09.21.67

Page 1

Open to Public

The

ANCHOR

Fall River,

M@]$$o,

Vol. 11, No.

Thursday" Sept. 21, ]967

~$ ©] 967

$4.00 per Vaar PRICE lOc

lJ"he Anchor

CCD To Emphasize Adult ,Education The CCD will sponsor a diocesan-wide Adult Christian Education effort in conjunc­ ton with its annual teacher training program in each area of the diocese beginning Oct. 3. Courses in Christian Doctrine, Advanced Scripture and Elementary and Secondary Mehtods will be open to the pubilc to answer the great need of adult education and spur the establishment of . '1 I •• t h a d u I t discussion _action tIon ~I 1 conSIst 111 one hour of gram. The prospective eac ers . . doctrme and one hour of meth- will then di.vide into groups for mtendmg to prepare for ods each week. the second hour for elementary intendin got prepare for All present will attend the or secondary methods depend­ teaching CCD courses in parishes, a basic 20 week' (40 hour) program for credit and certifica-

course in Christian Doctrine taught by one of the diocesan priests assigned to the CCD pro-

Bisho~ Urges Support

For Confraternity \

An expanded catechetic keep our own ideals and, sense of loyalty to Christ and the Gos­ prog'l'am in every parish in pcl. ' the diocese is the immediate There is no surer' way to be a objective of Most Rev. James good Christian than to preach

:b Connolly, Bishop' of Fall River. "'This Fall we are to inaug­ \l!lI"ate a more intensive course in teacher training for release-time $faaching," the Bishop stressed in pastoral letter which was read at all masses in all churches of &be diocese on Sunday last. "We want-we need-mOl'e 1laried courses in adult educa­ tion,"" the diocesan Ordinary emphasized. We need, in Confra­ ternity work, the use of our 'school facilities, and the help of 3\lxiliary aids in the form of books, projectors,' films and whatevet' might help make more nnpt'essive and permanent the teaching of Christ," the Bishop lISSerted. The pastoral letter follows: , "Lol'd to whom shall we go?

You have the words of eter­

nal life." St. John Chapter

VI,v:68

Beloved in Christ: We are at present preparing a Diocesan synod, aiming to carry out, as best we can, the ideas ,and ideals of the Second Vatican «aunci!. An overwhelming ma­ jority of the Bishops voted for Pastoral Renewal in every avail­ able form. They emphasized the JIIOle of the Catholic in the mod­ world. There always has been wch a thing as the Apostolate ei the Laity, but the summons to know Christ . . . and be Christ . . . has never been em­ Phatically declared as it has been by this Council and this Pope. 'No one can live passively or .differently in our confused :world. Either we become domin­ lilted by what others do or say, and tamely follow after leaders £:Oing off in all directions, or we

a

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Ordinary Names Two Moderators . Bishop Connolly has an­ nounced the appointments to ~o Diocesan posts. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, pas­ ior of Our Lady of Angels Church, Fall River will serve as area moderator of the :Diocesan eouncil of Catholic Women, • rea No.1, Fall River and co­ ordinator of the Bishop'" An­ -..al Charity Ball. Rev. James F. Lyons, admin­ ~trator of Our Lady of Victory ehurch, Centerville has beeD Ilamed as area moderator of the Diocesan Council of Catholic .women, Area No. 5, Cape Cod _d the Islands.

Christ's Gospel. Some men might say they couldn't do that Consci­ entiously, since they do not prac­ tice it. For them, I can think of nothillg better than that they preach what Christ did, being eet·tain that if we preach, we will be constrained to practice. 'Then we become Apostles of the Word. Then we may be sure our lives will not be'lived in vai.n. Many at'ound us judge Christ­ ianity by what they see in or hear from us. It's a pity to think of the many who do not know Christ, mainly because they have never seen His reflection in a neighbor. But it is more sober­ ing to find so many "weak and unprofitable servants" who bury their faith and hardly ever re­ veal it through an apostolic deed. For years the Confraternity Tur.t~ to Page Fi~teen

Bishop in Europe To Administer Confrmation Bishop Germany oom.mence which will

Connolly is in today' ready to a two-week trip take him through'

T'ur!tey and Greece to adminis­ ter the Sacrament of Confirma­ tion within the United States Ai~ Foree (European theater) geo­ graphical area. The Ordinary will follow 'the steps of Pope Paul in vis'its to Istanbul, Turkey and Ephesus, Greeee where he will pray for the laity, religious and clergy of the diocese at the site of shrines of Our Lady and St. John the Apostle. ' Making the trip at the invita­ tion of the Air Force, the Bishop expects to ,return to the diocese on Monday, Oct. 9. Fr. (Lt. Col.) John F. Burke of the Manchester (NH) :Diocese

win serve as chaplain to the Fall

River Ordinary. '

The Bishop's itinerary follows:

Sept. 20-New York to Rhein

Main.

Sept. 22-Frankfun to Istan­

bul.

Sept. 24-Istanbul to AnkarQ Sept. 26-Ankara to Diyarba­ kill'.

Sept. 27-Diyarbakir to An­ kara. ' Sept. 28-Ankara to' Adana. Sept. 29-Adana to Ankara to Istanbul to Izmir. At Izmir he will go to EphesWi Turn to Page Sm .

CONFIRMATION TOUR: Bishop Comiolly, center, is tendered Godspeed by Bishop Gerrard, right, and Father Barrett~, chancellor, left, as he leaves for a Confirmation t()ur of Air Force Bases in Europe.

ing on thei I' level of teaching. There- will also be presented an advanced doctrine course in New Testament Scripture - 10 weeks (20 ·hours). Credit and certification 'in this course will be given to any prospective or active teacher who has already completed the basic doctrine and methods course, Those taking part in the courses for adult education need not take part in the methods courses. They can enroll in either the Christian Doctrine or Advanced Sacred Scripture Courses. The only charges will be that stemming from materials and books used in class. The courses provided, places and dates are the following: .'all River All courses will take place at Mount St. Mary Academy, Fall River on Thursday evenings at 7:30 beginning Oct. 5. Christian Doctrine: Rev. John R. FoIster; Advanced Scripture: Rev. George ·W. Coleman; Ele­ mentary Methods: Miss Patricia Makin, MoEdo; Secondary Meth­ ods: Sister Mary Timothy, R.SoM. New Bedford ,All courses will take place at Bishop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth, on Tuesday evenings at 7:30 beginning Oct. 3. Christian Doctrine: Rev. Agos­ tinho S. Pacheco; Advanced Sa­ cred Scripture: Rev. John J. Smith; Eiementary Methods: Sis­ ter Mary Columban, R.S.M.; Secondary Methods: Sister Joan Bernadette, SoN.D. Turn to Page Six

.Pope's Senate Choices Bring Total to 1:9'7 ,

-

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has nominated the 15 per cent of the member­ ship of the Synod of Bishops which was 'allowed him under the synodal arrangements approved by him earlier. Among the 24 bishops from throughout the world that he has chosen, three are Americans: Francis Oardinal Brenna" of the Roman Curia, Archbishop Martin J. O'Connor, head of three bishops will join John F. Dearden of Detroit, John 'the Ponti:f;ical Commission theThese four U. S. prelates that have Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia for Communications Media, been elected by the American and Bishop John J. Wright of and Bishop Fulton J. Sheen bishops:-Lawrence Cardinal She­ Pittsburgh. han of Baltimore, Archbishop of Rochester. Another American, ArchbiSbOp

WESTERN UNION TELEGRAM LOB-443 NLC Vatican Most Rev. James L. Connolly, c/o Bishop's House, 394 Highland Ave. Fall River, Mass. Holy Father, having learned of, forthcoming diocesan synod, Fall River, offers prayers fur its success for good of souls. Cordially .imparts' to your Excellency, partici­ pants, synod, clergy, religious~ faithful your diocese in pledge of illuminating Divine graces, paternal apostolic benediction. Cardinal Cicognani

Ambrose Senyshyn of the Uluainian-rite archeparchy of Philadelphia will also attend the synod because of his position in an Eastern-rite church. Turn to Page Fifteen

DCCW Meeting The first quarterly meet­ ing of the Board of Directors

of the Diocesan Council of Catholiic WOnt en will be held on Sunday 'afternooDO Sept. 24 at 2:30 in St. John's School Hall. Attleboro. Among the items on the agenda will be a discussion of the preliminary plans for the Annual Bishop's Charity BalL


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Drive Divisao'n .leaders Division'leaders have been named for the Holy ,Union Debt Reduotion Drive now in progress in Fall River and

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Taunton. Chairmen announce that a gala dinner-dance Sunday night, Oct. 22 at the Venus de Milo restaurant will climax the drive, and that other events to benefit the Holy Union commu­ nity will include a fashion show from 1 to 2 Wednesday after­ noon, Sept. 27 and a ,second fashion show on an October date to be announced. Ticket chair­ men for both shows include Mrs. Stapley Bochenek, Miss Sharon Ferris and Mrs. Helen Rego. Additionally, a teen-age dance will be held with a name, bande providing music.

Downtown Merchants . Larry Romeo and Th.omas Britland, downtown merchants; Mrs. Gerald Cloutier, Flint mer': chants; Mrs. Lucille Santore and Mrs. Robert Bacon, beauty par­ lors; Anthony Camara, grocery stores; Mrs. Leah DeMello, mu­ nicipal employes; Miss Evelyn Almeida, Swansea; Edmund Met­ ras, soft drinks. Rev. Norman Ferris is work­ ing with a large' Taunton com­ mittee.

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Make Profess'ion As' Paulists.,.

. THE'ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Rlver-Thurs.Sept. 21,1967

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Patrick :So Hughes, of Souflii Yarmouth was one of five youDS men who made their final ren... gious profession as members oft! the Paulist Fathers Communi~ this month at St. Paul the ApOSo tie Church, New York City. The future Paulist priest is t~ son of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund JL, Hughes of South Yarmouth. Hti has three sisters and thl'Elli brothers. Very Rev. John F. Fitzgeralcll,. C.S.P., Superior General of tbCl Paulist Fathers, was the princlJ.> pal celebrant in a· concelebrateti1 Mass. He presided at the cere-> mony and received the commit? ment of the future priests. The young men, now life.-Iong members of the Community willll continue their studi~s for the priesthood at St. Paul's College" the Paulist Fathers' major sem,.. inary in Washington, D. C. 'rhd group has been studying there for the last three years. Prior ~ that, the men spent one year ~ the Paulist Novitiate at OalE Ridge, N. J. Hughes, a native of QUincy, at.. tended St. John's GradeSchocll there and Archbishop Willianw High in Braintree. He recei ve<i a bachelor of science degree from B. C. where he majored hi marketing and advertising. Hughes, who plays guitar amj has an engaging voice, is thlIl leader of The Paulist Fo)k Sin., ers, a group of Paulist' 'seminao rians who entertain oo'the caD)oo puses of the nation's mary:y co).. leges and universities.' He ami the group appeared lasf' WinteJ' at Carnegie Han in even~ of religious folk music: The other Paulist8 makilljg their final profellSion were: John Collins, New York' City; David Pil1iod; Port Washington, L.lL" New York; Charles Brunick" Camden,' New Jersey;' Richard Trelease; Edison, New ·Je·rsey.

LAFAYETTE, (NC) - An ed­ ucator advised teachers of the Lafayette diocesan school' sys­ Division lLeaders tem to develop a more open re­ Heading various divisions of ll!,tionship 'to the world and to the fund-raising effort are Dr. welcome non-Catholic students' Paul P. Dunn, Dr. Daniel L. into the schools. ·Msgr. Richard Mouton, super­ Mooney, Dr. Francis' J. D'Errico intendent of the diocesan school and Dr. James J. Sabra, physi­ system, here in Louisiana, told cianS; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rod­ erick, . teachers; Mrs. Cecile the annual meeting of Catholic Clement Grobe, alumnae; Mrs. school prinCipals that Catholic schools are call,ed upon by the Stanley Keezer, newspaper dis­ Second Vatican Council to meet tributors and teachers' parents. 'Robert Griffin and Frank S. '!the world of their local com­ Feitelberg, insurance and real m,unity... · COPTIC RITE: A Catholie"~iest of. the COpti~' Rite He said., that this entails build­ estate;,William O'Brien, account­ distributes Holy Communion in-Luxor, Egypt. Some' 90,000 ing, fostering ,and promoting· a ants and office supplies; 'Mrs.' new culture "that is both terres­ Ooptic Catholics live in this country under the 'juris~ietion Charles Whelan, druggists; Har­ Patriarch of Alexandria, Stephanos 'Cardinal old Dusoe, automobile dealers;· tial and yet Christian." 'The of the Coptic . , . . I. , ., "f, I Monsour Ferris and Joseph freedom which has entered the Sidarouss.NC Photo. " . " ' , :." Church through the council

Feitelberg banks; Gerald Luongo " ,' .. " ,:

and George Bolger, attorneys; should be allowed hi the classDr. Gilbert Vincent and Dr. Ed-' freedom which ward Steinhof, dentists; Dr. :so.:.: will enable boys and gi'rls to, PHILADELPHIA (NC) ~ A Methodist Bishop Fred Pierce. seph Rockett, optometrists. Jeffrey ,Sullivan, . funeral develop, according to their pwn Methodist bishop sounded a call Corson in his sermon told 3,000 homes; Joseph Levesque, flo­ talents, understanding and their to all segments of society to students and faculty members:· rists; Mrs. Barbara Coulombe, own grace, which will enhance unite in making Christian re- ''Tile Church must"ioOK 'to the' hotels and motels; Norman Le­ their' commitmen~ to God and" newal a reality in'a sermon at a Christian university' and the mi­ Compte, laundries; Mrs. Edith their unselfish service to oth- Mass marking the .125th anni- crocosm of its' campUs 'life not Alves and Mrs. Barbara. Cou-' eni," he said~ "versary of. suburbao' Villanova for' the 'demonstnition of a' false' 10m be, restaurants; John Mc­ He told the prinCipals they University. . or elective renewal motivated by Avoy, threatres; Mrs. Raymond should welcome non-Catholic John Cardinal Krol of Phila- .s~lf-~ratification,b~i c~iefiy for, Golden and George Niland, un­ students into Catholic schools. delphia officiated at the,. Mass ~e genuine renewal .of life. ions; Rev. James A. McCarthy, The monsignor stressed: "Non- in the university ,field house, in- .yihi~h hilS always .. c!lara~~l7ized ' Postponement' pastors; JQhn Coyle, contracto1'S; Cath.olics·share 'mahY valUel?1 augurating the,~ew school year,. tQe. 9hrlstian Vl(itn~~,\.9,.every". Monsour"Ferris, utilities' and moral, spi:ritual, and American, at the institution. condu<;ted ~t,age." . , . " . '. ", ..".: . A"testi~~nial ~lanned.',~y pa.. beverages. ..' with Catholics. Tliere is no.the_Augustinian :fathers.. ·.d~~shpp; Corso~,l\~d.,m-i\p.do~s nSh!0ners of St: 9'eo~~~.. Churcbo '.' '.' pr6selyti~ing.jf,l oW' 'schoois a~ , ,." ,', not.~~d a new J;eligi9.J;I.,t.o calm. Westport for thIS ,Sunday a.t Linm .. . . " , . : , ": ,; we'welcotne,those'non-Caiholics ,Mass.Ordo , irID,.e~resUessnes!1.lle,adcied all. 'C!>ID ,'Park Ballroo~' h~s"beem " Honor for NCEA .' wqo sh~e our be~i~ in the im-"" FRIDAY-Ember Friday in Se~' ,thaf~· necessary l~'~:t','JlilPture'. ,postp~ne~to 6 Sunday nr~W; Oct. '·WASHiNGTON. (NC). :- The .portance, of, religi'on in educatember. II Class. Violet. Mass fot:,our!1elves the, spirit" method ,22, due to' illness of the honor~ National' Cath'oHc Education3I " t i o n . " , . '"Proper; No Glory or Creed; ,and,' objective ·of,:.,~he';·iGreat' 'Rev.' Lo~enzo H.l\1:orai~, 'p,astora ,Associa~on i~ one of 12 educa' .. Common Preface. reac'her.," He adde4",ther~: mUllt All ot~er a:rrangem~ntS.,.r~m. tional organizations slated for SATURDAY -Ember Saturday, b~ ,a sp,irit Qf "agit<,itioIPUlQ pr,o,­ the, s~e. , .' hondrs by the Arrierican Council of September. II Class. Violet. "test" ..to achieve Chri.st,ian re­ ,...--'- ~--_ _~ oh Education at-its 50th ffitmial Mass Proper;. No. ,Glory 'or ilewaL . "'.". I Ji;!eeting, to be held here Oct. ' Creed; Common Preface. T h e , 11, to :13. . . are' . expected to at- ' 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th Lessons 'Span ish 'C..,a.' n Some 800, .FUNERAL HOME, INC. tend the third annual Fall River with their versicles may .t>e ~AD:~ID (NC)-The Vatican II. Marcel Roy - Go Lorraine Roy CYO Awards ~ight banquet to omitted at the discretion of the Councilium for the .Implementa­ Roger laFrance' .. Necrology be held at 6:30. Sunday night, Celebrant, but the first lesson tion ,of the Constitution on the FUNERAl. DIRECTORS

Oct. 15, at 'White's restaurant. and the Epistle must be read. Liturgy has given tentative ap­ Nearly .259. ~war4s will be pre­ SUNDAY-XIX Sunday After proval to a Spanish-language 15 Irvington Ct.

~EPT. 29 sented .to· CYO members out­ Pentecost. U Class. Green. verision of the Canon of the 995-5166

.Rev. J. A. Payan, 1899, Found­ standing in·the four-phase youth Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Mass which may be used as Of New Bedford

er, St. Matthew, Fall River. 'prQgram . of the' 'organization. Preface of Trinity. Oct.. !. Incl' d " . MONDAY-Mass of previous SEPT. 30 . u ed _ ,w:i ll ,~~_ ~asketball, Sunday. IV Class.' Green. Mass baseball, golf, tennis and cheer­ Proper; No. Glory or Creed; Rev. John J. Griffin, Pastor, leading: .awards;'. the Samuel OIROURKE Common Preface. 1963, St. Paul's, Taunton. Priestly ~e¢oriaI Award, given TUESDAY -North American 'Funeral to the outstanding: youth of the ocT. 2 Funeral B~tn~" year;.Christ the King'awards and Martyrs; SS. Isaac ~ogues, '571 Second' 'Stre'et John De Brebeuf and Com­ 550 Locust Street Rev. Joseph E. Sutula, 1961, presentations' to parishes out­ panions, Martyrs. III Class. Fall River,' Mass. Fan River. Mass. . Rastor, St. Casimir, New Bedford . standing for CYOwork. Red. Mass Proper; No Creed; 679-6072 .' , Ticket..committee.. chairman· Common Preface. 672-2391

Gene Chretien anounces that WEDNESDAY--SS. Cosmas and MI(:HAEl J. McMAHON tickets witl be .available at Ana­ . Damian, Martyrs. II Class. Red. Rose E. SulllvaJI

Licensed' Funeral Director FORTY HOURS· wan Street eyO in Fall River Mass'Proper; Glory; no Creed; Jeffrey E. Sullivan

Registered Embalmer from 7 to 9 Monday through Common Preface. 'thlursday evenings.· They are THURSDAY~St. Wenceslaus, Sept. 24-St. Roch, Fall River. also obtainable from parish CYO Duke and Martyr. III Class. Sacred Heart, Taunton. moderators. Ticket deadline is Red. Mass Proper; Glory; no St. Anthony of Padua, Tuesday, Oct. 10. Creed; Common Preface. New Bedford. Oct. 1,-5t. John of God, Replace Retreats Somerset. D~ D~ CINCINNATI (NC)' - Study Our Lady of ·the Immacu­ late Conception, Taunton days on theology and Scripture 7 Perry 'Our FUNERAL HOME Our Lady of Health-Fall will be substituted for the tra­

Avenue River.

ditional priests' retreats this 469 LOCUST STREET O,ils Fall in the Cincinnati archdio­ FALL RIVIER, MASS. cese. The change follows a rec­ l mE ANCHOR Taunton Mass. second Class Postage Paid at Fall RIver, ommendation made to the Arch­ 672-3381 Warm Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 diocesan Senate of Priests by 822-2282 Highland Avenue Fall Rive, Mass.. 02722 Wilfred C. James E. by tho 'Catholic Press 01 the DIocese of Fall its committee for priestly formaDriscoll Sullivan, Jr. River. SUbscription price by mall, postpaid tion. .

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'Methodist Bishop"Urges" Un'it, :

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Priest Cha rges Reverse Bias

Bishop, Medeiros" Reviews First Year As Ordinary on Visit to Diocese,

TffE ANCflOR­ ,Thurs., Sept,' 21, 1967

3

Mass to Observe Honor lBes\t\Owed On ParG$tm

JERSEY CITY, (NC) A IJJegro priest has charged that !£be Jersey City Housing Author­ He has a quarter of a million faithful in his dioees~half of them under 19 years of IB3' is practicing a type O'f re­ age. Almost 68 per cent are Latin-American. There are just seven Oatholic schools, with [Verse discrimination in giving an enrollment of 4,800 children. 'I'here are 70,000 youngsters between 7 and 14 who are ~liority to displaced Negro fam­ Itfies in a public housing project. receiving no Oatholic instruction at all. l'here is just one priest for each 3,000 persons, A High Mass will be cel­ Father Francis E. Hurtz of There are few nuns. These ebrated Sunday morning, at WThrist the King parish said that are only a few of the "moun­ 11 by Rt. Rev. Msgr. George ~egroes from :aayonne who are tains of problems" facing the E. Sullivan to commemorate ~ing displaced by an urban re­ the Most Rev. Humberto S. the honor bestowed upon St. ~wal project are being given Medeiros, Bishop of Brownsville, Joseph's Parish, Fall River, by \)reference over Jersey City res­ the elevation of the pastor to the 1Ulents in the Currie Woods ,Tex., as he begins his second \ rank of Domestic Prelate. lBIousing Project, a half mile year as shepherd of a diocese The Offertory presentation (U'om the Bayonne line in Jersey that stretches along the Mexican will be made by Alfred V. Jones, ~ity, because discriminatton border in the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Frederick J. Sherry, Mrs. Paul I"r.events them from obtaining Bishop Medeiros, former chan­ Boulay and Miss Julia Harring­ ~ousing in Bayonne. cellor of the Fall River Diocese ton. He has asked the Federal and beloved pastor of St. Michael The homily will be given by Housing Administration's re­ Church, Fall River, admits the Rev. Edward C. Duffy of St. ilJional office in New York to in­ problems. James Parish, New Bedford, a ~stigate possible collusion be­ His is a new diocese, carved native of the parish. $ween Bayonne and Jersey City out of the Corpus Christi Diocese Ushers will be under the di­ w.fficials in the matter. several years ago and served by rection of Bernard Tomlinson. Father Hurtz, director of a its first bishop only a few weeks A memento of the occasion will tIleal office of Newark's anti­ before he left for the opening of be presented to Msgr. Sullivan ~verty agency, CANDO, has al­ the Ecumenical Council in Rome. immediately following Mass by 00 distributed some 5,000 coptes There he died-and Brownsville Clement J. Dowling, chairman ~ a leaflet charging Mayor was without a bishop for months of the parish council. ifitomas J. Whelan and the J er-' until Bishop Medeiros arrived. Parishioners and delegations Because it is new, "it had 8CY City Housing Authority with from organizations with whom a lack of concern for Negroes of nothing," he explains. "We had Msgr. Sullivan has been asso­ to build churches. We need to ~e city. ciated during his 42 years in the build at least 80 catechetical priesthood will attend the Mass. centers." The list of "musts" is He served as pastor of St. Dom­ inexhaustible, but Bishop Me­ inic Church, Swansea, prior to deiros will complete it some day. coming to St. Joseph's.. In New Bedford Sunday for He also serves on the Diocesan the first annual congress- of the Board of Education, and is chap­ Richard Cardinal Cushing; Portuguese American Federa­ lain of, the Diocesan Guild for D;D., Archbishop of Boston, has tion, at which he was a principal the Blind and of the Veterans of accepted the invitation of the speaker. the bishop talked en­ Foreign Wars. most Rev. Russell J. McVinney, ttulsiastically about his still new Delegations are requested to :P:O., Bishop of Providence and ' dioCeSe and the people w,ho live contract Mrs. Charles Wills, sec­ ~ill be the featured speaker at ' in it; retary of the parish council, 1335 «he Fourth Annual New England "Poverty and ignorance are North Main St,reet to facilitate Regional Conference of Serra major problems," he says. "But seating arrangements. ifnternational, which will be held the Mexican people are loving MOSJ' REV. HUMBERTO S. MEDEIROS

