WELl WORTH READING
Nuns and Television Our Lady of V'ictory Missionary directors of North Easton . eatechetical center, begin sec~md year of television series over New Bedford Television Station WTEV Channel 6: Page 11. ~igters,
Americans Out Front Teacher'and Student Fire' Tower to Church The United States hierarchy play ed a. 'leading role in the Vatican Council II decision to acknowledge the right of freedom of religious worship. It was the first fourth ses .sion major vote. Page 1..
Miss Ann Turner of No. Dighton, Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, graduate, teaches Latin at Trinity College in Washington as she pur sues a degree at the same institu tion. Page 15.
. A discarded tower bell from a Fall River fire engine house nQW sounds the call for the next mass at a Bryant, South Dakota church, where a Fall Riverite, Rev. Thomas W. Connolly. is pastor. Page 3.
Council Favors Freedom ofWorship
. "Freedom of Worship" ·just what does it mean? It is the various interpretations that Catholics, non-Catho 'lics, religious and atheists may give it that has the world's bish ops worried. Thus a wide varia tion of criticisms has faced the schema, based especially on "how someone might" erroneous 'ly interpret it." Some bishops feel that the danger of misinterpretation is so
great that it would be better to shelve the whole thing. Others have found the schema to be a basic and necessary pronounce inent by the Church to a trou bled world. They feel that much of what has already come from the Council, like ecumenism, would become only double-talk without a clear pronouncement concerning religious liberty. The majority of speakers fa vored a statement and basically the statement as presented to
The
ANCHOR
o
Fall River,. Mass., Thursday, Sept. 23, 1965
Vol. 9, No. 38 ©
1965 The Anchor
PRICE lOc $4.00 per Year
Providence College to Hold Installation of President PROVIDENCE-The Very Rev. William Paul Haas, .O.P., will be formally installed ~s eighth president of Prov idence College at inaugural ceremonies on Saturday, Oct ober 9. The Most Rev. John J. Dougherty, Auxiliary Bishop of Newark and president of Seton "Hall University, South OrangE', N.J., will deliver the inaugllral address. at the 10:30 A.M.•exercises in Alumni Hall. The inauguration ceremony will be followed by a buffet luncheon in Raymond Hall and ·tours of the campus. An Inaug ural Concert by the Rhode Island Philharmonic . Orchestra under the direction of Francis Madeira will be held at The Veterans Memorial Auditorium, Provi dence; at 8:15 P.M. to conclude the day's activities. The 38-year-old' Father Haas, the youngest man ever to be named president of the college, took office on July 1 succeed.ing the Very Rev. Vincent C. Dore, O.P., now chancellor. The Oct. 9 ceremonies will mark the first time that a Providence College president has been formally in stalled. A native. of Newark and a close personal friend of Bishop Dougherty, Father Haas was graduated from Providence Col lege in 1948 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1953. He re ceived a Doctorate of Philosophy from the Umversity of Fribourg, Switzerland. in 1962. Turn to Page T~ent,
the Fathers by the Commission on the schema. Its 'importance for the Promotion of Christian could be gauged by the re Unity. The minority bitterly at- . nowned leaders that approached tacked the document and elab- the rostrum: Ameriean Cardi orated on the possible misinter- nals Shehan, Spellman, Cushing pretations. Finally, by a 1997 and Ritter; the Primates of EIl to 224 vote, the Vatican Council gland and Ireland; Curia Offi said that the document would be ciaIs Octaviani and Browne; used as a basis for a declaration. Eastern Rite Patriarchs; the long It was now a certainty that there persecuted Cardinal Beran and will be a declaration; there can tQe youth interested Cardinal be no shelving. Applause and Cardijn.
.cheers rocked St. Peter's Basil-" The council document was
ica as the vote was announced. mainly interested in saying that For nearly a .week now, one' each and every one must be free 'prelate after another rose to "to believe as his conscience die give his own personal comments tated. No outside power-Church
or State-can coerce an individ ual to believe or reject a certain religious truth. Now this does not mean that man can believe or reject God this does not mean that all religions are equal be fore God; this does not mean that the Catholic Church is not the one and only true Church founded by Jesus Christ. One must obey God and be subject to Him in all things-man is not equal to God. God has created one true Church and the others -as good, charitable and laud ible as they may be-are not Turn to Page Five
Fr. McMahon Is Cape Pastor
1he Most Reverend James L. Connolly, Bishop of the Diocese "of Fall River, an nounced today, the assign
an,' the transfer, of two assist ants. " Hev. William J. McMahon, as sistant at St. Kilian's Church, New Bedford, and Director of ment 0:': one administrator, ap Calhedral Camp, East Freetown, pointment of a& clfmp director has been appointed administrator or ~t. Joan of Arc Church, Or leans, succeeding the late Rev. James E. Lynch who died July 7. Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, as sistant at St. Mary's Cathedral, Fa',l River and Diocesan Director of the CYO, will also serve as the . r.ew Director of Cathedral Camp, Ellst Freetown. Rev. Jorge de J .. Sousa, assist ant at St. Anthony's Church, Taunton, is transferred to Our Lady of Angels Church, Fall Fall River. Rev. George Almeida, assistant' at . St. Michael ChurcD, Fall Ri ver, has been named to suc ceed Father Sousa at St. An thony Church, Taunton, as assist ant. Rev. William J. McMahon, son of the late James J. Mc Mahon and the late Rose Anna Smith McMahon, was born in REV. WILLIAM J. McMAHON Taunton, Sept. 20, 1911. Follow-
ing courses at Providenee Col lege and St. Michael's College. the new administrator of St. Joan of Arc Church, Orleans, completed his studies at St.· Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. Ordained May 18, 1940 by the late Most Rev. Bishop James E. Cassidy in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, he has been assistant at St. Killian's Parish for .25 years and director of Cathedral Camp, East Freetown, for the past 17 years• In addition to his duties M camp director, Father McMahon hall served as Director of Our Turn to Page Two
Ozanam Sunday Commemorates'Chief Founder
.Of St. Villcen't de Paul Work of Cha~ity.'
Sunday, Sept. 26 is Oza nam Sunday throughout the Fall River Diocese. Churches will distribute a holy' card with a prayer for the beatifica tion of Frederic Ozanam, and many priests will accompany the distribution with a brief talk on this remarkable man of 19th century France, chief founder of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. The son of a doctor, Ozanam" saw charity put into practice in the lives of his parents, who knelt together at deathbeds in the slums of Lyons, where about one-third of Dr. Ozanam's prac tice was carried on free of charge. Mrs. Ozanam was indefati gable in practicing the works of mercy amopg the slum dwellers, and her son wrote of her: "It is at her knees that I learned to fear You, 0 Lord, and from her looks to love You." As a youth, Ozanam went te Faris to study, where he becllDW
a leader among his fellow stu dents, whom he tried to lead to Christianity. On one occasion an
FREDERIC OZANAM ...
unbeliever taunted him, saying, '.'You, who pride yourself on be ing a Catholic, what are you doing·for the poor?" . The words stung Ozanam' so sharply that he and a few of :his fellows banded together to help the poor of Paris, naming their group in honor of St. Vincent de Paul. Ozanam was but 20 when he formed the first Vin centian conference, which had a membership of seven. But al most immediately the idea spread, until "the membership jumped from the original seven, to hundreds, thEm to thousands. Only an angel using some mar velous heavenly adding machine , could possibly figure up all the deeds of charity done since 1833 because Frederic Ozanam started the Vincention society." Ozanam lived to see his so ciety spread and grow, possibly nourished by his own self-sacri fice. Never strong, he sacrified health to his work among the Turn to Pa&e Twenty, A
A ••
BE-Y. WALTE& A. SULLIVAllf
Seeking Maturity As CYAO Goal The AttlebOro Area Catho lic Young Adult Organiza tion announces as its goal for the year "to offer greater opportunity for maturity ba society and in the Church." Translated. into the orgal)iza tion's four-fold program, it wIll be the objective of the members to wor}!; upon the "new role" of the laity in accordance with principles to be formulated by the present sessions of the ecu ,menical council in Rome; a con centrated study on the problems of young adulthood will be ini tiated; a reawakening of interest ill the federal, state, and local Turn ~ Paee Twenty
2
Bishops Acquire Paris House
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1965 . ,
Diocese of Fall River
OFFICIAL
ASSIGNMENTS Rev. William J. McMahon, assistant at St. Kilian Chitrch, New Bedford, and Director of Cathedral.Camp, East Free town, to St. Joan of Arc Church, Orleans, as administrator. Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, assistant at St. Mary's Cathe dral, Fall River, and Diocesan CYO Director will also serve as Director of Cathedral Camp, East Freetown. Rev. Jorge de J. Sousa, assistant at St. Anthony Church, Taunton, to Our Lady of the Angels Church, Fall River, as assistant. Rev. George Almeida, assistant at St. Michael Church, Fall River, to st. Anthony ,Church, Tauriton, as assistant. Effective date of abo~e assignments is Wednesday, Sept. :19, 1965. '
REV. JORGE de J. SOUZA
Assi9.,ments
REV. GEORGE ALMEIDA
Affec~
~....-./Jd:-;;g ~
Continued from Page One 'Lady of Good Counsel Retreat House, located on the grounds' of Cathedral Camp, and Spiritual Bishop of Fall River Director of the Diocesan Coun cil 'of Catholic Women. In January of 1963, Father Mc Mahon was selected president of the National Catholic Camping Association, a position he still holds. Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, newly appointed Director of Cathedral Camp and who will 'continue in INTROIT-Have pity on me, 0 Lord, for to you I call his present assignments, ,was all the day ; for you, 0 Lord, are good and forgiving, born Oct. 2, 1924 in Fall River, abounding ir~ kindness to all wh\> call upon you. Incline the son of James H. and Anna your ear, 0 Lord; answer me, for I am afflicted and poor. Louise Smith Sullivan. A graduate of Monsignor Coyle, Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy School, Taunton, he took .Spirit, as it was in the beginning, js now, and ever shall High his classical studies at Xavier be world without end. Amen. Ha.\'e pity on me, 0 Lord, University, Cincinnati and com for to you I call all the day; for you, 0 Lord, are good pleted his philosophy and theol and forgiving, aboundIng in kindness to all who call upon ogy at St. Mary's Seminary, Bal timore. you. Ordained on April 3, 1954, In GRADUAL-The nations 9han revere your name, 0 st. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, Lord, and all the kings of the earth your glory. For the by Most Rev. James L. Connol: D.D., the new Cathedral Camp Lord has rebuilt Sion, and he shan appear in his glory. ly, Director was assigned as assist Alleluia, alleluia. Sing to the Lord a new song, for the ant at St. Lawrence's Church, Lord has done' wondrous deeds. Alleluia. New Bedford. On Nov. 11, 1956, Father SuI OFFERTORY-Deign, 0 Lord, to rescue me; Let IIvan was transferred to St. all be put to shame and confusion who seek to sn atch Mary's Cathedral, and three years later was named Diocesan away my life. Deign, 0 Lord, to rescue me. CYO Director and Diocesan COMMUNION-O Lord, I will' tell of your singular Catholic Scout Director. justice; 0 God, you have taught Ine from my youth; and Father Sullivan will continue to reside in St. Mary's Rectory now that I am old and gray, 0 God, forsake me not. and serve as assistant in the par Please Clip and Bring Church .on S..:nday ish. Rev. Jorge Sousa, son,. of the late Feliciano and Leonilde Cal deira Sousa, was born Dec. 27, 1925 in Funchal, Maderia Island, Azores. ~repares Educated at the Funchal Sem LANSING (NC) - Two years by the Michigan Catholic Con ago there were 132 people in the ference under contract with the inary, Maderia, Father Sousa was ordained March 24, 1951 by Lansing area who could not find U. S. Labor Department. . jobs because they lacked edu Officials here. believe the Most Rev. Antonio Manuel Per eira Ribeiro. cation or technical skills. project demonstr~tedthat the so Now they all have jobs--some called "hard core unemployed" On Oct. 29, 1951, Father Sousa of them have the best jobs of can be solved. Of 172 original was assigned to St. John 'of God their lives--because they com enrollees, 132 are now working Church, Somerset. He has also pleted the 12-month program of at meaningful jobs. This repre fered by Lansing Job Training sents a job placement record of Center, a pilot project operated' r per cent; a rate significantly higher than the national aver OCT. Z age for similar projects. Rev. Joseph E. Sutula, 1961, Lacked Qualifications Pastor, St. Casimir, New Bed The trainees ranged in age ford. from 17 to 61 and came from a OCT. • variety of racial and religious Rev. Stephen B. Magill, 1916, backgrounds. The average age Assistant, Immaculate Concep was 34, the average level of pre tion, North Easton. vious formal education was the Sept. 26-St. Roch, Fall River. OCT. '1 Sixth grade, and their total in Sacred Heart Taunton. Rev. Caesar Phares, 1951, Pas 'comes during the year 1963 av St. Anthony of Padua, tor, St. Anthony of Desert, Fall eraged only $900. New Bedford. Seventy of the trainees were River. Oct. 3-St. John of God, Som receiving some sort of 'welfare erset. assistance when enrolled, 115 were the head of a household or Our Lady of thee.. Im maculate Conception, a family, and almost one-fourth Funeral Dome Taunton. had a criminal history. 550 Locust Street Approximately a third could Fall River. MasI. speak no or very little English, a THE ANCHOR third had never learned to read, OS 2-2391 second Class Postage, Paid at Fill River. and many had never attended Mass. Published every Thursday It 410 school. .All had one thing ia RoBe E. Sullivan
Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass., 02722 by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall .common-a lack of basic qualifi- ' Jeffrey E. Sulllv. .
River. SubscriptiOA price aJ AlIi" postpaid caUona to let or hold a joli. ....00 per Jear.
Proper of. the Mass Sixteenth Sunday After Pentecost
to
Michigan Job Retraining Program 132 for Employment
Necrology
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
JEFFREY,E. SULLIVAN
Four Priests
se~ed as assistant at St. Mich
eel and Our Lady of lIealth Church"Fall River, Our Lady of
Mt. Carmel, New Bedford, and at St. Anthony Church, Taunton. He will report to Our Lady of the Angels Church, Fall River, on Wednesday, Sept. 29. Succeeding Father Sousa in the Taunton Parish will be Rev. George Almeida. Born in New port, the son of Manuel and Anna Almeida, he attended St. Thom as Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn., St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, and Our Lady of :the Angels Seminary, Albany. Following his ordination on May 1, 1965, in St. Mary's Cath edral, Fall River, by the Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, Father Almeida was assigned to St. Michael Church, Fall River, where he has 'served for the past four months.
MONTREAL (NC)-The Cana dian hierafchy has acquired the Sacerdotal Fraternity house m Paris and named an administra tive. board to direct It. This house was one of the properties affected by financial difficulties which faced the Sac erdotal Fraternity and which saw the Canadian hierarchy act. Ing to bring about a reorganiza tion in this community. Bishop Gerard Marie Coderre of St. Jean, Que., had been named to look after the future of the Paris residence by the Canadian hierarchy. The Paris residence will be used by Canadian priests study ing in Paris who will form a community there. Priests visit Ing Paris from Canada will also be· welcomed.
Mass Ordo
FRI~~Y-EmberFriday 'of Sep
·tember. II Class. Violet. Mas8 Proper; No' Gloria or Creed; . 2nd CoIl._Our Lady of Ransom; Common Preface. SATURDAY - Ember Saturd87 of September. II Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria 01' Creed; Common Preface. The Celebrant may omit the 2nd. 3rd, 4th and 5th lessons with their versicles and prayers ap pointed for this day. The first lesson and the Epistle, how ever, must be said. SUNDAY--.xvI Sund87 Aft e'l' Pentecost. II Class. Green. < Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-SS. Cosmas and Da mian, Martyrs. III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY - St. Wenceslau., Duke and Martyr. m Class. Mass Proper; Gloria; DO Creed; Common Preface. WEDNESDAY - Dedication ef Fr. Ouellet S'peaker St. Michael, the Archangel. I Class. White. Mass Proper; At press Meeting Gloria; Creed; Common Pref HARTFORD (NC) - Father ace. _ Uaurice Ouellet, S.S.E., who waa THUBSDAY-St. .Jerome, Priest, transferred from a pastorate ill Confessor, and Doctor of the Selma, Ala., because of his in Church. m Class. White. MWlII volvement in civil rights acttvi~ Proper; Gloria; DO Creed; ties, will be a featured speaker Common Preface. at the Eastern regional confer ence of the Catholic Press Asso 103rd Parish ciation, Meriden" Conn., from JOLIET (NC) - The 103rc1 Oct., Tuesday 6 to Thursday 8. , parish in the Joliet diocese here Father Ouellet is now director in illinois has been established. (If novices at the Edmundite With territory cut off from st. Fathers novitiate in Mystic, Anne's parish, the St. Ambrose Conn. The 38-year-old priest parish has been formed with had been pastor of St. Eliza Father James O. Storm as tbe beth's Mission in Selma since first pastor. 1961. He fed, housed and advised Catholics who participated. in the voting rights for the Negroes demonstration's there in March. In June he was removed from the pastorate at the request of Helen Aubertine Brough
Archbishop Thomas J. Toolen, William H: Aubertine
Bishop of Mobile-Birmingham, . Brian J. Aubertine
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Latin America"s Problem Effects All Christians
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 23, 1965
Maryknoller Heads Psychologists Vnit
WINONA (NC)-"Amer ican Catholics· bear an obli _ gation to see that their Latin American brethren do not lose their Christian faith in the face of sweeping social changes," an Ecuadorian bishop said here in Minnesota. . , Bishop Bernardino Echeverria of Ambato told the general as sembly of the Study Week on the Apostolate that, Latin America, faces a spiritual problem "that concerns all believers in Jesus Christ." "It is a problem for all Christ ians but especially for you, dear friends from the United States, you whom we call our dearest friends and neighbors," Bishop Echeverria said. , "A consciousness of S()lidarity hilS been formed between us and; because of this, you bear a reS ponsibility, you have an obliga tion to fulfill. Extending help, to Latin America, in this sense, is not only an act of good will, but also of justice and duty," he said. , Council Theme Bishop Echeverria said the Church's'anxiety lies in finding solutions to the' spiritual prob lems just as governments occupy themseives in solving material problems. "It is no exaggeratioft to say that this has not been done," he said. "This matter of help has clear ly expressed itself in the ecu-:, menical council on its the1l1e of the apostolate of the laity. That theme will certainly be approved at the next session of, the coun cil," Bishop Echeverria said. "Wherever a human being suffers hunger, is in need of clo thing, housing,. medi~ines, em ployment and education, there must be a Christian spirit to of fer the remedies. It should be clearly understood that this ob ligation weighs heavily on those. people blessed with an abund ance of the world's goods," he ' said.
