09.19.68

Page 1

"

New School Board Members

Bishop

'Appo~n's

Dighton \V®mal a

Ty~~

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The Chancery Office has announced the appointment of 'three new members to the Diocesan School Board.

They are Rev. Luiz G. Mendon­ ca, pastor of St. Michael's Par­ ish, Fall River; Rev. John J. Brennan, SS.CC. pastor of St. Joseph's Parish, Fairhaven; and Mt·s, Joseph C. Murray, a mem­ ber 'of St. Joseph's Parish, No. Dighton. The new appointees will re­ place Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Silvia, pastor of St. John the

The ANCHOR

Baptist, New Bedford, who re­ signed; Rt. Rev. Msgr. Patrick H. Hurley, late pastor of St. Jo­ seph's, Taunton, who died on Feb. 1, 1968; and Mrs. Eva Marie Dane of Orleans, who tendered her resignation. Father Mendonca was born in New Bedford on Sept. 26, 1919, the son of the late Luiz G. and Marie Almeida Mendonca, Fol­ lowing graduation from Holy Family High school, New Bed­ ford, he studied philosophy and theology at the Seminary of Angra, Terceira, Azores. The new School Board mem­ ber was ordained on June 10, 1944 in Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford by the late Bishop Cassidy,' , Following ordination, he was appointed assistant at Santo Christo Parish, Fall River and then he served as a curate at the Immaculate Conception Church, and Mt. Carmel, both in New BedfoI:d. On Sept.' 26, 1962 lie was

Mee~s

~em."

The country requires the con­

tinuance of Catholic schools

Bishop Sheen said, for three

lfeasons:

1. To give children the mean­ ing and purpose of life because ""the children who inherit the· oonfused world we bequeathed them must be given a radar, 11 ehart, a lighthouse and 11 tar-­

get." 2. To preserve the rights aoo of all by teaching that those rlghts and liberties come from God and not from the state cmd. that "democracy is ~ ~,bCl"ties

....

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Chatrify

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.Sunday

'J.1he co~ordinating commit­ tee of the Bishop's Oharity Ball will meet Sunday with the co~sponsors of this fa­

Catholic Schools lence by teaching an inner vio­ lence (> ¢ ¢ di,rected against our own 'gUilt, our egoism, our lusts, oU,r cynicism, ouJ; qishonest;r." 'Discussing ,the third reason, Bishop Sheen said: ,"Surrounded by destruction and violence in the mass media, the child needs a training which makes him see, that as a knife needs to be sharpened, and as a sculptor knocks off huge chunks of marble to produce the form, Turn to Page Nineteen

East Falmouth, where he serv~ as pastor from 1964 to 1966, On Oct, 27, 1966 Father Mendonca was named to his present pas­ torate at St. Michael's Church, . Fall River. On Dec. 12, 1967, he WaD named a member of the Boarcll of Examiners of the Clel"gy. Father Brennan was born in County Monaghan, Ireland, the son of the late Frank and Saratn Brennan. Following his school years at the National School in Ireland and St. McCarthen's School, Ireland, he came to New York City. Before entering St. Mary'o Seminary, Kentucky, Fatheli' Brennan was a superintendent of construction for the City clr New York. Following training at St. Mary's, he joined the Sacred Hearts community. Ordained in 1950 at the Im­ maculate Conception Shrine". Washington, he was assigned W establish a new seminary ~ Turn to Page Fiv~

I®J~~ (cmmit~ee

Asserts Nalion Nee'ds

"The hour has struck," he said, "when our schools must render to God not only the things'that are God's, but also to Caesar the things that are Caesar's. Nine­ reen out of 21 civilizations which vanished from history Perished lfrom within. Lincoln said he never feared that America would fall by an attack from without, but rather from within. "In a word, our schools of morality and religion must be ~reserved not only for the sake of the parish and the Church, but also for, the sake.of the oountry." Catholic schools, the bishop said, must be preserved not only 00 teach Catholics but also "for parents who knock at our doors and ask that we take their non:' Catholic children; for inner-city children would fill our build­ ings tenfold if we could accept .

MM. JOSEPH C. MURR~Y North Dighton

~<r ~D~~®~I~

!Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 19, 1968 PRICE lOc Vol. 12, No. 38 © 1968 The Anchor $4.00 per " ..or

ROCHESTER (NC)-The preservation of the Catholic school system is essential to the preservation of the United States, according to 'Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of Rochester. Bis'hop Sheen maintained, in' a recent pastoral' letter ~ the people of the Rochest­ on the divine right of kings er diocese, that "the state of not but on the divine right of per­ the nation" requires schools sons." 9£ morality and religion. .3. To "cut down on outer vio­

named administrator of Our Lady of IiJealth, Fall River, and was transferred to St. Anthony's

RJ!;V. LUIZ G. MJ!;NDONCA Fall River

vorite event of Bishop James L. Connolly for the exceptional and underprivileged children. Co-sponsors are the Confer­ ences of St. Vincent de Paul in every parish and all affiliates C1f the Council of Catholic Women ir the diocese. Rt: Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan co-ordinator of , this outstanding social event of Turn to Page Two

I I

REV. JOHN BRENNAN

Fairhaven

.(ape Cod ,(CD Workshop on 'I'he third in a series of Religious Education work-. shops will be held this. Saturday for parents and

home. Seminars will bEl given on Prayer, Formation of Conscience, Psychology' and Teaching the Trinity.. '

The Cape area session is teachers of CCD elementary school=children of the Cape area. scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 21 Previous sessions in Fall River at Holy Trinity Parish, West HarwiCh. The program will and Taunton have been attend­ open with registration at 9:30 ed by more than 160 persons. Sponsored py the Fall River A.M. From 10 A.M. to noon and Diocesan CCD, the one-day from 1 to 3 P.M., registrallts will workshop is designed to provide participate in seminars. Rev. a summary of the new religious Philip Davignon, Cape area CCD co-director will celebrate education concepts now em­ ployed' in CCD classes and the . the Mass that concludes the pro­ gram at 3:30 P.M.

ing to the lord

aNEW'song

STIR UP ZEAL FOR GOOD WORKS: Part of the GJradual for the 16th Sunday after Penteost-next Sunday­ says "Sing to the Lord !l new song, for the Lord has done wondrous deeds." We are new creatures~ a new creation, because we all'e baptized in Christ. Hence, our song is ,a lllew song, the song of the redeemed who s-ing "Amen 1"

"Saturday

areas of the Diocese will enroll more than 40,000 students this year and will be staffed by more than 2,000 catechists, both lay and religious.

Pharmacists Hold Annual Meeting The Sixth Annual Conven­ tion of the National Catholic Pharmacists ,Guild. of the . United States and Canada

will be held in Boston, Friday, Instructors for the seminars Saturday and Sunday,' Oct. 4, 5 include members of the Dioc­ and 6, preceding the 1968 Na­ esan CCD staff, the CCD Teach­ tional Association of Retail ing Sisters and Brothers, Com­ Druggists Convention. mittee and the Diocesan Execu­ Timothy P. Keating of New tive Board of the CCD. ,Bedford is executive secretary. Registration fee" for the Reli­ The three-day program will gious Education workshop is commence Friday with a meet­ $1.00. Those attending are re­ ing of officerS followed by quested to bring their own reports of the various commit­ lunch, but beverages will be tees. Saturday the Annual Guild served by the workshop com­ Meeting will be held with the mittee. Further information on election of officers for the com· the Parent-Teacher workshop ing year ol< • • Guest membeJ may be obtained from the CCDo and speaker at the 7 P.M. din· priest-director in any Cape nero will b~ .Roger W. Cain, ex· parish or from the Diocesan ecutive secretary of American CCD office in Fall River, ~ele..: College of Apothecaries. His phone 676-3036. subject will be "Professional Survival," The Diocesan CCD organiza­ A Guild Mass and Communion tion plans to hold similar work­ shops at Bishop Stang High on Breakfast will be held Sunday Sept. 28 and at Bishop Feehan morning and the speakel wiD be Rev. Joseph E. Manton, High on Oct. 5. C.sS.R., well-known Redemp' eCD Schools of Religion in an torist radio priest.


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_Prelate Deni~~r . letter 'Secret~';

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Booklet SpeakS oriform.lio~ Of Conscience. by(;#~olia.

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report in the' Times of London

, I' IS . WASHINGTON (NC)-P'atrick 0 ard'maI O'EoYe holding intervieW~ this week with the 44 priests - who miginally ~umbered 51- who have refused to a~t ~he · teaching of Papa Paul's encyclical On the Trans~s~non th 0 nly of Human Lifease. li ht' f h t th ' hentic teaching of the science in theg 0 w a e aut Church teaches in the sense that Church. The priests have he forms it in accordance wiUi ('lssued statement· reaffirm- what the Church· teaches."

Pope Paul's encyclical on birth . control, Hum'anae- Vitae.

'lbe Times had printed too fun text of this letter from A.m­

leto Cardinal Cicognani, Papa1!

Secretary of State.

Archbishop Murphy, in a lcl­ ter printed in the Times, ~w<o ., days later, said "The Jette, was

: never 'secret,' neither was i!I

, jog their previol,ls s.tand on free~ In reply to-another question, - .0: 'before.' T-he normal heading foi'

dom 'of conScience, although the the booklet notes that Humanae .:, a confidential letter, 'sub~secre"" new" statement omits a 'passage Vitae is' not 'a "formally ·Walli... '.' to,' was completely absent. "·in an earlie'r st.atement contain... ble" document. But 'it points ·o~ , ·"It carried no note whatsoeveli' ',ing .an· ~xpliCit insistence 'that that the condemnation .of arti: of 'confidential'-or is a lettell' '.spouses are 'free in some circum- ficial birth control is "an unwhich one recives. a,t one's stances to employ artificial birth broken tradition going'backto' 'breakfast table' 'secret' .unless

<.'<introl methods regardless of the very beginning of Christianone' immediately runs to the

., the' Pope's teaching. banning ity'" and has been firmly Stated press with it?

artificial ·contraception. by popes. . . "Neither was it 'before.' It ac­ . In the meanti~e, faith~ul of . The booklet says it would be' companied the encyclical in the the . Washington Archdiocese. wrong to suppoSe that onlY.: insame envelope, was cyclostyledl h~ve been given a 40-page, fallible teaching "really couftts" (-and badly too) right down Ul> 14,000 word response to qUe&- for Catholics. Very little ,of the and including 'the signature." tions asked about the encyclical, Church's moral teaching has :.JUBILAIUANS: Three members of the CongregatIon Another priest told the Th1)es: iIi a booklet entitled. ,"Sex in 'been infalli-bly defined, it says. of the' Sacred Hea'rts cel~brated jubilees at St. Joseph's .' "Every priest in the diocese, oil Marriage: 'Love-Giving, Life. lid C li D t r i n ' . " S CC· Clifton received a copy of ill . Giving." .. ' , . S o . a 0 C oe _ e Chur.ch, Fairhaven. Seated: Rev: Columba.Moran, S . . ., and it was not labeled secret.so. The booklet's first question is' "But this. does not mean tha,t 50 years; sulndi.ng: Eev. Francis Regis, SS.CC., and Rev.,. ,The letter urged bishops to Be­ "Why. can't a cathOlic form his' - all this non~ef~n~d teac~in~'is Damien Ve;,u-y, SS.CC., commeinora't~ 25 years as priests, eur.e complete obedience on too own ,conscience on the ; ~bj~ ..of d~ubtful ~a¥dlty. It ,18, ~u- ',in the' congr' . egati<m. ' . ",',' , ... " . , : eneyclieal o tea~, g.: " ,.,' · of contraception?" thentic t~ach1Dg of the Church, '-:"As a matter of fact," the an'-' arid faithfUl'-Catholics accept'it , I ",' •

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Mass, Ordo

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"The Pope says that th~ ,Stu..te, A."id,.f.Oil': PriyO.'.t, ~ S, Apostle and 'EvangelIst. U tal.ac! pas, t\,Vo intrinsiC pUrposes Class R 1'11I' P"

an earlier 'stag'e" than 'decIding or' n1f~anings'_ life:;'giving and' . .". ed. ass roper.

I BOSTON (NC)~A Massachu- of partial state support'for stuGlory; Creed; Preface cd about particular issues like con- love-giving-and that these are setts state legislator bas devised dents at private 'schools' arid '001- . Apostles. traception. I inseparably linked," it 1tays."1t a plan which appears likely to leges. "And I underscore the' . SUN.DAY-XVI·· Sunday' "At the most fundamental is a mutilation of the act to de- d d ts" h stre ed' K:JI' stir-up Church-5tate separatists wor stu en, e sS.· Pentecost. n Class. Green. · level," it says, "a Catholic !orms prive it of eith.'er m~a.~g., ' C sts..JI ting 'pn"v'ate in Massachusetts. 0 'V1 opera' Mass Proper; GlorY; Creed; his' conscience about the mean."Thus, a person might deprive Rep. James Nolen said he will schools caD no longer be met by Preface of Trinity. . ing of life, and in doing'lso he the ad of its love-giving as~ introduce in ,the 1969' Le~"la- income from tuitions, and 'the " ' reaches the decisio,? that. he by' forcing sexual acts on an- . ...... need for state support is'greater MONDAY-St. Linus, Pope ami ought to be a Catholic. But if a other against his reasonable ture, when it convenes 'in ·j'an- than er 'N I mpbasized. Martyr. In Class. Red. . going to be a C ath0 li C, wishes. And he w-ollld deprive '. uary, a resolution asking for a ev., 0 en e . . OR person'IS he has to accept what goes along it of its life-giving meaning by stlidy of the question of state"Notr~ Dame Initiates, ' S l Thecla, 'Virgin and ~ar~~

with being a Catholic, and that contraception. The. tWo J;l1eim- support' for privete school stu-. .. . . .." ' . , " . TUESDAY-Mass of: precedIng

·includes accepting :the teachingingS and purposes of the.· sexual. dents, pointing up" '''dire ,New ·Law Study S,unday. IV Class. Gre~n. MllSIl

· of' th~Cburch .on particular act are not arbitrary ones., They . plight of' parochialschOoIS..' NEW, YORK' (NC) -Twenty F'roper; ~~Ill!n<!n ~ace.,

· issues, like contraception." , are intrinsic. of the ,act. itself. . Nolen; one of the legisl~tive ,·second-year·law students at the , OR .:

"When' a particular issue . They are there 'because that is leadersvJho acliievedswee'ping '. Uiliversityof Notre'Dame have Our Lady of Ransom, .White. arises, he willingly accepts the . the way God planned' it • • ... edu.cationaIreform.s inthEl siate .' arrived -In'-London to inaugurate, .WEDNESDAY-M~. of preeed­ Church's authoritative. r e s o l u t i o n ' in 1965, said he will ask the .leg- : the' first full-year abroad Pro-i ing Sunday. IV Cb.ss. Green. of it,"' the answer continues. "A .islature to name a' conlmisSion of.',. gram in American· legal ,educa'Mass 'Prop~r; Cormpon, Pm­ loyal Catho:tic sees the authority List R~signatiOl1ls .' 10 legislators and' 10 public' tion. ,":' . ace. . I.: of the' Church not as an imposi'po members, including fri>m the Tbestudents will start classes' ,THURsDAY-North. America tion, but as a directing principle f field· of education, for the study.. ",Sept. 30 with, British ,law stuMartyrs: SS.. isaaC , Jogues. in line with his most fund amen.YONKERS ,(NC)-A listing of . '''lfeel that· private. schools at.,· dents ,at University College,.', Jedm De Breoouf, etc.; n·Class. tal commitment to Christ. 463 . U. S. priests who resigned an levels are facing'. 'problems , University of, London.:, . ~ Mass Proper; Glory.;, "In the case ofcontrace.ptio~ .. from active ministry in the '" th'atthreaten their very ability., . ,Prof. Conrad Kellenberg;'fo;r~.,', . .,: he makes a conscientiousjudg- Church 'since l:ast January has to continue in opention;"Nolen mer I"Wbright scholar and· a" . - - - - -_ ment to accept the teaching of been comp~ed by the Nirtional doeclared. C l . , member of the Notre.. Dame law the Church that contraception Asociat~on for pasioral Renewal. He is expected to suggest. that . faculty, will reside, with the stu­ D. D. Wilfred C. is always wrong (which does not. This 'compares with a total of· the state consider the possibility dents dwing their year ,abroad. Sullivan Driscoll' rule out, of course, the possibil480 priests who'resigned in the . . Each student will supplement ity that he ·can arrive at that entire year 1967-an inCrease. of II) his reading of English legal FUNERAL HOME con.£lusion by himself). 31 per cent in the monthly rate:' materials with American eases Unbroken Tradition of .resignations, the rePort said. . C~ntinued from Page One . a~ statutes usually read to pre­ 469 LOCUST STREEr "A catholic' forms. his· ........:..· The I:eport of the asSOCiation, .' pare for, 1r.,u' examinations in .the ~........ which has headquarters here in the Winter Season, has an- UnitedStates. FAll RaVER, MASS. New York, is based on 550.re- nounced "that this meetirig will 672-3381 beheld" at 2 in the, Kennedy" , -. I~OP' eSlgns .. "plies to'a questionnaire mailed" Memo,rial'Center, NewB·edford. ' " " ec:ro ogy' to its m~mbers. The report does . VATIC(\.N, CITY (NC)----:Pope not clam:tiO be,complete. It in- P~ns for.the 14thannual Char-.. .'$EPT. 26 ~:U~l8.vhIohapSA~;edB.thLee~ermuesant cl.udes.reports fi'om most Amer- 'lty Ball'to be held'Friday, night,· Rev. John .J. Donahue" 1944, .o..un:u di b t nly next Jan. 10, will be ,correlated .·,Ass.i,s,tant, ,..St.' Wi,lliam, ,;·Fall., . " ,t .• of S a i• n .t John, Newfoundland, to l~an ocese~. u 0 a fr . a.c -· . . •n of Reli"'o · t ies, at theI!leeting of the' co-spon- . ,River. -., ,. '.. . t of his office 'be.•, ~.n.. . ... us. ·communl . . .relieved. FuneFol Home-' be ests cl ded. Th tual soring . organizations.. Working' ..' ~ .: . SEPT. 29 . . .. I cause of. failing health ,ami pp are.m ~'" e ac . committee' assignments' wiil be Rev. J. A. P.ayan.,1899, Found.er, 571 Second, Street. transferred him to' the ti'tu!ar ~tal of reSlgnati0;DS. 18 p~bably , higher, the assocJ.atlon 831d. given' to the 125 expected to ~t. Matthew, FalllUver. dl'ocese of Altava. attend. .'. " . . . Fall River, Mas~ Representatives from' every ,SlEPT. 30. 679-6072 Rev. John J. Griffin, 1963, . , . . erm~n aYl'!'en!., area of the diocese will be given Pastor, St. Paul,. Taqpton•... MICHAEL J. McMAHON a progress' report of the instituRegistered Embalmer . FORTY HOURS

Meeting Success tions which benefit from this OCT.' Z licensed 'Funeral Directov' ESSEN (NC)-A German lay . worthy charity. Tickets will' be ,·Rey.. Joseph E. Sutula, 1961, DEVOT-ION

leader has said that the recent . distributed and contacts for the Pastor, St.. Casimir" New B'ed-, Sept. 29-5t. Anthony of 'Pa­ . 82nd Katmllikentag, the meeti~ : 14th annulJI Charity' Ball' Sou- ford. dua; New Bedfoi'd.. of German Catholic laymen, had .. venir Booklet will be assigned.. .r---~---=';"-------.. oUr Lady of the Immacu­ opened, up new opportunities . There will be five categories in. r lare Conception, Taun­ ,. for dialogue 'among ·the different: the 'Booklet. They are: . '.. 5;;., _

ton. <. :FUNFi:JllAl .HOME. INC. groups within German Catholi- : Veri Special FPends, Guaran- ' Ptnneral Bome

Our Lady of He~th, Fall ;'1 "'; \ , cism. . tors, Benefactors; Sponsors' and • ,~ .. ". 550 Lceus,_.:,I Bked River. .. Marcel Roy - G. Lorralllll' RlIJ' ~ :. 'This co~t· came from· Patrons.". .. ,' , ""­ .. . , ' . ' Ro.ger LaFrBlIC8 . .', , . Friedrich: 'Kronenberg, general: VariouS numbers of tiCkets FaD River. ~ ..

FUNERAL DIRE~ORS,·r; '. . ,'. n:f AacitOIl . ~ecretary'of 'the; m1inaging bOard'. will' be aSsigned to the' donors 672-2391

second Class Postage PaiD at Fall Rrvel. of tb~~tral· Committee of _ of· .the categories. Tickets are

,15 Irvingta:n .0." ';-::.: : ~'. , Rose E. SuJUVaD ~.:U~:~~ ~:r," R;~:~rstissa'02m' " German Catholics, the fede!a- ~ $10 ·per·couple. . :'. Neli'Bedfof,d.; '::".;. I1Y tile Cathall«: Press'CIt tIIe-Diocese.CIt Fall .tion of, the, country's lay organ-,.: The ball theme and decorative 995-51 " ' . i : ; . . ~.~~,.~8~~ :~RIver. Subscrrptlon price .., 1III11.·1JQStlIIflI izations. 19CeOOI7 'Will .also be' discussed.'

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1ftEANCftOR-~of".er

Middle-Class and Militant ­ ~eg_roes Make Unity Move PHILADELPHIA (NC)-First there was the Third am.ference on Black Power, for which 4,000 black men, their attire rang,ing from Colorful dislikes to shiny alum­ won suits, from Afro' hai:t~-dos to conventional cropping, flQnverged 'upon this city. The next week the month- accepted all points of view as ~ American Foundation being valid in the struggle IlnU toward freedom." for Negro Affairs attracted Evans announced tha-t AFNA 600 members of the Black bour- ~isie to its first general meet- ilDg here in the City of Brotherly J"ove. There were no, dashikis, 'no laded blue jeans. These were the !ilNltion's successful Negroes,' 'the men and w.omen who own the bla-ck newspapers, hold down ~ashington jobs 'as assistant sec- !rotaries, who teach and run the mation's black universities. , These were the people?' partic-, ~ants in the Black Power Con- ference warned each other against-they ~ere the Uncle [i'oms who had copped out of Ole problems of the majority (pf the nation's black people. Except when the smailer, finore prosperous group coml\)leted its meeting, it hadn't :'Worked out quite that way. They didn't sound like Uncle· "oms, many of them, and if they bad coPPe<l out of the fight, they' , were now getting back in~with iIbe financial power and politi-,

"will attempt to bridge the gaps ,that exist between various' groups, organizations, social and economic structures (0 ,co Co Black hands must work together .in America if there is any hope for a harmonious American commu- ' nity." The unity was expressed in more substantial, ways. The Black Power Conference dis­ cussed estblishment of a -black national bank, an Afna work­ shop suggested "'a Negro Na-, tional Development Corporation fund co 'I) co organized to acquire control of existing busiliesses, to finance expansion of small, suc­ cessful businesses, or to create new businesses." Have Means Like the militants, AFNA' members turned toward means

of going it alone, without white

help. Seldom was a proposal

made which involved seel{ing

help ouside the black commu­ nity; rather, sources of money eal muscle which the poorer, 'and expertise within the com­ more militant envy, and so des­ pemtely need to make Black munity were explored in depth.

llower, -a reality., Unlike the more militant par­ , Present Tensions tici-pants in the Black. Pow.er

If the earlier Black Power ~onference, who h~ve the abIl~

meeting had 'served to illustrate 1ty to create the 'Ylll, tlj.e mem­ the growth of black conscious- • bers of. AFNA have tile means,.

ness and to promote "Unity to provIde, the ~ay. ,

'llhrough Diversity" ~ its theme .Its preSIdent IS F~er~l DIS,:, . tnct Judge A. Leon HlggInboth­ - the later conventIon made of Ph'l d 1 h' Th th 'mear to many what has been am, .1 a e pIa. e 0 , er apparent to a few: the black officers mclude. Dr. Horace middle class is no longer com-' Man~ Bond, p~esld~nt emeritus mitted to apathy. It has under- of Lmcoln UnIversIty,. head of gone what the militant theoreU- ,the Bureau, ot Edu(:at}(~nal an,d dans call "radicalization," and Soci~l Research of Atlanta Un~'ts tho i verslty and father of GeorgIa Is 0 w re ad y t 0 d 0 1 mg 'np o1·..· ' J I' B o~; d P a tri CIa ' then black struggle. l.~clan u Ian

"

, But the two will still have to overcome the undeniable tenBions between militant and mid, , cUe-class. ,!hat the tensions are there was Illustrated when'Sami ' . ae1 ,E vans 0 f P h ladeJ.phla~ board chaIrman of the FoundatIon for Negro Affairs, said his group _ '"will have real Black Power." The implication was that the other's power was not "reaI." But the difficulty may be more m the fact that Black Power has Dever been neatly defined. And both meetings seemed willing to get together in the future. Ron Karenga 'of Los Angeles ra 'leader in the Black Pow~ ~nference, said "we heard and

DCCW Meet'i~g For May 1969 Miss Kathleen Ro~he, Presi­ dent of the Diocesan Council of the Nationai Council of Catholic :Women, has announced plans for the Fourth annual Fall River Diocesan Council of the NCCW

to be held at BiShop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth, on Saturday, May 3, 1969. ' The theme of the proposed convention will be '.'Service to God in Community," reported

Mrs. Adrienne Lemieux, secre­ tary, who also announced that the next board meeting would be beld on Nov. 17, .in Fall River. Mrs. John Mullaney of Attle­

boro was also' chosen to head a

"POOial committee to review the By-Laws' and ~submit needed Ohanges. > Other membem Of the com­

IIlIttee are: Mrs. Adrienne Lem­

ie1l1t (Taunton), Mrs. Gilbert

JlJoonan (Falmouth), Miss Lydia Pacheco (New Bedford) ~d Mrs. Michael McMahon (Fall

.\Fer).