Parishioners and friends of IlD. Providence Friday and Satur- and. full of faith. They are So Msgr. SlJllivan, will attend a liIaY, Sept. 29 and 30. lOad you. want to give of your- differeiicebetween the Portu­ good friends in his' new home. reception sponsored by the par­ Along with Cardinal Cushing, , iielf to help them. They go 'out gue~eof:Portugal and here." He laugh,s as be recalls a re­ ish council in the school han _er members of the New En- ,of ,their way to show reverence :ij~ ~~ems pleased his "report eent party' he gave for members from 2 to 4. 'Refreshments will "'and Hierarchy who have Indi,.. and devotion. They, are a kind ,card" i,s ~. good. of the news media of the area. be served under the direction of .. 'lilted that they win attend t~~ and llappy people/' , Turn io p~ge Six ~e Woman's Guiid. His new life, the bishop ad­ tonfererice ar~ ,Most Rev. Ernest His new "home" is one' of .. Primeau, D.D., Bishop of Man- the beauty spots of America, mits;.is "different" from his for­ lhester; Most Rev, Walter ,W. ,the, now-Texas-booster elaims mer life in Fall River. As he' makes his rounds of his Curtis, S.T.D., Bishop of Bridge- "Brownsville is ;!O miles froin PGrt. the Gulf of Mexico. There are sprawling Texas diocese-"It's No, Main St , Fall R,ver .Also Most Rev. Robert F. rivel'8 running through the city, the smallest in Texas, I'm never Joyce; D.D., Bishop of Burling- 'pe:opie can fish from the streets.'~ more than. two hours away from toil; Most Rev. John F. Hackett, There also are' "shacks and Brownsville"-he says Mass in D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of, Hart- slums," the bishop would like to ranch house and under mesquite furd; Most Rev. Thpmas ~. Riley, tom down. ,"Brownsville has trees. »D., .Auxiliary , Bi,shop of Bos'" highest tuberc:ulosis rate in He has 'a "big Texas hat," lie ten, and Most, Rev. James~. the country," he, says, blaming admits samewhat sheepishly and A N o - - - - - -....... Gerrard, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop it Oill the inadequate diet and a 'pair of high Texas boots. The BEST DIRECTOR-Fred Zinnemann fJI. Fall River. substandard housing of the poor- boots are not an affectation as BEST ACTOR-Paul Scofield much as protection. "There are' Bishop McVinney will serve as er people. rattlesnakes in Texas." BEST SCREENPLAY -Robert Bolt ilost of the fourth IlJ\nual conTo help with housing, his dio­ BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY (Color) f.erence and James A. Scatena, cese now is ,cooperating with the He also has run into human BEST COSTUME DESIGN (Color) trouble' and trouble makers. president of Serra International, Federal Government in con­ Since the day he arrived in JIJlll preside at the conference. struction of 100-unit low income Serra International is a volun- housing projects in two cities of Brownsville, .to find himself em­ the. diocese. If they prove suc­ broiled in a battle by' farm tary association of Catholic lay- eessful, "we' will spc;msor more." workers 'in his "Magic Valley" f men who dedicate themselves to He has a shortage of priests. for a $1.25 minimum wage, COLUMBIA PICTURES l'rt'senlQ1 a two-fold objective-fostering "We have pnly one priest for Bishop Medeiros has been the and sustaining vocations to evei.-y 3,000 people," he says. target of criticism and "Yankee FRED ZINNEMANN'S. Che priesthood and furthering "That is the lowest ratio in the go home" letters from some 1C eatholicism through enduring eountry. We need ,priests. The growers. f11.\ il'riendships among Catholic men. people need them." He does not blame his critics. Some day, to help spread the ''They are victims of a back­ ehurch's word to more people, ground they didn't create," he he hopes to have a diocesan says gently. What must be newspaper. Now; because of a changed is the whole system that lack of 'funds, "We are publish­ breeds the problems, he feels, ing four pages in the secular "and the change must be gradual newspaper. Father Joseph P. and 'prudent" if it is not to Delaney is publisher and we thwart the aims of the change. have an, editor who's a profes­ However, along with critics, sional journalist." Bishop Medeiros has made many Since his arrival in Browns­ ville, Bishop Medeiros admits,. ~Bg • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • ~ "I haven't had time to study Spanish-but I get along." He writes' his sermons in From plllY by TEOINIOOLOR" Spanish--one of the seven lan­ guages he speaks - and then turns them over to a Mexican­ MA1I'S: Wed. Sat. Sun. at 2::ll@

born nun for editing with the IEVIE: 5ul11I. tlhi~\l,I Thurs. at 8:00, Fri. Sail. ell 8:3@

request: • So. Dartmouth • "Please see if there are any Students At All Performances 1.00

CIInd Hyannis _ crimes committed against your fa language. SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR SCHOOl.. GROUPS "She may find one word that : $@.lOJartl11l1lolUlth 997-9384 :

is good, Spanish--but not goocj. lI!!I Hval11ll'lis 2921 •

PIl.IEASIE PHONE 677-9357 Mexican. Mexican is a mixture JAMES A. SCATENA of Spanish and English, like the ~~am •••••••••••• J

Providence Host To Serra Clubs

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4

Priest Suggests 'lam ~@[f . Poverty War? ~~~@Ratio·n.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 21, 1967

fro EYe~y's 'Credo H~~~'flLBg To Tea~hers' (1)f !te~~g~on 8

CINCINNATI (NC) - 1». priest long involved in work among the poor her'e offered a series of proposals for

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy There is nothing novel or nasty, I trust, in my saying that the teacher of religion requires preparation. In ·part, it is intellectual; the mastering of the matter. In part, it is technical: acquiring the art of effective communication. There is a third element, too: gion' must put the student in one's own spirit!1aI forma­ personal relationship with that tion, a profoundly Christian someone, and make .him realize outlook. Of books to assist in that, if he attends to God, God acquisition of the requisite gifts and qualities, quite a list could be made. But I should like, in this space, to suggest what the teacher of reli­ gion can gain from pro per use of Father Lou: s Evely's newest publica­ tion, C I' e d 0 (Fides, Notre Dame, Ind: 46556. $3.95)~ .This, like its predecessor from Father Evely's pen, is certain to be very. popular. . The last time I looked at America's listing of the best sellers in representative Catholic bookshops, it included no 'fewer than three of his works. Little wonder. Father Evely takes, and pro­ vides, a fresh look at whatever he is considering. His pages are free of the hackneyed. Not for him the slick repetition of pioiJs jaJ;gon. A Gospel text, a prayer in daily use, a teaching of the Church, each is subjected to piercing· scrutiny. In each, his eye discovers n~w treasure. Also, whatever he writ~s re­ lates to common experien~. He is not abstract, recondite. He

knows human nature, the ·human predicament. He kBOWS our w~nt~, inclinations, prejudices,' moods: He shows how Christian truth touehes .and affects these. What we see, under his leading, ,is not .a set of propositions but a

personal prescription for. our peculiarities. Morever, he can arouse ~nthu­ siasm, prompt engagement, prod tbem toward action. He makes real the power and the joy of being a Christian. He indu~s us to accept and work at our voca­ tion. 'I Believe'

As for Credo, at first gl.an~ it mi.ght appear to be an old­ fashioned affair. How many re­ ligion books have there been. dealing with the Apostles' Creed? Isn't that sort of thing, that ki nd' of approach, out­ moded'? But please give Father: Evely a chance.

Consider, for eX<lll1ple, some of the observations he makes in

commenting on the first two

words, "I believe." He wl'ites,

"To say 'I believe' is to ask a question; it is to offer God an

emptiness to fill, knowing with total certainty that he will fill it." Indeed, he maintains that not

to raise questions about God is to

show a lack of tl"Ust in Him.

Children's queries, then, should be welcomed. They are .an evi­

dence of intel·est. Their religion

must not be "a family castoff to

be worn without the slightest al­

teration." It must not be "a ter­

rible incredulity, a 'terrible fear that if you' question anything

tee whole edifice will crumble." A genuine act ef faith is ;.) de­ parture, setting forth aoo risking all. .Doctrine of Trinity And right from t~ start, Father Evely stresses that "God is net an idea, nor a system of ideas. He is not something, but someone." The teaching of reli-

will reveal Himself from day to day, always new because always alive, not boxed up -or ex­ hausted in a set of formulas. It is marvelous to observe what Father Evely does with the doctrine of the Trinity. He does not simply run through the same tired old words and end up, "And, anyhow, it's a mystery." He says, daringly, "God is the being who has to be several to be Himself." He go!:s 'ln, "He exists in unceasing communica­ tion." And then, "The commandment to love one another cannot be separated from the revelation of the Trinity. They are the same thng. We must be charity because God is Trinity. There is no place in Christianity for h.ap­ piness in soli tude. The Holy Spirit helps us not to do without other people (that job is ·done by the devil) but to be unable to do without them." Incarnation, Redemption This is merely to -ex~rpt three sentences from sever~l ·closely packed pages. But it gives seme crude idea of t~ originality of the mind at work, and the abil­ ity to mu~ine .adiUicult doc­ trine and link it up with Chris­ ti.an life.

So, too, with the .whole ques­

tion of the Incarnation aml Re­ demption. Here, -of ·cour~, sin comes in, and Father Evely says tb.at sin is the abnormal situation in which God is. flO longer known. . That may seem an od~, unsat­

isfactory definition, until it is recalled' that Father Evely ·never tires of repeating that God is love and that God's glory "is to show how much he loves; it is his joy in having,a Son, .mEl ·hav­ ing sons and daughters." Sin is a rejection of that revelation. God's response is the J.ncar-· nation, which is t~ love of God made visible. Impressive is Father Evely's quick iickin.g off of the Gospel passages in which the Incarnate Son .asserts .and illustrates· his Father's love of man. Perhaps we have not 1'_1. ized how many these are, and how poignant. The heart~ning catalogue should be kept and

used.

Meaning of Sacrifice

The Redemption is supremely

a work of love. It was carried out

in sUfferi~g, but Father Evely finds monstrous the notion that

"God is 'appeased' by Christ's blood," that "the Son's expiation

was equal in importance to the

Father's anger."

He stresses, rather, the ·basic

meaning of sacrifice and its man­ ifestation of love, Chri-ston the

cross represents the total fidelity,

the total obedience of love. We

should see him there as the Son

"who devotes all his enthusiasm

to loving his Father in .a nature that is rebellious and afraid."

Father Evely is aware that. some of us think that suffering has an absolute value .and is to be sought for itself. But, he maintains, it is love which has that value and is to be sought. "Don't try to suff~r more, aut to love more. We slwukl. s~k not the .effect (suffering), but the' eause (which is the love that seeks the .JjOod of (lt~rs, not'

NEWMAN MEDAL: Father J. M. Sherlock, national chaplain of the Canadian Newman Federation, presents the 1967 Newman Medal to MichelVanier of Ottawa, who accepted on behalf of his mother, Mrs. George P. Vanier, wife of Canada's late Governor General. The Newman

Medal is awarded annually to the Canadian Catholic who has made an outstanding.contribution to society; NC Photo.

Disag:ree on Parades Priests ~'ppose, Society Favors Annual Hoty Name Demonstrations

stepping up the war on poverty. Father William M. Sicking, director of the De Porres Cen­ ter and a member of the· board .of the Community Action Com­ mission, made his suggestions in testimony given to investigators studying the city's efforts to 'ap­ ply federal anti-poverty legis­ lation locally. . He recommended: -A federal tax credit for bus­ inesses giving unemployed men opportWlities for on-the-job training. / -Health clinics in areas oJ! .poverty, staffed by private phy­ sicians who would receive sub­ sidies to bolster their income. Construction of private homes--"not housing"-without pop u I a t ion displacement as slums are cleared, and encour­ agement of neighborhood coop­ erative stores. -Sponsorship by the federal government of a " j u n i·o ll' achievement" type of program for training youths in business leadership. -Establishment of nurseries arid day care centers for chil­ dren of mothers who are I'e­ quired to work. Neighborhood Clubs

Father Sicking said these pro­ grams could best be carried on through neighborhood clubs 01'­ ganized as non-profit corpora­ tions I'eceiving aid fro~ the gov­ emment an9 attempting to make their programs self-sustaining. His testimony was gi yen . at a hearing in City Council cham~r eonducted by State Represenia­ "IVes William Ayres of AkrClm and John Ashbrook of Johns­ t€twn. Fatliel- Sicking was critical fII the Community Action Commis­ sion's w~k in the Cincinnati area.

which have been a fixt.ure jf} the area for more than 60 years. The vote was taken by the pastoral committee of the Sen<lt.e of Priests and the results were forwarded to Archbishop Thomas A.. Boland. one's own pain)." However, the ~xecutive comSince 'we are habituated W mittee (If the Newark AI:chdi- ­ .Jobo E. Hansan, .executive di­ not loving, the effort to love will ocesan Federation of Holy Name Fector of the CAC, told the jf}­ involve dislocation and disloca­ . Societies a week earlier had ~ ",estigators, however, that the tion will entail ·pain. "If one hold -the parades in eight loca­ could make a hunchback tiOlls on SWlday, Oct. 8. 'The $4 million spent in the area by the federal government last year straighten up, he would ~rtain­ committee said the parades &f) the anti-poverty program ly feel as though his bones ~re would serve as a demonst.ration was inadequate. being pulled apart." of faith in observan~ of the Y~r of Faith proclaimed by "'!Ve hope the CongressmeD Church of Silelllce Pope Paul VI. will see first hand the. need for When Father Evely moves on greatly expanded appropriatioM Contr-oversy surrounding the to the Resurrection, he declares t~ combat the human erosion iD parades erupted last June. The that is the Incarnation per­ {lUI' community," he said. Holy Name executive committee petuated and extended to us. voted to continue them, and the And the theme of love figures Senate of Priests voted for here again. their discontinuance. Father Evely asks why so much religious education is inef­ fective, and replies that it has failed to put the student in touch /·l~MIEUX with the living, loving God, has PLUMBING & HEATING. INC. MONT&II~ stressed the commandments (largely negative) instead of the _ .....~. Sales ana Service

beatitudes (strongly positive),

~~ tar Jamestic

~..".'=O and Industr-lal has regarded the Gospel <IS a

PRINTEr AND MAILED :.JiI 'Burners

code rather than the demonstra­ 995·1631 tion of an infinite love, has not

Write or Phone 672-1322 shown the Church to be Christ ,2283 ACu:>HNET AVENUE living in the assembly of his 234 Second Street - Fall R;v. NEW BEDFORD members; . p $ In a striking sentence, he says "The real church of silence is ·ours; ours is the church where OUf 'no one speaks, no one acts, the church which says not.hing - to OUf to us or to anYOf]e el~." An exaggeration, but not· totally un­ founded·. Nor is the statement Your. Gulf Hill that the children who later turn away from it, "cannot be said QUI' to be turning away f,rom Christ, FOR HOME DELIVERY CAll 998-5691 for they have never seen him. Christ is life, light, joy and love." . This we must conVey in ~ur educational efforts, .and Father so. DARTMOU:rH. MASS. . Evely can help us do so. NEWARK (NC)-By an ·over­ whelming majority, priests of the Newark 3rchdiocese have voted for discontinuallce of an­ nual Holy Name Sunday parades

Y CHURCH' BUD';" 9IVElOPES

"You Can Whip You Can't Beat

Cream, but Milk !"

Route Mon ;s Always at Y Service!

·GULF· HILL. DAIRY


mt: s Prelate Declares S~ster John Alicia Spends Summer Aiding Thurs., Sept. 21, 1967 American Troops TV Production Company in Hollywood Schools Problem Winning War If you want to experience some of the boundless enthusiasm filling the "new Left Unsolved SAN ANTONIO (NC) Church," talk to Sister John Alicia, S.U.S.C. of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River. Her "'NLnv~-

American troops are win­ lJIing the war in South Viet­ nam, Archbishop Robert E.

Lucey of San Antonio, one of 22 1!J. S. observers who viewed the recent elections in the Southeast Asian country, declared here. The prelate told reporters the American observers "were con­ vinced" that the voting in the elections was "largely fair." He said that as a result of the bal­ lloting the South Vietnamese fl)eople are "learning the ways of democracy." The archbishop said the Amer­ lean commitment in the South­ east Asian country is morally justified because the U. S. is us­ fillg military force "trying to Jl)rotcat and defend human rights and is doing this quite well." He said the -U. S. is" also de­ veloping a constructive program ~aching the Vietnamese how to Jl)ractice democracy. Explaining why he judges America's use of force to be Jl.egitimate, Archbishop Lucey <llluotcd the late Pope Pius XII's Christmas messages of 1943 and 1948. In 1948 the Pope said "a peo­ jplle threatened with an unjust oggression or already its victim may not remain passively indif­ iEerent if it would think and act !ilS befits Christians. All the more does the solidarity of the family @f nations forbid others to be­ lllave as mere spectators in an nttituc1e of apathetic neutrality." Force Necessary Some Americans, Archbishop Lucey said, "don't like force." But "the use of force," the archbishop declared, "is moral and juridical. We can't have fl)eace unless we have force, be­ eause there are evil men in the world." He made it clear, however, tlhat "every kind of force is not llegitimate." To be "morally lrood," he said, force must be t!sed to protect people's rights. "It is necessary to use force," Il!e continued. "The man who doesn't believe this will be en­ slaved." If the U. S. does -not 1lSSe fOI'ce "we'll be subjugated and libelty and justice will die. M is up to us to defend liberty and justice," he said. Taking issue with critics of the administration who have urged ~he .withdmwal of U. S. troops JErom South Vietnam, the arch­ lDi~hop said "these people at'e mistaken." Cruel to With(]lraw Withdrawal, he added, would be a "tremendous cruelty" wward the South Vietnamese jpleople and a "great stupidity." Such a move "would hurt all Southeast Asia and the whole world," he declared, "because in a certain sense we are the ones who defend democracy every­ ~here."

Archbishop Lucey also cor­ lIleCted published reports stating be was opposed to peaceful ne­ {lotiations in Vietnam. "I never li3id that," he said. "'I said there are people' in our <IlOUntry who keep shouting 'ne­ gotiate now,' but the thing that must be added is this: how are we going to get representatives <tf the Viet Cong and the North Vietanamese government to the IIIOI\ference table?" Stating that President JohnsoR \lias been "ready evel}" day to bring about negotiations," the IU'Chbishop declared that those who advocate peace talks should lexplain how they can be accom­ ll'lished. He said the "Negotia­ tion Now" supporters had iaileQl !to do this.

words tumble over each other a1'\ she discusses Marshall McLuhan, Sister Corita, San Francisco hippies, TV techniques-and the relevance of all these to her work as a high school teacher of religion and English. She could take as her own the words of one of the songs sung by "The

BURLINGTON (NC) - Public school officials in Bennington, Vt., met with Bishop Robert F. Joyce' of Burlington here, but the puzzle regarding the future of Bennington parochial schools was left unsolved.

Parables," a folk group she di­ rects at SHA: Spirit of God, every man's heart is lonely, Watching and waiting and hungt"y until Spirit of God, man longs that you only Fill the earth, bring it to birth , And blow where you will. Sister John Alicia sees it as her work to communicate the Spil"it to youth. This Summer her vocation took her to Holly­ wood where she was a drama consultant for OFM Productions, formel'1y known as the Hour of St. Francis, a Franciscan-spon­ sored organization that previ­ ously produced radio programs and is now specializing in re­ ligiously-oriented films and tel­ evision spots. Into six \''':eeks, says Sister John Alicia, she crammed such diverse activities as--touring Hol­ lywood and Beverly Hills look­ ing for good spots for location shots, making a brief pack trip into the High Sierras, also on the search for location shots, saying hello to Peter Sellers (whom she encountered cycling down a busy street), shooting film at Disneyland, and visiting 'several movie star homes. "Movie and television stars and technicians are very good to OFM Productions," she said. "They cooperate with us in every way, even to letting us use their 'homes for location shots, thus cutting down on film expenses." F@r their part, entertainment ~ndustry greats often express their pleasure at working with a company that isn't in business solely for profit. "I can be my­ self with you," said one actor. "I don't have to worry about the effect of every word on other people." How It Began How did Sister John Alicia's contact with Hollywood begin? Some seven years ago, she said, she was studying drama at Cath­ olic University. A fellow stu­ dent was Rev. Emery Tang" O. F.:\'l., public relations aide and "traveling salesman" for OFM Productions. Some time ago he visited Sister at Sacred Hearts Academy and they discussed the potential of OFl\f films for class­ room and CCD lise. At that time, noted Sister, they were used by church organizations but not much effort has been made to fit them into school curricula. The next thing Sister John Alicia knew, she was invited to spend the Summer in Holly­ wood exploring further the ed­ ucational possibilities of OFM films. She was already booked to give a Summer course at Holy Union's College of the Sacred Hearts, oot was released b7 Mother Anne Thomas, provin­ eial,. for this new project. "At first," she said, ''I began te go over the films alreadli" made by OFM, writing studli" quides and making suggestions foe their use by teachers. But thea I found myself involved in production work on new films, especially TeleSpots." -releSpots," she explai05. "are 55 second dramas that could be caUed 'commercials with z message.' They're filmed m ooROIl" and are avant garde in cameil'a line." Typical TeleSpotii &bow effectG of parental quu-

Schools Supt. Howard Kelley and members of the Bennington school board in a meeting with the bishop sought to learn whether the 7th and 8th grades of two parochial schools in Ben­ nington would be discontinued. The bishop told the board members the decision was up to the Catholic school officials in Bennington. The public school officials sought information to plan for the future. Last May the Ben­ nington Catholic High School with 300 students closed down. These students will be absorbed by the new Union High School, a public institution, but Ben­ nington residents turned down a proposed $800,000 bond issue to care for the increase in students. A tentative agreement has been reached between Catholic authorities and public school of­ ficials to rent the closed high school. , The public school officials are concet'ned about consistent ru­ mors that the 7th and 8th gt'adeo of two parochial schools, involv­ ing a total of 100 students, will be dropped.

SISTER JJOlHIN AUCIA, S.U.S.C. 'reling upon children, how race prejudice expresses itself, or how children learn to cheat. "They have been snapped up by TV stations," says Sister John Alicia. "OI"M productions can't make them fast enough." Prefers Teaching At Summer's end Rev. Carl Holtsnider, O.F.M. director of OFM productions, asked for Sister Jonh Alicia on a perman­ ent basis. But.she can't be spared from teaching-and she's not sure she wants to make TV a life's vocation. "Personal con­ tact in the classroom can't be replaced by impersonal TV work," she says, adding quickly, "at least, not for me." She is enthusiastic, however, about the work being done by OFM Productions and hopes to give the organization more aid on a short-term basis. She men­ tioned as being especially worth­ while a series of films now in preparation on the Church in the modern world. Subjects in­ clude a contemplative commu­ nity of Poor Clare nuns; a study of teaching Sisters; work with "down and outers" by priests and seminarians; a vocation film; and "The Long Journey," the story of an orphanage in New Mexico. Sister John Alicia topped her Summer with two days in hip­ pieland, the Haight-Ashbul}" section of ::san Francisco. ''The real hippies," she concluded, "are quiet people who want merely to be left alone. It's the lunatic fringe that attracts

Casey-Sexton, e ....