Tickets for Pope's
Visit Big Problem,
NEW YORK (NC) -Tickets, tickets, who's going to get a ticket? That is a puzzling ques tion facing planners of Pope Paul VI's trip to the United Na tions here. There will be about 5,000 tickets for the ceremony at st. Patrick's cathedral, 2,000 for his U.N. visit and about 100,000 for his Mass at Yankee Stadium. No hard and fast decisions have been made on distribution of the free tickets, but aides at the New York chancery indi cated most will be distributed through New York parish churches. Pastors in neighboring dio ceses probably will be invited to make written requests. Officials are anxious to make tickets available to Protestant and Jew ish groups, but how this will be done has not been decided.
Predicts New Mixed Marriage Statement ROME (NC) - An English member of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity in dicated that new re~ulations roncerning mixed marriages were imminent. Asked, at a press conference about the possibility of new DI'ovisions concerning mixed marriages and marriages con tracted outside the Catholic Church, Bishop Thomas Holland ot Salford replied: "Rather full developments on this matter are expected within a very few
1i3¥s."
3
CHICAGO (NC)-'-Father Paul , F. D'Arcy, M.M., director of edu cation for the Maryknoll Fathers and an authority on the selection and training of seminarians, is the president-elect of the Amer ican Psychological Association. He will assume the presidency for a one-year term in Septem ber' 1966. Father D'Al'cy, 44, is a native of New York.
GRE~TER
NEW BEDFORD'S FIRE BELL NOW CALLS CHURCH-GOERS: The ben in. the tower of the new St. Mary's Church, Bryant, S.l). formerly hung in the Quequechan Fire House, Fall River, and was procured by Rev. Thomas W. Connolly, pastor, a Fall River native. for his Church.
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Worldm'lssion ·Honors 'Career Girl' Two New York Famili·es Receive Awards WASHINGTON (NC) A Cleveland "career girl" and two New York families who have poured aid into the U. S. Church's overseas missions re ceived the ninth annual World mission Awards, here. At opening ceremonies of the 16th annual meeting of the mis sion-sending societies, awards were given to Mr. and Mrs. George Zirkel of Queens Village, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Edward Neumann of New Hyde Park, N. Y., and posthumously to Miss Clara E. Westropp of Cleveland who died June 23 at the age of
78.. The presentations were made in St. Thomas the Apostle Church here. Miss Westropp's' sis,ter, Judge Lillian Westl'opp, accepted her award. Jtaised $200,OOG The Neumanns and the Zirkels have involved all members of their families in fund-raising events for the missions. It is estimated they have, with the aid of other interested fami 'lies, raised more than $200,000 in the past 20 years through card parties, dances, plays, fashion shows, rummage sales, basket ball games, clambakes and other activities.
Holy Name Society
Fights Obscenity
ARECIBO (NC)-A resolution calling for support of a cam paign against, pornography in Puerto Rico was adopted at the islandwide convention of the Holy Name Society'here. The res01'l.ltion called HNS members to SUPPOl't legislation now pending in the Puerto Rican Legislature, providing for more stringent laws against ob 'scene literature and motion pic tures. Some 6,000 HNS members took part in a parade and rally at the baseball park here. Archbishop Luis Aponte of San Juan and Bishop Alfred F. Men dez of Arecibo bfficiated at the rites.
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Miss Westropp, who was, Cleveland diocesan chairman for the missions for nearly two dec ades, was a co-founder and president of the Women's Fed eral Savings and Loan Associa tion. Foundr'
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In 1946, Miss Westropp found ed the St. Francis Xavier Mis sion Association and launched a plan of "mission circles"-each having 12 women who raised funds for the Jesuit missions in Patna, India, where her brother, Father Henry I. Westropp, S.J., was the first missionary. The plan spread and expanded quickly. There were at the time of her death more than 465 "mission circles" working for the Patna mission and for areas in Latin America.
New Law Establishes Marquette Board WASHINGTON, (NC)-Presi dent Johnson signed into law a measure creating a special c0mmission to plan for the 1966 commomoration of the works of F:'1ther Jacques Marquette, S.J., explorer and missionary. The legislation authorizes $10, 0(10 to finance activities of the commission, which will be com I,osed of four senators, four House memb~rs and four others to be appointed by the President. The observance will mark the 300th anniversary of Father Marquette's arrival in America and his achievements.
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, In, 1954, Pope Pius XII award ed her a "Pro Ecclasia et Ponti fice" (For Church and Pope) medal for her service. The combined program of the Neumanns and the Zirkels has benefitted mission activities in more than a dozen countries. Recipients include the Montfort Fathers in Africa, the Marist, Brothers in Japan, the Holy Ghost Sisters on Formosa, and the Dominican Fathers in Japan.
Notre Dame to Aid University in Peru NOTRE DAME (NC) - The University of Notre Dame here has planned its first program of ccoperation with a Latin,Ameri can school. With a $557,700 grant from the Ford Foundation, Notre Dame will aid the Pontifical Catholic University of' Lima, Peru, to "develop its central ad ministration, rebuild its curricu lar offerings especislly in the natural science, and establish an office of university develop nlent."
Continuing Education fALL SESSION
Sept. 28-Dec. 7 Ten Tuesday Evenings
7:30 to 9:30 P.M. The Contemporary Novel 18 Amerlee Creative Writing Effective English The New Grammar Public Speaking Reading Improvement For Adults Drawing and Painting The Artist At Work Interior Decoration Personality Improvement For Wo_ Conversational French-Beginners labor law Modern Math For Parents ' Philosophy In An Age Of Anxiety You And Your Child Current '/iews On Tension III World Affairs You And The New Morality Accounting For Non-Accountants Insurance - (Prep. Agents' & Brokers' Exam,) Investing In Stocks and Bo~ds Training Course For Supervisors Real Estate Persuasive Selling Elementary Shorthand (Gregg)
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1965
Court to Decide
Ohio Legal Contr~~ersy Concerns Legality Of Nuns Teaching in Public Schools
Says America the. Beautiful Ideal Anteroom to Heaven By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. The story is told (and here it is again) of the patriotic .Englishman, who, on his first flight over the United States, looked ~wn at the rolling fields of corn and wheat, on the sheer beauty of the mountains and lakes 'and rivers, on the awesomeness of the great . Just as America's essential eities, anti, in brief but tell ~auty is not just on the surface, ing summation, said simply so neither is her ugliness. And "Damn I{ing George TIL" just as people have to be fined No on~ driving this great in order to keep from ruining country ~uld help but be the external looks of the coun impressed The try, so they must also be mountll;lns threatened if they are to keep of ColoradB and her morally beautiful.
the colDrs
It takes the threat of fines of New MelKico and imprisonment to make some are gorgeous. ·Americans offer even superfi The drive amng cial equality to many others. It the north shore takes thousands of polcemen to of Lake Supe keep' Americans from killing and rior, or down robbing and stealing from each the Mississippi other-and not even these thou River from the sands of policemen can top these Twin Ci ti e s things completely.
sou t h , around
It is time that we Americans Lake Pepin lll'ld some of the understood the pure beauty of little towns of Minnesota and our country, and how it can ·be Wi'sconsin, is sometimes breath kept and how lost. It is time we taking. And, of course, for sheer, stopped tolerating the destruc awesome beauty, it would be tiveness of those who would bard indeed to match the drive ruin the whole beauty and con 1brough Council Bluffs, Iowa. cept of the real American dream Founded in Gecl by a pagan materialism which But lovely as America seems worships only the selfish indi when you notice these details vidual, his wealth, his comfort of physical beauty, her essen and his pleasure. tial beauty goes far, far de~per. Means 18 God America's beauty is in her spirit, not always the spirit we see, This country is not suppbsed but the spirit on which she was to be heaven on earth, but it founded and the spirit which is supposed to be an ideal ante comes 11) the fore on occasion room to heaven, the place which in a grant burst. is best fitted to help us pass I am one of those sentimental the test of life and get us to ists who gets goose-:bumps when God, Who is eternal life. Con i hear the National Anthem; a sider America heaven and it :reaction I found vastly enhanced will turn into our hell. Consider after being exposed to "God it what it is-the means to God, Save The Queen" instead for a and it becomes the external three-year stretch. grace of God it actually is. . "The Star Spangled Banner" It is time we Americans, as a brings to mind the thousands on nation, made 1.!se of everything 1bousands of GIs who gavetbeir in our country for the only lives so that we can still play reason God allowed us to occupy the National Anthem before it in the first place - to get to . ball games. It makes one think Him. This will mean our turn of what it means to live in "the ing to God, in everything, as in land of the free and the home dividUals and as members of of the brave," this country the American family of man founded in God. . kind.
Ugly Ameriea
It will mean dedicating our Sometimes, though when you lives, not to ourselves, but to Btand at attention for the Na God. It will mean making use tional Anthem other thoughts in of the sheer beauty of our vade your mind - the picture, country, this shadowy manifes not of a beautiful America, but tation of God's beauty, for the of an ugly America. reason He gave it to us. It is mY-privilege just now This is true American ecu . to live on the shore of a lovely menism. This is true charity. It . Jake. About six each morning, is also true patriotism. I get around this lake. And on Monday mornings I only look . at the water, because the shore is littered with junk from the Sunday night invaders of the place-with beer cans, pop-corn ROME (NC)-The third World boxes, candy wrappers, every Congress for the Lay Apostolate type of junk imaginable. will meet here in October, 196'1, Ruin Beauty to help the· Church's. laity to There are signs all over our meet the new responsibilities highways, "Keep America Beau mapped out for them by the tiful-Don't Be A Litterbug." Second Vatican CoUncil. . But since this is not enough of The date was decided by the a warning to· the traveling gar . executive board of the Perma bage distributor, supplementary nent Committee for Internation signs warn that anyone caught :If Congresses of the Lay Aposto littering will be fined. )pte at a meeting here. The orig i.lal 1966 date for the Congress was postponed at the Holy See's request in order to allow more time for adc;quate study of the council's decisions on the re STURTEVANT (NC)-A de sponsibilities of the laity in the parture ceremony for two Fran Church and the world. Earlier clscan missionaries of the .As oongresses met in 1951 and 1957. sumption province was held About 2,000 delegates are ex here in Wisconsin before they pected. Preparations for the con :left for the island of Samar in gress has been underway for we Philippines. several years. Regional prepara Father Lawrence Janicki, O. tory meetings will be held on F.M., and Brother Ambrose Lee, th, various continents during O.F.M., bring the province's the two years preceding the personnel at the mission to 15 congress. The prepardtory theme American priests, three Filipino is "Unity Among Catholics, A aloni Christians, Amoni :Men.. priests and five brothers.
Reschedule Meeting For Lay Apostolate
Franciscans Leave For Philippines
MOTHER GENEVIEVE
Seventieth Yeo r
As Religious
Mot her Genevieve Mary, S.U.S.C., will mark her 70th year in religious life ·Sunday at St. Martin's Convent, Fall River. . Born in France, she came to the United States in 1912. Among her assignments was 21 years of service as Mistress . of Novices at the Holy Union Provincial House, Fall River. Still active, she spends much time painting religious subjects. By'way of a hobby, she has a parakeet which has been trained to speak in English, Latin and French.
Pope Paul Approves Cardinal's Absence ROME (NC) - Pope Paul VI has cabled his permission to Valerian Cardinal Gracias of Bombay to delay his attendance at the fourth session of the Second Vatican Council. Replying '10, the cardinal's re quest to remain in Bombay in "iew of the armed conflict· be tween Pakistan and India, the Pope said:"We assure you our heartfelt prayer for peace, and lovingly impart to you and your faithful our paternal apostolic blessing." He expressed appreciation of Cardinal Gracias' desire "to be with your people in these dif ~.cult days."
Name Danny Thomas . For Catholic Award ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) Television star Danny Thomas has been named to receive the 1965 Catholic Action Medal of St. ·Bonaventure University. Thomas, who will receive the award Wednesday, Oct. 6, was Cited by Father Francis Kear ney, O.F.M., for exemplifying "Chiistian principles and ideals in both his private and profes sional life." .
Guild to Meet Fall River Catholic Guild for {he Blind will meet at 2:15 Sun day afternoon at St. Joseph'. Church for Rosary and Bene d'ction. A meeting in the school hall will ff;)llow.
FORT RECOVERY (NC) Legality of the long standing practice of hiring Catholic nuns to teach in some Ohio public S<'hools appears destined to be settled eventually by the Ohio supreme Court. The first decision is expected to be made within two months in Celina where a suit seeking to bar the nuns is pending. Both parties have indicated inten tions of taking the issue to the state's highest tribunal no mat ter which way the Celina ruling goes. Ceriified Instructions Jesse C. Moore, machine de signer and inventor, who resides Fort Recovery, instituted the Euit against the Southwest Lo cal School District. He charged
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A convert 3·1 years ago, Father Luke Manni· karott asks help fOr something wonderful before he dies. He wants to leave behind him, In hi. parfsh In southern India, a church and rectory to last•••• When he Joined the Church In 1934, Father Luke brought with him 14 Jacobite families. Now In Enadi·mangalam he offers Mass for hundreds (many of them con· verts he Instructed). "The harvest is ripe," this aging priest says gently. "Jf only someone wilt help usl" ••• How can you help? A decent church can be built for as little a. $3,50~! alnce father Luke'. parishioners will builG It tree·of-charp. A rectory (with meeting· rooms) will ClOst only $2,100••• , Do some thing' wonderful while you can? Name the church ($3,500) or the rectory ($2,100) for your favorite ••Int, In memory of your loved on.., Jf you build It all by yourself. • • • Smaller lifts ($100, $76, $50, $25, $20, $15, '10, '", $8, $1) are Godsends, too. since the wage-earner In southern India ,etl only 16¢ a dayl ••• Clip the coupon below. UN It for aomethinl wonderful rI&ht nowl
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tfle school board is dominatet .by the Catholic Church and ~ dents of the district's four ele mentary schools are segregate' ;>ceording to religion. :Moore claims the school boeJ'd aHows .religious symbols in the sf'hools, contending this violate. the U.S. and Ohio Constitutions. Ohio attorney general has ap proved use of nuns in the schools. Eight nuns teach ill t.hree schools which have nearly all Catholic students. There are no nuns at the fourth school where enrollment is predom iI'antly Protestant The school board has defended use of nuns on grounds that they have been certified by the State Board of Education and are authorized to teach in public schools.
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Council Favors Religious Freedom
Turn to Page Five THE Church. . The main arguments of the speakers who backed the reli gious liberty document were the following: Natural Right and Personal Dignity: God created man free so that he might choose God, himself and choose freely to ac cept God's revelation and the wav to God as explained and poi~ted out 'by Christ. Man must be free so as to per form a free and personal act of faith. Religious liberty is the sub ject, foundation and. end of social life and even of the peace ful and effective governmental action in a s~te and between states. Such a document is necessary if the Church is to show herself as not being the enemy of free dom and liberty. The Church has often suffered persecutioll because she herself has not rec ognized the baSic freedoms of some who might criticize her. Privileged religions (S tat e Religions as Catholic in Italy and Spain; Anglican in England and Lutheran in Sweden) might be called on by the citizenry to inspire national life but they must not interfere with the rights of other citizens. Religious liberty has deep roots in Sacred Scripture for man and God in the Bible are intelligent and free. Christ in many ways showed respect for human freedom. Some Oppositioa The minority that attacked' the document and even the pos sibility of treating such a topic was often bitter. Natural right was cast aside in an affirmation that since man has been raised to a supernatural level, the na tural no longer pertains. It was stated that the document favor ed humanism, naturalism, sub jectivism, . relativism. situation ethics, pragmatism. The Scriptures did not prove the existence of religious free dom, some held, and the use of . Scripture in the document was twisted. Others claimed. that
even if Scripture was acceptable, the document went contrary to 'all of Tradition and the papal pronouncements of the past.. As far as states were concern ed, some claimed the special right of the Catholic Church which is objective-while the rights of other religions were only subjective. It lowered the Church to be equal with all other religions instead of being the one true faith. There was also demanded a statement which would clearly point out "that the Catholic state is better than an indiffer ent and neutral one .. .n; ·that undue kindness was being shown to false religions. Cardinal Browne summarized the bitterness by demanding that states defend the Faith and impede the preaching of other religions not founded on super natural faith... Authorities in Catholic countries know that preserving the Church works for the greatest benefit of their citizens and that spreading other religions in a Catholic nation is a violation of public morality..." Right Balance One prelate summarized the arguments in the following way: Does the document: -Encourage subjectivism and indifferentism? No. It deals with the problem of civil liberty of man to seek religious truth and it condemns religious indiffer entism and affirms man's obli gation to seek truth. -Weaken the teaching that the Catholic Church is the one true Church? No, underlines this fact. -Help spread religious error? No. It is an effective barrier against dishonest propaganda. -Lessen missionary ardour? No. Only where there is no true religious liberty are there ob stacles to the preaching of the Gospel. -Aid false humanism! No. It stressees man's need to seek: God. -Conflict with the Church'. earlier teaching? No. We must all note the evolution of cir cumstances through the cen turies. One Father probably best des eribed religious freedom by 'stating that there had been false and erroneous views ex pressed by some high prelates The election of officers will in the council chamber. Because highlight the semi-annual lunch these were false interpretations eon meeting of the Past Regents of the document, it did not mean Club of the Massachusetts that they could not be expressed. Daughters of Isabella, which Each prelate was free to say will be held Sunday in the Barn what he thought and believed Room of the Village Green in in conscience to be trUe. It WlUl Danvers, Mass. only this same freedom that the A special program bas also proponents of the document been planned by the committee,' want extended to the rest of the t 6 11 0 win g the 12:30 P.M. ,vorld. lunche.on. Invited guests to be seated at the head table with the officers are Rt. Rev. .Joseph A. Beatty, State Chaplain of the Daughters 6f Isabella, Mrs. Josephine st. Dowd, of Amherst, the Supreme - MINNEAPOLIS (NC) Albert the Great parish here Advocate and Mrs. Charlotte ill holding an unusual kind of Charron of North Attleboro, the ."aission-instead of nightly ser State Regent. mons in the chureh, the priests go out to parishioners' homes. Homes to be visited were se lected at random, and those con . tacted were asked to invite 12 NEW YORK. (NC)-The fifth t., 25 adults of all faiths from biennial convention of the Na the neighborhood. The missioner tional Federation of Sodalities conducts a two-hour session at will be held here starting Thurs the home, preaching on the mys day, Oct. 7. tical Body of Christ and discus Among eonvention speaker-. sing it with those present. will be: William Stringfellow, "This mission is not merely Episcopal lay theologian, Oft an event in the life of the par:.. Christian witness in. the inner ish," said Father Jerome S. city; Arthur Wright, director of Becker, O.P., originator of the the New .York Catholic Inter idea, "It is an intensification of :racial Council, on human rights; the life of the parish, for a Father John G. Donohue, of St. deeper understandin'g between. Patrick's Cathedral in New York , shepherd and flock." , on ecumenism; and Oren Root, An estimated 1,000 to 2,000 of the Irving Trust Company of persons were expected to take New Yor~ OIl witness t8 the part during the three weeki; of -wi. ~e mission. .. _
D of I Election
Next Sunday
Pa rish Mission
Goes to Homes
Sodalities to Hold Fifth Convention
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Sept. 23, 1965
5
Vetnam Relief On the Rise
FRIENDS MEET: Campfire Girls of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, meet Portuguese Dominican whose seminary near Fatima they've been helping support with their contributions of pennies. From left, Rev. John D. Fernandes, O.P., Katheen Guinen; Rev. Peter Mullen, girls' moderator; Joan Reed. Fath~r .Fernandes addressed girls on his projects in Portugal
.New Approach Detroit Priest Uses Tape Recorder
To Make Religion Interesting
DETROIT (NC) - There's a swinging new disc jockey in De troit who runs a religious pro gram and identifies himself only as "Father Child." Father William T. Child took over the Sunday morning pro gram and WCAR radio a few weeks ago and decided that "re ligion can be interesting." To prove it, he carries a tape re corder with him whereever he goes. He has interviewed a mother superior about her watchdog; Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Father Theodore Hes burgh, president of Notre Dame. and Trappist monks in Kentucky. Interspersed with the inter views are songs, including tunes like "Don't Poison the Pigeons in. the Park." An assistant pastor of St. Ig natius parish, he crams the par ish bulletin with pictures of
Catholic Committee To Hear Shriver PATTERSON (NC) -Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps and the Office of Econo mic Opportunity, will speak Wednesday, Oct. 20 to members cf a lay committee formed here by Bishop James J. Navagh of Paterson. Shriver will address the com mittee's first annual $lOO-a-plate dinner at the Westmount Coun try Club, West ·Paterson. Pro C'ceds of the dinner will be used to further Catholic educatioa ,centers in the diocese.
