a la Carte Marriage, Italian Style Uta!i1) Moment of Truth, The Night of the Iguana Nothing But the Best lBd Organizer, The IItalJ
Pressure Point Pumpkin Eater, The Red Desert Servant, The Storm Center Strangers in the City Taboos of the World UtalJ This Sporting life Too Young to Love
Victim (Br.> Visit, The Who's Afraid of Virginitl Woolf? Yellow Rolls Royce, Tho . . Young and the WillillB Zorba, The Greek
Duel lit Diablo Eva Fille Madness, A From Russ ia With !>ove Group, Tile . Girls on the Beach He Rides Tall Honeymoon Hotel How to Stuff a Wild 8lflhII Irma la Douce Kissin' Cousins lady l last of the Secret Agents long Ships, The looking For love love on the Riviera "-
Loved One, 1he Male Hunt Man in the Middle Marriage on the Rocks Money Trap Mozambique Night' Must .Fail No Greater Sin lwas: 18 _ Anxious) Oscar, The Our Man Flint Psyche 59 Racing Fever Rasputin Red line 7000 Return to Mr. Moto, TM
Sandpiper, lIie Seconds Seven Women Seventh Dawn Sex and The Single Girl Shot in the Dark, A Silencers, The Sleeping car Murder, The Small Worl4 of Sammy lee, The tBr.) Soldier in the Rain Space Flight 1&-1 lBFJ Spy With My Face Strangler, The Swinger. The. This Property IS IiUI!lIemnell
Torn Curtain Vice and Virtue (Fr.) ... Village of the Giants Viva las Vegas Viva Maria What A Way to Go What's New Pussycat? Wh~ Killed Teddy Bear' Who's Been Sleeping iJI II!'I Bed Why Bother To Knock Wild Angels What Did You Do In the War, Daddy? Young Dillinger Zombie
Green Mare IFrJ High Infidelity-lItat.., I love, You love lItal.! Image of love .loan of the Angels? Jules and Jim ~iss Me Stupid Knife in the Water tla .Fuga lltal.! Hilif!: in the Water (PolJ ba Mandragola IltalJ il8 Notte (Night) lItalJ Lady Chatterly's Lover (i~ I,aw, The (Fr.) Lefs Talk About Women IItal.) Game IFrJ kve Goddesses, Vhe ~ ill 4 Dimensions Utat>
I:ove and Marriage love Is My r'rotession IN<) love on a Pillow IFfJ lovers, The IFrJ Modemoiselle Magdalena (Ger.) Maid. in Paris (Fr.) Married Woman, The lFftl Mating Urge Miller's Beautiful Wife CHatJ Mistress for the Summer, A Molesters, .The Mom and Dad lSideroadl . Mondo Pazzo lItal.! My life to live IFr.) Never on Sunday (Greek) New Angels, The .lItalJ Nude Odyssey, The (\tal) Odd ObsessioQ UapJ
Of Wayward Love ,.,tal.) Oscar Wilde (Br.1 Passionate Summer (Fr.-Itat.> Phaedra (Greek) Playgirl' After Dark IBr.> Please, Not Now! IFr.> Port of Desire . Pot Bouille IloveJs of Paris) (Fr.> Prime Time Private Property QuestiQn of Adultery Repulsion Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (Br.) Seven Capital Sms IFrJ Sweet and Sour IFrJ Silence, The (frJ
Swedish 'Wedrlin"
1IIIIIIIIUIJIUHUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIHnnllllllllllllll/ll- . Agent for ttA.R.M. . Amorous Adventures of _ Flanders An American Dre8lll Arrivederci, Baby Blood and Black l:aee Boeing, Boeing Cassanova 70 Cincinnati Kid, TtIe == MORAtty O B ~ City of Fear Cry of Batlle Curse of the Voodoo Dementia 13 Desert Raven Devil and The Ten Commandments
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Affair of the Sidfl, IlIlii Balcony, The Bambole lItal.! Bell'Antonio lItalJ Boccaccio 70 lItalJ Bonne Soupe, I!a ~ Breathless (FrJ Christine Keelei' Ati&, • IQanJ Circle of love Cloportes IFrJ Cold Wind in Augoot Contempt IFrJ Dear John (Swect<l Doll, The ISwed-J During One Night ibl) Empty Canvas Sirl With the Golde» ~ ~
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Take It All (A Toue PreMireJ (Can.) Tales of Paris lFr.) Temptation lFr.-ltat.> Terrace, The lSpan.> To love (Swed'> Too Young, To.. Immoral Viridiana ISp'> Wasted lives and TheBiJ& of Twins Weekend (Dan.> White Voices lItat.> Woman in the Dunes Uap,) Women of the World (uaU Young World, The IFrJ t
,
16
THE At'
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'-Diocese ofFolI River-Thurs. Sept. 15,.1966
Asks Labor Join Rights Crusade
Latin ABll1elrican Inte[f~rat;on EssetrrotfG@1 for Progr<e~~ From "Social Revolution in the New Latin America", ~ Edited by Joh.n J.Considine, M.M. Dictators\know well that in some ways they need the eooperation of the Church. This is' very important. I,t leads them to give ~id to CathQlic education, and to be quite severe in a negative type C9f morality, while they ignore oompletely that most impor-. , tant . element of morality, an appreciation of. human liberty. In many cases the beginning of the end of tOt3t . itarian regimes has been a fight a gai t the Church, as was the case in Ar gentina, Colom bia and Vene zuela. But also
in many cases
::., the beginning
of dictatorships
had a sort of
blessing fro m
Cttte C h u I' C h .