Cleansers • ••

the publicity." She visited vari­ ous parts of the section, togeth­ er with a former student, now a San Francisco resident. Of a psychedelic dance she attended, she said, "If you have settled in your mind what is happening and that you're existing in it, it won't disturb you, but it could be very upsetting to emotionally unsettled youngsters." SHA Graduate

Sister John Alicia is a gradu­ ate of Sacred Hearts Academy and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Shea, 18 Pear Street, Fall River. She holds a bache­ lor's degree from 'Providence Teacher's College and a mas­ ter's degree' in performing arts from Catholic University. She is a member of the National Cath­ olic Theatre Conference and the New England Theatre Confer­ ence. ~~

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Bishop Ass;g!rn$ Two Deacons The Most Reverend Bishop ~ announced the assignment of two deacons from St. John's Seminary, Brighton, to weekend work in St. Joseph's Parish, Fall River. Rev. Mr. Edl)lund J. Fitz­ gerald of St. Mary's Parish, Taunton and Rev. Mr. Edward Eo Correia of St. George's Par­ ish, No. Dartmouth, will alter­ nate in ]>er[orming the dutieo of a deacon in the Fall River Parish starting the weekend 01 Sept. 30th.

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THE ANC,f:lOR-Diocese

of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 21,1967

Appre~iation

'Bishop Medeiros·

Continued from Page Three "'Sixty-three came and we bad a good diaiogue." . ' The press, though, does ask A high powered campaign is now underway to retrain some "strange questions," he says. As a case in point, he cites those' who are unemployed 'so that their abilities and skills the, "What do you think about might. meet the present, day needs. The slogan used is a mini-skirts?" "I said I didn't good one-You can't do today's job with yesterday's skills. think I bad ever seen one. What about borrowing the slogan and concept and "The next day in a Corpus Christi paper, with a story that applying it to things of religion? , said 'Bishop Makes a Hit,' 'they People are talking religion today as never before.' They ran a picture of me and under it.' are asking, questions and demanding answers. They are 'He's never seen a mini-skirt.~'" ex:amining 'their own religious beliefs and those of their He likes newspaper men. He neighbor. They are asking for the areas of agreement 'ust doesn't "quite understand" them. and difference. All this-on the part of Catholics-is an 1:Iis "Magic Valley" someday,. , attempt to see fully all the implications of their own faith Bishop Medeiros feels, will be it and it is also a striving to see how much they have in com­ major tourist attraction. ,The' mon with those of other religious beliefs. climate, the natural beauty, of the area-"It's better than ,Mi-. As never before, the adult Oatholic knows that he ami"-the 150 miles of clean un-. eannot live' in' a religious ghetto - satisfied with a few 'spoiled beaches on Padre Island, answers on the main points of his religion and' asking no that runs along the Texas Coast more questions. from Brownsville to' Corpus Christi, all could be magnets for 'He needs to know. :vacationers, he says. , Many agencies are trying to help give him the answers. He'd like to see tourists come Catholic newspapers and magazines and books provide food in; to provide more jobs for bif,J for thought and intellectual enlig.htenment. ' People. . ' There: is a wonderful opportunity being provided in He'd like to see industry come in-"We have a new industrial­ every area ill this' Diocese of Fall'River very &hortly. technical school the government Eminently qualified teachers--'-religious and lay':"-are is bUilding' that will train 3,000 going' to ' give, courses in both the content (>f Catholicism people at a time, that may help" and methods in imparting this to others. These courses .will -to provide even more jobs. , 'be. given in eve:ry area. of the Diocese. TheSe Adult Forums He wants to see the standard of living upgraded and ,human

,in Religious Education are sponsored by the Confraternity", Continued from, Page One , , ip ,A. Davignon;', Elementary ,dignity restored to all peoples.

of Christian Doetrine. Their aim is that of St. Paul----to see Metho~s: Sister Christine Marie, He hopes for more priests and Taunton that adult Catholics are also adult in knowledge and have The Christian Doctrine and M.S.B.T.; Secondary Methods: more nuns :who will help spread "'reasons for th,e' f'aith that is in them." / God's. word to the people of his M~thodscourses will be, taught Sister Edward Ignatius, M.S.B.'i'.. Capje Cod-Falmoutb diocese.

,Some people· will, take, these elective courses for their at Bishop Cassidy High School, All courses in Christian Doe- , . , "Father" Medeiros, 'as he sUB own enrichment' and satisfaction. Others will look upon Taunton, on Tuesday evenings at ' trine and Methods will be held at likes to be called, is a self­ ' them as valuable aids to their apostolate of teaching in 7:30' beginning Oct. 3. Christian Doctrine: Rev. St. Anthony Catechetical Center, , effacing man. He has shunned Parish Centers of Religion. Those not of the Oatholic faith Thomas F. Neilan; Elementary East Falmouth each ThUrsday the' spotlight. Now he cannot are most welcome to attend these courses so that they Methods: Miss Janet Barbelle; evening at 7:30 beginning Oct. 5. avoid it. He will do whatever he Christian Doctrine: Rev., Ron­ can to help his people any way might understand better what their Catholic friends and Secondary Methods: Sister Rose Meth­ he can. , ald A. Tosti; Elementary Angela, S.U,S.C. neighbors believe and what the raw stuff of ecumenism is" ods:' Mrs. Mary Fuller; Second­ When news of his ,selection as The Advanced Sacred Scrip­ all about. ' , bishop of Brownsville first was ' ture Course will-,beta~ghi at ary Methods: Sister Mary Ter­ , , announced, the then Msgr. Me­ , But all who follow the courses will be opening their St. Mary's Parish Center,' Norton ence, M.S.B.T.' deiros said he had received 'the lives to intellectual enrichment and profit and to the -WOrk­ on Thursday eveniJ1g at 7:30 be­ word with "shock and fear. But ings of the Holy Spirit Who 'uses these opportunities to ginning Oct. 5 by Rev. Donald yo'u go where (;.04 sends you." Archdiocese P'lans touch men's minds and hearts and to affect their conduct J. Bowen'. The job to which "God sent Speakup Sessions AtUeboll'o for the better. . , is not an easy one: It is bim" The Christian Doctrine and And they will be facing today with today's knowledge ;Methods courses will be prefilled with problems and witll DETROIT (NC) In six of religion. ' sent'ed at Bishop Feehan ,High "speak-up" 'sessions in more than heartbreak. But Bishop Medeiros School, Attleboro, on Thursday 90 per cent of the Detroit arcb- carried with him from Fall RiveI' ,' diocese's parishes, Catholics will 'to Texas a faith that will so»­ Darnal' lft"T evenings at 7:30 begining,Oct. 5. ' ~JS mount all obstacles. rl r " ' IO , U, Christian Doctrine: Rev. James ,be encouraged to "tell the arch­ bishop" what· is In their hearts ' He will fight for his pe~pIe K F II The Bishop of Salford in England' haS point,e,' d out an . e e;y j, Elementary Methods: ,Sister Martha Mary, OL.V.M.; and on their minds for the and justice. He already has be­ t h h ' , gun tI:te battle. He already, has ex ,reme t at e is noticing in many areas of the Oatholic, Secondary Methods: Sister Joan Church's future here. , t, press. Louise, O.L.V.M. . The sessions are in prepara- had some victories. There still is 'a sizable job_ After the First Vatican Council of a century ago, he The Advanced Sacred, Scrip- ,tion for the archdiocesan synod be done. said, there was a tendency in 'the Church to treat all papal ture Course will take place in to be held in the Spring of 1968.

statements as if these were final. definitions of faith and conjunction with that of, Taun- The pre-synod groundwork was

, " ton at St Mary's Pan'sh'Center - laId,with an exploratory sermon morals. Now, after the ,Second V<>,ti"'<>n Councl'l, there .;., ,. ' AD Norton on Thursday evenings at,. a~ all Masses 01'). Sept. 10. This is

detected another extreme-a treatIng of papa] statements 7:30 beginning Oct. 5. to be followed by three general

. ,B'IS h op H 0 II an d' s word s,' ' 'Ii ' ey ';h ' , ses,sions on television, at whicb' Continued from' Page One and d ocument s as 1'f, In were Cape.'Cod-Yannouth · "f . 't f " Archbishop John F. Dearden oj' to pray at the site wher~ tra­ th e product lon, 0 a umversl y proessor. , , ' ': All courses in Christian Doc­ ,Detroit, priests, Religious' and dition ,. says the ·Blessed Mother'. The Bisho"p' has a point. After the Pope issued his trine and Methods will take lay people selected at random house is located. I'S quoted ..., "... 'place at' St. Pius" X Parish Hall, w'll ' t OPIC . areas ' recent encycll'cal on cel'l'bacy, one theolom'an b' , I d'ISCUSS t h e nme Oct. l-Izmir to Athens. , 'So. Yarmouth, on Thursday having said: "The Pope has given reasons for celibacy. evenings at 7:30 beginning on which ever-yone is invited to Oet. 3-Athens to Iraklion .. Now we must examine them to see if they are yalid.'", ,Oct.,5. ' express an opinion. Athens. , ' , mouth,: Christian ' , Rev. PbilThe' nine topic areas are clerOct. ~-A Athens' to Frankf...... No one expects that every word from the PoPe's DoctIin,e: gy, laity, Religious education, k> Weisbaden. should be treated as an infallible declaration. But the Pope community affairs, worship, ecu­ does not speak or 'write lightly. He does consliltthe' best 0,'rganizatrions IlJlI'g'e ,menism, adD;linistration,and Oct. 5-Weisbaden to ~p~n..

. dahlem. A mIssionary activity. , minds in tl)e Church before issuing any directiye or ency- B , an on School' id ' Oct. 6-Spangdahlem to We. clical that has far-reaching consequences. He is very much h ' t h' d ' 1 1 h WASHINGTON (NC) ....:. Four M' t" C' th .-' ,bad,en. aware {)f t e'lmpac IS, wor s Wlave on the whole organizations in suburban Prince on ana ,a 0 I,e Oct. 7-Weisbaden to Hahn Church. And so it would be ,strange indeed for him to be' Georges County, Md,," have .- Hospital to Close' .' ',pet. 8-Hahn to Rhein MaJig considered just another writer, just another speaker, just ,urged county delegates to the " " Oct 9-Rhein Main to New . M'aryland Constl·tutl·onal, , Con'HAVRE (NC)-Sacred Hean, ' " ,. ano th er th] eo oglan. Hospital here' will close on or 'York. vention to support the .Inclusion

in the new -constitU'tion 'of a before' June' 30, 1968, Sister

'strong ban' on state aid, to pri- Maureen, hospital administratol', Appoints Episcopal :

has announc€d. vate schools. She said the hospital is not Clergyman· Chaplain j No' such ban is ,contained in the present constitution and closing for financial reasons, lack WHEELING (NC)-Wheelirig none has been proposed by the of patient. support or competent College has appoined an' EplD­ Constitutional Convention Com- staff, but said the area can best copal clergyman as an official ,mission. be served by one new, fully member of the faculty. The Rev.. (\~~'r'l\l NF.W~~APER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL PiVER Groups asking the ban are equipped hospital facility. Charles E. Roberts, Jr., rector One authority pointed out that of St. John's Episcopal Church Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation ell! federal funds can be made avail­ In Wheeling, will minister • , 410 Highland Avenue Church and State, the Prince able to aid in construction of , the religious needs of all Pro.. Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 , Georges Chapter of the Ameri-' new hospital facilities, but funds estant students at the, Catholic PUBLISHER can Civil Liberties Union, the to remodel present hospitals aJ'e institution. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. Fellowship for Social Action of almost non-existent. The Wheeling Area Cle~ GENERAL, MANAGER, " ,ASST. GENERAL MANAGER ,the Paint Branch, ,. Unitarian ' 'The hospital has been opel',. Council. selected Father ,Robert. Rt. Rev. Danielf. Shalloo, M.A., ' Rev. John' P'. ,Driscoll Church in Adelphi, and the·Co- ate<! by the ·Sisters of St.' Fraa­ . for the, position, Father., Franll: MANAGING EDIT0R ' ,. ',' ' ,,' lumbia 'Union 'Oonference' "CIff' ,as 'of PenanCe and, Christi_ R. Haig, S.J., president of . . Hugh J., Golden' " , '" , 'Seventh'Day Advehtisb.',- Charity'since 1911. ~st 'VirSinia college, said.

Adult Forums

CCDAdult Education

'B.·sho' p"S T,.·p

CO'

--

@rhe ANCHOR


·----'1

·Teenagers Return to School~o,rk After Summer of ,Involv<ement an Se[J'yi~e PlTOHeC~~11 C~WJbs

\

THE ANCHOll­

'Thurs., Sep~. 2], ]967

Ed~t@IT' Wa~n$

AIb~(lJlfr ~crroB~ms

"Here we are, all· together." in the words of a song heard at guitar Masses. At the start of a new !ACademic year, teens are more and more involved in Church lrenewal going forward. on a hundred fronts. Many spent their Summer giving service . aIt ~mps, inner city pi"ojects Janick, lVIt. St. Mary; Paul Bark­ and vacation activities for iewicz, Stang; and Janel Lafond, the handicapped. 80m e St. Joseph Prep..

~rrequentIy

SHREVEPORT (NC)-Fathei' Joseph P. Scherer, associate edi~ tor of the North-Central Louisi­ ana Register, predicted that "un­ less centers for the controlled experimentation with the litur­ gy are soon set up, we may ex­ perience what Father Karl Rah­ ner has called a latent schism.'" Father Scherer spoke to a meeting of members of the Na­ tional C~.uncil of Catholic Wom­ en from North Louisiana and! South Arkansas. 'Huge groups of Catholics want worship forms that reflect the age In which they live," he said. "l'hese will .do either of. two things unless experiment centers are established.

"They will seek meaningful liturgy, liS many are now doing especially around college cam­ puses and in the larger cities, in a bootleg form; or they will cease coming to Mass at all."

Dehool groups, such as Prevost SMA News and Jesus-Mary's Christian Welcomed to the faculty of Youth Movement, held meetings SIIA Fall River are the follow­ oven during vacation. All groups "ing new lay. teachers: Miss Bev­ are now planning Fall and Win- t erlY Francis, an SHA Alumna 001' activities that'll continue' to : and graduate of SMTI, assisting 'demonstrate that teens are re- in the lVIath Department; Miss aponsible. Heard from last night Marjorie Moran, a Salve Regina 'at the Fall River premiere 'of graduate, in the Biology Depart­ ,ClA Man for All Seasons" were ment; Miss Elizabeth Slusarski, 'f;he Parables of Sacred Hearts an SIIA Alumna and gradua,te Academy, Fall River, who sang from Annhurst College, teaching and 'played as moviegoers en'ter- ,in the Junior High and a~sisting

ed Durfee Theatre for the Fa- 'in the History Department. 81'. JOSEPH PREP: Clas's offiCEH"S aotSt. Joseph Prep thers' Club sponsored periorm-' Also welcomed as new faculty School, Fall River, are from left, MIchelle Pai'va, freshman aIlce. ; members are' Sister Eugene At Dominican Academy, Fall ~ Margaret, who holds a. master'a president; Mary Clare .Rapecis, sophomore president; Clau­ River, the senior class has chosea ' degree in library ,scienCe from dette· Cormier, school president; Deborah' Lemire, junior as theme for the year the Charlie Villanova, as director of the president. . Brown inspired thought: "Hap- 11 Junior' High and High. School I 'opiness ·Is Loving." Other stu'dents ;·Ubrarian; Sister Stella Marie,:· ; . . ,...... VI~OQOUS. b€l)IC.H€b. th~n~d~ of Catholic ed'ucatlon Bedfortrs' ~~ly F~~il~ High to

were' informed of this thrOOgh ; who has her undergraduate de­ start their high 'school career, the medium of a playlet starring gree from Annmarie College and what to do about them. t\CtIVE. thoUClhdul. 'Following Mr. O':arien's talk the 'largest' entering class in

'~eanuts" characters presented School of Music and is candidate .many years.: ....

l)lsclplm€b the Red and Green Teams held by the' editors of the upcoming for Master's Degree at Boston l'(ew H;F faqulty,members in­ .' ooiti<Jfl of Dominilog, the sch'ool ':. University Graduate School of separate 'meetings as a kick-off Five words that tell the story 01 the " ;fearbook, which will be dedica- , .' 'Music; as head of the Academy for team spirit during the com- cl~de Sistel,".M~ry ,Charles Marie, contemporary Franciscan Action Arfl'lf ood: to the late Sister Mary Of the ··:Music·· Department; and Sister " iDg'year. The 'respective captains Sister,' 'Margaret' Ann, Sister

,Sacred Heart, longtime music .' J&tla ':Elizabeth, former princi- Qutlined their plan of action ior Mary Charbenella, Philip Phon

and R. iMartineJ : Let us tell you how YOll clirector at DA. ' p a l at Cassidy High as: assistant ,a rousing. ye~r of keen compe­ can serve. Wri.te lor FREE "Election Results 'principal and guidance depart- tition in school spirit, scholar­ At Taunton's Coyle High the literature at no oltIigatioll. ship and sports. ,! 'At St. Joseph Prep in Fan ':ment coordinator. Jesters ar~ pl~paring a program o 'AleST 0 llAOTH£1 River Claudette Cormier of New" ,: .stUdy procedures and new '" '. Drama Club for this. com,ing: Monday night. fATHER MARSHALL. O.F."'. CAP Bedford has been named school ,', courses· also whet the appetite Broadway 'sh.ow tunes will be 110 SIlGNNARlHLACE. YONKERS. N.Y. 10roJ H~adin:g the list of announce­ f,lresident. Class presidents are . at SHA. Senior and junior re­ ments for student activities hold- featured; Meanwhile the Coyle Deborah Lemire of East Free- ligion,' English and history stu­ · big tryouts thi's week' is an in­ ,Glee Club is readying a folk town, juniors; Mary Clare Ra- dents will be introduced to re­ vitation to interested SHAers to Mass for the First Friday of pecis, West Warwick, sopho- .·search study centers where read­ Ad! join the drama ~lub under the October under direction of mores;' Michelle, Paiva, New . ing and study in depth in the · direction of Sister John Alicia. Brother William. Babbitt, C.S.c. Bedford, freshmen. respective fields will be facili- The club will study techniques of Louise Dion of Bristol has been tated by the more readily ac­ 'staging,' lighting, costume and Rlamed editor of the school pa- cessible research materials set . scenery, management and pro­ per, Josetta, and she'll be aided apart in these areas. duction imd will be in charge of by Denise Beaudoin, Fall River; Junior 'American History stu­ the school play to be presented Margaret Hall, New Bedford; dents at SHA are taking part in later in the year. · 'Anne Braga, New Bedford; aod .' 'il pilot program, the Amherst This week, Mrs. George Sny­ ' ..Darlene Lemois, West Warwick. ,,,'Project;' under the direction of der, SHA physical education di­ , .. At 'Dominican, Elaine Senecllal :·:Sister· Ann Dolores. Sister spent · tector;'Sister Albina Marie, Mod­ ·was named school president' in 1·"the'Summer of 1966 at the Uni­ erator of sports activities, "ana .June and she's now been joined :,'vel'Sity' of Massachusetts .on an Sister" John' Elizabeth, represent­ · !)v, class officers, inCludirig' Di- . j NDEA study grant as one of 50 'ing the 'principal, attended the ,ane"Cloutier, 12A president; Di- ."'Secondary . school teachers of firSt i meeting of the Bristol . llne Beaudoin, 12B president; history developing this project. · County Girls' :A:thletic League at Debra Lay, llA president; Stt~· has, been invited with her Dighton-Rehoboth Regional High 'Lynda Raposa, llB president; :.. students ,to participate, in the School~

Patricia Leduc, lOA president; ,,: ~2q)erim~ntal program. Units to

Hob Family !lteborah Fobert, lOB president. ".ba .ex.plored include such topics ..' O' n e hli n d red freshmen Student councillors are Joan .,.,M-What ,Happened at Lexington , "stormed> the portals" of New' Darcy and Paula Roy, seniors; ." G~~en?-< The Supreme Court and Elaine Desrosiers and Gail Fur- , ·.the' Dynamics of American Gov­ tado: juniors; Rachelle Mercier, 4lrnment, PoUt and Mexico, Says, Journalists' lW-d De'?orah Dupre, sophomores. , Property in America, Ideals and ,.T A..: ,TR..reefold l1IIs IK: F.ceshman elections are post- .. ~ality in Foreign Policy, Why "" 111 poned in order to give new stu- ;. Watts? Democracy and Its Ser'JALAPA '(NC)-The threefold dents time to know each other. . vants. task of journalists today is the September Dance '.. Bl1lbavior Code education of ma'n for community At 'DA a' dance is already'. in A feature of the first student development, learning the propel:' .. ~e work~, with juniors red- 'aSsembly was the presentation language for dialogue and com­ · eircling Satul'day, Sept. 29. Vic ',,·(1)f,a student code of behavior and 'inunication;' and the use of the '•. :H.OME IMPROVIEMIE!N'1I' IlOANS Annen will be mc for the aff"air J student dress code for both unibest professional techniques to , and'" proce'eds will benefit" the i' ·form .', and non-uniform days. spread 'the awareness of man and it" '~IERSONAL LOANS ~unior-senior banquet fund. Stlid Senior student council members comrriunity through all media. banquet;' a year-end actiirity, met with their moderafor, Sister ''Fhese tasks for journalists Geems a long way off now, 'but Barbara Mary, during the Sum- .were given here in Mexico by . '. VACATION LOANS tbne will flit. mer' months to discuss and for- ·1\lejan.dr~ Aviles, president of ONIE' SlOIP. COMPL~E BANKING SRVB.CIE AT ANY .' '.. And. also at DA two' new mull!te this code. At the assem- 'the Latin American Catholic ~flchers,/1~ve joined the faculty, bly the principal Sister Jane 'Press Association, at a journal.. ,. :: OF OUR 6 HANDY I!A~OC$ Sister Mary William, O.P., hqlder ' 'Raymond, introduced the school '. ism" workshop for high school Gf a master's degree in gu'idance ' captain' Pamela Correiro illld shi.denb3'iil the state of Veracruz. from Boston College, and Miss ., .team captain Pamela Correiro Spe'aking 'on . public opinion Cecile Levesque, a Salve Regina . arid' team captains Judith Suili- and the developmEmt of Latin ~iology major. van, .3t. Agnes, and Jacqueline .AmeriCa, he told the students: Members of the part time Proulx, St. Margaret's, who pre- "Our newspapers must devote all tmculty are Rev. Maurice Jeff- ·sentedthe material to the stu- their ener'gy· and 'talent to the lJ'ey, who will discuss marriage dent body, task' 'of the development of ~th senior religion classes lVIr. William O'Brien, president people~." W~11HIS~X CONVENIENTLY lOCATED BANKS ~ice weekly; Rev. Thomas of the SHA Fathers' Club, ad­ IN NEW BEDFO~D MOire ComfortWearinfj lLf)pes, who will take up the dressed the students at a special SOUTH BANI(-:-Cove St. at Rodney FreU1ldli lBolllllev«llll'd Bame topic with juniors; Rev. . teams assembly to outline the JJobn Oliveira and Rev. James club's ,programs for the year.' He WESi IBANK':"'Kempton Street at Mil~ $ill'e~~ Morse, who will lecture on per- ' urged ,all to enlist the interest Here Is, a pleas!'nt w!'y to overcome LUND'S CORN!ER BANI){~Acushnet Ave. near ll.ilDU1ld's COl1'nSl' , loose plate discomfort. FASTEETH, 09n alit y development to s09b.~ , .lW.d cooperation of their parents an Improved. powder, sprInkled on DAlRirMOLlTIH BANK-lDlCll1'tmcuth Street ll1IelClr ~OC!t~CII~G! Awo. mores and freshmen respectively... in '!lromoting the planned activi. upper and lower plates. holds them NOIRl1T1H ElAINJK~AcUJlshl'iet AVG!o Imt CCirfiU1l Pw~. , firmer so they feel more comfort­ ,Susan Fauteux is DA's,Anchor ties. A father-daughter chicken able:.-No gummy, gooey, pasty taste ~1E1N1T~~ "l8tU~~-PurchCllse raJl'ilC1 Wi~~iGITii'U S~. , .iJf,rl this year, and she's obvi~Wl- .pie supper is the first social ac- ,or.feel\ng.lr~i')k"line.Doesn·tsour. lI... •• • '.: '. . . . , . 'Checks "plate odor breath." Den­ , ·..fW'.' fi!ffl(;tent. Other school repw1- JIYfty,: sla,ted for M~nday" Oct.. I "'Iturell that·fit are essential to health. ; . .<' DRUViE-aN.. SE~VDCIE A'ff.'A~fL IBlANK$ ~.rs I;Hlme~ so far are J"cqueUne ,.!lI,.. Tn .gen~ral, the Fathers' f"'tub· .' ~'I",u.~ ,df:ut1s,t" regUla~ly., Qet r '",,_ ' .• - ..... " .Y' ,t-:'~, . , . '. . '" • .....w:>.I..=A'Ii! at all drug counters. awbe.t:~. . JesU~-Mar.y~ : ~~:.ti1on theme fOIL" the .;year ~ a st!l~, o f , l " , ; "".' ,,'. '." ':" ". ,,' ... ~

the Cc\puchlns

~

SAVlE DOLLARS

with the

MERCHANTS u°!E(c(j)!IIamyIlU

Aulo lOin Plan

"