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football games, animals and any:" thing else he can put a religious message to. ' His only previous broadcast ing experience was a closed cir cuit TV program at St. Mary's school in Wayne, Mich., but he hopes to have a TV program some day. "You've got to be • part or your listener's life, and not apart from him," he says. "There are other approaches to religion than what we've been used to,"
CYO Co'nvention WASHINGTON (NC) - The eigMh National Catholic Youth 0rganization Federation Con vention will be held in Chicago, starting Thursday, Nov.l1, Msgr. Frederick J. Stevenson, director of the Youth Department, Na tfonal Catholic Welfare Confer ence, said the theme will be "Christ to the World," and that more than 6,000 youth and their adult advisors are expected to attend.
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NEW YORK (NC) - CathoUo Relief Services-National Cath olic Welfare Conference has greatly increased its program of aid to Vietnam, Msgr. John F. McCarthy, assistant executive director,' said. Msgr. McCarthy said CRS NCWC recently sent more than 40 tons of medicines - worth some $400,000 - to the country, the largest single shipment of medicines in the agency's 20 year history. Half the medicine was donated by the Catholic Medical Mission Board. CRS' also sent 200 tons of salt and 2,400 cases of sweetened condensed milk. Msgr. McCarthy announced that CRS had also requested permission from the United States Agency for International Development to increase its Vietnam feeding program from 400,000 to 650,000 persons. An emergency team of four CRS officials has been sent to Vietnam to help implement the increased progranL
Jewish Businessman On Seton Hall Board SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-A Jewish businessman has been. named to the board of trustees of Seton Hall University here, Bishop John J. Dougherty, uni versity president, has announced. Irving R. Rosenhaus, head of international operations for the .J. B. Williams toiletries com pany, previously served on the board of advisors of Seton Hall'§ school of business administra tion. He has also served as a trustee of the Seton Hall College of Medicine and Dentistry, since sold to the state of New Jersey. Also named to the board was Dr. Clarence C. Walton, dean of Columbia University's scbool of J:eReral studies.
Registration Up PROVIDENCE (NC) - Our Lady of Providenee Seminary here has reported a registrathm of 310 in the high school division. for the coming _ion compared to 293 of last year and 105 011. the college level compared tit n last year.
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THE ANCHOR-Dioce-se of Fa.!1 River-Thurs. Se~t. 23, 1965
Stop Lecturing And Understand' Young People
Strange Spirits Strange spirits are abroad in the land. What else can explain West Coast riots that saw "students" fighting for the "right" to carry placards cov:·: ered with obscene, expressions? What else can explain the emasculation of so many young men who walk the streets of the city looking and --at times-acting like anything but men? What else can explain the actions of those who burn draft cards and ridicule Americans who are fighting in Viet Nani so that they might enjoy freedom at home? What else, can explain the fea.r the grips communi ties at holiday seasons when invasions by young "punks" hangs heavy in the air? What 'else can explain the bE'lief that individuality 'is achieved by tearing down established traditions and manners? What else can explain the spircding increase in crime and especially in crimes of violence by the young? "The Law Enforcement Bulletin," publication of the FBI, points out in its September issue that in the last five years the percentage of young-age arrests for homi
cide, forcible rape, aggravated assault, robbery, burgla ry, larceny and auto theft more than doubled the popu m,tion-increase percentage of the same group. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover states, " •.• the question puzzling most people is what caused the principles and morals of some of our youth to degeneratp. to near-animal levels ... I am convinced one of the most damaging is the false teaching which tends to blame Sudety for all the frus- trations, woes and inconveniences, real or imaginary, visited upon our young people. Teenagers and our parents have been subjected to a foolhardy theory which condones rebellious, conduct against authority, law and order; or any regulatory measures which restrict their whims, wishes, desires and activities"
Opposes'S 0 Ivlng . , Poverty P ro bl em b y Bi'rth C.ontrol
RICHFIELD (NC) Teachers of 'religion to teeft agers s-hould stop lecturing from the eat e e his m aJHi str;ve to understand young pe0 ple, an author and lecturer said here. Speaking to some 150 Confra ternity of Christian Doctrine' teachers, high school Sisters and parish priests at Holy AngeJli Academy in this Minnesota com munity, Mrs. Mary Reed New land of Monson, Mass., said·: '~The first thing that a religion teacher should know about teen agers is that they are hard t& understand and that they are not interested. To combat this apathy, the teacher should not atiempt to fully understand the student, but should try to re member what life was like at that age."
Mrs. Newland, mother of six sons and one daughter, advised teachers to make religion mean ingful. ,She suggested using news paper stories as pegs on which, to hang religion. "Take poverty.. racial injustice, the cheating ~c"lndal at the Air Force aca demy and find the relevant doc trine to be applied to them," she said.. She called the Bible the chief source for getting .to know Christ and warned teachers to give their students time to think out and discuss a Bible iesson. "Everyone has a different al'lrm clock in him," she said. "You cannot feed youngsters 12 ':years of catechism and expect them to be baby theologians." She said the most important job of the religion teacher is to love. "What must be taught is salvation history... They must know that God loved the idea of making each one of them," she said.. '
By'Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) In the last J;"elease of this column, I prged the government to refrain from promoting or advocating birth control as a part of its anti-poverty program. I did ll(,)t enter into the current debate on the public policy aspects of the birth control problem, but simply , stated-and should now like control. They simply provide Mr. Hoover goes on to 3ay that society has, failed birth control information to youth in that there has been a failure to teach them "the ,to repeat - that the direct those who voluntarily request it. meaning of discipline, restraint, self-respect and respect promotion or advocacy of Provide Information for law and, o,rder and the rights of others.'" birth control as a part of' the The point is, however, that government's anti-poverty pro- many of the professional ad Parents and those in the position to form the at- gram would be vocates of birth control who . titudes of the public-newspapers, movies" television- an insult to the built up the original pressure in have indeed failed. poor people of favor of these programs would, t hi s country' as indicated, above, like to see As Charles Peguy once wrote: "The worst of parti- and, more spe- 'the government go beyond the' aJities is to withhold oneself; the worst of ignorance is cifically, to poor mere supplying of birth control
not to act; the worst lie is to steal away." Parents wit- Negroes, and information and officially ,adopt
would also sig- a policy of advocating or proheld themselves, taking the path of least resistance in nify that the moting birth control among the
giving in to children, reacting against the harshness of government had poor as a "solution" to ~he probthe thirties and the war strain of the forties by being settled supinely lem of poverty.
DETROIT ,(NC) - University permissive in giving into anything their children want. for a policy of ' Whenever anyone obje'cts to of Detroit law school students They have refused to act when action was called for defeatism or de- such a proposed "solution" to the will staff a le,gal clinic for the sp'air. In mak- problem of poverty, he is likely and have abdicated their role as parE'nts in the vague hope ing this statement, I did not 'to be told, more or less politely, poor and pleaa' their cases ift that someone else-'-the school, the community, the ,Church mean to imply that the admin- that he is a religious bigot. So court under a new federal anti -might do the job for them. istrators of the anti-poverty pro- be it. If it is a mark of bigotry; lioverty program. The university's law school gram are toying with the idea: 'to hold that the government has
The public communications media have glorified the of directly promoting or advo- no business advocating or pro-, has received' a $242,000 grant Hollywood tramps, t;he glamor-seeking sensualists and cating birth control among the moting birth control among the from the Office of Economic have made goodness and morality seem dull stuff in com- poor as a solution to the prob- . poor, I am perfectly willing to Opportunity for a four-point urban law program including parison. lem of poverty. be known as a bigot. I did mean to say, however, I don't want the government the following areas of activity~ A legal clinic for the poor Success has been judged in tenn'l of material posses- that there are many people in, promoting birth control in the .,' eions and no questions asked about how it was attai~ed•. ,'this ,co~ntry' who would like to plush suburbs of America. Why, with 50 law students supervised ,by a permanent st!iH of lawy~l's, ,Masculinity has 'been equated with pretty-boys 'in-,' see the anti-poverty program then, should I want it to do so mvestigators and social workers. move 'in this direction and can- in the slums? , Academic courses for partici Iltead' of with strength, moral and 'spiritual, and' decision' be expected to do everything Population Explosion ~4self-eontrol. . . :, possibie to make their point of . The usual answer'to ibis pating students coordinated wiall , There is, the hope that the pendulum Hbeginning te view pr~vail. question is that peOple who live' 'their clinical work, A general community eduell . . Who's AdvoeatiD~ It! in the plush sUQurbsalready ~wing : the ~ther. :way. ' If the administr"tors o.fthe pro- have acceSs to birth control in- 'iion program via newspapen, . ',' B~.t, meanwhile, 't~ere ,'are stra;nge spirits,' ~Qroad ~gram are evertempteti to give for~wtion,whereas people living radio, television and other medh. 'the land. And Jli)one should ask ,whence they eame.',The into~. this pressure, they ~ili !n the slums do not.. '.('herefore,' to inform individuals of their legal rights and the legal SH answers are' painful.ly D,ear. . want take 'a good hind look the argument goes, the govern at where' it'is coming from.', me,nt, with .full 'respect for the vices available to them. A research program to uncover My' guess is that, by and large, rights of the individual ron-' major legal problems of the,pOor. it .is. not coming from the poor science, should provide such in needed changes in. law schOol themselves, but rather from' _. formation for those slum ciwell variety of outside groups who ers who desire to take advantage eourses and other areas relate4 to the pOOr and the law. think they know what is best of it. . for the poor, or even worse, This argument, it seems to me, are merely interested in cutting would be more persuasive if its down on their taxes by encour- proponents, by and large, were aging the poor to'limit the size aJl concerned about the alleged , , of their families. "population explosion" in the OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER More specifically, I would be suburbs as they are about the VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vati
willing to give odds that the de- alleged "population explosion" can City will issue a special se
Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River cisive pressure in favor of the in the slums. In other words, if ries of stamps Oct. 4 commemo
few birth - control information big families in the slums are rating Pope Paul's visit to the
410 Highland Avenue programs currently being fund- deplorable, why aren't they just UN that day and his appeal for FQII River, Moss•. 02722 675-7151 peace.
ed by, the federal government as deplorable in the suburbs? The series will consist fill
came not from the poor themAre some Americans more PUBLISHER selves, but from local Planned equal than others? Or have we stamps in four values depicting Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD., Parenthood groups and similar so little imagination in the face two subjects: Pope Paul pro organizations. of mass poverty-and so little nouncing his discourse, and the GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MI' 'AGER UN building itself. All will carry These few- federally funded genuine respect for the poOr Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. ,Rev. John P. Driscoll birth control programs, be it that we must patronizingly tell the inscription in Latin, "Pppe MANAGING EDITOR noted, are not in the business of them to get with it and to limit Paul VI, Messenger of Peace," .Hugh J. Golden and the date. advocatini or promotine birth ihe size of their families7.
Students to Staff Legal Clinic
to
@rheANCHOR
Vat,ican'Stamps 'On Papal Visit
Expert S'oys Cano'n Law Needs Revision, Renewal
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 23, 1965
Nuns' Superiors Request Voice In Vatican II
DENVER (NC)-UCanon law in its entiretyJs in need of both revision and renewal," Father Paul M. Boyle, C.P., president of the Canon Law Society of America, told a national meeting of the Major Superiors of Religious Women here, adding -that istic laws on censorship of mail, the need for change particu the need for a companion and larly is presssing "in that confessional restrictions. Such 8ingular section which rules laws should "no longer bind In such minute detail" the lives of ·religious women. The Passionist priest from Louisville, Ky., emphasized that "the end or goal of the law is tremendously m 0 r e important than the means." "Whenever an observance of the letter of the law will hinder the attainment of the purpose or,spirit of the law, then the let ter must fall," Father Boyle said. He added that this "gospel principle" is essential to any true renewal of religious life, though its application_ will be beset with some dangers and difficulties. Calls for Dialogue "In the past 60 years we have ~itnessed a progressive denud ing of religious constitutions, to the point where they are nothing more than cold, canonical pre scripts," he declared. As a partial remedy for this and to promote healthy life in religious communities, Father Boyle called for dialogue' on
community and inter-community
levels, which he said already has
begun to' g a i n momentum
throughout the country.
Father Boyle deplored that church law "still regards women as minors who must be safe guarded and protected," He was critical particularly of unreal
7
DENVER (NC) - Repre sentatives of 180,000 'nuns in the United States have unanimously sup p 0 r ted • historic resolution proposing that Sisters have a voice in Vat ican council deliberatiON which affect their lives. The proposal, which will be submitted to the bishops of, the United States, the Sacred Con gregation of Religious in Rome, and to the Vatican council, cul minated the five-day meeting of the Conference of Major Supe riors of Women here. It states: ''The Conference of Major Superiors of the United States requests that Sister rep __ resentatives be asked to serve as permanent, consultative or or acting members of the Sacred Congregation of Religious, of the Commission for the Revision of Canon Law, and of any post conciliar commission that may be set up for implementation of acts of Vatican II in regard to Religious." Sister Mary Luke, conference chairman, speaking on behalf of more than 400 major superiors from 44 states, said there is "a serious concern" on the part of leaders of women Religious that , "women should have something to do with the regulations that bind them." Sister Luke, the first American woman to serve as a council auditor, urged that this request for representation of nuns within Church regulatory bodies be taken as "meaningful" and given "a respectful hearing," She said she was "very opti mistic" that the resolution would be favorably received in Rome and elsewhere, basing her opti mism on what she called "a fine, open attitude" on the part of the world's bishops.
mature and dedicated women. Our American Sisters are not merely sincere and dedicated; they are also mature and intel ligent," he said. Centers of~ Renewa~ Father Boyle urged mother superiors to make every effort to insure that the same respect and confidence given American women in civil law be accorded their Sisters in the revised code of Church law and their own constitutions. Father Boyle expressed hope that centers of religious renewal will be established particularly in large cities, whel'e trained and competent priests, Religious and laity would welcome Sisters for lectures, discussion and other forms of promoting religious a~d apostolic renewal. "Through your discussions and studies, by your efforts ·and ex periments, may this be your role today-to lead the way, to bear a believable witness to a re newed way of religious life."