JI) u I' in g the
struggle for in dependence, the Church was identified with the making of &he nations.. Since that time it.has not beeR entirely separated 'from peHtical · events. During the last century its position regarding thedic"; tators was dubious. Carrel'a in Guatemala, Garcia Morena,in Ecuador, were the Church'.. children of prediliction. In tflts GDentury the picture has changed, · although Laureano GomeE and Peron were very closely related flo the Church and backed by itj; authority as defenders of. CtH:is &ian principles. In short, the ecclesiastical &ttority has frequently given eKcessive- importance to the privilege of Christian religion · and· not enough considerati4!Hl to . the excesses of some dietatol'S. A concept of the role of the Church that relegates it striCtly to Uie teaching of Catholic mor als and doctrine has given rise to the notion that the Chul'cn should never interfere in po:litics. This has resulted in undelayed :llCceptance by the Church af the totalitarian regimes that h~ve risen in the more developed countries. Oth~r SuppOrts Among the pressure ,groups, students are also important, es pecially in relation to ideolog ical movements. Student groups are sometimes related to dicta to·rships in a negative way by reason of the fact that the over throwing of the dictator was due to a struggle begun by these gl'OUpS in the university. In some other cases they have fought against democracy - for example; the extreme leftists in Caracas who ~,agitated against Betancourt. Another pressure group is the oligarchy, which has been closeIy involved with dictatorships especially in countries with a big class society. Using the al'm)' as their instrument, they have plotted to retain control of· the nation and to put. an end to social reform. Most dictators have been too closely tied to the oligarchy to be inclined ·to fOGter moves toward social betterment. But with the growth of the middle class and the increasing power and organiiation of the trade union movement; we may pre diet that totalitarian regimes based on the power of one fam ity or that of an oligarchiCal group will be less and less in evidence. Finally, there are pressures from foreign business. concerns and Jrom foreign governments. --1 • The name of the United Fruit Company calls to mind III long period of exploitatioflWlder
n.s
powerful totalitarian regimes in c;entral America. Foreign companies have looked upon such dictators as Trujillo, Rojas Pinilla and Batista' as guardians of economic stability, who enable them quietly to car ry on their prosperous concerns. United States and 'Dictators To what extent has the United States Government aided the rise of dictators in Central and South American countries? The case of intervention in Nicara gua, and the relation between the National Guard and Anas . BROTHER lFRANCllS, C:F.X, tacio Comoza, are worth con'sid eration. It would probably be difficult to prove in what measure the Pentagon has had part in estab Jishing dictatorships lH" over throwing governments. Although Brother Francis,' C.F 'x., the imperiillism is no longer an is former Donald Pimental, son of s.ue, still the influence of the Gilbert and Mary Pimental 9f United States is very strong. 138 Crapo Street, New Bedford; The Germans and the English received the habit of the Xaver have also wielded p0werful in ian .Brothers during ceremQnies ftuence in some South American at the Mary Immaculate· ·of countries and have been very Lourdes Church, West Newtan, much involved with seme ef the Mass. dictators. The new postulant was a pa Some Latin Amel'icall COUf\ tries have had interests ·&f gl·eat. rishioner of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church,' New. Bedford, importance· in neighboring coun tries. Peron exercised emH'mow> and a graduate of Bishop Stang· iflfluence in revolutions in llQme High School, North Dartmouth. &ther countries and uPon their There follows· fOl' Ikother subsequently estab'lished dicta Francis a full year of canonical tors. novitiate at the Xaverian &"oth In order .to 'understand why ers Novitiate, Newton Highlands, foreign ·governments and busi-, Mass. Hesses have sometimes favored aictators, one can begin with the simplest of explanations: affairs are expedited if you deal with one man. You don't have to wait until things are approved by a congress. Kevin F. Tripp, New Bedford, To a foreign country operating :II student at St. John's Semi in Latin America, it is of pri nary, Brighton, has been named mary importance to have a to the advisory council. of the stable government - stable at new 1 y organized Univel·sit,. least in the sense that busiiless Christian Movement. The move can be carried on safely, with ment replaces the former Nm tional Student· Christian Feder no disruptions. ation, and encoJllpasses seven The full limits of. responsibil Protest'a nt and three Catholie ity for Latin America's dicta torships cannot be detel'mined student ox:ganizations. without consideration of the for Officers elected at the first eign policies of some European annual general assembly of tine countries and of the United movement, held in Chicago, are . States States intervention in the Charlotte ·Bunch, Washington. Dominican Republic from 1916 D. C., 'a Duke University gradu to 1934? Was the purpose the ate, president; Feliciano Carine defense of oppresssed people ·and , of the Philippines, a stu'dent at their liberties? Was it to defend Princeton Theological Seminary. the people or to protect Amer vice-president; Tami Hultman, ican interests? Historians so far Durham, N, C., a student at Duke are divided on the question. University, secretary; Rev. Ed Were Dictators Necessary win Bennett, New' York City. Given the circumsfances of treasurer. the Latin American colonies at Political, Social COlllloern the time of liberation, are dicta torships necessary? One can only Resoluiions passed .by tb:) point to the incidence of the group reflected its concern for 'phenomenon in Latin America. contemporary.' social and polit A study of the history of the ical issues. Among them were m Latin American nations should statement of support for Wash give considerable knowledge· of ington, D. C. home'rule; an e. what may be expected in the pression of solidarity with ~ emerging nations of Africa and gentine students suffering go¥-. Asia. Already they have shown ernment oppression;. and a state a marked parallelism to, the de ment urging student study of velopment of nations in Latin the draft and conscription iSS\lle America. now faced by the Congress of Latin America's hope of a the United States. more balanced and stable polit The five:-day general assem icalorganization lies in. the in bly· at McCormick Theological tegration of the' masses and a Seminary was attended by 201D balanced development of social ~delegates from all parts of the structures. A necessary, enabiing world, representing nearly lW$ factor is economic development. ca~puses. ., . _ Once we have achieved these • things we may hope, not only for integration within countries, the continent will become a ISllllJlll but for integration of all the of peace, progre8!l l1R4l ·1lllRdePo. Latin American countries so that llitaooina. '