"

qkJ~.ERCHA.NTS

CI'Ia:liJ»uil, BANK

FALSE TEETH


8

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of~Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 2.1, 1967

Hyricinth Circle 'Pi,ons Events

Gives Hints om Ways to Aid Aged Avoud Embarrassment

The Da~ghters of Isabella of New Bedford will hold a Social on Tuesday, Sept. 26 in the D. of I. Hall, 1,1 Robeson Street, New Bedford. Mrs. Hilda Pacheco and Mrs. Clarice Pateakos will serve 8fl chairmen. The 'annual "Mother and Daughter" Mass and Communion Breakfast of Hyacinth Circle No. 71 is scheduled for Sunday morning, Oct. 1 at 9 in the Holy Name Church, New Bedford.' Breakfast will follow immedi­ ately in the Holy Name Hall. The Hyacinth Glee Club will provide entertainment. "

By Mary Tinley Daly AnsWer to a requeSlt for a vacation replacement col­ umn came in the form of a heartwarming manuscript from­ Mrs. Esther Farwick, R.N., Nursing Unit Supervisor, Pipe­ stone County Hospital and Nursing Unit, Pipestone, Minn­ esota, entitled, "Please Dunk My Toast." In a pos't-script, trying desperately to retain their Mrs. Farwick tells us, "We sanity. As well people, you know how have 43 patients here and I frustrating it is to meet someone

love my work." This is pretty you know you should remember. obvious, for her messages comes But, for the life of you, you through 1 0 u d cannot think of who this is or lil1lterfaith Committee and clear, writ­ where you met him. . SpoU1lsors Project ten with com­ Imagine how the confused per­ pas s ion. and WILMINGTON (NC)-A pr~ son feels when suddenly con­ eharity but with ject sponsored by institutions of fronted with such a problem. It· no hint of con­ three major religious faiths in is a real shock to the nervous descension. It Delaware aims at helping fam­ system and could cause much brings 11 'lesson ilies in need and assisting chii­ trouble.' . on the care of Gentle Remindell'S drEmto escape the poverty cycle. . the aged ,from The sponsors are the Catholie I hope' thoughtful nurse will one who knows diocese of Wilmington, the Del­ greet'me each day with a cheery wh e re of sh~ aware State Council of ehuches "Good morning! Today is * * *" speaks, a: lesson and the Juewish Federation of and proceed to tell me what day' LITURGY IN AFRICA: .Adaptati()n of the liturgy Of for all of us. Here is Mrs. Far­ of the week it. is and the,'time ' Delaware. They have formed the the Church to the African 'scene· brought the usual Deiaware Interreligious' Com­ wick's original' manuscript, pub­ of the year. . .' , lished with thanks... M.T.D.· . Also, it· means '-sO, much to the' musical teachniques of the people ::j.nto the service. Drums mittee. . .. Most people,· when they reac~ mentally slow to b~ re'mindedof and a 'xylophone-like instrument'-aCcompany the sihging of "Former Gov. Elbert N. Carvell middle. age,begin to think iJ? approaching, birthdays an~. holi­ 6f Laurel, Del., has been named the congregation. NC, Photo. terms of a will. I'm really not days.' ".

chairman of the committee. In eoncerned about what will hap­ When I start nonsensical ram­

preparation for October' and pen to my materia1 gain, but ~ bling, please gimtiy, but firmly

November meetings, Carvel has am very much concerned about set' me straight. And, if I pray

appointed a group of county co­ those last years of my life 'when loudly, kindly shut my door, but

ordinators for the project. The I shall be mentally and physi­ . let me pray.1 Some may think it coordinators include Russell W. eally unable to care for myself. cruel to shut the door on the McBride of this city, co-chair­ . nuok Toast ' noisy folks, but if you are sure man for New Castle County. I hope when I am placed in a I cannot harm myself, just close nursing home a kind nurse will my door so I will not disturb Coamdl of Churches Knit one, purl two is the pass­ touches such as blocking and come along and dunk my toast. others. word and a ball of yarn and a buttonholes adds a great deal to Backs Father Groppa Encourage me to help myself When m;y' dentures no longer . pair of knitting needles are the the' cost. . ATLANTA (NC)-The gene­ fit properly, or if I prefer ~o and others just as long as I pos­ passport into the exciting, cre­ Saving money should not be ral board of the National Coun­ leave them out altogether, I WIll sibly can. Please let me receive Holy ative world of the knitter. Age is your reason for beginning this cil of Churches voiced support find it very difficult to enjoy hobby but rather it should be of Father James E. Groppi of and be no barrier, from six to 60 or bet­ my toast. It is surprising how Communion often, the urge to create something Milwaukee and his militant civil fast it cools off' and becomes thoughtful enough to place a ter still from six to 80, anyone beautiful with your J>wn hands. rights activities during the hard and dry. I hope someone glass of water, and a sp~on near­ A handknitted garment has char­ can enjoy. this by so the priest may help me if opening session of a two day will be improper and dunk my marvelous, pro­ acter all its own, it stands out meeting,here. toast into the hot rich coffee I have difficulty. among its bought comrades like I am looking forward to ductive hobby. The 150-member board ac­ and let me enjoy every bite. If you haven't a jewel among thorns. spending my last days in a nurs­ cepted a resolution proposed by I'm sure shc will get a big Years back it was all but im­ ing home. It is my daily prayer as yet visited its executive committee and toothless smile from me. the world of the p~ssible to find a good-looking asking for financial and moral Also, I hope the aide will take that my mind and body will re­ knitter you're dress pattern to knit. They were ,support from members for the time to tie a bib around my neck main strong so I can spend in for a treat all over-fussy and frilly and cer­ those last days helping those priest who has led the open so when I feebly try to feed my­ and ,for many tainly lacked anything smacking housing demonstrations staged self I will not spill oatmeal' down who are less fortunate than L. hours of plea­ of style. Today there is a com-. in Milwaukee. my front· where it will become .sure as you cre­ plete reversal and handknitted ./ cold and sticky. Glenmary . Nuns Elect ate a garment dresses are admired and bid for Training Centers When visitors come and of beauty from a simple ball of by the fashion conscious. Some LOS ANGELES (NC)-=-A total thoughtlessly ask, "Do you know New Mother Genera!" yarn. metallic knit yarns are coming . of 89 centers to train laymen me?" or "Do you remember me? , CI.1':CINNATI (rilC) _ Si.ster Ten or 15 years ago a woman on the market tq add even more Tell me who I am," how I pray Mary Joseph Wade is the new knitted for children or friends . lustre to the already beautiful as teachers of .religion will be that then a considerate .nurse mother general of the Glenmary but very' seldom did she think collection of yarns available. <!pened here next Monday by the will 'come to my rescue with, Sisters. , ,of knitting as' a creative way to These are exciting in evening Confraternity of Christian Doe­ trine. ' "Of course she knows. you. The Long Island City, N. Y. make .clothes for herself. Today dresses' and perhaps if ,you start You're Mrs., .So-and-so." Or native, who has been a memJ>er., handk'nitted fashions are' defi- . now· you'iI have one made for "SurelY she knows you, but I of the community 'for 21 years, nitely In with'a capital I. The the·Bishop'~.Ball. Of course, you oon't believe I do. Pl~ase tell me ·was elected' at' a general chapter look of knits is highstyle and could al~a:ys make the skirt a your name." . meeting in the motherhouse here extremely expensive but ·if mini and, that 'would cut your Many of the people in nursjng at' which Archbishop Karl J. you're handy with those pointed labor time in half! needles you cali create ..your own homes are confused and are... 'Alter of Cincinnati preside~. If you're" not ambitious enough full dress these ..TheGlenmary community \\1as individual look for a little 'less to tackle than. it would'cost you to, p~r­ . metallic .yarns .make stunning 'founded in 1949 and canonically Apostolate of laity '.'~ WYman chase readymades. ,The labor is evening shells or swe~ters. No. approved. Recently a large num­ your own so of course you avoid 3-6592 : matter what you knit, this is ber of the Sisters were released' Proposes Observance . ~hat part of the cost of. off the the season to get the needles SAN 'ANTONIO (NC)~Me~­ from the~r vows and formed a z:ack knitwear but more impor­ CHlA~ES F. VARGAS clicking for 'never have hand"'; lay community to continue work bers Of San Antonio's Archdio­ . :tant than the cost of purchasing knits 'been more in. ' in the Appalachi~ areas. 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE .. resan Committee on the Aposto­ , a good knit is the thrill of makThere now are 19 Glemnary la"te of the Laity, marking the NIEW BEDFORD, MASS. Steal Coin Collection, Year of Faith proclaimed by nuns working in such areas" ill ing one yourself. For Bishop's BaU Ohio,North Carolina and Georgia, .. P~pe Paul VI, have recommend­ Don't think though that ~heJi Cash from University ed to pastors ~'practical and COR­ 'principally 'in· catechetical, social DAYTON (NC)-A coin col­ erete expressions of faith" to be service and nursing work. The you make a sweater by hand it eluried out on the parish level. nuns' also are concerned with will be a great deal cheaper .' lection' valued at more than The group's suggestions in-. parish and ecumenical activities, than any you can purchase. $20,000 and cash and checks to­ elude plans for a' march of faith, community action and the arts. Handknitting is very expensive, taling $34,500 were stolen from especially if you're using the the University of Dayton. 1\ public procession culminating , best possible materials, and no Thieves used a blow torch to in recitation of the Apostles' Sucordium Club' 'one should enter this hobby open ~he safe' in the treasurer's Creed at the conclusion of a The Sucordium Club of Sacred thinking otherwise. The wool it- office where the collection and Mass; recitation of the Apostles' self is quite high and having.: money were kept. .' Creed at all Masses and in all Hear,ts Academy, Fall Rivei', will hold its opening tea from professionals put finishing " The coin collection was owned Catholic classrooms; and a con­ by the Society of Mary, which eerted study 4;lf the faith by all . 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 24 in the school gymnatorium,' i operates the sch,ool. The, vollecin the Church. Prospect !?treet. October 'events Penny Sale tion was started some 60 ,years The letter, signed by commit­ A penny sale will be sponsored ago. tee chairman Father Erwin A. will include a meeting and gui,The money' stolen included . tJUraschek and co-chairman Mrs. dance' session at 7:30 Tuesday by St. Catherine's Fund-Raising James McKay, also asked ,pas:'" night, the 17th and a dinner . Committee' of Dominican Aca- $21,000 in cash; mostly from tors to -inform the committee of dance 'at Venus de 'Milo 'restau- . '. demy, 37 'Park'Street, Fall 'Riv:" book ·store receipts .which were , . ·.. :·any pftrish ;Jctivitiesthat ,make! rant at 6,30 Sunday night, ~ .. " el-, .at· 8 Sattirday night, Sept,.' heavy, J;>e,cau~!,! .of ~ChQol'9peJ+ing,. 22nd' . ' 23. and $13,500 in checks~ the Year of Faith 'a reality.

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Says Sto're !P'astries' Can't I Equal, Hom~·'~:aked Vari:ety

By Joseph and Mal'HYIll Roderick

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Sept. 2'1, 1967

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9

Plan Commission ~o Assist Aging

I

It is of,ten the little flower that gives the greatest joy. In Spring when we are anxiously awaiting the warmth of good weather it is always a joy when the first crocuses break through the earth and thrill us with their gay colors. Too often, though, itt is this simple sort of flower that or rolls but invariably I am we overlook when pI-anning' disappointed. Those beautiful (}ur Fall planting schedule. concoctions never taste as good

ST. PAUL (NC) -A 23-mem­ ber commission on aging will be set up here by the St. Paul-Min­ neapolis archdiocese with the approval of Archbishop Leo Binz and the archdiocesan board of consultors. lVlsgr. Francis W. Curtin; pas­ tor of Blessed Sacrament church here and former director of Archdiocesan Catholic Charities, will head the group. It includes two priests, nine nuns and 12 laymen. In establishing the commission, Archbishop Binz said that the work of caring for the aged is an especially important and ap­ propriate work for the Church, since many in modern society are increasingly inclined to ig­ nore the needs of the aged." Purpose of the commission, ac­ cording to Msgr. Curtin, is to serve in an aavisory capacity to the archbishop and his con­ sultors in identifying and at­ tempting to relieve the problems of the aged.

as they look and their cost puts Crocuses are as easy to grow a tremendous dent in the food as any bulb and will thrive in bill; especially if you have a almost any kind of soil, in light growing family that likes sweet shade or in full sun. Like most desserts. bulbs, they will not tolerate Ii Doing your own baking is a !SOggy soil, but other than that lot easier and cheaper'than many they have no special require- people want to believe. Cookie ments. I usually plant mine at dough can be mixed in batches, random in the garden wLth l1 ' pastry dough for pies and turn­ touch of bone meal added as a overs can be made in quanity oook adds a pinch of salt to the and kept in the refrigerator and I3tew, just for good measure. if you're !fortunate enough to These little bulbs can be plant- bave III good-Il i ze freezer you ed any time now or as late as can even bake one or more mid-November and they will cakes on a day you're in a 'bak­ be thriving in the Spring. ing mood and put the extra one Jl:"lnnt ilJm GIrOUAJ]}S away for a busy time. I always As in the case with most try to mix a batch of pie pastry ~ulbs, crocuses look best and during, the weekend and use it ahow ,to the most advantage in 'd~ring,. th~ week. the garden when they are plant, 1!'%e DOUgh llIallJlllly ed in groups. I usually soften the" .... .. S~um ~elharom~aHon eoil of 'the bed where I am go- " PIe qough IS the handIest Item Proied to Start mg to plant my crocuses then, illlaginable. In 15 minutes you step back and toss a handful ,of ,c~n transform it( with the help CLEVELAND (NC)-A $5.3 fuulbs on the ground at random' .of a jar of jam) into tasty, flaky million hous'ing rehabilitation and plant them where they lie. ' turnovers. In even l~ss time t~an project in the riot-scarred This ensures a more nalmral' .~q.at jt can become the toppIng Hough area here is about to get planting and results in a far' ,fQr a: stew or casserole or the under way. better 'showing than planting' ,b~ttom c.rust on a. lemon Dle­ The Catholic, Cleveland dio­ rn rows. Clusters of yellow, r.~ngue pIe. C?ften, If I have . a cese pledged $500,000 "seed" mauve or white crocuses or any' little e~tra ~me (and room In money to obtann administrative oi the other color combinations my ~efrIg) Ill. roll out a cou?le and financial services for fed­ bI masses are quite a sight to of pIe shells rIght. aft~r ~aking eral housing insurance and low see especialy after a bleak the dough, then If I m In the interest loans. Wi~ter. mood for a one-crust pie I'm In the slum area, which was . The older crosues get, the bet­ halfway. to my goal. . the scene of ISS6 riots, 47 struc­ ter theY' look because they diThe pIe that Joe was enJoy­ tures will be demolished and l1llinish slightly in size but re­ 'ing this evening was made /from 70 others will be improved. The produce rather rapidly if they a .shell that I took from the re­ new project will provide three are left undisturbed. The small­ frIgerate~ when I returned from five-bedroom units; 112 four­ er size adds to their beauty as school thIS afternoon. It took 12 bedroom units; 107 three-bed­ fiar as I am concerned. I feel minutes to bake the chilled shell room units; 237 two-bedroom much the same way about old and whi~e it was bak!n? I ~ade units and 137 one-bedroom units; -_.... ....-..;;.._. _ _..._.__l _ tulips which begin to diminisb the vamlla cream fIllmg In a plus 18 off-street parking lots, in size after a few years in the saucepan on the stove. It took a community center and com­ garden. These smaller flowers about 10 minutes for filling and SEABEEES A][D ORPHANS: Vietnamese baby is be­ mercial .garage. are just as delightful1f not more shell to cool enough to use. ing cared for by the Sisters of St. Paul of Chartres in their 00 than the overgrown but new­ ~opped w,ith a 12 min~te me­ Pay Bus Costs Orphanage at Go Yap, Vietnam, where U.S. Navy Seabees cr varieties. rmgue thIS complete pIe took MILWAUKEE (NC)-Reports often 'lend a helping hand with clothing and food for the At any rate crocus is so in­ me 34, minutes from beginning from Catholic schools within the expensive about four cents a to end. It would take me that children. NC Photo. ' Milwaukee archdiocese indicate bulb, thai you can plant 50 a long, to get into the car, drive that local public school districts season without denting your ,to the bakeshop and spend my are paying the cost of bus rides pocketbOok to any great extent. hard-ea~ne? m?ney for a pie for 14,655 Catholic school chil­ Try planting a few in pots, then' that I dIdn t enJoy. GALVESTON (NC)-Father Schwartz, a native of Washing­ dren. A new state law permits buryiI'l'g the pots in the ground No matter how busy your ton D.C., who bas been working public school districts to pay for in your garden and lifting them schedule,. somehow a bit. of James L. Golasinski, superin­ in Pusan for nine years. bus transportation for private tendent of schools of the Gal­ next Spring to be brought into home bakIng can be tucked m­ school pupils. the house. These can be left to it each week. The raves from veston-Houston diocese since "I read of Father Schwartz outside until they are almost your family will more than 1964.. has left here for Pusan, coming to ~he U.S. to speak in ready to bloom and then brought compensate for your efforts and Korea. where he will become a various seminaries about his founding member of the' In­ It> EU:CTR~CAI, In without hurting the bulbs in the results on your food bill plans," Father Golasinski said.' ternational Mission Society. any way. will be noticeable. ~~ C9IT1fr<t1Jd(1l)ffl "I had thought about going to Sponsored by five of the the missions since ordination. l'!Jll tUne Klitclllellll The ,?ea~h cream pie that J.oe '"" h 'd n was enJoymg when I asked hIm bishops of the 10 Sees of South An opportunity had not pre­ Aj>0 you ave any 1 eas ..or for a tOPI'C f ' 1 . . f I?" I k d or my co umn IS Korea, the new society wil~ be sented itself. I was able to spend t l) OpIC or my co umn. as ~ made the followin wa composed of priests from around six hours with Father Schwartz Joe as soon as I pushed my chaIr ' g y. the world. In the !first contingent last May. I was accepted." away from the dinner table. He ,.lI"eacUn Cream lI"ne of members there will be at least !looked up long enough from % cups sugar Following, his acceptance as ":'~ one priest from Japan and one eating, with obvious relish, pis If.l 'clip all purpose flour a charter member of the new or­ from Africa. ' cecond piece of home made 14 teaspoon salt ganization Father Golasinski Bishop John Choi of Pusan is was released by Bishop John L. peach cream pie to advise me 2 cups milk /A~ the chairman of the board of Morkovsky, apostolic adminis­ 00 urge the female of the house­ 3 slightly beaten egg yolks 944 County St. hold to return to baking paStry 2 Tablespoons butter or mar-, bishops which will steer the mis­ trator of the Galveston-Houston New Bedford! ­ sion organization. Founder of diocese. m her own kitchen rather than garine the society is Father AIoysiUG stocking up on bought goodies. 1 teaspoon vanilla This has always been a sub­ 1 can of sliced peaches (drain­ ject that Joe felt very strongly ed) utes longer. Stir and watch.

about. When we first married' 1 9 inch baked pie shell 3) Remove from heat, add

be often said he didn't care For Meringue butter and vanilla and cooL

if I served him only gelatin for 3 egg whites 4) Into the cooled pie shell

dessert as long as I didn't put ¥4 teaspoon cream of tartar place the sliced peaches and pour

on the table any of those store Ih teaspoon vanilla the cooled filling on top of them.

bought cakes ana pies that tasted 6 Tablespoons sugar like sawdust and pretended t h e y ! ) Into a saucepan sift to­ 5) For the meringue be3Jt the

were good. Well, he got his way getlter the sugar, flour and salt. egg whites and cream of tartar

MANUFACftJRERS and :I must admit that many Slow~y stir in the milk and cook, along with the vanilla until soft

evenings he didn't even get gel- over medium heart (stirring con,,: peaks are formed. Gradually add atin' but neither did he, get store stantly) until mixture boils and the six tablespoons of sugar and

of BRISTOL COUNTY

pastry. ~ickens. Cook two minutes continue beating until stiff peaks

'Oh, ever,' now and then be- longer lInd return to heat. are formed and all the sugar dis- ,

THE AREA'S MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK cause I have a terrible sweet 2) .,sti,r a small amount of solves, Spt:ead, thi,$ on toP. Qf tooth I break down and buy t~e mixture into the egg yolks, ,the pie, filling, fiealing to the ATTLEBORO FALLS some gooey-looking confection pour yplks into remainder of the pastry. Bake in a 350· oven 12 ,-_.".·"_.".N..O_R.T_H_'A.tT_L.E_B.. O.R ..O_'...e _'..lI/I_A.N.S."F.'.E_L_D . that I see when I i:0 to bU¥ bread hot uiixture and cook two min-:- . minutes or until golden. 1 ~-_._~_._-

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Texas Educator Joins Mnssioners

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': Prelate Refu$~s To Intervene .. In Milwauke. e MILWAUKEE (NO) ArchbI'shop William E . Cou'"...:' ins of Milwaukee hasreminded Catholics that the

. to Leave

Dorothe~n Missio~ers.·J/brced

17R A'N~110l(­

.' ,Thurs.•. Sept. 21, ),?,67

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$52 Miffion Gool Of Fund Drive

NOTRE DAME (NC)- Ttill 1IJniversity of Notre Dame' bav Pa~rlcja Francis i.,annoUI:1ced ,a five-yeall $5~ mBa ';, .. . ., lion fund-raising' program dO'>

In .the coming year, Miss ,Helen M.Mclntyre of 150 Shawmut Ave.,New Bedford, signed to expand graduate ea.

will be asked to help an estimated 43,000 to 44,000 men, women and...teen-agers' find jobs., cation and ~esearch. The pr(iloa

For Miss McIntyre, district supervisor of the Southeast District of "the Massachusetts Em- g~am also RIms to attra.ct t~P-

t ServlCe, . thOIS WI'll b e a II ".m a d" ay s work" -more or Iess. M'ISS MIt fhght faculty some to the PI oymen c n yre, a by endowing 40 umverslti!l professo.

