09.16.65

Page 1

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Fourth Session of Vatican Council Underway

Synod of Bishops To Aid

Papacy To Rule Church

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At the 0 pen i n g of the f{)urth session of Vatican Council IT on Tuesday morn­ ing, Pope Paul announced the setting up of "an episcopal synod, composed of bishops chosen for the greater part by the episcopal conferences and approved by us, which will be convened, accord­ ing to' the needs of the Church, by the Roman Pontiff for con­ sultation and collaboration when for the general good of the Church this will seem oppor­ tune to us." The Pope called attention to the fact that he was deliberately refraining from touching upon any of the themes that will be

submitted to the examination of the Council Fathers so as not to "compromise, by any word of ours, your freedom of opinion with regard to matters to be pre- . sented to you." This is seen as an answer to the 'criticism that has been leveled against the Pope in an ever-increasing de­ gree lately as being a great thinker but one unable to act, a man of such .great intellect that he spends agonizing time exam­ ining all the nuances of a situ­ ation and balancing off one against the other without coming to clear-cut decisions. In his action of proposing a synod of Bishops, the Pope is carrying out the wish expressed

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by' the majority of the Councn Fathers for "collegial" rule ot the Church by the Pope with the Bishops. Collegiality means that "the Order of Bishops, which succeeds 'to the College of Apostles arid gives this a p 0 s t 0 lie body continued existence, is also the subject of supreme and full power over the Church, provided we under­ stand this body together with its head,' the Roman Pontiff, and never without his head." It is felt that this synod of B.ishops will bring to the day-to­ day administration of the Church more international and varied insights. The Curia, the papacy'. Turn to Page Nineteen

Holy Father Warns of Symbolism Extremes

Emphasizes Eucharist Realiiy VATICAN CITY (NC)­ Prompted by "serious pas­ toral concern and anxiety" over recent theological dis­

HIS HOLINESS POPE PAUL VI

cussions, Pope Paul VI has is­ sued an encyclical defen~iing the Church's traditional doctrine on the Eucharist. The document, nearly 7,000 words long, defends: -The practice of celebrating Masses in private when Mass with a .congregation is not pos­ sible: -The preservation and ado­ ration of the Eucharist outside of Mass; -The traditional doctrine on the Eucharist exactly as it was set down by the Council of Trent . iro the 16th century. There have be@ some recent attempts to rep h r a s e the Church's teaching, using scien­ tific terminology to explain that change that occurs to the ele­ ments of bread and wine at Mass.

Pope's UN Visit To End With Mass at Stadium NEW YORK (NC)-Pope P'aul VI will enter New York in a two-hour motorcade and will end his Oct. 4 visit with • second major public event-an evening Mass at Yankee Sta­ dium. The high point of the vjsit, the first by a reigning Pontiff of the Church to the United States, will be a speech at the United Na­ tions in which he will make an appeal for international peace. The'Pontiff will arrive for his visit to the United Nations at Kennedy International Airport shortly before 10 A.M., EDT. From there he will travel to the residence of Francis Cardinal Spellman and St. Patrick's Ca­ thedral in Manhattan. Before leaving the airport, the Pope will deliver a short address to the dignitaries assembled to meet him. These may include Cardinal Spellman, U.N. Secre­ tary General U Thant, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and state and local officials.

Opposing these attempts, the encyclical gives a ringing confirmation to Trent's definition of "transubstantiation." Even the words of the def­ inition, Pope Paul said, must be preserved exact­ ly. The word "transubstantiation" was used by the Council of Trent to describe the change that takes place during the Consecration of the Mass, when

dJThe ANCHOR

.A" Anrhor 01the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul

Fall River, Mass.ISept. 16, 1965

Vol. 9, No. 37 ©

Stonehill Lists 350 Freshmen For Opening

1965 The Anchor

the substances of bread and wine are replaced by the substance of the Body and Blood of Christ. Entitled Mysteriuni Fidei (The Mystery of Faith) after its open­ ing words, this third encyclical of Pope Paul's reign is addressed to "the clergy and faithful of the world" as well as to the hier­ archy. It carries the date of Sept. 3, the feast of a great champion of the Eucharist-Pope St. PiWl

X. The new encyclical appears just a little more than a year af­ ter the publication of the Pope'. first encyclical, Ecclesiam Suam, on Aug. 6, 1964. The second, en­ t~ed Mense Maio, was issued on April 30 this year. Pope Paul stated clearly at the beginning of the present ency­ clical the reason that prompted him to issue it. "We are aware of the fact that among those who deal with this most holy mystery in the writteD Turn to Page Ten

Bishop Connolly Designates Sept. 19 as ceo Sunday

The other four U. S. Cardinals Next Sunday wilJ be observed as Confraternity qt Three hundred and fifty· have been invited to the day's Christian Doctrine Day in the Fall River Diocese, Most Rev. events. They may be among the freshnaen reported at Stone­ James L. Connolly has. announced. The Diocesan Ordinary, group meeting the Pope a't the hill College Monday for a airport. The Cardinals are: week's spedal orientation in a letter read at all Masses in all churches, also thanked James Francis Cardinal McIn­ the laity for its participation tyre of Los Angeles, Richard and guidance sessions prior to in the recent New England for training courses speaks wen the. oPening of the college Mon­ Cardinal Cushing of Boston, Jo­ regional CCD Congress which for the future of the Confrater­ seph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis day, September 20. Stonehill will officially open was- held at Bishop Stang nity in the Diocese. and Lawrence Cardinal Shehan "We must thank all who par­ next Monday with a Mass of High School in North Dartmouth. of Baltimore. ticipated; with a special word of The route Pope Paul will fol­ Concelebration in which several The Ordinary's letter desig­ low into the city is still under priests of the faculty will parti­ nating Sunday as CCD Day commendation for those who ar­ ranged so practical a program, discussion. But police and other cipate. This will be the first follows: touching, as it did, all needs. It bme that such a Mass, which officials are working to make it Beloved in Christ: gave great inspiration to Parent­ one that makes it possible for represents a revival of an an­ "Our Regional Congress of the Educators, . and those who give the greatest number of people clent Christian tradition, will be Confraternity of Christian Doc­ to see the Pontiff, according to celebrated for the students and trine at Bishop Stang High time and talent to religious in­ a spokesman for the New York for many this will be their first School has been hailed as a great struction of children who might otherwise be deprived of knowl­ attendance at this type of Mass. archdiocese. success. The well-informed zeal edge and the guidance helpful Turn to Page Seventeen Public interest in the visit is of the speakers, the enthusiasm in adjusting to life's problems. extremely high, according to the of the men and women who Chiefly, however, we are thank­ spokesman. Inquiries about the came to listen, learn and be in­ ful for the education in depth Fast and Abstinence spired Pope's agenda have flooded to work for the cause of which was aimed at all of us Catholic and U.N. information Christ, were all a comforting responsible for bringing the Next Wednesday, Friday offices. experience, to clergy, religious light and love of Christ into our and Saturday, Sept. 22, 24 and The U.N., for example, has and laity alike. We feel richly confused world. 25, are Ember Days. Those been swamped with requests rewarded, and grateful to God obliged to fast must do so on "To the faithful of the Dio­ from Catholic schools to take for the apparent good that was the three days but meat may their pupils on the regular U.N. done. The fact that over eight cese, I address the words written be eaten at the main meal Oil 1'um to Page TeD }Vednesday and Saturda,. hundred of our lait~ enrolled Xurn to Page Nineteell

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THE ANCHOR-Dioces~ of Fall River.:....Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

Charges Teache..s Fail to Turn Out Socially Conscious G'raduates

Proper of the Mass Fifteenth Sunday After Penteco~t INTROIT-Incline your ear, 0 Lord; answer me; save your servant, 0 my God, who trusts in you. Have pity on me, 0 Lord, for to you I call all the day. Gladden the soul .of your servant, for to you, 0 Lord, I lift up my soul. Glory be to the Father, etc. Incline your ear, O· Lord; answer me; save your servant,O my God, who trusts in you. Have pity on me, 0 Lord, for to you I call all the day. GRADUAL-It is good to give thanks to the Lord, to sing to your name, Most High. To proclaim your kindness at dawn and your faithfulness throughout the night. Alleluia, allel~ia. For the Lord is a great God, and a great king over all the earth. Alleluia. OFFERTORY-I have waited, waited for the Lord, and he stooped toward me, and heard my cry. And he put a new song into my mouth, a hymn to our God. COMMUNION-The bread that I will give is for the life of the world. .

IPV

flesh

Please Clip and Bring to Church on S"nday

Alert Members of Kolping Society To Importance of LQity in Church NEW YORK (NC)-The ad­ visory board of the Catholic Kolping Society of America urged local units to recognize the era of the awakening of the laity in the Church. Some 30 officials of the youth organization founded in 1849 by Father Adolph Kolping of Cologne, Germany, d r aft e d guidelines and directives in keeping with the impact 01. the Second Vatican Council. Fat her Helwick Krewitt, O.F .M., of st. Louis, society president, who presided at the three-day convention here, of­ fered Mass at the Vatican Pavil­ ion when the group visited the New York World's Fair. The world wide Kolping Soci­ ety has some 500 houses, the greatest number in Germany and Austria. Father Kolping, the centennial of whose death is be­ ing observed this year, founded the movement to aid young men trained as mechanics and living away from their paternal homes for the first time. ~ In the lodging houses, where efforts are made toward a who I e s 0 m e Christian atmo­ aphere, youths are guided toward

Necrology SEPT. 24 Rev. Joseph E, C. Bourque, 1955, Pastor, Blessed Sacrament, Fall River. SEPT. 26 Rev. John J. Donahue, 1944, Assistant, St. William, Fall River.' SEPT. 29 Rev. J.A. Pyan, 1899, Founder, St. Matthew, Fall River. SEPT. 30 Rev. John J. Griffin, 1963, Pastor, St. Paul's, Taunton.

F0tlTY HOURS DEVOTION Sept.19--Holy Cross, .,. a 11 River. St. Joseph, Attle~ro. St. Louis de France, Swansea. Sept. 26-St. Roch, Fall River. Sacred Heart, Taunton. St. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford.

THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid It FilII IIlver, Mass. Published Ivery Thursdey lit 410 Hishland AvenUlL Fall River, Mass., 02722 by tlIe Clthollc ..ress of the Diocese of Fill

I'ver. .SubscriptiOi price lIy lIlIil, pOItpal. $4,00 per year.

REV. FELIX LESNEK, SS.Cc.

Nam'ed Superior. At Monastery Very Rev. Daniel J. McCarthy, SS.CC., provincial of the Sacred Hearts Fathers, has announced . the appointment of Rev. Felix Lesnek, SS.CC. as superior of the Sacred Hearts Monastery, Fair­ haven. Mission procurator for the past nine years, the new supe­ rior is a I;lative of Detroit and following service as a dental technician in the U. S. Navy during World War II, Father Lesnek prepared for the priest­ hood at st. Philip Neri School, Boston. He was professed as a religious in 1948 and was ordained in Washington in 1953.' He served in the Japanese Mission from 1953 to 1956. Appointed to serve as the new mission procurator is Rev. Daniel McLaughlin, SS.CC.

a deepening of religious convic­ tions; receive.a training in fam­ ily living and are prepared for good citizenship. Has 13 Centers According to Father Krewitt, the, movement in certain Euro­ pean countries receives state backing. He likened the Kolping' program in Europe .to the Y.M.C.A. work in this country. "Kolping tries to do for the young worker in the United States what the Newman move­ ment tries to do for the univer­ sity students," he said. In the United States there are 13 centers in six states. Los An­ geles has ·two large houses with comQined facilities for 100 youths. New· York City has a facility for lodging 100. The cultural, educational, and FRIDAY-M ass of previoua Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass social program of Kolping per­ Proper; No Gloria or Creed; mits participation by young 2nd ColI. Impression of Stig­ adult women, but in this country mata of St. Francis, Confessor: there are no residences for Common Preface. women, Father Krewitt said. OR Impression of Stigmata of st. Francis, Confessor. W hit e. Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. SATURDAY-St. Joseph of Cu­ OTrAWA (NC)-A priest said pertino, Confessor. III Class. he conducted a survey which White. Mass Proper; Gloria; disclosed a large number 01. no Creed; Common Preface. clergy in the Quebec, archdiocese SUNDAY - XV Sunday After object to filling the dual role of Pentecost. II Class. Green. priest and teacher. Mass Proper; 3-10ria; Creed; Father Jacque Lazure, chair­ Preface of Trinity. man of the University of Otta­ MONDAY - Mass of previous wa's sociology department, said Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass he conducted interviews with Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 214 priest-teachers in the Que­ 2nd ColI. SS. Eustachius and bec archdiocese. He said they Companions; Martyrs: Com­ constitute 15 per cent of the mon Preface. 1;400 teachers in Quebec's clas­ OR sical colleges. SS. Eustachius and Compan­ His survey showed, Father . ions, Martyrs. Red. Gloria; no Lazure reported, that only 20 Creed; Common Preface. per cent of the priest-teachers TUESDAY-St. Matthew, Apos­ are content with their present tle and Evangelist. II Class. status. He reported that 41, per Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; cent favor leaving such subject. Creed; Preface of Apostles. as mathematics, science and larl­ WEDNESDAY-Emoer Wednes­ guages to lay teachers, while 18 day of September. II Class. per cent favor "abandoning the Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo­ priest-teacher role" except iD. ria or Creed; 2l).d CoIl. st. minor seminaries. Thomas of Villanova, Bishop Father Lazure, who reported and Confessor, Common Pre­ on his survey at the recent face. American Catholic Sociological THURSDAY-St.. Linus, Pope Society' convention in Chicago, and Martyr. III Class. Red. said 12 per cent of those inter­ Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd Coll. viewed "claim the priest-teacher st. Thecla, Virgin and Martyr, role is no longer justifiable even no Creed; Common Preface. for minor seminaries, except for teaching religion and, very oc­ casionally, one or two secular aubjects." On Saturday morning, Sept. 18, "There is a clear tendency to at 9 o'clock, a First Anniversary desecularize the teacher-priest Mass of Requiem will be offered role and to confine it gradually at St. Patrick's Church, Fall within a more religious and River, for the repose of the soul sacred aphere." Father .Luure of the late pastor, at. Bey. Edmund 1. Ward. aaid.

Mass Ordo

Pries,ts Object To Dual Role

Anniversary

SAGINAW (NC)-The teach­ lowed itself to be projected III ers group, ''basically the most an image of a middle-cl. . important in society," is failing white-man's chureh." to perform one of the most im­ He said this middle-cia.­ . portant functions of education church "has been forced to go .. by "not turning out socially con­ the sources of money, large~ conscious graduates," the direc­ middle-class" for support an• tor of a human relations insti­ , consequently "we fail to preac1l tute said here in Michigan. the social encyclicals because • Father Louis J. Twomey, S.J., might offend the middle-clasa. We have forgotten the language director of the institute at Loy­ ola . University, New Orleans, of the poor." "Where is the Church's pre.­ told the. Diocese of Saginaw Teachers' Institute: "We are not ence in the slums?" Father ~ preparing youth for society mey asked. "We drive throup them and say 'Thank God I today." Speaking to 650 educators in don't live there.' We tolerate St. Paul's Seminary here, Father conditions which deprave tile Twomey said it is basic to the poor." "Upgrade your training," . . educational system "to build a society in which the dignity of challenged the teachers. "Gift young people the idea they c-a every human person • • • will 'be be of service to their fellow maa acknowledged, respected and and soon you'll have more ".. protected." cations than you know what .. "Our graduates," he said, "can do with. We've got to get out ef become members of the John the Middle Ages." Birch Society-and God forgive them. They become members of White Citizens Councils--and go to Mass and Communion." "Our civilization is threatened because we lack either the knowledge of what our princi­ CHICAGO (NC) - A workel' ples mean - or the' courage to for better community relatiou live by them." said here the prime objective fa He asserted that communism the war against poverty and en.­ - Which he called "dynamic crimination is "to correct a pre­ negativism" - has enslaved a found tendency of our society .• third of the earth's population exclude and. penalize minori~ groups and the disadvantage(L­ "because of our failures." . "We have lived in variance .Speaking before 500 CathoBe , with our pri~ciples " he declared. lay leaders at the Midwest Aa­ sembly of the Sodality Lar Middle-Class Church Apostolate, Rufus P.. Knighton. Fat her Twomey said the community relations supervis. Christian Church-and not just of the Detroit archdiocesan op. the Catholic Church-"has 81- portunity program, said the "retII issue is not giving special coa­ sideration to Negroes and ot~ minorty groups for past injl»­ tices," but rather adoption GI realistic measures to achieve the GLENDALE (NC) - Father prime objectives 01. the caua­ Robert C. Berson is the new paign. Knighton, president of the superior general of the Glen­ mary Home Missioners. He was D e't r 0 i t Catholic Interraci" elected at a general chapter to Council, warned that in the w. on poverty, "the Economic ~ succeed Father Clement F. Bor­ portunity Act is not the whole chers, who completed two six­ answer." year terms. -rhere is plenty of room f . The meeting was held at Our Lady of the Fields Seminary private effort" he said. "The ael here, national headquarters of itself has served to arouse the the society founded 26 years ago country to a great concern not by the late Father W. Howard _only for the poor within our owa boundaries, but for 1he poor ef Bishop. the entire yvorld." Father Berson has been supe­ rior of the Glenmary Fathers at the Glendale Seminary and di­ rector of lay personnel. The society includes some 75 priests and 50 Brothers, staffing churches and chapels in some 70 rural settlements of Pennsyl­ vania, Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Oklahoma, Arkansaa, and Texas.

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3

Mission Experts' Annual Meet"ing In Washington

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 16, 1965

, WASHINGTON (NC) lome 1,000 priests, Religious and lay persons active in' f'atholic mission work are

HELSINKI (NC)-A new par­ ish covering tens of thousands of square miles will' be set up

in northern Finland and Lapp­

land. It will be the sixth Cath­

olic parish in Finland, which has '

fewer than 3,000 Catholics in a

total population of 4,5 million.

The parish center will be Oulu,

a city of 78,000 near the Arctic

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eKpected at the 16th annual Meeting here of the U. S. Mis­ ,ron-Sending SocietIes starting ..ext Monday. Sponsored by the Mission Secretariat, a-15-year-old na­ tional clearinghouse of informa­

tion and services for foreign

missions, the meeting will have

this theme: "Revolution in Mis­

sionary Thinking: Our Response

to De Ecclesia." De Ecclesia is

the monumental Constitution on

the Church promulgated by the

Vatican council.

Immediately after the close of

the mission-sending societies'

assembly, delegates will be in­

vited to a seminar on the Church

lit. Africa. Featured speakers

will include Bishop Joseph

Blomjous, W.F., of Mwanza,

Tanzania, vice-president of the

Pan-African Bishops' Confer­

ence.