VINCENTIANS AT PAN-ASIAN CONGRESS: 'Three wOrld leaders in the St. Vin­ .cent de Paul Society were among the large group which convened in Sydney, Australia, for the Pan-Asian m~ting of the Society. Left to right: Archbishop Sergio Pignedoli, left, of Rome, Norman Cardinal Gilroy, Archbishop, of Sydney, center, and Patrick Goh of the St. John ;Bosco Conference of the so-ciety in Singapore. NC Photo.

F.ol-mer 'Nuns Plan Work in Appalachia Stress Social, Chang.e for Mountain People

KNOXVILLE, (NC) - Design-/ health needs in poverty areas in the region by FOCIS mem­ ingatid implementing programs during the coming year. v bers. in community development In Virginia a?d West V~rginia: 1n Cincinnati: FOCIS mem­ among the Appalachian people Developments m the regIon are bers maintain two apartments in will have first priority for the ~~d on more t~an .20 years of 'the inner city, promoting a con­ Federation of Communities in livmg and workmg m the ~ise structive coming together and service (FOCIS) during the County area. A resea~c~ proJ~t mutual understanding among coming year. to understand the relIgIOUS ath- . diverse elements of the commu­ Harns, former U. S. Ambassador The board' of dlrectors of tu~es and v~lues of the moun- nity. Members perform a vari­ to ~uxembo~rg; Dr. Stephe~ J. . FOCIS, a lay organization begun tam, people IS. under way. P~- ety of social set'vices in form8J. WrIght, preSIdent of the UnIted in August, 1967, by former Glen­ feSSlonal. serVIce l~ a~ -mUSIC, and informal situations. ;N'egro College Fund; Leo Marsh, assistant director of the YMCA's marY Sisters, at a '.l'Q.eeting here and speCIal education IS offered in Kentucky reviewed the past f Am erIca, ' . k 0 and F re d erIC O'Neal,' president of Actors year and planned future activi­ ties. Reports from the four re­ E't . qUI y. gions revealed: ,

Move, Toward Center

Chicago: F'OCIS trainees in It counts among its ,members ' the uptown area worked with Congre.ssmen, Negro pUblishers, neighborhood 'people to sponsor OlympIC' athletes, Federal bu­ three street festivals during the rea~crats and scores of academ;' Summer. '

ics. .

Plans of the Chicago FOCIS And, whIle only III month old, oommunity for the COming year AFNA has established a six­ month budget of $107,000, nearly include a training session during the second semester, services of . ha1f,,~f whi~h will be devoted one member' as· a professional ~ hln,ng ~ six-man research and librarian in the uptown pubiic lDvestIgatIon team. 5~% CUJ:rent Annual Divide",d Paid On Our 90-Day A,nd it • already rea-ching out library, cooperation in neigh­ Inves,tment Notice Accountsl Compounded, Paid Every borhood and agency activities. intO the more militant religious Eastern Tennessee: FOCIS 3 Monthsl groups, such as the Conference ' of Negro Catholic Priests and members offer services through 4%, % Current Annual Dividend Paid On Our Regular a variety of 'agencies, including the Black Sisters Conference. In fact, it seeme4- by the time the anti-poverty program, the

Savings Accountsl Compounded, Paid Every 3 Monthsl the convention was over that public health department, the

those black people -who had Department ot Rural Develop-'

merit of the Catholic diocese,

stayed more or les.~ on the out­ • interest Earned from Day of Deposit to End of skirts of militancy were moving public schools and hospitals, and

toward the center, just as the , the Commission on Religion in

Interest Period-Compounded,' Paid Quarterly. an' ecumenical

militants - whose calm 1968 Appalachia, meeting contrasted sharply with church organization.

• All Deposits Insured IN FUU their turbulent 1967 conference They plan to expand their

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ROME (NC)-The general of - and to help ,others penetrate "'Il the Society of Jesus has sumthought which may,ormay n~ moned all Jesuits to discover for have been his own previously." themselves the meaning of Pope He urged Jesuits to be unafraid Paul VI's condemnation of conto rectify their teaching if nee­ traception and to explain it to essary and to give their"l'e8BOllW the w~rld. for, dOing so.

Si,ghtof Freedom Is Best Answer to Czec'h Crisis ·By Barbara Ward

\

'He app'ealed to the core of the Obedience does, not mean ~ There are difficulties about writing a column o~hich, Jesuit's personal vocation, which servile parroting of the encycli­ because of delivery times, has to be composed well In ad­ is to serve God through obediit, ~ ence to·.the Pope: ~e appealed. cal but a deep studyoi vance of pubiication. What one writes ,and the events said. the -core of the Jesuit's public that take place before it is published can be sharply out In what seemed to be a refev­ v'(lcation, 'which is to make the If)f line. This, has happened I Church's thought understood 'ence to the widespread accept­ to me in the last weeks? Re­ triumphant arrogant r~gim~ ': of and' loved. ance' of contraception outside Father Pedro Arrupe spoke in the Catholic Church, he warnecll cent columns asked people ever greater ~wer, Cue for weSt . a I,0007WQrd letter date Aug, 15 that "we must not forget that to consider on what they . , . '. ­ This fact should determine the REGISTRAR: Miss 'Linda and'" 'addressed' "to ,the whole our present world, for 'an its , " . . t amazing scien~fic conquests ill would spend money· saved , reaction of the AtlanJi,<: powers. Lafer, Brockton, i.s new reg­ Society." He stated at the outse through dis;1rmament--on them­ . that he' was writing. "because . ·sadly lacking a true, sense dJ. selves thi-Ough

They must, naturally, keep the oppOsition to the encyclical b~5 God and is in danger o.f deeeiv­ tax rebates--or

aHiance strong and no! allow, istrar at· StonehiH College, becOme widespread.": ing itself completely." on other 'less

any idea to grow up in .1\1osco~ . North Easton. She,' is' in ' However, he urged Jesuits te :fortunate pe6-­ that moyes beyond the line of 'charge' of academic records, the Soviet sphere of innuenc~ grades 'and s~tistics; 'estab­ Attjtude of Obed.ienee, ',., "collaborate with others in eea­ pies, ' through for instance, in Bedi~would . "While many completely 34:­ ters of basic research on man." lishmeht of class schedulescept the'leaching 6f the encycli­ foreign aid. The D<lt be resisted by force. assumption be-: Father Arrupe' asserted ~ and registration of students. cal, a number of the clergy, hind this ques­ But they must at all costs re­ the "authentic word of the Pope -' .Religious ,and laity violently re­ tion was that frain from falling back them­ '. * * need not be infallible to be ject it in a way that no one in there could be selves into panicky anti-Com:": Bene.d:,ct."ne' founds highly respectect." He cited ~ a! the. Society CaP. think of shartween the super­ ~1Unism and reverting: to the . "religious submission' CIf win New Mon'ostery . ing," he said. power s, Rus­ idea that only military and and of mind" which the Second The~ only response Jesuits can sia or America, forceful' situations are worth Vatican Council demands all KOTTAYAM (NC)-rather give to the Pope, he said, "is an possibly in the early seventies, to working and paying for, On the 'Bede GriffithS; O,S,B., who.. attitud~ of obedience which' 'is Catholics .give to the Pope's ,scale down the nuclear arms contrary, they have to remem­ founded an experimental mon': / ,.at once faithful, loving, firm, authentic teaching authority race and above all not to launch be.r that it is the openness and astery 'in Keral~ state in .,1958" open qnd. trji(y creative. even when he is-not speakiiIC still another round of fantasti­ n>ti9nality of Western society. ex cathedra. ' o h~' o~ned a folew monastery. at He added, "I do not say that cally expensive anti"-missHe de­ that attract Eastern Europe.. ,Tnchll1apoly In .Madras state this is necessarily painless ancl fense, , - ' " , The belief .that freedom can and - has assum~d ~he. name easy.'; Has the Russian occupation of be combined with social justice ~ayannand~" w~Ich IS pOPuI~r Of the assent owed to the Czechoslovakia scattered all -for -racial minorities, for pov-. among In<lia s Hmdus" , . POQe's 'encyclical, Father AF­ such' hopes to the four winds? erty:'strick~n peasants;"for whole • T~e: n"ew monstery, ,like the rupe observed 'that "a teaching Are those who have warned.lIs undeveloped societieS-will be a ,Kunsumala Ash;am (HIli o,t the suc]l as the one he, presents

about "the continuing aggressive more potent dissolve.ment I€ f Cross Retreat)•. m ~e,rala;: IS an ':' merits assent not· simply because

ambitions of wdrid' Commu­ Russian' power' ·than any sabre­ a.tt~mpt to we~ C~I:IStIan mO,nas-, of, the reasons he, offers but

nism right? Far from seeking rattling or ,all-out rearmam~nt, tlcism ·to the' tradItIons of H;It:t du also and above all beeause ~

controlled dill,W'D1ament,' should In this' ~ntext. a new effort tQ sOciety.. The monks follow, " the. .the 'charism ihat· en~'bles bim tCl

273 CENTRAL. AVE. we now set in motion a new set Atlantic wealth to work t-o Rule <?f St.. Be~~<!i.ct accordin·g,· present it.'" \

drive of, immensely expensive enlarge' the opportunities. ~f . to . stnct CIsterCIan obsely'lnCe

" B.edlfy TeachiDC'

re-arming which, could eat' up poor peoples at home ~and de­ 992-6216

and·are,the SYro-Malankl1ra rite, any margin for other intema- . veioping peoples abroad, f.r They have' adopted the saffmn Father Arrupe said tba-t i~

Honal policies-such as econom­ from being irrelevant to the robes of the local ,"holy men," very nature of the Jesuit V41­

NEW 8EDFO.~

ic assistance or new plans for . Ozech crisis, is of the very es­

~at only vegetarian foOd. and go' l'.ation means that every Jesmt

expanding trade and liquidity?> sence of the conflict .betwceca barefoot. .

"awes it ~ hims~lf" tCl penetrate Are we forced back into Il Soviet and Atlantic power. siege economy? If so, much of For Soviet power is being un- , what Pope Paul has ,pleaded for dermined from within by t~ in . the shape of international forces of freedom. In 1848,. MarX. justic;e, taxa'tion, investment and wrote that "a spectre is haunting dcvelopmeht will simply _be Europe, the .spectre of Commu­ thrust ,aside by the' deepening nism," In 1968, the spectre' cdsis of violence and fear, haunting tbe Russian Empire is the spectre of freedom, 'Vhat Have Soviets Done? The more, Western 'society But befoTeJwe ta!'e this de­ shows that in.lreedom, and with spairing view, we have to decide freedom it can solve the pt'ob-'. the real nature of tlie· Soviet lems of social jU,stice 'which action, Is it no different from Communism claims to solve; the Hitler's apparently s~milar take­ more irresistible will be the de.;' over of Czechoslovakia in the mand of Communist peoples, in­ Spring of .193,9? Are the aggres­ cluding the Russian people, .to 'Less Thon 7c A Doy sive forces'. pf totalitarianism make their own experiments in once more on the march? Will .a more open world, nothing stop them save gerferal 'We' cannot counter the chal­ war? lenge of the Czech crisis simply The answer must surely be by producing a mkror-;image of that the Czech tragedy ot J968 Russia's panic. We must return is quite different. The Czechs to. our own deepest insights of are not being "absorbed" in .the I .' jUBticeand liberty, Then per­ Soviet system. They have been h,aps we can say of ourselves, in there for 20 years' and more, the ,words of Wordsworth, ever since Hitler's frantic anti­ * .. "'Thou has great allies', . Communism opened up all East­ Toy fricnds' are. exultations, ern &ufope ,to Co~unist c~n- : "agonies ' trol. ' And love and"rrlan's tJnco-nquer­ What is happcning is. that able mind. .' the Czechs are' trying:.in a cer­ ,'0tain m'odest .way, if not. to get out', at least to be less in,They Missi,Qnory M~eting

want to combine Communism' The GAS Company win: . Ask's' Coordinoti~n

and freedom: They want to ex­ periment with social control of BRAGA (NC) -The ~venth ,,economic life. anQ private con­ 1. Provide the GAS Conveision Burner FREE annual ,Missionary Study Week, trol of per'sonal life, And this is which was attended by both' precisely what Russia is too ter" civil ~nd religious authorities, 2. Provide 'Controls ... FREE , rified to pcrmit, urged i'nstilling 'incteachers the The attack on, Czechoslovakia missionary ideal which is known 3. Inst~1I 8urller and Controls "FREE (in to be in ,the national interest. is the action ·of. panicky men in 'your own furnace)' 'the Kremlin who believe that' if - The meetings noted that many J, . .,' , . the Czech experiment· of 'free::' Portuguese missioliary teachers­ 'dom succeeds, 'it will spread not 4. Provide Service" • '. F~EE show a lack of coordinatidn 'with only to, countries with miserably' the state schools. unpopular ·governments-as .-- in It was resolved that the mis­ 5 No Ca~h Investment on Your Port Polaild or East Gel'many-but. to sions should identify themselveB Russia itself. with the development called for , And Russia, remember, has in the ·papal encyclicals and that ncver in all its history known missionary teachers should have what free constitutional govern­ .a constr'uctive awall'eness of fu­ ment means, So its leaders hav~ ture developments, without for­ I . , panicked,. This is 'dangerous, But getting the fl'uitful lessons of 155 NORTH MAIN STREET.- PHONE os 5-7111 it is the very opposite of Hitler's the past••

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Interfaith Drive. Asks Assistance for' Biaf!l'ans\

THE ANI"'!'-!':';Thurs., Sept. 19, 1968

ATLANTA (NC) - Pro­ ~nt, Catholic ancl Jewish Glrganizations here have join­ ed illl an interfaith drive to

Coote HiU in Ireland an~ then was 'named to the mission band of the Sacred Hearts Congrega­ tion. In 1955, Fattier Brennan es­ tablished .. the Holy Redeemer Parish, Chatham and during his nine years as pastor also super­ vised the construction of Our Lady of Grace Mission Church, So. Chatham. He w.as named pastor of St. Joseph's, Fairhaven in October of 1964. Mrs. Joseph C. Murray. the former Crace M. Morrissey. of Barrington, received her A.a. degree from Regis College, Wes­ ton; her M.A. from Brown Uni­ versity, !providence, and was professor of English· at Regis College. She has served as fil'st Exec~tive Secretary of the Regis College Alumni Association. She is a high school teacher in the Confraternity of Chdstian Doctrine program at St. Joseph's Parish, No. Dighton and is ac­ tive in th~ CFM movement. . She is the wife of Joseph C. Murra.r, president of the Taun­ ton Cooperative Bank and ihe mother of four children. They are: Sr. Mary Gracellen of the Sisters of J.VIercy Novitiate; Rosemary, a Cassidy High soph­ omore; Christopher. a first­ ·grader and Pau) who is in kindergarten. Bishop Connolly also an­ noufKled the members of the Advisol'y Council to the Board fOI; the coming year. They ate: . Sr. Mary Gerald, O.P., principal ,at Dominican Academy, Fall River; Sr. Lucille Champagne, CSC, principal of St. Anthony High School, New Bedford; Bro. Richard Kinery, CSC, principal at Coyle High, Taunton. Also, l\'lr. Rodney DeCecco, teacher 'at St. Patrick's School Fall River; Sr. Maureen Joseph: SUSC, principal at St. Mi­ chael's School, Fall River; Sr. Mary Nathan, RSM, principal of Holy Family School, New Bed­ ford; Sr. St. Maurice, SSJ, prin­ cipal of the Blessed Sacrament School, Fall River.

School 9.o@ rrd Continued from fage

assist innocent victims of war, famine and disease in war-torn Biafra. ." The sponsoring organizations IlIl'C the archdiocese of Atlanta. ~e Atlanta Jewish Welfare Fed­ eration and the Christian COUI,l­ cit of MetroPolitan Atlanta. a proclamation, Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. said, "The 14-month­ old civil war between Nigel'.ia and Biafra has inflicted a griev­ OWl famine on Biafra by reason of both a blockade and the widespread destruction of farm­ land It 1lI 1lI thousands of infants ',~ children have perished by l,itarvat,ion and disease in an !lct of virtual genocide against the mbe of Ibos."

In

h

Day of Glvimr The mayor said that .since an agreement has been reached be­ tween Nigeria and Biafra on Uand and air routes for relief shipments, he has proclaimed a day of praydr and a day of gi v­ li!llg for the children of Biafra. Archbishop Thomas A. Don­ ellan of Atlanta urged all mem­ bers of the archdiocese to "give wi tness to your concern over this critical 0 situation by con­ tributing to the fund for the relief of the starving children of 'lBiafra: "Join your efforts to those' of our other Christian and Jewish brothers and let us with them stretch forth· a united hand of help to those children who 4:annot help themselves. "Our common acknowledge­ ment in fa~th that God is our Father demands that we see aU men as his children and,conse­ ~uently, as our brothers. If our -faith is,alive then it must·reach into the marketplace and pro­ duce the bread which feeds these brothers when otherwise ~ey will sure,ly. die..

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'I~ECTIURES 'DOWN UNDER': U.S. astronaut Capt. Alan Bartlett Shepard, Jr., USN, tovls time off from lectures at the UniversitY.Jf Sydney, Australia, to explain the workings of a launching rocket to Ann~ Stimson, a student at United Kingdom High School, aud David Moran, a student at Marist Brothers College, Randwick, Sydney. A special -science school at the University Sydney was said. to be the largest of its kind ever organized,. and 75 per cent. of to?se, ~ttending came from Catholic high schools.

or

Humanitarblll Effon' "Confident of your generous response, I pledge our cooper­ etion to the Atlllnta Jewish Welfare E;ederation and .the Christian Council of ·Metropol-. ROME (NC)-An eye-witness' feri!1g." It said th~ hospital's· ibn Atlanta. M~y the humani­ Kwashiorkor unit-where pro­ tarian effort we share draw us report of the "nightmare" bomb­ closer not only"to the people of ing and strafing ()f a hospital in tein-deficient children are treat­ ed-suffered the most. Biafra but also to one nnother,~ Biafra has .arrived in Rome along with news that Nigerian Five Kwashiorkor children the archbishop !J3id. ." Archbishop DOnellan said war warplanes are also strafing the were killed 'outright in their is always a horrifying reality, 'feeding stations created by in­ . beds, qthers badly woundooc.-as ternational relief organizations bullets and shrapnel sprayed. but' the methodical extermina­ through the roof of the chil­ tion of innocent non-combatant to head off ,starvation there. The report stated that about dren's ward. A few children who • men, women and children sim­ 75 persons died and 270 were were able to run outside were ply defies tbi! imagination and ' shocks the oonsciimce of the injured by a Nigerian MIG cut into lit-tle,pieces. fighter th~t strafed and rocket~ world. ' . "One child, of about four years bombed ,Our Lady of Lourdes was found dead outside the "We here in Atlanta may hospital in Ihia'la, Biafra, and kitchen. Beside it was the leg never meet or come to know even a single citizen of Biafra. the nearby mar:ket and seminary. of its father, who had' been

Five hundred' children were ~arrying the child on his baCk. Nevertheless we truly, share in the tragedy of this small nation being fed at the semi,nary when '. In another place was ·the body . of a yvung -child, the head and because the suffering it faces the MIG, fighter struck. The report .on the oombing of . shoulder's intact, the rest of the is a tragedy for all men every~ . Ihiala was dated Sept. J. It iiead' b<>?~ gruesomely mangled. where. . in part:· "B'ut to suffer at a distance is "A young girl who had been "Yesterday morning at 11 lOOt enough. We must do all that visiting her little sister was we can to save the lives that He o'clock a Nigerian MIG fighter wounded in. the stomach. As she left," the archbishop·commented. made savage attac~. first on a was being carried to the casual­ nearby market, where . the I'e It is believed that this is the ty department, she begged the were at least a thousand people. first time that Catholics, Prot­ nurse to look after her little estants and, Jews in Atlanta Then on. the seminary, where

500 children were being fed, and

have cooperated in raising funds lastly it made three attacks on

ltor a' hum~~nitarian purpose. the hospital.

fAnJt~AVEN "From ner window in the

convent, Sister Maurice watched lU~A~ER fue MIG coming toward the VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope hospital and the' convent, OOMIJ'ANl'

lPaul VI has named Msgr. Gero­ llamo Prigione to be apostolic spreading a thick flame of bul- .

lIlluncio in Guatemala ancil E1 lets in every direction: '

Complete Une As it ,passed, it tl,lrne~, coming. Salvador. At the time of his to attack at tree-top level: lllomination, he was counselor of Building Materials spraying bullets and rockets at

the apostolic nunciature in Aus­ evelythi~g in its pa~h.", '

Cria. Msgr. Prigione previousl¥ a SPRING ST., 'FAIRHAVEN , Nightmare of Suffetfug

was stationed in apostolic dele~ gations in Great Britain and the The ~eport. described the

993-2611 ~wted States. bombing as H nighpnare of suf­

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6

'Florida Ordinary Says Difficulties " Test of Faith

, , '''T ') ~-Oiocese of Fall River~Thurs: Sept.19, 19C5d

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Many years ago, the Japanese writer, Anesaki, winted out that man must master the machine if he is not 00 bee-orne its slave; And, not 10lig ago, the Italian poet, Giu­ seppe Ungaretti, wrote' ,"There is a foree, the force of the machine, which leaves us ever more defenceless before its' blindness .. '. Wha,t can man do in order not to be dehuman­ ized by. the machine, to master it,. to make it morally'an instrument of progress? .. How can man feel his great-'

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TAMPA (NC)-If people I,:, are having diffiCUlty with the faith today, "whether it is the' matter of the encycli­ . cal <,on birth control) of Pope

Paul VI, or the matter' of the

Holy Eucharist, or any otha>

teaching 51f the ChurCh, it has

ness in .face of the ma~hine, derjving strength only from always 'been that way - it has

always been a test of the faith,-­ his weak flesh? Moral strength !" , Bishop Charles B. McLaughlm

The modern father of the science of cybernetics, Nor­ of St. Petersburg, Fla., said here..