PITTSBURGH (NC) - Bishop to which they are net entitled John J. Wright of Pittsburgh from public monies paid out for called upon organized labor in urban renewal," Bishop Wright Pennsylvania to join with or said. ganized religion in a' united He called upon religion and "conscience crusade" for eco labor to support by "evelT nomk and social jUlstice for proper and effective means" that Negroes. section of the current civil right6l He anounced that he will es bill which seeks to extend fair tablish immediately :iIl human housing procedures. relations commission in the dio The Bishop proposed that the cese to work "in loyal ecumj:!n next Governor of Pennsylvania ical cooperation" with all other call a statewide conference on religious groups to implement . civil rights, equal opportunity the crusade. and social justice in order to "Organized religion and or rally public opinion, especially ganized labor have clear respon in metropolitan areas. The con sibilities to stimulate and sup ference would be modeled, Bish port enlightened efforts of or op Wright suggested, on last ganized government to terminate Spring's White House Confer slums, not transpla,nt them; to ence on Civil Rights, but "one 'put slumlords out of business, hopes it would be more effective not let them hang on to rat because closer .to the grass root infested, ramshackle tenements. possibilities of popular educa until, having collecte,:l outra tion and common action here ill geous rents unjustly for years, our own state." they can collect further money
.-
~AFRICA:
'IBISHDP leNA ·ICAMEL
.Sta,ng. GI7'@dteote
Receives !Habit
New Bedfordite' Boa rcll Member
0
THE HDLY FAlTHEA'S MISSIDN AID 70 THI DAttlNTAt. OMURa"
A Th confirm the children In Dl1lghilo, Ethiopia, pJ;RMANENT· lasit month, Bishop Zeno Testa had to borrow a CHURCH camel. The road ends th~ miles away, and the MEANS path to the village is too rough and narrow even A for III hep. • •• Still, tile vlnagers (members of FULL·TIME the Cunama tribe) are among the most fervent JPRIE'.5I' Catholics in Africa. For 44 years (they were first COIwerted In 1922) theY have gathered nightly for,p/"a¥er and religious Instructions; and they sinlJ Mass outdOors with touching devotion on the Infrequet'lt vfsits of our circult·lidlng Fran· cill(:an priest.••• "'I1liskind of faith Africa needs -and to preserve it these people need a ful/· tiffi!~.priest and help to build a lasting church of stone," writes Bishop Testa. ",t need not be cosi~1y fOr the people will build·1t themselves." • : •,Is,this the church you have In mind In memo ory of your loved ones? The cost is only $3,200. •.• Share something right now at least ($100, $75,$50, $25, $15, $10, $5,$2) with people who- have no money? Their prayers for you fa Afrka will touch the heart of Christ. .
"!nilE Iflcllrably ill for more than a year, our overseas WAYS Assistant Secretary, Father Denis Mooriey, OF O.F.M., died In Baltimore August 19, two days nilE after the safe arrival In lebanon of the first LORD AmElrican Sisters to take on a foreign mission In the !Holy Land. The Sisters (Sisters of Mercy front Albany, N. Y.) will open for Arab children, neld: fall a school for which Father Mooney prayed and suffered. May he rest In peace!
o How can one mlsslonary'do the work of tenr
M him Ol'ilo wheels. A small car costa $2,255. ralw part of It at Ioasti'
10 'll'he Holy
Father uses stringless gifta In any· amount ($5,000, $1,500, $500, $100, $50, $25, 310, $9, $2) where they'lQ needed most. [J Ilt costs only $8.50 a month ($100 a yearrto train Ii native priest. ilor $12.50 a month ($150 a Y81lr) you can train III native Sister. Paymenw rot YCIW" convenience, of coursa.
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MlSQR. JOHN Q. NOLAN, National Seoretary
~rltt! OATHOLlf~~,~~T We:LFARIl ASSOD.
1i=1~~~tI, N.Y. 1001'
THE AN(V-
New Controversies Shatter Co1m In Church-State Relatri(l»[j'g~hip WASHINGTON (NC) - The relative calm that 'prevailed over the U.S. church-state battleground in the past year and a half has been shattered' by a series of explosions in many parts M the country. Whether the new disputes are \he last gasps of a dying polemi eal tradition or the start o£ 1\ major new era ~f acrimony and litigation, no one can say for SU'l'e. But in r~t weeks the Jongstanding debate over church state relations bas been reopened by such events as these:
IroIDically, the new disputes come at a time when the fires-of church-state controversy ap peared to have been damped down by growing national con sensus. On the political ~ront, passage of the EI~mentary and Second <'ry Education Act of 1965 seemed to work to mark arrival at a widely acceptable accommo dation on one of the most bit terly debated issues of all ~ federal aid to parochial schools.
A ruling ,by the Maryland Court of Appeals that state construction grants to three ('hurch-related colleges werE~ un constitutional. The case is cer tain to' go to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Among the churches, too, the growth of theological dialogue <,nd the ecumenical spjrit has produced a' sort of' public policy fallout: an increased effort to understand opposing viewpoints on church and state. and work out arrangements that· all can accept.
A decision by a justice of the New YOl'k 'Supl'eme Court that II state -program fer .lending text Books oW ·par~hial 'school stu ~ents violates ~ththe state and feder.al -constitutions. In 'New Yark, ·tbeCourt -ef Appeais, not the Supreme Court, is the state's, highest tribunal, ~md the case presmnably ,will 'be . carried there. Voluntary Prayer This enumer.ation ·by no·means exhausts the' list. Major court cases are, ·pending, for 'example, on such issues as tax-paid bus rides for nonpublic school·pupils in Pensylvania ,and New Jersey; state provision ,of health and wel fare services to nonpublic pupils in 'Michigan; ,and .a federal pro gram of textbook aid to non public school'students and teachers in Ohio. . ' Education Ailt There' have also been shaI'p exchanges ~ver isues like ttie Post Office's plan to feature .a 15th-century 'Madonna and Child Gn the 1966 Christmas stamp, the wearing Qf religiQus garb by ,a l\un in an .anti-poverty program in Florida, .and a proposal to include a question ·on religious
Aid lay
affiliation in the 1970 census. In addition, a Senate subcom mittee held hearings on a pro posed constitutional amendment to permit VQluntary prayer in public schools, thereby reversing the Supreme Court's ,contro versial rulings barring prayer and devotional Bible reading fr'~m the classroom.
Passage by the Senate of a bill permitting individual tax payers and competing institu tions to file suit against govern ment aid to church-related insti tutions under a wide range' of federal education, anti-poverty and welfare programs.
Endorse Aid A parallel 'process has been lmderway In the liberal irii:el leclual ~ommunity. The New Republic magazine and colum nist Walter Lippmann have ooth endorsed., some form of aid to parochial school students. Milton Himmelfarb, writing in a- recent issue of the J'ewish magazine Commentary, sa i d Catholics "GaYe, a real :grievance" concern-' ing the denial of government .aid to parochial schools. "To would
remove the grievance be just," 'Himmelfarb ~aid. "It would also be states 'manlike, and would help to improve the education of a significant part of the American population." . "And among Catholics much of tm;;' muscular and sometimes &trident militancy of the .past seems to have given way .to an eHortat dialogue and ,accom modation NQw, however, the fragile Etructur~ of consensUs on church and state is being subjected to -major str;:lin' under the impact ;Of the -new ,controversies.