- Speakers at general sessions of

till e' mission-sending groups"

meeting will be Father Eugene

Burke, C.S.P., of St. Paul's Col­

lege here, "Collegial Responsi­

bility for the Needy Churches";

rather J. Gerard Grondin, M.M.,

llSSistant general of Maryknoll. "Cooperation-the Key to Apos­ tDlic Action"; and Father .John A. Bell, W:F., director of the Washington house of studies of

the White Fathers, "Individual

and Group Responsibility for the

Keedy Churches."

Fr. Considine Speaker In addition, one general ses- ' "on will feature three speakers

en the topic, "Implementation of Mis s ion a r y Responsibility." Speaking will be: Father Jo­ seph Varga,' C.S.Sp., Catholic Students Center. Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich.; Paul K.T. Sih, director, Center of Asian Studies, st. John's University, New York; and Father John J. Considine, M.M., director, Latin America Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Con­ ference. A highlight of the meeting will be presentation of the World-mission Awards to lay­ men judged outstanding for their interest in promoting the _use of mission work. ' The African seminar is being jointly sponsored by the Mission Secretariat and the African Re­ search and Information Center ef Washington. Speakers will discuss the gen­ ..al situation of the Church, the JIOle of Christian education, the place of women in social revo­ lution, the total Christian re­ sponse needed and what the fu­ ture seems to hold.

Edmundites Appoint New Selma Pastor WINOOSKI (NC) - Father Edward A. Leary, S.S.E., who has been serving as director of the Edmundite Fathers' devel­ opment program, has been named pastor and religious superior of St. Elizabeth's mission in Selma, Ala. Father Leary succeeds Father Maurice Ouellet, S.S.E., who re­ Rntly was appointed Edmundite novice master at Mystic, Conn. The change was announced by Father Eymard P. Galligan, 'S.S.E., superior general, here in Vermont. Father Ouellet, who fed and housed Catholic demonstrators in. Selma's dramatic voting rights demonstration last March, said his, transfer from Alabama was at the request of Archbisho~ Thomas J. Toolen, Bishop of, IIobile-Birmingbam.

I

DEPART FOR VATICAN COUNCIL: Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop­ (tf the Diocese, and Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chaneellor and Coun­ cil Peritus, at Kennedy International Airport, New York, as they prepare to board the plane for Rome ,and the fourth session' of the Vatican Council

Suggests More 'Nuns in Newman Work

Zealous Women "We are in midst of an explo­ sive growth of the number of Catholic students on non-Catho­ lic campuses," the bishop said. "And the Church's mission must do its utmost to provide for these students, the future lead­ ers of our society." After citing how the need for

priests as chaplains in the armed

forces and as missionaries in Latin America was stretching available sources, Bishop Pri­ meau said: "Among our religious Sisters there are literally hundreds of highly trained wonderfully zeal­ ,ous women whQse talents would adorn any university faculty, to say nothing of serving in this less official capacity as associ-

Plan Dinner, Dance Bishop Stang Council, Knights of Columbus, will hold its annu': al Past Grand Knights dinner and dance from 7 to midnight Saturday night, Sept. 18, at Gaudette's Pavilion, Acushnet. In charge of arrangements are Paul A. Richard and Normand LeBoeuf, :who announce that tickets are available from them or other council officers, and that all area Knights of Colum­ bus and their wives are invited.

ates of the chaplains in the New­ man Centers." Bishop Primeau cited the "mystique" that the Sisters have for the general public, non­ Catholic as well as Catholic.

Honor Dr. King JERSEY CITY (NC) - Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., ci~il rights leader, will receive an honorary doctor of laws from St. Peter's College here next Wednesday, Sept. 22.

"In a certain sense," the bish­

op said, "they stole the show

at Selma. The American people,

I think, regard them as 'genuine

article,' and give them far more

serious consideration than they do bishops and priests." "The presence of Sisters Oft campus," the bishop said, "espe­

cially if they work for advanced

degrees at the same time, would 'capture' many a crusty agnostic, soften prejudices and bring many

to a sympathetic and objective

attitude toward the Church."

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Prelate Sees Need for Chaplains Associates NEW YORK (NC)-A bishop recommended here the greater use of nuns in the Newman Apostolate as associates to chap­ lains faced with burgeoning numbers of Catholic students en­ 'rolling at secular campuses. Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, N. H., speaking at the banquet of the National Newman Chaplains Association held here' in conjunction with the golden jubilee congress of the National Newman Student Federation said the Newman Apostolate "is not being ade­

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4

Turns New Page

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

'Normal Maturing Process Excludes Too Early Dating

. Restore Historic Churcft in Texas To Status of Cathedral

By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. There's something cute about a tiny guy who walks like an old man, and you can't help but get a kick out of the little girl who shuffles around in her mother's big shoes and trails one of mom's dresses through a few mud puddles. On occasion, depend­ scattered parties long before the ing on .your mood and the natural time for dating. Dating comedian's skill, you might itself should be mostly at first even get a bang out of seeing· in groups, and not in isolated, an adult act like an infant. But when someone starts acting like an infant and doesn't k now it's an act, or when a young kid is similarly convinced that he is already an adult, you're faced, not with come dy, but wit h tragedy, not with beauty of any sort but with grotesque­ ness. There is a logical progres­ sion to our lives. so that each stage builds on the preceding stage, with each stage of our young life contributing some­ thing to what we are as adults. In the physicai order, this sort of process takes place automat­ ically, with an assist from com­ mon-sense health measures. In other spheres-the social, moral, intellectual and spiritual spheres, that is-we have to help the process a bit more. Process of Nature Each stage of life is valuable in a unique way, bringing helps unattainable at any other period of our lives. You cannot, for ex­ ample,' gain the profits of child­ hood when you are no longer a child. Nor can a child profit from a precocious and phoney adulthood. You could choose examples of this process of nature from any facet of life, but let's consider here, by way of example, how a natural dating process should evolve - from the stone age (when a boy thinks God created girls so he could throw rocks at them), through an increasing. social awareness. There will be a gradually in­ ereasing association - at school, in the neighborhood, at a few

DIRECTOR: Rev. Lawr­ ence T. Murphy, M.M.·, has been appointed director of the International Student Apostolate, a newly created post in the Newman Aposto­ late, with headquarters at the N.C.W.C. Youth Depart­ ment, Washington. NC Photo

insulated pairs, until there is a very high degree of maturity. Come the day when a boy or girl is mature enough to marry (which is much later than the day that many of them do marry), more serious dating is the order of nature, 'and, after a certain amount of playing the field and going steady (which is almost always an absurd contra­ diction in the teens), there can be an engagement and then marriage. Lose Benefits Now that's a perfectly' natural dating process. But take anyone of these stages out of place and you will not only create a natu­ ral contradiction, but you will also manage to lose all benefits-­ among them maturity~f grow­ ing up normally As a matter of fact, for this very reason we do have many immature young people wan­ dering around today trying to put on an act of maturity. They have been allowed, or sometimes even forced to act like adults long before they actually were. Apart from our vast majority of wonderful teens, there are a lot of teen-aged kooks who can be characterized only as bored sophisticates, already tired of life and seeing nothing in their future except further boredom. What Is Lett? After all, what is left socially for the high-school sophomore who has already had the thrill­ ing and maturing experience of blowing $50 on a date, or wbo has already found out what a thrilling toy preliminary sex play can be? What is left for the teen-aged girl who bas already gone steady for a year or two and who knows all about marriage except how to live it maturely and responsibly.? There are,. unfortunately, some teen-aged boys who know little more socially than how to get along with girls. And there are not a few teen-aged girls who have no interests whatsoever. who can, in fact, speak of noth­ ing else except boys or, some­ times, of one poor guy they have hooked hopelessly into going steady with them. Escape Artists And all the while their fond parents, who have allowed. them to date too much, too soon, or steady, beam with satisfaction and say "How mature, how cute," expressions which even­ tually change to "How horrible:" The only way for a child to mature is by facing the prob­ lems of bis present state of life, and the worst possible way to Hdeal" with those problems is to avoid them by pretending to be someone else, an adult, for in­ stance, long before one is an adult. All an early dating pattern does for these kids is make them escape-artists, the most common psychological plunder there is. They will, all too often, perfect this art of escape later on in other ways--through alcohol or some other outlet.

D.C. Conclave WASHINGTON (NC) - The 1965 convention of the National Catholic Pharmacists Guild will be held here in the nation's cap­ ital on Oet. ~ :mO. 1.0

F AMIL Y LIFE: Father James T. McHugh of New­ ark has been appointed to the staff of· the Family Life Bureau. N.C.W.C., Washing­ ton. NC Photo

BROWNSVILLE (NC)-His­ cathedral was laid July 6, 1858, tory-laden Immaculate Concep­ The first bishop in Texas' hi.­ tion cathedral here is .turning a tory, Bishop John M. Odin, C.M.. new page in its record of service . of Galveston, presided at . . to the Churcb in Texas. dedication June 12 1859. With the creation in July of Among the cathedral's fe.. the new diocese of Brownsville, tures are nine chandeliers cus­ the century-old edifice began its tom designed by French crafts­ second tour of duty as a cathe­ dral. Earlier, it served as cathe­ men in Paris and a powerful old pipe organ paid for by selling dral for a number of years in cattle donated to the parish by the late 19th century until Cor­ neighboring ranchers in lieu of pus Christi was designated See money. city of the diocese. The cathedral is looking for­ Pope Paul VI on July 21 formed the new Brownsville di­ ward to the day whtm it wiD ocese by detaching four counties house a priceless art treasure--a in the lower Rio Grande Valley painting of the Virgin and Child from the Corpus Christi diocese. by the 17 century Spanish paint­ At the same time he named er Bartolome Murillo. The origi­ Bishop Adolph Marx, former nal painting has been deeded te auxiliary bishop of Corpus the cathedral and in the mean­ Christi, to head the new diocese. time is represented by a cop,. The cornerstone of the historic which hangs over the main alta&.

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Chicago Prelate Accepts Court Recommendation WASIDNGTON (NC) ­ Describing it as a moral obli­ gation, Archbishop John P. Oody of Chicago said, the

THE HOLY FATHEA'S MISSIO. AID TO THE OAIE.TAL CHURCH

archdiocese will pay $3 million to the families of children killed or injured in the tragic 1958 Our Lady of Angels schopl fire. The prelate told a press con­ ference he accepts the recom­ mendation of a special three­ judge panel of the Circuit Court which spent all Summer investi­ gating 116 cases of death or in­ jury and proposed the $3 miliion payment. "This I consider to be a moral obligation of the archdiocese and we shall meet our obligations. The money to be paid will be borrowed from Chicago banks and no special solicitation wHI be made. Ninety-two pupils perished In the fire. Seventy-six were seri­ ously injured. The settlement includes those who did not file suit as well as those who did. Archbishop Cody said that the late Albert Cardinal Meyer. whom be succeeded, proposed that the settlement include those who did not file suit. "I concur with this wish," Archbishop Cody said.

FATHER THOMAS WILL BUILD

I"T EVENINf'IS AF1ER

WORK , \

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Rosary Rallies :::;ANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE (NC) - Father Patrick Peyton, C.S.C., founder and director of the Family Rosary Crusade has arrived here to make arrange­ ments for crusade rallies in un. city in the Canary Island$.

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• In Rome thfs week the Bishops thought of Jeru­ salem, the heart of our 18-country mIssion world. Pope Paul asked that relics of the True Cross be carried in procession when the Council reconvened..... The Bishops in Council need our prayers. They need help to wallop world poverty, to keep God with the poor•••• Give them a hand? The Holy Father will use your stringless g1ft (in any amount) where it's needed most.

HOLY ATHER INOWS WHERE YOUR HELP

Cardinal Rejects Joint Meeting COLOGNE (NC) Lorenz Cardinal Jaeger of Paderborn said that the suggestion to hold a joint Evangelical (Lutheran) and Catholic national congress is not a good idea at the present time. Germany's two major faiths now hold separate church con­ gresses. This year Cardinal Jaeger was a guest at the Luth­ eran congress in Cologne. Cardinal Jaeger said in an. in­ terview here that "the con­ gresses are supposed to be a witnessing of its faith on the part· of each church, not a gigantic demonstration by two big denominations. "Besides, a joint meeting would necessitate the exclusion of some very important ques­ tions and that is useless," Car­ dinal Jaeger said.

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From Communist-Infested southern India Father Thomas Puthiavel pleads for help to build at once a durable church In Kavarapa·rumbu, a critical mission-center. "Not long ago the Reds gunned dowlt seven of my finest-men," writes rather Thomas. "Without a church we cannot lave the faith." ••• The problem, of eourse. is poverty. The men who have jobs (weaving bam­ boo mats) get about 16¢ a dayI ••• The church (with meeting-room attached) can be built for as little as $3,800 (the cost of the materials) since Father Thomas and his parishioners will build it evenings after work. 72:1 Catholics, many of them chndren, are waiting to use it. They hear Mass now out-of-doors, If and when weather per­ mits•••• The parish is dedicated to st. Therese, the little Flower. Build the church ($3800), or part of it, in memory of your loved ones? Please send at teest as much as you can right now ($200, $150, $100, $75, $50, $20, $15, $1e>. $5, $3, $1). Father Thomas needs your help immediately. We'U send it to him AirmaiL

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Fifty-two Enter

Nursing Class

Fifty-two young ladies have matriculated at st. Anne's Hos­ pital School of Nursing, Fan River, for the coming year. This Is the 39th entering class and largest in the history of the .choo!. Listed among the new fresh­ men are Sister Maureen, O. Carm., from Our Lady's Haven. Fairhaven. Fall River Maureen Barreira, Monique B 0 u 1 a y, Madeline Bousquet, Madeleine Brodeur, Jeanne Du­ pont. " Camille Faria, Doris Ferreira, Michaeline Leary, Rosemary Martin. Also Barbara Pickup, Margaret Potvin, Jeanne Rivard, and Su­ zanne St. Arnand. New Bedford Susan Cafferty, Patricia Han­ Bon, Jacqueline· Hebert, Diane Kappral, Mary Rodrig!1es, and Patricia Simoes. Taunton Beverly Bzdula, Suzanne May­ Bard, Therese Stankiewick, Pa­ tricia Tonry and Donna Virginis. North Dartmouth Cheryl Cardoza, Elizabeth Co­ elho, Bernice Leblanc, Diane Leblanc, Mary McMahon, and Mary Stebenne. From other localities in the Diocese came Patricia Bonczek, I'airhaven; Rosanna Ventura, No. I'airhaven; Diane Monjeau, So. J)artmouth. . Two represent Acushnet and l!omerset: Carol Olivier and .Anne Sorelle, the former, Diane Ouellette and Rita Pelletier, the latter. Also, Delia Duart of Vineyard Haven, Kathy Ryan of Cumma­ quid, and Lydia Rose of Marion. Completing the freshman class are: Patricia Dias, No. Tiverton; Patricia Malone and Patricia Moniz, No. Tiverton; Veronica Bento, Newport; Helen Flynn, Middletown; Virginia Silvia, Bristol. Also, Gail Campbell, Whitman; ;Joanne Conway, Hanson; Karen Lopes, Plymouth; Tamara Tzetta, Pembroke; and Margaret Ellison hm Portland, Me.

Ontario Lay Workers To Enter Priesthood COMBERMERE (NC) -Two members of the Madonna House Lay Apostolate, one of the old­ est lay apostolates in North America, are now studying for the priesthood here in Canada's Ontario province. The two are Thomas Zoeller of Louisville and Richard Starks of Rochester. Twenty-five people mad e their vows at Madonna House here. Ten, who have served as staff workers for at least seven Fe a r s, dedicated themselves Irforever." The day the vows were made also marked the birthday of Mrs. Catherine de H\leck Doh­ erty, foundress of Madonna Bouse, and the 20th anniversary of Pembroke Bishop William J: Smith's first visit to Madonna Bouse, which led to the found­ ing of the Lay Apostolate.

Prelate to Advise Cursillo Movement LANSING (NC) - Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Green Lansing is the episcopal advisor of the Na­ twnal Cursillo Movement. At an erganibzation meeting here in Michigan Bishop Green was se­ lected by the delegates and con­ sented to serve. The convention approved a board of directors and a na­ tional secretariat composed of 21 priests and laymen from various geographical divisions of the country. William O. Sweeney of Detroit is executive director of the group.

'nfE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall .........

BEGINNING-AND CLIMAX: Left, students enter­ ing St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing chat with Sister Madeleine Clemence, director. From left, Kathy Ryan, St. Francis Xavier parish, Hyannis; twins Diane and Bernice LeBlanc, St. George, North Dartmouth; Sister Maureen, Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven. Right, students graduating

Sept. 1'6, 1'96S

from Fall River school receive congratulations of Bis'hop Connolly and graduation speaker. From left, Linda Pelder, Hyannis; the Bishop; Lt. Col. Phyllis J. Verhonick, ANC, R.N., Ph. D., chief, department of nursing, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research; Joanna Fernandes, T~unton

Declares Laity Key to Chu rch Mission Work

Workers Cast Positive ,Image in Africa

LOS ANGELES (NC)-Back here after a two-month journey through Africa, Father Law­ rence O'Leary is firmly con­ vinced that the success of the Church in the mission field rests largely on the laity. Father O'Leary is assistant di­ rector of the Lay Mission Help­ ers Association which has head­ quarters here. It was his third trip to Africa. He visited eight countries where 75 Lay Mission Helpers are stationed. The lay missioners "are cast­ ing a very positive image in Africa," Father O'Leary de­ clared. ''They are recognized not only by the people but also by the government for their excel­ lent calibre." Father O'Leary said Qne of the best indications of the accept­ ance of lay missioners in the life of the Church in Africa came from a number of Bishops who "are asking for qualified layinen to teach in their seminaries." Personnel Dearth "This is an admirable way for laymen to foster vocations to the priesthood," he observed. "We have one Lay Mission Helper teaching at a seminary in Uganda. Both the Bishops and priests see him as a great in­ fluence for the seminarians, a layman living an exemplary Christian life. This gives them motivation for their own spir­ itual development," he com­ mented. Africa's Bishops and native clergy now have a confidence in the lay missioners and recog­ nize their great potentiality, Father O'Leary asserted, noting laymen are doing vital work that might not otherwise be

Chinese Reds Sieze Buddhist Monastery HONG KONG (NC) - All monks have been ousted from what was formerly one of China's largest mountain-peak monasteries, it has been learned here. Between 300 and 500 Buddhist monks formerly inhabited this monastery at 0 p Wutaishan Mountain close to the northeast border of Shansi Province. The monastery has now been emptied of all Buddhists and convected into a state school.

done because of 'a dearth of per­ sonnel. "A Lay Mission Helper, a woman, is manager of the larg­ est weekly newspaper in Tan­ zania. It's not an easy job. A 'priest wouldn't be available to do it," he said. Contributions Vary Medicine, he said is another field where great contributions are being made by mission doc­ tors from the Los Angeles Arch­ diocese. "At Licuni mission in Malawi, Dr. Herbert Sorensen has built up the hospital, has opened new labs, a new operating theater and a new medical-surgical ward that is dedicated to Msgr. Anthony Brouwers," he' said.