bert Wiener, of the Massachusetts Ins,titute of Technology, Bishop McLaughlin urged the in discussing electronic calculators, echoes bhese V'iews and ' laity to pledge' loyalty to is ,a convinced supporter of moral values. "Our grand~ Church during a ceremony at fathers." he has said, "tasted the 'fruit of the of science, which he blessed Ii statue oil Nuestra senora de la Caridad and today this fruit hus a bitter taste in ~ur mouths; the del Cobre, 'patroness of 'Cuba, JA Angel 'with the flaming s,,'iord st~nd'8 henceforth about us St. Joseph's church here. O•• Time is short; and tIfE; hour is now ilPniinEmt when we '"Of ail the' p~blic festivalis must choose between good and eviL"" , that .I could think of, that would These men all agre~ on this 'one .thing ~ the crisis of be ' oPportune and timely,'" tb.tl this age, as the' cris'is of ~yery age, js a ~ri8'is, of man and bishop Said, "one'in honor of o\lll' Biessed Mother is by 'far the 'the need he has of true Christi~n Civiliza,tioii'; that is, the, Ireatest. It is 'only 8' short'time h'armonizing of the claims of thes-pi;ritwith materiaLwell-, aio that our Holy Father him:.. being, wi,thSQCial justice'; and'with respeCt, for' freecIoin,.and 'iJelf said to uS, "if you will ha~ the human ~rs~mality.',' ., .,' deep' faith, If yoU Will have .thai· ..... faith nourished, if you will SufI:.:; Amid all the, breakthroughs .in·scientific and techno.;'" t . , ;.c '. ,taiD ' the' Faith by -other than logical areas, man still 'has 'the :fust Of'shaping'hin).; .' " ":; .', :".; .. . . ;; . ~son; th~n gO to' Mary.', self to the ,im,ageof th(> GOO W'hO;~atled h'bn. ,'. ," "Fal,th, he' c;ontinued, :'hae , From this point: of view; he has a constant need CJf' . 'made o1Jr C~ureh great. BecaU!Jl!i renewal, of ~valuating his moral strength and weakness, Of C)Ur faith has been strong, ,it has measuring himself nQit agairist the machines' that' he uses been firm; it has not leaned but against the potential Jhat he must try'oo realize, as' a Louisville Archbishop rhoinas J'o McPonough , upon, or been holstered with reason completely. child of God a,nd a broth~r to all other men; , Offell's Advic~ to Papal Criti~s Unless man strengthens within himself tibereaelling ,Where' F&lth ~iD8 MIAMI (NC)-CriticiSm of the the operation and grace of the for good and the, avoidance of-evil then his attention to "it has a foundation in reasoJll, • Pope called "totally unwarrant­ Holy Spirit. The episcopacy' machines and 'to the things, around him is'a mere playing. .ed"here l;)y Al-chbishop Thomas ,dates back 'to apostolic times. It but there is a point beyond - with the packaging and forgetting abou,t the contents. And J. McDor&ugh of Louisville who is the. voi~e' of God among the 'Which you cannot reason," he people.' It is the leaven in the added. .''That is where faith be­ he has never and will never come to grips with"the essence, emphasized that "Christ aP­ gins--when all other structures' pointed Peter, to be His· vice­ city of God." ,- . the vital inner core, of himself. He will' never beCome the He said that, "far too often 10, and you must stand on faith , Christian gentleman that a medieval writer once spoke'~ regent, ,committing into his, hands the 'power, CYf the keys.'''' the Bishops of the, world are alone." ' HGod's servant, the world's master, and his "own man." Bishop McLaughlin noted, that "Paul today' is Peter," Areh-' being peremptorily questioned , bishop McDonough ,said, "a,nd - yet they, through a special on of the best ways to deepen truly Christ ,has said to him, charism,' have been: ch!>Sen by Catholic faith is devotion to 'Thou are Peter and upon this the Holy: Spirit to serve the Mary. Even while small, group of campus .rad'icals ~ rock I will build my Church,' and Church in positions of authority. "I pray to our Blessed Mothe!' eondemning the ao1Jing President of Col,umbia U~riversity the gates of hell shall not pre­ 'The.Bishops of this era must in­ every day to enable my faith to wiiqout s~ much as giving him the opportunity 00 get into. vail against, it.' These words cesSantly uphold the house of CI stand' firm, to keep it deeply the job, the Dean of that University was cautioning the represent a mandate. They echo God and present His unalterable rooted, to enable that faith to . for all centurieS the wilf of Him teachings no, matter what the reach out and help others, and to incoming freshmen to study campus pplirl7.icscarefuHy before who died to. save all." cost-,-no ma1tter what the sacri­ enable th'is faith to grow in me. making a comlllitment one way or the other. One would Archbishop McDonough also fice." I know that ~s the prayer of aU think that the ide:a of Stop, Look, Listen, wou,ld 'be a first-­ emphasized that ,the divine mis­ ot" us today,": he told the pre­ dominantly Spanish-speaking grade affair, and it seems strange :that men embarking o~, ' sion given to the Apostles will.' remain constant until the end of' congregation. ' ~ college career would have to be advised that one should ·time as> others assume their "If we are faithful to her Son; know what he is doing before jumping int~ a situation or ministry. she will use' us ,as instruments a politic-al commi,tmeni. He rontinued:­ to bring His ~ace into' the CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)­ Itfshows,' however, thattlte pursuit of information and "The Bishop of Rome succeeds During a general audience here world," he added. the educating to wisdum are not the same thing. Thede-, Peter and the bishops' of the Pope Paul VI assured a group of The. statue':'bl~sing ceremony , 'world are the Wlid, authentic sire to get facts and to s-tir up. activity' needs only a :facile successors of the APostles' and Czechoslovakian pilgrims' that 'followed a Mass in Latin, cele­ brated by Bishop McLaughlin. memory and a nervous spirit: The work of acquiring wis.. carry out their mission th~ougb he shares with them the trial More than 1,200 persons attend­ their country is undergoing dom, of educating judgement, of being steeped in ideas so ed the MaSS and reception for , Ulese days. ' tnat one is fully equipP"d and able to change ,the world is the bishop's first visit to· the Pope Paill said: "Your pres­ quite another matter. The latter is the work of. college. ence stresses our concern fot the parish. In an atmosphere that is characteriZed by re'8:son,· ideas situation in your country which " ", ",' ~ whol~ world speaks of ~ a MO. Ch 0 can be pursued, and evaluated and men can d~vel()p in the r.OUISVn..LE.'(NC)''"7"Enrori~ nation, undergoing a most dim':' Issionary' anges

things that will enable them to confirril what is good and ment in. Catholic' elementary' ,'cult triai. ~ " '. Ko e I land L°fe

to change what need~ _changing :and-t,o.. it ,all,'wjthresPeet;' , an~ secondary. schools in Ule, "We widerstand' your feeli~s ' r, an s I , , for the people involved. ',': ' ' , . ~uisvme . archdiocese is re­ and we ~&hare in your trial. We TEK J:UK DO' (NC) .,....:. The , . hoSpital facilities, electricity and , But it seems that aiready, ~t Columbia, at .least, the ported "' be 3,~OO to 3,500' less pray ,for you. this year tI~a.n it .was last year., "We exp~ss the hope. that -pure water' suPPlies of this sinai signs are out that a-small KrouP is bent· on a kind of, college. Two . factors 'accounting· ,for yo~r. present difficulties may , island hi' the· Yeilow 'sea Oir nihilism, a tearing down of structures with no concomitent .nea'rly half of drop are that sec­ effect the strengthening of youi' South Korea's west coast' aN offering of a worthy substitute to fill the'vatuum thus , ,ond grades in parochial schools feelings for the search of, and due to the untirin~refforts of one man.' ated. The sacred flageyf' ~caderni~ freedom is being invoked have ,enrolled about 75 per cent the certainty of, 'the 'higher spir­ He 'b Father Benedict' A. to destroy that very freedom. There is little thought that as many children as th~y did itual values of the spirit, for the last year, and that two high good sense of justice; liberty and Zweber, Maryknoll missional7" academic freedom means academic-the realm of ideas, th~ schools in the archdio~ese are peace among ,you.and' everyone, priest from Lakeville, Minn.;. °the freedom to pursu~ thought without infringing on the closed this year. and in the reawakening and the soft-spoIten man with a big . rights of others to do th~ same. ' ,., , In addition, nearly 20 per cent ,preservation of that Catholic smile, sandy thinning hair and fewer students are enrolled in faith which has been your his­ a deep tan which comes from Catholic colleges in the archdio­ tory" and which has ennobled neariy constant exposure to the cese this Fall than were en­ your national conscience and sun, wind and salt water here. rolled last year. given to your life its greatest He comes from' a family of 'nine Last Fall, five' Catholic col­ moral, force and transcendent brothers and sisters, of whom leges enrolled 4;948 ,full- and hope." six are in the religious life. A part-time students. This Fall. ' I younger brother was ordained :~~~e~~l.eges have enrolled 4,102 Name Director"~u:~~~~noll Pr!est this past

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NF.W~PAPER OF, THE DIOCESE OF FAlI.l P·,i'lER However, college spokesm,en N I A G A R.A UNIVERSITY Father Zweber makes islanCI Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ~oncede that operation of the (NC)-Father Lewis F. Bennett, , calls aboard the Gil Mo Ho, II . PUBLISHER " newly opened Jefferson Commu· , C.M.,. has been named' director' 40-foot motor alaunch he bas , 'Most Rev. James L. ConnollyI' D.O., PhD. nity College here 'has been·a of public, relations at Niagara' been Using while his own GENER ' ' " factor in freshman-level enroll'- University. He- succeeds F~ther . -a 39-ton vessei whichprov~ , AL MANA(?ER" . ASS_T.Rev GENERAL, t W·1Dt er It . was ' tGfI Rt. Rev. , Daniel f. 'Shalloo, M.A. : J h P' MA;.~.AGER ... - . I , . men,t. ' o ,Jefferson,' a', two-year, E ugene'A',",Wals'h, C;M\' recent- over thOIS, pas, , '. " .1) ,n • "f1~CO . state supported ",College; is 'ex- ly named liaison officer for ur-, old for t~e Yellow Sea's 'po,"* . , MA":IAGi~G EOITOR . ,; .. , "', :' ,: '.'. peeted to have more than 2,200 , ,ban affairs' by 'the .. city of, i»g waves',.....: is' rebuilt .. Hugh- J~;,Goldenj 'LLB. ,:" "".;", ,,' students.' . ' ,-', "',,,,:', Niagara,'Falls.,"·''' .. repla~ .. , .':." ,.,' .

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T~ ANCHOR-

Adult Educatioh At Lea Salette

Thurs., Sept. 19, 1968

7

Editor Receives Jewish Award

The La Salette S!11rine in At­ is oJlfering three cliffe!'­ en! series oil COUfS2S this Fall 03 part ox its ChristiaIll Adult' CLEVELAND (NC) - Joseph ;Education program. A. Breig, associate editor of the Opening-the sessions on Tues~ Catholic Universe Bulletin, (by, Oct. 1, Father Rene H. newspaper of the Cleveland dio­ Chabot, M.S., will give 10 eon­ cese, has been named the first £-erences on 'll'uesday evenings recipient of the Henry A. Rocker 6th the theme. Fed at the Table Memorial Fund Award, and will @:f the Word. receive a two-week trip to Is­ This two-part course will con­

rael. sider 1) the Constitution on

The awal'd is made by the Di vine Revela&n. and 2) the

Jewish Community Federation, Liturgy of the Word. Food for

and will be given annually to a thought will ~ ~athered froIq

leading Cleveland citizen. .an the documents oil the council. The award, named for a long­ with the hope thot its a~imilil'" . time president of the Park Syna­ r&lon will sbed some light on the gogue, commemorates "the ideals time •that is. now. '" of the man who served his com_ On Wednesdllly·evenings, start-: munity during his lifetime with O~ 2, Father Chaoot will olso unusual dedication." ~Ns~nt a serles of nine 'courses; Breig, who is also asscoiate' ~, Th~ Buildbig Uj]) of Ith~, editor of Family Digest, is n cpristian Community. Part, ,one, trustee of the Cleveland Heights will deal with The Individual -University Heights Public Li­ Man and Woman; part two with brary, the Cleveland Interfaith 'l'he Building llJ.J.o oJl the Buman Round Table and the Catholic € o mmunity. . Interracial Council. CONFUSED? is the title of a He holds the St. Francis de filird group of lectures to be de­ . Sales ,Award for distinguished ~ye,x;ed, \'?y ,Father!! ~eor;g~ " contribution "to the-CatholiC! Morin, 1\([.$.,. and Paul Char,bon­ , p r e s s . " ' ..:',,, nea\,\, M.S. Treating. sueh ~opi~ NUNS IN V1ETNAM: Tvrenty Sister-Nurses of varioufll,~Jllun,~~ies in ,t~ Chure'h lihirgy and conscience tiiey-hope 'to helP people' Iii" are serving in Vietnam' und~~ ~ 'Catholic Relief Services program" to, rehapilitate' refu­ every' walk :'of 1i1Ie to explore' gees and to train native personnel in social services. Here Si~ter, Helen Rei$Ch, O.S~F Of 'Proposes Controls' m~ .. i~iglim., lind mspi,tatio!#' of ,Sprilllgf~eld~ Dt»helps llllli'Djured civilian in a hospital.jn Hue."NG.,fhoto•. ',O,ver Schools that have made up-da¥n~' the M~UR/iI (NC)-'-:'The Madras' Church an exciting and, at times,' state government' is planning to painful, experience. These en­ introduce' legislation for "effec­ counters are scheduled for Mon­ tive control" of the state's, pri­ dS)' evenings; starting OCt.' 14: vate schools, Education Minister 'Further information and reg';' V.R: Nedunchezhian has de­ : I: tstratio'n procedures can be had' c:1;u:E:d. by writing to' the Director Of .;:BOSTON '(NC) .- In a' new c1~ of Vatican C~uncilII and emonr" witharc::hbisho~s and The ministers said here that Adult Education, La Salette ceremoriial rite, Awdliary Bish-' involves a number' of changes' bishops, priests and Religious the state government proposes' to Shrine, Attlehoro. op Daniel A. Cronin of Boston in the traditional rite in the in­ and hundreds of the laity amend the Educational Rubis "so as ,to bring under effective Wll,!i ,ordained to the episcopate terest of brevity, simplicity and present. Thursday at Holy Cross cathe­ The bishop's brother, Joseph government control privately an effort to avoid duplication, Pope Urges Priests

dral here. ' D. Cronin, served as lector at managed educational institUtiOll1l Msgr. J.YIulcaby explained. Assist Seminarians

The ritual. was performoo by the Mass. His mother and father, in the state." ,Bishop, Cronin, the archdio­ Nedun~hezhian pointed out VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Richard Cardinal Cushing as cese's fourth auxiliary bishop, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Cronin; priests of today must Il9Sist consecrator and AUJdliary Bisb­ was appointed by Pope :Paul VI his brothers, Robert P. and that at present the government, ops Jeremiah F. Minihan and on June 12. The ,40-year-old Peter J. Cronin, and nephews, which paid financial grants to seminarians, the priests of to­ Daniel G. Cronin, the schools, had no effective morrow, by firm faith, Pope Thomas J. Riley of Boston as co­ prelate, a native of Newton, was Robert P. Paul VI, told a group of French consecrators. ordained to the priesthood in. participated in the offertory control over their operation or management. priests who visited him. ' ,Explaining use of the term Rome on Dec. 20, 1952. He procession. Asked whether nationalizatioD Speaking to priest graduates' "ordination" instead of "conse­ served at parishes in Salisbury, of private schools, was contem­ of the Pontifka1 French semi­ cration" for the ceremony, Msgr Lynn and Waltham until 1957, Governor Approves plated, the 'minister said that nary in Rome led. by Joseph John J. Mulcahy, archdiocesan when he was assigned to the, such a step is not feasible "at Cardinal Lefebvre of Bourges,' master of ceremonies said: "This apostolic nunciature in Ethiopia Good Samalritan Bill :,TRENTON (NC)-Gov. Rich~ present," because it would m­ Pope Paul said: ' . as a secretary. Since 1961 he has change was made from the view­ volve a huge investment. . "Your yowng brothers who point of uni~. The phrase been attached. to the Secretariat ard J. Hughes has signed into law I1he Good Samaritan bill are preparing themselves for 'Ordination of a Bishop' helps of State at the Vatican. The. cathedral was filled to pass~ by the New Jersey leg­ the priesthood carry within iIlo project a more 'uniform islature, granting immunity to themselves needs and require­ phraseology as regards the three overflowing for the unusual cer­ persons rendering emergency ments which nt would be foolish major orders of diaconate, preS­ care to victims at the scene 'of rto ignore. Has not the Church byterate (priesthood), and epis­ Co~secorate, linstall an accident. herself justly proved the neceil.; copate." , ,The law extends legal protec­ tJity of a conciliar renewal? 'The ceremony, used for the t(on proVided to licensed prac­ cannot ignore that path to be first time in this archdiocese; Broolldyn Bnshop BROOKLYN (NC)-In color­ titioners by the 1963 Good Sa­ followed, certainly difficult, has been fonnulated. since the ful and updated ceremonies, maritan Act to all individuals. which reveals its~lf to us and Bishop Francis J. Mugavero was ProPQnents of the new law which requires resPQnsible peK'­ installed and consecrated as the claimed some people by-pass ac­ enns with ,0 discerning .wisdom Sc~[)'es hlfrimiid@ts@r!"rn, 365 NORTH FRONT STREETi. fifth, spiritual leader of the ¢4~nt victims rather than assist Illnd a prduent audacity 0 (> .. NIEW BEDfORD Brooklyn diocese. CtciQ'h@~;c ~@[?l®U' "Seminarians expect of you a becau~ they fear be!ng, sued , , ' , t ,Bishop Mugavero was install­ ll)f(~therly openness and at, the for injuries that might be at­ NEW YORK (NC) -A state­ 9fi'2-SS34 " , Game time a firmness 'in' faith ment issued mt Catholic Pre5$ ed in a public rite at St. Jaffies tributable to the emergency pro-cathedral before ,clergy, Re., vy~'i,c,h ,~'i~l ,gi~e the,m'~ru~:t,,'s~ Assodation headquarters here add' they 'rendered. '~~ :remtyan(f ,motiva~ion. With, de&110res' 'efforts, to "intimidate ligipUS and, ,laity representing ',' your contact, yo.u g'~asij' the the" Central California' Register each padskt ,and organization' in n~e~it:r, for 'a' ser;io'us tlu~ol'o~:" ahd 'its ,advertiserS bec~use of' the diocese. :, I ,.. The con,secration ceremony: ieal effort which does no! ,i~~ thE!' stand 'the diocesan news': more the living tradition of 'the paper has taken' in .deferise. 6£ tOiOk place in the, larger QUI:' Church, 'nor a deep interior 'life, strikin'g farm 'workers 'in the Lady of :Perpe~ual Help church, w~ere ,3,533 persons, including but, 'which :Is derived from the Delano, Calif., ~rea. ' :, mQre, than 5'0 bishops -witnessed authentic sources of grace and 'The newspaper' of the Fresno the raising of the new bishop to 1,: £rom an illuminoo seal which and Monterey dioceses published gives witness to Christ in the statements by Catholic bishops; the fullness of the priesthood. world and which edifies by pa­ defending the right. of the grape tience the' community of the vineyard workers to organize a baptized. This is the'hope of the unioill, and an interview with ~e Church." Cesar Chavez, union leader, concerning the objectives of the Science Center long-drawn out dispute. The ERIE (NC)-FoW' Erie firm~ paper also published an inter­ !have been awarded contracts for view with 11 representative of construction of $5.2 milllon the growers, giving their side of the controversy. lSCience center at Gannon Col­ lege here .Msgr. Wilfred J. Nasn; The intimidation efforts have College president, said the four­ been made by a group' of farm PRINTED AND MAILED ~tOrY. center provide modern 'o/0rkers who side with the Classl'09ms n:n:d ~oborotories for growers and opPQse ,a union. Write or Phone 672..1322 ' njechanical engineering, physics T;~s group has been p~cketing rin'ci chemistry; as well as alloW':' ~ta~~is}lIments of 3dvertisers.n,. 234 Second Street - Fall, River pett~ .b.~king log foi-"enlargement of G,!~oP,;\l the Catholic newsp;;lper, in, the two dioceses. ' . c:olWluter center. ~ro

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. '9, '968

Srings Response

leather Styles Top fashion

WASHINGTON' (NC) - ~.. Works of Peace, foreign re arm of the National Council . Catholic Women, has receiv .. some $65,000 in donations sinCl2l the beginning of August in reo sponse to an appeal to aid sta~ · ing children in Biafra. The funds which came f~ 3,000 persons of all ages amt walks of life comprised on&. third of the total contributioJlll received by the Works of Peace during the yea'r,' according to • NCCW announcement. The money will be used -.' buy high protein food for ch~ dren to be distributed in Biafra by Catholic Relief Services anc1 International ea'ritas. The Works of Peace admhlJ,o islers foster-child (Help-a-Chi_: and fos~er-family· (Help".a-FalJlJol · ily) programs mainly in the FaGIl East and in Latin America. MIt Mildonna Plan provides voea,. · tional, nutritional and child ca", ,training for' 'young· women hi Asia, Africa and Latin Ameri~

·

Lists for Fait Winter \;

By M'aJriBYIll Roderick

Fan '68 may well go down in fashion history as the year the gals stole the skins right off the animals' backs. Never have there been so many leather, suede or related materials (real or fake) used in glamourous outfits. Suede eoats, like cashmere, always seemed lovely to the touch shine, sheen and softness of the used in them. Handbags but they lacked that some­ leather still swing from the shoulder thing extra that spelled chic. but they too are a bit larger

This season chic is not lacking than last season (a feature I and many top designers are adore). Many are antiqued or lending the i r have the wild:jungle look of a time and talents tote Frank Buck. wo~ld have 'Iio the promotion earrled. of designs JJ).ade Boots Important of these mate­ JiaIs. Many Boots· (we' in cold "New En­ aresse8 are made gland give $hanks) are just ~ SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS: FreSihmen. at St. Anne;s .et pigskin· in important as they have ,~n fo.r Hospital School of Nursing, Fall River, receive scholar­ IIIOft delectable the past'three seasons. They are .hades and high, higher and very very high ship awards from alumnae association., From left, Rose­ mary Braga, Fall River, recipient of a partial'grant; Diane

teamed .with but above an they are hand­ wide industrial

some,' warm, and' the perfect St.' Laurent, F'aH River, partial; Miss Marge Fit-ta, R.N. Ilip p er sand ending to a costume look. The and Mrs. Lorraine Rapo8a, R.N. of the alumnae; 'Grace Diocese Participates metal catches midi coats cry out for them, the in Project Equality that look as if they belong on mini skirts look complete with Roy, Maine, full g,rant; Diane Beaudoin, Norlh Westport, PITTSBURGH (NC) - '.I'Jie. the scholarship award commit­ partial. Mrs. Raposa heads luggage; they are .truly eye­ · them and even we ,middle-aged Pittsburgh diocese is one of M eatching. Weskits and vests aTe matrons find them smashingly tee. :religious instltutions pledging. -~ing wooed away from men's · warm and stylish for our battle iis multi-million dollar purchas­ closets and completely adopted against the rigors of a Massa-

ing power to equal opportuni~ AY ..t he ladies. · ehusetts Winter. . " .

in all aspects of employment as,', Only $235 If you want toiry your hand Project Equality of Westem Georgetown University to Admit Women A· darling little college girl atoreating leather fashio~s for Pennsylvania, Inc., announced yourself (instead of' paying who'waited on me in Boston the 1nto College of Arts,. Sciences its :formal launching' here. other day was wearing a vest Samuel Robert prices), leather Project Equality, the' nation­ WASHINGTON (NC)-George- women play interchangeable wide interfaith program spon­ from the store's more expensive can be bought by ·the ya'rd and ''tis said that it sews easily. The town University, the nation's roles in many professions." eollection of skins. It was com­ sored by the National, CatolJ$ Also, a new $6 million library, Conference for Interracial Jus­ pletely lined and outlined in only thing, is keep your pattern oldest Catholic higher learning simple and try not to pin inside institution, will break a 179- scheduled for completion in 1969, · tice with headquarters in Chi­ curly lamb and had been de­ signed by Samuel Robert to sen the seamline even for cutting. year tradition an~ allow women . will allow Georgetown to handle cago, places the purchasing Some ·pattern makerS recom­ ·into its ali-male College of arts a larger student en-i'ollment, Fa­ for $235. power of religious organizatiooo fller Davis noted, adding: "We behind a drive for fair emplo)"-o Mr. Robert has also done some mend using tape instead Of pins and sciences next. Fall. Father Royden B. Davis, S.J., .simply did not have the aca­ very lovely items in leather and to keep the pattern pieees toment practiceS. fJUede for Bonwit Teller's Safari · gether, and thus avoid piu eollege dean, said the. univer- demic facilities for more 'stu­ The program insists that ali marks~ Room. Most of the jumpers, sity's board of directors approved dents before this time." firms doing business with paP­ An added note 110 the- home 1he decision to admit women skirts, vests and coats are more The present library, located in ticipating religious jurisdictiollO ftasonably priced than the sewer, or the would· be one: to the college in the 1969-70 ac- .the Healy Building on the main · main·tain a strict policy of non­ Jamb-trimmed weskit.' In fact, Channel 2 is offering a very ademic year. The change, made campus, will' be convened in. disCrimination in hiring an4 mex,t 'to Pierre Cardin's prices tfOOd sewing . progr~m. every ·after· consultation with faculty part to Classroom space next purchasing.