Br

member of Holy Name Parish, began her Employment Service oareer nearly 30 years ago, when she went

ships, and will pay the cost d1 seven major new buildings. causes of racial unrest would Father Theodore M. Hesburgbp continue to plague Milwaukee c:.s.c., pO, No~re Dame preside~ with or without the civil rights t k' th N B df d smce 1952, saId the program has leadership of Father James E. o. wor m e e~ e. or been named "Summa: NotJl:ll'J Groppi. offIce as a clerk-.tYPlst, shortly Dame's Greatest Challenge." I:ll'f! ' hop who has been after her graduation from New d' 'b d th f d ., ff .... Th e' arc hb IS , Bedford High School. escrl. e e. un -rals!l~g e 0"-<1 .repeatedly asked by city offi-relymg entirely on gifts an411 · daIs and disturbed Catholics to In February, "as a result of pledges by alumni and friends-­ suspend Father Groppi for his Civil. Service exams," she emas probably the greatest eveit' · militant civil rights tactics .and ~haslzes, she becam.e one of the undertaken by a Catholic uni­ has. repeatedly refused. to do so, . fIrst two women m the. st~te versity anywhere in such 0 made his latest comments on the named. to the posts of dlstnct . brief Period." city's strife in an editorial in the supervIsors. The action also. marked t~ .... Catholic Herald Citizen, MilThe territory for which she first major project undertakeli waukee archdiocesan ~ewspa- is responsible ranges from Plym'by the university' since its a(),. per. outh to ProVincetown' to New ministration passed to predo. . "If Father Groppi were out of Bedford and Fall River and' inantly lay control last Ma310 the picture,'" the ar~hbishop north to Brockton~ It also . enThe Holy Cross Fathers, w~ said, "the NAACP Youth Coun- compasses the' islands of Nanhad operated Notre Dame sin«:Cl eil would not go' out of' exis- tucket . and Martha's Vineyard. 1842, gave control to a 36-malii tence. I·ts Direct Action comAMy desk and secretary are in board of trustees, whose 29 la!7 "..nl,ittee would .continue to. deter~New. Bedford," she explains, "members i~c~ude Prote~tants an~ · mine tactics. Its large l~ga~ staff "but I try to visit each office in : Jews. OffICIals have pledged would still ad,vis.e. Ttl!! parent- the district at least every two ,that the university will remain ~ organization would maintain its weeks." Catholic insti~ution. , ". present position ami 'lend its lfe~' travels-':"in the new car . Speaking at an inaugural di.... "lIupport. . , she bought immediately.' after . ner on the camplisattended ~' .. '. "More to the point,the under- her promotion'-so far have avthe trustees, sernor facult~ lying ,causes of unre'!;t' pOiiJted . eraged "about. 1,000 miles... a members of the SUMMA nationaD . up by the Youth CO'lHicil would committee, and' 300campaigil "go , on . Plagll.ing us. .. ..eXIS . t' e d month," she .estimates. " Ie'aders"'from' 39 cI'tl'e's, Fat"-­ They n..... long before Father Grop'pi's ad:' As a district supervisor, she is . 'H;esburgh disclosed that $20.$ vent."" . . '.} responsible "for seeing that proMISS HELEN McINTYRE '-'"-' New Bedford million in 'gifts has al~eady beeJi. '", . Meanwhile open housing dem- . grams are carried out and that committed. He said it was pro\).;. ''''onstrators' and anti-d~monstra- p,ersonnel.needs are..met." she feels the Youth Opportunity . that "the more education 'a 'per- ' able Notre'Dame will'reach i~ ·",tion ·demonstra,tors said" thete Both can generate"headaches, Program, conducted in coopera- . son' has, the better .chance he "'$52 million goal'long before the · would be' no let-up in the city's sne admits. . tion with employers of the' area, has to get the kind of .job he . official five-year pledge periCM1l tense racial struggle which MayWhat is the job situation .in . bas helped tremendously. . ' wantS." . ends. or . Henry Maier claims lias Sou'theastern Massachusetts? . One' thing she emphasizes' is Dedicated' to her job' and ar­ br~lUght. Milwaukee to. the .. "It's' good as fat jobs' are' . . \ ticulate about the work of' the Priests' t.o Obserye O!yerge of civil·war." concerried," she sliys, "our need' . 'Employment'Service, Miss McMeeisDelegation is to getpeople iofillthdohs," Intyre ~so finds tiinein her Protestant Council . In their Second consecutive oi)~' <jf the ~igge~ p~oblem8 busy sch~ule to play an actiye SAN FRANCISCO ,(NC)-Shl night 'of demonstrating, some 400 f~~ing.8 state..einPloymenf:OfficeP tole inparlsh activities.' of the eight Catholic Sees in Cal­ · white' youths frpm the. sOllth' side :these d,ays,. ~1l~ .says, . ~i.s ~rying. '. QUANTICO, (NC)- ~Jtis . -' She: is 'a member ~f 'the Wom~ ifornia .have· named priests' .. ealljng' themselves '~clos~d houS~tp help get th~ ~hronicallyun':' 'far too, easy .to ignore. the re- .' en's 'Guild at Holy Name a~dis' . serve as . cOnsultant observers. · .~ng" .' a~yocat~s, ~;lr<*e4 .. ~.e.m.plo,;red into ~h~ lab~~ rilarket. peated efforts our ' .~xernment" ii i'right' s'rm"" in t~e' ~l~ri~al at' the Protestant Northern ea),. ; Ar<;h.bish9.pc;ou.si~s,'.·r.e~ide!1ce:.t~, '; . "The . ~ommunity...at-;I,argehiul ".haS made to securePea~e., . : to work of the"pa"1iihdutiIi~th~ 'iforniaCouncil'Olf Churches prOo · tt~m~,~d. ,~c~ion ag.~i!l!?~. ;F~~~~r. :.,~.,r.e<:!lize . .that ·:we . canT .stand .,imag·ine' that we are'·free .. from, .' ~atholi¢' !ChadtiesAppe~I..~Jl«l eeroings. ..... G . ,\ at the'tfihe 'of'the 'arir'Iu'al'parish i>', :.':'9P J?,I:., " , ..::, ,,:,.'" . r·;'''· " 't .:~:~.av.i,!g :J~e<Iple: ~itting .. _.,~ :.,the·divisive.·effects:of commun1st, coIleb'tion;"·.:· .... : ..... :. ;",' ....). 'The .priests·wiUcoMe <from the "...;' ~~:~c~ .. ~;r~~d.;:lt~'t~~:?t,~Q~:.. .~d,eliJ1c,ll,"··,sl)e.warns,· .. ' , ':p . ..•:Propag~nda·.and: simply cry,fOr '-.' She \11s6" is'se'<i reHi ry6f ih~ . San' 'FranciSco ··archdiocese· .anCI I:":~ .. ~.~r ~~s ~ .•." ,~p _,:,~e.c.~~.w... .. :" ::.To· ~elp get: peopHl '·into.jobs, ·"peacet .Francis, CardinaL.,SpeJl":'·New Bedford"Quoti:t club 'i\i\d'ili ';,1,he Oakland,' ...~Rton, Santm " " . ' ., ,b~Ue.~ II ~el~,g.a!~o,l} .~f .~l~,y~u,~h~ . ·the~ State' Employmcmt·· Service . 'rn~lI1: of New Y:ork ·said. her-e.', :'. -" t' .. :,._< tn'" I' C ""'t··· '~f A '.... Rosa; 'Sacramenw and Monterey~ .. . ~ht9l;lgh t!t e . Im,es ;o.me~t. WIth . is.' inauguhiting, .a..···~humanlre- ". "In a 'sermon' ;j,t tne 'U:S: Ma:~c~:~io~n 'of ~P~~S~~~~II,()~: '·Ent·,· Fresno ~iocese., .:' .. . ',.)~~.al'ChlJ!sh.6p'~.,', .';. '.:.....: ,.; ... ,J. : .!!~~rces ... developm~nt·.progr~m!' Hne Corps base,Cardinal'.SpeU... ,. plOyineilt:'Services' ill'id .the' Mas:' :. The .. lDterdenoJJllnati~nal ~o­ .. . . M*er.. t.n7<\ ~n.ef .~e~hng, ~~c;h-:: .' iii. the' ,desjgne4 t-o ~transfer, 'm~h said:' f'Everyone warits to' sachusetts State' Em 10'Yees o~er.ahon between Ule !lIX. eath-: ... ,~~SIlOP C~.uslO.rl!a~d: . ,'.,' .:. ';.: .. t~e unemployable 'into emploY-'see an 'end to the horrors of -this . sociati(jn~ : . p" -:., ~hc Sees 'and the counCIl Wall ",.' ,. 'Th~~lx.bo~s be.h~,:~~. v~,ry "a~le through'''mot~vation,eoun- .. -war. We must continue. to 'exThe bus e t : · · · th "maugurated·last year when Saft well. They w~re completely.. .seling ,and training.' . ' . plote vigorously every avenue daughter ·M~:.cU~:~ga~~tA~ .Francisco's Archbi.shop Joseph ~everent and f;>0hte. Four. were "People in the'Employment which may lead to peace. But McIntyre, .with whom .she re- T. McGucken apPol~ted an ob­ Roman Cathohc. Each boy mtro- Service have always tried to de-, we must also be sure that it sides, and the late Edward K. server to the councIl. duced himself a~d in ~urn gave yelop the right job for people," leads to true peace and not to MIt H . t M' Ed'th the nam,e of hIS parIsh. The she says, "but perhaps not with c n yre. er SIS er, ISS I b ddt k f F th betrayal and dishoflor." C. McIntyre, is office manager oys '/ no as 01' a er the same emphasis as now.·Now. C d' 1 S 1 and bookkeeper at SullivanGroPPI s ouster but asked rath- it is necessary-and I believe ar ma pe lman, Catholic . · v'car of the USA er th a t somet h mg be d one. I in this approach." . 1 •. rme d F orces, Foster, Inc., in New Bedford. told them we have a priests' senDespite her feminine status said that he knew he was labeled

ate and personnel committee to Miss McIntyre has run into n~ a "hawk" because of his visits

Conference. Set handle such matters," personal problems in her new to the troops in Vietnam. He

WASHINGTON (NC) - The

. . said: "I really don't care. what Job. I am called because I believe in Catholic Association for Ihter­

"The men always have been Auxiliary Preaches most cooperative and still are,"· ministering to the spiritual national Peace (CAIP) will hold its 40th annual conference Oct. she says. "Of course, I've worked needs of these men and women." At Memorial Rotes 27 to 29 at Dunbarton College with a lot of . them for a long He told the 1,400 people at the DETROIT (NC) Detroit's time." . open air Mass that he believes in of the Holy Cross' here. Theme The falmouth National Bank of the conference will be "SelecAuxiliary Bishop Joseph M. During 1966, between 43,000 "the basic rightness of.our coun­ FALMOUTH, MASS• Breitenbeck was one of several and 44,000 persons looked for try's cause." He wants peace, . tive Conscientious Objection in By the Village Green Since 1821 clergymen who' spoke at a com­ an Age ·of Conflict." . jobs through the State Employ- but "not· peace which is synony­ munitJo' memorial service for the ..ment Service offices in South- mous with surrender and even­ 41 pel'sops killed in the city;s §11I11I11II1111llllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllltllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~ eastern' Massachusetts. She 'feels tual slavery." race rioting -last month: = . . . at least that many will be lookCardinal Spellman cited his 28 . The service was held at the iog for help during the coming' years of· association with the Friendship Baptist Church in the . year. military. and said: "I think you midst of .the. riot-torn area. Teen-:age job hunting can be know how much ,this . bond IN~ : ".W.e must face the terrible a problelft\ she a<:imits, although means to me." ~ § wound in mankind of which this , " ~uffeIing is the symptom," 'said the hishop,"the wound which Layman' Gets Post AnLEBORO'S' cries' out to be cured with every X-0UNGSTOWN .(NC) 7""John· Leading Garden Cent... m3 n, beirig given t~e full dignity' .J;·Augensteiri is the firsUayman. . f"_. fO>f h IS person. . ' . to ~014' a key Post in' the YoungsV' . "Hunlan -.beings aI;e· ~~ngry;' town !iioces~-!1 school.sy~tem;,He' , and we must feed them with ·\V~s ':;\ppoin,ted .assista·nt, ~~perr.. '. . '. :'. that for which. they' Pwnger; for' . inten<Jent to serve' as chief aide' ~~th: M~in .. &W~it 5~ food, fOr' knowledge, .for cloth- . "to . Msgr.: William,. Hugl)es; ;head . .' lng, or~ducation, or .oPPQrtu7 o( tJ?,c:l Ily~tein.Aug~nstein <. • nity, but most nf .all for human . concentrate ,on the curriculum 222-0234 . ,,,,. _.,'" .,.: ." .. ~~~i.ty, ':~,tl~:.sai~, ., "~' ,' .. . ,.' tJ:1ed:!o~~s~:~:.si~ ~~!gl.I:, .. §~~Q!?\~~:. ,. .;,;; _ ' ; 'iiIIIIHIIIHIHIDlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHII"IIII1/IIII11I11I1I1lIltmlWiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllIlIlIllNii

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Bishop'McDowel1 Urges' Stronger" ,,',;,'SchoCjr Syste'm:, 1 I

ALBANY '(NC~A })is'nop "p r () po sed methods"" 0 f

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This~, One .Person

Fights Unemployment And A'ids Economy ,of' Whole :Region

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THE ANCHORlhurs., Sept. 21, 1967

.

Three Americans On ' Commission

For Dia logue

'

DOrothy Mitchell Eastman

"We could see the Chines'e ,COmmunist gunboats from onr house on the hill. The gov­ strengthening the Catholic school system to combat ernment felt it had to yield to the Communist demands to prevent a massacre." In the

present cri,ucism of academic safety of a sunlit reception room at Villa Fatima in Taunton the two Dor<Ythean Sisters YOUNGSTOWN (NC) ­

shortcomings and mounting eco- described the terror of their last ~ays on Taipa, the tiny island, off the coast of main- Three U. S. Catholicil - ~

nomic pressures. land Ohina, that is part of

bishop, a priest, and a la~ Auxiliary Bishop John B. Mcthe Portugese province of man-have been named W Dowell, veteran superintendent Macao. The two Sisters, still an international joint prepara~ 00' schools of the Pittsburgh dio- .dressed in their Order's tory commission for dialogue cese, advised the 1,500 teachers between the World Methodist in the Albany diocesan school white tropical habits, were MothCouncil and the Catholic Church. er Superior Marie Jeanne Cran­ system: "We have good schools. They are Bishop James W. Our children will receive the shoff, R.S.D., and Sister Mary Malone, apostolic administratoli' best in education if each teacher Sardinha, S.R.D. They have just of the' Youngstown diocese. makes him self the very best". returned from Taipa, after closFather Bernard Law, editor oR ing the Dorothean mission there. Featured speaker at the an-' the Mississippi Register, Natchez­ nual teachers' conference, which Gentle and infinitely gracious, ~ackson diocesan newspapell" also was attended by nearly all Mother Cranshoff looked much and Daniel Meaney of CorpU!J nuns stationed in the diocese, .too fragile to endure the rigorous Christi, Tex. the bishop' said that Catholic' life of a missionary in turbulent The commission will hold it.!J 'schools Should be preserv~d' 'and -Asia. 'first formai meeting Oct. 15-18 ail 'strengthened because Of Uieir' ,"She lost 30 pounds in the Arricia, near Rome, Bishop Ma­ responsibility to teach more .three years we ,were in Ta'ipa," lone was notified in a Jetteii' than secular subjects. Sister Sardinha sighed.' "Fish from Augustin Cardinal Be2l,,'" Disputing criticism that Cath~ ! and rice every day. And we only who heads the Vatican's Secreta­ oUc schools are anti-American' 'drank the rainwater we could riat for Promoting Christiail because they isolate their stu- :collect. We: wouldn't dare eat Unity. The commission is similall' dents from public school pupils, ,,·green vegetables. Cholera, you 'to groups now working 0I0l 'Bishop McDowell said: '''Our: ,; know." , Catholic-Anglican and Cathblie­ I, Catholic'schools are not di'·is1.ve. Mother Cranshoff has, 'been Lutheran relations. The longer you are in \l Catho- 'many years' away from her na­ Besides the three American£\, lic school the better citizen you iiveBrussells, Belgium. After , Catholic representatives on the 'are." He said the nation has \' studying under the Dorotheans commission include ArchbishoJi) 'many Catholic-educat~d lead~rs. ill Englimd and Switzerland, she ,,' John Murphy of Cardiff, WaleS\) Relatilln to God ' joined, the order "and I entered ..;, ,,J i Msgr. Francis l?avis, Birming~ I" 'Do everything in )·our power :, the: Portugese novitiate in 'ham, England; and Dr. Edwarcll , 'to make the section where"you ',Spain." The Portugese povitiate ,Popham, Lancashire; Englimd. '.. 'teach more Catholic and pupils 'in Spain? "Yes,1 ~ she'l<'1i:nighed Methodist Participants

.: .better educat~d and more A~- "that soundsfunnJ',' doesn't it? ,rican," ,he adv~sed the te~~h,~rs. But during the Portugese revo­ " Participants from the, WodEl) "We m,aintain that every child lution in 1910 all our houses in ,Methodist Council will' includli' must know about his God 'Portugal had to be closed and Bishop Gerald Ensley, Colul1l\oo n: that his relation to God must '·abandoned. The novitiate was re­ bus, Ohio; Bishop Fred' Pien:e permeate everything he <!ges settled in Spain very' close to _ ' Corson, Philadelphia; 13isholW Sister Marie Jeanne Cranshoff, Sister Mary Snrdinha and influence every other area the Portugese border." Odd Hagen, Stockholm; Deal!! of life," Bishop 1yIcDowell said-. Moth~r left Europe and came WHliam Cannon of the theology The bishop spoke against: to East Providence in'1939. This There are, many missionary 'ents "If you don't take your chil- school at Emory University, At­ weakening Catholic schools by, year she wHlbe superior. of orders in Macao Who will help 'dren 'Otlt of those Catholie lanta; Rev. E. Bolaji Idowtll. enlarging shared time pi'ograms Our Lady of Fatima High School them after that and teach them schools we'll see that you don't Jbadan University, Nigeria; Dr. with public schools.. He said in that city. a hade. Many of the refugees, work. ,Or buy food. Or 'worse." Eric Baker, London; Dr. Alberi there are some within the ,Sister Sardil1ha, a native 'of, perhaps most, go on' to Formosa ' So' sOme still resist. "But I Outler, Perkins School of The­ Church who favor conciliation' Bristol, Rhode Island, was a where Chiang' Kai-shek's Chi- think if we abandon our fight in ology, Southern Methodist Un~ . ,with P.rot~tants, and others.oil ", ~ember of t~e 1i,rst novitiate nese Nationalists greet them with Viet Nain these'people may lose ,rersity;'Dallas; Dr. Harold Ro~ ,church:-schO(lI"matters. ,,,: .. , clalJs of Villa'Fatima' in 1953, ..open arms. ' courage" Sister Sardinha feels. .. erts', Richmond College, Surrey.. .' ""To those, who say we are Jiv- ,,' Articulate and, vivaCiOUS' she " The' Dorothean Sisters were ',.!u hate war. I had sixlbrothe'rs in , England;' and 'ProfesSor GordOlil iog in' an e~um~niclli .wodd, I' :,~e<:ljlle~tl1eir''1~f$t',~~Jl~~~", OIl ,'iilvihidto ,Taipa by' the' Bishop i the Army. But I :think we've got "flupp, Mancheste;r; Enghihd.' ' , ",su~ges~notbmgdS' f~rthor ,from ,the' island" with' great,.. t~~iJ;lg. . of, Macao, to run. a, new' 'sehool do 'show' the ,Communists we Officials of. the SecrE:tariai 1M ",!be ,mm\~,o£"theVahcan Co,un,:, '.'The Communist tactics are the 'hein', built, on 'the island. But . mean to defend :freedom in Asia. 'Promoting ChrIstian U~ity an411 , .' cit ,f! Fathers, than"a,conciliation":' 'same' all' over' the woi-ld. "Their :when the, Communists : started. ,If, lellve· "Viet Nam ,every . ttie World" Methodist ,CouncilR .0£, id,octrine. ,We. t~~ch childr~n" ',,Qii~gest' -weapo~l is, ',terror;" " ~be their reign of,terror last' Winter ",place, :will ,be,-like , Macao."" ":Will also be-presen~'at" tile talke. that .they..are crellt~res ma?~:I~ "\l~sel:ted;',, ~hey.h'ad't9 abandon their hopes "In":the,lastf~w months-:-tbey ," "The, function of· the prei;>".... ~ ,th~ }~age, ,p£ G!>~, ~he "b~shop Talpa is a vel'y: sma'U ish'lrid; for the school. ,were' on the, ,island, the Sisters 10l'ycommission is to' considew , ,saId, an~,:t~ see In ,eve~r:o~her .Only'· one-and.,one:"half 'square ", Mo:the~ Cran~hoffand Sister "said, the Communists offered 2 'the feasibility' of Catholi~ ...person thIS l~keness and Image- miles in area, and Macao is Sardinha, along with two, other ,reward to any parishioner who ,¥.ethodist theological dialogus> , we ·alone bnng tha.t ~essage.. iG ,,'little larger .than that. For years Dorotheans ran' a' nursery school ,would' accUse them of being , of some commOn projects. , . , t?e youth and the V~tIc.an.c~,un- ,now the world has wondered ,for the refugee children. ~'Their American spies. They' were cII expects us t.o clarIfy thIS. .why Red China hasn't gobbled mothers worked in the six fire- ,watched constantly. The 'Portu­

'up the small Portugese colony cracker factories on the island. guese government was no longer

right on her coastline. Imagine a tiny island like that able to give them police protec-

Philadelphia Sisters A recent Amercian .magazine with six firecracker factories." tion. So they left, with deep article suggested that it's be- Sister laughed to recall it. regrets. At Anglican Synod "You can't imagine the noise This year Sister Sardinha will OTTAWA (NC)-Six singing cause Macao is just too poor, the Catholic nuns from Philadelphia Reds couldn't be bothered. "Non- they made on their holidays" be principal of St. Francis sense" snapped Sister Sardinha. Mother shuddered as she re- Xavier school in East Providence. were among the guests attend­ "Will she miss the little Chinese ing the Anglican Church of "That's what the Communist membered. children from Taipa?" she was would l ike the world to thl'nk . Canada's genel'al synod here. Last Winter the Communists truth is that Macao, like began demanding that the Por- asked. Her expressive brown The nuns are members. of the The Hong Kong has been too valu eyes spoke volumes. In their Medical Mission Sisters, who bl t th ' f t - tuguese government on Macao pain was the anguish of all the 0 em as a ree por . Do expel all foreigners. "They hate maintain and staff 36 hospitals a e know that "ght n 0 w, d al'I y us for the charitable work we missionaries who have had to in 13 mission countries. They you 'Il' d II rI . t R d ' leave their flock to the mercies work as doctors, nurses, phar­ °C'~~ ml f lOn °dartshPours In 0 e do there with American money." of the Communists. ma or goo s e Reds export the Sisters said. macists, technicians and dieti­ Macao? The Portugese tians in Africa, East and West ,through flag still flies over Macao, and ' The Communists already conPakistan, India, South America that's the way the Communist trolled all transportation and and Vietnam. want it for the present." they refused transport in the The six sing folk-style reli­ 'What infuriates the' Commu- province to foreigners. Next gious music to the accompani­ nists is the steady flow of refu- came a food strike. Storekeepers WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBLEMS ment of guitars, maracas,casta­ gees coming into Macao at the who dared to defy the ban and at the nets, bells, wood blocks and rate of about 350 a month 'from sell food to Americans or Euro­ sandpaper. They performed at mllinland' China. peans were terrorized. ' , Carnegie Hall in New York "They allow many to "escape" Then tlie Communist gunboats earlier this year. on purpose" Sister says "Those arrived along with a threat to SOMERSET, MASS. : ,,:ith tl!berculosis, cancer, the talj:e over the city of Macao and 1200 Missio,nei's badly handicapped, the drug ad- the two islands and massacre all Thel~ost friendly, democratic BANK oHering Porttigttese nationals who tried BOGOTA (NC)-There are diets.'" All refugees, healthy or other- to escape. '

about] 200 Spanish prjests wprk­ wise, are made welcome by the It was then that the govern­

irIg in Latin America. Further­ more, there are about 500 priests Portut:eS;e gOvernment at 'Ma- ment gave in, to aU the demanas

Club Accounts Auto Loans and 1000 seminarians- in 'Spain £ao..The police bring them im- of the Communists, ,including the

',Checlc:ingAccounts Buisi,ness Loans .....ho intend ,to work ill Latin mediately to the Jesuit inissionright to maintain, a 'police force;

,Savings Accounts Real Estate Loans America within 'the r\ext 'three,' where they' an given: clothing, Thel;e are 21,000 children ,in

At Somerset Shopping' Area-Brightman St. Bridge years. Ov.er 280 U.S, diocesan' personal items,' food and lodging' Catholic schools in the province>

priests and 1968 U.S; religious 10r 'ten days,' Then they're 0Jl. The 'scnools were the next target

'Member Federctl Deposit' Insurance Corporation ,,' of the Reds. They 'tol:d the 'par-

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12

,:-THE ANCHOR-Droc~se'of:'Fail'Ri-ie';''::'' 'rhurs~S~pt. 2"

;1967"

Prela,te, ' Releases Financial Report

StreS$e~ Value of Dioce~@ffi)

ParEsh,.