Marquette Measure 'Goes to President WASHINGTON (NC) - The Senate has passed and sent to President Johnson a reso~ution establishing a ~pecial commis­ sion to plan observance of the 300th anniversary of the arrival of Father Jacques Marquette, S.J., in North America. Next year will mark the 300th anniversary of the arrival in Quebec of Father Marquette, pi­ oneer missionary and explorer, who died near the present-day Ludington, Mich., in 1675., The French Jesuit's statue is in the U. S. Capitol's Statuary Hall, where it represents Wis­ consin.'

The late Msgr. Brouwers found­ ed the Lay Mission Helpers and sent the first members overseas in 1956. Father O'Leary said the gov­ ernment regards Dr. Sorensen's work so highly that it had asked him to stay in Malawi to aid in the nation's medical programs. Education Need "It is difficult to generalize about Africa," Father O'Leary

Project to Assist Guatemala Indians HOUSTON (NC) - The two­ year-old International Cooper­ atives organization here in Tex­ as has purchased 600 acres of farmland in northern Guatemala and will send volunteers to teach Indians modern farm methods. Purchased with gifts from leading laymen in the Galves­ ton-Houston diocese, the land, in the province of Huehueten­ ango, will. be worked by men chosen by Father T. W. Kappe, director of the Rural Life Com­ mission of the diocese. Volun­ teers will serve for two years.

averred. "Every country is dif­ ferent." The principal common need, however, is education, he said, adding: "Education is everything. When the Church runs a hospital it trains African personnel. Our doctors train people because they realize that one day they will leave--should leave. "They should leave because it is a missioner's job to improve conditions and to educate until the people are ready to take <;:are of themselves," He visited Nigeria, Rhodesia, M a I a wi, Zambia, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya and the Union of South Africa.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fatlltlver-Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

Grant Us Peace

That His Work Continue This coming Sunday is Confraternity of Christian

Doctrine Sunday throughout the Diocese. All Catholics

are reminded that their task is not only to keep the Faith but to encourage its growth in the minds and hearts of their neighbors. Oatholics are their brothers' keepers. The varied works of the COD-teaching, visiting, dis­ cussion clubs, clerical assistance, ecumenical encounters­

all these are the privilege and obligations not of the priests 'alone or of the Sisters alone but of Catholic laymen and laywomen. These lay adults, by their reception of the sacra­ ments of Baptism and Confirmation, share in the kingly and prophetic and martyr role of Christ. They are a kingly people, the people of God. That brings with it the responsibility to build up the Body. of Christ. They are prophetic people-and the root meaning of the word "prophet" is preacher. That means they must proclaim the wondrous deeds of God by their words and in their lives. ­ They are a martyr people, and "martyr" means wit­ ness. The Christian is a· witness to Christ, and witnesses to Christ by letting Him live and act through his life. As St. Paul said, "For me to live is Christ.'~ The lay Oatholic who enrolls in and participates actively in his ·Par­ ish Confraternity of Christian Doctrine is trying to make that come true. in his life, "For me to live is Christ." The work of Christ becomes his work, the zeal of Christ becomes his zeal, the aims of Christ becomes his aims. That is what CCD means-the lay Catholic aware of his role in the Church and willing to aSsume it. That the saving wor;k: of Christ might continue.

"Mystery of Faith" Pope Paul's newly-published encyclical, "Mystery of Faith,/' is sure to provoke much discussion, not for what it contains-which is clear enough-but for what some people will read into it and infer from it. . The encyclical is clear in that the Holy Father. state~ what is and has always been the Catholic teaching on the Eucharist. There is no problem there. But some will be dismayed that the Pope-while en­ couraging theologians to continue in their work of invest­ igating always more deeply the riches contained in the doctrines of the Church-has cautioned that an over-em~ phasis on certain aspects of the Eucharist, in this instance, the Eucharist as a symbol, might put into unfortunate shadows the central reality of the Eucharist, that it is the Body and Blood of Christ. Because men's minds are limited, they must look at the doctrines of the Church under certain aspects. And some theologians, so intent on examining thE' Eucharist as a symbol and a sign, have taken their gaze from the Eucharist as the Body and Blood of Christ and may have given the impression that the "symbol" aspect is more to be considered than the "reality" aspect. The Eucharist, of course, is both-most importantly, it is an Objective Real­ ity, Christ. And every other consideration of the Eucharist must never put aside or lose sight of this paramount fact. Whenever a spotlight is 'put on anything, something else falls into shadows. In this c~e, the Holy Father wishes to make very sure that the shadows ·do not obscure· the central fact of a dogma of our Faith. Such is his purpose and responsibility. And such he has done with, as he puts it, "apostolic authority."

@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALl RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.D., PhD., GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MA~ !AGER If. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden

PontiH stresses· Active C.ha rity . To Newmanites NEW YORK (NC)-Pope

P.aul VI has stressed aetiw eharity and warm. Christiall affection as the keys . . spreading knowledgE' of the Catholic Faith.

The Pontiff's advice was in • message sent to the liOth annI­ versary congress here of the National Newman F'ederation, attended by about 1,100 student representatives of New maID foundations on secular college and university campuses. The papal message, addressed to Auxiliary Bishop James W. Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, episcopal moderator of the New­ man group, noted that the con­ gress theme is: "That All Mll7 ~e One." The Pope said: 'That all may be onl~,' the d~ ing words of our beloved prede­ cessor, Pope John XXIII, fonn a most fitting theme'" ..... "The realization of this prayer of Our Blessed Lord may wen be possible through the fulfill­ ment of the motto of Cardinal Newman, your inspiration and model: 'Heart speaks to heart! It is by aCtive charity and wann Christian affection that the way can be opened for the gift of faith in those who are as yet unaware of the riches of Cath­ olic belief.'" By Msgr. George G. Higgins Reform Essential (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.c.) Bishop Malone, in a message The current debate over the use of federal funds to support a program of family planning both at home and to delegates, accented under:" standing of the Church's reform abroad should not be thought of exclusively as a d' ment bet C th I' -lsagree- as essential in the confrontation ween a 0 ICS on the one hand and non-C th r of Catholics with their Chris­ on the other. While it may be a 0 ICS tian neighbors: true that, percentagewise diced and "superstitious." "Our confrontation will: be .Catholics have been more vo~ As chairman of the Miami more fruitful to the extent that cal in expressing opposition meeting,. I felt obliged to say we really· understand the re':' that, whIle the public policy as­ newal in which we are presently to, or reservations about, such a pects of the birth control prob.,. engaged," he said. . program than have the mem- lem are admittedly debatable, I bers of other At the opening Mass· Msgt, religious groups, ~or ~ne felt that the direct pro- John F. Bradley of Ann Arbor, the fact is that motIon or advocacy of birth con- Mich., federation chaplain, also manynon-Cathtrol as a part of the federal gov- emphasized the spirit .of Church olics also have ernment's anti-poverty program renewal. serious reservawould be a rank insult to poor people in general and more spe­ tions about the cifically, to poor Neg'roes. direct interven- tion of the fed- Patronizing Advice eralgovernment In my judgment, the latter in the field of point is extremely important. BOMBAY (NC)-Le~;s than 24 fa mil y planLet's face it. Negroes constitute ning. This is so the biggest single group of poor hours after the outbreak of the not be c a use people in the United States. By India-Pakistan war, Valerian they are necessarily opposed on and large they are wretchedly Cardinal Gracias of Bombay ap-· pealed for prayers "that India moral grounds to artificial birth poor because we, the white peo­ control as such, but simply be- pIe made them poor in the first might successfully defend her cause they feel that family plan- place and have kept them poor national integrity." Cardinal Gracias spoke at the ning is a profoundly personal for many generations. basilica of Mount Mary in the matter and one which lies outWhat are they to think if we side the competence of the gov- now turn around and tell them Bombay suburb of Bandra, where a vast throng of Catholics ernment. from our comfortable middle­ had gather'ed to celebrate the In other words, the record will class ivory towers that the solu­ feast of Our Lady of the Nativ­ . show that many Americans who see no moral objection to arti- tion to their problem (which is ity. ficial contraception as such are really our problem) is to limit ... The Indian prelate told the the size of their families or, in nevertheless persuaded that the other words, that- the solution to group that voluntary help is federal government would be necessary to assist the govern­ well advised to concentrate on the so-called Negro problem ment in providing for the needs its own proper role and to re,,:, (which is largely a white prob­ of Indian' soldiers, particularly lem) is to cut down on the num­ main completely neutral on the ber of Negroes in the United 111e sick and wounded. divisive issue or family planning. States? Cardinal Gracias said that Insult to Poor g 0 v ern men t leaders were If I were a poor Negro, I think I happen to have run into this "bravely playing their part" in problem recently during a panel I would bitterly resent such pa­ maintaining the morale of the discussion on poverty at the an- tronizing advice, especially if it people, and in "ensurin.g the in­ nual . Labor-Management Con- were offered by my own goverr)­ tegrity of the motherland." He ference of the Diocese of Miami. ment as part of its anti-poverty said that "valiant soldiers are One member of the panel, in- program. I would strongly be risking their lives for the secur­ stead of telling the audience how tempted to conclude that the ity of millions in their homes."· he thought we might go about anti-poverty program was a For Durable Peace eliminating the root causes of subtle, but very cynical, attempt "If to obtain freedom is a poverty, brashly advocated-as to establish white supremacy in painful process, it is even more his sole contribution to the dis- this country once and for all. painful to retain it," Cardinal cussion-a government program Gracias said. of birth control for the poor. Tuition Grants He added that "freedom is not When this gentleman was p0­ litely reminded by a member of ST. PAUL (NC) - Tuition so much the end of the national the audience that he ought to grants" for teacher training will struggle, as the beginning 01. talJ- a~out poverty and take up be given to 32 members of the national self-achievement." the controversial issue of birth Catholic Aid Association, a fra­ Cardinal Gracias called upon control in a more suitable ternal life insurance group, at all Indians to pray for a speedy forum, he literally blew his its 82nd annual meeting here in and durable peace based on jus­ stack and bitterly· accused his Minnesota. Archbishop Leo Binz tice and mutual understanding interlocutor - a distinguished of St. Paul will distribute 111e "not oI!ly toward us, but for the Miami lawyer-of being preju- arants. entire world.·

Program of.Family Planning Outside Government Sphere

Cardinal Gracias Urges Prayers


Head of,Famly 'Life "Unit, Hits Bureau' Chief, ',

Reports. a/Church Involvement,.·in: .Vietnam i'·~~r:Nf~?·R~,'·1965 .7 Politics Greatly Exaggerated, Says Priest Sermon on Mount More Relevant Than Ethics

"Humanly speaking, I do not know what the' outcome will be. I trust in the provi­ WASIllNGTON . (NO) The director of the Family dence of God." That is the summation of the Vietnam war offered by Rev. John B. Thanh Life Bureau, National Cath. Hung, a native of that beleagured land. Representing his Bishop in South Vietnam, he , o1ie Welfare Conferenee, has, spoke last Sunday at Masses at St. Jean Baptiste -Church, Fall River. Father Thanh . aecused the chief of the U. S. Hung has been in the United Children's Bureau of "paternal­ States six years and has Ism" in advocating government earned master's' degrees in birth control .for the poOr. The charge has been Diade by journalism and sociology

Msgr:. JohriC.

Knott in a com­ ment on an address by the Chil­ dren'sBureau chief" Mrs. Kath­ erine B. Oettinger. Drug Firm Conference Mrs. Oettinger .said birth con­ trol aid should' be offered par­ ents as a "right."Shesaid the federal government has a major ~le to play in' providing such aid to low-income persons. Hers w~s the most outspoken public statement yet by ali offi­ cial of a federal agency in favor of government-sponsored' birth control. She spoke in New York City at a conference on public family . planning clinics sponsored by a drug company which manufac­ tures one of the. best known birth control pills. . Msgr. Knott said: "'Mrs. Oettinger's concern for the poor is commendable. How­ ever, the various programs she is advocating and promoting from her influential position as ehief of the Children's Bureau of the United States government do smack of an inordinate pater­ nalism or, in h"ercase, ~aternal- .

Ism. Last Free CUnic -:It .is a sociological fact of life that the poor and the deprived, Whether at home or abroad, have not in any .significant numbers YD1untarily accepted past or presently existing contraceptive programs. "The emphasis. in her speech III that for their own good, of course, they shoUld be made to do so. "She may eaD. it 'motivation' and 'education' but to bring the power of government to bear in this most intimate atea of per­ sonal freedom is In fact to de­ prive the deprived of possi,b17 their last free choice."

from Marquette University and Loyola in Chicago. He plans to begin work for a doctorate in sociology at the Chicago insti­ tution. He ill preparing, he said, to assume charge of radio and press activities in his home Dio­ cese of Long Kuyen when he returns to Vietnam. . ConfuSion the Keynote Confusion is the keynote in reporting the Vietnamese con­ flict, said Father Thanh Hung. A$ a trained journalist, he real": izes the difficulties being expe­ rienced by correspondents based in Saigon,' but also indicates that lome reporters do a far better job than others in report­ ing the real facts of the situation. Asked if he had been ap­ proached by any student groups demonstrating against Vietnam­ ese involvement on the part of the. U.S., Father Thanh Hung said he had not, adding however that on a campus as large as Loyola's, all shades of student opinion undDubtedly existed. Discussing North and South Vietnam, the priest said there are DO basic divisions between the two parts of the country. Circumstances have divided us, but the instinct for unity is there and if Communism .is overcome· there be no prob­ lems in reunion. -rile Vietnamese situation has really become an international matter," he continued, "and pos­ sibb" the ultimate solution for the country will come when there is agreement between the United States and Red China. American soldiers sacrificing their lives in Vietnam," he· em­ phasized, "are, from the long range point of view, giving themselves for the United' states and the entire free· world." Sense of msto,.,. Father Thanh Hung stressed the need for a sense of. history in coming to any sort of under­ standing of· the complicated Southeast ,Asia picture. "We ­ must learn about the past to understand the present," be said. "In general," he stated, '"l think American aid is much ap­ predated in Vietnam 'and tl'l1t Americans get along well with the Vietnamese." ,.. His appeal to the St. Jean Baptiste parishioners stressed the need fOf' aid to his Diocesan seminary and also for assistance to families uprooted by the war. "As far as we know," he said, "the Church continues in

will

ethics, Philip J. Scharper, editor in chief of the Sheed and Ward Ilublishing company, said here. Addressing Our Lady of Cin­ cinnati College's annual faculty institute SCharper said. "Since we laid such stress upon ethics, we have run the risk of producing generations of little Stoics rather than vibrant Christians willing to imitate even the folly of the Cross." ScharPer said that "morality as commitment, as the pursuit of perfection, as orientation of the total human being toward the Good, has been largely con­ centrated within the religious 01 del's. And the call to perfec­ tion, the invitation to grow in grace, has been' largely linked to the vocation or the professed Religious." Rethink He suggested that Cathofic ed­ ucators should "perhaps rethink what is essential to Christian morality. •• and what it means VIETNAM SOUVENm: Rev. John B. Thanh Hung 01 , to be that 'true and perfect Vietnam, in United States for study, presents souvenir Christian' which Catholic edu­ silk painting from his homeland to Magr. Henri A. Hamel, cation exists to form and fash­ pastQr o~ St. Jean Baptiste Church, Fall River, ,..1. _ •• ~ l?ather ion." "'Our Lord taught a morality Thanh Hung addressed parishioners. of commitment, stressing the choice of the greater good rather While in this country he has in Chicago he makes his head­ than the avoidance of evil as the quarters at Alexian Brothers contributed to ''Le Delta," a .hallmark of the Christian," he periodical published in·Paris by Hospital, 1200 West Belden declared. Vietnamese intellectuals, and has Ave~ue, that city. He has trav­ "'We have no right to teaeh eled extensively in the U. S. on occasionally written for Amer­ the Beatitudes as· counsels of ican periodic:,ls. 'While studying behalf of his home Diocese. perfection to be opted by a chosen few, when Christ so ob­ viously addressed them to aU who would follow him."

Says Lay Theologian' Program Successful Despite Resignation SAN

ANTONIO (NC)-one

of the first graduates of the Uni­ versity of San Francisco's In­

stitute of Lay Theology said that the resignation of a fellow graduate for financial reasons does Dot mean the program as a whole is failing. Tom Keene, lay theologian employed by San Antonio's Our 'Lady of Grace parish, said he agreed with the action of George Randol, who quit whet!- one of PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop two parishes. where he was J'ohn J. Wright of Pittsburgh has working in Fresno, Calif., could accepted the invitation of Bishop not afford to renew his contract. . Guy-Marie Roibe of Orleans, But Keene lrisisted that the France, to preach at the French incident did not indicate failure national feast, May 8, 1966, in of the entire program but mere­ honor of St. Joan of Arc's de­ 1y the breakdown of financing liverance of that city on May 8, arrangements in a single parish. 1429. He said most lay theologians The celebration, held annually working in parishes earn close for generations, is attended by to $10,000 a year and disputed a dignitaries of Church and state statement by Randol that he from all over France. The last "and others in the. program" are American to preach there was for financial reasons. Archbishop John Ireland of St. North Vietnam, although under leaving ."As far as I know," Keene said, Paul, Minn., who spoke on M~y great difficulties. Communica­ Randol is only the second lay S. 1899. tion is very scanty, however. In. theologian of the first year's Bishop Wright is considered South Vietnam, the picture is graduating class to leave the . one of the foremost American different and the Church is . because of financial scholars on St. Joan of Are. lie bOurishing., in fact, the South field cultieS." . diffi­ . . owns one of the most extensive Vietnam Church is the,strongest . in the entire, Far East in terms Successful Men libraries relating to JJ,er in the He said other dropouts from United States. In 1963 Bishop of native clergy." The visitor . Wright preached at the. annual commented that reports" of the program~ne or two' each service in -Chinon markipg St. Church involvement in Viet­ . year since the first· graduating namese politics have been. exag­ " class in 1961 have left for rea­ Joan's libe~tionof that city•. gerated. . ' . sons other than money. He has three sisters in South' 'lTo understand· Randol's posiVietnam and a younger brother MT.ANGEL (NC)- Father a priest in the Saigon Diocese. Ambrose Zenner, O.S.B., fonner, An older brother was· killed by rector of Mount Angel' major a band of Communists while on . . TONG JIN (NC) - Bishop William McNaughton, M.M., of seminary here in Oregon, has police patrol. been named to establish a new . Father Thanh Hung said he , Inchon, a native of Lawrence, Benedictine community in Cuer­ thinks the Catholic press in the Mass., used the Korean language _ navaca, Mexico. Other irtonks U. S. is excellent and some . in celebrating the first Mass at from Mount Angel are expected papers in particular are doing a the new modern-style Church of the Resurrection, a gift to the to join the new community, and good job of presenting an un­ Inchon diocese from a Catholic eventually it will receiveMex1­ prejudiced view of the Vietnam­ layman, John Kim. can vocatio~' ese situation.