Tuesday evening at 6:30. The members and students, means all year. "

for· his suede suits, Samuel Ro­ bert looks like a designer for the instructor is gearing her show 10 schools of Georgetown, con-· '!'he college annually' enrolIs for the basic 'beginner, but even ·ducted by the Jesuits, will be .about 1,600· of Georgetown's working woman. Even if Florida is not your to those of us who have sewed open to co-e~s. total enrollment ot' some 7,500, Winter playground and Europ,e for a while, refresher course Founded in 1789, 'Georgetown students. It offers majors in' bi­ ;your Summer one; and even if is always' welcome. 'was an all-male institution until ' ology, chemistry, classics, eco­ you have to be a plain old work­ No matter whether you buy 1898 when a co-ed· was admitted nomics, English, fine arts, gov­ ing girl to keep that wolf. (or your leather by the yard GlIJl' off· 10 the school of medicine. The ernment, history, mathematics, mortgage collector from your the drawing boards of. ~. great 8cllool of nursing was founded modern languages,' philosophy, 94 TREMONT STREET dOOr), 'one item of leather can designer, ~s is the year of style . in 1903, but women were not physics, psychology and' theol­ iAUNTON~ MASS. ar8ce your wardr.obe. in skins. , eommon in other schools until ogy. ~any top designers are selling . Tel. 822-0621 rUle 1940s. Full scholarships for '-.-IJ " *ady-to-wear lines this season women were not g.ranted until Vietnam Bishop and. 'even a' designer's leather Assignment of Priests .' the 1950s. eoat (not fur trimmed) can be SAIGON (NC)-Father ~ames New Library piCked up for about $165. This, Bishop's Prerogative Nguyen van Mau has been con­ Father Davis said women are may be quite a bit of change to 'BUFFALO (NC) -An inde­ secrated bishop of Vinh Long spend' for a coat this Winter but pendent lay organization called being admitted ~ the college by Archbishop Angelo Palmas, a year now because "the old European Apostolic Dele~te for 'Vietnam the fun of wearing a designer's "Vox Populi" has been organ­ TERM DEPOSIT CERTIFICATES· idea and workmanship is worth ized to encourage Catholic laity idea of separate education for and Camoo9ia. tha,t little bit extra to make you to "speak out"-in either dissent ,the sexes is outmoded. Men and Daily Interest

feel that little bit extra. or affirmation-over the recent Units of $1000,

Leather isn't confined to transfer of seven priests who'· C BD P t" t One Year Maturity

oDleges or ~clpa e clothes alone - 'accessories are d.iffer with Pope Paul VI's birthvery important, especially wh~n control encyclical. 1111 Research Trai:ning they have the richness of Theodore Callisto, vice-presiWASHINGTON (NC)-Three workmanship found only in hide dent .of the diocesan CFM, said Jesuit institutions-Boston Col­ or tanned skin, Belts are wide he and Francis Greune, the pres- . lege; Fordham University, and and metal buckled; but their in­ ident, tried to set up an appoint- . Loyola University; Chicago _ trinsic l?_eauty comes from the Bank by Mail.

ment with the bishop to discuss ,are among U. S. institutions of we pay .the postage ,

the transfers, but said they were higher learning partici-pating· in S,CiI. ys Elbow-Be'nding told by an assistant chanceilor . a .program designed to help that "priest assignments·are not . overcome the nation's shortage • SOUTH YARMOUTH • HYANNIS Cal!Ses. Cqlh,Jses the bUsiness of the people of the ,of educational researchers,' the • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PlAZA SEATTLE ,(NC) -~Dr. Nola 'diOcese or the CFM." . . U. S. Office of Education, De• DENNIS PORT . ,.'OSTERVILLE Moore told a meeting of physiIn the meariti~e, two couples ,pa~ent of Health, Education, clans and other medical ~r- who belong to the CFM have and Welfare, announced here. sonnel at Seattle University's publicly resigned .fromthe.orMore th<m 300 graduate stu- ~1II111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111I1111I11111I11I1111I11II11II1111I11II11I11I11111111111111111II11I11I11IJg institute on alcoholism that the 'ganization .because , they "vio- dents have completed advanced = . . . . .. = addictive drinker can often be lently object" to· the positions training and joined the research ~=_== TH E . ~" _=_

identified by a callus developed taken by the, Greunes and Cal-· community during the pro. . =

em his "drinking arm." listos. One of the couples, Mr. gram's first ,two years, the Edu- ,-LOBSTER

Dr. Moore provides necessary· and Mrs. Robert Jacobi, former cation Office reported. .§ BOAT f@ , medical care for elbow-benders president. couple' of . St. BeneIn addition" more than 3,000 -, §_=s i§=== who land in Seattle's city jail di<;t's parish in the )3uffalo llub- persons' with . research· back~ "drunk tank." He said a diag- urb of Eggertsville, said: grounds, including personnel of = nosis .of the addicted drinker is .."We and' many'. other CFM state education. agencies, local ,§ IN', . not easy, but there are certain oouples we know support 'the school systems,. and: other organ-' . § typical indications - uncoordi- bishop in this matter. We accept izations, .have ,received special "5 I nated muscular action, frequent the right of priests to dissent as training to update or improve '§ .. cuts and abrasions from falling, individuals. However, we' can .. their. skills in educational re- '5 5 ' ·wounds received in brawls, and, notaecept the right of those search and development, the Ed- '§ UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN "'.' Tel. 997.9358 f@ . '., ~ c~urse, ,the c~l~u~s, " ., , .P!!e~t.Il .110 ~~,A~ens.i~'! " ~ ~ti9n Pn~~, saicJ...·,'.iuIlUllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllilllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIHIIIIJlHmlmlHlmllllnnlllllilllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIlIIIIum

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Smens Bring: Back' Childhood ,

9

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Sept. 19, 1968

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Francisc;an Nuns' To Reorgonize

Memories to, Grown-Ups By Joseph and MariHyllU Rooerick

. WHEATON (NC) - A new -ecclesial" community structure £01' the' U.s. province of Fran­ irees for this year and althou.gh we will IWt have mucll ciscan Sist-ers, Daughters of the to spare, we are looking f9rward to years of production Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary ahead. Our total harvest was olne delicious apple, three (Wheaton Franclscan Sisters), has been announced-here in Ill­ peaches, one pear and four inois by Sister Dolorine Barta, plums, a total of about 00 are based' qm a remembered provincial directress, leents worth of fruit. odor. Tille new direction of the order Three of our trees were Childhood Memories I used to love the smell of a will be a "return to ecclesia," lInproductive but are only two damp ce1h:lr (today, J,f our cel1ai'B or early Christian community, ife8"fS, old so it may take' a few , a're damp, we rush out and buy , defined "the assembly of the Ilnore y~ars before we get much .., a dehumidifier) or wet paint. , brethren U1lited through love,'" ~ a ~lIrvest from them. In ~e' Pine Si:ent still conjures up exSister Dolorine said. llneantmle some of our older" "t h I'd ' . 'd .... h uld tart t d" qU1S1 e 0 1 ay VISIOns an even The new stJ:'ucture was 'ap~' "",ees s o . s ,0 pro uce to 'this day if lean find a mo­ proved during an assembly con':' lmore' heaVIly, haVIng b&rne ' , " f 't tte h littl':': mept of alonepess WIth the ducted at Our Lad;r of Ang7.~S', some ,rUl , no ~ r o~ , ,~, Christmas tree I' sit very quietly motherbouse ~ere, ,initiating, a W!:lil' w~ will continue to ~d 'one " next to it, inhale deeply, and n~w stage of developmen,t in 'foe !D:l' two ~warf trees 'a y~~. ," close my eyes to'''float back to ptogram ,of renewa;l and evaNa';"' Id0llJ flor Citv ' , my happy" childhood ,Cbrist-' tion begun by Sister Dolorine Dwarf trees are ideal for' ~ .. mases. Freshly spread 'tar was imediately after !her election in Bmall city garden. We have sev- another childhood smell I re­ October, 1966. eml trees in the yard which at- member well for when we were Sister Dolorine said "formerly, ~at:t every child within sight, cllildren the' first hint of tar our order was structured 'like a 90 that we 'are constantly anin the air was an invitation to pyrami,!, with a base of workers swering the &ol"bell to find sev- find the tar truck and get a " , looking up ·to the authority of a erol little ones on our doorste~ nice big, hunk of black tar ~ FRIENDS OF ST. ANNE'S:,Miss Anne Kiencke"een-, leader, at the ,top'..From now looking for fruit. We enjoy giv- mew on. I don't know w~ether Ing ,fruit to the children but it is it very sanitary or particu" 'ter, assistant probation officer in Bristol County andgllel!lt' o~', it w.il1 be stroctu:red as a • -constant BOUl'Ce of ~ . lady good for us, but I dicil enAl 'd V" 3eft, " eucle, With alll members at the . I d 'b 'M speak er, IS w~ coone y ~~':: "ex'an ~~ ezma,. J " " same level." , . ' have to leave what 100 are', joy it. ­ Sister Dolorine formerly was doing to pick it for them. With, Joe's memorle3 of Ch.ildhood and Mrs. AlOYSlUS. J. KE'arns, n.ght~ tit? the:fIrst m~tmg of" dwarf trees, this problem is less odors are more countrified than the year of the FrIends 0-4; St. Anne S HOSPItal. Mother Dolorine, provincial su-' likely, to occur., ' ,I mine. He speaks of burning perior. Titles suCbos" Mother" Dwarf trees need Winter pm- 'leaves 'and warm'" toma~ and "Superior" have beeIl elim­ tect.ion against winds since they , ripening on the vineo intihe , inated In' the new ocllegial-type are not deeply rooted and heavy' yard. Gingerbread and freslil7 organization. ~ds ean'take their toll. It is baked cookies are lJIlso tops ,on ' • simp.le matter to drive. two ",~s list of happy thougiht odors. , ,NationaIWomen'~ C:0l:'ncil ,OQnation Provides stokes mto the ground em ~, Melissa and Meryl's list c o n t a i n s ' , Pope, Donates 'School' aide of the tree trunk and w;e I mostly things to eat: Grand1:Da's Funds to Airlift S,upplies to.Biafra Small leng~ of rubber ~i.ng ehicken, N~na's applesauce and. ,To Castelgandolfo through which some chain has "Ob yes, Mommy, your cookies." NEW YORK (NC)-Catholie 'drops as another method 'of CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)­ been threaded, for support. Tiili.s !If I were a betting woman I Relief Services here in United bringing increasJd aid to suffer- Pope Paul VI has inaugurated keeps the tree from swaying Wl- would wager that everyone's states has airlifted 24 tons of ing Biafraos in the blockaded' an ,elementary school building necessarily when the winds be- would contain at least one bah:- high-protein foods, plasma and area. here that he will donat2 to the gin to blow and serves it as un ing odor that:was wafted to their medicines, valued at $97,000 to The supplies left John F. Ken- citizens of this town.. anchor. smell buds, to start their stOm- aid the starving people of Biafra. nedy International Airport for Built on land given by Prince We also wrap our smali Ilrees neh juices working. In a way we Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, Amsterdam where 11 more tons Alessandro Torlonia"assistant to 00 that rabbits won't have the owe it to our children to fill executive director ,of the U.S. of CRS supplies valued at $47,- the papal throne, :the building opportunity to feed on the their memories with the delight- Catholic overseas relief agency 300, will»e add~. The 35 ton$ consists of 15 training class­ you~g bark.. D.warf trees, ~ , ful aromas ot good things iCOok- reported the, airlift, !Deluded ; were flow.n fr?m Amsterd~m to rooms, six professional training particularly subject to strippmg mg, and 11 house filled with ~ 200 pre-packed parachutes ,a,t- ,t Sa\l! ',l'~me, the Portuguese ;t.Slan~ , classrooms, a chapel, a healtA, b;r animals because. they are wartnthof home baking'. ' " , tache rl to relief supplies totaling" of th~ ,wes~ coast of Afrfca, from ' care center and il gynasium. nither tender nnd easy to cret to. Here's a cookie recipe to fin ' r . 'wh,e~, supplies ,are ,air-sputtl~d " 'l'.b1s wra.pping process takes ,your kitchen with wonderful' three an~ one-half., tons. The~e 'Dight~y intO the blockaded re- , ~ut five minutes per tree and , smells "on' a nice' brisk Autumn" are the first of 1,000 parachutes, ' ,.", " ',., ' ,', , lIsi well worth the llttle ,effort 'day: ' CBS is planDing to use iA ,~r.,." g.t~~re than $75,000 in donati~ , mvolved, bec:ause once a tree , Cbmamon Discs ,,', 'from 'sff:ilia,teS Of the Natlrinili b$B been stripped, ~ ia: 1% CupS'sifted floull' " Rules Against State .,,' CoUiIci!I" of' Catholic Women' nothing you can do to' brine it I 1:- teaspoon baking powder ' , ' made 'possible the 'purcb&se" of ' JNkk. ' ,~ te~poon salt ' "Bid to Run School " suPPlies 'for 'this airlift as well' ' Looking forward to the Sp.rdng. Ik alP soft margarine :CALCUTTA (NC)--'TheW~si',' as the un~erwriting of 'Uie ' ~ will prune Geveral of our 1 eIlP granulated sugar Berigal high court here has nded ,~artered.,flight The Cath­ trees verT lightly, t3ldng out 1I. egg, beaten tbatthe state govemmenthlid Glic ~edical MiSSIon Board {}f those brnnehes which will BOt 1 teaspoon vanilla extz-acl " DO right to Interfere in the op": " Ne~ York and World Medica1 be' capable of SllPporting fruit "'Cup finely chopped nuta eration of a 'Salesian-owned Reh7f of Detroit al~o donated' ehould the tree bear. We stress 1 teaspoon cinnamon , polytechnic sChool. portions of the supphes. the wood lightly, because too i) Sift together 1i:le fiou.r, _.~~~.. tanl fnJit '1'he ruling came in a writ peIIevere p'''-'''' may re . baking powder, salt. / titian of the Don Bosco Poly­ production. We wil1l nlso ~rti2) Mix, until crea......, the 1_ ....., technic: school at Cossipore chal- Iize our be a ri ng t rees 11ght.." margarine, sugar, egg and va- " here again stressing lightly, be- nilla. !enging' a government order ap­ &..rtili za t·IOn may....... ft'_ TH~ cause over-...", 3) Mix the flour mix.ture into pointing its "governing body." !retard production. the creamed ingredients and reThe court declared that govIa the Kitchen irigerate until it's easy to handle. ernment interference wi$b an invite yoU to ~sit 'I'oday in c:Inss I was discuss4) Shape level tablespocns of 'institution belonging to a miIng with JQJ' students the dif- , dough into balls,:and roll lin the ,norityviolated the Indian eoo.~ fusion of molecules anci bow ' nuts and cinnamon. Arrange em' stitution which states that an they travel through the air. To·' a l:reased eookieshee~2" ajl)3ri minorities "shall have the right IIllWltrate 'this theory I ~ , and bake in a 375° oven :for 15 to establish and administer edu­ perfume In the front at. the minutes. eational institutions of, their classroom and when the odor choice." was finall7 wafted to these in led China 'Foreigners The three-member governing A lovely ColoniaJ6 room 'ranch -garage - eomer the back 'seats, they were able 1_ 'Precar:ous -S'totus body was set up by the govem­ to Wlderstand the "case of the"" ment, then controlled by a located in Waa..1 Hills on Diamond Hill Road, Woonsoc~et, Goating moleclues." HONG KONG ··{NC)-Possi- l'4arxist-dominated coalition, foljust below Walnut Hill P"aza. ,for just $LOO it oould be ywrs AJ; we were discussing the exbly the most expendable human lowing the Salesians' refusal to periment, one little boy raised ttnit in China today is the group tum over the five-year-old on November 16. Built by Alphag~ Ferland and Sons. bis hand ond inquired if the Gf 39 foreign residents in Peking school to an, administrator lDdors that come from biB who work for, or 'are used by, ,Damed' by the education depart­ HOUSE BEAUTIFUL is open daily from 1 P.M. until dusk, another's cooking at home came the Chinese' authorities. ment. from molecules floating, from A -eatalogue of ~eir current 'rainy ,days excepted. ' ifthe.oven to his nostrils., Well, status, prepared an<ll privately one thing led to another and the circulated by a reliable resarch talk turned away from sciim~ group here, reveals howpreca­ ,. the delicious smells that come riouS their position is. INSURANCE AGENCY. INC out of kHchens. Predominating' in Peking's DIRECTIONS: One little girl' spoke of the 'foreign set are American, 'Brit­ 96 WILliAM STREET ' smeli of vanilla in her mother's ish and New. Zealand writers. 'Drive "North from Pawtucket or Providence on Diamond "NEW ~EDFORD.·MASS. bread',' pudding, while another Most of them have been .in' 't:fill Road, Route 114; continue ,to ,i~~t before Walnut Hill mentioned the aroma of bakin~ China for more than 18 years 998-515.3 997-9167 "Shopping Plaza. bread;' and it brought to IDF lind have been employed by PERSONAL soviet: .ind the thought that many of Qhinese publishing and radio -.r happy C$i14hqod ~emorieil ,broadcasting authoriije,'i.

We have reaped our harv'est of fruit from our dwarf

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SIST,ERS OFME:RCY

House Beautiful

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DONAT BOISVERT


10

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. 'Sept.19, 196&

-

SPECIAL LIMITED, ENROLLMENT FOR EXTRA 'CASH BENEFITS EXPIRES MIDN!GHT~.•..OCTOBER 20. 1/968 . ' .

.

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.......

NOW-FOR CATHOLICS OF·ALL AGES AND CATHOLIC FAMILIES'.OEALL SIZES~ .' ~

,

'

,

Ne~'rHospital Plan for Catholics pays ~xtra cash direct

to you-'

in ad~itiont() any other insurance-group, ,jndividua~ or Me~ic,ar~~

.. :'ta:x-fr~e~ 'extra cash to yseas \:, . yq,,- pleasel:

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$10",'0"", "

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hospitanzed(see~I;~la;'s~t rjg~~) , .... .,.... .. . .; ;

.M

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a week while your wife is hospitali,zed (SeeAII.~amilyandHusband·Wife'plans at right)

l

'hpspit'aIi2ed' ,,

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":(See AII·famHy and pne~Parent Familyplans'atright) I,'"

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~500 ~

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acciden,taldeath-benefiit .}

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(Payable on all plans. See details at right)

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REGARDLESS OF YOU~ AGE OR .THE SIZE 'OF YOUR ,FAMILY YOU CANiENROLl'.f:OR ONLy,$1.00

,l.PARENT FAMILY PLAN '$7,500 MAXIMUM

ALL·FAMILVPLANI ',."

;,;' . -it ,': -. $10,POO MAXIMUM .' ~; .t "/ ($14.28 PA~S YOU: $~OO weekiy· dally) extra cash

'~!ti,:,1"

PAYS YOU: $100 weekly ' ($14.28 daily) extra cash ~ " ...:...­ income while you are hos­ pitalized. $50 weekly ($7.14 dally) for each eligible 'child hospitalized. 1I

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HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN' $7,500 MAXIMUM

_

T'his~~~ld\'wei~ h~:

l/you,-as llUsballd, father and breadwi,,-' ner are suddenly hospitalized, your income stops; your expenses go up. Even jf you . l'!ave some kind of "salary insurance" it prob~lb.lY w<1n't come close to replacing, your full-time pay.llyour wife is suddenly hospitalized, who wiJI1~ok after the fam­ ily, do. the laundry, the marketing, the ~Ieaning? You may' have to fake time off .. from your job-or, hire domestic help. If , one 01 your clrildrm is hospitalized" you'll certainly, spare no expense.!I you're a Sell­

the most imp~rtant news you've neard in years! Now ,you may enjoy a special low-cost health protec­ ior. citiien; with 'limited resen'es, and are tion ,plan that'pays,Uextra,cash" direct to,' llO,spitalized, ~ven" with Medicare, where yOIl when, unexpected sickness or accident, , will 'the ','extra" money you, need 'come llospitali,zes you Qr ,a, member ,of, yqur, from?, '" familY! 0 ' Without any, extra, cash protection In ,MutuaJProtectiveJnsurance,Company, , ,case of a hospital emergency, debts may be sp,ecia)jziJ'!8 in health,insurance fOf ,Cath:o: inculTed,:,savings may be' lost; peace ofolics for over 35,ye~rs, has created ~ br(ll/d­ mi!ld ml,\y be shattered-and even recovery', lIew health plan -especially for Catholics can be seriously delayed. . ' like yourself,...the HOSPITAL PLAN FOR How The Plan Protects You And

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"Try" This Plan For Only $1 You can a~tually "try" the plan under 81

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For only $1.00, you can e'llfoll yourself

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wit!lQllt !laving to see a company represen-, _alive. anti without any red tape whatsoever ':"dui:irig this limited enrollment period. i "And/ after you receive your policy,

if

jor,:aliy reason you aeCide J'Oll dim't,want' it, )'011 'may return it within 10 days'mld ;ro!lr dollarOl'vill 'be pr01;lptly relimdfd!' ;. "Why You 'Need The Hospital Plan For,

. 'Catholics In Addition To Ordinary

- H~alth Insuran'ce ' '

illatier what ot;,er insurance 'jou 1I0W carry, it simply WOll't cover every__ 'hing! ' , . :Because

110

Now, wiSh the unique protection of the Hospital Plan fot Catholics you can avoid ,these worries....,;because YOlI can be assured of extTl! cash iI/come ",hen you or ;lOy cOv·' cred .family member goes to the hospital­ to help keep you out of debt, to help keep your savings intact, to speed recovery by' easing,your.worried mind! No mattcrJlow large your family, no matter what YO~lrage , o'r occupation and witliollt. mly'other qilQl- ' , ificatiolls, whatsoever, you' can choose any , of the lour low-~ost pJaris shown at riglit, . In addition to, the important cash bene­ fits, 'you get all these valuable ·~extra"· features': '

Your "Health· Bank Account"

Here's a wonderf1ll1 bendit, no matter' which plan yot! choose,.almost like an' ex­ , Think for a moment-in these days of,· tra "Bank -Account." When your policy is rising medical costs, would your preseilt issued, your insurance provides up to insurance cover all your hospital bills? All . $W,OOO, $7,500 or $5,OOO-according to your surgical and in-hospital doctor's bills? ' the Plan you choose. This is YOllr ';Heal,h~ All the medicines, drugs,su'pplies and the Bank Account." Then, every month your Dlany other extras? Probably not•. policy is in force, an amount equal to your And even if all your medical and hospi­ regular monthly premium' (includirig your tal bills were covered, what about all your first month) is actually added to your max'­ other ~xpenses-the,bills that keep piling imum! ,When you have claims, your bene- ' up at home-':the tremendous and costly up­ , fits are sj'Ill~ly sub~racted from your "ac­ set to your .budget, your 'reserves and your . , \ family l i f e ? : . ' . (Cotl/in/led on next pa8~J

"

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Now, during this Limited EnrolU~ ~ ment Period, you can enroll Y~,ur· self and all' eligible members of .your faml'Y with no red tape anell Without any qualifications, what•. -.ever-but you must mail your l.troHment F<l)rm 'no later thalli Midnight, 'October' 20, 19681, , , "

.• income while y'ou are hos­ pitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) while your wife is .hospitalized: $50 weekly ($7.14 daily) for each eligible child'hospitalized. If yours is a yo\mg 8rowing fainily, we iee- If you are the only parent Jiving with your ommend the AI/~Fam'j[y Plan. You and your cbildren, we suggest the Oile-Parent Family wife are' covered at once for accidents, for Plan. This covers you and all eligible chilo 'sicknesses which begin after your pOlicy is dren living at home between 3 months of .30' days old, and for maternity benefits after age and'under 19. Under this plan, of c0l;lrse, you'r poiicy has been in force for 10 months. ' 'future additions ate not included since no And 'all ,your unmarried dependent children ' maternity benefit is provided in the One· between 3- months of age aJ!l1 under 19 are Parent Family Plan• . included at 110 extra cost as tong as they Jive " You pay only' $5.95 a month and you at home. (Tbis includeS not only your-pres­ get your, first month for only $1.001 ent children but any future additions.) , You pay only $7.95 a month and you INDIVIDUAL PLAN get your first month for only $1.001

a wee~for 'e~ch~eligible~c'hild

,

suns YOU BEST

CHOOSE THEPLA'N THAT

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$5,000 MAXIMUM •

..

_

PAYS YOU: $100 weekly ($14.28 d~i1y) extra cash income while you are hos­ ,pitalizecL. ,

, )) .' ••" PAYS YOU: $100 weekly ($14.28 'daily) extra cash _, income while you are hos­ . If you arc living by yourself, or wish to cover only one family member, you'will want the : pitalized. $75 wee~IY'·($10.71 daily) while lndivid/lijl Plan. your wife is hospitalized. ',: . . . YO,u pay oniy $3.25 ri month and you .If you have Ilo'children, or if your children get your first month for 'only $l.oo! are grown and no,I9nger dependent on you, you will want the Husblllld-Wife Plall. , ,You pay only $5.75 a month 'and you' (NOTE: See below for over-65 rates and bow you , get your ~irst month for ,only $1.00! , may enroll p~rents who are over 65.)' •

,On all pla.ns, your cash benefits are, paid, cover, any accident immediately, tlle wry from the ~'ery firs~ day you enter the hospi· ,day you,. pQlicy goes into effect-and any tal, as 100lg':'"nd as many times-as you are nel'!' sic)mess, which begins.after your ,policy hospitalized right. up to the maximum (Ag­ is 30 days old. There are only these mini­ ll!'cgate of Benelits), of your plan;, '" mum necessary 'exceplions: pregnancy or , any consl:quence thereof (unless you ·have IMPO~TANT,"Here is another: real.' the AIl-Family,Plan). ,war, military service. ~'pJus'~-if you have been tpld that,imyone nervous or mental disease or disorder, sui­ in YOllr family is "uninsurable'.'! Even if oile of your cQ,'ered :family members'haS' cide, alcoholism or drug addiction, or con­ ditiotis covered by Workmens CompclIsa­ , suffercd froril 'chrollic ailments in the past,' lion 'or Employers Liability Laws. You are ,the kinds of conditions' that, come back,' , again and again or are'liKely to recur,' the free 'to go to:any hospital of your own choice , t h a t makes a charge for ro0tV and board, llospital Plall for, Cat h oUcs will cover 'with these exceptions only: nursins homes, ellCh family member lor Ihese pre-exl\tillg convalescent or self-care units' of hospitals, cOllditiollS after he !los beell protected by Fedel:al hospitals. or any hospital primarily the policy for .two years! ' 'for treatment of tuberculosis, alcoholism, But whether or not you have had :l chronic, drug'addiction, or nervolls or mental dis­ ailmcl!t, the Hospital ,Plan for Catholics will order. ,

"

Special ,

No~e .:

If You Are Over 65.