School' Boards

ATLANTA, (NC) - The At-­ lanta archdiocese released the financial report for the fiscal year July 1, 1967 to June 30, 1968, marking the first time the archdiocesan budget hall been made public. . In releasing, the $1,042,095.33 balanced budget, Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan and Auxiliary Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin said: "In the new, open Church, charted by Vatican Council n, there must be' open facts and debates. The advantages are evi­ dent. You will have more con­ fidnce, in ,those who handle the budget. You will have more in­ eentive' to support the Church." The budget was prepared in consultation with' the members of the" archdiocesan financial council, chiefly made up of lay­ men, 'which formally recom­ mended the adoption of the bud­ get. The budget was then ap­ proved by Archbishop Hallinan.

WASHINGTON (NC)-While controversy has swirled

around the attempts of many American Catholic colleges

to introduce greater lay control; a similar effort on t~e

grammar school level has gone almost unnoticed. Yet in'

extent and in influence, this education and in many cases the

grass-roots movement may local Newman apostolate.

"And of course," he continued,

be more important than any Iaicization of higher educa­ "the' boards give all sorts of

beip to the parish. They widen stion.

Figures supporting this opin­ the support for teachers because ton came from Msgr. O'Neil C. the lay people have a real role in the school. And of .course, JI)'Amour, diocesan school super­ intendent for Marquette, MiCh:, they lighten the burden or the who said in an interview here pastor!" lPAVLA: Father Raymond A. Kevane; national director The burden of the boards that there are now 3,000 parish of ~apal Volunteers for Latin America,,'traces his forth­ themselves is lightened, Msgr. school boards throughout the coming inspection trip to Central. and South America for D'Amour continued, by work­ ~untry, all of them including shops Jhat he and other mem­ members of his advisory committee"John Corrigan, and lay members. . This is an 'increase, ~gr., bers of the board of Catholic J'ames Strenski. PAVLA now has 300 volunteers over­ D'Amour pointed O\1t, of almost school superintendents hold in' seas, serving 17 Latin: American Countries On 130 projects, different parts of the country. 3,000 within' three years., established at the request of Latin' American Bishops. Backing up these parish boards Ultimately the monsignor hopes NC Photo.

..... are diocesan school boards, many to have a national secretariat to of them revitalized versions of coordinate the boards' work,

supply research material and

boards that were once control:­ [fOITiJ@~ S)frl?@!ru® [L@g~w ~®~g$ff@[rMG®

led solely by priests. Some' 130 help train board members. , JImprove Public JImage ' of the nation's ,144, dioceses ha,ve Initially, the monsignor would school boards; ~O of these incl,ude O[]'i) liite to see this board a part ~of lay represen~ation.

, ' Miss San Giovanni offered two SOUTH ORANGE (NC) ­ , the United States Catholic Con.... New.Approach Str6ng resistance, amdng lay peo­ explanations for the opposi~ion ference." ''Then, when it gets on Asked if the members of th'ese pie to ~hanges in the roles of }o ~h~ges iJ:i roles. " ' its'feet, 'board memberS will be' parish and diocesan boards a~e She, 'noted that sociological laymen, Religious and priests­ able to 'reorganize, it or relocate, 'profesSlonal ',~ educators, ~sgJ;. ' was indiCated in a survey of a theory ~olds that change is .least D'Amour, foPmer· associate sec. it . to: suit, their needs," Msgr. l~rgesuburban parish taken by likely to occur among things D'Amour added. ' retary: of the' National Ca~holic a soCiology' ins,tructor at Seton held sacred in society and ex­ Educational .Association school ,Asked why the boards sud-. Hall University here in New pressed belief that' the roles of denly seemed necessary al-· superintendents department, said priests, Sisters and laity are Jersey. that in almost ,every case they though Catholic schools' had ex­ This finding runs contrary to seen: by the laity as being at the isted for years without 'them, were not. ' core" of religion. other results of the survey un­ Professional educators usually the Midwest educator answered: dertaken by 'Lucinda San Gio­ A closing of the distance be­ "Well, in the first place, this , do not serve on the boards, but vanni to determine the attitudes tween. the layman and clergy is is, simply the way things should are rather employes of them. The of lay people toward changes in seen as blurring the line between board members are non-profes:' be done in tf:1is day and, age. In theChur.ch brought abOut by the the sacred, and the secular, she the second place; it will reduce sional people, chosen from the said, and is viewed as a threat the pastoral image of the schoois. Second Vatican Council. community to form school pol­ Attitudes toward develop­ to religiou's experience itself. .That is; the schools will.no long­ icies that reflect the commun':' ments in law, liturgy, ecumen­ Another factor, she said, is ity's attitudes and wishes, he er 'be looked on as extensions ism, the role of the laity, and the that "people are less willing to of the parish, but as professional added. role of priests and Sisters were accept change when it involves educational ,institutions. This new approach to Cath­ "This ,will not only improve surveyed. Out of a sampling of· an alteration in the institutional­ olic education, putting power ,the public image of the schools, ,400 parishioners, 124 replies ized relationships individuals into the hands of elected lay it may also help to do away _were received. Results were tab­ have with one another." Changes people, points up some' new ,with some of the problems that ulated on the basis of most fav- in the role of laity, priests and ideas about Catholic schools. "It arise when state aid to CathO:­ orable to change, in favor of Sisters, she said, involve such reflects the fact, for example, lic schools is being discussed." 'some change, and opposed to alterations, whereas changes in that although Catholic schools change. ' law,' liturgy and ecumenism do

operate under the auspices of the Almost half, of the respond- not.

Church, the Church cannot have $[pJD(j'oft'M«!II, DDIJ'~ci".@rs , ents, , 42 per cent, favored some'

total control. , of the changes on an over-all

1r@!l'1M Confeli'enc::e ' "Rather," Msgr. D'Amour ex­ basis, but attitudes in each of the _MBIl'il5stfter Stresses

plained, "the, state and paren4; EMMITSBURG, (NC)-.,...A per,. .areas surveyed differed consid­

,Oneness of Spirit

bave rights, and authority that 'manent· organization, . to be _erably.. SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A must be respected. For that mat­ kno.wil the Eastern Regionai , lFavoll' lEcumenism Baptist minister said here, "I be­ ter, even the non-Catholic gen­ ~onference of Spiritual Direc':' Some 80 per cent of the re­ lieve there can' be 'and must be eral public should have some ~ors of: Major Seminaries, was say, in the operation of Catholic formed' at 'the conclusion 'of a 'spondents either, strongly or a oneness of spirit. I believe, it's schools because so I1lany citizens ,three' day workshop at- Mount moderately favored 'changes in coming. 'But unity and unifica­ are involved. in Catholic edu­ ~t. Mary, Seininary' here i~ the law 'and liturgy, with 90 per tion are not synonymous. We cent favoring eclimenical moves. need one· another, but that does cation." Marylan'd. ' , Lighten Pastor's BurdeJm , Purpose of 'the three....day' ses:" , , But 56.4 'per cent held tradi':' 'not mean. we have to be all Asked how these school boards sio~ was to dil?cuss and compar~ , tional, views on the role of the' alike.",,' . . The Rev. ,Buckner Fanning, .... operate, Msgr. D'Amour noted: the program for spirituality' ,in laity, and 52.4, per cent on the "First, they are not simply major' seminaries. The nature' role of priests and Sisters, Miss pastor of Trinity 'Baptist Church school boards; but boards of edu­ of the diocesan priesthood and ,san Giovanni reported. These here, told 'an interfaith dialogue cation. This means .that they its :proper spirituality; 'the role pe-rcentages held up f8J.rly weil .group at St. Pius X church" "we supervise schools, Confraternity of the community 'in, the forma: ,wb,en results were br'oken do\Vn ,have prophets ,of doom among us. But I, do' not believe that of Christian Doctrine'work, adult tion of diocesan priests,' and the 'on the basis, of age, sex, edtica­ 'tion ,arid other variables" she, Christians are naiv~" or. whis­ tIse o~ professional psy'choloip,cal said, even though there were tling in the dark when they say assistance in 'seminaries with its CrOlMIl'il'ilDfr!l'@@ U'@ ~lfi!lJ<dlW relationship between spiritual wide variati'ons in the other there will be it tomorrow. , "Our desire to communicate , direction and' counseling were categories. ROJd([ll~ ~M[h)@~@lJ'il«=e Those with grammar school with one another is our guaran­ DAYTON (NC) -Racial im­ the major topics discussed. tee that God is working among education only were least favor­ Father Thomas G. Smith of balance in Catholic schools in the able to change in general (lllh us," he said. "We must learn, Dayton area will be studied by the faculty of Mount Saint Mary, per cent) while those with grad­ Baptists and Catholics alike, to workshop director, was elected a committee of 30 pries'ts, Reli­ serve God without first being uate 'school, experience were executive secretary of 'the con­ gious and laymen. most favorable (83 per cent);. concerned about who gets the ference. Appointment of the committee The per<:entage increased at each erec:tit and without trying to con­ was announced by Msgr. Edward A level of education, she noted. trol the result," he added. A. Connaughton, superintendent 5 m pplI'ecsahon

of Dayton area 'Catholic schools, Today is registration deadline . . . . . . . . . $ .

in a letter to all pastors. In the for a film appreciation course to letter, Msgr. Connaughton said be given at, La Salette Shrj.ne,'

the "whole matter of de facto Attleboro, for nine weeks, be­

segregation, or racial imbalance, ginning at 7 Thursday night,

in our schools is one that we Sept. ~l. Titled "The Art and cannot refuse to face." Meaning of Film,'" it will be "The issues which are rele- conducted by Herbert F. Ostrach,

vant to achieving uniformity or film education consultant,' and' ,

quality education and ending or will include screenings of 19

24~Hour' doing something about racial im- short films and three features.

balance are, as you know, so The project is sponsored by the

vastly complex that their resa- Shrine Cinema Club, 'Attleboro

653' Washil1gton Street, Fairhaven ,.,: lution will require the compe-, public library and the Diocesan '994-5058 tence and good will of all of' us,., ,Federation of. the .Christian.:. elergy and laity alike," he said. 'Family Movement. ~

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148 B. A.II. III;IIwlt


Bishop Deplores Defeat of Open Housing law

TH~ ANfHO'R:-Diocese

Of'Fon RTver-Thurs. sept. Z1, f'9'67

'3

TOLEDO (NC)-"This § certainly not Toledo's bright­ est hQur," was the reproof expressed by Bishop John A. Donovan of Toledo after the city's voters, in a record primary vote, invalidated a fair housing tl>rdinance that had received unanimous passage by the City' Council in March. The vote was 54,619 to 22,798. Bishop Donovan, who was in­ stalled in April, promptly took a leader's role in the effort to win voter su'pport of the ordinance. His statement spoke of his keen disappointment in the out.­ cOme. "The results make it extreme­ lly difficult to consider Toledo to be a progl'essive city, proud of its heritage, and deeply at­ tached to American ideals of equality and fairness among beings. "It may well be," said the bishop, "that the outcome repre­ sents a failure on the part of otherwise good people to under­ stand the responsibilities wbich living in a community entail. "Fellow citizens have the obli~ gation to respect one another, to accommodate themselves to the legitimate aspirations of others, to subordinate their personal and sometimes selfish, interests to the good of the entire commu­ nity. Difficult Task "We are now faced with the difficult and delicate task of showing a minority group that its members are not rejected. We must find a way to convince them that we are not unaware of their needs, that we will take effective measures to assist them ¢ ¢ ¢ "We must take every step necessary to provide adequate housing, increased employment opportunities and good education facilities." Bishop Donovan was on the Citizens Committee for Fair Housing. He authorized a pulpit exchange at Sunday Masses M emphasize the moral and reli­ gious dimensions of the housing issue. On the Sunday before the vote he appeal'ed on a TV panel with an Episcopalian bishop and a rabbi to uI'ge citizen support of the ordinance. Bishop Donovan approved use of the Central Catholic High School as an assembly.point for a protest march organized by the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. '

,..

Brotherhood AWaJII'd For Priest, Nun NEW YORK (NC)-A Jesuit !priest and a Franciscan nun were among those honored in the 1967 National Mass Medil'l Brotherhood awards program, sponsored by the National Con­ ference of Christian and Jews. The annual awards are given In recognition of outstanding achievements by the various branches of the mass media­ books, newspapers, magazines, motion pictures, radio and TV. In the newspaper category,. Father Daniel Berrigan, S.oT.. and Rev. Robert D. Fitch re­ ceived an award for their photo­ graph of a l03-year-old mlllll being carried to register to vote for the first time in his life. The photograph appeared in tbtl National Catholic Reporter. Also in the newspaper cate­ gory, Sister Matthias, O.S.F., woo awarded a certificate ofrecogn~ tion ,for he,r article, "'What Are Yo\!. Doing Talking to That' Nig­ Iler?," also in the National Cathe>Iic Reporter.·

_.the search for .grasl roots in a drought-parched lanlL 300,000 missionaries are working in needy areas like thism Will you help them relieve the suffering of hunger?

Rt Rev. Edward 1. O'Meara, Nationa~ Director.

THE SOCIETY FOR IHE PROPAGATION OF THE fAETH

366 Fifth Ave. New York, N. Y. 10001

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By lWsgr. Ge@rrge G. Higgins (Dill"ectoll", Socftall AdftoJm Dept., USCC)

,......, The August 7 release of this column criticized what' I regarded as a very simplistic "free enterprise" ~dvertise­ ment sponsored by W'arner and Swasey, a machine ·tool company located in Cleveland, Ohio. The theme of this advertisement was that the oor people of 1967, a dis­ workers, regardless of the color P of their skin. Urban Renewal Program proportionate percentage of whom are Negroes, ought to I should also like to congratu­ ;follow the inspiring example of late Warner and Swasey on the the rugged pioneers of the 19th very imaginative urban renewal century who crossed the plains ,:,program which it is currently·· in covered ,wag­ . sponsoring in Cleveland. An ex­ -elnS and made

'ecutive of l the corporation has the i r modest

:written to me about this "pro­ fortune on the

.gram, but even before his letter ,western frontier

.~ardved I had r~ceiveda very fa­ by dint of sheer

'vorable report about it from one hard work and

'of the leading figures in the i n d 0 mit a ­ Catholic interracial movement .~le courage and in the United States. perseverance ~ . In June of this' year, 13 fam­ ~GOlfNG TO SYNOD: U. S. Prelates: elecled by the American Bishops and ratified by and, heedless to moved' into .~ 'newly reha­ · add, without bilitated' apartment building in ,the Holy See to. represent the United States at the Synod of. Bishops opening Sept. 29 Rome, photographed as they prepared for their work, .are' left. .to .right, Bishop John ·benefit of gov­ '.the middle of Cleveland's Hough ment assistance. area, Hough is one of the· city's J~.':Wtigllt' of Pittsburgh;. John,: Cardinal, Krol,· Archbishop";of .Philadelphi'a; Archbishop I said in the column referred most badly deteriorated neigh­ Dearden of Detroit, president of the Nati~nal Conference.. of Catholic Bishops; and ll.o above .that, in my opinion, borboods. It adjoins Warner and ~~wrenc~ Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore. NC Photo. · this sort of "covered 'wagon" Swasey's main plant. metoric is hopelessly unrealistic Occupancy' of the building and completely outmoded. '.~RlPletes a Warner and Swasey ,. ; , . :, I did not: say, howey-er,',llor . ,·pilo.t, demonstration ,of the possi­ " 0'; ',','S·,.·U·: '0'" 'did I mean to imply that Warner bilities of private business act­ cia and Swasey's internal race'rela- ing directly in urban renewaL ' " .' ..., . -" . ' ,., ··!ions policy is behind the times. ~·building was purchased ·and ,,' q ~, . ~ · My criticism was direCted exclu.- :l'et,milt to new ...: constructioo .. ~ell'!la, rUlnG~~,e.: · 'lllively at the particular.advec... ~andards through approximately , 'MILWA'(jKEE (NC) '..:..- 'Opell action may' be 'causiog the pelice, . tacilitate Ii' county-wide open · tisement in question. .$115,009 of corporate,funds. "hotising.legislation was suJ:ij)ort­ .public officials' 'andsome . citizens , ocCupancy bill' and' a more effee­ Race Relations . Warner and Sw,asey.·plans to . ed here recently by'" several of Milwaukee·would seem a very ti ve state open oCcupancy bill." I still disagree with the slm­ . sell the apartment buildil:lg to a The Catholic Knights Insur­ .pUstic point of view expressed. non-profit housing organization Catholic or Catholic-represented small price to pay when con­ trasted with the deplorable con­ ance Sodety" recently voted to in this adverti.sement--and in a established by two Negro. groups.

"affirm the principle of open number of other Warner imd churches. The churches have es_The Catholic Interracial Coun­ ditions' to· which Negroes and housing .and to uige appropriate Swasey ads--but I am happy to. tablished a foundation to oper­ cil voted to endorse and support other minority' groups are' can­ governmental authorities to eR­ note, for the record, that, to the ate the building, and will employ tbe campaign for legislation on , fined -in the slums and ghettos act such 'laws' as 'will ensure best of my knowledge, W&S social service workers from the Opell' housing by the Youth here." such a right to ali peoples" .. 0" follows a much more enlightened' : Urban League of Cleveland. Council of the National Asso­ The Milwaukee. archdiocesan policy in its own corporate ap... . Civic Responsibility ciation for the Advancement of priests' ,senate also supported A Committee .for Fair Housing proach to the problem of race' F W .. Co~ored .,People and its advisor, open housing legislation. A state­ Legislation was organized by the relations in the United States. or years, arner and Swasey Father James E. Groppi. ment released by the priests' League of· Women Voters at a executives have been, stressing I have this on the corporation~s ·the need for private business to At a ~cent meeting, the Inter­ group' said· a, ,city· ordinance meeting attended by various re­ own authority and also' on the take a stand in m~tterS that af­ racial Council voted to "actively 'would make,the',city "the moral ligious : and " other ~ interested authority of disinterested ex- 'fect the national well-being. ' participate· in civil rights leader necessary .. at this time to groups.' perts in the field of race r e I a - ' ' m a r c l i e s ' and to make financial / .. : y tions, , " ...The ' see the :success'of the contributions to the Youth In a subsequent advertisement •Hough apartment project as val- : Couqcll to help defray expenses entitled "The American Way to i id;lting this point, of view. Pri.,. Of, ~he': COntinuing campaign." Black Power," 'Warner and Swa­ vate " 1 : . , . - .• 1 . ---'business,t they bd' are con":.', 'Gerald F. Natrop, interracial canno a .lcate to the' ~un.cil . . president, said "open sey says, l'n effect _ and w.I'th Vln..."""" . legitimate p'rl',de--that I'ts,per'~~n'_ "government the. complete re­ Sawings Ba~k·'Uf~ 'Insurance 'b'i" hOl,lsing :for Milwaukee is long .nel officers are color 'blind. ; SponSI I 't' Ity for creating healthy ,.overdue. In . spite of this need. leaD Estate Loans Equal Opportom"""

communI les. .,; , .... ' ' I ' . '-I.' .

~.. no real action has been taken CillrD~tmas . and, ,~a~ati~n .Clubs "We know a company," this. I am pleased to be·able to put by the: local power structure, in­ secone: advertisement re a d's, this u,rban renewal' project on c;ltidiq.g1Ocal government offi­ S~~Dngs AcCO~,~t,s'." "which doesn't give a snap for a the .·.record, if . only. to make cials.~· . man's color but only for his will­ amends to Warner and Swasey Natrop said the actions of .i.._ 5l CQ8lIwC3111llient locations' ingness to learn and work. for any unintentional harm loU<C '''Today there are more than which my earlier column on its NAACP Youth Council' are NIEW .. BEDfORD 430 colored men and women "covered wagon" advertisement "well-4irected toward the con­ " . sciertce of the community." there (15 per cent of aU em­ ~ay h ave caused the company's Referring to the marches, he ,;' ployees), many of them among, ~putat ion. . ' said "the inconvenience that tWa the supervisors, professionals. While I cannot agree with the, . technicians and highest paid point of view expressed in that mechanics. We know a lot about advertisement, I "sincerely ad­ ." that company. It is Warnerand"'nut'e'the compapy's:enlightened. . . ! " Swasey, in its Cleveland plants." '. policy and. its 'sense of I ' " ..•••,'.. , " • . ' , : , •.• " , ' .' . ' . . '" "'.,' • I have no reason whatsoever . civic re~ponsibiliiy in the field! ;. to doubt or even to" questl6li; 'of' tirban renewal'and race 'rela­ "these statistics and every reason:':' tions, .and I am ".pleased to have.>"" .. '.. to believe that they are com­ lW-0pportunity to B~y.S9 publi"ly.· ''',' pletely accurate, (Y.;"· . . ... .,.'.: .. : : More power, then, to' Warn~r'! ~enna. and Swasey-and sincere cen­ gratulations on its commitment to the philosophy of equal em­ PHILADELPHIA (NC). - A ployment opportunity for all call f9r volunteers to give a day a week ·of free time for apostolic arist Mago2Zall1lre work' in .the area parishes and Elltlds Pull..li~"'&.;oll1l institutions ,has brought a 95 I!JI .. "'" 10 per cent response from students LOWELL. (NC)-Marist, bi­ in the college departm~nt of monthly magazine published St. Charles Borromeo Seminary here in Massachusetts by the here. . Mal'ist Secretariat of America, To be eligible for the program, . has ceased publication for finan­ a C average is required of stu­ <l:ial reasons. The publication was dent volunteers, Only ]0 semi­ founded in 1964. ,..' narians' have . lower than' a C Brother John F. Colbert,. F., '!lv:erage. Of the' remaining 252 ," students, 239 volunteered to M.S" business manager, in a ,: letter to subscribers said re~" 'Sad'iii'ce their Thursday fr~e­ ~te' of unfilled subscriptionll, <d\l:Y:-!or a variety of",apos;~elia: :w-ill be made on requesL works. ' .

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.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of'aft RIver-Thurs. Sept. 21, 1 9 6 7 ' "

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J SYNOD MEMBERS: Named" by Pope P.aul VI to membership in the world synod of bis'hops, opening Sept. 29· in Rome, a'1"e, left to :right: Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of Rochester, N.Y., former national director of the Society for the PropagaJtion of the Faith; Archbishp Ambrose Senyshyn•. O.S.B.M., Archeparch of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy rat Phila­

delphia; Maurice Cardinal Roy, Archbishop of Quebec and Primate of Canada; Francis Cardinal Brennan, from Shenandoah, Pa., member of the Roman Curia; Archbishop Martin J. O'Connor, native of Scranton, Pa., president of the Pontifical Commission for Communications in Rome NC Photos. .