Cardinal Shehan Cites Cha f.lenge .For Correctio,nal Association BALTfM03.E (NC) "One "his interest and concern" for warped personality, thwarted in the ,prisoner.
his gO:Jls to perfect knowledge M.an ,by his nature is also .a
and love, affects the el1tire hu social being, the cardinal con
man race. Until every person is tinued, and correctional pro
di rected on his right way to the' grams have a peculiar 'duty to
final goal, the human race will "inccease the potential of the in
suffer." dividual to live in harmony with
This was the 'challenge pre others." , sented to the more than 1,500 Motivated by Charity delegates attending the 96th an Cardinal Shehan also told the nual Congress of Correction by conectional workers that each Lawrence Cardinal Shehan. The should have "a clear concept of five day congress was sponsored his own dignity and be proud by the American Conectional of his privilege to work with the Association. troubled children l1f God's fam In order to meet this chal ily." lenge, the cardinal said, the cor "While evel'y work of a Chris rectional worker must first have ,tian should' be motivated by a clear concept ·of the dignity of charity," he said. "some works the individual. by their very nature can become Man, he said, ';is a 'being made specially vivid expressions of with an immortal soul to the this charity; and we can say image and likeness of God. In without fear ot contradiction this image and likeness he has that one of the most important the ability to know al)d to love." works of charity is to 'visit those An inmate of a cOI'rectional in prison'." institution, he continued, is often "This act of love," he said, a pel'son whose "ability to know "must motivate the correctional has been hampered by the ab worker. He must see himself as sence of truth" .and whose "abil an instl'ument in, the hands of ity to love h:Js been frustrated." God working, w.ith other' chil The cOl'I'e<:tional wOI'ker must dren of God regardless of what attempt to help the inmate to they have done. He must be .able know and love, he said, particu to recognize the dignity -of the larly by demonstratin:g "sincere, sinner and disapprove of the honest, buman love" through sin."
17
~
lihurs., Sept. 15, 1966
FOR OUTSTANDING'SERVICE: Miss Jane Hooy, former director of public assistance under the Social Se curity Board afld later under the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, became the first American to re £eive the Rene Sand award for outstanding service in social welfare. NC Photo.
Wins .Sand Award Miss Hoey Is First U.S. Citizen 'TO' R~ceive Special Award WASHINGTON (NC) -
Jane
M. Roey, Catholic lay woman
and f<>rmer federal welfare offi cial, was presented'> the Rene Sand Award for outstanding work, in the field of social ser viceat the 13th Internation'al Conference of Social Work. The presentation was the sev enth'made by the conference and the first to a citizen of the United States. Recipient of the first award in 1954 was QueeR Frederica of Greece. The award is given in memory of Belgian humanitarian Dr. ,Rene Sand, f01,lnder and former president of the ICSW, who died in 1953. Miss Hoey was recognized for her long career in social, welfare ~uring which she was \Iirector of the BUI'ea"u of Public Assistance
Holy G.h"..~tFathers Plan Pe-ru t'Aission SAN FRANCI~CO (NC)-The Western provirce of he Holy Ghost Fathers will open a mis sion in Arequipa, Peru, its first in South Amer'~a. Until now th:::ir major interest has been in Afr:ca and the U. S. southern, m' ::ions. Fat her George Reardon, C.S.Sp of Bakersfield, Calif" is superior of the team of three priests as signed to the Perl' mission. In the secEon of the diocese they will serve are n'~arly 30,000 people, -99 per cent of them Catholic, with no priests to serve them. Yhe Ho:y Ghost Fathers will do a great deal of social work, conduct medical clinics, cooperati ve cen~crs, schools, ag riculture centers and provide family assistance.
Pr;~~t')'
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V@~Mrrotheers
CllilICAGO (NC)-Three dioe- esan priests have received pell' mission from their bishops ~ assist in recruiting for the EJi;.. tension lay volunteers organi~ tioJl from October to January. They are Fathers Wallaee c;. Ellinger of the Springfield-Ca~ Girardeau (Mo.) diocese, JOM GTatbw~hl of the Lansin(l (Mich.) diocese, and Mauriee <D:I. Ga))a,gher of the Pueblo (Colo.~ dmcese. Each will accompany a team ,of veteran Extension volunteern touring colleges, universitie~ nursing schools, and apostol,i~ organizations during the 1966-6'<r national recruitment campaign.. Father John J. Sullivan, nationaD director of the volunteers, anl!1l Father Joseph P. HeraI'd, train ing ,director, will accompany teams also. A goal of 500 new volunteero has been set. They would begiIID , training in the Summer of 1967. Volunteers are lay men .m~ women, married or single, 21 W . 45 ~'ears of age who serve in tbe bome missions as teachern" fffirses, parish workers, Newmall w()}'k-et's, catechists, anQ St>eil£1 'Ill4)rk-et's.
,Says Communists Up to Old Tricks 'f\lEW YORK (NC)-The 'U. ~ , q:'emmunist party is upf!o its ClUJ 'Werld War II tricks of infiltF* ifl!l .Jewish and liberal organi~ fj();}S ill this country, the Amell iean Jewish Committee bae ~r,ged.
fer the U. S. Social Security Ad mi nistration for 17 yea rs; acted. as a United States delegate -W> ·the social commission of the United Nations Economic and Social Council; and served as director of social research for ine National Tuberculosis Asso ciation. She is a member of the perma nent ~ommittee of the ICSW and is vice president for North 'America, Catholic International Union of Social Service.
She is also vice chairman ef the New: York City AdvisQry Council on Public Welfare and a boar~ member of International Social Service, the Catholic In terracial Council of New York City; the Association on Amer ican Indian Affairs, and Com
monweal magazine.
Tn her address to the plenary session -of theICSW at which she received the award, Miss Hoey calI-ed on social workers k> "unite in an aggressive. world wide assault on poverty."