During this limited enro'l~ent'yoli;~"1Ij get , , th" .exIra, castl protectioll needed to till the gaps 'm: 'Xfeoic:u'e simply by fiJling",(jut'the Enrollment Form on next page ,lVilflOl/tj allY other qualificatiolls! The HospitaFPlan for' CathoJjc~ not o'nly accepts you regardle~s of "age, it ,gives you ,!,ord·to-find extra'cPsh pro­ .' teclioll during the high.-risk senior.'yea:rs,at' a c.o,{l'wilftili y(Jl,rl~ielillS. . ,,' ,:' : . " Ifyou"a~~ 0\'er'65 now, or when y~1i be­

come 65, the fol!owing modest monthly in­ crease applies. (This is the ollly increase that can ever be·nrnde·as'long as'you continue your policy in force): ': Female'on All-Family or I Husband-Wife Plan .•• ;., ••ADD: $2.25 Fema'ie on One-Parent Family' : !'rlndividlial.Plan ~ •• ADD: $3,00 M;ale,on any P.lan _, •••• ; ADD: $3.00

. Are·Yo-ur Parents Senior: Citizens? Even though y,our parents are covered by Medicare, a serious condition requiring lenglhy',hospitalizalion can mean the end of their reservc;s and loss of independence. To 'honor their jndependence and safeguard your own reserves, enroll your parents in the Hospital I'lan for Catholics during this

limited Enrollme~t. Have the parent to bo enrolled cemplete and sign the' Enrollment Fonn, bllt enter YOllr address c/o your name. (Example: c/o John Jones. 120 Main Street, Anytown, U.S.A.) We will send the policy and premium notices to you. Just enclose $1 for the first mon~ •.

Accidental Death Benefit On All four Plans }n the event of Ihe accidental death (within 90 'days of an accident) of any perso,:, cov­ ered untler, the .I-Iospital Plan for, Calholics, '$500 will ,be paid, to any benefiCiary you

,

wish 'to .name, subject to 'the maximum (Ag­ gregate :of Bjlnefits) of your .pol icy. You may, 'if you wish, DlID:Ie your parish lJli your beneficiary." ; .

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111

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept.19, 1968

18 Important Questions Answered

ABOUT THE NEW HOSPITAL PLAN FOR CATHOLICS.

III you have no children, Or if your children 1. What Is the Hospital Plan lor Cathol!cs? The Hospital Plan lor Catholics is a brand· new, ore grown and no longer dependent on you, you will want the HUSBAND·WIFE PLAN. low·ct»t health protection plan-created especially Or, if you are living by yourself. you will want Cor Ouholics-that pays e'll,d ulb i,leome direct to the INDIVIDUAL PLAN. }'Ou when covered accident or illness hospitaJizetl tS. If I become hospitalized; when do my beneyou or II member oC your family. ' fits begin? 2. Why do I need the Hospital Plan lor Cath· On all plans, your cash benefits are paid from the olics in addition to my regular insurance? lirst day you enter the hospital. for as Ions' , Probably your present ht»pitaJ, insurance won't very -and for as many rimes-as you are hospitalized, cover all your hosrital expenseS. but even if it up to the maximum (Aggregate of Benetits) of the does. you will Ilil need help to cover all four plan you choose. household expenses when you are ht»pitalized. 7. How much ain I be paid in a Catholic hos· 3. Can I collect even though ! carry other pital? health insurance? Each plan has its own "Aggtegate of Benefits." Yes, 'the Plan pays you in addition to any health in­ wnat we call the,maximum. surance you carry, whether individual or group­ For example. under the, ALL-FAMn.Y PLAN" /Wen Medicare! ;And all. yC?ur :ben~fits ~~e, ~lIx.f,ree!, Iho flla...,;mllm is :$10,000-$100, a week ($14.28 ' II day) extra cash income while you are hospital." 4. Is there a lot of red tape to quali(y? ized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) while. your wife

I, None at all. Your only qualification is to complete is hospitalized. '350 ,weekly ($7.14 d;tily) for each, and mall your Enrollment Form by the deadline eligible child hospital!zed. date shown on the form below. Under the ONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN, 'ho J. Which plan should I choose? m"...,;lIIN1I' is ~7,500-$100 weekly ($14.28 daily) You may choose'any of fOil' low·cost plans-you while you lire hospitalized: $50 weekly ($7.14 daily) for each eligible child hospitalized. ClIn aaually select'the e'llla plnn that silits you best! Under the HUSBAND·WIFE PLAN. ,he'm..." · IE yours is n youns. growing family. we recom· ;mufII;s $7,500-$100 weekly. ($14.28 daily) mend the ALL·FAMILY PLAN. You and your wife

while you are hospitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 are covered at once for IIccidents. for new sick· daily) while your wife, is hospitalized. nesses which begin after your policy is ~O days Under rhe INDIVIDUAL PLAN. Ibe "",...,;., old, and for maternity benefits after your poliev has been iii force for 10 montlis. All 'your un' mUII';s $5,000--$100 a week ($14.28 a day)', whHe you ate hospitalized. , " married dependent children (nndfurure additions) between ~ months lind under 19 are included, 'lit 8. Must I go a Catholic hospital to collect ': benefits? ' no extta cost, as long lIS they live at home. If you are the only parent living with your chilo No. you wHl be 'covered in any hospital 'of your : dren, we sUll8est the ONE·PARENT FAMILY cboice that makes a charge for room- and board. PLfI.r'1. This c6vers you and all,eligible children except nUrsing homes. convalescent or self-care', livins at home between 3 months of age and under units of hospitals., Federal hospitals, or any hospi· .. 19. Under tbis plan, of course, future additions 'tal primarily for the treatment of tuberculosis. drug ;, " are not included since no maternity benefit is addiction, alcoholism. or, nervous or me neal dis- , ' . , provided in, the ONlr·PARENT'FAMILY PLAN. order.

to

9. When does my policy go into force?

Then, every month your policy is in lorce. nn amount equal to your regular monthly premium (including your fitst month) is actually added to your .maximum. When you haVe claims, benefits are simply slIbtracled from your "account:' 14; Are any other unusual benefits incltided? Yes. In the event of an accidental death (within 90 days of an accident) of lIny person covered, '$500 will be paid to the covered person's bene· ficiary-unless you wish ·to name your parish as beneficiaty-subject to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits), of your policy. IS. Will my c:laims be handled promptly? Yes. With your policy. you will receive a simple, easy-to-use Claim Form. Your claims will be proc­ essed quicklr lind your checks sent .direaly to yoil. 16. Why are the premiums in tbe Hospital Plam for Catholics so low?

You actually get all these benefits-at such n low cost-hec~use this is a mass enrollment pian-lind no salesmen are used. Our volume is higher and

our sales COStS ate lower.

17. How 'much does my first month coot?

Only $ 1.00, regardless of your age. the si%e of your family or the plan you select. After the nist

monch. if you are un,ler 65, you pay only these low monthly rates: only $7.95 II month for the ALL­ FAMILY PLAN; only $5.95 II month for the ONE·PARENT FAMILY PLAN: only 85.7:; a month for the HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN; only $3.25 II month for THE INDIVIDUAL PLAN. (When you are over.65. premiums ioc~e. See modest increase in box at lelt,) ' , 18. Why should I enroll right now?

Because an unexpected sickness or lIccident could strike without w;trning - and you will not be (".overed until your policy is in force. Remember, if for any reason you change your mind, you may return your policy within 10 dnys and your $1.00

will be refunded imme,!iateJy.

It 'becomes effective the very s;tme day we receive your Enrollment Form. Accidenls that occur on or after that date are covered immediately. After your policy is 30 days old. sicknesses which begin there., after are covered. Under the ALL-FAMILY PLAN, childbirth or pregnancy or any consequence there· of is covered after your policy has been in force for 10 months. 10. What if someone in my lamily has had I€ health problem that may occur again? Any covered family member who has suffeted ltom chronic ailments in the past will be covered fOf these pre·existing conditions after.he has been pro­ tected by the policy for two years. 11. What conditions aren't (o~ered? Only these minimum necessary exceptions: preg· nancy or any consequence ther~of, (unless . y~u , have the ALL·FAMILY PLAN). war, niilltary service, nervous or mental disease or disorder, suicide. alcoholism or drug addiction. Ot any con· dition covered by Workmen's Compensation or Employets Liability laws.

12. Cnn I drop out any time? Can you drop me? :

We will never, cancel or refuse to renew your policy for health reasons-for as long as you Jive ' and continue to pay your premiums, \Vle guar;tntee that we will never cancel. modify or'tetminate your policy unless we decline renewal on all poli· cies of this type in your entire state or until'rhe maximum (Aggregate' of Benefits) of your policy has been paid. You. of course. can drop your pol~ icy on any renewal date. .

13. Why is the Hospital pian for Catholics al· most like having an extra "bnnk account"? When your policy is issued, YOllr insumnce pro. vides up to $10,000. $7.500, or $5:000-depend­ ing on the Aggregate of Be'lefits bf the ,plan you choose. This is your "Health-Bank Account."

...

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COllnt"-much like putting m~ney in and taking it out of the bank, . Peace Of Mirid And Security

expect. Regardlc$S~f your age, size of your ,I family, or the plan yOll select, you get your first month for only $1.00. See box on preceding page for low rate of plan that suits For as IOllg as YOlllil'e and continue to pay you best. . . . : ' .' _ your premiums, we will never cancel or How Can'We Do It? refuse to renew your policy for health rea- . sons-and we guarantee that we will never How can we offer so much for so little? ' C:l ncel , modify or ternlitiate your policy The answer is sinlple: .We have lower total sales- costs!. The Hospital Plan for Catho: unless we dccline renew:ll on all poliCie's of this type in your entire state or until the lies is a mass e/lrollniellt plan-all business niaximum (Aggregate of Bene~~s) of your' is conducted directly between you and the pO,licy has bccn p:lid. ' , company bymail. No salesmen are Iiseli. : No costly investi~ations or extra fees. It all : Extra Cash In Addition To Other Insurance adds up to real savings we share with you' Yes, the Hospital PI:ln for Catholics pays, ,by giving yOIl top protection at lower cost. :; you in addition t? a?y. hCllIth il~surance you ' A Re~pected Company . , carry, whether' md,v.du:l1 or group"':'even .. ',.. ' " I. I II" b . 'fi In addition to the exceptional advantages " Mc(hcare. FI/rt lermore, a yoltr ene rts f th H . ·t· I PI f' C th r' ' t' are tax-freeJ Of course, you may carry only " 0 eth.ospl.1 an ,or labollcys-yougel '.: rk I' .hM IP 'v ,'some 109 even more va ua e:· our po -" onc I'C po ICy Wit utlla, ro~ech e. ' iey is backed by the resources and integrity , ot the MI/tllal Protective Insurance Como: , ,Surprisingly Low Cost.. l\1embership in the Hospit~I'Plan for Calli-", pailY, "The Catholic's Company," 'special- ': olles co,sts cOllsidcrably less tbill1 you might,: izing in low-cost protection for Catholics,' .

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MUTUAl.:.. PROTECTIVE J;NSURANCE COMPANY'

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3860 Leavenworth Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68105

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Wi,fe's First Name . Middle Initial If AI/-Family or HNJb""d-W.ife SELECT DAII-Family Plan Plan is selected. give following' PLAN ,R' 0 Husband-Wife Plan I-nformar,'on on wl·fe-. I-~:-=:-'::-:::----r":":'-:+-..--:::----,r-:~--l U DESIRED: 'DATEOF Month Day Year ! ( C h e c k O n e DOne-J:'arent Fam:ly Plan WIFE'S BIRTH: Only) 0 Indi\'idual Plan Do you carry otherinsurance in this Company? 0 N.o D Yes (If "ye5," please list' policy numbers.)

3860 Leavenworth Street, Omaha. Nebraska 68105

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Lice~sed,by 'he CommOluvealah o/lJlassaclUlsetUJ

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If for any reason you decide you don't want your policy, you may return it In 10 days. and we will promptly refund your dollar!

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11V1t'UH tAl"" SPECIAL LIMITED ENROllMENT PERIOD! EXPIRES MIDNIGHT, OCTOBER 20, 1968

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, Doesn't it make good sense for you to be protected by the Hospital Plan for Catholics, should you or a member of, your family be suddenly hOSpitalized? Why not take a moment now to fiU out your Enrollment Form and mail ·it promptly with only $1.OO-"intrGa ductory" cost for your first month'/il .... coverag-:. Money-Back Guarantee When, you receive your policy, you'll see .No Red Tape..... No Saie,smanWiIICall that it is direct, honest, easy to understand. BI/t il for allY reusOrJ yOI4 change you" ]f you enroll now, during this limited en-" mind, YOI/ may return' it within 10 day~ Tollment period there are Iio other qualifi­ Qll'd we will promptly refund YOllr dollar. cations other than to complete and mail Please Note: Bccause this is a limited the Enrollment Form below. We will issue, your Hospital Plan for Catholics (Form, enrollment, we can only accept enroll­ ments postmarked' on or before the date P l47 Series) immediately - the same day shown below. But, please don't wait! The we' receive your Form. Along with your sooner we receive your Form, the sOoner policy, you will'receive an easy"to-use Claim Form. Any time you needyollr ben·, yourHospitalPlaJi for Catholics will covel!' you and your family. We cannot ~over';YOM efits,\,you'can be sure that your claim will if jOllr policy is IIfH in forcel ' be'handled promptly• . '

r~--------~--~------------------------------, . ,Don't delay-fill ou\ and mllil E.nrollment Form today, with $1.00, to Mutual Protective Insurance Company. I

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acroSS Amel'ica for over 35 years: Cath.. oiics everywhere, possibly right in yc;>ur own community (including many priests). know of us and may be insured by us. ManyCatJiolic school children have £Ojr years enjoyed Mutulll Protl:Clion coverage. Serving .policyholders throughout the United States direct by mail, Mutual-Pro­ tective has its headquarters in' Omaha, Nebraska. where it is incorporated and licensed. '

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I have enclosed my first monthly premium of $1.00 and hereby apply to Mutual PtOt~ctive Insurance Company. Omaha. Nehraska. for the Hospital Plan for .Catholics Form PI47 Series and-Plan thereunder as selected above. I understand the policy is not in force until lIctually issued. The beneficiary for all persons covered under this policy shall be: Check one: • '

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12',

'THI;'ANCHOR'7Diocese,of,FanRiver-Thurs. Sept.19, ·1968,::

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S:cores flow-Blow Atta11ck On CeS)or Chavez, Alinsky By

Msgr~

George G. Higgins

The United Farm Workers Organizing Committee (UF WOC) is currently str!king several large scale vineyards. in California, which union officials claim produce about to per cent of the grapes Clf the country. UE.WOC, led by national director Cesar Cha­ ' ~ vez, is promoting a nation­ Father William Lester, S.J., wide grape boycott in" an who conducts a question-and­ answer column for Twin Circle, atte~pt to compel the grow­ was asked by one ,of his readers. ers to barg,ain collectively wi,th" the 4nion. The growers, who are not required by law·t9 recognize UFW,'OC eve:n if' a majority <?f their employes 'want: aunioil,"

"NOT THA rAGAINl"

We see pictures of it every day; we read newspaper ret>Orw about it;'we hear discuSsion on it. But have we Christians become insensitive to it?-the destructor of body and spirit, the destroyer of hope and" fulfillment: POVERTY; For us, poverty has become just another word,. usoo ~ and reused so that tihe reaUty it ex­ presses no longer moves us to conip~ssion. We ace turned off to the message it' bears. .

to comment on the morality of Chavez' efforts to ;organize farln

workers' in California.' Father Lester replied that" he is' "in~ elined to be on the growers side of this dispute." Obviously he' is . entitled 'to HEADS CANONISTS: Fr. We read of{ starving cbiltllren ns we read the stoclI market "h.is opinion, but ·~l·.·couldn't be­ . bulletinS:.·We view T.V. reports depicting starvation and misery have~,re£used to lleve my'eyes 'when I read that· .Adam' 'J.. Maida, assistant in our own country and around the world, then' go to bed and give~in to their his reason for supporthlg 'tIle .' chancellor of the Pittsburgh fall peacefully to slecp. Today poor people are merely numbers, de rna n d s. A growers is that Chavez' ''teacl).er .Diocese, is t~e new president statistics to be recorded and tbenforgotten. If only at were pos­ ..number of Cath­ and associate," SaW. Alinsky, is of the Canon Law Society of sible for the reality of the situation to seep into oW' minds, we olic organiza:" a Marxist and that Chavez him- America. He was chosen at might then be moved itt act on behaU of. others. tions, including self, following the: ':lead . of. t:l.. SOCI'et's th National Alinsky, subscribes to Marxist 'lie t' y 30th annual It might be well lor us, then, to refleet on the actual COD­ Co u n c i 1 0 f principles. . ,_, • mee mg in Boston. . ditions of poverty, to experience, through our imagination, the Catholic Women 'and the' Na­ ,' misery an<l hopelessness of the poOr, to sense theitr· futility,' their tiona! Catholic social Action Sees Ked Baitin1&" ~ embarrassment, their loss of personal dignity. Conference, have' called upon . ,I must be getting nllive in lIlT. ..' ,. .. , '. . their constituents and :affiliated "old age, for I had thOught that· . . ,.' . , . .. What Is poveri7? It Is DO I'UIIIling water, DO eledrietT, IIID bodies to support the California: tm,s. kind of emotional Red'" Of communica*ion or tra.nspo~on.:Povedy is. a ~d­ grape boycott. Several arehbish-:-. .,baIting .had gone. out of stylt;, at .:.. '. . ,. " . _ tal of beaDS for tonight's supper. It is ~ blaDket. or no blankds. ops and bishops iIi various parill least in educated Catholic eir­ NEW IBERIA (NC)-A bish­ and a road-side curb for a beil. It Is a eit7 ghetto and a country of the' country have also pub­ cles. In any event to say that op observed here: ''These are licly 'endorsed the boycott. . Saul. Alinsky and Cesar Chavez, important times of judicial re- • shack. Poverty is being wIthout 'necessities .. well as conveni­ ences. Widespread Boycott 'are Marxists is the cheapest sponsibility, there is a delicate Public support of the union's kind of demagogue"". balance of justice to be main­ '" ' ' Poverty is a father's_shame' in be.g<hng food for his childen. demand for recognition--'and" 0 f ' . Unfortunately, however, that's tained." '. '.. ., ..pending _ legislation aimed at· not 'the end of the story. The Auxiliary Bishop Warrer:J. L.' ·'.R is kiiowirig that for some people around the world 'living in bringing farm workers under'worst is yet to come. Father Boudreaux of Lafayette was the 'an' American ghetto would be luxury. It is Biafran children, 'N U I" ... . . . . . . . . so'mbre as old men', waiting' to die. the: coverage of.. the' a.ona 'Lester goes on to say' that celebrant and gave the homily Labor Relations Act--has been "Chavez' religiosity' is much too at the annual Red Mass in St. Poverty. Is a ehronic disease and no medicine. It is a sick even mc;>re widespread. ostentatious not to be contrived. Peter's church in this Loilisiana ehild and no doctor within 50 miles. It is %5 to 30 years less to All of the maj.or Ca:tholic; Like Alinsky's good pupil, he community. live. Poverty is staying away from school, beeause there is DO Protestant and Jewish SOCIal ac­ seems to be 'using' the Church." "The scales of justice are delischool. It is paying farn~ers in some countries not to grow food. tion organizations in the United This kind of character assas­ cately b!ilanced," the bishop while in other .countries millions are starving to death. states are. in complete. ag~e­ sination is beneath contempt. I noted, "and it doesn'·t take much ' ment on these two obJecb~~. ~riously doubt; that anything to throW them off. Men must Poverty is' an old man who cannot dream. a youth who cannot and, with a view to promotmg quite so offensive has beeh pub-. respect law and order" but law see beyond today. It is' the inability to believe in oneself, the them more effectively, have lished' in the Catholic press. and order must also respect men. pathetic refusal to accept-the challenge of life. PoveN)' is the organized an ad hoc interreli... recent years. "This is.your responsibility 'as frustration of knowing that'your children will never see a .better . ' . . .:'.: judges; lawyers, court offi~i~ls".day.' giow.; committee known, as· the NatIonal Campaign for Agricu,l_· . ,"', Walfs for Apology... law. enforcement offi<:ers," Jte. ..: TJ,y.·te.lmagtDe ti.tsiu~not to make your oWn Ufe.~­ tural Democracy.. .' Father Lester 'and 'the 'editors 'con!i~ued, ~'and: we p'r~y: 9ocI ... able-but. in order to sympathize with ,the suffering of othe.rs. This committee,' whicb oper- of Ti.vin Circles awe ME Chav~z' that He will make your hands W~ areaBbrothe..s, united ini Christ ,Under common Father. ates' under the veryeH1efe,ot d~:" , . and Mr. Alinsky ~ immediate· 'steady, ' ~nlighten. your 'lI1in<ls, As members... of.. this worlti :,famlly,.as b'i IHI7 fami17, ,we are rection of .the-Rev.:fi:ugene Boil4"' ..'.' apology. And while they at 'strengthen your hearts, to .make obliged to eare for and protect our brothers arounil the .world.. tiliei'" of the United ChlP."Ch. ,0(. , it, ·they might want to ten, uS' pure and unaffected Ju;:IgMe~ts. We masll be, instillers of faUh and hope. We must give the poor Christ, has been helped enor­ just who in the Church Is being "We must ~ecognize the plilce, "used" by Cesar Chavez; . ·of God in oUr lives and in the , n<>* a way ou&, "$ a way· in to. lif~ with the, hope to accept mO,usly, in the case of the Catb­ olie community,. by the vigorous Whom did they have in mind!' wO'\kof our 'courts," Bishop the' ehalllenge of teday. and the courage to believe in the future. stand taken by a number of, 'If, as I suspect, they were tbink- "'Boudreaux' saj,d,. "and .so ~ Bat we mast shaft in the suffering of others, not with pltemal­ bishops in favor of bringing 'ing of the· Catholic· bishops· of come today ~ as~ the guidance Ism. '. 01' eondeseeasioD, bat: with the eompass!on _el gentleness iiarin worke"rs under tbe cover­ ,Cali~ornia,and the other bishops, and strength' of !the Holy $pirit 01 Christ could alleviate the sulfe~ of Rben Without compromising ·1heir personal eliP1I~. ' . age of the NLRA. !throughout the country . who ... of God. To a great extent, the: , .In this connection,. a r~nt . have supported Chavez'. organ- :welfare of our land depends On The question is bow toaccomplisb. aU this. Tile answer ia jomt statement by aU of the mng drive, I can only wonder this delicate balance of justice., bishops of Calif,ornia has been why they didn't have 1tle eour- It.is truly your count1'7's work, simple, if indirect. We, wlio cannot follow Christ io the mission lands, can support, both:spiritually and materially, those who do. particularly helpful. age to say so. it is also God's work."' Missionaries represent us, as members of the missiODaQ" Church, Deserved Tribute On the other' hand, perhaps

to aU the poor around the world. How effective the missional'J' -- To round out this brief sum­ they were noC; in fact referrlDg mary of Catholic opinion ·with to the bishops. If not, bowever, .law ,will be in alleviatiilg the misery ~d despair of the .poor, will depend largely' on how generous we are, how sensitive we are regard to the organization of the question recurs: Whom did' , farm workers, it should also be they have in mind? .to those'- in need. N~w":"'what does the wold POVERTY mean noted that there has b~n wide­ Perhaps Father Lester will. TRENTON (NC) - Major law ' to you? spread public support in. Cath-, have occasion within the near enforcement bills, including one SALVATION AND SERVICE ARE THE WORK of Ole Society olic circles of Cesar Chavez as future to throw some addiUooalestablishing a bi...partisan State for the Propagation of the Faith. Please cut out thIS column and an. individual-the one individ­ light on this niatter .in his Commission of Investigation· ual' chiefly responsible for tbe 'question-and-ansWer COlumn' iil patterned· after New ¥ork State's' send' ;your offering to : Kight 'Re~erend Edward T., O'Meara, Na­ organization of UFWOC., . .Twin Circle. Needless to add ., anti-crime unit, have .been , tional Director, s66 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001, 01' Many Catholic organIzations ·manY'of us win be waitiD,ganx~ 'signed into law by Gov., Richard' . clireetb' to 'your IoeaI dtocesan director, The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Ray­ and inqividual Catholic' leaders iously for his answer.:.-and for' '1. Hughes of New' Jersey. ' mond T. Considine, HI North Maua S~ FaIllUver, Massaeh.­ have gone out of' their; way to his apology to Cesar Chavez The' commission, which·, Wail lilCUII 08720.-\ pay richly deserved tribute to -Saul Alinsky. . , .,," 'recommended by the' Legisla­ Mr.. Chavez as a truly dedicated . 'ture's crimin~ justice stUdy and remarkably effective spokes-·· commission after a week Of pub­ man for the diSadvant~ged farm lic liearings last Spring, will be' workers of the United.States.· T D K' composed of'Jour members who For my own part, I m~t say 0 Dng will be 'appointed Jor five-year that I admire him tremel).dously. SEATTLE (NC)-Archbishop terms and will be paid $15,000 as a person and look upon him Thomas A. Connolly. of Seattle per year. as 'one' of the great men of this' dedicated the archdiocesan new The commissioners win have ROUTE 6-between Fait. River and New Bedford generation in the field Of social day care center in the City's the duty and power to investi­ reform. ' ghetto area and named it for Dr. gate the execution, and enforce­ Attack on Integrity : Martin Luther King, Jr~' slain ment of the laws of New JerSey One of Southern ~Jew Englaftd's Finest Facilities Feeling as I do about Mr. civil rights leader. with pa·rticular reference· to' or­ Chavez, I was simplY appalled·The new center will have im­ ganized crime·and racketeering" to read.a ·very .low-blo1!V attack mediate facilities for the eareof but they also will be eDipowered on his personal integrity in the 30 'children 'with accommoda':: to investigate.:any .matter con­ Sept. 8 issue of Twin Circle, a tions gradually expanding to the cerning public peace, safety 'and, '. FASHIONSHOWS~' ETC., ~latively new Catholic weekly handling of 50 YOWlgsters~ Cen­ justice: In .addition, .. they. willl edited, with a decidedly, con- ter director is Father lo.,ep~ have the power to probe the..", FOR DEYAILS CAll MANAGER--636-2744·' 01' 999-6984 .... ! . ." servativebent, by Father Daniel' 'Buck; in whose parish it JS'lo­ conduct of public officials and LY~l1s, S.J. cated" . , " .':..... , , ,',' ,.' ,,";ij.'i,pu~lic e~ployes>:· ,.,...