Prelate

At

to

Preach

French Feast

CINCINNATI (NC) The Sermon on the Mount is "more relevant to the Christian" than a course in

Open Community

Modern Style

tion," Keene added, "you have to know this: a good lay theologian needs to be successful in public relations, teaching, salesmanship and organization work. "The Institute of Lay 'I'heol­ oradydraws men who have al­ rea proven their success in these fields. Most of these men are already making between $15,000 and $20,000 annually. So you can see that the salary of the lay, theologian ill usually , step down. It is quite a sacrifice." Most of the work of the lay theologians is in conducting in­ quiry classes and visiting pros­ pective converts. Randol alone was credited with having con-=­ verted or brought back to the sacraments 354 people.

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"'UfII. Sept. 16, """

8

Tt-lE -ANCHOR~Diocese of Fa" River-

'Crazy Cake' Delights Guests At Late Summer Picnics •

TV :Star t\:) Assist ­

Foi rhaven Parish

Frank Fontaine, known te tel­ evision viewers as "Crazy Gug­ genheim" on Jacm Gleason" American Scene Magazine, wiD present ali all-star review at -I Sunday night, Sept. 19 at ~ coIn Park, North Dartmouth, far the benefit of the building fund of St. Mary's parish, Fairhaven. Mr. Fontaine, with his east, will fly from Miami, where he is scheduled to appear "on the Sept. 18 premiere of the Jackie Gleason show. Aids Charity Noted for his m!lll¥ appe. . ances for charily, Mr. Fontaine made his start in televisioft » years ago, while rehearsing :101' a pari in the American ~ Magazine. The star, father of H ehiJdreR;, is a native - of Massachusetu. - The coinmittee plamrlng his __ - -appearance -is headed by Mr. and . -Mrs. -Manuel Sylvia and Mr . . _Mrs.- loseph Cataldo n _.. eharge of subscriptions; GeneiofIi - admissiOl1 tickets and I'eIene4

By Mary Tinley Daly Early September seems reluctant to release its hold on Summer, producing sizzling days with August-like" inten­ sity. Realizing the season is- almost over, with similar reluctance, we cling to Summer days, Summer ways. -For a while, at least, we can still dogs and Englishmen, we finish dress in eottons, entertain kitchen chores. casually, let the children play Nothing to do now but clean up and escape. How cool the under the hose. Moreover, these Summer days rest of the house feels, a mere bring forth frequent lequestll 90 degrees.

for "a cold dinSomehow, though, in the eve­

aer, something

ning, the whole effort seems

easy but good."

worth the morning's sizzling ex­ Specifically, at perience. Calm and collected by ear house, O11s this time, we open the refrigera­ .. ean. cold tor door and, as if a magician tr i e d chicken, had waved his wand, 81 though »0 t a- t 0 Alad it bad spontaneously grown­ mot the store­ them, the white box yields up bought kind"), its treasures: platter of IOlden­ tbiek - slices fJI. fried chicken, bowl of potato plump . red to­ Alad with fleclul of golden ear­ _matoes and,"Oh, - IleaU a.e awilaNe. I'Ot, pale green cucumber, fat -"ee, cake for dessert - Creq red tomatoes. And Oft top stands C.me~" the proud and quite sane "Crazy Dioceso-ft Meeting -;Cake" with its tart lemon icing. III eool Momllll' The Fall River Diocesun COUIlio­ "How nice," exclaim family Personally, we toO find thI8 ell-of Catholic Women wiD hohl and friende. "Just a cool, simple • mighty Atiilfactory repast to its first Diocesan board meetiDt supper." eat Oft -the porCh, in the back­ Of the year at 2:30 SUnday 8fte~ "And IlO easy," Ay we, -.d )'ard, or even to pack up and noon, Sept. 19 at st. ~ mean it. take to the park as dusk decends.

School, Attleboro. "CruJ' Caire'

After all, we tell ourselves, the whole cooking bit can be done Every woman reader 04- tbtI

lID the cool of the morning. eolumn has ftC) doubt gone

So. like the man who started through the lI8Dle deal-chicken, SHEET METAL _out to make boar's-head SOUI' salad and the like. But would and was instructed to "first you like to know how" to make J.. TESER, Prop.. lind the boar," we begin our . _-INDUSTRIAL MORNING MEDITATION: This young nun is one of­ eold, cold supper by lighting tbe ~:~: asC~~~?"ca:e:e~ :~ RESIDENTIAL But try it and See! ­ the 155 professed members of the Sisters of the Immae­ even, putting potatoes and egga recipe. -_COMMERciAl en to boil, and - frying ehicke~ Good Summer, Winter, Spring - ulate Conception, an order- autonomous since 1955. The . 253 Cedar New BedforcI What ooes this do to a kitchen, or Fall, the recipe was submitted - motherhouse is in Ouagadougou; Upper Volta, in the iwe}i.;. Florence -McGrath Sullivan - WY 3-3222 ....en in the cool of tbe morning? b,to tlA Little Bit of Butter," cook­ diocese of Paul Cardinal Zoungrana. NC PhotO. :Makes it like Lucifer'. quartel'll, book extraordinary, published that's what! - ­ Once started OIl a project like by Mothers of Girls Attending Georgetown Visi*ation Prep-ara­ thi~like heading into the Lin­ tory School, Washington, D.C.;'­ eom, Holland or any Qther tun­ 1 package yellow eake mix ael-there's no way to go but 1 package instant venilla pud­ .mught ahead and lit • 1000 ding .uP. ­ 4 eggs Oa oceassiOB, we have tried 1 cup sour crea", to oven-fry the chicken but that ~ cup salad oii Involves an oven-cleaning job Beat all ingredients togethf -: afterward, hardly indicated task for a hot day. So the chicken or well and bake in an angel ~ chickens sputter away in the pan, •dusted witb a mixture of ¥& cup sugar and Jh teasj)ooD pan and we fry alongside. The oven bakes the "Crazy Cake," einnamon, or top with your fa­ favorite at our house, for 50 vorite coffee cake topping before minutes while we feel as though baking. (Or try lemoD iein& our own temperature were 350 our favorite.)

Norris H. Tripp

St.,

degrees.

en" Cake "attered 88 • patronage-dis­ pensing politician, we struggle along, remembering the encomi­ 1IJnS heaped on "the kind of potato salad only you can make." So we peel spuds, cbopbard­ bOiled eggs, celery_ and cucum­ bel'll, sliver carrou and onions, mix mustard and a modicum 01 vinegar with the mayonnaise be­ fore hand-blending the whole business. BJ' NooD Finally, when the cool of the morning has been supplanted ~ atmosphere shunned by mad

Salve Freshmen J'reshmen at Salve Regina College, Newport, include 2'r from the Fall River Diocese. The class includes 203 girls, rep­ Jesenting 100 cities in 12 states. Classes will begin Monday, Sept. 20, with upperclassmen register­

iDi tomorrow and Saturday.

Diocesan Office PATERSON (NC)-Two Sis­

ten have been added to tbe staff fJI. the Paterson diocesan super­ intendent of schools to serve as curriculum coordinators for the diocese's 83 elementary schools. They will coordinate the work of J6C91DIDunitiea of Sisie.ra.

Announce Events For Girls' _Units' The second annual day of rec­ ollection for Girl Scouts and -Campfire Girls of greater Fan River will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday, Oct. 2 at St. Vincent'. Camp; Westport. The program will include two conferences, an outdoor Mass, recitation of the rosary,_ a question period and Benediction. Tickets are avail­ able from Mrs. Jobn B. Reed - and Mrs. Harold E. Ward. Rev. lohn 1'. Andrews, ehap­ lain fOr - the groups, also an-­ nounces that examinations for the Marian Medal will be given to girls v:bo have completed the requirements from 7 to 9 Mon­ day night, Oct. 11 at Anawan Street CYO building, Fall River. The medals will be awarded on the feast of Christ the King,­ Sunday, Oct. 31.

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Chrysanthemums Bring Fall, Hav:e Tr-ueNew England Flavor

-THE· ANCHOR.;..

Thurs., Sept. 16, 1965 ­

----

Urges Revision Of Constitution

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

Chrysanthemum time is just around the corner. Of aD the flowers, these seem to have a New England flavor which makes them dear to us here. When one thinks of mums one' cannot but think of cool, crisp Autumn days, pumpkins ad Ha~loween. Mums wi~ recipe for a plum cake found bt be forrmng buds soon, 80 it a book titled "The Good House­ lis a good idea to give them a keeper," published in 1840. feeding j1t8t about now in "Take two pounds and a half of enter to help them along. With dried and sifted flour, allow the lIrought conditions the way they same quantity of fresh butter are it is probably wi s e r .to washed with rose-water, two live them a good feeding with pounds of finely pounded loaf • - solvent fertilizer rather than ' sugar, three pounds of cleaned dry one. Any dry fertilizer is and dried currants, one pound worthless unless it· is followed of raisins stoned, one nutmeg W a thorough watering to wash grated, half a pound of sweet­ • into the soil. In the absence meats cut small, a quarter of a of a sUbstantial rainfall it is pound of blanched almonds wisei" therefore to fertilize with. pounded with a little rose-water, • water soluble product which, and twenty eggs, the yolks and when mixed in a small amount whites separately beaten. The of water, will reach the· mums a butter must be beaten with the ~at de!1l faster than any other hand till it b;comes like cream; fertilizer. ' . then add the sugar,and by de­ One great advantage of mums grees the eggs, after these the which is often overlooked by rest· of the ingredients, mixing gardeners is the fact that they -in at last the currants, with may, be' moved any time" some nearly a teacupful· of rose, or even While they are in blQ.01llo orange flower water. I Iliways 'plant some new' ones _ This mixture must be beaten In the Spring in out of the, way· together rather more than half pi~ces:These t, transplant 'Whef~ an hour (remember, modem theyarEi need,ed in the Fall. _ housekeeper, this is by hand) Before moving, give them,. then put into a cakepan, which .,00 soaking with water. After has previously been buttered they are moved they may droop' and lined with buttered paper; lor two or three days but they fill it rather more than three ~n regain their vi~r and con­ q"!arters full. It should be baked tinue development.' In this way in a moderate oven three hoUl'l, they may be used to replace and then cooled gradually, by at annuals which hi:\Ve gotten too first letting it stand some time leggy or any plants which have at the-mouth of the oven. been i n j u r e d . ' . "'If you fear the bottom of the ,Some mums have to be staked, , cake may bum, Put the_ pan on IMItI have fo:und that it the,. a plate with' saw-dust between.­ M'e planted fairly closely togethThe 'ease of the recipes found _, about a toOt apart, they tend III -the cookbooks of today to hold each other,up and -there fa sharp contrast to those our .. nttle need for staking. If you great-grandmothers had to fol­ bave to stake, however, try to low. A good example of the ease .e stems, loosely so that they do of modem cake baking is found. Iaotget too bunched together. in tlae 'following cake recipe .There are feV! flowers that from Mr& Hilda Mello stacq, Ihow to- ~ advantage iaformerlY of Elpirito- Santo .par_ 80ral cQp)aYJtban chrjsmtlle-lsho :ran BiRr, and DOW fit Mums. We ~found that·~ .PanBaHeighb,· Ohio. 6» best- and last longest wIleD h Good aM So . . we pick -tti~ in the evening ehoeoWe Cake ..a put them in ,tepid water wemigbt til the cellar. We haw 'I"his. made, 'baked IIIlCI IlI80 found ttbest to strip the served 'from the same pan. It . ' -bottom half of the stem of an cIU'k 1D1d, deBcions: tollage to discourage the mum ~.CUIM- sifted all ~ 4Nior whiCh develops8fter the flour fl9wers are on display for sever­ I ~ ctJi)S mg.­ .. days in the home. -1 ~ teaspoons baking soda III The Kitchen lJ6. teaspoons salt .. Tablespoons cocoa Suddenly, u the blissful Au­ I ~ teaspoons water tamn weather decends on us, ;we l¥,a Tablespoons-vinegar Jlnd ourselves back in the awmg ¥.z cup melted butter or mu­ et social duties. The phone rings .garine

briskly from mom to night with I ~ cups -cold water

aews of guild meetings, P.T.A. '1 cup chopped nuts

e'¥ents, and other church and 1) in a 9x-l3J,2 grejlSed eeIl:e .mool obligations. If you have pan sift-2JMcups of the flour with -y repu~tion at. all as .a cook: the sugar, baking 'soda, salt, aDd tbese ,achvities WIll entaIl a--bit cocoa. ., work in :rour kitchen, as tile '%) Make three wells in the dry 4lemand for food items for cake lagredients. In one we» putl~ .les and ehurch suppers -talk teaspOlODS water, . in 'the second to those members who can and the vinegar, ill tbethircl the 6» enter a kitchen ecmfidelltllT. melted but'ts. • )"OU're one of' these ,gals. la­ ') Pour thel'~ ~ edI4 aent not,.our lot, but eajOJ' the .Jr'ltt,ft Ggerall IlIIIl1 miK tbor­ eompliment of being constdetted ougbly.. _e of the good eooka- of the ' 4) _Mix the remafnln(t ~ cup \ parish. of flour with the chopped 1UriII· More often requested than an,. arid add to the batter,' blendinl '. .eher fQOd item is cake. Cakes biwell. . fail nicely into the catego17 of ,5) Bake in sse- oven for • winter desserts, and since most to 35 minutes. of us have neglected this end of Choeolate FrostIDc 4 one o~ squares of cboc­ baking during the humid days olate eI. Summer, we have little to eomplain about. 3 TablespooM 'butter Ja reality, as we stand in our 4 cups sift e d confecUonen lItfeamllned kitchens, respleti.. sugar . 4lent with every electric marvel "1 Tab.1espooD milk' til( this country, electric mixers, 1 teaspoon, vanilla u.rters, self-cleaning ovens, etc. 1) Melt choCOlate and batter we sould be able to toss off a together. delicious cake with one arm 2) When mixture is cool, add tied behind our back and any the remaining ingredients, grad­ words of protest stops at our ually beating wen. Spread _ __ as we lead UIe followiDC aooled cake.

9

BETHESDA (NC)-Complete revision of the constitution of the Sisters of Mercy of the UniOll was urged by the community'. seventh general chapter meeting at the general motherhouse here. The Sisters stipulated that the revised rule Jnust be a guide to holiness through merciful love and service to all in need. The,. also said that anything hinting of legalism or formalism is con­ trary to the spirit ot the order's foundress, Mary Catherine Mc­ Auley. "It would be a false sense of' loyalty to our foundress," d~· clared Mother Mary Regina· Cpnriingham, mother general,­ "that would hold us back from· making the changes needed for an effective achievement of our gQals. Were Mother McAuley liVing tOday, -she would be· 'the first tQ' 'open windows' and let ' the fresh winds of the· Spirit breathing in the Church today permeate and revitalize -the life ' of her religious community." The general. chapter, also a~eed that 8I). active _apo$late , ­ for the Religious is an ecclesial mandate; requiring a public an~ permanent commitment to eon';_ tinue the life of· christ iIi- the . .,. . _ world today.

NEW GARB AND NEW LOCATION: Ppstulants of the Sisters of Loretto will no longer wear the traditional· black dress during their postulancy· and novitiate but win ' be attired in white blouses, skirts, colored sweaters and "ordinary" coats. The new candidateS will make their studieS at. Webster College, St. Louis, instead of the Nerinx, Ky. house. Touring the, college are, left to right: Miss Jeanne Ladish, Miss Barbara DuUck and' MissJaekie O'Toole, aU .of. St. ,Louis. NC Photo.

are

No S·Ign

Revo Iulon t·

O·f '

San Franciscan Again Is Council Auditor' SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Mn. J'osePh McCarthy of this city, . first American lay woman to 8erve as an auditor at the 8ec­ ondVatican Council, has been invited to serve in the same capacity at the fourth session. Mrs. McCarthy was 'president of the National Council of path­ oli,e WOJD~n when, ~ .wu named as a council auditor JD, .

=

Loy Missionary Reports Many' Are Still' Unaware . ~:~~e ~~e:.:., Fighting Is Over in Strife-TqrnCOunfry Bo8einar,: Kilch. ' NEW ORLEANS (He>- -

A

]iounc weman: who spent the past year. ~ in the ~ detecled,~, hostility to'misaioa­ aries iD tbat strife-tom countr7.

Barbara- LJmch, 21,_ taught. theMiSlriort at st. Mar:F, loested ill. Namar; .seme 300. ,miles east of 'the capital ctty of'LeopoldYiD&. Look for Parents Except for occasional road­ blocks, where travelers must show their credentials, she said, there are almost no signs that the Congo has. been the scene of • revolution. People in remote vinages, though,. are still hiding· out in the jungles, unaware that. much of the murdering and destruc­ tion that caused them to flee has diminished. Although priests- and others-haw tried to find them to ten them. they can come out, the' dense tropical thiclart makes that difficult, she pointed out. Manx l1nderDourkhe4' Misa. Lynch said .mOst ,?f her s$udents- at the mission SChool are confitlent that the long tur­ moil ia' the Congo has subsided. They are' unworried, except for lOme who have not heard from their pazoenb for It long time.

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10

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept.. 16, 1965

, CCD ·Sunday

Canada's Bishops Urge World War On Poverty OTTAWA (NC)-Efforts on a world scale to aid needy nations are urged in a Labor Day statement by the Cath­ olic Bishops of Canada. "The' Creator wanted man's labor to foster unity among men, but because its product has been IlO unjustly cih(ided, men are split into two groups-the 'haves' and the 'have-nots'," the statement said. "The economic resources of the world should be administer­ ed and distributed to serve the welfare of the whole human family and not the interests of only a few," the statement af':' firmed. Collective egoism, like indi­ vidual egoism, must be rooted out, the bishops urged. They suggested several ways that ~ould "lead to combined efforts en the part of all Canadians." Public and private agencies, they said, should provide "all posible information about the needs of the underdeveloped ~ountries, the initiatives that might be undertaken to help them, and the projects already under way." Sense of Brotherhood Everyone should strive to en­ lighten and involve public opin­ Ion in this matter, they added, ~mmending "the great work al­ ready being done in this area" by press, radio and television. ''Families and schools should Iltrive to educate our youth to a sense of brotherhood and in­ ternational solidarity," the bis­ hops said.