Methodist Lauds Pope's UN - Visit
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Meth odist Bishop Fred Pierce Corson of Philadelphia has hailec;1 Pope Paul's scheduled visit to the United Nations as "providen tial." However, Bishop 'Corson said it is not true that he suggested a "summit" meeting in New CHICAGO (NC)-The Meth- York at which Pope Paul would odist Church and the Evangel- confer wi~h American Protestant ieal United Brethren Church and Jewish leaders. have taken a decisive step along Bishop Corson, president of the road to unity of the two de- the World Methodist Council, nominations. was interviewed in the hall of BONAVENTURE (NC) OLD AND NEW LOOK: Sisters of St. Joseph model St.ST. Commissions of the two the ecumenical council which he Bonaventure University has their habits. Left, Sister Louise An old and new look in churches approved a joint con- is attending as an observer. He opened its first residence OIl said the Pope's trip is providen gele in the old style attire, right, Sister St. Ida in new. t'ampus for women. Known as stitution and plan of union to be tial because "it gives the Chris Shay-Loughlen Hall, the $1.1 acted on by ,the general confer- tian opportunity to present its million structure has accommo 'ences of the two churches in position to the worJtl and to datiON for 318 students. November, 1966. The plan would show that the cause of peace is then go to the churches' regional one on which all of 118 can conferences, with implementa- unite." $lon possible by 1968. "The PoPe Is In the supreme -Am t in another Diocese? Complete The Methodist Church has 10.3 position to speak for an of us," queried a startled priest when million members; the United he said. "In public and - he saw 'the new loOk of the Si9- _ Brethren Church, 760,000. ~ramatic way the heads of the ters of St; Joseph for tile first The 'Anglican Church of Can- :protestant churches should show time. Without' fanfare,' the com -ada has approved union with the that we unite with Pope ;:'aul Munity' adopted a radically United, Church of Canada. in his effort and that .~ is speak- " changed habit, and the surprised .; , The action was taken by the ingfor al~ -of'us.~ , prie,st isn't the onli one who'. been taking a second look at the Anglican Church's general· synod, , . Si.sters' trim DeW atti~. , here -in Vancouver,' B; C., com- --, 1 ., posed of the'country's 28 bishops" ~ ,A _ ac:~s
D.esign pf thebabi~_ w,as an lntel'I)ationl,l1 project,. with Sis.., " and ·300 'clerical and lay dele'B~II
. "gates. There. were only three, ter St,. G~orge~d otherSistel'l! '~ssenting' votes, none from - .. BOGOTA (NC) ~ Luis Cardl- at the, Fall River Provincial" bIshops. . _' " nal Concha of 'Bogota issued a House o~ t,ti~ C9mmq.nit)- joining ,., The UnIted Church,' formed in - condemnation of' a proposed bin - forces with a member of the French mot her h 0 u The TAUNTON, MASS. 1~2S by a merger. of, Presbyte- , which would give legal recog nan' and MethodIst -churches" -nition -to divorce and make civil starched,guimpe of the old habit b.~ been replaced b, a neat mil ... must ,still approve ,the merger. marriage obligatory for an Co THE BANK ON
.itar7 collar' and,the -new;vei' and lts tiext meeting is in' Septem- lombians. TAUNTON GREEN_
ber, 1966. Divorce is forbidden in Co lombia in virtue- of the country's Member of Federal DePCllllt
concordat with the Holy See. Insurance Corpora'ion
"The state cannot establish ST. LOUIS (NC)-A $150,000 divorce withou,t transgressing gift from the Wohl Foundation' the natural law/' Cardinal Con WILKES-BARRE (NC)-The cha said. "The state has an ob has been received by St. Louis Polish Union of the United ligation ro issue laws which are University medical school to es- States of North America, a na based on the natural law," he t..'lblish a section of child psychi tional Catholic fraternal organi added. atry. zation, will mark its 75th anni Rt. 6-Between Fan River and New Bedford
Asked if the proposed law Dr. Robert H. Felix', dean of versary here Sunday, Oct. 17, would affect Catholic marriage, ,the school, said the award hon 0". of the Finest Facilities in Southern New England
, - ,with a Pontifical Mass to be if approved, Oardinal Concha ors the two daughters of Mrs. c('lebrated by AuXiliary Bishop said: "I don't see why it should, David P. Wohl. He commented: Available for:'
Henry T. Klonowski of Scranton. because Catholics obey the ec "'There are feW areas in medi BANQUETS • TESTIMONIALS
The Polish Union was' founded clesiastical law and the divine MDe which are 110 urgently in in St. Paul. Minn. in 1890 ~ law. There might be some Cath '-FASHION SHOWS and SPECIAL PARTIES
-need of development as in the Msgr. Dominick Majer to pro- ' olics who would disobey the' 'area of child psychiatry. We are FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CONTAC'J:
teet and educate -.Polish. immi Church and accept divorce but constantly frustrated by the lack WYman 9-6984 or' MErcury 6-2744
grants and to help them bypa. they would be unfortunate .... of trained personnel ill the the language banier. ~ROns." tield."
Ch urc h'es Move Toward Merger
Women's Residence'
New Habits of
Reflect Concern
sOme
BANKING
SERVICE
for' 'Bristol CoUnty
has
Preo-I q t . .,tt : 0-.lVOrce:-·, , ,. '
.8ristol'-County Trust- Company
se "
$150,000 for Child
Polish Union Marks 75th Anniversary
Psychiatry Unit
LI NeOLN PARK BALLROOM
8'
?tfE ANCHOR-:-~i,oc~e of Fall Rtver-Thurs.
Sept. 28" 't965 ~
Asserts Womertt Too Independent
-----------------------~
Grandparents Don't Mind Tots
YoungAuntCan'tStand Racket
By John Jay Daly
(Mary Tinley Daly's spouse, John Jay Dal"
the ''Head of the Housel·)
(';inny, rather agitated, came downstairs on the dou ble, verging on the triple. 'urhis has got to stop," she de dared, determination written all over her face. "What's A"otta stop?" "This noise. This banging of doors. This • • • This· • *" "Who's banging shot at us, from ambush, doors, darling? Who's mak Ginny "but I can't." With that, she ing noise?" "As if you didn't stomped out of the living room, know," she said sarcastical spike' heels and all. ~,
"Th' children, of course. Th'
~tors."
Of course, that would be It.
For several days we've had boy and a girl; two 'ei. our grandchildren. Not only have we had grand ebildren but we've had what eomes along naturally with Jl"8ndchildren - built into 'em; mostly noise. For several days it has beeJl Ilnything but peaceful. Not until now, however, not Wltil Ginny came stomping down the stairs, has there been a complaint. We're so happy to have th' little ones, God bless ·em. That is what Ginny was told, • a reminder: .. 'Suffer the little ehildren,' Ginny * * • and you. know the rest of that." "Yes," s'h e acknowledged, '"that's just it. Of such is the Kingdom of Heaven w hen they're asleep, but when awake Daddy, you've got to put an end to this noise, this banging el doors, this slaying of the pie-anno·· ... ~sitonr-a
• *.
Can't Stanel It '"Remember, Ginny," she wae '"minded, "you, too, were once a baby. But, as you leave your teens, you forget." "Maybe so," she said. "I'm not a baby any longer. As I enter my twenties I cannot stand this con Rant rumpus, this unceasing :racket, this blasting, this bang Ing. Oh" (stamping her foot, looking at her mother and me), "'how can you two, how can you two, at your age • • .?" "Ginny," her mother, warned, fidgeting, "please, leave my age out of tilis!" "Now listen, little one," Ginny was warned by her ever loving daddy, "don't start shooting ages at us, your Mommie and me. Old as we are, we're not yet decrepit-we hope. Even if you ean't, we can take it--no matter how hard they bang the doora. :We, little lady, have been con ditioned by you and your l»rothers and sisters, all seven of ;you, long before this generation arrived. It was like going through the Marines' boot camp. 10, we can take it!" This was the Declaration Of a lBenior Citizen. · "Maybe you can take it, yo. two, since 10U'~ ,Marines,"
,
. "To Benefit Sisters'
, Hyacinth 6re~ '11,' N~~ Bed,:, 'toni Daughte1'll of Isabella, wiU aponsor a card PartY for the ben~ eIit of the White Sisterl at I 'Tue~ay; night, Oct. 5 in Holy Raine Hall, earner of CoWity and tMudley Streets. Progressive whist and bridge will be played and many playing and door prizes will be awarded; In charge of arrangements is Mrs. Emmett :r 4lmond.
Benefit Supper ,.he convent building fund benefit from a beefsteak pie dinner to be served at 6 Saturday night, Sept. 25 in the eo"lvent hall of the Sisters of at. Joseph, 2501 South Main Street, Fall River.
",m
After a few moments of silence (the kids had gone to sleep) Ginny stomped back with an idea. These were her stomping grounds: "I've decided," she announced, "to protect two people who need protection." "From what?'" No More Grandehildrea "From grandchildren," she shouted. "From the Chinese fir-e drill; the banging of doors." Next day we learned through the grape Vine, the Grapes of Wrath vine, that Ginny has started a new addition to the conglomerate societies of Amer ica. As usual we come by this information from overhearing a telephone conversation, though we deny emphatically that we are eavesdroppers: "Yes," Ginny was telling a pal, "and I imagine your par ents would like this idea, too. It is simply this: To protect the old folks from their sons and daughters who impose upon. their parents, making 'em baby sit. Get the idea?" Ginny's listener got the idea. So did we. The new organization will be called, we heard Ginny whisper in the phone, The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Grandparents. 1n i t i a I. are, TSFTPOCTG.
West Virginia Nuns Aid Prison Chaplain
S E R V ICE TO YOUTH: M.aryknoll Sister Jacinta Marie, the former Nancy Donovan of Waterbury, works with youngsters of Mayan bacgrkoll.nd at San Miguel Aca tan, near Huehuetenango, Guatemah. NC Photo.
Marching Nun Image
Participation in Selma Demonstration
Incident, Not Essence
PEORIA (NC) - A Sister of St. Joseph who took part in the Selma, Ala., march warned that the image of the marching nun should not attract young women to a life of religious consecration. "The march was an incident, not the essence," said Sister Er nest Marie Schmidt, who has a doctorate in sociology and is chairman of thE: sociology de partment, Fontbonne College, St. Louis. "Young women ean be at tracted or dismayed by what I did. but they must understand that the Selma march was an in cident, although an important expression of my vocation as a religious woman in a specifie instant," she told the convention of the Peoria, m., Diocesan Council of Catholic Women. Miss Point She later said in an interview: "Every two weeks since Selma I have been asked to join in demonstrations, even to march 0::- Washington to protest the U. S. role in Vietnam. These in vitations came from people who missed the point of our demon stration. , "Sisters," she said, "do have a part to play in race relations, but the demonstration 18 a last
WHEELING (NC)-Two Sis ters of St. Joseph of Wheeling have been sent to prison. Sisters Marie Therese and Leah Marie will work three days a week, assisting Father Paul W. Hickey, Catholic chaplain, at the Federal Reformatory for Women. in Al derson, W. Va. The chaplain requested their services and the assignment was approved by Mother General Mary Ruth of the community, as well as Glad,.. V. Bowman, prison warden. .The Sisters are staying in a temporary "convent"-an apart ment near the reformatory. They are under contract with the Fed eral Bureau of PrisOlUI of the 'Get EI~phant.- : U.S. Department of Justice dur ing their assignment, which in SOO in One Crate eiudetl interviewing and co~el~ CINCINNATI (NC) - Sister ing inmatea' and otherwiSe .... , Mary james Opened .the c.fa~ astini t:be chaplain;: . , assigned to -the IJttle Slate,. of ',the Poor. at ,st., Peter'll Home . ~~hool Oft Holy' Days here in Ohio. ,"Just .,mat we WORCESTER (NC)-CathoUc 'needed," she exclaimed H she -.ehoolii 1ft 'the WorceSter diocese 'looked inside and foun(l-l5OO will remlrln open on holY days eleph;mts. ' But these were Uttle elephants of obligation in order to conform with the' public school calendar, -ash trays, doorstops, salt and pepper shakers, even a pencil :l't!sgr. John 1. O'Brien, superin ·sharpener. They were a gift of tendent, hu announced. Mrs. ,Ella, Mae Sauer, formerly .. ,I of this city, who died recently Announce. Whist 'm Florida. Mrs. Sauer also left A whist party at '1:30 Wednetl '.$2,000 to the Sisters. The elephants were made of day Right, Sept. 29 to benefit the Franciscan Missionaries ol teakwood, ivory, porcelain, china and other materials. Sister Mary Mary will be held at St. Fran cis Residence lIall. 196 Whipple James suggested, perhaps, an Street, Fall River. Sponsoring other home could be found for organization is the St. Cecelia the pachyderms-and a resident Mission Club, with Mrs. Renee of the home suggested maybe Lescault in charge of arrange the Republican National Com
Nu"s
mer'
mittee.
resort technique, justified when a rural Negro community like Selma· is denied normal chan nels' for redress of grievances. "My witness here and now will be a service of excellence. And that," she continued, "will not be as a demonstrator. Sisters like myself are professional ed ucators, not professional protes tors. My service of excellence is more likely to be in the class room and in upgrading a sylla bus for sociology students -* I'ontbonne."
Fan River District The first meeting of the Fan River District Council of Cath olic Women will be held at 8:00 tonight in Our Lady of Grace Church hall, Westport. In an nouncing the session, Mrs. Vin cent A. Coady, president, notes that it is intended for presidents nnd alternates who represent affiliated organizations within the Fall River District.
Sucordium Tea The Sucordiwn Club of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River will hold its annual tea and .reception for new members from 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 26, at the academy auditoriwn; Pros", J.ect Street. '. Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski. will speak, and .acad teachen w~ meet .with parents, :Mrs.. Stanley Bochenek ia club president and SIster' Ba~ b8ra Mary icI' m~er:ator.
..rot.,
WH ITE'S It. 6
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MEXICO CITY (NC) - '.lIbe independence of modern womea is having a disastrous effect Oft marriages and the raising of children, a Mexican mother and author declared. Rosa Maria de Alvarez Urqui za, a leader in this countl'Y' Christian F ami I y Movemeni, said in a talk here that "mMe and more women, under the guise of greater freedom and rights for their sex, enter mar riage in ail irresponsible manne.. "They feel marriage should not intefere with their private lives, and that they can do what they want without regard for the feelings of their husbands," she said. "The inevitable resull is misunderstanding and 1Il~ mately divorce." , Mrs. Alvarez Urquiza said ti* "bachelor attitude" among wom . en has resulted in domination eC children by their mothers, en ating problems for the next generation. "Now," she said, "young girls also are becoming high-handed and headstrong, needing to prove they can ·k~. lIP with the gang.'"
Iowa Family Leaves For Mission Post DUBUQUE (NC)-David Me Ghee, his wife Alice and thew two children, Anne Catherine, 18 months, and Mary' Bridget, two months, left here for the Bahamas where they will serve as lay missioners. . Bishop Paul L. Haga~ O.S.B., of Nassau appointed the McGhees to teach at Mally Star of the Sea School in Freeport, Grand Bahamas, and to condUct catechetical classes on weekendlt ~n native villages.
Columbus Eve Ban McMahon Council, New Bed ford Knights of Colwnbus, win IJponsor its traditional ColumbUII Eve Ball Monday night, Oct. 1'1 111 the Gold Room of the New Fedford Hotel. Many dinner parties and cocktail hours will precede the event, and break fasts will follow. Dancing wiD be from 9 to 1, and dress will be formal. The council. also plana a mystery ride for SaturdaJlt~ Oct. 30.
Fall River Women Fall River Catholic Woman'll
("lub will hold its annual recep
tion for new members at 3 Sun
day afternoon, Oct. 24 at _
Rock Street clubhouse.
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Family Restaurant
The Narrows .. Norttt Westport
Whe,. TJ:Ie, IAtire Family Can Dine
.
economically FOR
RESERVATIONS
.PHONE
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5·7185
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Honyhocks Garden Standby; Colorful, Simple toG'row
THE ANCHORThurl~, ~ept. 23,1965""
9
Scores Wealthy
Classes in Peru
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick
In t1le search for something new and different, gar deners, like everybody else, may find themselves forgetting the beautiful flowers of the past. One of my favorite old fashioned flowers is the hollyhock and although it is not in great use today in gar dens, I think it can serve green and white, offset with • number of purposes and touches of black wrought Iron. walls are a sparkling white deserves m 0 r e widespread The trimmed with a deep border of
LIMA (NC) - Bishop Jose Dammert Bellido of Cajamarca, Peru, has fired a withering blast at this country's wealthy citizens, declaring that they are far more interested in protecting their own interests than in pro moting real social reform. Commenting on the rapid sale of bonds 'to combat communist guerillas, the b ish 0 p said: . "Wealthy people are not anxious, ,to buy bonds to end social in justices. They bought bonds for the struggle against the guerillas because this is an immediate form of self-defense. Fighting social injustices would be a long term matter, and therefore they do not consider it important." Bishop Dammert said he does not believe the wealthy would' assist the poor if it were not for the menace of communism. "AIl social reforms were made out of fear, and all social conquests came as a resuttof strikes and deaths," he said. There has not been a true Christian conscience In Peru, and I do not believe the wealth)r will aid the poor in the prov Inceaon their own initiative."