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Pre,late Stresses. 'Resp'ect. for Law·

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CLOTHING CEREMONY: Christiine Mary Homen appears as bride at beginning 'of her clothing ceremony as C3Irmelite novice at South Dart­ mouth monastery. Bishop Connolly asks if she is ready to accept the Car-

Archbishop Alter Asks Instruction On Pope's Credo CINCINNATI (NC) Pope Paul's "Credo of People of God," which proclaimed June 30 at

the he the

Dartmouth Carmelite Nuns Receive Firs-t Canonical Novice in Diocese' If joy truly indicates the presence Of God, He filled every crevice of the Carmelite Monastery in South Dartmouth la8't week during the fh-st clothing ceremony held there for a Carmelite novice. '.Dhe M08't Rev. James L. Connolly presided aJt the ceremony in Which Christine Mary Homen, daughter of MnJ. Manuel Homen of 29 Grant St. and the late Mr. Homen, received emile that stayed even when her expression on a face cannot-­ the novice's habit. Preceding , eyes 'were closed. and to Mrs. Homen and Ute the cermony, Bishop Connol­ "She told me afterwards she friends who knew Christine, ly, Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, eouldn't explain the feeling she that expression was the outward

close of the Yea~ of Faith, will be brought again to the atterition of the people of the Cincinnati archdiocese at Mass and other services throughout Octo- Rev. Manuel Ferreira of St. ber. John the Baptist Church, ChrisArchbishop Karl J. Alter of tine's home parish, and Father Cincinnati has instructed Msgr. Emmanuel, monastery chaplain, Henry J. Vogelpohl, chancellor, 'concelebrated a Mass in Ute to send a letter to the priests of monastery chapel. Hunddreds of the a~chdiocese suggesting that relatives and friends participated "efforts be made to acquaint the -some outside-in 'the Mass and faithful" with the Credo during ceremony Utat followed. Among October. Ute clergy seated in the sanctu­ "Such efforts could include ary were Rt.Rev. John A. Silvia, reprinting portions of this docu- pastor of st. John the Baptist ment in the parish bulletin, Church, New Bedford; Rev. Ar­ preach~ng on the various doethur 'G. Considine, pastor of St. trines contained therein on Sun- Mary's Church, So. Dartmouth; days, reciting parts of the pro-' Rt. Rev. Msgr. Reginald M. Bar­ fession during Bible Vigils or rette, chancellor of the diocese, other gatherings of the faithful," and Fathers Richard and Fabian the chancellor said. of Our Lady's Chapel. It is also suggested that on Christine entered Carmel Oct. Oct. 27, Feast of Christ the King, 3, 1967, the first p'ostulant ac­ "our efforts could be crowned cepted at the Dartmouth monas­ with the recitation of the final tery. portion of the Creed beginning The days before her entrance with, 'We believe that the Mass' were happy ones for the 17-year­ etc.' to the end, at the celebra- old teen-ager-who left behind tion ,of the liturgical ,feast, in in the outside world her par­ place of the homily." ents, her brother Peter, herQe­ (Pope Pius XI established the ' loved guitar and,the innum~r­ feast, of Christ the King with ,able hamburg stands at WhICh an encyclical letter, Quas Primas" ~hg~:as: ,a familiar munching Dec. 11, 1925, at the end of a stmrs In Eyes Holy Year, in order to explain The tiny--4 ft!et 11 inch and Christ's kingship and to draw 104 pounds - Christine an­ attention to the evils of secu­ nounced exuberantly then that larism.) his letter Msgr. Volgelpohl she was doing "only what 1 declared: "This Creed is to serve Utink God wants me to do." as a chart, as a criterion of what Fulfilling His will, put stars in Js orthodox, and' as a lamp from her eyes. Last week, Christine was even which light will pour forth into every phase of Catholic belief more radiant as, wearing 51 white bridal gown with a an~ practice. "It is to be a guide for those sweeping tJrain that symbolized eharged with the responsibility her marriage to Christ, she was of proposing Christian doctrine escorted into the chapel by her Mother Superior Jlor the first to others-be Utey priests, Reli­ gious or members of the laity. important step An ber Carmelite 'To be with our Holy Father is life. Her dark hair, worn high. to be with Christ. To be with was covered with an Irish lace' Peter is to stand yesterday, to­ day and forever upon the rock mantilla. which Our Lord set as the "And there was II smile on ber foundation of the l':hureh.' ~lips," '1I1'1J. Jl[omeJl .recalls, ".

In

Dlelite ruJe of life. The prostration. The Ordinary and Rev. Patrick J., O'Neill concelebrate M'ass in monastery chapel. Christine, now Sister Mar., Therese of Jesus is a Stang High School graduate.

bad-like an ecstasy--and be­ ing the type she is, it just bub­ bled out." After Ute Mass, Christine Homen was escorted out of the chapel and sister Carmelites helped her out of her wedding gown and into the "dress" of the ,Carmelite habit. ' When she returned to' the chapel, wearing hemp sandals -made in Spain-and a brown undertunic, she prostrated her­ self before the altar to indicate her humility before God. Bishop Connolly blessed the various outer pieces of her habit and she was assisted in donning them by Mother Supe­ rior. . The bishop also asked the young postulant if she were ready to accept the spartan Car­ · melite rule of life. She responded that she was. Canonical Novice As the clothing ceremony ended, the new Sister Mary Therese of Jesus, canonical nov­ ice, exchanged the kiss of, peace with her sisters in the commu­ nity. Then she was allowed to greet ber mother and sister and the relatives and friends who flood­ · ed by her in what appeared an 'unending stream. , Last Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the young nun was allowed special visiting privi­ leges, in honor of her reception. - The friends who visited dis"; · covered that a year in the mon­ , astery has not quenched the for­ mer Christine Homen's high : spirits arid .love of life-if any­ 'thing, it perhaps has increased 'Utem. · "I'm very,' very happy," she 'said. "I believe now more than ever that 1 made the right de­ elsion." OUtward Sign , JVords can be' deceiving. '.rbe

sign of an inner peace and joy. "W,hen she came in as a bride, abe was lovely," Mrs. ~omen says. "She was carrying a long white candle, decorated with , flowers and streamers. She gave it to 10 keep. " "I guess a mother always loolai forward to seeing her daughter ,as fl bride. Christine was as happy as any bride 1 have ever

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seen."

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Visitors to the new nun agree. Wearing the brown habit and the' white coif and' veil of her 'order, ,Sister Mary 'Therese of' Jesus might have been sober and unlike her teen-age self. She wasn't. She chattered 0 mile a minute, "I'm still talk­ ing," she said, "but I guess J[ have to be careful about what ! say." Two seconds later, she was ,swinging up a foot to show off her'· hemp sandals "made in . Spain." Thi:m sine was, pirouetting around the small cell on her side of the screen separatipg the en­ closure from the public portions of the monastery to' show off , her new habit.

The coif and veil tuck unde!' the overtunic of the habit, she explained so rapidly it was im~ possi,ble to keep track of the e~planation, "but this week the Sisters are helping me, so I'll look all right for company. Next week I'll have to start doing it; myself." Suddenly she slowed down temporarily. "I'm still nutty,'" she admitted with all the exu­ berance of a teen-ager any­ where. Her sisters in the community jare "wonderfUl," the life ill "wonderful" and Sister Mary Therese of Jesus - who kept Stang High School hoppinl while she was there-is happy~ There is no doubt about it. Doing God's will has filled her with 'a joy that spills ovei' toward everyone near her.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of

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Future' Uncertain Broadcasts Say ChUrch Co-Responsible

CCl,tholic Social' Welfare Agelrncy D.<etnces Di$cl"Dmination in Hiring

NEWARK (NC)-The Mount ~rmel Guild, social welf'are' 0gency of the Newark archdio­ @ese has denied that it is guilty i:ld discrimination in hiring con... , tractors and workers for its !!lousing project' in the ghetto section of Englewood. The charge was leveled by the Bergen County Community lBuild~rs, a group of Negroes ac­ ti.ve in the building trades. It il:harged that the guild had failed ~ meet with its representati~es. !do discuss the matter and sai<t gUil~. officials had "put ~en;l..

.,

For Czech Upwising . ZURICH (NC) - Unce11tainty prevails in Prague concerning the fwture of the Ohurch in Czechoslovakia, KIPA, the Swiss Catholic news agency, reports. Soviet-controlled broadcasts in Czechoslovakia have called the Church co-responsible for the

plications from Negroes in the even before groundbreak­ ing ceremonies were held and that two black subcontractors have been engaged for excava­ tion and masonry work. "Outwardly," . he said, "it ap­ pears that a brand new organ­ ization that comes out with a chip on its shoulder <md is con­ cerned only.with its inn~r inter­ ests, is another attempt to keep new building from the poor (; 0 $

area

so-called

counter-revolu~on.

However, the invaders have not interfered with Church ad­ ministra·tion or Church services. The residence of Bishop Fran­ tisek Tomasek, lIipostolic admini- . strator of Prague,.was sur·round­ ed by Soviet troops. To get b;ld­ .lj' needed food supplies,' the . archdiocesan chancellor, ills-··. 'gwsed as a' layman,,' got out· . thI'Ougha back d~r~ . " , . On Sunday, .Aug.. 25, for tJi~ , first time in 20 years, M~ Was .

broadcast from St. Bartholo-­ mew's Church in Plzen, west of Prague. At the Mass, prayers were said fur the "legal govern­

ment."

The recent events have caused

a postponement of confirmation

by the government of the rein­

sta,tement of Bishop Kltrel ot­

cenasek as apostolic adminitra.­ tor of Hradec Kralove.

G~t$

$100,000 Giffi' .

NOTRE DAME. (NC)"':"The University,..of Notre Dame has announced an unrestr,icted $100,. 000 gift from Thomas D. M~los" key, president of MoGloskey .& Co...Inc:, :rhi-ladelphill. Pa., one of the country's leading con­ struction companies.,

Threats, lF~l~e Statements. "We're not sure what this or~ff/' .., gamUltion" c~ contIibute,i:f .r.9seph A. Brown, ~o,c.ili~e.,.. anything, ljut if.th'eY are sincere ih0':lsi~g dire.ctor for, the, .. guil~" we ,\\rill gla41y ~meet, with them. Gllid the Bergen Builders " had,. But. we will"u(lt ~ccepttheir dic": . fai}ed t.;> confirm .a,n' o'rlginal ta·titms. If they: 'have ,: nothing, date for. a meeting and th~,ill:;., conitruct4ye ~9' off~r, .tJ;1ey~ill

I3Ued 'their news release after de- : be rejected. We're not accepting

lJIi'a'riding his. appearance. S·' iii rabbie...iousing group, as they

meeting he was wId of only .tht!, apP~llr,'io be from this inciden~~

fAight before. . " . . just because they make a lot of

"I had a preVioUs appoint~ent' th,~a~. and fa;Jse statement$... · '" .. , ' . .. . .

made weeks before their phone .The guild isbuil<ling.~n p~p-, INCREDIBLE: U.S. Ma- .' ~1l/' he said. .., ,,,''',: .. ;' erty which an anonymous dorior' .' s at TIn";' I Have Inner Interests bOught and gave to· the' gUild;·"Jl!l~·· '.' ". '" ,........."'., ',., ')

t·;!·­ 'Brown alSo 'pointed out .that" with" 'the provision :that new·h...Y,l~tmup., )~t this Y9ung8t,~1' ,". :.: Che' ilrojectwas d~Siined'by "il' hOUsing for l"l:!s~den~ of .the area" Jl~r :v,Ol~OVe! a telephone, I I .

bl~ck architec( an(i"th~t'PeOple, be built there. "'''':' f01'\~he,fifflttime ..Ne Ph~t~. ef the are~,', wh.O ,wHf 1?e. ~'~eIL The guild is alsO involved in . .. ' preference' when' rental' sta;~ building projects for low-income 1H• HilLY FATHER'8Mlf".IION AI~"~"THE'OIiIENTA~ CHURCH' .' bave been' consulted.on::the·:c:i~·' families in, other area$ of tbe., sign of the buildings~' ,. "... archdiocese. A special housing Ho~ can you make this troubled ·wol'ld.''' better Further, he said; the guiia'be:.;" department has been esta1;llished Enro~lment ONLY place? Pray for ~r :native priestS and s,i~rs ph;' accepting' emPI.oYm~~ : for this PUl1pose, '. LOUISVILLE (NC) ' - Some' YOU each day, and doJlll you ~n to give ~e11'What 400 students at two Catholic' CAN they need•. They are your ambassado,rsto the ·schools·in the', Louisvill$ DO pOQr, an~ t~~y get lonely, hungry, tired. Month Religiq~s Leacle~s': :t,,.:.,::;: high archdiocese are' attending SOme: . 'THIS by month, .have a share in all the good they dol :,:.':' classes taught :by public' school" teachers in public school rooms.

PHILADELPHIA (NC)''':'' A ator to attempt to resolve the

The' students are taking pari . . . . ~all to Philadelphians to support impasse which . now exists due in '8 dual enrollment program o Traina .native Sister overseas. She'll be your the efforts of farm workerS ill ,to the obstinacy .of the growers worked' out· this year betwe-en personal rePresentative to people wh~' need California to obtain union rec-' and the strike and. boycott of public school officials and rep­ heip, and she'll write to you. Her training costs iDgnition, a living wage and de- the Farm Workers' Organizing resentatives of the Catholic only $12.50 a month, $150 a year, $300 al· eent living condi,tions was issued Committee; school board. together•. this week by nine area religioUs "Fourth, contaCt local food Under the, plan, the students /leaders, including Msgr. Philip . market managers and request go to rooms in their own sChQ91 lJ Train a native priest He wants to give his life 'I. Dowling, executive secretary tha·t the food, marketing. com­ buildings. But the rooms are for others. For the next six years he needs $8.50 of John Cardinal Krol's Com- panies use _their influence to. leased to public school boards. amontb ($100 a ~ear, 600 altogether). Write mission on Human Relations;' help resolve this· grave prob­ and are under publicschoo( to us. .. "Although this particular' sit- lem." control. ' nation exists at the other end' send a' 'stringless' gift each month to the Pledge Support Catholic students at both MONTH of the country," thei,r statement Holy Father to take care of the 'Countless· num­ sChOOls take their other classeS' BY While admitting that the ; declared, "Philadelphia has' a in other parts of their sehooi MONTH ber of miSsion emergencies. He will use it where a.irect concern, being the 'fourth statement "did not ask support· buildings. These classes are con­ YOU it's needed most. iargest distribution center 'for of the boycOtt of California table' ducted and supervised by their' CAN ·0 Give a Child a chance. 'n 'ndia, Ethiopt~ and table grapes in the United" grapes sougbt by Cesar Chavez own' school officials. HELP because some representatives' the Hol'y Land you can 'adopt' a blind girl. 8 States. The dual enrollment ~lan has' deaf·mute I>oy, or ~ needy orphan for only $10 "Moreover, the resolution of were not authorized' to· make a .month ($120 a year). We'll send you the Chis grave problem cannot· help' such .a pledge on behalf of-their ·been talked of here for Some' , time. T·he plan moved beyond youngster's photo, tell you about him (or her). affect the situation of' farm' religious bodies," Msgr. Dowlin'g , :workers who today constitute,· said ·"our effort was to' bring' to' the talk stage last Spring when Send us your Mass intentions. The offering about one-fourth of· all the poor the attention of Philadelphians' the Kentqcky attorney general you make, when a 'missionary priest offers Mass the ,plight of the· California· farm": said, in effect, that such a .plan. lin the United States." for your intention, supports him for one da~ workers and to ask people 110 could be legally worked out In their sta,tement, the reli­ under state law and that public support, Chavez's efforts. II Mass intentions are his onlY,means of support. gious leaders "strongly recom-. schools might get state financial ~e~4'~: ,the following steps': He said several archdiocesan assistance for students enrolled Feed a refugee family for a month. It costs "First, petition Congress 00' institutions and' ar~ Catholic .only $10•. We'll send you an Olive Wood Rosa/y "part time" in public schools. extend the National Labor Rela-: cOlleges' had pl~g~ not, to buy from the Holy Land. iMons Act to include, farm work-, Galifqrnia, ta!?le grapes and. ,that

0rs; :' the Archdiocese. of .Philadel-. Fw@t!'@O'r70@B '~@d@fr)f . "''' . "Second, write ·to' the' Califor-;: phla'~ In~titu~ion.al P.r~ureItlent'. nia growers 'appealiIig to them:':. Ser\,ice, p~ann~ 19 P4~liSl).· ·;t:,he.:, IEltl1id1@irSi®$ ,.~Il'il«:' ~ijD©@ff .. , Somewhe;(i"in our 18'COU~t,;, mis~ion'w~r'ld :;Q~ ",.~ ".., r .~:).". to conduct· 'their labor-manage-:; reltgious lead~~' statemlilnt:fur,. .. /DQcail buiiCi',.a complete parish .plant (chUrch, , . J;.QS . 4~G~Llj:~. (~C) .7:"'" Tqe. 1:.-1;: .• inent relatiQns jlS' do all other: tli( inf~rmatio~ ~f' tli;eir' c;u~~ti' . Ciltholic Ko~ping, ~ociety" . ,~, . , ,,'" iT ,·~chl:l9.". r.~tq,ry, and convent) for $10,000. Name" \ 1,',.1 big businesses in the United': ".. ,_ NOW:.. it for Y9uf"favorite' saint; '·in· your loved ones', " . ., ,: 'r.' Ame,rica ,:cpnven,tion: hEtr~; ~D;'" tj", States,' J.e.,. recognize the right. , . ",emory. _ ' .' ..,': .,> ..,.~, statement of principles,. e.ndo.t$ed" B'~ess-'!p'«il~ '~@IM(Q!na ~f colleCtive bargaining;. '. ::..' : . . .. ., -' . ... . .... POI;le,.:}'aul.· ,vi's ,'_encyclicaJ,.~ I':. :.~~~~~--~~-~~~~-~~-, . "ThIrd;. 'encourag~' the' f¢eral. CO""" birth. c<.mtroI.. ..' : goverl)ment to appoint a· medi- CeD'ilter iw· $aogow ",',"" ,The. fraternal .and insuran~, .: ,,,' . ·Dear ENCLOSED PLEAS~ fiND $ .. SAIGON (NC) - Archbishop orgallization .'!Vhich :w:IlS f()un4.ed, , Ifcmsl1JllO' Nolan: FORr_ Weogel Societv' p'Deliiils Angelo Palmas,' apostolic' dele- in this country in 1923 stated\; .' I gate for Vietnam and Cambodia, "We pledge our loyalty and de­ _

:Ec~menical Tour', blessed . the new Pax' Romana votion to Pope Paul VI and his . Please NAMIEE.,.......... return Coupon 8TREET.:.... _ WASHINGTON (NC) _ The center here. holy ,office, and in a special way with your Gustave Weigel Society headAmong those present were w~ endorse his Credo, in which offering ClTY' 8TATE_ZlP CODIBIl. _ quarters here has announced its Archbishop Paul Nguyen vart he spoke distinctly not only to inaugural ecumenical tour ., Binh of Saigon and Sen. Nguyen ,all Catholics but to all men of CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION 'Europe, Oct. 14 to Nov. 3, will van Huyen, president of South good will in the world. As .sin.. be known as the Douglas Horton Vietnam's'senate and an 'adviser cere Catholics. we fully endorse Memorial Tour. '. to the IQcat branch of Pax Ro-l his recent eI).cyelical, Humanae Dr. Douglas Horton, honorarY" 'mana, international orga'!,!izai;io~ Vitae." . 'ehairman of the society and Ii'. _,.of. Catholic ·students ,and _intel~ The statement also asserted:' delegate-observer for the Irite'r~·. lectuals..: ', .' _ . -The c.onvention was especIally. '~ational Council of CongrEiga..:.' The 'n~w centeer \Y~ built with~ concerned with support 'the, 'tiona!. Churches to the Seconafllnds, donated by the Holy-See!: American hierarchy ... .in - .their MSG,R. JQ'HN ci NOLAN,. ~atlona' ~~~~tarY.,. yatican Council, died AUl:.: :21,::<The grol.lnd·.~loor o~: theb'uildingi aPostoliC. authority and ,iii their, " .Wrlte: CATHOLIC NUtR EAsT,WELFARE Assoc.. .;'" 'Iin Randolph, N. H. Services .wiU.":.,~ill be used,-.by··Tan Dinh parish' o~tsta,~dfng a~comPlishnlE~iits.,~· ., 33(1.M!ld!son AvenuE!· N,ew York,.. N,!),~ ,~.0017..;,. . -be held during the'tour in Romi!I:,:~,,!~t.. its ac~iVities, and Pax Ro.k our Catholic s<;hool system::T~ . . :':~'~'pp'one: 2~~,(,~U~o~ ~;~ '.. " I'. ., , . 'Geneva andLondon with friends li. :Iillln'a will ~·occupy the secon~:t ed'u~~#QJl . of..:sii,.~iol!.cl;1g~F~· '. . ' .' ~f ,Dr; Horton participating. ' and, thinl<41oors.:--:"· . -- , '. ': is no sIilaIl ta-s'k-'"

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THE ANCH0~Thurs., Sept. 19, 1-968

Asks Honesty In History

DomQsu~~@ITl)S

15

Hold ,Chapti'er Me·eting

HARRISBURG (NC) The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference has urged a spe­ cial committee of the Penn­

CHICAGO (NC)-Dominicans from various sections of the world have convened 'for a two­ month series of meetings whil:h may rank among the most im­ portant events of the order's more than 700-year history. The meetings are being held at Aqui­ nas Institute of Philosophy in suburban River Forest. The discussions, Father Gil­ bert J. Graham, D.P., head of the Chicago province, said, are intended to help "re-ev.aluate the order's present way of life, ou1' rules and the laws by which the community lives," so that if any of these may prove hin­ drances to the Dominican aposto­ late, they can be up-dated or eliminated. Father Graham said he "ex­ ~ts to see fairly great changes" i~' the legaliistic· aspects of the community's structure, in ae­ Cordance .with the main themes ofV~tican Council II. The Special general chapter of the' Dominican order, which numbers 10,000 priests an~ Bro­ thers on, every continent, bas been three yea·rs in the planning, Preliminary meetings with Father Aniceto Fernandez, O.P., Dominican master general, who was at the Aug. 30 opening ses­ sion, with the provincials from, allover the world, and with delegates to the chapter, began last September in Rome.