BRIAN COREY

To Honor Corey At ·CYO Banquet' A testimonial banquet honor­ IngBrian Corey will be held at I Sunday night, Sept. 26 at White's restaurant, Westport, under sponsorship of S1. Joseph's parish CYO, Fall River, and the Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Youth. Corey, unanimously elected in .Tune as president of the New England Council of' Catholic Youth, heads nearly 750,000 Catholic young people in the six-state New England region. In eight years of, CYO mem­ bership, .Corey has served as treasurer and president of St. Jo­ seph's parish CYO; Fall River area CYO president; and head of the Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Youth. While holding area offices he remained . active as a parish CYO merdber and later as an adult advisor. General chairman for the ban­ fluet is Michael McNally Jr., also a -.ember of St. Joseph's parish CYO. He announces that tickets are available from the Anawan Street CYO office in Fall River between 9 and 4:30 daily.

PREPARE FOR FOURTH SESSION: Papal Honor Guards were busy at ceremonial occasions at the opening of the fourth session of the Ecumenical Council last Tuesday. Swiss Guards, center, are flanked, left, by Papal Gendarmes and, right, by Palatine Guard

Pope Stresses Eucharist Reality Encyclical Is Waring to Theologians Continued from Page One or spoken word, there are some who, with reference either to Masses which are celebrated in private, or to the dogma tran­ substantiation, or to devotion to the Eucharist, spread abroad opinions which disturb the faithful and fill their minds with no little confusion about matters of faith, as if everyone were permitted to consign to oblivion a doctrine already defined by the Church, or else to interpret it in such a way as to weaken the genuine meaning of the of the words or the recognized forces:>f the concepts involved." Although the Pope's condem­ nation of error is a stiff one, his attitude toward those persons in error could be described only as gentle--even kind: "We certainly do not wish to deny in those who are spreading these singular opinions the praiseworthy effort to. investi­ gate this lofty mystery alld to set forth· its inexhaustible riches, revealing its meaning to men of today. Rather, we· ac­ knowledge and approve their effort. However we cannot ap­ prove the opinions they express, and we have the duty to warn you about the grave danger which these opinions involve for the correct faith. Constitution Casting his'thoughts repeated­ ly in terms of the Second Vat­ ican Council's Constitution on the Liturgy, completed during the second session in 1963, Pope Paul seemed concerned with steering a straight doctrinal line t h l' 0 ugh the revolutionary e han g e s underway in the Church's liturgy and sacrainen­ tal life as a result of the consti­ tution. Among the innovations being offered by some theologians in their interpretations of the council text, it has been sug­ gested that since Mass is an act of community worship, priests should discontinue the practice of saying Mass when the faithful are not present, and should in­ stead attend community Mass and receive Comm]J.nion. Others suggested that the practice of Benediction· of the Blessed Sac­ rainent, retention of the Sacra­ ment in the churches between Masses, and visits to the Blessed Sacrament are not in accord with the council document. Departing from Trent's phrase­ ,ology on transubstantiation be­ cause of an alleged lack of c:o-

ordination with modern science, some theologians have suggested words such as "transignifica­ tion,"or "transfiguration," to de­ scribe Christ's presence in the Eucharist. Apostolic Authority Against such tendences, Pope Paul said: "So- that the hope aroused by the council of a new wave of Eucharistic piety which is pervading the whole Church be not frustrated by this spread of false opinions, we have with apostolic authority decided to address you, venerable brothers, and to express our mind on this subject." The course of the encyclical is summarized in a sweeping par­ agraph near its b~ginning: "To confirm what we have said by examples, it is not al­ lowable to emphasize what is called. the 'communal' Mass to the disparagement of Masses celebrated in private or to ex­ aggerate the element of sacra­ mental sign, as if the symbolism, which all certainly admit in the Eucharist, expresses fully and exhausts completely the' mode of Christ's presence in this Sacrament. "Nor is it allowable to discuss the mystery of transubstantia­ tion without mentioning what the Council of Trent stated about the marvelous conversion of the whole substance of the bread into the Body, and the whole substance of the wine into the Blood of Christ,· speak­ ing rather only of what is called' transignification, and transfigu­ ration; or finally to propose or to act on t):le opinion according to which, in the Consecrated Hosts which remain after the sacrifice of the Mass, Christ Our .L ord is no longer present." Summary Carefully summarizing the Church's fundamental teaching on Christ's real presence in the Holy Eucharist, not only during Mass but as long as the appear­ ances of bread and wine remain, the Pope forestalled any efforts to give less than the fullest pos­ sible meaning to the word "present." "It would be wrong to explain this presence by having recourse to the 'spiritual' nature, as' it is called, of the glorified Body of Christ, which is present .~very~ where; or ·by reducing it to a kind of symbolism, as if this most august sacrament consisted of nothing: else than an effica­ eious sign of the spiritual pres­

ence of Christ and of His intimate union with the faithful, members of His Mystical Body,''' the Pope said. It is true, he continued, that symbolism "is. often used to de­ scribe the Eucharist, especially with reference to the unity of the Church. But the constant teaching of the Church, he said, "compels us to-acknowledge that 'the Eucharist is that flesh of Our Savior Jesus Christ who suffered for our sins and Whom the Father in His loving kind­ ness raised again' (St. Ignatius of Antioch) * * * "The way Christ is made pres­ ent in this Sacrament is none other than by the change of the whole substance of the br~ad into His Body, and by the whole substance of the wine into His Blood, and this unique and truly wonderful change the Catholic Church rightly calls transub­ stantiation. New Reality "As a result of lransubstan­ tiation there is no doubt that the species of bread and wine take. on new meaning and a new finality; for theY no longer re­ main ordinary bread and ordi­ nary wine but become the sign of something sacred, the sign of a spiritual food. However, the reason they take on this new . significance and this new final­ ity is simply because they con­ tain a new 'reality'· which .we may justly· term ontologicaL Not that there lies under those spe­ cies [somethingl what was al­ ready there before, but some­ thing quite different; and that. not only because of faith 'of the Church but in objective reality." "The worship of the Church gives the Eucharistic Sacrament -worship which is reserved 'I) . God alone:'- follows from this doctrine, the Pope said, "not only during Mass but also out­ side of it, reserving ,the Conse­ crated Hosts with utmost care, exposing them to solemn vener­ ation, and carrying them pro­ cessionally to the joy of great crowds of the faithful."

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Continued from Page One by S1. Paul to his 'disciple Tim­ othy (Tim. II, 2:2): 'What you have learned from me and many other witnesses, give into the keeping of trustworthy me~ who will know how to teach others besides themselves.' We are all one in Christ, through Holy Baptism and the· other Sacraments. Our union must be intimate to the .point that we think, pray, live and work as He did. So it is necessary to adjust our working and doing to the point of being willing instru­ ments, zealous spokesmen, for the spread of Christ's Gospel. This is not only the priest's re­ sponsibility. "It belongs to all who ·have become Christians, professing faith in Christ. This is a mandate of the Church, from the time of the Apostles to that of the Coun­ cil now meeting in Rome. "So we appeal to our devoted laity to take a more a.ctive part in the' life and growth of the Church. They must find and serve Our Lord in all 'their rela­ tionships. They must so let the light of their lives shine forth that men may come to know and glorify God. And here the pro­ gram of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine has its place in each parish. It seeks to in­ struct and inspire a dedicated body of laymen and women ready and willing to bring the words of salvation to their neighbors, and at the same time to intensify their own faith through discussion and dialogue. Such benefits are too important to be ignored. "Next Sunday, September 19th, will be observed in the Diocese as Confraternity Sunday. We beg our priests to recom­ mend and to implement it in each parish. Since this is a lay organization it is important that the laity, through the establish­ ment of a well-trained Execu­ tive Board, hike over the con­ duct of the Confraternity pro­ gram in each parish. For the pastor and priests, there remains the important matter of guid­ ance, encouragement and provi­ sion of the necessary teacher­ training programs. Thus work­ ing together, and a bit harder. we hope and pray for the con­ tinued favor of Our Blessed Lord and Our Lady, and for in­ creased activity and mounting benefits from the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine." Faithfully in Christ, +JAMES L.CONNOLLY Bishop of Fall Rive..

College Head DAVENPORT (NC) - Sister Mary Helen has been appointed president of Marycrest College, 'conducted by the Sisters of the Humility of Mary here. in Iowa.

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lHE ANCHOR­ "",urs., Sept. 16, 1965

11

Dakotan' Prelate New Liturgica I Unit Leader CmCAGO (NC)-John J. McEneany of Brookings, S. D., is the new president of the Liturgical Conference here. The South Dakota pastor, trea­ surer last year, succeeds Father Frederick R. McManus, profes­ sor of canon law at the Catholic University of America, Washing­ ton, who since January has been director of the U.S. Bishops' Commission on the Liturgical Apostolate. Father McManus, who served four terms as president, did not seek re-election because of his duties with the Bishops' com­ mission. He will continue as a member of the advisory council. Re-elected vice-president was r Father Maur Burach, O..S.B., prior of St. Pius X Monastery. Pevely, Mo. Elected ;ecr(.~ry was Donald Quinn, editorial page editor of the St. Louis Re­ view, newspaper of the St. Louis Drchdiocese. Father John E. Corrigan of Silver Spring, Md., was elected treasurer. The conference announced that next year it will return to the traditional format of a single Liturgical Week, meeting in Houston.

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OPENING OF FOURTH SESSION OF VATICAN COUNCIL II IN ST. PETER'S BASILICA, ROME

What Vatican Council Has Done and Will Do

VATICAN CITY-Here in brief is a session-by-se8sion Eastern Catholic Churches and on ecumenism. rundown on the work of Vatican Council II: Of the remaining 13: :five were brought to an advaneed :J'IRST SESSION-Oct. 11 to Dee. 8, 1962 ·Mate of completion; these included schemas on bishops, Five schemas formed the agenda of this flession. No non-Christian religions, seminaries, life of religious, and 'llehema was completed and therefore no documents were Christian education. One schema on matrimony, after brief debate, was removed from the council agenda and placed promulgated. Of the five schema'S treated, those on the9acreilliturgy in the hands of the Pope. The schema on missions was sent back for redrafting and on communications media were approved but sent back as was the schema on priestly life and on the Church' ill for amendment; a document on divine Revelation was re­ the modern world. These three documents, plus the schema moved by Pope John and sent back for redrafting; a doc­ ument ~m the Unity of the Church was approved but flent on religious freedom, which had been revised but not voted back to be incorporated into a document on the nature of on, will form the core of council debate at the fourth session. Two other' schemas, on divine Revelation and on the the Church. This last document was debated briefly and lay apostol-ate, were debated and, sent back for amendment. .ent back for redrafting. SECOND SESSION-Sept. 29 to Dee. 4, 1963 Six schemas formed the agenda of this session. Two Ichemas were promulgated: on sacred liturgy and on com­ munications media. Of the remaining four : six chapters of the schema on h Nature of the Church were approved but sent back for a.mendment; a schema on Mary, Mother of the Church, was '9'Oted to be included within the schema on the Church. The first part of a sch~ma on bishops was approved but sent back for amendment and a schema on ecumenism was ap­ proved and sent back for amendments. THIRD SESSION-Sept. 15 to Nov. 21, 1964: Fifteen schema!!! fonned the agenda of this !reesion. Three were promulgated: on the nature of the Church, Oil

FOURTH SESSION-Sept. H, 1965 Eleven schemas form the agenda of this final session; four must eomplete the councilar cycle of debate, vote, N­ vision, vote etc. They are: religious liberty, the Church in the mqdern world, missions, and priestly life and ministry. Two documents are in a ,"semi-final stage," that is, debated and revised but not yet voted on. They are sehe· mas on divine revelation and lay 'apostolate. Five other schemas are in a "final" stage, that ie, they have been debated and voted on part by part, but must await:a final voting on the' revisions made in light of the earlier voting. They are: non-Christian religions, bishops, life of Religious, seminaries and Christian educa­ i:U>..

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1~~E ANCH.<;,~~.o.,.i~ces.e of F~~.~iver-Thurs.Sept. 16, 1.?65

Only by Reparation.

Find's Spiritual' Treasure

In Houselander Letters

God Love You By Most Rev.

Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.

On the same day, a mother lost two et her chlldre... Mte By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy a~d 9, the. other a&'ed 11. One was a dau&,hter, the other a lOll. Some parents are so cast down with pief that the7 thfnk only In editing and publishing The Letters of Caryn House­ of their loss. The mother and lather of these two children wrote lander (Sheed and Ward. $4.95), Maisie Ward has given to us sayin&': "This represents the savlnp of our datl&'hter, the volume the subtitle "Her Spiritual Legacy." Such a Patricia. and our son, Michael, who left us hl7 18th to be with designation is not a whit excessive. For Caryll Houselander our Father In heaven. I know they would want 70U"to help some poor child have a better ute." There was enclosed their )TOuq did inde~d leave a spiritual "The discovery of the un­ Uves' savina's of $4.73.Saered Serlpture _:va: '"Their work lhaD treasure In these letters, one known Christ in man by men in follow them.peculiarly apt to our times, whom He also secr~tlY dwells, one on which eo u n tIe 81 was the chief achievement of her people can draw now that the own 'lpirituallife," Maisie Ward This mother has somewhat the same attitude as Our messed letters are in print. Everyone observes, "the chief adventure .Mother at the foot of the Cross. She lost the Son of God and. who reads them . . in which she tried to engage all aequired the son of Zebedee. It 'WaS a poOr will feel that who came to her for help." exchange but it is the way of love. This they might have Chief Adventure good mother loses her own and immedi';' been written to . What Miss Houselander her­ ately reaches to the aid of other poor him. For someself called "the great truth of children. In the message of Fathna, and 1£ where in each. the p.resence of Christ in man" there be any truth to' the later: mesSage of them (or at is the central theme of her doc-. ofa few years ago in Spliin, the Blessed least in each of trine. She found it in the' Gos­ Mother . bids us to adopt . the poor and ~y 1 eng t h), pel, for example, in the passage PRESIDENT: Charles T•. hungry of the world in expiation for our . 110m E.' t h i n g in which our Lord says that at Badrick of Preston, Iowa, sins." What this good mother did in sor­ Is said which' the ~ast Judgment many will be row for her children, other mothers' in ... applies to a difastonished to discover that, when business administration sen­ joy and.happiness,can do for' the millions ficulty or perthey were charitable to others, ior at Kansas State Univer­ of .afflicted in mission .lands. It will only plexity one has they were actually giving food sity, has been elected presi­ be .byreparation: .that great disasters and hirpself experienced.. and drink and shelter and com- - dent at the Nation-al New­ catastrophes- '-can· be averted from' the Some. we.re written. to clQse... fort to Christ himselt. world. May Michael and Pabicia wh9 are in heavenlnter~ede to . friepdi> . o~, long standing, .some . She de~loped it logically and man Student Federation's the Holy Spirit so that· all who read #its column will do something . golden jubilee congress in were written to strangers who,· applied it with brilliant practi­ f~ .the, poor. . ' . '. .' . became friends..(Was anyone a . cality;··.As these letters show New York.- NC Photo. stranger'to hllr?) :Miss·House.. over and over again. this. was lander carried on a 'very consid- to her no mere sentimental no­ . . II yon believe that ute does not stoP with· death and that erable correspondence. In fact, ti~)D, no mere pretty play of riving does not stop with death-then re-e~aDline your WIll, lOok me probably could have made a . imagination, . but. a .bedrock over you bequests! U yoU' stand 'lnneed of God's mereyand feel life work of letter Wr1tlng; so relllity which, to the person others would have done more . with70ur faith, then make a numerous were the people' who with open eyes and an open notation in your WiU:rBeeanse·1 have need of the forpveness 01 appealed to her for advice. heart, is encountered day after the Son of God hidden III the poor, I hereb7bequeath to The Artist, Writer day in the commonplace round. Society tor the Propa&'~onofthe Faith, 366 FIfth Avenue, New She was an extremely busy Prayer and the sacraments help MONTREAL (NC}-Plan­ ~ork, the sum of _.__.._ ...._ ....._ tor the General Fond. "'What person She was .an artist, her us to live it. ning sessions continue to be 70U have done for the leu& of 1117 brethren :voa have do:lle·for: . medium being wood carving. Advice on Prayer held. with .the objective of Me.. . She was also a writer. Many of She had much to say about making the Christian PavIl­ the letters in this volume were prayer. Prayer, she noted, brings written ;luring the·second World us closer to truth' t~an thought ion a showcase-type feature of GOD LOVE YOU to CoM.C. who haa another outlook _ Wal', when, Miss Houselander . dQes. 'That one gets to kn9w the Canadian Centennial W()rld'a Wills. "Enclosed is another $SO gift. It would be a shame to wait bad. a full time .job in cenl~orsbip people better by praying for Fair to be held here in 196'7. Seven religioul.l denominatioDJI until I die to help Jny Drothers. It seema better to Pat as I ·10 In London, did ffrst;1id work: them, was another _of her find­ will participate if! the projecl-­ thro~ life in order to feel the pinCh Personallj and get a deeper . d fire watching, helped an. ings. S~e spoke of "the myste­ eutstar,.dtng psychiatrist in his rious country· of prayer," and in the Roman . Catholic Church, realizatlon of how badly the poor suffer and need ID7 help BOW eare of distUrbed children. stIli,.. it $he was entirely at home and United Church of Canada, An­ rather than 50 :rears from now. They are hungry and ski now glican Church of Canada, Pres­ and starving • we~ from the·lack of knowledge of OUr Lord, then as. later, she. deluged all.1deally qualified guide. with mall. ... .. She advised people who found :. byterian Church. of Canada; .Jem. Christ, and Bi.I teacbfnllL, ' . Lutheran Churches in Canada, "T ~. lettersfr~ Ameri~. prayer difficult to make short the Baptist Church and' the canada, AuStralia, India,' ~ca.acts of love very often. She ad­ BoIl and, Germany, FranCre, vocated the aspirations whieb Greek Orthodox Church. . . Cat oat . . . ~iuUI. .~·10- aUrutee .. It ad . . . It·.. SMtze:-1and, Hungliry. Portugal; are simple but radicaL She ree­

Planning has. progressed to the IIoa Rev. hItou ~. Sheen. Nathmal Dfredor or 'rile 8oe1d7for· 8pain-moStly from poor ommended the rosary, and said point where employinent Of an peOple iii real tro:uble of soUl or that merely holding a I'OlJlU"3' architect and a constructloD eon- ., tile PropapUOD· of tile FaItIlo _ PIftIl Aveaae, New Yon. •• 1':. body ...~ .. ~ountless Ion e 17 . gave one a lIeIlSe of holding on tractor, and choosing a theme . 10001, or to 70ur Dioeesu DIrector, Itt. :aev. Ra.J'molUl '1'. C'JoD­ women It • • write from everT' to God.