ue. It .. tall, sturdy, of easy wall paper with a design of culture and thick growth, which, black grill work and trailing makes it perfect for a screen or turquols~ flowers. This elegance a background for flowers which hi carried out even in the floor zequire some' shading from the ing, where Mr. Mello haa-ere hot sun. ated on original design using On a trip to Jamestown ~ translucent, off-white marble eently, we saw a number of very vinyl with an' intaglio pattem handsome gardens which con in black. tained only hollyhock and day The old world charm of the lilies. Both these flowers grow kitchen is also found in a grace pretty much unattended, yet ful, round glass-topped table they made a nice display and supported by a wrought iron served the purpose of brighten pedestal. Matching chairs are ing up otherwise drab front covered in washable olive-green )'ards. Vinyl which is impervious to the Hollyhock may be seeded any four little children of the house time now. OnE! package of seed hold who range in age from 11 should afford enough hollyhock months to five years. to make 'a row 50 feet long, al Distinctive touches 'of black EMERGENCY ARRIVAL IN VIETNAM: Sister M. Elise though I prefer to see them used are again picked up in the tradi Wynen, M.D., of t~e Medical Missj,on Sisters from Phila a little more sparingly. Of tional iron work chandelier and 'delphia, questions a patient carried five miles in a ham course, seed may be collected the .black candle sconces that from hollyhock in bloom, but decorate the walls; and the mock to' Holy Family Hospital, Quinhon, for admission. " Within the past few months, thou9ands of refugees have self-sown seed quite often pro smart use of color seems to cul duces plants which are inferior in the striped Roman settled in Quinhon, where the Medical Mission Sisters' hos , Shared-Time Programi to the parent plant. However. minate shade that Is the sole treatment pital provides the only out-patient care for refugees. NC I have never bothered to buy , For Catholic Schools used on the large jalousie win Photo. hollyhock seed because I am not dow over the main sink and a DETROIT (NC) - Two mON a hollyhock devotee. Plain old, smaller window in a bar area Catholic schools in the Detroit hollyhock Is good enough for my archdiocese will engage ill garden so I just transplant the set off to one side. This bar area , shared-time pro g ram s un. young plants which appear in 'consists mainly of a white for mica-topped counter and a small school year, makin« a total at. the Spring to locations which I four such experimental projects. NCCW Official Sees New Involvement
teel need them. If you do not stainless steel sink that Mrs. One of the new programs, have hollyhock, it is a simple Sabra uses more for washing In Poverty Programs, Race Justice
linking St. Hilary's and Mason matter to seed them. Borrow a and changing the children than School in South Redford Town seed pod from one of your for a mixing center. DAYTON (NC)-Participation a more meaningful area of active ship, will be the first to involve In essence, the color scheme of neighbor's plants and spread the In federal war on poverty pro cooperation," Mrs. Holden, said. elementary school pupils. seed on the surface of a bit of white and off-greens brightens, grams is bringing thousands of WICS also gives women a Sixth graders at St. Hilary'. lOil which has been loosened the kitchen and the Spanish Catholic women "out of their chance to promote racial justice, will split their school day be with a hoe. Not all the seed will motif gives it an air of distinc middle class shell" and giving she added. tween the two schools.' The same germinate, but three or four tion. However, appearance in it them their first on-the-spot view Although Catholic women have division of time will be prac self does not make a kitchen. plants of hollyhocks are suffi of some of the critical needs of "responded tremendously" to the ticed in the other new program cient to make a good showing. Mrs. Sabra is a hostess who en the poor. challenges offered by WICS, linking St. Anne's School and joys nothing more than spend Do not disturb them until the This Is the opinion of Mrs. they, like most other Catholics, Furman Junior High in Warren. ing a day cooking in the kitchen Spring when they may be trans and who entertains at dinner John Holden, of Columbus, social are lagging behind in the strug planted to their permanent loca action chairman for the National gle for racial justice and under leveral times a week. tion. Council of Catholic Women. standing, Mrs. Holden believes. Fund Raising Whist When I asked her what she Because hollyhock make a Interviewed at an institute at. . liked most about her kitchen, St. Catherine's Fund Raising rapid growth' in the growing the Cincinnati Archdiocesan Group of Dominican Academy, season, they need some fertilizer. ' she stated that she loved her Council of Catholic Women at Allow Sunday Evening stove, a stainless steel, two oven ."all River, will sponsor a whlat I use 5-10-5 fertilizer which I the University of Dayton, Mrs. Masses, in Chicago at 8 Saturday night, Sept. 25 at spread in a ring around the plant electric stove with such features Holden singled out for praise CHICAGO (NC)-Archblshop the Academy. Also planned by after it has been transplanted in u teflon-lined removable oven Catholic participation in Women the' unit are a spaghetti supper John P. Cody of Chicago has au the Spring. The one thing which panels and a roast-guard ther in Community Service (WICS). thorized Sunday evening Masses In October and a Dominirola in hollyhock cannot do without hi mometer t hat automatically WICS, interfaith and inter cooks roasts to the correct de in the archdiocese of Chicago November. Next regular meetinC BUD, so they must be planted in racial, recruits and screens beginning Oct. 3. gree. will be Tuesday, Oct. 19. a bed that receives a full day's women applicants for the Job What could be better to stir In his first pastoral letter sun or they will not flower. Corps. Participants in WICS Other than a bit of fertilizer and , up in a kitchen with a Spanish visit tenements and hovels- and since his installation last month, Candlelight Ball motif than a plate of Spanish Archbishop Cod y authorized a normal amount of water they
discover first-hand how the poor parishes to hold one evening Rice. Friends of St. Anne's Hospital, Deed no other care to Speak of.
live, she said. Mass each Sunday between 4 Fall River, will sponsor a can Spanish Rice with Beet WICS is' a cooperative effort, P.M. and 8 P.M. The archbishop III the Kitchen dlelight ball Wednesday, Oct. 20. Jh pound or (1 small can of of the National Council of Cath Most of us women enjoy flip said the evening Masses would nnushrooms drained) olic Women, the United Church ping through home magazines accommodate changes in urban % pound of ground beef Women, the National Council of and suburban living, increased gazing longingly at beautiful 1 cup uncooked rice Jewish Women, and the National sizes of congregations, and per rooms which we never hope to 1 medium onion chopped Council of Negro Women. duplicate. These dream rooms sons working on weekends. 1 nnedium green pepper chop..: 3 Savings Plans are a reality in the remodeled ped ' L a & " In Struggle
home of Dr. and Mrs. James Home Financing 1 number 2 can of tomatoes
Set Ins t a II a t·Ion 'Sabra of St. Anthony of the 1% ,cups boiling water ~ "~n the ecumenical ievel,. the Desert parish, Fall River, which 1 teaspoon salt anti-poverty progr~ has given Dr. Paul van K. Thomson, was decorated by J. Robert Mel 1 teaspoon paprika "... women the opportumtr to move vice-president of Providence lo, N.S.I.D", of Fall River. When Jh teaspoon monosodium glu-, ' from the tea and cookie stage to College will speak at the annual I visited this home l,w.aB, par tamate ' Installation dinner of the Queens ticularly interested in the kitch • 1M. 'teaspoon pePPet:, Plan Ban Daughten of Taunton, to be en, which was originally, a com , 1)' Clean, slice" and set aside held at 6:30 Monday night; Oct. 261 Main St., W areham, ~a9ll.
bination of a small butler's pan the mushrooms (if you are Using , '-i The eighth annual eharity 4 in Sacred Heart School audi Telephone, 295-2400
try and an undersized kitchen fresh) , " '. ball sponsored by the ushen' 'torium.. Tickets are available hllll-l,_11 SI"lce Aftll."
devoid of work space and stor 2) In ~ cup of shortening, committee of New Bedford' Ihrough Saturday, Oct. 2age., Mr. Mello's job was to tum brown beef in heavy skillet. (;atholic Woman's Club Is an';' this ugly, old-fashioned room 3) Add to the skillet, along nounced for Feb. '12 in the GQld into a functional and' beautiful with the beef, the rice, mush- Room of New Bedford Hotel. modem kitchen. It is rare when , rooms, oniol), and pepper, cook- 'I'he for m 1 event is 'chair ON CAPE, COD one finds a truly' beautifui ing ,over medium heat until rice manned by Mrs. Thomas E. Zi kitchen, for most kitchens, if is lightly browned. Stir o:cca- x;oli ,and Mn. ~enrique Rogers. functional, seem sterile 'and lack sionally. ' individuality. 'J:ltis kitcJ:1en, after 4) 'Add to rice mixture toIi),a FQII ,River Nurses having been remodeled, com..', toes and boling water. Stir in bines function' With ' dramatic' mix;tureof salt, paprika, mono . Fall" River' Catholic Nurses' beau.ty. , . ' , f1uild will hold a communion sodiuni glutamate, and pepper. The work area is aU-shaped supper following 5 o'clock Mass S) Tum into 'greased 2 qUlirt design (the pantry and kitchen easserole; cover and ·bake in at St. Mary's Cathedral Sunday havlng been combined) with 350· oven 50 to 60 minutes or evening, Oct. 24. A ,living r0!lary dark pecan stained ca~inets and until rice is tender. Remove 18 planned 'for Wednesday, Dec. AMPLE PARKING a dramatic Spanish motif. The eover for 'last 10 minutell of o at St. Anne's }lQapital j:hapel, eolor scheme is turQuoise. oU va Dakin,i'anRiver.
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10
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Sept. 23, 1965
Red Persecution Of Religion Has Same' Purpose WASHINGTON (NC) Communist persecution of religion today wears a new, less violent face, but its aim remains the same-blotting out religious belief, a Catholic spokesman told a rally protest ing Soviet persecution of Jews. "It is not now so much a mat ter of open persecution, partic ularly in the Soviet Union," said Father John F. Cronin, S.S., as sistant director of the Social Act ion Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference. "The approach today is more subtle and hence more difficult to combat," he added. Father Cronin spoke at a "National Eternal Light Vigil" held in Lafayette Square, direct ly across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. The rally protesting Soviet persecution of Jews was spon sored by the American JewiSh Conference on Soviet Jewry on behalf of a number 'of JewiSh organizations in this country. World Opinion Father C ron i n attributed DIOCESAN COLLEGIATE ENROLLEES: Attleboro ciety. New students are Janet Plante, graduate of Bishop, abandonment by the Soviets of open, violent persecution of freshmen at Stonehill College, North Easton, confer with, Feehan High School and Thomas Gariepy, Attleboro High rellgion to "a certain sensitivity .Rev. Paul J. Duff, C.S.C., dean of students, left, and senior School alumnus. to world opinion today in Rus William Weldon, president of the campus Purple Key So man circles." "To the extent that the com
munist world uses the weapons
of peaceful coexistence and
eompetition among ideas as its main arsenal in spreading its Bi~hops • message," he said, "it cannot hope for success if it uses the erude devices of the secret police WASIUNGTON (NC) The sion-sending soCieties, composed of St. Paul's College here, major tremendous potential' to fullilI and the prison camp.'" seminary of the Paulist Fathers, . their . eollegiai' responsibility." future holds major' changes' in of religious and lay. organiza , However, he added, other the Church's' attitude toward tions engaged in overseas work, told the delegates that cooper "Like so many other things to forms of persecution continue. niission efforts and in the way here in the nation's capital. ation in the new movement is day, cooperation is of the es "'There are administrative har-· it carries on this work, U. S. sence. Resources manPower, c,re- . More Prop-ams indispensable. assments; particularly as regards missionaries have been told. Meeting under the theme, As the U. S. Conference of ative thinking are 'at a premi the building and repair of The Vatican Council has "Revolution in Mis s ion a r y Bishops works out structures to um; the task is enormous, the ehurches and synagogues. Train taught that the Church itself is Thinking: Our Response to De implement its collegial duties problem 'explosive," he declared. ing of Clergy must be conducted missionary and that everybody, Ecclasia," the nearly 1,000 dele 'Needy Churches' , toward the Church elsewhere, in the face of discouraging ob from Bishops to the people in gates were reminded by the he said, "there could be direct . Father Burke spoke of "needy atacles. Liturgical' books are the pews, h'as to pitch in. sponsoring Mission Secretariat and 'constant collaboration be churches," putting aside the tra scarce and religious literature These thoughts emerged in that "the mission activity of the tween them and the mission ditional term, m iss ion a r y hardly flows in abundance from major addresses delivered at the Church (is) no longer regarded se'nding w;oups organiz~d her~." churches. .He explained the .tate printing presses," he said. 16th annual meeting of the mis- as' an adjunct to the 'real' life of ' ''The religious communities of ehoice this way: . the ·Church." . Quotes Pope the. United States engaged in .' ''This usage looks·to empha-' ·This stems', the Secretariat far-flung mission activity offer sizing two things. First, that it ""Particularly formidable," Fr. stressed, from the .Council's 10 the Bishops," he adde!i "a is fheChurch as a whole that ... Cronin declared, are the obsta. monumental document, De' Ec eles placed in th~ way of .reli- ih~ mission and its every'mem- ' clesia, the Constitution on the ber is charged with themissio. . _ious education of the young. Clini~' Church,with its emphaSIS on Catholics' Increase aiy manda~. .
Father Cronin c~ncluded, by _uoting Pope Paul VI's words to ' ~RESNO (NC) ,- A priest the collegial. responsibility of TAIPEI (Nd)-Th~re arfil cur ."Secondly, .it is clear that the . the' 'opening meeting of ihe ('ha.~ged here that, a·.recommen Bishops. ' ' . .. Fently 283,074 Catholics in F~r- old~r conception ,of missioa' fourth session of ·the ecumenical" da~I?nbY a. gran~ ?urr· that a . Tuk. Enormous :, In()sa, .according .10 the' i;"forma;;' churches, .mission~· churches, eou.ncil. Th,ere the PopedeelaJ,"~d:,. f:lln~y ·planmng clIme, be estab Principal concern . ~f th'e' ,as- . non department of' ijIe Catholic cl!urch .. missions" simply "does , '''Toward those'. .. • who by jished for p~rso~s on welfare seinbly ~eI:e is' ~here ·their B<i- , Centra! Bureau, officiai age~c:; not take into account the actual ., blind' antireligious prejudice and· ro~s is a vIolatIon· of public eif;ies .stand as ~e peW' missio~ of the bishops h~re. A year ag9 situation or express proper~y the . lmjustified opposition caUse her ' polIcy. approach is implemen*ed. What . th ere were 265,561 Catholic!!. J1~tureof the Ch~rch its,elf.", 80 much suffering, theCntirch, I'at~er Roger Mahony,' acting is their. role .as more ~ishoP!l 'Ten yf:iars ago there' were. only
instead of condemning, will -en- as spokesman for, Bishop' Aloy launch mission programs, as 48;517 Catholics' and lesS than
tertainfeelings only of love; 'for lIius J. Willinger. C.SS.B., 'of communities, traditionally Tlot 10000 20 yearS ago. ' involved in mission work e n t e r ' . . them she will pray, yes, and in- Monterey-Fresno, told the Fres spired by love, we will all pray no County Board of Supervisors the field, as lay volunteers ex~ that God may show them the that "even outside the area of pand their involvement? Father Eugene Burke, C.S.P., same mercy that we implore for religious belief there are great ourselves." differences of opinion as to how far the government should in:' Commercial • Industrial
trude into so intimate an aspect Says School Aid Bill Schedule Catholic of man's life as the size of his Institutional
Imposes New Duties family." Painting tmd Decorating
LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET HUTCHINSON (NC) - The Charities Meeting Public Policy Elementary Act of 1965 carries fALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The Fall River OSborne 2·1911
"The question of state-sup- duties as well as advantages, "Where Service
51st annual meeting of the Na ported pJ;ograms for the distrithe ,New Ulm Diocesan super Is a J ' ,·tter of Pride tional Conference of Catholic 7-4 Williamson Street Charities here starting Sunday bution of family planning in- intendent of schools said here in formation and devices is more Minnesota. wili deal with the social mission than a religious question. It is Msgr. John C. Ward toid of charity. a question of ·public policy. It ,!lo~e 300 teachers, "It is neces-" Among speakers to the con jnvolv~s our rights as Ameri- sary' for us in priva~ schools Yention will be Matthew Ah sf!" lIlann, executive director" Na 'rans,", the California p,tiest said. . ,to, extend our good will to those The., Cat\olic Ch"rch respec~.s in pUblic, school admirilstr~tion. . .' " . " ' .. tional Catholic' Confererice for Interracial Justice; UrsulaM. .beliefs and .rightS, of all citi~9s, W~. need. ~ re~pond' in a J?osi~ 'I , ," , ' , . ' . .. Gallllgh$-,adoptipn specialist, "'and dQes; not seek to impose 'itS. , iiv.e way; we need to be' much . ' . . . . U.S. Children's Bureau; Msgr. beliefs on, o~hers, heaslierted. . more ,e~ncetnt!d ~bOl1~' ,.1Iu~ii~ , "But, ~~ . the same" tim~ 'lhe sc,h,o~l education." , : .',., .. William R. johnson, president, '" .,' " National Conference of Cathoiic 6hur~l,1)5 '-vi~'ian;i ,~,. pr()te~: ' John Feda, s.uperintendent ' o f , - " . " , . . loom. H~uis. Charities; Thomas Hinton,exec:' citi~ri~, ", eIlPf,!ci~lly the,. po~r, '~hools .at $hakopee,Miilli.,~i~Sefvi'" •••in. to 10 p.in. utive 'direeto~; National Catholic against having prQgrams or .ser- ,c::~p~ration is ne<,:essary. "We vices forced upon' them which inust give honest, frank.'opinions .. .
Community Services; and Ran I, . 'PiGl'WY a~~691.
dolph' Wise, commissioner, Phil';" may ~ at variance Wit~·"~~e.ir· nf what willhe)p our scl?-ools... ~.. 'South Dartmouth" ft'asS.