sylvania Senate to stress the contributions of all racial, eth­ nic and religious groups in the history classes of the state's schools~ r William B. BaH, PCC general counsel, told the Senate commit­ tee investigating practices and needs for teaching a·bout the contributions of racial, ethnic and religious groups in the building of the United States, that ·the Conference did not feel competent to "review policies and methods of the department " of public instruction." But, he said, the Conference wished to "strongly endorse" the view that the contributions of all groups should be stressed in educating young Pennsylvanians. Human Achievement . Ball said history classes must also make clear to students .that PAP AL COM~~sSIONc6NSULTORS: The Qa:non Law Society of America, which, "many groups in this country were never afforded the oppor­ bas tMee consultors now, has peti-tion~· for a larger reP:resen~tion 011 the Pontifical tunity to make the sdk of con­ Oommission for t~ :revision of theOanon Law C()de. Thf'three U.S. Consultors, who met tributions which American his-: . tory books have traditionally at last week's Society' ,conclave in Boston, are Fr. Frederick R. 1tfcManus of Catholic . University, 'leTt, Dr~ Stephen G. 'Kuttner of Yale. Unh'e'I'&ity, center, and Msgr. John S. celebrfted." " served as a peritU6 Vatican- Council II. , NC. Pharo. .' This was true, he declared, Quinn of Chicago. .who , .... "because ,the America into which they came - or were brought - sternly denied them all access to achievement." • He continued: "The outrageous fact is that for all too many Americans, this frustrating of human achieve­ LONDON (NC) - S p e cia 1 Like" other post-war exiles '60,000 PoliSh soldiers who came ment and expression is pro­ 'prayers wereoHered for Czech": . here f,rom Eastern Europe they here to eontinue the fight longed into our very day." He oslovakia in churches througb­ maintain close community rela­ against Hitler 8fter the fall of asserted hilltory books should out Britain. tions, but seek little publicity. . France in 1940. not give pupils '''the impression VATICAN CITY (NC)-Twen­ John Cardinal Heenan of Many still have relations in About'95 per cent of the Poles that America has been a land of Westminster had joined with Eastern' Europe and it is be­ ty-four martyrs of Korea 'in­ are 9atholies. In the London opportunity, when o~ly partially other religious leaders in issuing lieved that the Czechoslovak area alone there are about cluding two French bishops: will this has been so." . be beatified Sunday, Oct. 6. One . a special appeal for such preyers Center in London is kept under 30,OOO=and they have three par­ Nature' of Prejudice week later. the' foundress of the· for the Czechosolvakia people in .constant communist watch. isbes devoted solely to their Salvatorian Sisters, Teresa von Students should learn the his­ their distress and l10r justice, _ . .. needs. The country has more Wuellenweber, will also be be­ One Mass IS S81d eaoh Sunday than 100 Polish priests. tory of prejudice in U. S. society, freedom and peace in, Eastern ' 'l. • "at Farm. Street, Jesuit head­ The second largest group, the atified. he opined, adding "we must not Europe. Many Catholic' cnurches quarters 10 London, by Father Ukraini~, number 30,000. They Another beatification, that of blanch at this, preferring histor­ Clelia Barbieri, is tentatively ical hokum which 'accentuate throuknout the country included Jo~n Lang, S.J., a Czechoslovak, have their own bishoif' and wor­ scheduled for Oct. 27. She was the positive' to what SQme will Czechoslovakia in the prayers . WhICh between 60 &nd 70 of his &hip in the Byzantine rite. found·ress of an, Italian congre­ :f1ellow-countryme~ usually at­ Some Orthodox call a 'negative! view of some of the people at ·:Masses. gation ·of nuns. Hundreds of Czechoslovaks tend. But Father Lang encour­ aspects of our history. ages many others to attend.their There are also about 15,000 These 24 Korean martyrs will "Heaven knows," Ball said, fled to· Britain when the com­ Hungarians, 'mostly, Catholics, be the second group of martyrs "we have taught ever so much munists seized power in their own local churches. who are looked after by a single . of Korea to ~~ beatified. They. negative-and false-h,istory up country in 1948 and British sub­ The 181"gest smgle Catholic Hungarian priest, Msgr. Bela to the present concerning Negro jects of Czechoslovak origin gr~u~ from Eastern Europe. in Ispanski, who constantly travels were executea during violent persecutions of the 1860's dur­ and Indian 4'nericans, depicting here are now estimatt.>d to num­ Bntamtoday are the Polish. ­ around the country visiting the first as poor quality peo­ ber about 3,000. Two-thirds of 'Jrh~y total 150.,~OO and are small groups of his countrymen. ing which 10,000 Korean Catho­ lics died. Ainong them were ple, inept and servile, and the them are Catholics. llD81nly' tlhe famllies cf' nearly Most of the oth'er Eastern Eu­ Bishop Francois Simeon Ber­ latter as cunning and violent." . . .\ ropean countries also have small neux, vicar apostolic of Korea, We have also taught false his­ eomniunities here, and in some and his coadjutor, Bishop An­ ·tory, Ball continued, by omitting easeS their own priests. Some of toine Develuy; sufficient mention of bigotry in :~~ groups are partly Orthothe teaching of American his­ tory. ClfTIMBOTE (NC)·-.:..Against ~bousaiids," said Father Mc­ The Eastern Euroi>ea~s gener­ . Concluding .he observed: ELECTRICAL the, constant din of seagulls and IDtire;~ame to Chiglbote as ally are working-class 'peoPle "Only by understanding tile the steneh of drying fish, twe mangers-strangeni to city life, whose social life is largely spent Contractors nature of prejudice will oar :American priests, ,~m ~ ~ '~industry and to the eeonom­ within their own community. children be able to recognize It.~ ton "rea are working here GIl Ies of metropolitan· ~ving" _ Many have found it hard to in­ the doclul Of this port· city, te "Because Of their 'UnC9mpJi­ tegrate With 'the Bri~ish way of he,lp 1be peop~ impro~ their eated backgrounds, they. were li1e. and the bishops here have Jives. : . c easy prey to moneylendet'8, dock 8e't up a special National Council JJoth priests ~ .~nican, bosses and the politicians. They of Migration to help them with HOUSTON (NC)-The aoope, Fa~. H~IH'Y... Cama<:ho ~ out always losing,~ laid their problems .an'd arrange for progress and accomplishments CIlf Maryknoll Father WilHam Me­ Father McIntire; Who 'WOrked natlonal priests to come to Brit­ the Texas Catholic Conference­ Intift-8relabor relations spe­ with the U. S. Labor Department ain to look after them spiritually. erganization of the state's Catb­ eialists' and members of the before being ordained: They work' under the direction 944 County St. olic bishops _ were discussed Peruvian hierarohy's Social Ae­ "Our goal," said Father Mcln­ of Bishop Edward Ellis of Not­ New Bedford , tion Cotnmission. tire, .~ to ... rrive the workers a tingham, 'the, council's chairman. and evaluated at the organiza­ " Cbimbote, 15 ~al'll ago a Q)ristian vision 'and Q moral, tions second annual general 88­ sleepy tourist town,.is today'the technical and doctrinal orienta­ lleffibly here. fisbmeal capital ci the world. tlon." Pul'pose of tile TCC, which Its fleet of over 400' fishing Most of 'the priests' work Ul 11788 established in 1964, was. te boats last year netted 3.2 Million. done at the Center for Social provide a single interdiocesan. metric tons of fish, Wibose fish­ Action where courses are held in It. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport .geney for dealing with' mat­ meal product accounted for 7:1 the technicai asPects of labor 'ters of common interest to all dioceses, and to faciUtate eeu­ per cent of Peru's total foreign . organization and group dyna~ Where The exports in 1967. ies. Another aspect of it is ac­ menical realtions and interfaith· Chimbote's growth is ambigu­ <eomplished through person-to­ Entire Family cooperation on a statewide basis. cus, however, according ~ person contact with the workers Can Dine The state's bishops, who com­ Father McIntire. - on the docks arid in their Economically prise 11be TCC's board of diree­ The majority of tine people ~es. ' tors, met with priests, ReligioUfl Who swelled ~ city's popula-' "Basically, we want to teach iIDd laity who 8J'e members of tion. to 190,000 from a mere 8000 tilem to think and'speak on their FOR 0 «be conference's various deparl­ of.1l decade SlI1dn baM ago are . own," llaid Father McIntire. RESERVATIONS. ~ueaUon, 1JOCatioDs, 80­ in trouble. . ' Their two' most im.portant 'PHONE OYer '16' per eeDt' Bve without' iexU>ooks are Pope Paul's"D~ dal welfare, ~ eetlon, leIal. . pubDe information an4 eCumen- "e1ectrieity, rUriningwater or ' velopment of Peoples," aDd' the . : 675';'7185 ... IaI1 relat1oDtJ..-.GtDjnc 1be tIuo­ . -.utatlon.Tbq' b3ve ,De 'ieD8e' 196'1 "MeSsage- of theVarioue ...... r'o. .... tlIlleIDb. . :.. ,'" '. . 'III eamm~~l . ,~ . '.' BishopS 'oftbe Third Worla..' .

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~CzechosloYak 'People

Ask. Justice, Peace in Eastern Europe

British Pray for

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Plan Beatification Of Korea Martyrs

Labor. Priests Work Waterfront In Peru Fishing industry City

Di,scuss Progress

Of· Conference

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QUAUTY MEN'S APPARlEl. ,


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The Parish Parade Note: Parish publicity chairmen lU'e asked to re­ port news 011 their orgal1.1za­ . tfons to this eolumn. ltl<:lIIS should be received a.t The Anchor. P. O. Box '7. Fal! Ri.ver 02722 by Monday of the we,ek (ttl issue.

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ANt:: :')~­ lhurs,,·Sept. 19, 1968

.Bisnop Connolly Ordains Father Gilmour ,For Latin American Missions

. Holy N~me ®hurch in New' Bedford was the unusual setting Saturday for the ordiJla­ hon to the priesthood of. Robert G. Gilmour Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmour of 209 Book Strei!t. Presiding at the ordination ceremomy, the first ever conducted in the church, wa~ ~he .Most Rev. James L. ConnoHy, D.D., bis.hop of the Fall River Dioeese. He was assIsted by Rt. Rev., Msgr. John J. Hayes, pastor of Holy Name, and Rev. Henry " 1 :", T. Munroe, assistant. Thl~ Rt.

The Parish Parade

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ST. JOSEPH, .. FALL RIVER The parish council will. meet ot 7:30 tonight. Or~anizations that have recommenced activi­ ties for the season include the Boy Scouts; Cub Scouts and Junior Legion of Mary~ Newly-elected president of the CCD £01' the parish is Henry Travis. ­ Member!> of the Guild for the lBlind' will meet in the church at 2:15 Sunday. afternoon, .Sept. '22 for rosary and Benediction. Parishioncll'S are invited' to at­ tend.

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HOLY NAME, .'ALL RIVER The parish couneH will meet ~t 7':30 tonight in the rectory. Lectors wi)l meet in the church a.t 6:30 for a reorganization meeting and training session. A choir rehearsal is slated for 7 in the ChUl·ch.· The execuiive board wiIl,,meet at the rectory at 7:30 tomol'l'ow night. In addition to regular CCD classes, a pre-school i'eligion program for ehildren from '3 to 5 will begin in October. Reg­ istrations will be accepted from 9 to 11 Sunday morning, Se~t. 22 at the. parish. school. SACRED HEART, NOR1'H ATrLEBOR0 CC:r1 teachers, lrebstitutes aad helpers are needed on the ele- mentary and high school levels. VolunteeFS are asked to contact Mps. Nonnand Jette for elementary classes and Robert Dwyer' fGr high, school units. Also need~ ed are office workers to keep CCD records up to date. CYO members will meet Mon- d.ly night, Sept. 23, and' Boy Scouts meet Friday evening of each week. New altar ooys will be registered tomorrow afternoon at 3: 15. Publi~ and paJ'ochial school students are welcome. ST. MARGARET, Bl.'ZZARns

B~Y

5S. M:ugar'et-Mary Guild of Buzzards B::ly and Onset has pI'esented ~OO to the pal'ish for youth work and a pledge of $2500 has been made towards kitchen e€/,uipmel'llt for the new Buzzal'ds. Bay parisb center. Fund-raising events planned for coming monthS' include a whist party in Onset to be in charge of Mrs. Thomas McGov­ ern and Mrs. Henry Nickerson; and a Fall rummage sale and cookie sale under direction of Mrs. William, Brady, who will announce dates and places. The executive board will meet at 8 Wednesday night, Sept. 25' at the home of Mrs. Bernard Bums; and a· gene rat meeting is IIet for Wednesday nigbt, Oct. 2.

"

Rev. Msgr. Reginald M, Ba.rreite,· chancellor of .the diocese, was the bishop's master of cere­ monies. Also participating were Rev. Lucio B. PhiliipilllO, assist­ ant at Holy Name, 'master of ceremonies; George Bellenoit,. a seminarian' at St. Mary's, Balti­ more, cross bearer, and Rev. Mr.. RODel't Carter of St. Mary's Seminal'y, lector. Following the ordination, Bishop Connolly concelebrated Mass with the newly ordained priest. Father Gilmour sang his' first Solemn Mass at noon Sunday at Holy Name, his parish church. He also preached the sermon. Fpllowing the Mass,. a recep': tion for relatives and friends was held at the Kennedy Center. A' graduate of Holy Name School, Father Gilmour began his'studies for the priesthood at 'the Holy Cross Fathers prepara­ tory school at Notre Dame, Ind. He later studied at the 'Holy Cross Novitiate in Jordan, Minn.; , the University: of Notre Dame, Holy C'lOSS College in Washing­ ton and Notre Dame College in New Orleans. . Honor Gradma1e He holds a bachelor's. deg~ee from Notre Dame, from whiCh he graduafed with honors, and master's degrees in theology and i41 anthropology. . While studying for the priest­ hood, he did social work in Chi­ cago, taught at Notre Dame High , School in Niles. Ohio, and stud­ ied for overseas wodt at: Amer­ ican and: GeoJ1getown Universities in WaShington. Last Summer he wOli'ked in' the mis~on in Guatemala. Cur­ rently he is attached to the Dio­ cese of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. His first assiglllltJent is expected to be in Latin American missions. . Fatherr Gilmour is the brother of Mrs. Francis Ferreinll of the Brook Street address who gave her, brothehr a pre-ordiniltion present Thursday-a brand new niece, his first.

-Stu,dents to ·Start 'Free University'

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01lJR LADY OF THE CA~ EAST BREWS 'FER, DENNIS The first meeting ofthe autumn

season for the Women's Guild will b4! held at 8 on Thursday ev~ning, Sept. 24 in the ~mch haH and will be preceded by Mle installation of new officers by .Rev. Henry L. Durand, M.S~ pastor of the parish. Tbe 'new slate of officen1 • elude: Major (ret.) Doris Jeooen. president; Mrs. Edward Boyle, vice-president; Mrs. William Gre'nje1', secretary; Mrs. William Jones, treasurer. All ladies of the parish woo live contemplating joining 1h~ guild this year must be ai ~i!J meeting. 'Registration for CeD claSS(>#) will be held in tbe parish haH ClS Sunday, Sept. 22 after an .~

Masses.

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ST. JOHN BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE The Ladies Guild will serve Q lobster supper from 5:30 to '7J Saturday night, Sept. 21 m llie parish hall. Mrs. Ralph Souza is chairman and Mrs. ClarCne€ l Kirby is in charge of tickek\ whicb are available b'om lilllll members. .

8ISHOP CONNOLLY; REV. ROBERT G. GILAlOUR

Choice of LeaCiers Cons~ration

"

Homilist Urges E'lection Of· Bishops, Limited T~nns

CLEVELAND '(NC) T'he election. of bishops and limiting of 9heir terms of ofiiee were proPosed in a homily given at the conse£ration of Auxiliary Bishop William MI, Cosgrove of Cleveland. , The homillst wa~ Father Pa'­ rick .O'Malley, president of the recently organized National Federation of Priests' Councils. Father O'Malley noted that there are many difficulties 'posed by the 'election of leaders. But, he asked,. for tine "sake of the men themselves in authority. must we not begin to examine' ways and means of giving to the people of God a 'sharing .in the choice of their leaders?" He praised Bishop Cosgwve as a man wen qlllaiif!ed for his

DETROIT (,NC)-A "free uni­ versity" offering 21 C6lJ'rSeS ranging from '''Ene Structure ".~ideClst and Dynarrucs (j)f Myth" to 'ka­ rate wiiIl be launchet:ll Sept. 30 by the University of DetJ."Oit ¥ATICAN cri'Y (NC)-JacoD student government. Herzog, director general of the FI'ank Lucatelli,. stUO'el'lIt dean Israeli prrme minister's office, of the uni~ty within a, uni­ came to the Va.tican at his own versity, is setting up the prO'­ request to discuss the Mideast gram enabling both stnxdents and - situation with tbe Holy See. faculty to pUl'sue their ideaSl and Herzog met with a high Vati­ interests outside of the I'leces­ can offidal. It was repOrted else­ sal'y restructions in.heEent iln the . wheJl'e that the official was structure of degree-granting A:I'chbishop Ag{)~o Casaroli. institution. The non-credit head of the Council for tbe Pub­ courses· are open and free to all li~ Affairs of the Church. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, , Who al'e interested. Her~og'sviSit to the Vatican FALL RIIVER. "The J1"ee' univeJl'Sity will al­ was with parrtiCll)lar reference te The Winter schedule of low for innovation within e3&h the peace keeping mission' of Masses will begin Sunday, Oct. C<lIlege without disrupting ex­ U .N. secl'e~ary general T.hant's 6, with Masses hourly from 7 to iliting C<l!lege structures,'" said special ambassador to t~ Mid­ Iloon each Sunday morning and Luea.telli. east,' GunnaJl' .faning; an afternoon Mass at.5 o·clo~k. '''lit wirI allow for experiments The Holy Name Society an­ in inter~ipljn21ry 2;pproaches nOllnces a turkey supper and to education, establish a meeting dance for Saturday night, Oct. ground' between tL'Ie. University. PlU~lUNG & HEATING. INC. 5. Supper wiH be served from off Debraiii and the surrounding 6 to 8, with dancing to follow cO!Tlmunity, take advantage of . ~ Sal~s. <:Inc. SeJVIce Ufltil 1J :30. special! interests of faculty mem-­ ... ~ ·tOl Jamestlc Envelopes will be distributed bers who do not bave an -oPPOI'­ 31111 IfICustnal Sunday, Sept. 22 for a mission tunity to pl'esent them in regu­ )il Burners appeal to be delivered Sunday, lar classes, and provide a frame-, 995·l63l

Sept. 29' by Bishop Ernesto Gon­ wOl"k fur eapitalDzing on stu­ 2283 AC", __ .• ,;;T· AVENUE

~alves Costa 'on behalf of Poi'tudent Jnitiattve in academic NE\t\i SF.DFORD­ auese missions in Africa.' . areas."

Discu,sses With'Holy See

Christigns, Buddhisb Meet for Prayer KVOTO (NC)-RelatiOJWJ bf;... i-ween Buddhism and Christi&&­ ·jty . moved a step eloEier dUJ'mll iRe last week in August wheR Ul Buddhists and ChrisiiaD6 JDet 101' five days of prayer and diseussion at ~e Kanaai Seminar House or the Nippon Cbri6!_ Ae.ademy in Kyoto. .

new offi<;e and further aSRed, "But what will the' responsibil­ Leading Zen Dl.'lSters Yamadil ities of the episcopa<:y do .~ Mumon and Shibayama Zenkd him? What will it make of ,attended the. seminarl all cM4ll him?" , Buddhist lProf. Masao Abe. Rep­ ''The task should be SQ de­ resenting Christian denomJnQ­ manding that it will wear him· tions were Father William John­ out, burn him out, in'service i0 ston, Catholic' professor GfI the people." . Sophia University; Tetsuwl1'o Fathel' O'Malley pointed out Al'iga, a Protestant; and If'Eo!1. Ihat key positions in business Yukio Irie, a Quaker. industry and education "burn': Participants prayed rogefu~ men out; that they give all they and joined in services of each have .in their productive years, ether's religion on conseeutive then retire from theil' demand­ days. A pJrayer meeting was belCl ing leadership roles. in the Quaker manner; I!I PYOt-' He asked: "Does not the draining job of estant Bible service was· held; Ordinary of a diocese also ~_ and participants attended ~ Catholie Mass. in Jtl'~ mand that his term too be lim­ Temple. ited? Not as a political' expedi­ ent, but because he is a man and so has limitations 01'1 hi~ health, sbengtb, and ability te change and accept change. He is, in short, human. . "Why do. we not recognize his SUB BRI1ICl lOAD ASSOm. MASS. 02J. humaness and insist on treat­ ret 644-5551 in~_ him as ~ human being? There· are po supermen. There BOILERS RETUBED are just men; men who desper­ lUBES REPLACED ately need other men, and who H HOUR. SERVIC£

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Philadelphia 'Director Discusses

• THE ANCHOR-Diocese ·ofFall Riv~r-Thurs. Sept.19; 1968'

Causes of Vocations Crisis

Charles Portis" True· Grit. .: Sinlple6Delightf~1 Novel

. PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Msgr. lrently leaving the priesthood! Edward J. Ti)ompson,. director and Religious life, Msg.r. Thomp­ of ,vocations for the PhilaMlphia son said: "My basic feeling' w that self-conceit and selfishness archdiocese, attributed the cur­ rent· vocati'ons' crisis to affluence are largely responsible.. The manner in which some have an­ and uncertainty. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John.S. JK:en~edy . "The Church is in such a stage nounced their departures show At a time when most fiction is obscure, oblique, even of transition," he said, "that .a desire for public notjce, II frustration in their own style those ~ho want to give them­ eryptic, is it refreshing to come on' a novel which is simple selves oompletely are reluctant leadership roles." and direct. Such, at first glance, seems to be True Grit by He added "they don't want the to do so. The same is true of Charles Portis (Simon and Schuster, 6a,O Fifth Avenue, conversions to Catholicism. discipline of dogma, the asceti­ New York, N.Y. 10020. . ,

Thiii'gs are ~o fluid· that not as cism of celibacy, the ~itness of $4~95) .. And although the New York," N. Y. 1001t~. $5.95),­

many.. people' ar,e coming into obedience, yet these were the characteristics of ChriSt,' the :reader' realizes that this is i~ by' aComp~rative, newCQmer.

the .Church as previously. .' "For a stronger reason," Msgr. Eternal Priest." 'Miss Godden's outlook and art IlL put-on or a spoof; his en­ Only Genuine Signs Thompson'" c'ontinued, "people jQyment of it is not likel~ to be are now well' ~nown, as' the re­ aren't going to identify with Commenting on . celibacy, lessened: He will probably find suIt of many works of fiction, the priesthood and with Religi­ Msgr. Thompson said: 'To me, It as delightful long and' short.' She explains ous )lfe until it takes a definite celibacy is the only .genuine, as a cool spell .that her' present clutch of stories shape. Until there is consistency, real, positive sign and' assurance in the midst of _is entitled' Gone because "each is we're 'going to have to be satis­ to God and the people of God the dog days. 'founded on a moment of experi­ fied 'with a few vocations." that the priest is really for God This novel pur­ ence,felt or Ileen, or touched, . They Have Everything . and His people. This is based ports to be an that has'., long. since. gone, but The monsignor analyzing the on what Christ did in His priest­ autobiograpliical that has left a small sediment ,. crisis in an interview here, said: ly "rolt~ at the Last Supper and on work by one' .or shape behind." "AS a priest or Religous, there' Calvary." Mattie Ross, who, MSGR.E. J.TEOMPSON iLo~gest, Subtlest a·re two securities to act freely: The monsignor said vocation as the story Each story has an introductfirst, that all is well because direCtors must foster sensitivity­ opens, is a girl ~ 14 living tion, in which the author exI am.JI1flil Phnlil~..a it is going to end well in heaven; to the supernatural. He added, plains its origins. This is a bonus'· Vllu"",By(gJ1Oij lW:loilI'itiii, second, that a natural and superL "The rich young man's 'problem near Dardanelle,. ~<1 Arkansas.. It ',."

for the reader who wonders ~elrnewa natural hundredfold has been was that he was immersed in material thiIlgs and lacked gen­ opens with a bang. So~~ time in where an artist gets his material . promised by-Christ." the late nineteenth century, a~d how he develops it.. Miss ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) Msgr.. Thom:pson said "these erosity. We show a priestly gen­ when. neighboring Ok1ahoma Godden shows that the' same The Order of Friars Minor are the days of' affluent young erosity. through celibacy in con­ was still Indian Territory, Mat-· ~aterial may. ~. used twice, .(Fran~iscai1· Fathers) of Holy men ;....who· resemble the rich 's~crating our body and blood tie;s father is shot dead by ne'er­ once for a short stOry, later for a Name province, with headquart­ young man of the Gospel story. to the pepple." do-well Tom Shaney. whom Ross novel ("Lily and ~he Sparrows"). ers in New York City, concluded Discussing trends in renewal :"They have everything, in­ \ha~ kindly' taken on as a hired found in this collection, was­ in religious communities, Msgr. here the 12-day first phase of. eluding many inviting' opportu­ band.