design now are under considei"- . IIdfD.. 168 Norill Mabl 8 ..... ,.. . Illvel'. 'Ia. L l&teo keepUon

ation. .It has been agreed that part of the world··· I tr7' to MlSwer the people who really do In writing of the Sacramenb, the pavilion will not serve as an want help." In order to. do 'SO, she repeatedly stressed that, information center, nor will me limits herself to four hours "Penance is a form of Commu­ there be any denominational lleep in 24. nion, a means of union with .booths. Both callers and correspond­ Christ - that, before all else." Way of Cross ents were drawn to her by her And I)f Holy Communion, HOur Your nearest mail box is a firS! The theme will present man as books. In these, she set out in­ mistake is that we think of it an individual person; man as Federal "branch office" thac', aghts into the Gospel and its too much from our side. If we part of humanity~ man's yearn­ application to everyday life in can only realize that it is much ing; man's achievement; man'. open 24 hours a day co make ,- the middle of the twentieth cen­ our Lord's Communion with Us, failure; man's helplessness, and saving easy (or you. No traJJ1c, no tury which were original and than ours with Him. we would man's hope and faith going "the puking, no weather proble~ inspiriIig.The misery and be­ never hesitate to go. It is not way of the cross" through Jesus Withdrawals are just at simple . wilderment of the ordinary what we feel that matters, but Christ. Architecture, paintings, person (and the extraordinary, what He wants."

at savings paymem.. photographs, sculpture, three di-' Live Happily

too) she understood exception­ mensoional effects, light and .' . ally well. For such dIstress she

Another reCurring theme in sound will be used to develop . ••••.••• ·••iI· ...,··...,· could prescribe with amazing these letters is her opposition to the theme.. • • • • • • • n. "I ..." co.pofor -,te""'- ell­ aptitude. Practically everT line obsessive preoccupation with ''In the Christiar Pavilion, the fort"L!n4 . . . . . . me wrote had both a probing personal' -perfeclion. Such pre­ churches will preach not abOut tIlrust and a bealing toUeA. occupation means concentration themselves hut about Christ,· '. ­ eo self rather than on God. said Father Jean Martucci, see­ But Miss Bouselailder refused retarT general of the paviliOll ~ 161 Negro" Priests none ·of Ufe's joy•. She told more committee. . than one correspondent of her _-.-..;~ ---~ ServJng in He said 'the agreement of'ibe own detennination to enjoy life, St.&No • BAY ST. LOUIS (NC)-In to Uvehappi17, to· put oft lleven Christian faitba to build . ..... &he last six years the number of "scrupl~ and inhibitions and and share a common pavilion is City . ' - ' a ••• . . Negro priests' serving in the : things preventing me· from real­ unprecendented and meana . . . . . . . . .• • •. .WE 'PAY 'OS-TAM' United States has risen from. 91 izing the sheer lovelinesa of the there will be no special Vatican, to 161. :,J,!! ~.IcI.,addr ....cI."nlope., ready'to mall world, the people in it, and even ProteStant or Orthodox pavi1kma . The disclosure came from a the material things in it-food. .'the Montreal World Fair. IUrvey conducted by the Di,vlne drink, the sun, spending money, Word' Messenger,published by etc." The "etc." included music, the Society of the Divine Word pictures, flowers. .' Francis'

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION herein Mississippi. The survey . One Ash Wednesday, she Residence

also showed that 15 Negroes will wrote ''The only [Lenten] reso­ be ordained to the priesthood lution I ever found works is: FOR YOUNG WOMEN •this year, equaling the annual 'Whenever I want to think. of 196 Whipple St., Fall River Home OHice: 1 North Main St., Fan River record high set in 1961. myself, I will think of God.'· Conducted by Franciscan Somerset OH~ 149G.A.R. Highway, Rte. • The Messenger reported that It is an excellent resolution for Missionaries of Mary the highest number of priestly year-round use, and neatly suma IotIJ Offices Ope. FrhIay (venl.p ulltJl • . lOOMS - MEALS up the teaching of this marvel­ ~cations among Negroes is in OVERNIGHT HOSPltALln Somerset Drift-III WlIlIo. Opeli Mo•.-TUrs. ,. 4 Louisiana, with Mississippi in ous woman who was, in her way. IRq"i,. OS 3-2897 lMtCond place. . • doctor of the Church. .

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1'HE ANCHOR-1 Sept. 16, ms

Episcopal Bishops Suggest Guid'elines for Dialogue

S

New Tuition Law To Aid WisconsiR

GLACIER PARK (NC)-Bishops of the Episcopal Church assembled here in Montana. have endorsed "common prayer"_ with Roman Catholics and other measures designed '00 foster closer Catholic-Episcopal relations. t~e should seek MADISON (NC)-Fres'b­ eommunication and dialogue men attending Wisconsin'S at all levels," th~ House of -"Dual officiating'" at the 13 Catholic colleges and uni­ Bishops of the Protestant sacrament of matrimony is "disversities will be among the at present. "Episcopal Episcopal Ohurch said in a couraged" first to enjoy the benefits of the clergy should not play an official state's new tuition grant law. document setting "guidelines" role in ceremonies restricting for relations with the Roman the God-given freedom of their Signed into law by Gov. Wa?­ Catholic Church. eommunicants in the religious ren P. Knowles, the law pro.­ Attending the annual meeting rearing of their children." vides grants to state residents of the House of Bishops were -Episcopal bishops should nOt for a portion of tuition costs at 122 'spiritual leaders of some 3,li-eonditionally" eonfinn Roman private eolleges and at other million EpiscopalilUl8. Catholics who join the Episeopal private pOst-high school insM­ tutions. The bishops also sent greettngs Church, and Catb,olicspriestll -"praying :for ~ blessiDg sh~d Dot conditionally baptize Officials said they hoped att­ JUBILARIANS: Rev. Daniel Clotter and Rev. Albert and 'guidance"- 10 Pope Paul Episcopaliald received irl60 the Rowley of. Sacred Hearts Monastery, Fairhaven, 1x>gether ministrative machinery could be VI and tbe Second Vatican Coun- Catholic Church. set up quickly .and initial pa,.­ eiL _''We should Dot d-m heed- with Rev. Charles Kellagher, fonner pastor of St. Boni­ ments made by December. Onir , In another major, action," long into defense of the validity flace, N~w Bedford, who is presently stationed in Abaeo, freshmen will benefit this year. bishops adopted resolutions eon- Of Anglican Otders. RestraiDt ClIl ' British West Indies, gathered at the Fairhaven Monastery The program will be expanded demning ,racial ditlCrimina~ oUr, part will, not compromise on the Occasion of their 25th silver jubilee of their ordi~ to include all classes by 1969. : . ,.,' . ' particularly _ praclked wHbia historlt1al positiop. and JDaF iiOD. '!'he new law, wbose fitst·ye&r the church. ' aid the work of the Holy Spirit.· eost will be $2.4 million, wm. The Episeopal bishops' cled... -",We' Should' JPve and seek help meet tuition costs in eXee18 of $200 per 'semester. A slidinc J18tiOft on relations with Roman iletive eoopera~OD In all dvie, seale Qf grants based on income Catholics follow~ by two-and- '=Ie~d communal projectl will determine the abe of the a-haif months the fim official _ , Catholic-Episcopal talks 1ft the VatIeaD Deeree Pontiff Visits Orthopedic Home ~an~ The measure W8I designed t.ir , United States. Those talk. were -Episcopalians Should tamn­ sponsors in the state legislature FOr Childreft of Worken' Families

held June 22-24 in Alexandria, lerize themselves with the Vati­ to keep, students in private Va., and were greeted as a lNe­ eancouncil's ,decree Oft ec1DDen­ ARICCIA. (NC)- The young , honor to'it. That sorrow was Bot schools and tbus ease the load OIl eessful first step in dUilogue _ 18m, 811 weIJ. as its other decrees. the offici811eveL Three ROman, Catholic priestll boy with twisted hands carefully, sterile nor desperate but noble public iDstitutions. scrawled the words "Viva D and sacred. It followed the great Furtber talks areplanne4.,.. attended tbeco'nference session Papa." . . Pro~esslft Lerts1atIGII law which God mysteriously in80metime early next )'ear be­ dealing with Catholic-Episcopal Pope Paul VI, his ~ brim­ . fuses in human sorrow and b.v Fatber William F. Kelley, S.l.. tween representativel of the relations. They are Father Rich­ ming with, eompassion, wat~hed Episcopal Joint Commission ClIl an'll. Hopkins, editor of the young-Walter Ineltti, one of the which it is made Christian. That president of Marquette Univer­ sorrow beeomes fruitful. It be­ Ecumenical Relations and the :M 0 Dt a nB Catholic Register~ 230 child patients of ,the ortho­ , c:ame' the source of this generoUi sity, Milwaukee, praised G~ Knowles for his support of the Catholic Bishops' Commission OIl Dewspaper of the Great Fan. pedic hospital here, laboriously' law. "All of' Wisconsin owes yOH Ecumenical Affairs. diocese; Father Bobert J. ,Fox but proudly trace out the words md fine institution. Inconsol­ able in itself, it became capable a, profo,und debt of gratitu<ie," 01. the College' of Great Falls; . he said. Sunesttollll . 8nd Pather Peter Donovan,. a which meu.·· "Long Liw the , ei consoling othe~s." 'Pope." Among suggestions JI'.l8de. bp curate at st. Ann's eathedraL , It waS only one bicident 01 a Before leaVing the home the Father Virgil :Blum,S~S., '.' 'Pope listened to _ a conCert 01 political' sCience teacher at MM'­ the Ep,iscopal bishops ill their' "Aft editorial hi. the Register day' in whiCh the Pope :visited 'hymns by the 'children and dis· fluette and a lonitlme advoc~ doeument were these: ' commended the "understandinl '.....:Bishops of each dloeese... and. toleration" manifested • .' three towns near his' sUmmer tributedboxes of candy. Then he of tuition grants, called it "• • home at, Castel Gt:mdolfo, but it ': urged to appoint an ec1lm.enkaI the guidelines ,adOpted by tIM , was al80 among the most movins drove to Ariccia. His route wa. progressive legislation." . dotted with elust~rs of people G~tI to students. wm be' ehaimianOl' eomini~. . bishoPII. ' mo~tI of bis journey. ,out to greet him ~d at one pOint baaed Oft their pareDts' "eftee­ -COmmon prayer with eatIt;.. 'l'lie Pope started aftemboa he ,~opped his car 10 he eould tive income"...:...a figure defiriecl eIIes is recommended "wherever tour by drivirig to Anzio to visit tent tiriefly with sOme 400 woril­ as, net taxable income plus ant' "pOssible." However, "in sUeh the Giuseppiria Saragat Institute, Men who lined the l'08Q. ­ tax exempt income, less $000 pe.. - prayer 'and worship we should, • home for children' of workers'

,dependent. ' BOt let unbridled enthusia_ families founded ini961 by Ital­

Payments wil1range hom ... platie otheI? J1l .embarrassiDg COLLEGEVILLB (N C ) . ­ ' ian PresideDtGiuseppe SangM Exchange Studen~

, low lUI fljO to students whOll,e 'Situations nor should we eom­ 'l'weDty Catholic, Protestaat 'an4 1ft memory of his wife. '

parents' "effective income" III promise ourselves." Orthodox liCbolars met 10 week­ :,Get, ~ree Lodging , The Pope was met b)i Presl­ "$9001 to $10,000 to a high ~ long sessions' at St. John's Ab­ dent· Saragat, officials and 80me (NC) '!'he' , :MEXICO CITY Diseoul'all'ed bey and College here iD Minne­ eo children of the institute. He archpishop of Mexieo City h8IJ' $2~ where the effective ~ -Episcopalian clergy and lay.. ·so18 for an ecumenical dialogue paid tribute' to the president's eome is $2,000 or less. dedicated a home which wiD men should seek to make friends OIl modem sPirituality. decision to mark his wife's mem­ provide free lodging for students with their Catholic counterparts. Designated the "Spiritual Ltte ory by founding a home for coming to Mexico from various They should expla;.n their' be­ Institute," the'encounter brought needy children. parts of the American continent. ' llefs and traditions and 'try to together theologians represent­ The Pope observed that the learn more about those 01. Cath­ · ing nine Christian denomina­ Archbishop Manuel D a l' i 0 home was born "of your sorrow, olics tions, seven Catholic, religioUil Mr. President··· Let WI give Miranda y Gomez said the Inter­ American Catholic Home was eommunities and three conti­ built. because tbe success of a Dents. student exchallge pro g ram The eonference waa organized Says Tube1oeulosis NEW BEDFORD

brought problems of ~quate by Dr. DOuglas V. Steere, a housing. Quaker leader at Haverford Rampant in Tow. GUATEMALA CITY (N~ tNDUSTRIAL OILS

MONTREAL (NC) - Spared (Pa.) College, and Father God­ frey Diekmann, O.S.B., liturgist A Belgian missioner working 1ft from demolition by a last-miD­ HEATING OILS

ute switch in plans, historic St. and theologian at St. John's. The the town of Jocotan has 'r~ported Jacques church here' has been two men met iD Rome during the that everyone in an outlying dii­ second session of tbe V1lticQll triet of the town has tuberculo­ TIMKEN

designated by Paul Emile Car­ sis, and that many other towns­ dinal Leger as a "pilot church" council two years ago. OIL BURNERS

A apokesman noted that, while , people aN suffering from the for latest developments in the m u c h interreligious dialogue ,disease. " liturgy. Father, Leon Ru...et baaed hhI has dealt with theological, bib­ & Service

The church, built in 185'1, W8IJ lical and sociological iSsues, the Jlepo!t on medical :records kept • have been demolished 10' a institute was unusual in that It by Dr. Luis Rementeria, a New program to -provide new traffie was concerned with the spiritual York City volunteer ,who has 501 COUNTY STREET­

arteries for the 1967' World's life ,itself. . worked in the priest's hospital Fair celebrating Canada'. cen­ NEW BEDFORD'

Daily sessiona' during the c0n­ ,for three years. in the town of tennial year.. • Falmovtft HGfiOltOlBallll

ference began with a concele­ 14J,OOO population. Cardinal Leger Ilald prien­ Falmouth, Mass.

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The priest said· his announee­ brated. Mass ,which: Protestant ., till IrMa Silet , . .

IPecialistS in the liturgy, cate­ participants attended asobsery. ment 'was made in the hope of ehetics and. pastoral life will_ be era. The' sessiona featured pres­ IJtirring ,up national interest iD 8tationed at the church and the entation 01. fonnal papen' and ~ local problem which, he said, most minute changes resulting discussions. Bach day dosed • due to malnutrition and poor from the Second Vatican Council with commOD prq'eI' b¥ toe P8I'­ ,hygiene combined with smoke , will be carried out there. from open cook fires. ~panta.

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- Tbe cardinal also said he an­ ticipates that during the World" :MEXICO CITY (Me) - . . . Fair, the historic church will be-' · though priests must preach the come a popular tourist attraction Gospel and' preside' atliturgieal and will be visited by an esti­ functions, they should pa:v more mated 20,000 persons a day. attention today '"to the majOl' During this period, the cardinal aspects of eontemporilry life,· said, the church will be "bi­ accordin, 10 Fa~er Jaequel lingual" and staffed bJ' priestll Audinet, director of 1tle Parie familiar with a ~ ~ laD­ P88toI'al aMi ~ a l . . . 1W14Iea.

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14

Church Benefits From Activities In .Civil Rights

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

"'Pastorar' P'lannln~""'I's .'. Need'ed

For Wise Use of Resources Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. From "The Church in the New Latin America" The Church in the Brazilian Northeast is awake to the tremendous human and Christian problems of the area. Its bishops form the most progressive group of bishops in Brazil, to the point that some of them, and many of their clergy as well, are labeled by reactionary elements as phi­ Catholic education is registering locommunists! !'The Pastoral advances. Inte~rated programs Northeast Brazil and in the Plan of the Northeast," de­ in Ecuadorean Diocese of Riobam­

ATLANTA (NC) - A priest who spent his Summer doing civil rights work ill Georgia feel the Church is better off because of it. Father Joseph Cooney, O.P., said local Negro leaders "appre­ ciate the fact that I was there, and that I was there because I was permitted to be there by Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta. They recognize that-this may be an embarrassing situa­ tion, that I have beel). criticized by the press, and they watched _ this to see if the archbishop would recall me when it possi':' I:!ly became e~barrassing. "This is ,crucial. When they saw the archbishop was really · interested in ,permitting a priest · to work there with these poor Negraes,then'they realized that -, the Church is not part of this · social -system that's taking ad­ vantage and has taken advan­ - tage for hundreds of years of the Negr~." Ask About Priests ­ CANCER HOME JUBILARIANS: Sister Mary Dolores, Father Cooney spent 10 weeks left, Brooklyn native, and Sister Mary Jubilana, Bostonian, in Crawforliville, Ga., as a vol­ now stationed at the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home for unteer with SCOPE (Summer Organization and Incurables, Fall River, celebrated the silver jubilee as sis­ · Community Political Education), a project ters on Tuesday: ' sponsored by Dr. Martin Luther King's Sou the r n Christian · Leadership Conference (SCLC). Father Cooney, sta,tioned at the DoMinican House ,of Studies Washington, D. C., was inter­ St. Louis Archdiocese ·Is Planning to Study - in viewed in the Georgia Bulletin, Atlanta archdiocesan newspaper, And Implement Vatican Council Work by Father .Richard McSorley, ST. LOUIS (NC) - ,Joseph the success of the "Little Coun­ S.J., professor of theology at . Cardinal Ritter has directed that cil." - Georgetown Universit':,. discussion groups' be established "The succesS Of the assembly When the Negro is at: last fully in each parish of the St. LoUis will depend 'on how well our · accepted into . the American . archdiocese to study decrees of· people are informed on the mat­ the Vatican Council in prepara­ , ters. discussed' in the General community, Father Cooney said, : tion for an archdiocesan "Little Council," Cardinal Ritter said. · "the Church will not be, on the outside because the Chw;ch is Council." "There should be as many small · cooperating with these people The Cardinal ordered the cre­ groups as possible in every par­ , while they are on the putside." _ ation of the parish study groups ish for study and discussion of in a letter to archdiocesan the decrees of the council." Father-Cooney said Negroes priests exhorting them to work _,often asked "about my religion First in -Nation . with "enthUsiasm and zeal" for : and about myself and about The Cardinal also announced · priests. They distinguished the Delay Shared-Time' he was extending the.·length of Church from those Catholics the regular Fall and Spring they know wilo, the Negroes say, Education Start clergy conferences. He said this are lll-ean. There is going to be DES MOINES (NC) _ The is because "the Council has al­ - quIte a bit more receptivitT to Iowa Department of Public In­ ready shown that formalized Catholics because of this." - &truction has postponed the be­ eontinulng education is neces­ 'ginning of shared-time educa­ sary for dioCesan priests." tion here until next school year. . The St. Louis Archdiocese is Dual enrollment was author­ the first in this country to an­ CAPE COD

ized in a law' recently adopted nounce plans for a "Little Coun­ by the legislature. But Paul·F. . ell" to study and implement the MORTGAGES