adelpldadepartment ofoublic own per~onal r~l~gi()l,!..s and tP0r- l>,. trul3,'" ecu.menical.sphjt is wnat .......f;lre. alvalues," F,~~h,ef,Maho!li ~~d.~; wUl ~a~}~~s,,:~~' ;y<;~r~"'"·.",, '.r~~_~~",""'~ffl~_""'"4.~, "' .. ~.. N.~'01~"~' ......._~~ H'4>#'#,'
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Missi~n Says Emphasis on Collegia I Responsibility of
Paulist Expects Major Changes in
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Episco'paI Bishop Calls Cardinal World Figure
1M .a.NCHORThurs., Sept. 23, 1965
11
Episcopo I Bishop Notes Problems In Unity Move
BOSTON (NC)-An Epis copal bishop said hel'e that Boston's Richard Cardinal Cushing today is a distin ~. ,
NEW YORK (NC) -
guished international personal ., ity. '''. Just returned from a six month global tour of Episcopal church missions throughout tire " world. Rt. Rev. Anson Phelps ' Stokes. Jr.. Episcopal bishop of Massachusetts. said: "The car dinal's good works are kndwn throughout the world." Bishop Stokes said he had an audience with Pope Paul VI in Rome which Cardinal Cushing had arranged. In Bombay. India. he visited a seminary which the Boston prelate financed. "Every one tells homey stories about Cardinal Cushing and is con cerned when he is ill." the bishop said. Pope's Influence Bishop Stokes reported that , the influence of Pope Paul has spread throughout the world. • "bringing a new, fresh outlook in the Roman Catholic Church and a new spirit of ecumenism in the mission field." The Epis copal prelate said "friendliness and cooperation have developed among the mission churches. which now realize they must work together." Nationalism of the emerging nations has greatly affected the missions. Bishop Stokes said. "There is a great desire for na tive church leadership. and for the white man to help rather RELIGIOUS FORMATION THROUGH TV: The second year of the television series, th~n dominate." he commented. 'The Little Flock", under the direction of Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters will ''The chances of such a eon 'Yersation resulting, in, act u a 1 start Saturday morning, Oct. 2, over WTEV Channel 6.,. New Bedford. Sister Miriam; union are better now than ever O.L.V,M., operates one of the cameras and assists in preparing S(':ri·pts and visual aidB.' before." he said. "It's always dif ficult to assess what is happen ing. because it is easier for people on a high adminstrative level to reach agreement than it is for the man in the pew to un derstand the issues." , Sees Two Obstacles AKRON (NC)-An authorIty" During her travels., Sister, are interracial home visits M' The biggest barriers to a union of Catholics ,and Anglicans listed in race relations said here the Claire related. she bec~e other student exchanges. suburban school child knows all acutely aware, of the injustice Love and Understandinr by, Bishop Hines are the accept Through sophistication, she ance of Anglican orders and the about foreign couiltries but the first time she walked nothing about the other side of through the streets of New' eontinued. the city is being made' ,issue of papal infallibility. Re brittle and that which is brittle lated' to the, latter is the place the railroad tracks in his own' York's Harlem. She noted that city. normally Sisters are looked lit ean break easily,- while that of Mary in the Christian' life. ,"Teachers very often' for the' and notice~ everywhere they 10. Which is pliable can give and' Episcopalians feel the first first time begin to understand "While walking through Hartake. and ride with the wave.s.' steps in' overcoming these hur "We make a brittle city when - dIes must be taken from the a large part of life and ,the prob- , lem. I was completely ignored~' , -Catholic side. Anglican orders, lerns of our racial structure: For the first time' and in a de- we say this is the eolored sec 'were deClaredrinvalid by Pope when they begin to teach Negro pressing and 'crushing way, 'I, tion, 80 therefore this i1;' the Negro Catholic church; Ne'gro Leo XIII 'in 1896 and although . chi~dreJ;l." ,Slllter, ~laire Marie felt the efiecb of segregation;" ' Catholic church or white Catho- . , many Episcopa1iarnf do not agree of the Franciscan Sis,ters of Mil- " lIiie said. 'With the 'judgDuint they are not ,waukee. told 350 nuns and lay ; "Finally a,little",",l pulled my lic church is con.tradiction~ The' lobbying b an immediate teachers at the Akron - Aree mrt and looking up liaid::-1food' two words when used together' Catholic interracial Council. ehange. m'orning. Sister.', My', fir ,II t cancel each other Out." the nUll Sister Chure., until iaSt June thought was: Honey' by the" emphasized. The' lJroblems inherent ill the director of education for the papal infallibility,.they feei. can , time you reach seventh grade. I Sister' Clail"e. ealled fOr "lOve National Caiholic' Conference on hope you do not hate my guts," be demonstrated' by the dog and understanding, as well all' matic papal utterances on Mari. IDterracial Justice. said the Bhe continued. action, in solving race problems. "What Rome has done with grass is' a little too green and "Then. I think. for the first well kept in the suburbs to give the doctrine of the Assumption the child a knowledge of real time I became totally aware that has frightened man y non I was part of the white power DRY CLEANNG Romans." said Bishop Hines. life. structure that makes the Har and ''The textbooks teach an un "We are willing to pay her lems and the black belts." she FUR STORAGE honor" but many of us think the real world. Children are not added. Roman Catholic Church has learning to live with other peo Sister Claire emphasized that ple. They must learn to know moved beyond the Biblical in people not only across the seas. racially segregated society is terpretation." but also across the railroad 'artificial. and therefore artificial Word of Caution methods may have to be used to tracks and the expressways," the 34-44 Cohannet Street For the most part. Bishop Franciscan nun asserted. bring Negro and white students Hines expressed a note of cau Taunton - VA 2.6161 Harlem Experience together. Among them, she said, tious optimism about - future She deplored the depersonal Catholic-Anglican relations. es ization of life in the cities where .-D.-e....... _ct.-..,-i
pecially as a result of the Ecu-' people are categorized-not by menical Council.' He said it is • special clothing or an ,arm band "hopeful /lign" that the Fathers -bu;t by their ''!ol9rwbich is. . 0 of, ~he council have been' willing eOnvenient and permanent mark. MEXICO CITY (NC) - Two ~I' See Us I to. meet in, open session to eon Sister Claire. now chairmanol 'valuables paintings dating back sider, updating 'the liturgy, l"ell. - : About the sociology department at Al to the 17th' century 'were stolen Mious free.dom and eoUegiality, vernoCoilege, Milwaukee, 'lNlid , ..om Jhe chapel er~ted 'the , ,1'9ur; Church.". he 118id, ~M ' While traveliil; ,aboutlhe eoun~ ' spot where theVir.;in G~a ~meto grips' long- ago", with ,ny she~' sa~ the' negative r~:" dalupe'appeered to ihe' Indian many of the problems Roman ~n8e of Christians' to 'the 'racial peasant Juan Diego. ,,' ,Catholics are' talking iabout." problem ,-- including , Catholic Police theoriz~d tliat, "profee Among these problems, he laity and Religious. '. aoional" thieves entered the ~hap. would lillt the use .of the vernae , :. , ''Too often, the. ~tti~ ~emed' '_I with large Sund\ly crowds, ular liturgy, the issue of Church -- be-,go slow-but meanwhile theJ;l took adv~ntage of lax preWare~am ,'Fal!"o~thi authority, and the place el the , generations were and are sufiei'Cautions,~ ~te~l the p'a~n~iJ;lg~ t eY 5-,3800 ,XI 8-3000 lai9, ' and' dyinc," ~e ROteci. ' eI. the Apostles Peter' and Pav10 s.-._.__._,....-,_.............~
Nuns Says'.,Textboo·ks Teach Unreal World " Must Learn to Know People, Francisan- Avers ,
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Va Iua bl e p. • a.ntlngs St I F Ch I en rom ape
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reformed churches in the United States. Now. in the midst of so cial and ecumenical ferment. Episcopalians are turning to their Protestant neighbors as a means f)f fulfilling their divine ~ommission as a church. ThIS fact, however, should not be misinterpreted by Catholics as the abandonment of some thing essential, said Bishop John E. Hines. the 22nd presiding Bishop of the U. S. Episcopal Church. "If it seems to Catholics and Orthodox that we are surrender ing something essential," he said. "then it will require more con versations to settle the differ ences. We believe unity leads to a church that is more Catholic. Considers Own Nature Bishop Hines, discussing the church unity movement, touched on the Episcopal participation in the Consultation on Church Union. a plan of merger which may eventuallly join his Church with the Methodists. the Presby terians and several other de nominations. "The Church is beginning te l'Onfront the world more seri tlusly than it has in many dec ades," said Bishop Hines. "As a result, the Church is thinking more seriously about its own nature. A part of this process is the whole ecumenical movement' and this Church has been in the f~r~front of the movement for a century.
See Plans Seminary, Five High Schools T'RENTON (NC)-The Tren ion diocese has disclosed plans t'o build a seminary and five new high schools in a $16.5 millitlft p'rogram. ' \ , The' new Sacred Heart Semi. )):uy with accommodations for !30 students will be contsructed' in nearby Titusville. The five new schools planned for Tren~ 1o'n. Piscataway. ,South River; Oak Tree and Hazlet will have t61al accommodations for more ' »tan 6,000 students.' ' : Ex~ansion ~f. five' eXisti~' bi,h schools also is planned. "
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12
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 19~5
Only by Reparation
God Love You
'Interne';- ",'Seat of Power' Written F:rom Recordings
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.O. Much attention Is given to certain 01. the ApOslles-Petn, Paul, .Iohn-but UUIe Is given to Andrew. Andrew the AIJOStIe never preached a sermon that has been reeorded, yet he broul"ht many people to .Iesus. He bronl"ht his brother Peter to .Iesus (.101m 1: 0). He broul"ht a boy with loaves and fishes to .Iesus (.101m G:8). He bro11&"ht the Greeks to .Iesus (101m 1!:2l!). Without An
drew there would have been no Roek of the Chareh, witho. Andrew DO feedin« of the hungry. without Andrew DO Ieuoa .t the seed fallinl' Into the (round to yield rich fruit.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Marvelous invention, the recorder, tape or wire. With out it we would not h1l,ve two of the curridnt best sellers, Interne 'by Doctor X (Harper and Row. $5.95) and The Seat of Power by James D. Horan (Crown. $5.95). The first
is the chronicle of a year's internship by a doctor who 200,000 In an area with a popu prefers to conceal his iden- lation of about a million. tity; the second, a novel It was on July 2 that the inwhich depicts the power of the underworld in a great American e it y. Neither will rank among the finest books of the year, but each in its own way fascinates the reader. But where does the recorder come in? Well, Intern purports to be a diary spoken into ,a tape re- eorder by. the young ~octor during his intemahip. ''The transcript has been edited for coherence and grammar," he tells us, "but every effort has been made to leave the diary unaltered by after'thought or retrospection." As ior The Seat of Power, the narrator is a reporter named Duke Malloy, and Mall07 uses recording devices to get evidence of the corruption which. in this novel at least, makes New York City the pawn of gangsters and crooks. The reviewer frankly admits that he approached Intern' with some suspicion and distaste. He assumed it would be sensational, a money-grubbing expose in the Confidential D;lanner. It proves, however, to be a thoroughly respectable piece of work, one which fulfills the author'a announced purpose. Dedicated but Fallible
That purpose, he saY!l.is to contribute to an understanding between doctors and the general public. ·Some doctors win deplore his book as a breach of ethics, and some of the general public are sure to regard it as justification for filistrust of the profession. But it strikes us as a real contribution to the kind of understanding which the author seeks to promote. Granted, it offers evidence of incompetence, irresponsibility, and bad mistakes in some few instances. But it does not prove that these are the rule. Quite the reverse it shows the profession in general to be skillful and dedicated. • Anyone with an ounce of sense knows that doctors are of the same breed as ourselves, not supermen but fallible and subject to the same weaknesses and temptations as beset all our kind. The book does no more than spell out' and underscore that truth. r Direct Experience. It enables us to see one young man 'makiQg the transition. fr!>m medical school to' practising physician. In school he has been' stuffed ~th. facts and .tb~r.~.\"" has observed" doctors at work, . but has had hardly any.oppor-: tunity to work himself. Then, suddenly, he is hurled into his interneship, and in the eourse of a year gets direct experience in several branches. of medicine. It is a baptism of fire --and of blood. _ Hectic Year One gathers that· Doctor. X studied at Johns Hopkins. The hospital in which he interned sev~al years ago is in the Southwest, a medium size o~e, privllte, and located down town ia a city with a population of
ternship began" and the first assignment was a medicine ser vice, followed by a service in obstetrics and gynecology, two . . in surgery, one in pediatncs, and a second in medicine. Of all these he gives us a practically day-by-day, sometimes hour-by hour, account. Altogether, it is a hectic year, keeping him under constant tension, with inade quate rest and precious little recreation. The wonder is that he ever survived it. The spiritual enters this nar rative of life and death hardly at all. The author refers to going to church on Christmas Eve; it ,is sometimes said of a difficult case that it 1a now in God's hands; but the full dimension and destiny of the people in his care just do not occur to this doctor, or at least never figure in what he writes. For the sensitive. it should be noted that some of the events recorded are gruesome. and the language is occasionally rough. 'Seat of Power' There are gruesome events
and rough language In The Seat of Power also. As well as re peated frustration, but eventual triumph, for the redoubtable Duke Malloy. A 'mobster named Action Jackson, out for revenge against the head of the mob, gives Mal ,loy invaluable information about the numbers racket. This in volves not only the underworld but crooked police, the district attorney, one of the wealthiest and most powerful men in New York City, and the national chairmau of the party in control
in Washington.
LAUDED: Josep Cardinal Beran, exiled Archbishop of Prague, spoke to Council members M 0 n day urging that they vote for freedom of conscience for all peoples. The Council Fathers unani mously applauded the Car dinal as he concluded his appeal based on personal ex periences under the heel of the Czechoslovak govern ment. NC Photo
Dedicates Shrine Of Mother Seton
There are ITOUpS of children who cive carnivals. puppet shows and fairs to raise money for the Missions; indi viduals who write "I can do without candy and mal"azines" and enclose $4; paren. who. inspired by their children's saeri fices. add to them. One eouple cut out oar column and attach b1« the simple note "We boUl"ht a used car Instead of a J1ewone" enclosed a cheek tor $1.500. With DO fantare. and DO laek for anyone to notice, they have provided the Holy Father with • om. that oould educate a native priest, or treat 300 lepeta with II1lltone for one year. or feed 1,500 people Ia the sl1lDUl of Latbl America. A Canadian .woman anonymously sacrificed the '101 she had planned to spend on .... nnneeessary new winter ooat." No one will notice that she .. ,wearin« the same coat lor an other year. but the pOOr of the world wiD certainly notice '101 worth of food and medlciDe. Are you one of the Missions' An drews? God Love Yo1&!
NEW YORK (NC) - Before leaving here for the Second Vat Have you ever wondered -Just where does my money «of' ican Council, Francis Cardinal lust how much good does it do and for whom? How desperate are· Spellman dedicated the Mother those people anyway?". If you have, Bishop Sheen'. new movie Seton Shriqe at· a site where -rile 30th Parallel" will answer all your questions. Those of us she once lived with her husband who live aoove the 30th. parallel cannot envision the horror and and five children. anguish of those who live below. Hunger is not merely an ec0 The newly renovated buildin, nomic problem; it i8 a moral and spiritual one-a greater danger is adjacent to Our Lady of the to 01ir future than atomic warfare. It is around this searing theme Rosary church, built in Federal that His Excellency has fashioned "The 30th Parallel." It runtI style architecture and which hu for 26 minutes and is available through your Local Diocesan stood since the early 18008. . Director. For more information write your Diocesan Director er The Shrine Chapel extends The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 368 Fifth Avenue, -through the church building and New York, N.Y. 10001. is' on the second level with ac commodations for 254 people. Blessed 'Elizabeth Ann Seton's Cut MIt this eol1llDJL, pia your saerUlce to It and maD It .. life is depicted there in stained Most Rev. FaltoD J. Sheen. National Director of The Socie~ lor glass windows. the PropagaUOIl 4tf the Faith. 366 FIfth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Father Joseph I. Dirvin, C.M.. 10001. or to your Diocesan Director. Itt. Rev. Raymond T. COIl biographer of Mother Seton, first "dine. 361 North Mala Street. Fan Itlver. Massachusetts. native American to be beatified, said the Setons moved there on May 1, 1801. This was when William Seton had suffered se vere business reverses and had to abandon a fashionable house on Wall Street.
INC. Mother Seton was still a mem ber of the Episcopalian faith at that time and a parishioner of famed Trinity Church on Wall Street. Her conversion to the Catholic faith came on March 14, 1805, at St. Peter's church on Barclay Street. Mother Seton was beatified bT Pope John XXIII on March 17, 1963.
What is Malloy to do With this bombshell? He takes it to the publisher of his paper, a frail, ill little man who has the heart of a lion. The publisher is all for telling the story on page one, despite the pressure and the peril which this will bring to the paper and its personnel. Discredit Paper
But when the paper breaks the story, it is blanketed by a vast and bloody riot in Harlem, which the grandstanding district attorney exploits to the hilt. When the paper returns to the story, key witness are destroyed at crucial moments. And all the fearsome power or"the supposed ly respectable public figures who will be hurt by the revelations is crushingly marshaled to si lence .or discredit, the paper. The cause seems hopeless. But CHICAGO . (NC)-CompaniOll Malloy, who is, as durable as take-off and landing prayers for Doctor X, never· gives up. And travelers using airlanes are a ~ honest assistant district at vailable without charge through torney_ goes alon3 .with him. ·,the Passionist Fathers, 5700 N. ].foreover, the cause of :right Harlem. 'Ave.~ here. The prayers finally gets some big breaks. were' composed by Father Con: Finally, the forces of evil are leth Overrnan;C.P., for are-. nailed-at least temporarily. treat he gave to airline personThis "is a huge book packed nel. with cardboard cutouts and overloaded with cliches and hackneyed dialogue. It begins haltingly, but when, about half way through, it hits a fast pace,
it has a generous measure of exArthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. citement. The author informs us, DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM "This story never happened; its "SUPPLIES people never' lived." If the story, 204 ASHLEY BOULEVARD in·. its full working out, has no counterpart in real life, -the peo New Bedford pIe ,and aitiletiQWjJ unfortunate17 WY 3-8405
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The Missions are helped by Uttle people Uke Andrew. ODe Uttle girl, aged five, sent her most precious possession-tbree marbles- for the Missions. We telephoned to thank her. After all, how many others give their most precious possessions for the ,JIifissions? There are some women In the world who have diamonds that are no more precious to them than Suzy's marbles were to her. We have few rich friends for the rich usually give to those who already have millions. But we have millions of poor friends, Andrews and and Andreas, who bring souls to Jesus;
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Cltristion U"ity Prayer Week Jan. 18-25
Ruling Prohibits Religious Rites In Public School
NEW YORK (NC) - The annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity will be held from Jan. 18 to 25, 1966 under Catholie and ProtestaDt auspices. The week is co-sponsored by the Catholic Association for Christian Un i t y of Lyons, France, and the World Council of Churches' Commission of Faith and Order. The Depart ment of Faith and Order of the National Council of Churches eosponsors tne week in the U. S. For the first time, a common leaflet of prayers will be avail able for use by all denomina tions. Sponsored b.y the WCC and NCC faith and order groups, :it is also recommended by the '0. S. Bishops's Commission for Ecumenical AHairs. Msgr. William A. Baurn, exec utive director of the Catholic bishops' commissions, said Cath olics "have had the privilege of eollaborating" in the preparation Of the leaflet. Joint Etfori "We are deeplY' grateful. for this opportunity," Msgr. Baum commented, "and look upon this joint effort as an important step ill the development of our work ing relationship with the Na tional and World Councils of Churches. "In the light of the Decree on Ecumenism of the Second Vat ican Council, which summons Roman. Catholics not only to en gage in dialogue and in common churches, but also to pray for witness with Christians of other the cause of Christian unity, the observance of the week of prayer has taken on a new' and deeper significance. . "This leaflet is an admirable means for the fulfillment of the purposes of the council docu ment, and it is hoped that it will be widely used by Roman Cath olics as they pray. among them selves and with their fellow Christians."