Pope Paul VI's FinolChoices Set Stage for Synod of Bishops Continued from Page One commISSIOns of the synod win office will prepare a bulletin The language of the meetings No :£xperts The Pope's choices, added to also work Ilfternoons. which will later be read to the will be Latin but attempts are No "pel'iti" or trained experts the bishops elected by the variPress Information assembled representatives of being made to provide simulta­ in various branches of ChurCh ous regional conferences of Daily a press commission com- the press in Italian. neous translations. However, knowledge, will be given offi­ bishops, will bring the total of posed of three bishop-members, Copies in French, Italian, there is considerable difficulty cial status 01' admitted to the bishops at the synod to 197. They the secretary-general, a special Spanish and English are to be in finding translators adequately meetings, as they were during included eight cardinals of the secretary for this session, and the provided with Father Edward prepared for the technical lan­ the Second Vatican Council. The Roman Curia but also a broad director of. the VatiCan press Heston, C.S.C. in charge of the guage of the discussions in the­ chosen or elected bishops are .too representation of residential \ ·ology, canon law, etc. "periti." English bulletin. bishops from all parts of the world, including India, Spain, I II Brazil, the U. S., Italy, SwitzerContinued from Page One land, Lebanon and Burundi. of Christian Doctrine lias workThe synod will therefore be ed with the assistance of priests made up of 135 representatives and religioiJs, but mostly of lay from 95 episcopal conferences, men and women, for the prep­ 13 Eastern rite prelates, 13·Curia aration of a better youth for a cardinals, 10 representatives of better tomorrow. Success has religious orders, the 25 papal blessed their spirit of zeal. foi' nominations and one secretary- the people of God. The parish general. that has an energetic, properly More Members conducted program i10r religious The Pope has also made pro- instruction, touching every level vision for some countries with of education from primary only one bishop to be represent- grades through adult-training ed, or for those countries to activities, can stand up well take part which have not yet under scrutiny. It is not enough set up their national or regional to allege, "We have our schools; conference of bishops. , sisters, and lay teachers on salOrder of Business ary." They still do not reach The synod will begin by dis- all for whom we ~re responsible. eussing the guidelines for the So no matter what the success, revision of canon law. Then it it can ·and' should always be shall pass to seminaries, the better. This fall, we are to inaug­ sacred liturgy, doctrinal prob- urate a more intensive course ill lems and, lastly, mixed mar- teacher training for releas:-time riages. teacher training for release-time Length of Meeting more varied courses in adul~ It is thought that the synod of 'education. We need, in Confra­ bishops will complete its work ternity .work, the use of our wthin one month - Sept. 2~ to school facilities, and the help of Oct. 29. The Pope has provided auxiliary aids in the form of for an. extension i{ it be needed. books, projectors, films, and Meetings will be held in the whatever might help to make morning six days a week, with . more impressive and permanent If you're looking for the best in banking service, come. on Sundays. and holydays oft. The. the teaching of. Christ. Un to The NationarSank. With the opening of our Staffordl Regional Centel'lll Square Office, we're now nearer to even more of you ii'll To facilitate this, we ask foil' the Greater Fall River area, and each of our offices has a collection on Sunday, Septem­

just about every service you could want for yourself and

ber 24th, in every parish church and mission, to support and ex­ your family. We mean it when we say we're your ·"FulU GREENSBURG (NC) - Bis­ pand catechetic work in each . lervice Bank"! hop William G. Connare of parish. Monies collected are for Greensburg has given permis­ the use of the parish program, Ilion for celebration of home and those devoting time and Masses and reception of the eompetence to caITY out the Eucharist under both species work of the Confraternity are in the Greensburg diocese. . to be assured of assistance from In a letter to all Catholics in parish funds. . the diocese, the Pennsylvania On the Diocesan level, we win prelate announced that Mass in lJ10t be slow to improve what private homes, attended by DO facilities we have, even to the less than 12 persons of sevei'a! point of setting up Regional THE FALL RIVER Lfamilies will be permitted on an Centers for teacher training. experimental basis, starting Oct. Trusting to have your cordial! 1. eooperation, and prayers, for the Be also said that Communion success of our Diocesan Confra­ "'EMBER FEDERAL DEPDSIT INsURANCE CDAPDAATION eould be distributed under both ternity of Christian Doctrine • 55 NORTH MAIN ST. lIPCCies, although be stressed work, and with every devoted that .t must always be recalled lJOod wislll, I remain, . • 15:3 SOUTH MAIN ST. "'that Holy Communion is truly Faithfully yours .in Christ; • '1001 PLEASANT ST• ftlCeived wbene:ver we recei_ . .lames L., ConnollYl emly . .del' tile .... fIII.. bRad.· Bishop ill raU :my.

S·sho P's Le.ll.ter

THREE LOCATIONS

Gives Permission For Home Mass .

NATIONAL BANK ,

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16

~ ANCHOR-Diocese

Circulation Rises

of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 21, 1967

Catholic Newspaper, Magazine Total "Passes 29 Minion

Many Difficu·lties· Confront Latin :Students Abroad· From "Social Revolution in the New Latin America" . Edited by John J. Considine, M.M·; Rodrigo Guerrero points out that there is a significant difference between students who finish high school in Latin American Countries and come to the States· to study in eollege and those .. who graduate in Latin American uni­ versities 'and come to the love of their homeland and United States for graduate nlaintain in them a desire to re­ studies. Those people who tUI'n home. come for the first four years­ Home Contacts of college don't go back or if -they do they dOll't belong to their own cul­ ture any longer because intel­ lectually' and emotionally and psycholog­ Ically they'have assumed the val­ ues of a differ­ ent culture, that of the United States. Tho s-e people who come for their gl'aduate studies after they fin­ ish university studies in Latin America are the ones that we should work with in the United States for they hold the greatest potential for return. When they arrive they don't understand the culture, they don't understand the United States, they don't understand the values, they don't understand the social customs of the United States. They have to search con­ stantly for the right course of action. They have to adju!lt. Those people who help them in the first stage win those Latin Americans. The organization that does' something for the Latin American students, either meet­ ing thel1l at the port, bring~ng them to the campus, or inviting them to parties and social acti v­ lt~es, wins the allegiance of the Latins. The student become~ inter': - ested in that group and recog­ nizes that these people are tak­ ing care of him. Usually Catholi~ organizations at the universiti~s don't do that. Many Dropouts The intellectual efficiency of Latin American students in fOI'­ eign countries is extremely low. The' number of dropouts is aston­ ishingly high. In many cases those who achieve good results don't want to go back to their' old-fashioned. and underdevel­ oped country. They become too identified with the countl'y where they make the postgl'adu­ ate training to return to their original country. . When they are required to re­ turn by immigration laws, th'ey . fulfill the requirements and hastily leave their fatherland. Many learn economic theories that are not well adapted for the country in which they are going to work. The economics here in the United States is quite differ­ ent from the economics they will need in a developing country. Our medical students become accustomed to the high standards of medical practice here.. This is a level that we cannot afford. They return to discover that they cannot work with our prim­ itive medical system. They come back here or they live their lives dreaming of coming back. A practical inter-American co­ operation program should seek a way of assisting Latin American students to overcome these diffi­ eulties. We ought to have a plan £Or all aspects of student life. We must create a Catholic action program for the Latin' American students. We must .uide them them in their tech­ nical and professional studies. :WO must encourage them in Ute

It would be useful to have Latin American centers where they could receive newspapers, have folkloric music, and con­ ferences and lectures on Latin American problems to keep them attached'to their native counti'y. The major universities should develop Latin American centers. We need to establish felloo/­ ships and scholarships for- can­ didates who' accept the commit­ ment to work in their own country as soon as their studies are over. Mat'xists have understood the great influence Latin American students have in their societies and have concentrated their ef­ forts in this field. Marxists con­ centrate their work and invest thei'r money in the universities and educational centers. The result is that in some' Latin American. countries the universities and national student unions have been the bulwark of communism and terrorism. The communists realize the political importance of ,Latin .American student organizations and have prepared leaders to work with them. We Catholics are now recog­ nizing our mistake in not t.aking part in student life.. We concen­ tl'ated on studies alone. Our duty in the universities was seen as a concentration on spiritual pro­ grams. Today we are meeting the challenge anq have started a vig­ orous student movement led by young members of the Christian Democratic Party in most of the Latin American countries. This movement is changing the situ­ ation. In Chile, for instance, the' national student union is con-' trolled by the Christian Demo­ crats: There are other 'outstanding groups in Venezuela, Peru, Ar­ gentina, and Bolivia. Today there is an attempt among Cath­ olics to participate in the whole life of the student.

DIRECTOR: Rev. Donald . Jeffrey, M.S., who' was or­ dained by Bishop Connolly in 1964 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, has been-named director of the La Salette Bureau of Information, At­ tleboro.

. NEW YORK (NC}-Total circulation of Catholic newspapers and magazines in the U.S. and Canada has passed 29 million. This is the result of continuing circulation gains among diocesan newspapers,' according to the new edition of the Catholic Press Directory, published here by the Catholic Press Association. The U.S. now has 128 Catholic diocesan newspapers, four national newspapers and 11 published in languages other than E r h Th' t t l . I t' . ng IS. elr 0 a clrc.u a Ion IS 6,?42,944, co~pare~ ~Ith approximately SIX mlilton last, year.

Catholic magazine circulation

in both the U.S. and Canada, however, continued to decline in the past year, it was reported by James A. Doyle, CPA e~ecutive director. Circulation of general maga­ zines which accept advertising declined 4.5 per cent from last year to a total of 7,059,596. The directory lists i08 of these maga­ zines--a drop _of seven from last year. Circulation of magazines not accepting advertising (includ­ ing mission, devotional and oth­ . I' d .) er specla Ize magazmes re­ mained almost the same as last year-15,289,635-but the num­ bel' of magazines in this cate­ gory dropped from 250 last year to 234.

~MUte$ [f@[!@l[}u@oWo (GU'@ []'jJU' \ ~ ~ ~®®@ ~ ALBANY, (NC) - A $100,000 state grant to Fordham Univer­ sity . to . establish an Albert Schweitzer chair in the human­ itites,.......due to be filled by com­ munications theorist Marshall McLuhan - has been ruled in violation of the state constitu­ tion by Atty. Gen. Louis J. Le­ fkowitz. The attorney general turned down contracts in connection wit h the professorship on grounds that the grant could . not be allowed under a consti­ tutional provision barring aid 1<> religious schools. The Fordham chair· was the only one of 10 created by the Legislature in 1964 to go to a sectarian institution. Father Leo McLaughlin, S. J .. president of Fordham, said the school would provide the funds to honor McLuhan's contract bilt would appeal the decision in court: McLuhan had already moved f~om the University of' Toronto to begin classes at Ford­ ham. .

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¥Ol!JJ(!'!hJ [P>Il'C~jIl'(OJll'\11l$ . Religious Interest PITTSBURGH (NC) - Two

Neighborhood Youth Corps pro­

The students too are .becom­ ing 'aware of the importance of jects run by the Pittsburgh. di­

their participation as Catholics ocesan Catnolic schools office

in student movements but this have been funded for more than

participation is not as efficient $1 million by the Department of

as necessary. Student apostolic Labor for 1967-68, their second

organizations, potf1blY the Pax year.

One project aims at providing Romana, JOC, and YCS move­ ments for university students, cash to 600 in-school studenta are becoming stronger and more from poor families and 800 Sum­ mer enrollees, to keep the youths influential. With the help of the German in school. The federal govern­ ment is p'aying $740,830. of the hierarchy the Secretariat of Lat­ $858,150 budget,' with the re­ in American Bishops (CELAM) mainder being provided 10callJ' is developing parishes in the im­ pOI-tant student centers in Latin in services and facilities. America. This includes training " The second project offers WOM: priests for this' special work and, experience and pocket money to if necessary, bringing them frOftl out-:of-school youths, particular-, . other countries.. Iy drop-olits, while encouraging In some Central American them . t~ study further. They countries priests are coming work 32 hours a week for $1.25 from Belgium and other parts of an hour and must take six to EurOPe. A good pastoral plan is eight hours of classes weekly. unfolding according to the needs The government share of the of the students in coordination $476,540 budget is $414,000. with CELAM. . It tries to encourage a Catholic action movement that impels members to become vitally en­ PITTSBURGH (NC) - The gaged with the change of social blessing of CJ:,ops-a custom dalt­ structures, a change 'urgently ing' back to the early Church­ needed in our countries. This is is being revived by chufche!il ill now the· greatest challenge to the neighboring Fin ley v i 110 Latin American.Chrstians. (Pa.) area.

Crop Blessing

.'lJ'MB MOLV IFAYMCiR'IiI MDIU1Dall!Al L\\Dall 'lJ'GlJ'lJ'1XI0 GlJll'JllEillYAL CIXIULliJIi:&<l

NAME IT FOR YOUR FAVORITE SAINT, IN M5:MORY OF YOUR LOVED ONES

From hunger·blighted southern India' Father Jacob Vettakatt pleads for help to build at once a durable church In Ellakal. a critical mission· center. "My Catholics moved here four yearn ago to raise enough food to live on," writes Father Jacob. "Now we are 277 Catholic families, with 1725 members. Without a church we cannot save the faith." ... The problem, of course, is poverty. The men who have Jobs get less than 20¢ a dayl ... The church (with rooms for school and meetings) can be built for as little as $3,800 (the cost of the materials) sInce Father Jacob and his parishioners will build It themselves evenings after work. Meanwhile. our Catholics attend Mass In a thatched shed, If and when weather permits. . . . Is this thEl church you want to build ($3,800) In memory of your loved ones? Name It for your favorite saint if you build it all by yourself. At least pleaso ·send as much as you can right now ($200, $150, $100, $75, $50, $20. $15, $10,. $5, $3, $1). Father Jacob needs your help Immediately. We'll send it to him Airmail. @

BILLY

WRITE

FROM

MiCHIGAN

Dear Monsignor Nolan, . . I saw your earnest request for food and shelter for the unfortunate Near East refugees, and" living In complete comfort, couldn't re­ fuse. I am 13 and have finally found out how to help the unfortunate. Enclosed: $5.25. I am sura the money will be used wisely. This III my way of showing my love for everybody and my thanko to God for two wonderful parents and lID much comfort In the world when milliono Dufflllr. The coins ar0 from Billy (5) who goes to kindergarten thlo month. He won the money In 13 penny hunt. Signed: J00 and Billy

!ROSARY FOR l/IEfUGEES

"They live In tragedy," writes Monsignor Gart­ land about the refugeslI he cares for In the Holy Land.••• $10 will feed a family for a month, $91 will help. give school children a hot lunch at n.oon, $2 will give baby a warm blanket. ... 1111 thanks for each $10 gift, we'lI send you QflI Olive_Wood Rosary from Jerusalem.

JOE AND

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPEUMAN, President ' MSGR. JOHN 9. NOlAN, National Secretary . Write: CATHOLIC NIEA. lEAST WElFARII Alsoc. 330 MadllOn Avenuli ·N_ York., N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/lfUkon (1·5840


lHE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Sept. 21, ] 967

TIle

Parish Parade

Crito~B:g~

OUR LADY OF VICTORll. CENTERVILLE The Women's Guild is pl:m­ ning a rummage sale in the J!or?­ noon of Saturday, Oct. 7 from 9:45 to 12:30 under the direction of Miss Katherine Dooley, chair­ man, and Miss Margaret Fawcett. co-chairman. . Mrs. Arthur Maddalena Jr. will serve as chairman of the Retired Teachers' Luncheon scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 10 in the church hall. The Guild chairmen for the coming year are: Finance, Mrs. Donald James and Mrs. Francis McKenna; Program, Mrs. Ellis Johnson and Mrs. Leo F. Carey Jr.; Friendship, Mrs. Edward O'Neill. Membership, Mrs. Henry Mur­ phy; Refreshments, Mrs. Joseph O'Brien; Publicity, Mrs. James Hayes; Altar Society, Mrs. Roger Carlson. IMMACULATE CONCIEP'II'nON, TAUNTON Plans for the parish unit of the Holy Name Society include a penny sale for mid-November and a January Communion breakfast. Francis Lucey is in charge of the latter event. JMMACU~ATE

CONCEPTiON, lFALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold its annual banquet Tuesday night, Sept. 26 at Blinstrub's res­ taurant, Boston. Busses will leave the churchyal'd at 6 o'clock. Tickets are available from Mrs. Jeannine Albernaz, president, and Mrs. Ann Turner. They will also be on sale after all Masses Sunday morning, Sept. 24. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER The parish council will meet at 7:30 tonight in the school hall. CCD classes for public school pupils will resume Mon­ day, Oct. 2 for elementary grades and Monday, Oct. 9 fer high school students. ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE, SWANSEA Ladies of St. Anne welcomed 55 new members at a meeting held last night. Reception cere­ monh!s were conducted by Rev. Ernest Blais and Rev, Robert Kaszynski was guest speaker. An acquaintance hour followed the meeting, with Mrs, Andre. Car­ rier in charge of hospitality and Mrs. Paul Campbell and Mrs. Norman Fortin heading the membership committee. ST. "'RANCIS XAVIER, HYANNIS Rev. Bernard Kelly, spiritual director of the Women's Guild, will preside at the installation of the following officers at tonight's meeting: Mrs, Mary Morrissey, pr'esident; Mrs. Barbara Cannon, vice-president; Mrs. Pauline Antil, recor'ding secretary; Mrs, Marie Cheney, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Flora Bisbee, tr'easurer.' ST. KILIAN, NEW BEDFORD Mrs. William J. Richard will serve as chairman of the cake sale to be conducted by the Women's Guild in the school hall on Sunday after all the Masses. Also scheduled is whist party on Wednesday evening, Oct, 25 at 8 in the school basement. The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held GIl Wednesday evening, Oct, 4 at 7:30 in the school. ST. LOUIS, FALL RIVEn A cAke sale sponsored By the Women's Guild will be held in the lower church following aU Masst!s Sunday, Oct. 1.

To

MODERN. ])ESlGN: The chapel of the Misgionaries of the Holy Spirit in Mexico, seen during aMass at which the little girls are to receive their First Holy Communion, is a good exa~ple of modern church design. NC Photo.

Says

ACfL1Jdemicfr~~dom

Must

Earned

'Precious .Peoll"l Worm at!' Great CONVENT STATION (NC)­ Academic freedom like an:r other freedom must be earned on the Catholic campus as it is in any other institution, an pfficer of the National Catholic Educa­ tional Association said here, Father C. W. Friedman, asso­ ciate secretary of NCEA's college and university depArtment, dis­ cussed academic freedom in Catholic colleges at a faculty­ student workshop (Sept. 14) at the College of St. Elizabeth. Such freedom, he stressed, "will not come automatically. It must be earned, and freedom in education is not more easily

achieved than any other free­ dom. ~reedom is not a gift but a precious pearl won at great price." The responsibility for achiev­ ing such freedom, Father Fried­ man asserted, is "primarily the responsibility of those who are educators by profession-t.he ad­ ministrators and the faculty." He added, however, that an institution must create "the physical conditions that make possible and invite the pursuit 9f knowledge as a full-time pre':' DCcupation of its teaching staff." Recognize Incompetence The institution allows its staff

Says Church Seeks to Eliminate . Anti-Semitism In Austria NEW YORK (NC)-Franzis­ kus Cardinal Koenig of Vienna assured a group of American Jewish leaders here that efforts to wipe out anti-Semitism in Austria are being pursued by the Catholic Church. At a meeting with the Amer­ ican Jewish Committee gl'Oup the Austrian cardinal expressed hope that Christian-.Jewish un­ derstanding in Austria would deepen as a result of the spirit which has emanated from Vati­ can Council II. He told Jewish leaders that a textbook commission, established by the Vienna archdiocese and the Committee for Christian­ Jewish Coordination, for the last year har been reviewing .r..eli­ gious materials used in all pub­ lic as well as parochial schools in Austria, Textbook Commission The commission is seheduled to .. .report to him shortly with recommendations for elimination of negative references to Jews and Judaism, the cardinal said, The cardinal, carrying out a series of lectures and confer­ ences in the U. S, and Canada, met with Monis B, Abram, pres­ ident of the AJC; Richard Maass, foreigr affairs committee chair­ man; Dr, Simon Segal, dil'ector of th'e foreign affairs depart­ ment; Rabbi Marc H. Segal, di­ rector, interreligious affairs de­ partment; and Jerry Goodman, foreign affairs specialist. "The work of the textbook commission," Cardin:ll Klilenig noted, "would provide the Basis for more extensivie' progl'ams eovering the entire r:lnge &f re-

ligious education, attitude for­ mation, includin'g teacher train­ ing, seminaries, colleges, adu~t education, publications and the mass media." . Positive Appreciation In addition to removing nega­ tlive or hostile references, the cardinal emphasized that the program would seek to introduce Christians to the positive appre­ ciation of the common 'inheri­ tance that Christians share with Jews, as well as to a more real­ istic understanding of the values of contemporary .Judaism and Jewish people. Cardinal Koenig expressed the conviction that the Austrian Roman Catholic hierarchy would seek to carry' out a long-range program analogous to the guide­ lines issued by the National Conference of Cat.holic Bishops of the United tates. The cardinal, who is head of the Vatican's Secretariat for Non-Believers, forecast greatly increased dialogues and cooper­ ation between Christians and Jews in those common areas of human concern to "build 3"'world of peace and justice."

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to work for academic freedom, he said, through its policies on salaries, tenure, teaching sched­ ules and class loads, academic rank and promotional opportu­ nities. The staff, on tbe other hand, must assume the responsibility for preserving academic free­ dom, he continued. "When academic matters are referred to religious superiors, civil authorities, CQurts or the press, i.e., outside the academic community, education suffers, including academic freedom. "One can safely assume that in the U. S. at present people in positions of civil or religious au­ thority seldom comb the educa­ tional pastures in search for trouble. These individuals gen­ erally are aware that by and large they are not competent to decide educational issues." Father Friedman noted, how­ ever, that institutions do not op­ erate in vacuums and each bas "a history and functions in ;I sacial climate" affecting it. This climate in the Catholic Church, he· said, developed, in response to doctrinaire liberal­ ism and science, "what we have come to call - the ghetto or siege mentality" and tfnis has had its effect on Catholic education. Such spirit however has been out.dated by Vatican Council II, he said, and therefore no longer stands in the way of academic freedoom. "It is the spirit, the psychic climate of a society," he said, "that .encourages or withholds freedom from its agencies in­ cluding the colleges and univer­ sities. "The door has been opened. Vatican II has spoken. It is up to the Catholic colleges and uni­ versities to set their houses in order."

17

Aid

AA@[fcq]lliJ®tte

MILWAUKEE (NC)-A LuthQ eran group here has criticized l) plan for the state to give fn­ nancial aid to Marquette Uni­ versity medical school as an un­ constitutional use of stat~ money. Lutheran Men in America oil Wisconsin urged as an alterna­ tive that the state's task force OJ] medical education suport de­ velopment of a second medicall school in Milwaukee. The grouJl) indicated it might sue to block spending tax money to operate the Marquette medical school. Marquette is conducted by the Jesuits. Its medical school illJ operated by a separate corpora­ tion; one-third of its board mem­ bers are appointed by the uni­ versity president. The Lutheran group is an il1l­ tersynodical laymen's organiza­ tion which promotes Lutherarm eauses. A proposal to channel stat~ funds to Marquette medica] school through the county gov­ e.mment was presented to th~ task force at Madison, Wis. lift was referred to t.he task force'v fiscal subcommittee after dis­ cussion. Legislator members of the task force expressed doubts about the plan's constitutional­ ity and said they would ask the state attorney general for aJ1ll opinion.

Slovak Union Gives

Cordina' $25,000

PHILADELPHIA (NC) "Thank God and thank you fOlr what you are and for what YO'll represent," John Cardinal Kroll of Philadelphia told 1,600 dele­ gates and guests at the 36th can­ "ention of the First Slovak Un­ ion here. John Sabol, supreme execu­ &ive secretary of the First Cath­ olic Slovak Union presentetll Cardinal Krol with a check 100 ~25,OOO.

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ANCHOR';; .'. ., Thurs or Sept. 2'1,' 1967

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LOUISVILLE (NC) - A study

iIiJf - Catholic education is being undertaken jointly by the arch­ (dioceses .of Louisviile and Indi­ anapolis and the diocese of (Evansville in Indiana. Besides surveying all levels of !lormal education, the study will linclude adult education and Confraternity of Christian Doc­ il\;rine instruction. Archbisliop Thomas J. McDon­ ough of Louisville announced the undertaking in a statement out­ lining a five-stage stu~y, the purpose of which ·is to: gather (OOmplete information ranging from finances, buildings and per­ sonnel to "other pertinent statis­ tical data;" disseminate this in­ formation "through every pos­ sible 'medium" of communica­ tion; conduct parish-level study and discussion groups; "ascertain flle understanding and attitudes cf our people" through an opin­ ionaire, and prepare a planning mudy for the future.

.­ Arc h b ish 0 p McDonough

CARDINALS IN WASHINGTON: Meeting of the offi­ inal Krol of Philadelphia; Francis Cardinal Spellman of I!ltressed that the cooperation and New York; Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit, presi­ interest of both Religious and cers and administrative b,oard of the N ~,tional Conference laity are essential to the study's af Oatholic Bishops held in Washington included, left to dent of the NCCB; James Francis Cardinal McIntyre of success. He said "a-more detailed right. Lawrence Oardinal Shehan of Baltimore; John Card­ .Los Angeles, and John Cardinal Cody of Chicago. NC Photo. explanation' of this project will

IDe released shortly."