Johnston, state superintendent, work of the Vatican council. said a section of the law requires Similar assemblies have since -Residential - Commercial

. that the state board grant been announced in the Dioceses approval of shared-time six of Manchester and Oklahoma at

months before a local school dis­ City-Tulsa. trict begins it. Cape Cod's LARGEST Bank

Johnston said he had asked the state attorney general's of­ fice for· an opinion on his under­ - standing of the law. Atty. Gen. .Lawrence Scalise already has held shared-time to beconstitu­ tional. He has also said it would South Yarmouth, Hyannis

permit dually enrolled students M TREMONT STREB Dennisport

to ride on tax-paid school buses. iAUNTON, MASS. Yarmouth Shopping Plaza

elares Father Tiago Cloin, ba well illustrate the value of C.SS.R., of Rio de Janeiro, planning in getting maximum "contains a pre­ results from pitifully limited cious lesson for resources. the whole Cath­ Conclude Observations olic Church be­ To further this pastoral plan­ c:ause the main · ning,two concluding observa­ pastoral task of tions need to 1>£ . made: today is not to 1. The Catholic peoples of multiply Europe and North ~rica the traditional · who seek .to help the Latin types of works: American' episcopate to serve parishes, schools, their flocks should reveal special hospitals, interest in aiding the Latins to or.phan­ prepare diocesan, regional and ages, houses for aged and asylums. Today the national plans. An effective form Church needs a creative pastoral of cooperation. from outside activity which follows new ways consists in furnishing technici­ cOurageously and aims at the ans and funds to aid in pastoral rapid transformation of society. planning, especially on the the­ ological and sociological levels. This will be possible by re­ newed theological reflection on 2. Religious congregations of the contents of revelation on the men and women and bishops one hand, and by continuous · of Europe and North America analysis of the socio-religious should encourage Latin Ameri­ "reality' on the other, because can Church leaders to provide these are the two poles of all _them with at least simple out­ authentic pas tor a I theology, lines of their diocesan plans. which by definition is: the in­ ·Armed Willi such, those who carnation of the divine message have precious personnel to con­ in a concrete existing human tribute to the strengthening of co~munity." the Church in Latin America Pastoral Plans . will make wise decisions in The pastoral plans ~e still · placing them. Every superior very young, but aiready results · who disposes of a priest, Broth­ can be noted. It is certain that · er, Sister or layman desires to in Latin -America one has heen send such personnel to- areas able to go much further than where careful plans have bee~ in the majority, of the other made for their apostolate. regions of the Church. Perhaps the urgency of the needs' has resulted in a clearer compre­ -New -Catholic Paper hension of the problems. In Starts in Alberta Chile, . for example, the, three EDMONTON (NC) - The major goals set have b~en real­ Ized to an extraordinary degree. W est ern Catholic RePorter,' The general mission throughout weekly newspaper with a mod­ the nation has now been. almost em approach to religious jour­ finished and the participation nalism is in circulation of the lay people and the reli­ The paper, "published for the gioUs in this work has been People o~ God of Alberta," is very great. The improvement designed not .only for Catholics of outlook on the pastoral but the general community. It program has reached, beyond It has been founded on the spirit all expectations. The Catholic of ecumenism and the "open weekly, La Voz, now occupies window" approach of Pope John XXIII. one of the most important po­ sitions among the journals of "It is not enough any longer Chile; technically it is one of for Catholics to talk only to the best. The radio programs Catholics," said Douglas J. are operating in full career and Roche, editor. "The ecumenical the apostolate among the teach­ age has co~e upon us with un­ ers of the state schools is well believable speed.· People of an advanced. In view of the dem­ faiths have a new interest in, ographic explosion, reaching and appreciation of, people of other religions." the cbildren through govern­ ment school classrooms is often The Western Catholic Report­ regarded as more important er is opening its pages to con­ than the multiplication ofCath­ tributors of other faiths, he said. "From the fertile soil of frater­ olic schools. In Brazil the results of the nal charity, knowledge and un­ bishops' emergency plan are derstanding must surely grow," Gift also very encouraging. The re­ , the lead editorial asserted in the DUBUQUE (NC)-An anony­ gional Conferences have been Sept. 9 debut issue. . . ! mous $500,000 gift has been re­ established - and several' have' ceived by Loras College here in elaborated very specific pastoral Iowa, Msgr. D. V. Foley, presi­ Summer Service programs. Results in a different dent, has announced. He said the specialized sectors have also Five seminarians from La Sa­ college has received some $200,­ been achieved. The progressive lette Seminary, Attleboro, were 000 in other gifts in recent e1arification of policy toward among 160 vacation missionaries months._ aiding Trinity Missions operated

by the Missionary Servants of,

Gets College Post the Most Holy Trinity during rSERVING. _I' '" their - Summer recess; f i' 0 m

PHILADELPHIA (N C) ­ fiNE ITALIAN. FOOD_It .. Charles F. Shreiner has been classes. The volunteers worke~ .named director of the Latin at stations in seven st'ateli, t American Studies program at stretching from Pennsylvania to I St. Joseph's College here; 'He re-' Louisiana. From Attleboro they RESTAURANT LOUNGE cently returned after three. and were Bro. Paul Reinville, M.S., on Lake Sabbatia one-half years in Latin America Bro. William Slight, M.S., Bro. 1094 Bay Streei for Catholic Relief S8rvices­ Rene Caissey, M.S., Bro. Joseph NCWC, the over,' "ef agen­ Gosselin, M.S., and Bro. Ronald , -TAUNTON VA 4-8754' . q of the U. S. bish_, Hebert, ¥.s

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"t! ANCHOR-Diocese of FonRiver-Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

1!I

CONFRATE,RNITY SUNDAY

September 19

OVERFLOWING CO~GREGATIO:N

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Fan

. BY BISHOP CONNOLLY AT CLOSING SESSION OF CCD

AUG. 29, 1965

Join Your Parish CCD and thus become Mwilling instruments, zealous spokesmen, for the spread of Christ's Gospel." Bishop Connolly's Pastoral Letter of Sept. 12, 1965

MelScrge Is Sponsored By Tile Following Individuals GItd Business COIICerns itt Greater Fall River: Globe Manufacturing Co. Mooney & Co., Inc. KormOw Water Co.. R. A. McWhirr Company MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Mason Jumiture Showrooms

Sobiloff Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO


16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

Suqgests Several Solutions

Of Unwed Mother Problem

By John J. Kane, Ph.D. "Our 20-year-old daughter left home last September to attend school. Later she wrote and told us she had a baby and was not married. She wants to keep the baby although we warn her of the heartaches and problems: We eannot afford to have her words, this type of solution calls bring the child here. We for tremendous sacrifice on her have a large family, but will part. Consult Catholic Service trY if necessary. We want

Another possibility is to locate he~ to place the child out for the father of this child and ask adoption." that he contribute to its support. The problem you present, If this approach is followed, I Harriet, is sad would suggest it be done on a but far from purely voluntary basis. That is, unusual. There' she, or you and she and your is one aspect, husband should ask the young however, man to help take care of his which is dif­ chlld. ferent. You r If he is unwilling to do so, and daughter took assuming that you can actually the initiative in prove he is the father, you could .. leaving hom e consult an attorney about legal under pretext proceedings. But this undoubt­ and! arranged edly would result in some pub­ to have the licity which your daughter b a b y without seems eager to avoid. telling you.. No doubt, she There remains the. possibility wanted to spare your feelings of putting the child out for and avoid scandal in the com­ adoption. If none of these other munity. possibilities are feasible, then I But nowhere in your letter believ£' your daughter should do you make any mention of the discuss this matter with the di­ father. Certainly, you must have rector of the local Catholic So­ some idea of who he is. Neither cial Service. He or one of his is there any mention of the pos­ case workers may be able to sibility that your daughter and persuade her that in the absence the father of the child might of any other possible solution, get ma.rried. Not that I would for the child's good and her own necessarily advise this, but I good, adoption is the best way think the omissions strange. to handle the situation. Each Case Unique Your daughter undoubtedly You may recall·a column of a loves her child. But she must be few months ago in which a madp to understand that just woman wrote and informed me because she does love the baby, that she had become pregnant she must do what is best for its before marriage, had the baby. interest and welfare. If she and kept it, and later she and works all day, can she possibly th£' baby's father m~rried and provide the child with love and were happy. As a matter of fact affection which' it needs? Frank­ they reared a fairly large family, ly, I am inclined to doubt it. and now she was concerned that There is also the matter of her oldest son would discover your daughter's own welfare. that he had been born out of At her age she is quite likely to wedlock. meet another man and the mat­ I mention this to indicate tha't ter of marriage may arise. If or each case is unique. There is no when this happens, she will possibility of laying down any have to explain the fact that she hard and fast rule about whether is an unwed mother Just what a girl should keep her baby or impact this would have on the put it out for adopttion. Each prospective husband, is impos­ case and the circumstances sur­ sible to state. rounding it should be studied Sympathetic Tone earefully before any advice is , I suspect your daughter has given. I feel rather handicapped already received some profes­ in trying to reply to your letter sional' help since she went to because of the omissions noted another comnmnity to have her above. child. She was probably assisted However, let's try to look at in making arrangements for the the possibilities in' this case. delivery in a hospital and was ~_. First, your daughter could re­ probably advised about what she turn home, obtain a position and should do· with her child. attempt to support the child Why not ask her about this whIle you, of course, would have matter and suggest that she con­ to care for it while she was at tinue to meet with the people work. In view of the fact. that who ori,ginally helped her? My she left ·the community without own opinion is that she simply telling you that she was preg­ rejected the advice that was nant would seem to indicate that given her and is trying to make even if you were willing and it alone. . able to have her and the child If this should happen to be return home, she would reject the case, I fear she will ulti­ this possibility. mately be unable to cope with Economic Aspects the problem she faces. Sooner If she can obtain employment or later, she will probably In the city in which she is now place the child out for adoption-. residing and at the same time It is much better that she do make some provision for the it now than later. First, adop­ oare of the child while she is tion will probably be easier, outside the home, this may be . and second, the strain of being better for all concerned. parted from the child much less. If she has lived in the new I note your letter carried a community long enough, she can very r,ympathetic tone toward apply for aid to dependent chil­ your daughter and I trust this dren. This is not a large amount, will continue. Avoid any recrim­ but supplemented with her sal­ ination toward her when you . ary, she may be able to make it. write or visit her. Continue to But I wonder how long a young be as sympathetic and helpful girl is going to be happy tied as you can, try the approaches down to a job during the day toward the father that I have and the care of a baby alone at suggested, and I think one of Jlight? these solutions will eventually Certainly, she will crave some prove to be the best for the social life and I believe she child, your daughter, and your should enjoy such. In other family.

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St. Louis Cardinal Ponders Council Nucl'ear Talk

THE ANCHO~Thurs., Sept. "6, 1965

Urges Regulation Law for Movies In Pennsylvania

ST. LOUIS (NC)-Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis is giving "serious considera­ tion" to speaking out at the Ecumenical Council's F 0 u r t h session against the use or stock­ piling of nuclear weapons. "The people of the world are just seared to death," he com­ mented before leaving for Rome. Raises Question . "'People try to justify nuclear weapons by saying tliat they would only be used in a limited way but we all know things could get out of hand." Cardinal Ritter noted the ar­ gument of those who claim that the existence of nuclear weap­ ons is helping to "keep the peace" by deterring potential aggressors. "But is it?" he asked. "I won­ der if it is even moral to stock­ pile nuclear bombs." Owe It to World The Cardinal indicated be is not entirely satisfied with Schema 13 - the document on the Church and the modern world - even t hough it was dr,astically revised. after the Council's third session. That Ilchema contains a section on Duclear war. "It is so broad and raises 110 many things that are in need of IlOlution," 'he said as he sug­ gested the schema might be heavily criticized in the fourth session and perhaps even left to a post-conciliar commission for further refinement. A strong supporter of the pending Council declaration on religious liberty and non-Chris­ tion religions, including the Jews, the Cardinal asserted he has "no fear" for those docu­ ments. While both might face some eontroversy in the coming ses­ mon, he added, the Church "owes it to the world to pass them." Most Optimistie Of the Jewish declaration he said, "we're only doing what we should have done long ago. We Deed this to eliminate anti­ Semitism. "We don't have to pass it for the Jews. It is for the Catholic people that we need this." In general Cardinal Ritter was optimistic about the fourth ses­ sion. He is "looking forward to a succcessful conclusion - not just the conclusion, but a good one--of the Council."

Stonehill Continued from Page One The very Rev. John T. Corr,e. S.C., President of the college, will preside and will del~ver the homily. , All campus clubs and activi­ ties have planned events and presentations to demonstrate the scope of their activities and to encourage new freshmen to par­ ticipate in thE!'. extra-curricular aspects of campus life. Highlighting these events will be an evening of drama by the Stonehill Theatre, on Wednes­ day. This energetic cam pus group has arranged four special sketches demonstrating the well­ known versatility of the Players. The sketches include Maxwell Anderson's Anne of A Thousand Days; George Kaufman's If Men Played Cards As Women Do; the national collegiate playwrit­ ing contest-winning colle g e !lketch A Storm Is Breaking, by Jim Daneico; and A Member of the Wedding. ' Production of the sketches has been coordinated by Senior Bonnie Pheeny of Newton, and will be held in the Ames Memo­ rial Theatre in Easton. The pub­ lie is invited and there will be 1M) admission charge.

17

PITTSBURGH (NC) - A judge here declared that a movie regulation law is need­ ed to "drain off the moral

..J.k':bi.

URSULINE: MEETS CONGO HEAD: President Joseph Kasavubu of the Congo Re­ public greets Mother M. Magdalena Morawska, observer of the Ursuline Sisters' central office of education in Rome. They meet at a reception the President gave for partici­ pants in the Pan-African Catholic Education Conference held in Leopoldville. NC Photo

First Orthodox IExploratoryl Session Meet Catholics at Worcester Discussion WORCESTER (NC) - Roman Catholics and Orthodox have held a day of "exploratory" dis­ cussions here, the first ecumen­ ical encounter between the two on a national level in the United States. The Catholic delegation was a sub-commission of the U. S. Bishops' Commission for Ecu­ menical AHairs, led by Bishop Bernard Flanagan of Worcester. The Orthodox body represent­ ed the Ecumenical Commission

Prelate Stresses ~ ••":ac: ,,~ II":,,"~ OtTE'R~C (NC) M a 11 r lee Cardin:!l Roy of Ouebec saId here Christian workers have a duty to serve low-salaried groups and those without means to protect themselves. The Cardinal told a meeting of labor union representatives that unions now have reached a permanent strength status of which other social classes and public authorities must be aware. This strength has sought to adapt its structures and services to the needs of its members, he

said. The unions, he said, eannot remain indifferent to the an­ guish of unemployment, and must work to recognize that all have a right to work.

Award Physiologist Cushing Fellowship DENVER (NC)-The National Jewish Hospital here has award­ ed its Richard Cardinal Cushing Fellowship to Dr. Bernardo Lozada, former vice-president of the Inter-American Heart Asso­ ciation. The fellowship was established last y~ar in honor of the Boston archbishop who has been saluted by the hospital for his philan­ thropic service. Dr. Lozada, physiology profes­ sor at the University of Salvador in Buenos -Aires, will continue research in the cardio-pulmon­ ary laboratory on heart muscle metabolism and hemodynamics at the hospital here under the 1ellowship.

of the Standing Conference of Orthodox Bishops of the Amer­ icas. It was headed by Arch­ bishop Iakovos of New York, chairman of the standing con­ ference. The setting was St. Spyridon's Greek Orthodox Church here. Each communion sent 12 repre­ . sentatives. - For both bodies, it was 3ft ex­ pansion of ecumenical engage­ ment. The Catholic Bishops' Commission, who s e over-all chairman is Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore, has en­ gaged in conversations through subcommissions with Lutheranll,

Protestants Conduct

Archabbey Retreat

LATROBE (NC) - ' Seventeen -. Protestant faculty members and ministers fro m Pennsylvania State University have concluded a three-day retreat at St. Vin­ cent Benedictine Archabbey here in Pennsylvania. Archabbot Rembert G. Weak­ land, O.S.B., told the conference that the importance of the re­ treat is its -effort to promote _ ecumenical spirit on the univer­ sity level.

Drops Grades

Episcopalians and the United Presbyterians in the U. S.A. The Orthodox are engaged in a continuing theological dialogue with the Episcopalians. The one-day session was· in the spirit of the renewed friend­ ship between Catholics and Qr­ thodox on the international leveL

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Extend Program LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ex­ tension of the federal contract for continuation of the Commu­ nity Action Program conducted in Watts by the Catholic Youth Organization and Catholic Wel­ fare Bureau, has been approved.,

New Facilities B!\LTIMORE (NC)-Lawrence Cardinal Shehan has announced plans to construct a new home for the aged, a new' House of the Good Shepherd and a new IlChool fOf retarded children. AD $11 million fund-raising cam­ paign will finance construction.

CLINTON (NC)-our Lady of

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year because of lack of teachers.

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sewage running through many of the motion picture screens of today." Justice Michael A. Musmanno of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court told a Kiwanis Club meet­ ing here, he favored a bill now before the legislature which would provide for a three-mem­ ber review board. He said if the board decides a movie is obscene, it would ask a court injunction to restrain its showing. The film owners would have an opportunity to present their case in court, he added. "To characterize such an or­ derly pr!>cedure as censorship is .. to wilfully cry 'wolf,'" the jurist said. Increases in juvenile delin­ quency, the righ rate of social diseases and the problem of un­ wed mothers, the judge said, may not necessat"ily be traceable to immoral movies, but the man­ ner in which illicit and illegal ­ behavior is being depicted today in movies is weakening the moral fiber of young people. Mothers of teenagers are dis­ turbed over many films being distributed today, the judge de­ clared, but are powerless to pro­ tect their children from "debas­ ing suggestiveness." He said: "The motion picture industry needs regulation."