The AJC's information servift! veporled the party bas reve~ tv ·'its ,\Torld. War II 'united front' and infiltration d l'Ommlinal !lnd labor organi:w t.ions," as well as instrueti"ll t>ariy members to recruit among Jewish organization with slogaml tlesigned to appeal of Jews. ' The new line of the eommu nists, -ihe AJC said, was detaileil ;n an 'll-page article in tbe
August issue of Political Alfah·~
theoretical journal of the 11. &.
Communist party. "
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SPOKANE (NC) - Bishop BemaI'd J. Topel of Spokane an nUlinced he plans to form a r,l:iests' Senate in' the diocese to h'elp with problems inherent in hodern life.
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lH£ ANCHOR-[)focese of FaR River, lhun., Sept. 8, 1,966
CCD T®@~~®tr Normal Parish'Ortl~rr 'are just not that many school teachers around. Lucky indeed is the parish with a large supply of trained teachers who are gen erous enough to give their val uable time and professional tal ent for the CCD program. "I'm not the type" . . . . . Well, what is the type? The director 'of the CCD program for the Taunton area, Rev., Thomas Neil an, was asked his opinion on what is this type. "Assuming that he's a good' sound Catholic, of course as the first" require 'ment, I would say be should be a perSon who has the ability to communicate and' has an en thusiasm for what he's teaching, and 'a lov~ of young people," Father Neilan says. Not too large an ofder, when you come to think, about it. € o ntrary to what many may think, theCqD teacher is not CONVERT PRIEST: Father Peter Mogaj who 'in a very special kind of' person, 1959 entered the C,atholic Church as a married R.omanian with 'a degree in theology iIi one hand and a degree in education Orthodox priest, is shown as he officiated ~t the wedding of in another. He's a very ordinary his son, Peter, and Garole Opella, at solemn Romanian By c~' parishioner-the kind the Coun zantine Rite ceremonies at St. Anselm's (Latin Rite.) Church jgT. JOSEPH'S, cil fathers were speaking about \ 'rAUNTON in their Decree on the Laity. , St. Joseph's Holy Name Soci ,When they charged all of God's
M@lWtJ'(J1)~ 'r5~~ts ety, Taunuton, will, hold a ham people with the spreading of
and' :bean Supper on Saturday, the Good News of the Gospel. . Continued from Page One 9 f c~remonies.
Sept; 24 with l;ontinuQus serving Some are very young, Many', he founded the seminary of ArA Sol~mn Pontificial Mass of from 6:30 to 7:30 P.M. in the paJ;ishes have teachers who are aucaria and in 1906 came to Fall Requiem was offered' Monday school auditorium. James Curley students themselves in local col- River Diocese to minister to the _by Bishop Gerrard in the Sacred bl chairman. leges. ' .' , Polish people here. Heart Church, Oak Bluffs. Bish " Marking the cul,mination of a Many' are grandparents with Pastor of Our Lady of Perpet- op Gerrard also de\ivered' the membership driye on, Sunday, some time on their hands after ual Help, New Bedford, in 1912, eulogy at the Mass in Father ,SePt" 18, members will recei'l(e raising their own children. They . he went to Holy Rosary parish; McMahon's, parish church. Holy Communion at the ,8:30 bring to the program a wealth Taunton in 1918 and then to St. Eulogy. ,Mass on Sunday, Oct. ~" A of experience with young people. Stanislaus,' Fall River, in the Rev.. J"hn E. BOyd, pastor of ..breakfast meeting ,will follow Some are retired "senior citi- same' year. ' .the Mass with William J. Casey, " lik W'll' G h On July 23, 1964, F-ather Dy'lla ·St. Patrick's Chu,rch, F,all River, zens, . e 1 lam regg w 0 eulogi2;ed the. beloved departed President of the Taunton Boy's Club Association and Director of teaches in the High' School of celebrated the 65th Anniversary pastor of Oak Bluffs as one filled ,Guidance for the Randolph Religion at Immaculate Concep- of his ordination while St. Stan- with "goodness of heart, sincer ~sla~s parish itse~£ was celebrat- ity, st,rength and constancy of Public Schools as guest speaker. tion' church in <Taunton. Some are executiv'es who hold' mg Its 65th anmversaJ;Y.. ...." mind, zealous pursuit of justice, October will also 'find Holy Father . Dyl~a was name~ pas- and, affability." . 'Name members involved with a' positions of responSibility in the business world like Henry t~r emerItus In 1962 and IS sur"In the priestly life ()f Father 'Halloween Dance to be' held Murray, board president of St. vlved by, a brother, R;ev. Paul McMahon these, were outstand Saturday night, the' 29th. Mary,!s CCD in ,Taunton, who V. Dylla and several meces and ing. May I pick out ,goodness is' ~ . broad~asting, 'advertising nephews. , ~ hear,t 8n4. affability for a VISITATION GIDLD,' ~executive.,", " ::;' " Father McMahon moment of consideration? All NORTH,EASTHAM '. -,Mrs. '~eli~i€abral of Out Father McMahon was born 'of us that knew him 'lme'w his , New'~:f£icers Of the guild are Lady of Lourdes in 'Taunton is April 1, 1906, in Fall River, the, innate ap.d shining goodness. 'It, Mrs. Edmond Hebert, president; a nurse and the wife 'of a state son of the late William P. 'Mc- is 20 years ago that I lived with Mrs. Leon Allmon, vice-presi :trooper, put sti~l, fjn9s time to , ' Mahon and the late Mary E. Mc- pim in St. Patrick's,aJlld, I :re dent; Mrs: james Bowman, sec':' teach second 'grade. ", ,earthy' McMahon. , member vividly his s.ympatpy ootary; Mrs. Donald Walwer, ' others are !fUil time houseHe attended, Durfee High for the sick and, the al~ed. And ireasurer. . wives with large familieS-like School, Fall .River, St. Charles I ~ not alone in,remE!mbering Mm. Virginia Brennan of ImCollege, Catonsville, and pur- this. ST. JOSEPH, maculate Conception parish, who sued philosollhical and theologIn discussing Father's'deatl\ BALL RIVER kal studies at St. Mary's S~mi- with one of the, sisfer:s of the Boy Scouts will resume IlIlee«a . has six children of her own. The Martyniak family of St. nary, Balti~ore. Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home, logs tonight. ,Following ordination on May she said 'Wasn't he a kind and Women's Guild memers' will Anus in Raynham have made spom;;or' a cake sale after all CCD a way of life. Joe Marty- 30, 1931, in St. Mary's Cathedral, lovely ~an~?" Well those Sisters Masses Sunday morning, Sept. niak is Chairman of Helpers on 'by Bishop' Cassidy, he served knew him and well did the pa_ 16. Parishioners. are requested the parish executive board, his as an, assistant in parishes; in tients know him - because he wife Betty is a substitute teach- Osterville, Hyannis, No. Attle- was there with them .hour after flo donate cakeS, leaving them at the school between 2 and 3 'eI', and daughters Donna and boro, Fall River and Attleboro. ,hour. There are none Jleft now Joyce teach for the CCD, too.' In Ju!'e ,1954, he was named of the aged and the terminally Saturday afternoon. A full time teacher ,at Rayn- pastor pol St. John the Baptist in but they, too, knew of the ~ ST.' JOHN BAPTIST, ham Junior High, Mrs. Peggy Parish,' Central, Village, and devoted 'Alter Christw:' woose GI!:NTRAL VILLAGE Mack, who has four children of three years later was transferred' goodness ,of hear was pourf:ld , The Ladies' Guild will sponsM' her own, still finds time to to the pastorate of the Sacred, out upon them." The eulogist continued:, "In a rummage sale from 9 to 12' teach for the Immaculate Con- Heart Parish, Oak Bluffs. ' In 1963, Father McMahon was the rectory, on the street, ,every Saturday morning, Sep~. M ill ception parish in Taunton. All of these people have denamed Dean of Dukes and Nan- where Jim Mcrilfahon was' the the parish hall. Donations ' of soul of affability. Never rancor eJ.othing and other items may be ' cided that they are the type. tucket Counties. As someone has wisely said "If Father McMahon's death was ..... ous, always kind and thoughtful. left at the hall at any time. you're a Christian then you are sudden and occurred during the Living with him was a relaxed (!IACRED HEARTS, the type.", ' early hours of the second full pleasure that is all too often lost ~I{)R'lI.'H F AIRliA VEN day of the annual priests' retreat in the hustle and bustle of big at Cathedral Camp: East Free-_ :rectories in these later days." To benefit the School tm-, IHJ@RylFami~rGrl'trodlUl«Jlte town. Man of Sorrows proveinent Fund, the 'Ladies ,of St. Anne will sponsor a cake sale Assisting Bishop Connolly at "Pinpointing the s equalities following all Masses Sunday A ChrgstD~911 Bll'otheli' the Solemn Pontifical Mass in would indicate :a relaxe<:l, and, Brother James J. Stager, son the Cathedral were: Rev. Robert easy-going man. But I wonder morning, Sept. 1~. Donations of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Stager, L. Stanton, archpriest; Rt. Rev. how many here today realize may be left at the· schooL be New Bedford, and a June grad tween 3 and 4 Saturday after John J. Hayes and Rt. Rev. An- that few days of his priestly uate of Holy Family' High thony M. Gomes, deacons of years wePe not marked by sor noon or before Masses on' Sun School" also New Bedford, was honor. day. row. His parents, brother and Tickets are now available for among novices of the Christian Rev. Stephen J. Do~ney, dea- sister died in a brief :span_of the annual Fall chicken supper, Brothers of Ireland receiving the eon; Rev. John A. Perry, sub- months some 20 years ago. In. to be held' at 6 Saturday night, eommunity's habit this month deacon; Rev. Manuel Andrade these later years, in fact recent Oct. 9 in the church basement. . at ceremonies on the campus of and Rev. Edmond R. Levesque, months, another sister 'has b,een Mr. and Mrs.' Lawren~e Wilke St. Gabriel's College, Lakewood, acolytes; Rev. Roger P. Poirier, 'termiQally iIi in Miami. May I N.J. are chairmen. thurifer. suggest that we pray foX' her in He will study for the coming Also, Rev. Joseph Oliveira, 'his place?" , ft. MARY'S CATHEDRAL. year at Santa Maria Novitiate, book bearer; Rev. Paul R. Can''To his sister of Waverly, New FALL RIVER West Park, N. Y. ue!, candle bearer; Rev. 'Edmund Y-ork, whom he dE!!lrly loved, we The Women's Guild plans a The Christian Brothers were A. Connors" gremiale bearer; extend our sympathy. 'To our public whist for 8 Thursday founded in 1802 in Waterford, Rev. Thomas Lopes, mit r e, brother priest who rests in death, Right," Sept. 22 iD the parish Ireland. They now number 4,000 bearer. we promise our fervent prayers school. Miss Helen Goff is chair members, conducting schools in Rev. Reginald M. Barrette and ...:... that he may have eternal !WAIl. aM. aaris of the world. Jlev~ Paul J!'. McCarriCk, mastel'S rest ~ . lllrontinued from Page One JIlut two hours a week (for the lesson and preparation) is not fln inordinate amount of time. ~he average American spends :Ilar more than two ,hours each ~y watching television. What Mary Smith suspects as she listens to the typical an &wer-why' Jean can't possibly teach a CCD class-is what she often hears:. "Why me? I'm not S teacher. I'm a housewife. Or a nurse. Or an accountant." ••... :"'[ can't picture myself in front of a' class." '. • • • "I'm not the ,type." In answer to the first ob- ' tecthin, very few of oui' parish SCP teachers are professional, 'educators. If the CCD program had to ieiy on people with de grees in education there would be real trouble, because there
The Parish Parade
"
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DELANO (NC)~pe p1ck here have given a victory to the two 1I1Oions which have red their H-month strike. The new union which gi'ew irom a merger of the National Far m Workers Association ~NFWA», led by Cesar Chavez, and the AFL-CIO ,Agricultural Workers' Organizing Committee ~ WOC) was officially declared winner over the Teamsters Union in the election held at two I'8nches of the Di Giorgio Cor poration. The Teamsters Union won the original balloting at Di Giorgio June 24, but charges of fraud were brought boy NFWA and AWOC. Ronald W. Haughton of Wayne State University, a labor r-elations expert appointed by € a lifornia Gov. Edmund G. Brow~ to investigate the charges, :tl3commended a !lew election. , It v.cas shortly after this that NFWA and A WOC joined forces. Chavez said then the two unions had'a close working relationship and the merger 'would eliminate the question of which union was the bargaining agent in Delano. A WOC president Larry Itliong claimed the 'farm workers' or ganizations would.be more ex tensive as a result of the merger and more capable ,of' winning ,justice for their members. Rob ert Di Giorgio, ,company presi ,dent, has made ·no secret. of his ,pl'eference for the 'J;'eamsters. 6'1lS
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", THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 15, 1966
Rosary'Crusade Director
Marks Olrdination 'Jubilee
,'.