the forerunner of the 'novel 'An' ,an extraordinary renewal chap­ nities. As -in the case of the ThQ1I1pson said: "Communities Double-Tough in reassessment might· run the Episode of Sparrows).' ter of affairs. with paSsage of rich young man, Christ's in:vi­ risk of trying to do too much .:', '" 41 measures-affecting their com-. tation to them is not a question Mattie,. a c:ool and resourceful And wnen an artist is tntent .nunity life, government an4 ap­ of what they- must do to be· and9f doing nothing well. They 70 ung ~un bu'rsting with pluck on one piece' 'of work, he may· .ostollc work!!. saved. But, .as the rich young could be hopscotching,' spread­ end with scriptural quotations, chance .upon something which is man went a.way said, 'because· ing themselves tRin quantita­ determines to bring Chaney to the beginning :of another' (as Fath'er Finian Kerwin, O.F.M., he had . many possessions,' these tively while being qualitatively justice,even though he has es­ case· wl'''h' ce") . provin~ial. of Holy Name prov- . affluerit young men are less . ineffective. as th e w •. "L''Eleg'a'n . Caped' in"to' the Indian Terri~ory. My own preference among ince, 'pre!!ided over the chapter happy than they would have "~eligious communities must .' She gOes to Fort Smith, Ark­ Miss Godden's present offerings in which 79 delegates partici- been had they accepted Christ's get back to the spirit o£ the kansas, identifies her father's ,is "Fireworks for, Elspeth," . pated,' represent,ing more· than invitation." Gospel and the spirit of their remains, ships, them home· for . th e Ionge~", o f0f the 900G priests, Brothers anda clerics .wh'lCh IS re t e s t Obstacle founders .Many communities .burial, an"d lookS arQund for' a .stories and in many ways· the of the largest Franciscan juris­ 'Seem to get involved where they. United. :States ,marshall whom \subtlest ,and the most. perfectly diction i~ the UI}ited States. Msgr. Thompson, cited a sur­ she can hire'to pursue the killer. rounded. 'ley made a year ago at a Cath- .were not intended to go and, Father Constantine Koser, O. olic high school here. He said the since they are not equipped, She is .advised that Rooster . Obvtou,sly Contrived F.M., minister general of the or- students "saw.. materialism I as they bungle." Cogburn is', "the meanest· 'one, _ , . • "'. * a' pi~iless' man, double­ The least, successful of the der ,of Friars Minor, who at- '. the' greatest obstacle to the ai:­ 'Iiough,. and tear don't enter into stories I should judge to be "No tended several chapters sessions, ceptance of- vocation." announced" that .the next general He said a study in Germany·· Jtis-th~nking'" She seeks him out, ~More Indians," which seems' ob. is surprised to- find that he .is viouSly, contrived, and, in its at- .chapter. of . the2?,OOO-m:mber , ,disclosed there are' more 'voca­ "an 'old one-eyed jasper built tgmpted' renderIng' of the Amer- ord~r w111 be .hGld In 1971 In the· tiollS from communist East Ger­ along the lines, of. Grover Cleve­ iean idiom (and frontier idiom" U,S.~po~sibl~ at St. Bonave!1-' many than' from West Germany' land." She has a hard-time per­ at· that), is often inept.' tur~ UmversIty here. where one section is affluent, the suading him: to take, the job, but She 'is old-fashioned alongThe first session of the renew-' other is ascetic. In this country she oadgers hIm until he agrees. side Mr. Elliott, who is much al chapter will reconvene in ': during, the depression era and WYman, more glancing and symbolic iiI' October to complete work on its immediately' 'after World -War II Chilling Adventures 3-6592 method. Whereas .one, is never~ agenda of some 200 items. A sec':' there were many vocations be·' Now a complication arises.' 'left puzzling over what Miss ond session· will be scheduled in cause people had a clearer vi­ CHARLES F. VARGAS Before' the exPedition can start, Godden means, one is' often in 1969 to evaluate renewal mea-' sion of values, he said. /. a 'Texas 'Ranger comes on. the "that condition while reading his flures in force and to draw more Concerning the numbei cur.254 ROCKDALE AVENUE . -. . scene, :LaBoeuf by name. He, collection. ' def(nitt' guidelines for the fuNEW B~DFORD, t.\ASS. too; is ,ln search of Chaney, who He does include' a simple '·ture. '"> . .

is wanted in Texas for the.mur­ story, ~'Miraele Play," which is

ST. CLOUD (NC)-Rev. Rich­ der of a prominent local politi­ hardly more than a few -remi­

ard D. Tetzloff, LuttIeran min­ ea.l figure. . niscences of early childhood, but ister with experience in hospital LaBoeuf tries to get Cogburn is done,with just the right touch' service, has been retained 'as the Mov~ment flo work for him, .but Mattie out-· of naivete as to be convincing VATICAN CITY~ (NC) - A . first Protestant chapl'ain at St. wits ·him, and then LaBoeuf and . winning. The sameap­ tries; .to,. persuade Cogburn·.to proach, or something akin to 'it, papai letter has hailed the 20th Cloud Hospi tal, Ii Catholic insti­ leaye Mattie oehind, but she is workS far less well in "The Well anniversary of the~Unum Omnes - tution here in Minnesota. ~lial to Uiat' h!1zard, too. and the :sul~dozers." . 'movement of the International -Makes Eating With Federation of Catholic Men, This odd trio inVades the bad­ Qhief Deficiency which was meeting in Dublin. lands and 'has a series of chilling and ,bizarre adventures, culmi­ , .. Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Two stories, "Better. to Burn" Up to 35% Easier~ nating, after several excrucia­ and "Words "Words Words" Papal Secretary of State, writ­ Clinical tests prove you can now ting defeats, i,n. complete suc­ ing in . the ;mime of Pope Paul strike me as brought 'bff' admir­ eat and chew better-make dentures cess; ,-Baok· ·to: Dardanelle goes ably, the first lon~er, more in­ VI to the organization's adminis­ ;~~~~I~l;,o;~~t~O;'~~~ the J:~doubtabl~,Mattie, t~, carry direct,and grimmer by ·far ·than trative board, noted that "the your plates. FASTEETH holds uppem on .for her family in her,father's the second. Here. the people Sovereign Pontiff is particularly and lowers more firmly so they feel more comfortable. FASTEETH Is not place and. to make a tiny fortune' seem real and the building of pleased wit~ the two aims of, acld-doesn't sour. No gummy. pasty herself.. , taste. Helps check "denture odor". the story sure and ultimately your work: The concrete follow­ Dentures that· fit are essential to Mattie is sure to please the most effective. up of the (Unum onines) gener­ Ibealth:So see your dentist regwarly. reader and to lodge in his mem- . ;get i'ASTEE'I'H at an drug counters. Mr. Elliott's chief deficiency is al assembly of last Autumn al o ory. She may be on her way to strongly evident in a number of Rome on the theme of the Chris· a place among folk heroines of other stories. They appear to be . tian at the' service' of the 'inte­ . fact and fiction. With her saucy . intellectual co'nstructs, tricked gral development of man and ,~lYo.u Cr~am, tongue, her pure heart,. and her out in the trappings of imagina­ the participation of members of demonstr~tion of the i~vincibil­ .the International Federation of . tive creativity. ity of vi~u~,she is quite a girl. But the trappings, although : Catholic Men-Unum Omnes in ingenious, cannot conceal tlie the-renewal ofthe post-concIliar NeW" CollectioDS basic aridity' which defies all Church in cooperation with the Hill Far more sophisticated are efforts to make the story pillse .cofupetent offices of the Holy two new collections of short' move. I. See and of the .responsible bish­ ·stories. One, Gone by Rumer . There is notable disparity be­ ops." FO~. HoME DELIVERY CALL 99.8·5691 Godden (Viking, 625 .N:adison tween Mr. Elliott at his best and . The. letter expressed the Ave." .New .York, N.Y. 10022: Mr. Elliott at his worst. To his . Pope's pleasure wi·th the move­ $4.95), is by a 10ng-establisned credit, .he has not feared to' try JQent's:program to work for·~· author. The ~ther, An Hour of a. number of ,approaches and of increase .of vocations within, the . , Last· Things by George P. Elliott ,subjects. 'But he· is more ambi­ third world 'of the'. underdevel.' so~ DARTMOUTH, MAS$~ '. (Harper'and'Row, ti~s. '~han he J:s versatile. ope4 nations.. ,. . . . . .49 E~ , . 33td·St

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Opening .Kiclcoff

on

THE ANCHOR-

Sat,urdar:

.,

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19

Thurs., Sept. 19, 1968

:

Three Area Schoolboy. Grid

Nation u$

Leagues in 'New Alignme,nt~

Continued from Page One' so cl).aracter emerges through 0 series of self-denials, all' of · whicn implies violence toward By PETER J. BARTEK

all that destroys our person­ · alify""­ Norton High Coach

"The swords our people must put back into their scabbards New league aignmenrts, eoaches and talent spotlight 'are those which hurt others; the the local schoolboy gridiron scene which officially opens swords which we must unsheathe, next Saturday. Each of the three leagues looated within are those which hurt our diabol­ the confines of diocesan territorial limits has undergone ical conceits and our unconcern for neighbor. It is easier to carry . ­ a change in membership a placard damning someone else eince the completion of the 'Bristol County circuit ~t .the than to carry the cross of our 1967 football oampaign. Or,le, conclusion of the '66-'67 scholas­ · own ·built. God knows we need the N arraga~ League, tic year,. will· participate in the . an intellectual training to 'amass will expand to a five team cir­ lO-team Hockomock League. I knowledge; but we also need a cDit while bi>th t:lhe Bristol New Bedford is also among training of our own will in good­ C 0 Ul n t y ondl the schools which changed ness to denounce nuclear war­ Clllpeway Con­ league aHiliations but, the Itt­ fare born of this .wisdom." ~wo K.oves w ill I' Bishop Sheen concluded his s eve n dubs become part of the Bristol ir;~,~ - ': . \. letter by affirming that "we will r.illler than the County League in football. _. ""'. .", j keep our schools because of two eight of a year f~:.'~ However, -New Bedford will ,~:'" loves: love of God and love of ago. Old Rochesrompete in the basketball and ' 'C"">'~ .... ~I country. We will sacrifice for. ter Regional of lO<;,~ ';i' baseball this scholastic year them not just for the sake of our Mat t.a poi - ti;"'.:. after a decade's, absence 'from · sanctuary, but for the benefit of sett 'WIll com- ';" 1Ihe County circuit. . OUT republic." pete in the Most flrea coaches are ap­ __,_J He also expressed belief that: Narry grid loop, Peter proaching the up-comL")g cam­ / E;qua] aid for Catholic schools hopeful of imBartek palgD with . guarded . optimism, EAGLE SCOUTS: A stupendoqs Array of merit badges will be forthcoming from' the proving upon its showing in, the mindful that ill few bl!:d breaks is displayed by four new' Eagle Scouts of SSe Peter and Federal government. I Capeway Conference. . or injuries can turn a potential . All Christian churches will North Attleboro, which 8eV-.· championship season into a dis-. Paul parish troop, Fall River. From left, Eagles Edward erect its relationship with the aster.' .Souza, Our Lady of Health' parish;' J~ephStankiewicz, '''unite efforlsto work together in teaching the unchurched. SS. Peter and Paul; .David Pereira, Our, Lady :ae~Ith;. youths of America." Stephen. Holland, St. William.. .. '. . '., Non-eatholics will' also' 1 be Williston's Double-Session 'H.eadache' willing to sacrifice so that their ehildren can reCeive "moral Defending champion Case High to' be' Somerset's major problem' . traiJling" in. Catholic ~hOQls. ' of .swthansea and· as··the, coachingthStaff tries to . again e.pte-season avorl In 'develop a smoo working unit , the larger 'Narry circuit. Coach . centered' aro'Und 11 handful' of . . ( . . , ' " ,.. . :' ' .. Bob'Williston, whose club. rode' experienced performers~ EI·lis.$ays ~ersonalln.t~9rity Where A to an unbeaten league record in Dighton-Rehoboth and Old his first year at. the helm, may Rochester will rely primarily Guide in World of Change be hard pressed to duplicate last upon underelassmen. Coach Ed season's excellent showing. The Teixeira of Dighton expects 11 SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - .' age in the world's history has Cardinals have lost several key smaller but faster combine than Personal integrity is what should withered and died before our Means A performers from the champion- last year's club to earry the above all remain the coristi'lnt· eyes and a new age is struggling ship club. Compounding Willis- school colors. He is altering his guide for men in a world of to be borne, the tone and' direc­ ton's problems, tbe Swansea oHense accordingly. change, historian Msgr. John' tion of which no man can' tell ' school will be on double session At Old Rochester, Coach Tracy Ellis told members of the _ . ­ this year. Under the double-ses- Frank Almeida has two major legal profession attending' the "u behooves each of us, there­

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·GEO, O-'HARA

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;r~:g?~b7E~~'··§o1;]figi ~fw~ft~t:~E .¥.d~M~:~7~ :CH'.EVROL'E·I

dates. .coach Jim SU~livan's ways and A.l.qteida, 'like. lJDY 1 br~athl«lSS I. pace of chang~. in . nor will we repose while a world squad is now at 65, down trmn. ~h.who suffers a·depth prob- .~ vorte~ 0:( y,rhich every man. on ~e \m~rch passes Us ~y.; about· 90, and competition is ' lem,.bas to be concerned aQout' . is today. caught up, thos~ values . 'Tf1II to 0 I;" keen as the boys battle for var-8cbools . with JDaJ)y more boys and norms of con,duct that in,' the e ~rse ve" lIi~berths. Inexperience seems on their roster. 'firialreckoning will not have.' ."'It's your duty, as it is min~;" he . .significinltweight as we termin-. .eontinuecll, "to quicken our ~ace .. N~W ate ~ur. earthly .pUgrip1age~'" 'to ~ that ttK; eternallr true Seyen Harbor Pennant Dnams . Msgr. Ellis noted that '1o"say . values in our clvil~zll:tio~,..those rOOl Kings Hwy. we. live in an age of change is aspects of tradition that des~rve

Seekonk will be looking for The Bristol CountY League totally inadequate; we live in to endure, are not swept a~ay

its first Narry League. victory as flags appear to be u;p for grabs Open Evenings an age of revolution - - - An by the torrent that now engulfs

the Warriors commence their this season with at least four us all - • ­ second, season in the looP. Coach clubs possessing the potential of "No certain fo~ula cim' be

. . . , ' Val LaFontaine, who has a good' upending defending <Champion Prelates Condemn advanced for the successfulful­ ' . array of veterans. is hopeful Taunton. F"I - fiuinent of your commitment in thSit the Warriors.will be in con­ The Taunton Tigers stunnned . 'rize- . Inning I m the court l"OOm and the law of­ tention.all the way; local football fans' last season ltOME. (NC) ~ A movie that fice, any more than such can be when they rallied to an unde- received a Catholic prize at .this found for those of..us who teach, Catholic, Conferencefeated season but gone are the year's Venice Film Festival.has whether it be law or theology stalwarts of that clUb along with been branded unsuitable by the or the history of t!he Church. ·Fo~med· i~ Color~do its coach. Charley Benoit, now in . Nation'al Movie Commission of "But one of the most reliable DENVER (NC)' _ ~ Rich8rd the head coaching position at. the Italian Bishops' Conference.' , standards by' which our life mis­ Casey, president of the board of 1'ailnton, faces the unenviable .' The very same day' that the sian may, be 'measured 'is .the . directors of the Colorado Catho- . task of trying to produce another . bishops' . eomnl.issioQ's adverse' steadiness and, persistence· by .. , Hc Conference, announced the '~ampioitship'teampracti~al!y• 'judgment w.~ published inthe' which we adhere to' what' we appointment of Ronald C. Hayes from scratch. Vatican City 'newspaPer, L'Os-·· believe to be right, the constancy. The Falmouth National BOnk as the organization's first exec­ The most likely teams to de­ servtore Romano, the movie was .. that speaks to each of uS' in a FALMOUm, MASS. ' . utive director. ,throne Tauntolll prognosticators .seized 'by order of ItaUan judi- word, the success we achi~ve in By the Village Green Since 1821 With the appointment of say are Durfee,' AtUeboro; Bish';', cial authorities, .who complained being true, to ourselves - .• ' _ .. Hayes, and the election of offi­ op Feehan of. Attleboro and ~~i~r'::S~~~~~:es~~SCivi(jusand '

cers, the Colorado CathoUc Msgr. Coyle Hi?h of Taunt~n. '. The bishops' coinmission 'com- lr~!:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l;

Conference was formed. Colo­ None, ho~ever, IS ready to dlS­ plainedof the "violence scenes rado is the 18th state to organize ,count BISho(l Stang of North . and the nudity" of the' film. It . a conference, and the first to Dartmouth and everyone: ex- put the film in" the "excl.uded" elect laymeri as officers. . p~ts New ~ol"ll Vocational·· category. . . ' . Pwposes of the conference are wdl be greatly Improved. '.' When the Catholic Internatinal' to coorcUnate certain pl"Ograms . P,artisans. ~ predicting first Office for Cinema bestowed its· ' . ,. . in the tWo, Colorado dioceses; pXace finishes for all Bristot" . prize on "Teorema" at Vellice, , represent the Church in legisla­ Coun~ League clubs but 'the . tWo meqtbers 'of the Catholic tive and other. public policy more cau~ous coaches see a awards committee refused' to matters; assist the dioceses in wiC!e open race. The only con-' -.si~the f1~an!. At that time, .the 653 Washington' Street, Fairhaven program development and re- .clusion that can be drawn is eorrespondent for' L'Ossetvtore search; and dir~or supervise. that, the will again have' ,Romano," Father. Claudio SOrgi, 994-5058 any program sponsored by the one of i'tls patterned finishes" expressed serious resei"VatioDS conference. .; . eome Tb8ll1hsg1ving. '. about the 'deciSion. • ••41...... U •••••••••••• ~, •••.•••••••••••••••• ••••• •. l " "

SEDFOR')'

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BISAILLON'S

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THE ANCHOR..,..

Thurs., Sept. 19, 1968

or

IPriests Afrfi'empt

To Of

C~GU'o~y mss~~ AUfi'horr~ty'

NEWARK (NC) - Four­ It.een priests of the Newark archdiocese have sent a let,­ reI' to the more than 900 priests in the See asking them :00 sign a statement in support of ecclesiastical authority. Neither the letter nor the ac­ <eompanying statement" mentions Ithe controversy surrounding Pope Paul's. encyclic~l over birth control. The letter, how­ ever takes note "of the recent· Qttacki? on ecclEisiastical author­ '. ity and also of the growing COIl­ fusion among the laity.... The statement, the letter said, is "an attempt to clarify the issue." Those who sent the letter said the statement essen­ tially represents "the opinion of mte vast majority of th~ priests . . of the archdiocese." The statement itself makes lI'eference to "present controver­ mes" and. says the ul)dersigrled ~ish ,to voice clearly and u/V equivocally our support of the Holy Father." ItconUi1Ues: , Teaching Authority ­ "We now affirm what we have !always believed, that the Holy Father, as. the VicQIC of Christ, SlOssesses unique teaching au- ". -ahority in the work of the salva­ elon of souls. "Furthermore, on the day of <t»roination, we made a solemn. . eommitment to the Ordinal'y cand his successors. We now pub­ lIi<:ly renew our steadfast loyalty 60 this commitment." T,he priests have been asked 00 return the signed statement \\0 Father Michael J. O'Grady of Paramus, one of the drafters, by Sept. 15. Circulation of the statement ~llows the publication of state­ 'anents of support for the Pope's . encyclical by faculty members Cllt Immaculate Conception Sem­ , Inary, Darlington, and Seton Hall University, South Orange, and a statement of diss'ent aigned by more than 26 diocesan priests. Some theologians from Seton Ball and St. Peter's College; .Jersey College, signed an earlier atatement of dissent circulated nationally. '

1

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HOLY FATHER SHARES,THEIR TRJALS: Extend'" ing 'a special greeting to a group of pilgrims from Czecho­ slovakia during a general audience at Castelgandolfo, his

Summer residence, Pope Baul VI told them : "We under­ stand your fee~ings and we share in your trial.' We pray for you." NC Photo.

AssertsOid·Fas.h~oned Col~ege Dis'cipline, Dyi~g Notre -Dame Socgologis~ Notes Campus Trend

DAYTON (NC)-A sociologist versity, the educational enter­ ,to begin or extend and deepen their own religious commit­ has speculated here that ol~­ prise." fashioned tight discipline on He said ~'there simply must be ments." "We recognize that the prin­ Catholic college campuses is on mechanisms for the registering cipal means of individual growth' the way out but· students have · of student concerns; and struc­ no right to expect absolute free­ , tures for them to participate' in is ,the influence of people on' dom. ' each other; while seeking to de": decision-making." ;. velop 'high quality graduate and Robert L. Hassenger, director 'If "student power" means of the office' for educational re­ complete autonomy' "in. 'running search, University of Notre · their iives while at the univer­ Dame, told University of Dayton sity," he observed "then I am 0; students the old-fashioned disci- " against it, apd lose ,respect for pline just doesn't work today. students who are so naiyf:.. as to think this is the solution to their R'ocking the Boat , problems; but if 'student pow~r' "In choice of courses, in gov­ , means that undergraduates and erning so far as practicable the graduate students inust be rep- . internal affairs of the Cbllege, · resented by voting power on . and in partiCipation in extra­ every university committee that ROME (NC)-Msgr. ·Karl Bay­ college events, students should legislates in any way about stu­ 01', secretary general of Caritas be allowed, not complete auton­ futernationalis, international omy .(which students· rarely dent life, and perhaps even some aspects of the curriculum, then .... Catholic charities organization; want), but the opportunity to' I am for it." • bas flown to the island of Sao work' on a co-equal basis with Tome off the Nigerian coast with faculty and administration. Co­ Mutual Influence 30 tons of medicines and' baby ercive authority should at all Hassenger . tQld the students food for Biafra. ' costs be avoided," Hassenger "the young men' and women we The fli,ght of the Boeing 707 said. meet today are like no others in ~t1iner was paid for by readers "One overwhelming reason" of the Turin daily newspaper for avoiding coercive authority American history." "The questions you ask have 'La Stampa. Eleven tons of the is that "it. doesn't work," he · never been put with. su'ch seri­ cargo were supplied by West added. ' German Caritas, while the re­ "It seems to me that the pres­ · ousness before, or dealt so ur­ mainder was either given by or ent hang-up some students are gently with values and beliefs," purchased f·rom Italian pharma­ faced with, the almost 'compul-" he said. "It seems clear that the root concern of today's college eeutical firms. sive need to escalate their de­ A spokesman for Caritas In­ mands * * * is due in large mea­ 'student is'the quest for identity ternationalis said that Msgr. sure to past paternalism and re­ 'and honesty, and unalterable Bayer remained in Sao Tome strictiveness," he opined. More­ : opposition to 'phoniness.' " about a week to "help coordinate over, he added, "Catholic schools .As for, Catholic colleges and Il'elief" for the millions who are have no monopoly here." · universities, they exist, he said, besieged in the ever-narrowing Hassenger de<:lareli. "student "to provide' opportunities for circle of Biafra. unrest is, if anythfng, on the in':: ~ faculty and students who share 'He said that many voluntary crease, .perhaps- more so than in · certain commitments and wish IIgencies had representatives in Catholic colleges and universi-:­ ,:to' explore certain questions, to Sao Tome:> to channel food and ties." He pred~cted "this mood come together for mutual influ­ medicine to Biafra's st'arving will continue to make waves for · ence and learning." people. Among them he said are . college and' university adnun~5­ 'Maximal Development . U.s. Catholic Relief Services, trators," German Caritas and t\le German , "The· Catholic colleges and Protestant relief ol'ganization,as 'Studellt Pow~r' universities," he continued, "will well· as church agencies from Hassenger feels '~he more , provide enviro'nments which at- ~.

Sweden, Norway, Denmark and violent· demonstrations' of the · tract, 'among others, those who '

li'inland. past are shameful," 'not only' be­ want to discover what it means

"They are all working togeth­ cause they embarrass an insti­ to be a Catholic Christian, and

er in a ,:,ery good spirito"~ he tution but "because they 'disrupt who seek to do so in a free, yet

"GREATER, NEW BEDFORD'S aaid.' the essential work of the uni... info~med, way. They will want

professional· programs, Catholic higher education should provide sufficiently for .maxImal per­ sonal development by students. This means students must have' the freedom to' make mistakes and the opportunities to learlll from them," he declared." .!

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