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18

Educator Hails Role of Laity In Sshools

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 16, 1965

The

Parish .Parade

.IT. JOSEPH,

"ALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will hold

• cake sale following all Masses Sunday, Sept. 19; and a penny sale is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 16 and Saturday, Oct. 23. The parish will be canvassed for donations Sunday, Oct. 10. ST. MARY, NORTH ATTLEBORO

NEW YORK (NC) - The growing role of the laity in teaching 'and administration is pointing 'Catholic educa­ tion in new directions, a Na­ tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ ence official has said. Msgr. James C. Donohue, new­ ly appointed co-director of the NCCW's Department of Educa­ tion, hails as a "great advance" the bringing of increasing num­ bers of lay people into the schools. His comments are made in an interview in the Septem-

The parish guild will hold its annual banquet at 7 Tuesday night, Sept. 21 at Sandy's res­ taurant, Plainville. Mrs. William Hickey, chairman, announces that Rev. Victor Gaboury will be guest speaker.

ber issue of the Catholic Edu­ cator, published here. Msgr. Donohue, who also is superintendent of schools for the Baltimore archdiocese and sec­ retary of th~ Superintendents. Department of the NCEA makes these bookspoints: Curriculum reshaping, "noth­ ing short of phenomenal," is tak­ ing place under the guidance of lay men and women in ad­ ministrative posts along with experts being produced by reli­ gious communities; A systein of centralized fi-

nancing of Catholie elementary and secondary schools, with a tax levied on each parish, is in­ evitable because of lay teachers who must be given a salary com­ petitive to that" offered in pubHe schools; Parish school boards and strong home-school associations will be "one of the most impor­ tant things that can happen in Catholic education in the next 20 years" because they will ad­ vance the cause and effective­ ness of the schools. In all, said Msgr. Donohue, it

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The Corpus Christi-St. Ther­ esa's Ladies Guild will sponsor -a public testimonial to Mrs. Christopher Brady of Sandwich from 3 to 6 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 26 in Father Clinton Hall, Sandwich. Mrs. Brady' has served over 50 years as sacristan and as a catechism teacher to parish children.

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Mrs. Elizabeth T. Allen, direc­ tor of volunteer services at Paul A. Dever State School, will speak at the first meeting of the Catholic Women's Club at II Tuesday night,-Sept. 21 in the parish center. All women of the parish are invited, and follow­ ing the. meeting· new members wili be welcomed at a reception and coffee hour. The unit plans a luncheon and fashion show at 1 Saturday af­ ternoon, Sept. 25 at Fernandes Circle. Reservations will be ac­ cepted lJntil Tuesday, Sept. 21 by Mrs. Joseph Fonseco, presi­ dent. The Holy Name Society will benefit from an auction to be held from 10 in the morning to 10 at night Saturday, Sept. 18 01\ the grounds of the parish eenter.

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Parish Boy Scouts will benefit from a rummage sale to be spon­ sored by the Women's Guild from 8 in the morning to 9 at night Friday, Sept. 17 at the eorner of John and Rodman Streets. Mrs. Patrick Murphy, president, and Mrs. George P. Boitano, publicity chairman, are in charge.

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adds up to a minor revolutloa. "I don't 'think that Catholic ed­ ucation is ever going to be the same again," he said. "I think that Catholic eduea­ tic;m, as we know' it, won't lu.ft­ damentally change, since our goals are based on unchangeable norms and ideals. But the direc­ tions we take in reaching those goals, the visions that we have of. what Catholic education should be in this country, are going to be a great deal different from what they have been in the past," he added.

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The Council of Catholic Women announces a Fall fashion show for 7:30 Wednesday night, Sept. 22 at White's restaurant, West­ . port. Refreshments will ·be served and entertainment will be offered by the Franco Fam­ ily. Door prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the church improvement fund. Ceneral chairman Mrs. Mary Lou Silvia, aided by ticket chairman Mrs. Lee De Mello, an­ nounces that tickets will be available at the parish hall fol­ lowing Masses Sunday, Sept. 19. SS. PETER AND PAUL,

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Cub Scout Pack 17 is holding meetings with den mothers and plans to start a Webelos Den Wednesday, Sept. 22. A pack committee meeting is scheduled for tomorrow and a full pack meeting Friday, Oct. 1. Boy Scout Troop 17 will begin its season Tuesday night, Sept. 21. Scoutmaster William F. Pat­ ten welcomes all boys aged 11 and up. A class for sixth grade bo)'G . wishing to become Knights of the Altar will begin at 6:30 to­ aight in the iacristy.

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Pope Paul To Visit Continued from Page One to,ur on Oct. 4. Requests for p~ ae.ereditation total nearly 400. In addition to the interest of the general public, another. fac­ tor is that the Pope will be in an area having the largest single concentration of Catholics in the nation - nearly 7.2 million in New York, northern New Jersey and southern Connecticut. After his arrival at Cardinal Spellman's residence, the Pon­ tiff will go to St. Patrick's Ca­ thedral to pray and offer a blessing. Then he will return to the residence for lunch. a.. Patrick's Cathedral In the cathedral, which holds 5,000 persons and will be opened to the public before the Pontiff's arrival, the Pope will bless the congregation from the main altar. He then will walk to the tear of. the church to view a life-size statue of. Pope Pius xn and leave the edifice by a ter­ race on 50th Street, where be will be in view of. thousands of. person!! in neighboring sky­ scraper offices. There is no official confirma­ tion from either the White House or the Vatican that Pres­ ident J'ohnson and the Pope will meet. But the stage has been set for it. Mr. J'ohnson win be in New York Oct. 3 for. dinner and his press spokesman has said, "we will want to take • look at whether an overnight stay would be possible." Address in French In mid-afternoon, the 'Pope will leave for the United Nations. He will speak to the general as­ sembly. It is thought his address will be given in French and be about 30 minutes long. It will take place about 3:30 P.M., EDT. Like almost all of the papal day in New" York, the address win be carried on television. After his remarks, the Pontiff will meet U.N. officials and ttel­ egates at a reception and concert . in his honor at the headquarters of the international body. Homily in ED&,Ush A1J his final major pubUe event, he will travel to Yankee

Unveil Bronze Bust Of Michelangelo ROME (NC)-A bronze bust of Michelangelo has been un­ veiled on top of st. Peter's ba­ ,silica. The bust has been placed in a niche atop St. Peter's dome in commemoration of. the fourth centenary of the Renaissance artist's death. The bust is a copy of the bronze work of Daniele Da Volterra which is kept at :Dargello museum in Michelan­ ~lo's home town of Florence.

UN

Stadium to offer a low Mass for peace. This should take place about ,8 P.M., EDT. The Pope will celebrate the Mass in Latin and will deliver a brief homily in English. The 'Epistle, Gospel, Prayer of the 'Faithful and the Lord's Prayer will be read or recited by others. A lay lector will read the Epistle in English and a priest will deliver the Gospel in the same language. Neither has yet been identified, but it is thought they will be affiliated with the, U.N. At the Prayer of the Faithful, petitions will be made in the five official languages of the U.N. - English, French, Span­ ish, Chinese and Russian. Each will be made by a different per­ son. At the Offertory, the water and wine will be brought to the altar in a procession of six boys and six girls chosen to represent the world's six continents. The 12 children will receive Com­ munion from the Pontiff. At the Lord's Prayer, all in at­ tendance will be asked to recite It in their own Ilmguage. The Mass will be within the framework of the papal visit to the U.N. The' U.N. flag will be near the altar to represent all member nations. Other dec­ orations also will emphasize the theme of the Pope's visit. After the Mass, the Pope will depart for Rome-ending. grueI.ing day in which differ­ ences in time zones will have seen him the "go 29 straight hours. First as PObtiff The visit-the first by a reign­ Ing pontiff to the western hemi­ sphere---will be Pope Paul's third major voyage away from Rome sinCe be was elected to the papacy. In January, 1964, he flew to the Holy Land and went to Biblical sites in J'ordan and Israel. In December the same year he flew to India to attend the International Eucharistic Congress in Bombay. His flight to New York will be his longest, more than 100 miles longer than the trip to Bombay. His visit will 1M! the third to the U. S. Before he became pope he came to this countrY in 1951 and 1960. In the latter year the then Giovanni Cardinal Montini stopped in Baltimore, .Boston, Chicago," New York, Philadel­ phia and Washington and re­ ceived an honorary degree from Notre Dame University along with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Three presidents have met with'popes here in Rome---Wood­ row Wilson with Benedict XV in 1919, Eisenhower with J'ohn XXIII in 1959, and John F. Kennedy with J'ohn xxm .. 1963.

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Texas Priest Says Head Start Project 'Bound to Make a Difference' S,AN ANTONIO (NC) - "It's bound to make a difference.", That's the reaction of Father J'ames C. Brunner, director of. an eight-week Summer Project ,Head Start program 'here that involved 1,050 pre-school chil­ dren in 14 centers. Known as Project ADVANCE (Alamo District Venture Aiding Needy Children'. Education), the program was aimed at pre­ paring disadvantaged childrea for first grade. It put special em­ phasis on teaching English • Spanish-speaking youngsters. Father Brunner, superintend­ ent of schools for the San An­ tonio archdiocese, said most of the children will probably enroB ill public schools. "The children.will cerialnl,' . . MUer .. .a.ooI tba .....

mE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 16, 1'965

19

Urge Concern For Victims Of Poverty NEW YORK (NC)-Reso­ lutions urging student con­ cern for migrant workel'lJ and victims of poverty were approved by the National New­ man Student Federation. Dele­ gates representing some 50,000 Catholic youths attended. Regarding migrants, Newman­ ftes cited "the poor or non-exis­ tent religious and educational facilities afforded these people and directed the NNCF to ob­ serve this situation in the spirit of Christ's great equation, 'unto the least • • • unto me'," The statement on the war GB poverty was phrased: "We sug­ gest a closer coordination be­ tween religious organizationa concerned with these programll­ and the government." Student Freedom In a resolution on ecumenism" the group declared: "NSSIi' should seek out other religious groups on campus and take ad­ vantage of their common the~ logical, liturgical and academic situations for the realization 01.' our own ecumenical goals." , Interfaith retreats, student workshops on campus proble1118; and common worship were pro­ posed as means of activating the resolution. A resolution on student free-" dom stated: "The NNSF should align itself with responsible campus groups which promote' the development of the whole student through increased parti­ cipation in the shaping of cam"; pus life," The accent was on the word "responsible."

APOSTOLIC DELEGATE to Vietnam, Archbishop An­ gelo Palmas, who visited the Cao Dai religious sect at Tay Ninh, is shown speaking with the Venerable Boo The, head of the Cao Dai group. NC Photo

AII.'Night Vigi'l at Fair

Bishop of Leiria Is Major Celebrant

Of Concelebrated Mass

,NEW YORK (NC)-The first Mass concelebrated in the Latin­ rite at the Vatican Pavilion, of the New York World's Fair cli­ maxed an all-night vigil of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fat­ ima and the Society of Repara­ tion to the Immaculate Heart of. Mary. Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria, Portugal, in whose di­ ocese Our Lady of Fatima shrine is situated, was the major cele­ brant. Mrs. H. T. Bower, founder of the Vigil Movement in England, wal among the 350 worshippers who filled Good Shepherd Chapel of the Pavilion for the 10-hour devotion. Father Richard O'Dea, S.J., of.

Fordham University led the

opening hour.

The pilgrim statue of Our Lady of. Fatima was borne m. proces­ sion about the chapel and after­ wards crowned with flower. ~ Bishop Venancio. . Other expressions of. devotion

Bishops' ,Synod

during the vigil included a can­ dlelight procession and the Sta­ tions of the Cross. Fourteen pil­ 'grims held' black crosses repre­ senting 14 nations behind the Iron Curtain. Hours were assigned to the following intentions: protection of the United States from dan­ gers of communism; conversion of Russia, and SUccess of the fourth session of the Vatican counciL

Free Beer, Petition Can't Save Church VIENNA (NC)-Nearly a hun­ dred Viennese staged a demon­ stration outside an 18th century Catholic church in the suburb of Margareten here, protesting a decision to tear down the church for a new highway. After presenting petitions to city officials who ordered the demolition, the marchers' at­ tempted to hold up the work by giving the demolition men free beer. The laborers took the beer, drank it, and continued with their task.

Continuing Education FALL SESSION

Sept. 28-Dec. 7

Ten Tuesday Evenings

7:30 to 9:30 P.M. TIle Conteniporarr Novel In AmerlC8 Creative Writing Effective English TIle New Grammar Public Speaking Reading Improvement For Adults Drawing and Paintinll The Artist At Work Interior Decoration Personality Improvement For WomeR Conversational French-Beginners labor law Modem Math For Parents P11l1osophy In An Age Of Allxlety You And Your Child Current Views On Tension In WorN AffaIrs You And The New Morality Accounting For Non-Accountants Insurance - (Prep, Agents' & Bro'ers' Exam.) Illvesting In Stocks and Bonds Training Course For SUpervisors Real Estate Persuasive Seiling Elementary Shorthand (Cregg)

Continued from Page One

administrative arm, would be

working with the Pope and this

synod of Bishops. Many of the

Council Fathers feel that more

of the administrative activities

in the Church should be handled

by Bishops rather than by offi­

cials in the Curia.

Pope Paul praised the Curla in his Tuesday morning talk indi­ eating. that any changes he , would make in this regard would be evolutionary rather' THOMAS F. MONAGHAN JR. than revolutionary. Treasurer On Tuesday afternoon the .. Pope led'more than '2,000 of. the Council Fathers in • penitential 142 SECOND STREET

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might have done,· he IBId. "When we started we had eb11­ dren who couldn't speak Bn­ glish. After eight weeks these children were responding In En­ ,lish to questions." ' While the program ·can't overcome in eight weeks what has been lacking for six years,· PORTLAND (NC) - Catholic the priest safd, nevertheless it can save a lot of. time that would sehool officials here in Maine otherwise have been spent in expect "a major increase" in the sehool helping the disadvantaged number of lay teachers In the Portland diocese's schools this ehildren catch up. He also praised the program" year. Last year it was 148. eultural aspects, noting that the The principal reason, officials children had been taken on tri~ Aid, ill a new policy of not be­ to such places as the zoo, airport, . ginning Ii teaching Sister in the flre stations, libraries and farms. classroom until she has finished Each child received some $150 collele.Previously, Sisters with worth of medical care, includlllI two or three yean 01. college immunization shots ancl ~ would start teaching and finUlt. eoBep durin, Summelr . .OM ~

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20

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR River-Thurs. Sept. 16, 1965

.

RONALD CAULEY

DIANE COURCY

SHARON FOLEY

SANDRA GOULET

MARY McLEAR

It. Thomas seminary

Sisters If Mere,

Sisters oi Mercy

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SEVEN BISHOP FEEHAN HIGH GRADUATES FROM CLASS OF 1965 ENTER RELIQIQUS LIFE

-

Council Demands Research Into All Creation

WINONA (NC) Vatican council is a 110 scholarship, to manding challenge

- "The clear call the de­ of scien­

tific research to probe all God's creation," Msgr. Joseph Gremil­ lion, director of the socio-eco­ nomic division of Catholic Relief Services-National Cat hoi i c Welfare Conference, said here. Msgr. Gremillion, speaking to 1R0re than 800 delegates to the sixth annual Study Week on the Apostolate, stated that the coun­ eil is a "calf to the high intellec­ tual challenge of philosophy and the arts to experience and to ex­ press the value of creation; to the ehallenge of a theology adequate to the dimensions of today's world, from the depths of the electronic microscope to the heights ofogalastic space." Keynote In the keynote address, Father Louis M. Colonnese, adminstra­ tive director of the Latin Amer­ ica Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Conference, and the honorary chairman of the Win­ ona program, declared that "pious platitudes handed to men of great need sim:(lly cause the coals of tortured resentment to become the red embers of open rebellion." Father Colonnese said there is absolute and indispensable need for 20th century Christians to eome forth with concrete pro­ posals and remedies for the world's ills. ...~ "Christians," the priest said, -must have the courage to act as human beings with a great task in the present day, record­ making world," Anointed People ''The world," he said, ''long­ ingly awaits for the 'anointed people of God' to know and re­ spond to the basic and critical issues which prevent mankind fro m knowing the Father through the loving work of His Son." The study week, held on the campus of St. Mary's College, is sponsored annually by the Office of the Apostolate, Daven­ port, Iowa.

Fill Two ·Key Posts In Norwich Diocese NORWICH (NC)-Msgr. Jo­ i!leph V. King has been appointed chancellor of the Connecticut Diocese of Norwich by Bishop Vincent J. Hines. Msgr. King, rector of St. Pat­ rick's cathedral here, will re­ linquish the position of diocesan superintendent of schools to Father Richard L. Archambault, Who has been assistant superin­ tendent.

Says Reporting Church Story Difficult. Many Angles Rooted in Th.eological Soil MANCHESTER (NC)-There is "no easy, simple way of re­ porting a story" about the Cath­ olic Church, Father Vincent A. Yzermans, director of the In­ formation Bur e au, National Catholic Welfare Conference, told a group of newsmen here. Fifty representatives of the press, radio and television from throughout New Hampshire were the guests of Bishop Er­ nest J. Primeau of Manchester, at a meeting here to develop contacts between Church offi­ cials and communications media representatives. The bishop told the group the decree on communications of the Second Vatican Council pointed up the need "for consulting pro­ fessional personnel such as your­ selves to assist in spreading the message of religion and, further, to make a concreted effort to utilize existing communications media in 'accomplishing this mis­ sion." Father Yzermans, principal speaker at a luncheon, told the group the Catholic Church appre­ ciates deeply the objective re­ porting by the press, radio and TV of news about the Church, especially the happenings at the Second Vatican Council. He recalled that Pope Pius XII has characterized members of the working press as "valiant heralds of truth, fearless defend­ ers of what is right and wise pioneers of a true peace." ''There is no easy, simple way of reporting a story about our Church," Father Yzermans told the group. "Most Catholic stories have many angles. Many of them are deeply rooted in profound and consequently intricate theo-

CU Dean Is to Head Engineering Group MIAMI (NC)-Dr. Donald E. Marlowe,. dean of the Catholic University of America's School of Engineering, is the president­ elect of the National Council of State Boards of Engineering Examiners. Dr. Marlowe will serve as president-elect for one year and as president during 1966-67.

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SAVE

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5250 On This Glorious NEW

WHITNEY PIANO by • Latest 1966 Model • 39" Direct Blow Console • New Elegance in Tone and Fashion-Styled Beauty' • Your Choice of Styles, Cabinet Wood and Finish .

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I COMPARES WITH I VALUES UP TO I~

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5895 NOW ONLY

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Mason's is the exclusive factory distrib­ utor of world famous Kimball Pianos. That's why 'we can offer you this sen­ sational saving on a piano that has won world-wide recognition for tone, action, and design. Your Kimball will stay in perfect tune longer. The exclusive "Unilock" back construction provides

greater strength and "grip" to hold tuning pins firmly in position. The triple strength, laminated "Life-Crowned" tone-board will never crack or split as­ suring a tone life and brilliance un­ equalled anywhere. Select your Kimball Pianos now at Factory to Warehouse savings.

EASY BUDGET TERMS - NO BANKS OR FINANCE COMPANIES TO PAY

ELECTRICAL

Contractors

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944 County St. New Bedford

logical soil. This means, then, that our research must be most thorough; our interviews must

Mav Wear Suits MONTEVIDEO (NC) ~ Tbe bptional use of a black suit in­ stead of a cassock- for street wear is now permitted in the Monte­ video Archdiocese. A similar de.;. cree has been iSS\led in near17 all other Dioceses of Uruguay. .

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,."Ne.o En81and', Lar8es& Furniture Sho.4Jroom"

PLYMOUTH AVE. at RODMAN ST.-FALL RIVER - ACRES OF FREE PAPKING


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