13
LANSING (NC)-A rm ing by Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley prohibits students in public schools in
Michigan from conducting any religious exercises on school property during regular school hours. Kelley, a Catholic, issued the opinion at the request of the state superintendent of public instruction. He said he based hie opinion on the first amendment of the U. S. Constitution prohib iting state establishment of re ligion. He said he also drew on If. So Supreme Court decisions prohib iting religious exercises in pub lie schools. Although net religioWl axeF eJses, including reciting prayel'l and reading the Bible, are per NEW APPOINTMENTS; Pope Paul VI has named i;hree new members of the hier mitted during school hours, Kel said a "strictly voluntary" archy, left to right: Auxiliary Bishop John J. Maguire to be titular archbishop of Tabala ley program of· student prayer 01' and eoadjuto1' archbishop of New York without right of success;on; Msgr. (Brig. Gen.) other religious exercises is per William J. Moran, deputy chief of Army chaplains, to be titular b~shop of Centuria and missible if it does not take place auxiliary bishop to Francis Cardinal Spellman in his capacity as Military Vicar of the during regular school hours. Kelley said religious COUl'lJeB U. S. Armed Forces; and Msgr. Terence J. Cooke, vicar general and chancellor of the part of a secular program of New York arehdiocese to be titular bishop of Summa and auxiliary bishop of Cardinal as education are "not prohibited .Spellman. NC Photo. when presented objectively." Legal COMlusioDS He also ruled that religious holidays may be observed if the emphasis is "on what unites rather than what divides," and the recognition is slanted toward teaching about their origin NEWARK {NC)-There were dme I gave something.• nutritionist to show people rather than toward indoctrina nurses, teachers, auto mechanics, For next Summer, CASP how to make best use of the food tion. He said no ceremony or re A truck driver, a young business hopes '" recruit, among others, distributed by Caritas, auto ligious instruction can be held man and college students. mechanics and. earpenters to to celebrate a religious holiday. Religious symbols can be used In all, 26 young Catholics, with teach their skills to the unem Father Edward Cooke of Ram ployed, someone who can show only for educational purpos~ ~y, N.J., as chaplain, spent the the people how to construct Ie-' and to promote understanding of Summer in El Salvador and trines, someone efficient at their significance. Kelley declared that his oplB Guatemala working on social making jelly lIP the wild straw MIAMI (NC) - Damage ex improvement projects for the berries and peaches can become Ion was "an expression of legal eonclusions and not a statement poor and encouraging people to eeeding $100,000 was inflicted the basis for an industry. cn churches and institutions in CArry on after they left. Interest by young people ,. 01. personal views." Kelly said the law should M' the diocese of Miami 'by Hurri Pl'ojects such as these is a Matter of Reciprocity eane Betsy. phenomena of the period and followed as it "has been ex The program, known as CASP : pressed until it has been changed Although the <to-mfte wide has caught on in this area. - Central American Summer ~ a valid constitutional process, eoye of the storm reached the Parishes to Elect Projects, worked through Cari For instance, there is the 01' until it has been interpreted tas, the refief agency in the two 'ower east coast at Key Largo, Seton Hall Summer Projects in a different manner by •. Laity Committees eountries. They opened centers some 40 miles south of Greater program, directed by Father higher judicial authority." PITTSBURGH (NC)-A com where hundreds of children are :Miami, the storm hurled high Robert J. Fennell at Seton Hall tides and winds along the coast mittee of laity in every parish of now receiving a cup of milk a University in South Orange. the Pittsburgh diocese to serve day; helped in a clinic where line in Dade, Broward, and Mon That program found young meB Villanova Grant roe counties, breaking over sea going to Honduras to help the as a consultative body to the almost 1,000 people wete treat VILLANOVA (NC) - Twe pastor "in all matters that per ed in six weeks; taught sewing walls and c au sin g extensive poor build decent homes two lfJ'ants totaling $40,000 have been water damage. tain to the temporal and spiritual in a town where a volcano had girls going to Mexico to teach made to Villanova University good of the parish" is called for destroyed most of the peoples' As hundreds of homes were English and four student nurses here in Pennsylvania by the Na in a revision and updating of possessions; did some construc without electricity and subse going to Mississippi to work with tional Aeronautics. and Space IYnodal statutes. tion work and taught in para quent refrigeration, Miami's the Negro population. They en Administration. Before his departure for the ('hial schools. . B ish 0 p Coleman 1'. Carroll gaged in home nursing and made granted a dispensation from the a medical survey in the area fourth session of the Second Interest Swells Vatican Council, Pittsburgh's . They also studied the needs laws of abstinence foI' FridaJl'o of Greenwood, Miss., where they worked through the Pax Christi Bishop John J. Wright effected ftlat will face them when they Sept. 10. Building Contractor the updating and revising. 80 back next year. Heavily hit by 1M turbulent Center where a number of Sem inarians were also engaged ia The laity committee will aid Why did they do it? Diane forces of the storm which raged Masonry IUmmer programs.. the pastor in matters including Euletza explained: "I've been for almost 24 hours was Immac expenditure and investment of .-Ietting things for. 20 years. It'. ulata-LaSalle HighSChool lo African Aid parish funds; implementation of . cated on Biscayne Bay in MI Besides the CASP and Setoa the liturgy and counseling the •• ami'. southeast section; I'ill and Hall programs, .there are pastor a1:>,out "comnlUpitY.' trends, Organ IzatlOft tel . IOU were washecJ away :fr0ftl other recruiting "groups in this .problems and. opportunities.. that. teO t" . the sea wall and the enUre pro area. ·One i. the Newark Liaison eall for aPQstolic Cl()operation,· 0 Iflca n ft 10ftl. perty was five feet deep _ _ for the 'FoteiiJ'l'and Domestic, ,it ~as ~pl~.l}~(1. .. . SEVILLE (NC),~ The ~resl- Mawatel'. . Lay .Apostolate and the 'othel'. . .7 JIA~' S'fIIft' , -'The statute· makes' no distlne-. cJent m the CathoJre Action CoB .. 'Operation Cl'OS6roads, Whicb '. I.ofMl A.... . tton betweeB male. and female fraternity, of, LabOr in Spain hBII FA1RHAVEN WY 4-7.' collegians for construe-' The parking l~t.at the 8cho«li', :reeruits ·members of' parish ~mmitn!etv, again denied his ,roup has any' tkm work in Abicia.· . :Which. is- ~aHed by the SiateJ'l - , .. 'specifies the corrimi'Hee iBto bti JlOH~eal goa15 or desire toeup Of St. Joseph of, St. Augus deterinined by a vote of parish plant the country's single, obli tine and the Christian BrotheJ'l, ioners,and provides that persons gatory trade .union. 18 Jrears of age and older m&f' The statement waS iMUed b.y was partly destroyed and· partly vote. Teofilo Perez Rey at the 19th under six to eight inches of sand national eonvention of the lay' and rock. A few blocks away lapostolate group here. Leaders in the Christian Brothers' resi Real Nice Gift dence, the water roSe to five feet. (rf the Falangist-oriented nation CINCINNATI (NC) - Xavier . al union have expressed' fean - Near the downtown Miami University here has reeeived a 1hat the confraternity is trying area at St. Bosco Mission, the $'750,000 gift in stocks and eash to . wrest control of .the labor parapet wall of a reeently. con MANUFAcrURERS from the Walter· E. Schott Fami verted commercial. building top movement from 't~ govern ly Foundation. The gift will be pled, completely demolishing ment-backed union. used to pay part of the cost According to Perez, the eon ·three autos belonging to two . , BRISTOL COlJ'NTY
of a new SO-room residence for fraternity "wants ,to be a focal priests and a layman. At Villa ksuit Fathers, which will be {.oint for drawing people to the Madonna Residence for Young TMI ARIA'S MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK
named for Walter E. Schott, Church We wish to affirm once Working Women, located in a Cincinnati industrialist, who more that it is not an organiza :former apartment house, fire NORTH ATTLEBORO • MANSFIELD
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Jersey Groups Help Central Americans
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14
Chaplains S'core Christian Apathy In Far East
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1965
Catholic Schools Basic Need In Latin American Lands
MANILA (NC) - Nearly two dozen university chap lains from 12 Asian countries have issued a statement at
From "The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. At the Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program sessions it was very evident that there wa.~ great interest in the Catholic schools of Latin Americ,a. Essential infor mation on education at the continental level is provided fro m the study of Dr. ers of our Catholic movements Gabriel Betancur, the distin have always come out of our guished Colombian author Catholic schools. I think we ity now an officer at the share your experience. We are Paris headquarters of UNESCO. Catholic education data is cited as compiled by the Inter-Amer ican Confeder ation of Cath olic Education (CIEC). One of the most effec t i v e speakers was Miss Mari na Bandeira, a ,pioneer in basic education in Brazil. She presented in masterful fashion the story of the extraordinary develop ment by MEB in Brazil of the radio educational techniques worked out originally by Msgr. Salcedo in the mountains of Colombia. Value of Schools "I am not a school man," re marked one of the participants at the conference. "I have been in the social apostolate eleven years. But I continually hear at this type of gathering the thrust against education in the formal sense of the word. "People speak here of 'build Ing the Church rather than
schools or even churches.' Every
one of us is the product of an educational institution. I've di rected hundreds of young peo:" pIe who've dedicated their lives to Christ,and the great majority came from the institutions we tend to condemn. "An understone in the Confer ence here says, 'Let's get down with the people. Let's be Christ am 0 n g the people. In Latin America, quite as here in the United States, these old iristitu tions where we keep all these priests and nuns as teachers in what is known as the Catholic , school system-that's a waste of time.' . . "It seems to me that we are eutting off our own noses when we voice such utterances as, 'Let's get out and save the world In the market place. You teach ers in your ivory towers are apoilirig your substance.' " "I !iqn't t~.ink, Father," a fel~ low participant :replied, "that
there's' any attempt to abolish the Catholic educational system. There's niereiy.'astronger com plaint in these days that our Catholic school system today does not produce the right kind of leadership. It could but it doesn't. There is de~ire to re examine the Catholic education
al system as it serves both the United ,States and Latin Amer ica." ,"In Argentina where I hail from," said Father Luis Dolan of the Passionists in Buenos Aires, "I can't say that the l~ad~.
'a
Auxiliary Boards LANSING (NC) - Seven area boards of education have been established in the Lansing dio cese to represent specific schools in designated sections of the 15-county diocese here in Mich Igan. Father William F. Meyers, d i 0 c e san superintendent, of schools, said the boards will serve as' intermediate districts under the diocesan board of ed 1aCatioa.
tacking the apathy of Christian communities in the Far East re garding problems of economic and social development. The apathy, they said, can only be overcome by an edu cated laity that will become in volved in problems without' prodding by the clergy. The statement was issued in the form of a letter mailed to Catholic bishops in the Far East following a 12-day meeting here sponsored by Pax Romana, in ternational society of Catholic students and intellectuals.
not being taught what the pres ence of Jesus in 1964 should mean in our lives. We must put leadership into our schools, into our churches. But how do we bring this about? How does Jesus become a living reality? How do we inspire those thou Need More Attention sands of boys and girls from so many loyal Catholic families? "In the turmoil of Asia," they I'm only a missionary, not an '~aid, "non-Christian students are educator, but I think this is our playing an open and significant crucial problem." role. It is clear that the campus leaders of today will be the' po Private Schools for Rich litical and social leaders of to "I direct a question to Dr. Cal morrow. Most Christian commu vani of Venezuela," ventured a nities in Asia, especially those discussant. "In view, Doctor, of that have inherited Christianity the fact that one of the problems in a Western dress, are tradition in Latin America is the concen ally passive, apathetic and out tration of the wealth in the of the national arena." hands of the few and, further, of The chaplains suggested that the'urgent need of a well-formed bishops devote more attention to Christian laity, why do you sup college students, providing more pose a community of Sisters in chaplains who are better trained. Brazil recently closed a school LEADER: One of the first parochial schools to ini They said Catholic student or engaged in teaching the aristoc tiate the school, lunch program in cooperation with the ganizations should not provide a racy? U.S. Department' of Agriculture was the Mission of San "warm and sheltered atmo "Since some at least among the wealthy would seem to be Francisco de la Espada in San Antonio, Tex: Father Charles sphere" but should be a vigor the people who might aid in the M. Pugh jokes with some of the boys enjoying a warm ous training ground for future activity. proper distribution of the na tional resources and in the lunch. NC Photo prosecution of the much-needed R t C -. social revolution, it seems particularly important to make as many as possible among the wealthy into well-formed ChrisLOS ANGELES (NC) - A tian leaders." weekly radio program designed "What you say proves the neFto keep, Americans abreast of essity of a general plan," Dr. happenings at the fourth session Calvani replied. "Without knowof the Second Vatican Council i~ the plan of the area in. t ki f i 1 is being made available with LULING (NC) - "For a man anCien ss 0 peace n so emn out charge to radio stations v Ived, one could not judge the to be at peace with Christ, he. Masses-is then passed onto the wisdom of the move made by the must be willing to be at peace next person, and so on through throughout the country by the . Paulist Fathers. ' · t ers. B u t if suffi' S is Clent proVlwith his brother." the entire congregation. sion already exists for teaching Words are sometimes inadeProduced in Rome and known' Father Guste said the hand in a given community, or if still quate for conveYI'ng this mesas "Vatican Report," the program graver needs of another variety sage, says Father Robert I. shake is "electrifying" and "hits f'onsists of a 15-minute news d epth commen the S'st " . h ave ansen, I ers wouId Guste, and even weekly or daily you" with the true significance and anaIYSlS-ln,ce rt· . -'f'Ied i n c1osamI y seem JU"U receptl'on of Communion can of Christian brotherhood and tary on issues discussed at the love. He feels the handshake ing their schoo1, subconsciously become routine, council. Father Ellwood E.Kei "Usually our private schools will help people carry over into C S.P to with the true significance for- their daily lives this brother1yser, . ., serves as narra r in Latin America receive no gotten. and interviewer on the program. support from the State. The To dramatize the true mean- 10,ve. Tapes of the program will be Catholics themselves must pay ing of Christianity, Father pent to participating radio sta for_Catholic school instruction. Guste, pastor of St. Anthony of ~ons each Friday until Dee. 10, Hence with the map of any city 'Padua 'parish here, has inaugu. ., it was announced by Paulist Pro one may discemthe pattem of rated a "handshake of peace" at" ductions. 17571) Pacific Coast Catholic education.' Tbe sections • Mass every Thursday evening, TRENTON (NC)-Gov. RI'cb- ,Hig.hway, Paci~ Palisades, where the poor live have few in the rectory,s l'lvmg, . room. ,.. , ard' ~.' Hughes has 'pro---ft...i 'that '" C a1if• Catholic grade schools and no P ~_ P l'V"CU '" el'SOn... erson the state help provide dormitory col.leges ,while the neighbor-, T st bef C nl'on, the
hoods of· the wealthy are well.. I "t'U 'b .oret'h' °hmmdush Ire" "S:pace linSublic 'and private col dotted with schools. Thus ,the:' . ec or egms· e an a ex- 'l~geS by' authoriZing'" Nevl'Jer " ' gaiJi credence fot.' ,change ,by approaching ,a person. I ':;'''''c'o'''''e'.g'·e' do','rm' ito-" a'nd bWldCommunists f h ~C;T III . neal' :the.. ftonto 1 e congrega..", In'g' ·a'u' thon·'ty·.' ..." their' charge' that the religious'· ·tb him, tion, shaking h an ds , ;W:l: ..' . ' , c,ommunities serve only the rich ,and saying: "The peace of Christ, '. ThE) }tov~,rnor ~id ,aPPfopri-, COMP~NY iU;i<i powerful.:"", , "be .witb YQIJ." " '", I ' ~!~ legls'a~o.n Wl?uld»e, qrafted
Pri,est Must Plan ,,~~, with: ypu,". is tq~.. ~ply." an~~res~n~~ ~ t~~,~gl~lature,
'Tlie phinning for better bal- , The .gre~ti.ng..."..a fo~ ,¢/ the, thif, Fiill" Tpe a".~hl?~ty. :w.~uld",
Complete' Line' ance needs to begin with t h e · be patterned after a slmll~r one
Han d $ ha k e' 0 f Peace
epor s on ounci Available to Radio
Members of Louisiana Congregation h G' M Exc ange reetlngs at ass
'Suggests Dormitory BUilding Authority'
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poor has no money even to eat, let alone conduct a free or low. . . fee school. The parish of the rich ELIZP.-BETH (NC)~Fou~ pas-, possesses education in abun- tors here have Complained that dance " Even when a primary 'noise and vibration by jets tak- , school is provided for the poor, ing off from nearby Newark the low-fee secondary school, Airport are disrupting churcb so important during those years services and school classes. when it is, dangerous for the Representatives of the four young man to attend public parishes and of the aviation in school, is not available. dustry attended a meeting called "I strongly recommend seekby Mayor Thomas G. Dunrie to, lng to form loyal Catholic see what could be done about, teachers for the secondary the nuisance. ' Schools of the public educational The four parishes are ill the system. The anti-clericals' and Elizabethport section, in the the ManOsts make great efforta ~keoff 'path of planes leaving everyWhere to win the second- Newark Airport. Adding to un .sry school' teachers. In Yene- easiness is the fact that planes zuela we have had success ill have crashed in the section three penekatin, tbia field." Umea ill the last decade.
the. ~~ute shortage of dormi~ory , faclhties and other buildmga
in New Jersey colleges and 'uni- ,.
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Warns Against Sweeping Aims Under Rug
ANCHORIS She's Modern As Space Age, But Ann Turner ,THE Thurs., 23, 1965 Has Lost Heart to A ncient Greece, Rome Canada Women
,Sept.
CINCINN ATI (NC) - A She's modem as the space age, but her heart belongs to the classics. Pretty Ann Jesuit Educator pra.ised Turner of St. Joseph's parish, North Dighton, is a Latin and Greek major at Trinity Catholic colleges for their College, Washington, D.C., and so proficient in the language of Caesar and Cicero that "commitment to intellectual .last year as a junior she taught a freshman Latin class. She ranked first in her class excellence," but warned against academically every semester "sweeping the moral and -reli since she entered Trinity as gious aims under the academic a 1962 graduate of Sacred rug." Father Charles F. Donovan, Hearts Academy, Fall RivE:r. I
Endorse Social
Action Prog ra m
JASPER (NC),-The Cath
olic Women's League of Can
ada has entered on a, full
scale' program of social ac
tion. Catherine Toal of London,
Ont., CWL president, described
the program as one of observing,
judging and acting, in coopera
tion with women of all faiths.
"If women of all faiths com
bine to study common commu
nity problems, we will have
more effective action. There is
no reason why we cannot come
together to improve conditions
in our communities for the bet
terment of everyone," she said.
She told the CWL convention here in Alberta that the program follows a guide prepared by the National Catholic Social Life Conference, in Montreal, which suggested seven aspects of com.., ..... munity life for study: church life, leisure, civic life, education, health and welfare, industrial and international life. First vice-president Mrs. H. T.
Donihee of Cornwall, Ont., said
"The importance of the work of
social action has been known for
some time. This will re-structure
the league to adapt it to modem
living."