So'Ws U.,S. More MOS$Btt»mlmMorrndJe«ID
ones "'i trnink that, God and His Mother are so pleased to see WASHINGTON (NC) --: The them puling each others hail1', United States is becoming more laughing, shouting, jumping, mission-minded, with 1,177 more it's heavenly" he says. Any par missioners abroad than two ent who's ever watched four years ago, ,according to the older children try to keep handbook, U, S.' Catholic Mis straight faces during the family sionary Personnel Overseas, rosary while a three year old 1966, just published by the Mis~ somersaults back and forth sion Secretariat here. across the living, room, should Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, exec bc assured that Father Payton utive director of the Mission would understand. And as every Secretariat, and national direc pm-ent knows, if you wait until tor of the Society for the Prop ~e th~ year old is in' bed, agation of the Faith, in his intro eyeryone else will be deep in ~1.!mily. duction to the booklet, says it if He grasps YQur band os t:e homework or TV. the first missionary personnel "I hated to say the rosary comes Into the room and when pulletin published since, the he thanks you for visiting him when I was a little boy" Father Vatican Council and conformf confesses. "My father insisted on you realize that this large, sil with the council's decrees. ' it." he says "but that was yes ver haired man with the gentle It lists the names and ad Irish v()ice is as humble as iii terday. I dread the thought of dresses of the American societie. country priest, although' he has lllSSociating punishment with engaged in overseas mission prayer so I wouldn't encourage mbbed shoulders with celebri work, with statistics by coun·, ties for years and ill himself &9 Q modem father to insist on par tries and orders. ticipation by everyone." \Celebrated all many of them. Father Peyton is a living ex Bishop Sheen reports that the _ His deep spirituality iG so real U. S. has 9,303 priests, Religiom It seems almost to be 2l visibl,e &mple of the benefits of the and lay persons serving the mis ' presence in the room, as real as family rosary, even though, like My other little boy he may have sions outside its borders whereaf the rosary he ooIds in his hand. Germany has 17,000. The U. S. His great charm is the quiet rebelled at times. "But it's the tremendous effect of remember has 3,707 Sisters and 549 lay kind snd it's diffis:ult to remem ing afterwards' the fidelity of people serving as missionaries, ber that this isqAhe Father pey while Germany has 11,600 Sit! ton who speaks to millions, .in that mother and father kneeling Jl)BlLARIAN CONGRATUILATED: Rev. Patrick Pey ters and 1,400 lay-missioners. stadiums, theateJ'fl; on radio 2nd every night ~ say the rosary, television. His spell is not m 11 with their c,hildren, that made ton is CQngratulated by the Very Rev. Richard Sullivan, pro brf.lUant wit or a glib tongue lIluch an impression on me and . vincial of Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Fathers. ' but eomes from a passionate made me analyze what causecll ST. LOUIS (NC)-The SisteI75 Ilincerity for the cause for which our home to hea home of. love." But Father Peyton wants w d St. Joseph of Carondelet wm God bas chosen him.
beg i n wearing experimenwl O'J eou.1dn't write a sermon Il1' ooy his crusade is not a uusade habits in all four of their AmeJr X tried" be says. Be IIllwayn 10 sell the rosary to mankind. iean provinces this Fall. Varia speaks extemporaneously, Oi' 00 It's a crusade to sell the family :NOTRE DAME (NC) - What niques developed during the he would put it "All I do is show ' to mankind. The crusade bJ Da an absolutely indispensable eonference will be incorporated tions of four basic habit designr my heart and soul and all the global and his mission is to ~l for modern Christian lay into Gabriel Richard counJes and some eight headpieces will be worn by about 65 Sisters. TIM love and faith that God has ~ people of all faiths. "I urge Catb next fall, with free demonstra olics to use the rosary as tbeh' leaders? nuns will experiment with tWf 1here." tion classes being held through n is self-confidence, m. tile family devotion' but when J[ st~'les of a jumper and blousl Twenty-five yeaJ'S agoo wben speak to othen I always say cpinion of several hundred out the nation starting the lat~er pattern and two styles of a one the llrish born priest was 0r ]P!lIri of September. -Use whatever family prayer Hstaffers", of the Gabriel Richard piece pleated bodice and skirt, dained at Notre Dame he eould c you 88 II Hindu, Mobammaden, institute who met here for tl never'have env~oned that bU three-day study of ''T~e Role of
Jew Oi' Protestant find will a fame and his travelS would 0 Self-Confidence in Ctu:istian
press your family's love." tend literally around the globe. Formation." The - institute con
And how would this much be Albany, New York is his of 'J: loved priest like to'spend'his nem ducts courses in Christian leader
ficial home base but he says "We twenty-five years? '''Continuing ~aining. bave headquarters all over 1h4!l ~is work' Until i die if God Instructors, staff assistants and
world and I have to be in evellY will Qive the 'privilege. "leader-shoppen" of the -insti
! one of them: Caracas, Panama, There myJHe, there is ~y tute gathered on the University
B<>gata, Rio, Santo Domingo, future, there b'~yhope--never of Notre Dame campus'as repre
':': Sao Paulo, Manila, Hollywood, to stop disturbihg' the 'peace rentatives of more' than: 2,000 ,,\ . , Sidney, Madri,d, Dublin. HI DeVell' Dever to' ,let' StatUs, ,quo Jlr~v2lii~" volunteers in the training 'work.