. The archbishop said the first

two phases "will begin immedi- .

ately," parish-level discussions

:will begin in January, to be fol­ WASHINGTON' (NC)-At a the Natronal Conference of Cath­ Discussed the Canon of the fields,· and that the bishops iowed in February by distribu­ two-day. meeting here, more .olic Bishops and the administra- . Mass in the vernacular, but de- eould keep scholars abreast off tion of the opinionai reo than 40 bishops .representiIlg tive board of the United States ferred final action. It was re- pastoral concern and develop­ the administrative committee of Catholic Conference: ported that there will be a time- ments for the mutual benefit of lag before the Consilium on the all. Liturgy in Rome will approve' Progress Reports

OW ~>ne translation for the English';"

,speaking world.' . Meeting';as the administrative G.ALVEST.ON (NC)-A .. layman·· committee of the National Con­ . .' .. . . 'Y 1I1!1' '. . ' . The . Consilium, however, ference of Catholic Bishops, they ,will be elected' president of the . t d .. to t' 1 I " , . , 'reports new Galveston-Houston·· Dioc':' . . WATERBURY (NC) -'Moves ··said. "If we who value human gr!ln . e" 1permission f t"na lOna, d" t heard interim . . . 011 .the esan'. Pastorai Council' at its ih';; " to relax abortion' laws pose' a .,life· by reason of personal con­ eplscop~ con er~nces () a op ..missions, doctrine,the American 8ugural meeting here :WEidnes.;.· threat'to human life which de- vi~tion and' profession do. not 'for use in the meantime a single C~llege at' Louvain, pastoral . . mands that all persons of rell- mak~ a stand' for the pJ;eserva-· text approved by the episcopai councils, canon law, permanent daih.?~~:iin.g was sc~eduled by gious conviction' "stand up and tion of innocent human life, then, Conference. it is anticipated thai .. diaconate,' and ,distribution of Bish9P. o!ohn. L. ~orkovskY. The . ~. counte4," a priei!lt iong prom:- we will have only. ourselves tG 'action on,"'this will ,~ taken' be-' .. clergy. . '. 00imcil was suggested by. the' inent in family lifework de;. blame when other forces of·anti­ fore the general meeting of the , ·It was pointed out 'that these diocese's priests' senate to meet' clared here. (" . " life threaten our existence.". " ~ishops in November. . . ' . were all progress reports, with with the: bishop at various.times Msgr. .Johri Knott .'said' . Msgr. Knott 'said lawyerS are Set d~tes for the U.S; bish., ·final ones to· be submitted to ~ offer ~dv:ice ,and opiIlions ~ , "whatever soCiOlogical, 'medical ·"peculiarly responsible" for the ops' November meeting at 21 ' all the U.S. bishops at the time pal!toralm.atters. , ' . , . and 'psychological' arguments' welfareof'thehilmanindividuaL Washington, hotel, '.Nov.. 13'. 'CJIfthe November meeting. ' Father. Joseph A. Fiorenza, may be advaiiced for the Uberal- "It is you who are' called in the' through '17: 'A hOtel was selected, The synOd' of bishops, which eenatepresident, said the couu- iution 'of existii'lg aborli'on lllws, ultimate ~nalysis tosafeguar4 rather than returning to eath- "meets in Roine' beginning Sept. cll will be. coinposed' of.2O the simple faetremains that his right to life and to guard ·olic .university of America, be- 29, was not discussed, Archbish­ e~ec~ed lay. representatives'; four . What is being threatened with all those other rights whichfIow CaUSe'lOt' conv~nience. op John F. Dearden, president priests; two nuns and four ex- extinction is an' innocent indi-' from Jhesimple fact.that he is ·Many bishops at the April of the NCCB and the USCC, ~fficio members-.,-the chan~ellor~ vidual human life." a human, be!ng ami one touched meeting in Chicago had coin- who presided at the two meet­ ~rector of the' Society for 'the . lVlsgr.. Knott,' 'pastor of" by the' divine spirit." mented on the convenience of . ings, had earlier written' all U. Propagation of the Faith and Francis ~f Assisi church, Tor. . 'Live lIIumanly' using orie facility for .Mass, S. bishops, .asking for their com­ the presidents of the diocesan rington, Conn., was formerly di. The lawyers' obligation to the meals and meetings as opposed ments and recommendations in CQuricils- of Catholic men.' and rector' of the Fa~ily Life Bu;; . individual extends, Msgr. Knott to'living in hotels and traveling regard to the topics scheduled women: reau, Uilited States' Catholic said, to the person's "legal rights, through traffic to Catholic Uni- to be discussed at the synod. Conference, Washington. his civil rights and his property versity in Washington. ' · . rights,1' 'SO that "he might be Plans were made for press

Speak lng .t 0 Iawyers attending Government Grant the annual Red Mass in Immac- able to live humanly as befits coverage of the, meeting, with

ulate Conception church, Msgr. • his dignity." daily news briefings by a press

For Georgetown Knott said that "there are new Because of the nation's present panel' and press releases after

WAS H I N G TON (N C )..:­ ideologies abroad in the world 'urban crisis, Msgr. Knott said; both· morning and afternoon

Georgetown University has re­ . W h IC !'it IS' easy, to' g'et pessl'ml'stl'C sessions, similar to arrangements

' h see h' uman life, and espe­ <reived a $404,000 research award cially new life, as a threat to the ,about the future of our country at the Chicago Spring meeting.

for Project Themis, a U. S. De­ pride, the security, and the fu- in its efforts to promote social S~t the dates and place for the . bishops' Spring, 1968, meeting......, fense Department program aim­ J'ustice. ture 0 f existing people/' 273 CENtRAL AVE. ed at developing academic ex­ But where once most of us had April 23 through 25 in St. Louis. 'lInnocelllt, Defenseiess' . Recommended a h . f eellence in the physical sciences. . only an academic awareness of n exc ange 0 992-6216 He said that in current at- ghetto conditions, now at least views with theologians, those . . Father Gerard J. Campbell, S.J., university president, said tempts to modify abortion laws we realize the ~wfulness of the .in Catholic higher education, and "there is human life at stake, an environment in which too many similar fields with the. thought the . three-year award was NEW BEDFORD granted by the Air .Force office innocent and defenseless one· at of ,our citizens are forced to live. that this would keep the bisliops

that. This is not a Catholic value, Being aware of a disease can be abreast of developments in these

el scientific research. The proj­ ect will involve seven faculty nor' a Jewish one nor a Protes- .the first step in its eradication." members in physics and chemis­ tant one. Thi$ is a human value He told the lawyers that "by try and eight graduate students. . and one. rooted at the very heart the' grace of God and with tlie of western civilization."" common decency characteristic It would be "traitorous to 'our of Americans, the forces of prej­ Rt. 6 at The Narrows in North Westl?olJ1 P'ope Contribut<es JUdaeo-Crislian concept of life udice, ignorance and greed can and law to think otherwise," he be overcome....

Adm inistrative Committee Plans Meeting, of Bishops

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'

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ANCHORAGE (NC) - Pope

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to the people of Alaska for flood

relief, Archbishop Joseph T. Ry­

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Archbishop Ryan sent the eheck to Bishop Francis D. Glee­ 80n of Fairbanks. . The Pope also sent a wire to Archbishop Ryan extendIng his sympathies to all who were af­ fected by the floods. I~

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. Durfee ,l(iclCs 0',. at H.B. Yoke

"

~.

Bristol County Grid"League Fans Expect Close Race

1968:

.

O'Boy Challenge Coach piml O'Boy, who bas taken over the head coaching position at Feehan, has the un­ eviable task of trying to dupli­ cate last year's perfect 9-0 rec­ ord. The Shamrocks' attack will again revolve around veter­ an quarterback John Shea who can throw with the best in the circuit. His aerials will be direct­ ed at end Phil, Driscoll and half~ backs Paul Sullivan and Charles Deschenes who will be operating , out of a pro-type offense.Taunton, High, which ·finished last season· with a disappointing 1-7-1, ma~k, will host Feehan on opeping day in It game which may very' well tell just bow strong this league will· 'be. Taunton Dark Horse CQac~' Gl;lorge Hemonl;l has been drilling his troops for what could be the teams best year in the leagl,le', tbe Tigers have 16 starters back and, with experi­ ence under their belts, they could be tough for all foes. Senior quarterback Barry Rose, 5-11, 190 and fullback Joe Hamilton 6-1, 195 may be more than oJU>osing coaches bargain for. Rose, who attended the NOl'\th Easton quarterback school this Summer, has returned jo Coach Hemond "vastly im­ proved" and, Hamilton has 'proven tough'to stop in the past two seasons. Up front blocking for Rose and Hamilton, Hemond has as­ sembled a line averaging ap­ proxim8Jtely 185 pounds. The team has more weight, more depth, and more experience than ever before. Now, if they jell as a unit, Taunton may surprise Feehan in the curtain raiser and the whole league before the Thanksgiving Day battle with crosstown rival Msgr. Coyle. RocketeeTS at Dartmouth Runner-up in 1966 Bishop stang will be in contention again this year. Coach Charlie Connen bas three of last season's four starting backs <!'eturning as weD as both ends. The Spartans' offence will he directed by Charlie Souza who has the potential of becoming a ve r y capable signal caller. Sousa's running mates - Jack Doyle, Bill Marshall and Canas­

19

~l f'i'%c

1 Plan to ,Appeal Courfi' Approvam

Of $t@mp

By PETER BARTEK Bishop Feehan High of Attleboro, la8t season's Bris­ tol County League champion, has another fine array of talent moulded together and posed for the opening kick­ off of this Fall's football campaign which it hopes will bring another pennant to the dWcesan regional school va-an have good speed and Shamrocks' prospects and ean break away from anywhere gridiron. enthusiasm notwithstanding, onIfthe Coach Connell ean fill the

spirit reigns high in other quar­ ters, too, as the clubs await the seas\?n's open­

ers this week­

end. D u r fee

High of Fall

River will pry

the lid off the

schedule' when

it journeys to

New Bedford

tomorrow night

to face 1rQca­

tional. All other

games are listBarle'k ed Saturday. The league, one of the strongest in the State, ap­ pears to be evenly balanced again this year. Durfee, Msgr. Coyle of Taunton, Attleboro, Bishop Feehan, Bishop Stang of Dartmouth, and Yoke all bave at least five returning starters. N. Attleboro which is playing its last season in the league bas only three returnees. North will join the Hockomock League m

11iE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 21, 1967

WASHINGTON (NC) .... Protestants and other Amer­ icans United for Separation of Church and State (POAU) plans to contil,lUe its legal chal­ lenge to force' the U,S. Post Office Department to halt the issuance of the special 1967 Christmas postage stamp. The stamp has the same illus­ tr~tion as the Christmas stamp issued last year, only showing a larger version of the painting, "Madonna and Child With An­ gels," by the 15th-century artist Hans Memling. The POAU complained that because it depicts the Madonna holding "a Catholic missal," it is a form of "proselytizing for the Catholic Church." It contends that its printing involves th~' spending of public funds in alll unconstitutional manner. The Post, Office Department had already produced morc thallJ 650 million of the stamps, haI11 the order due for release' Nov. 6, when POAU filed an injuctiOD in US.. District Court 'here ro stop issuance.

gap between the ends the Spar­

tans will be once again in the

race of the crown. North·Attleboro will travel to Dartmouth hopeful of upsetting the Spartans but it will take an all-out performance for the rebuilding Red Rocketeers to achieve this objection. Coach Art Post is building around quarterback Steve Stack and fullback Gary DiNardo both of whom were sidelined most of last year because of injuries suffered in an automobile' acci­ dent. :--,' Heavy Durfee l.ine The only' other league contest .~,,"~~,-~' .. , scheduled 'for 'this up-coming ~4~< ~~',;,i~ premiere ~ee~end pits Durfee against New Bedford Yoke Fri­ GIFT OF POLICE: A Little Brother of the Good. day night. Coach Don Montle is concern­ Shepherd rushes to the freezer with poultry donated by ed about the progress his de­ 'Scant ,Consideration' Miami Police department members to Camillus House, a' fense has made thus far but ex­ refuge for indigent men conducted by the Little Brothers' The Justice Department, in i~ pects. his o~ence to. be as ex­ plosive this ,F.all, lis ,it was last of Albuquerque N. Mex., in downtown Miami. The refuge, dismissal suit said that if an year wheQ. it .a~umulated more which feeds th'o'usands of men each week, is threa~ned injunction were granted" the stamp would not be ready for than 20P poip.~. , with having to cl~, its ,doors '~nl~sl'! donati6~~ 'food the Christmas season even if the In con~J;'ast. W :J!ishop Stang, are forthcoming. NC Photo. government eventually ,won the the Hilltoppers returnees are ease. primari·ly '11 n e men. Center In a 20-page decisfon Judge George Mas~ou4 (190), guard Alexander Holtzoff dismissed Alan Miller (210), tackle Paul .the POAU suit, calling the sug­ D'Adamo (225), and ends Lou gestion that the stamp would Silva (185) and Jim Silva (160) Pooling of Statistics on Abortion· be a form of "proselytizing" fOIl give the Fall Riverites plently of any church "so remote and far­ "beef" up front. The holes open.., Ives urprlslng Igures fetched as to be entitled to bu1l ed by these 'boys will not be .WASHINGTON (NC)~Iieof stilct anti-abortionists' 'to" pro­ scant consideration." wasted with versitile fullback :. the results of the' three-dar In­ The Post Office has more thaJil ponents of abortion:"on::'demand· Joe Roque 'toting the,pigskin. .ternational COJlference on Abor­ a billion stamps' on hand for the l¢giSJati~n, insisted ,that t~:~ fig" , ~.Uer, at ·Uelm. . ,': 'tions here was' .the pooling of 1i're ,. was more like. 5'00.: Few coming Christmas season: 'POAU , Y~ke WIll hav~ fits hands ~un statl!itics on abortion; statistics even agreed to go' as high as , has 30 days to appeal in th'EiU.s ·,Frlday.trying to stop ~he. HIll.. · f~r different fro", tho~e ~eported . 1,000~ ' , ' . ,,'::-' . ,Circuit Court of AppealS;, 1oPllers. However, thmg,s are . by ven the ~Qst reliable 'But'there were ·other"figureu looking up" at 'the· ,New Bed-!. . e , , . .almdst as surprising. F6r'.'exam­ ford school.' Newhead Coach ~ources. .. . '. ''''.,'' Seek Common: Jeff Riley' 'is optimistic. And .~ost am~z~g perhaps was the 'pie:·· " There" are about 8,000':10,000 UTRECHT (NC)-The' 'Cath()oo rightfully '''so: The largest turn" varIant OpInIOn, on ,the number out of' candidates hi'm·any yeats '~ deaths ca.used each, ?,ear ~y legal"abortions iil'the 'l1nite'd lic Bible 'Foundation ari~ the Protestant Netherlands '·Bible has 'assembled':urider' Riley and,;lllegal abo~ons. T~e fIgure IS . Stiltes' each year. ' " ',' ' enthustism nbigns. Anything can: generally gIven as bemg, between , 'There' ,are from' 200,000 to' Society have formed a" joint happen 'if the Artisans main- 5,000 and 10,000 a yea~. But all 1,200,000 illegal abortions here' committee to seek agreement on '. ',' a common text of the Our Father. tain their aroused drive. experts at the, conference, from each"year. More than 80 per cent of all In Germany', the Cathol!F.' and Msgr~ 'Coyle and Attleboro, abortions are performed on Lutheran Churches have already both have non-le'ague games Reds Cl,ose Meeti~g women'· who simply do 'not want agreed on a common text for the slated for Saturday. another' child; comparatively few prayer. The Taunton' Warriors have To German Cardinal are performed on pregnancies seven starters· back. Coach Jim BERLIN (NC)-Alfred Cardi­ resulting from rape or incest or Lanagan is looking for a quar­ nal Bengsch of Bedlin, who re­ terback and a center to fill the sides in the East German !lector that might lead to 'deformed gaps. Capeway Conference co~­ of this city, has been refused children. tender Bourne will host Coyle permission by the East German Abortions are very much the in a game in which Lanagan communist government to attend prerogat'ive of the rich. Those hopes will produce the necessary a Protestant meeting' in West with' money can find someone COMPANY talent to make his club click. 'Berlin. to perform an abortion'.· Those without it cannot.', ' Lacks Seasoned Talent The Cardinal was sched~led to Coach Jim Cassidy has quar­ Complete Line

About a third of all pregnan­ terback Dick Hulkov returning address the fourth Lutheran cies end in miscarriage. Materials

Building Welfare Week. Another' speaker to direct· the Attleboro attack And to put these figures on but pressed because of the .was to be Lutneran Bishop D. abortion 'and miscarriage 'in per­ lack of experience at all other Kurt Scharf of Berlin. Bishop spective, statistics show that 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN

Scharf is not pennitted to cross positions. Non-league foe Fox­ there are about 3.8 million births : into the East German part of his boro will entertain the Jewelers 993-2611

per year in the United States. diocese. . Saturday. Other games listed for Satur­ No reason for the restriction day are: Mansfield at Barnstable, on Cardinal Bengsch was given. Dartmouth at Wareham, Mar­ He has been granted permission RESIDENTIAL tha's 1rineyard at Dennis-Yar­ to attend the diocesan meeting mouth, Fairhaven at Old of Catholic youth in West Berlin SCHOOLS. CHURCHES Rochester, Falmouth at Canton, Sept. ,24. HolUston at Norton., Somerset at INDUSTRIAL • BUNKE~ Seekonk. '

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~

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S

. . . F.

T;'xt

FAiRHAVEN

LUMBER'

Named Assistant Bernard P. Currier, formerly director of admissions and fi­ nancial aid at SiEma College, Loudonville, N.Y., has been named Assistant to the Pres­ ident for Institutional Research at Stonehill College, North Eas­ ton.

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20

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs.,

S~pt~

21,: 1967

Pre~a~@ IlJ[J'@~s

M@[J'@ ~®~[p)®Cft

,IF@[J' ~@~O~® KANSAS CITY (NC) ­ Rioting and violence in U.S. cities are the outgrowth of disrespect for law and law <enforcement agents, a bishop asserted here. Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Sul­ llivan of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo'" told a meeting here of ]police executives: '.'Social evils iinherent in the present society structure cannot be relieved by cdepreciating respect for the po­ llice officer; our' present social structure cannot tolerate using the policeman for a whipping boy." The bishop said even, in the vigorous struggle for civil rights, the law and, order framework of a free society must not be ,tJ 1I1nderinined. .. ..... ..,.­ He said the attitude of the na­ tion's citizenry toward law en­ CHAPLAIN SCHOOL FLAG: At ceremonies unveiling Air Force Chaplains; Chaplain Lt. Col. John F. Denehy, forcement agents should be char­ acterized in the words "seldom the Air Force Chaplain School flag are from left, Maj. Commandant, Air Force Ohapl'ain School. The unveiling have so many owed so much to Gen. Harry J . .sands Jr., vice commander of the Air Univer­ took pla~e during a dinner honoring Chaplain Orientation , CIO few," sity; Chaplain Maj. Gen. Edwin R. Chess, Chief of U.S. Class 67-C. "The indebtedness w hie h 'American society owes law en­ forcement and the law enforce­ ment officer is the act of living Jin conformity with law and order, to implement civil rights within the framework of our democratic society and in, the ehaplain, Lieutenant Colonel" and Catholic University, Wash­ ministration and operation of beth A. Denehy. He graduated 18pirit of the United States Con­ John F.' Denehy, a Domestic ington, D.C. Orientation, Advance and Senior from Coyle High School in 1937 stitution, to abjure criminal vi­ A highlight of his career came Chaplain courses attended by the and after his college and semi­ Prelate from the Fall River D,io­ olence, rioting, looting, insurrec­ Air Force chaplains. ' nary studies was ordained illl tion and tl'easonable threats to cese, is Commandant of the Air' in 196'.1 when Pope Paul VI ap­ Chaplain Denehy has been se­ September, 1945 by the late the existence of this republic," Force Chaplain School, Maxwell pointed him a Domestic Prelate Air Force Base, Alabama. ~ of the Catholic Church with the lected for promotion to the grade Bishop Cassidy. Bishop Sullivan said. ehaplain Denehy, began' his title of Right Reverend Mon­ of Colonel and will assume this . He served as assistant at Our Imitate Restraint . rank within the near future. Lady of the Isle, Nantucket and The bishop, who served for the military career during the Ko:' signor. rean conflict. His first assign-' As Commandant of the Air Fall River Native at Sacred' Heart, Oak Bluffs from Rast four years as Catholic chap­ The prelate' is a native of Fall 1945 to 1950, before entering ac­ Rain of the Kansas City police ment was with tlie Erding Air Force Chaplain School, Chaplain Depot, BavaJ:ia, GermanY,as as­ Denehy is .,responsible for ad­ River, son I}f the late Mrs. Eliza­ tive duty with the Air Force. depal'tment, said doctors, law­ yers, clergymen and members of sistant Wing Chaplain. Ret,urning to the U. S. in 1953,' , other professions "could well imitate the restraint, courage Msgr; Denehy was stationed at . and exercise of good judgment" Lockbourne AFB, Ohio all(~. generally display,ed by' police Travis AFBj California. While at . officers ,during the current Travis Air Force Base he served as', assistant wing chapl.ain ,. to voubled times. strategic Air, Commanl;l's 5th. "On the basis of equitaple ap­ ]pt'eciation, I am of the opin'ion' Bomb Wing. During his next assignment' that most communities have a better police department than he served as hospital chapla1n they deserve," Bishop Sullivan for the '271Oth Air Base, Wing at Tachikawa Air nase, Japan. ' said. Upon' his return to the States "When the American citizen begins adequately to appreciate in " 1957,.. Chaplain DEmehy as':' wing the police officer, and the police sumed responsil)ilities department, when the' American chaPlain to the'. 5518t Airborne' press and other news media E'arly, . , Warning and\ Control make conscious effort to protect Wing, Otis AFB, Mass. l;>uril1g the image of law enforcement this assignment he was in effect as I believe free news media returned to the Fall River Dio­ should, then we will have begun cese. He next went to Kindley Air ,~oo enjoy anew era' of security and peace in urban communities, Base, Bermuda, wher!'! he served as wing ,chaplain to' the 1604th in 'suburban commtinities and throughout our beloved United Air Base Wing. States," he said: From Bermuda Chaplain Den­ ehy was stationed once again on' the eastern seaboard' at Head­ Sisters of' Future, quarters, Eastern' Transport Air' Force, McGuire AFB, New Jer­ Conference Theme sey. This assignment was just a PUEBLO (NC)-"Sisters of hop to his next station with the the Future" will be the theme. Personnel Division, Office of the ~ 1,='1' q)f the Theresian national con­ Chief of Chaplains, United States .t~ ference, scheduled to meet in Air Force, Washington, D.C. ' L Hartford, Conn., Oct. 13 to 15. Rewarding Tour Msgr. Elwood C. Voss, nation­ The chaplain considered this al director, said Religious and a most rewarding tour of duty lay women will attend the con­ because of the possibilities it of­ ference. The Theresians is a fered in guiding the military ca­ PI!lS national organization of lay reer and assignment of Air Force women who work4;o !foster vo­ chaplains. ' cations te the Sisterhood. Prior to becoming deputy Archbishop Henry J. O'Brien commandant, Air Force Chap­ of Hartford, host to the con­ Maintenance and Service lain School, he attended Aca­ ference, in a message to dele­ demic Instructor' Course at the gates said: "I have' watched Air University; Maxwell Air with much interest the growth Force Base,', Alabama in May of the Theresians in the arch­ 1966. He served as Deputy Com­ diocese aoo throughout the coun­ mandant of the chaplain school try. I am convinced thilt, in until assuming his present office the providence of God, they will as Commandant in' May 1967. 91ake a great .. contribution Chaplain Denehy attended 155 NORTH MAIN STREET - PHONE OS 5..7811 toward the fostering of voca­ Holy CrosS College, Worcester, tions to the Sisterhood." St. Mary's Seminary, :Baltimore, ~.'

-----','~-" _ ,

Msgr." DenehyHeads Air Force Chaplain School Receives Promotion to Colonel Rank

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