'bave enough time to attend to , The People who Would wish Some 25,000 persons ha\'tehad
~ all the work tbat is, created "ather Peyton suceess in those hee training through thelnsti , , I : throUlfb the enJsade ~ ~dvanee 'next 25 years 'are legion,' and tute. '
, bmily, unity, through famUy· tiS diverSe as' 'the' moVie' stan .;. In the keynote' address here,
i prayer" he says. ' wbo:bave work~d'f9rbis Family Father Thomas J. Bresnahan" Of The world bas' 'changed afiCll Theater-arid the Mau Mau ter 'Detroit, hationaldirectOt ,of the eertainly the Church has changed rorists he-' cOJi-vei1ed wben 'he Gabriel Richard InstitUte, told hI the 25 yean since the Holy was mnuggled into their con the assembly that an individual's r Cross father w~ ordained. There centration eamp ten years ago. 'iecm'Viction of hiB persoilalworth \, are many who say that devotiOll1 llf, neither pride' nor snobbery: Now the' anniversary celebra to Our Blessed Mother has 4e tion bas ended and he's on his "It is a realization of one's ·place
dined since Vatican n but tile way to the plane' thiltwill take im God's creative act arid provi ',' . m8lll who has -,done more to him to the other coaSt. When be dence." ~pread devo,tion to Mary through '''We must remind ourselv~"
says bis goodbyes with prayell' the l'06ary than anyone perhaps for your own family you know l'i&id Father Bresnahan,' "that we I \ , ;. I. m this century bl not alarmed. )IOU will ~ways 'be' grateful to are God's image and likeness. I '"'The emphasis on Mary beB he among that leilion who can To think less of ourselves than not been lessoned, except by him friend pray for his ~ God does, who by' His' infinite I. people who are so far removed tilvlUed ~ • HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS power has created Us, is 'to give ' from the spirit oi Vatican n
anall credit to Him." that they're misinterpreting it'"
Trains Leeton
• PERSONAL LOANSbe flaYs, adding'too many people , Panel discussions centered CIi'i
have been misled by sensational Continued from Page One
3echniques and methods of build
• VACATjONLOANS reporting of the Council.
SuPerintendent cI. D i 0 C e S B III ing self-confidence. Speaken m '/ eluded Msgr. James J. Killeen,;l Do people saying their Jl'OS8rieIJ Schools. t ONE STOP COMPlm BANKING AT ANY during Mass upset Father Pa".. A similar repori-"Secondary eommander in the U.S. NlilVY
ton? "Certainly not. I say more Principals--.:The PriDcipalsbip ow Chaplains' C<>rps, and Peter R.
OF OUR 6 WAND" BANKS power to them. rve ~n Bishops a Profession"-wiU be given Jew Smaltz of Gannon College, Erie, h., lIlD advertising and market with their rosaries in. their handa Hr. Thomas J. Whalen, Assl~ Qt Mass during the Council" _ cmt Superintendent of Schools, tng expert. Development of a new Gabriel says. , stoughton. While many liturgists -mmM Paul V. Fiynn, Director «liZ Richard lector's course was rm disagree with Father Peyton 0111 Public Relations, Massachusetts nounced. It was said that tOO the appropriateness of the rosary Teachers Association, will speak course, which trains lectors (fOIt
during the Mass - no one wilill. ccrl "The Principal' and lPublie their r()les· iln the revised Ca
dispute the value of this beaut£.. Relations." tholic liturgy, had been .~sted
ful devotion as the basis of hlmA Luncheon will follow and then successfully for f(mr years tn NEW BEDFORD , '
JIbli'ayel'. Father O'Neill, Superintendent, lDetroit.' Father discussed two pll'Oblerlml t;lJIld. Rev. JOseph P. Delaney. Advanced methods Ollld tech aNfER IANK-Purchas~ Cflnd WiiJiam Sis. ~at many families e5llCOWlter , Assistant Superintendent, VI i III at 1iamily rosary time-teastrlli bold meetings' f()r the prin NORTH BANK-Acushnet AVfJ. llllt Ccffill1 Ave. G~ild nnd bickering QIDong the'young eipals lmd then SIll principals. SOUTH, BANK-Cove St, CIA Rodl'ley French loulevCllr<dl
er children and ~ of lJ:Diml The llnstituU! will 'end at 3:30 The New Bedford' CathoUe
WEST BANK-Kempton$~reefl ~t Mill Street teen ogers to participate. Eo the afternoon b1rt '~ere wi)Jl <Guild for the Blind will hold its WHD'S CORNER BANc(-A~llPShD\let ,Ave. llleGr lund's <COti'~ About ~he firm problem l!lIa be provision l'!m oonsultatlol!1 Jlllrst monthly meeting tonight I!»ARTMOUTH BANK-D€!loim@Q!lgtJ, ~~rHt ~eGr Roc:kdal<a ~'lJO. says parents flhouldn"t get up ~ith t!be for SJS many' pJ'iml,. at 8 till the Knights of Cohiri:lbuo .', . MallL ' , .. ~ bqr ~ ~~Cfl d ~e l1Wo <i:lipa!&1 £::S w~lQ wisb ~ ~ roo , JPIaople, meeting Father Peyton fur the first time snould be warned: nothing 'you've Civer heard sbout this famous priest can ever quite prepare you for the impact of meeting him f:n person. , The man who eoln'ed Ule phrase "the family that prays together stays together" took 'time cmt of his busy schedule to come to the Holy Cross Fa thers Seminary m Easton to celebrate his 25th anniversary as a priest with bls Holy Crosa
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Institute Staff 5ays Christian leaders' Need Self-Confidence
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ma111Y women, she knows .nutritious foods, such as millk, are good for dieters. And she heard . Ho~:Bread! ~~. She wa,nted tok1l1oW for sure. She ~,ooooe for ounce, Holsum Bread has twice the proite[ll1l of rnilk.60% of the calcium. 13% .les~ . fat.1JlDI'e iroD. .And more B vitamins than milk.
So she saw that Holsum Bremd, li1b milk; ~s dieters many nutrients, but nc~t too many eaiOries (t~o . :slices average· ev~n leSs than' a glass of~ She now makes'sure her own and he!' familY's cIafly 'diet inchlldles Holsum and milk folr·Jhiealth and ~or: . Shouldn't YOUJlr family enjoy Ho181lllmin and milk., to()f'
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TheSt~ are ounce for ounce comparisons per
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