Miss Toal noted that several
parish councils "have already
begun to study social and eco
nomic problems in their commu - nities and have invited members of all other denominations to participate and work with them." New Church
At a panel discussion on social
action, Father P. B. O'Byrne of
Calgary said the CWL constitu
tion is 25 years behind the times.
"It gave the parish more au
thority and tied you too closely
to the parish priest," he noted.
"You should be put in touch
with the new Church."
Father O'Byrne said he would
eliminate clerical direction of
the CWL because "many priests
tend to stifle the League's work."
But Msgr. Charles Empson of
Winnipeg defended the clergy
mel). While there may be some
some directors who have stifled
the league, he said, "more fre
quently they have guided coun
cils to fruitful work and saved
the OWL from becoming a tea
party. The director.is a spirit~l
counselor or he is no director
at all."
As a junior at SHA, Ann was S.J., vice president of' Boston College, declared here: "Any invited to enter Trinity under consideration of the mission of its "early entrance" plan, com the Catholic college or uh~ver bining her senior year of high school with her freshman year sity in the mid-sixties must ad of college. She decided against vert to the problem of keeping a proper balance between the it, however, not wanting to miss senior year fun at the Fall River primary intellectual and the secondary but still essential academy. spiritual aims of Catholic insti Few Enthusiasts tutions." Ann hopes to teach Greek and Offsetting Danger Latin on the college level after graduation, but admits she may .. "In the recent altogether com have trouble scraping up stu mendable and even exciting re dents. "I've had as few as two affirmation by most American in my Greek classes," she said, Catholic colleges and universi "and never more than four or ties of an unequiVOcal commit five." ment to intellectual excellence and scholarship, there may be an She thinks her teaching of offsetting danger of neglecting freshmen helped her~own s·tudies. or belittling the moral and reii "It kept me up to date on funda gious aims of our institutions," mentals, and the teaching expe he told the annual faculty con rience helped me decide that I ference ~t the College of Mount would like it for a career." St. Joseph. Blue-eyed Ann hopes to em Despite the "complete reli bark on graduate studieS next gious dynamism" of American year. "Maybe at Johns Hopkins higher education in its first two or Harvard;' maybe abroad," she centuries, today "a very large mused. number of academicians find re She is youngest "by 11 years" ligion, piety, or character simply of four children of Mr. and Mrs. irrelevant as far as colleges and Roger A Turner. "It was like universities are concerned," he gllowing up with five parents," said. she chuckled, "and I guess I was Some Catholics question the pretty spoiled." utility of the church-affiliated Last May, ·Ann received the college, Father Donovan said, ,,--St. Catherine medal for under while others "with complete graduate achievement at the self-assurance state flatly that Spring honors convocation at the day of the separatist Catholic Trinity. The award is .made an institution is over and that the nually by Kappa Gamma Pi, the Church must devote its energies equivalent of Phi Beta Kappa ~to an exclusively sacred, and for Catholic women's colleges, to sacramental ministry to Catholic an undergraduate nominated by students on secular campuses." the faculty in each Kappa-affil ANN TURNER
Essentiai Purpose iated college for academic .Father Donovlln made it clear achievement and outstanding of Christian Doctrine and also gians? "Regularity is the most that concern for religious and service. • belongs to a liturgical life com important thing in study," she moral development, while it is Keep At It mittee at Trinity. says. She spends about eight an "essential purpose," never Ann is a dormitory president Has this outstanding student hours a day at her books, apart theless is not the "dominant pur for next year and will be a any advice for upcoming colle- from time in class, which may pose." member of the executive board make less eager students reflect, "The distinguishing aim of of the student government asso along with one of her favoriate higher education is intellectual ciation. She is active in the dis classic authors, "Knowledge development, differentiating it cussion club branch of the cam maketh a bloody entrance." from the home or from parish pus chapter of the Confraternity organizations * • • which have But such labors have left Ann JERUSALEM (NC)-The ul more explicit obligations as re quite unbowed. She lovesswim- tTa-Orthodox Jewish d a i I y gards the sanctification of their ming, is a former member of her newspaper, Hamodia, greeted the parish choir, and was an enthu members," he said. opening of the ,fourth session "But it seems to me that we siastic Girl Scout in her earlier in American Catholic higher ed PONCE (NC)-The theology of the Second Vatican Council years. And at the conclusion of ucation have just been through a pro g l' a m at Regina CIeri by ,saying that the "Jewish doc-, her interview this budding clas- ' ument Served as a football for' sicist zoomed 'off in a -station per~od of overintellectualism, of . Major Seminary, Puerto Rico's
extreme sensitivity and diffi only major seminary, has been ~ i,nternal politics ol·tbe wagon' in approved collegiate dence about the moral and reli style. temporarily !'!uspended l!ecilulle Church. gious aims of OUl' institutions," . of an insufficient number el, -"The many. adventures' which Father Donovan continued. 1he document has had testify' students. Sixteen major IIeminarians ill that it will- probably be shelved. The. cOuncil eoncerns only the: theological studies at, the liemi nary have been transferred to Catholic Church and not the' ONE STOP , St. Vincent de Paul seminary at IOns of :PeoPle pe-pseeuted for 20 SHOPPING CENTER
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.nl: ArK.nUI(-UIOCese of fan RIver-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1965
Suggests Anxious Mother
Have Recourse to Prayer
By John J. Kane, fh.D. "I became pregnant in high school. Mv parents sent me away.and ul'ged me to have the baby adopted. I refused, kept the baby and when' of age married the father of the child. We are quite happy, but we worry because our child ren will find out. We have ebrating such occasions. ' no wedding pictures, celeDan~erous Pli~bt brate no anniversaries and Your present plight is really we wonder how long before a dangerous one. If you allow
....
our children will ask questions. How can we tell them not to get sexually involved when we did?" Why contin.ne to torture yourself with a neurotic anxiety over something that happened yea r s ago? Of course, it was wrong. You have repented for it and you can do absolutely nothing about it now. If you contintle in this vein you are likely to develop a full blown anxiety neurosis. You can't do anything about wedding pictures now and if or when the children ask about them tell them you don't know where. they are. Or tell them you just didn't have money for them, which I suspect, is true. You may even add you regret this and hope your children, if they marry, will have pictures taken. One Complication At present there is no need to tell your children about your circumstances. There is, how-ever, one complication which may arise. If the oldest child ever compares the date on your marriage certificate ·with the date of his birth, he' will be aware that he was born .out of wedlock. But there is no reason why he should ever see your wedding certificate. But such information may be Oft his birth certificate depending on the state and year in which he was born. There is also the question of the name that appears on his birth certificate. At some time in his life for a number of reasons he may have to have this document. When this happens you may have to ten him the truth. The . older he is when tbis happens the better. Since· he loves you deeply it may come as a shock. But when you explain your own courage at that time, I not only believe he will be sympathetic, but will love you even more. Please do not fear this eventuality. Monl Teaehin~ I cannot see why your (twn past life is any reason why you would hesitate to warn your own children against such dangers. If it has any effect on you, it should be just the opposite. Since you .have and continue to suffer so much as a result of your own indiscretion, your motivation in this matter must b.e even stronger than it ill with most parents. After all, this is a matter of moral teaching. It doesn't depend upon whether or not you ever violated such laws. Millions of parents who at some time or other violated the moral code in one way or the other must still warn -their children against doing so. The inconsistency comes when a parent is openly setting bad example by deed and attempts to teach merely by words. Your failure to celebrate wedding anniversaries seems to stem from feelings of guilt. Why continue to ignore .your wedding date? You are. happily manied and I see no reason for not cel-
this to dominate your life, you will be a less effective person, mother and wife. Furthermore, it may bring some kind of phys ical illness. There are certain diseases called psychosomatic, Le. illnesses which are a result, not from organic causes such as infection or injury to an organ, but purely from severe anxiety, Instead of worrying about the past concern yourself with the future and the present. In place of your anxiety, put a normal concern for your husband and your children. Work even hard er to be a good mother and wife, What I am really suggesting is action, a type of compensatory device. Since you are unduly concerned about a past mistake, then .JIlake up for it by trying to excel in your present voca tion. Reflect on how well you have reared your children. Thank God for the happiness you now enjoy. Problems Like Iceber~s Another possibility would be to involve yo~lf in some type of volunteer work for unwed mothers you may discover that you have feeling for this work much deeper than most because of your own experien,e. This too is a type of compensation but I don't know whether it i. feasible or not. Why not investi gate? But problems, as all counsel ors know, are like icebergs. Most of an iceberg is under water. Most problems are only partially revealed at least in the beginning. This is the aspect of your problem which merits careful discussion. To_ me your basic worry is not about warning your children against immoral sex activitil". Neither is if that they may find out about your husband and yourself. It is probably that you fear you will lose their love and respect if they discover the truth. This reflects a deep sense of insecurity you suffer abo u t whether your children will con tinue to love and respect you. Your growing anxiety is para lyzing you. It causes you to focus attention exclusively on this as pect of your difficulty. As a result you have sbut out all other possible reactions on the part of your children. Likel,. .. Spread Try to free yourself from these shackles of anxiety. Use your imagination. Why not assume, as I have indicated, that your oldest boy, who is the one most in volved, will offer sympathetic understanding? Why not con elude that he may never know? These are just as possible reactions as the one you fear. At present you are what is called threat oriented. Further more, this attitude is likely to spread unless you face it realis tically now. Amdety can become. all pervasi,.,e so that - not only will you worry over this one in cident, you will over everything. Take courage and give your children who apparently love you credit for some feeling of charity. Things are neither so critical or dangerous as you be lieve. Have recourse to prayer and if it is absolutely impossible for you to alter your attitude. alone, seek the help of a compe tent counselor.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaIT RTver-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1965
The..Parish..Parade
SAC_ED BEAltT, PALL IUVEK
ST• .JEAN BAPTISTE.
FALL R.IVft
New officeJ'll 01. the' Men'l Club are William J. Sullivan, JI'fellident; William B. Norton and Matthew J. Roberts, vice presidents; David T. Sullivan, treasurer; Leonard E. Burgmyer, fleCI'etary. A Law Enforcement Night is lldleduled for Sunday, Oct. 3 and a Fall danee for Sa~ urday night, Nov. 20.
A Communion breakfast is let for Sunday, Oct. 10 by the Coun cil of Catholic Women. A. Hal loween eostume party will fea ture the Monday, Oct. 11 eoun cil meeting.
The..Parish..Parade
SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAIRHAVEN
Ladies of St. Anne will re ceive corporate communion at 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, Sept. 26. . Monthly meetings, held at 7:30 in the school cafe te.ia will resume Monday night, Sept. 27. Refreshments will be served and an attendance prize awarded. Dues will be payable at ibis meeting, or may be re mitted to Mrs. Germaine Trem blay or Mrs. Florence Desroch ers. . The unit will sponsor a cake ard food sale following all Masses Sunday, Oct. 3.
HOLY KOSAllY,
~ALL
RIVER
The Women's Guild announces meeting for 7:30 Monday night, Oct. 4 in the parish halL 8
8'1'. ANTHONY OF PADtJA, FALL IUVER A membership b u f f e t Is planned by the Council of Cath
olic Women for Tuesday, Oct. 19. The eouncil and the parish Holy Name Society will co-sponsor a Commnunion breakfast Sunday, Oct. 24, following 8 o'clock Mass. SANTO CHRISTO, FALL RIVER .
Tuesday night, Oct. 5 is the date and '1:30 the time for a membership eoffee hour to be held by the Council of Catholic Women in the parish hall. Mrs. Mary Faria is in charge of ar rangements. A turkey whist ., llCheduled for November and a Christmas party for December.
8'1'. LOUIS, FALL RIVE.
The Women's .Guild will hold a rummage sale Thursday and Friday, Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, in the church haD. A whist is planned for Thursday, Oct. '1, and the next regular meeting will be held Tuesday; Oct. 5, preceded by a pOtluck supper. ST. MAlty,.
'NEW BEDFOIlD October plans for the Women's Guild include' a Communion breakfast and whist parties at 1:30 every Wednesday afternoon. starting the 13th. A Halloween dance will be in charge of Mrs. Alden Counsell. The parish will present a show in November, H Autumn in New York." ST. .JOHN BAP'ftST, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies Guild plans a 001
fee hour for' 7:30 Wednesday night, Sept. 29 in the new scboo1, with Msgr. John A. Silvia, pal! tor, as guest of honor. New teachers in the parish lldlool will be introduced. The unit also an nounces a rummage sale to be held from 9 to 5 Friday, Oet. 22 and from 9 to noon Saturday. Oct. 23 in the chvreh hall. ST. PATRICI, WAaEHAM
St. Patriek Circle will hold a potluck supper and Fall hat show as its October meeting ST. MARY,
ST. ANNE,
FALL RIVER
A dinner dance is set for Sat urday night, Oct. 2 at White's restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women. It will be pre ceded by a social hour from 8 to 7. A cake sale will fo]]ow all Masses Sunday morning, Sept. 26. Donations of pastry' and fudge may be brought to the church at 6:30 the preceding night. A barbecue chicken· dinner is . slated for Saturday, Oct. 9 at the parish llChool, with Mrs. Flor ence Dore as chairman. ST. THERESA, SOUTH ATTLEBORO
New officers of the Confrater nity of Christian Mothers in clude Mrs. Jeannette Gravel. president; Mrs. Mary McCann, vice-president; Mrs. Theresa Di rois, treasurer; Mrs. Patricia Biziak and Mrs. Velma Therrien, secretaries. A bus trip to the World's Fair is planned for Saturday, Sept. 25. OUR LADY OF ANGEL43 FALL RIVER
Officers of Holy Rosary S0 dality are Mrs. Mary Mathews, re-elected president; Mrs. Dor othea Almeida, vice-president; Mrs. Mary E. Velozo and Mrs. Gloria Benevides, secretaries; Mrs. Mary Silvia, re-elected treasurer. They will be seated Sunday, Oct. 10 at ceremonies to be followed by a banquet. The unit also plans a eake sale to follow all Masses Sunday, Oct. 24. S'I'. MICHAEL, FALL DVEa Officers of· the CouDcil
el Catholic Women aft Mrs. James King, president; Mrs. Weber Lopes, vice-president; Mrs. Ar thur Oliveira, seeretary; IIi. Mary Pacheco, treasurer. ST. WILLIAM, F~LL RIVER·
The Women's Guild has re sumed weekly whist parties. The next regular meeting will be held at 8 Wednesday night, Oct. 13 in the parish all":purpcMle
room.
'
:J'ALL RIVER
Mrs. Eugene Ponton, chairlady. has announced that the Women'l Guild will sponsqr a9 spaghetti supper on Monday night, Oct. 4, at 6:30 in the Catholic Commo Dity Center, Franklin Street. Thursday, Sept. _30, is the deadline for reservations. Men of the parish. are urged to attend. OUR LADY OF VICTORY, CENTERVILLE
The annual "mammoth rum mage sale" sponsored by the Women's Guild is planned for Saturday, Oct. % in the church hall. Chairman Mills Katherine Dooley will be assisted by mem bers of the guild's sewing group. She announces that donations of articles for·the sale will be ap preciated. ST. PATRICK, FALL RIVER
October events for the Wom en's Guild will include an auc tion Saturday, Oct. 2; a business meeting Monday, Oct. 4, with Fall River Postmaster Edward C. Berube as speaker; and rum mage sale for Saturday, Oct. 23. Members will be hostesses at a meeting of the Guild for the Blind Sunday, Oct. 24.
SACRED HEAIlT,
N.ORTH ATTLEBORO
The CYO will hold a 'Whist party tonight in the pari!;h hall, under sponsorsliip of the· group's adult _advisors. Over 75 pri2ell will be awarded. Abo on the CYO calendar are a bermuda .dance in November; corporate Communion, fo]]owe6 by a supper and social, in Jan uary; a roller skating party in the Spring and an evening's en tertainment in April ST.' FRANCIS XAVlEIt, HYANNIS The parish guild wiD hold its
first meeting of the season at 8 tonight. It will take the form of an open house for the unit's newly renovated headquarters, and plans for the· year will be announced by Mrs. Gisela O'Neil. co-ordinator. oua LADY OF PURGATORY. NEW BEDFORD
St. Joseph Sodality will spon sor a eake. sale fo]]owing both .Masses, Sunday morning, Sept. 26. It will be held on the church Jawn or, in case of rain, down atairs in the rectory.
17
ST. .JOSEPH, FALL RIVER
FIRST: James P. Butler of Norwood, a graduate of SS. Peter and Paul's School, Fall River, has received the Paulist habit and made his first promises of poverty, chastity and obedience at the Paulist Fathers' Novitiate at Oak Ridge, N.J.
See Beatification For Fr. Shorbel Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid, pas tor of St. Anthony of the Desert Church, Fall River, reports re ceiving word from Rome that be~.tificlrtion is near for Father Sharbel, saintly Hermit of Leb anon. The Fall River pastor is in charge of Father Sharbel's eause for canonization in the United Stlltes. Beatification is a neces sary step towards the final eon f",rring of sainthood. Bishop Eid said that a decree has been issued to the effect that Father Sharbel practiced heroic virtue and that a medical eom mission meeting this month ap pr~ved the veracity of miracl~ submitted in support el tile holy man's eause. . ~aronite Catholics an DOW awaiting announcement of the date of beatification for Father Sharbel, expected to eome be fore the end of the final eeaion of the Ecumenical Council. ~hor-Bishop Eid noted that he hopes to be in Rome for the beatification ceremony and that in all probability he will lead a pilgrimage of the faithful' for the occasion.
Artillery Battalion Honors St. Anthony LUANDA (NC)-The patron of the Portugu~ arti]]ery bat talion stationed at Maquela do Zombo, st. Anthony of Padua, has now ben made an honorary lieutenant eolonel. The experience .was not Dew to St. Anthony, who Wall bora in the 12th century in Lisbon. In a chapel in Lagos, Ponugual, there is a statue of the aint wearing the red sash of an 18th eentury Portugueae eoloDel a eross his brown habit.
Psychologist Hits Rigid Obedience PORTLAND (NC) -A priest blamed the "unquestioning obe dience" required in many paro chial schools for the loss of Faith among Catholic co]]ege students. Father Henry Ouellette, head of' the psychology department at Emmanuel College, Bosto~, said rigid indoctrination also is pre venting the schools from turning out creative apostolic leaders. He spoke at the Catholic Teach ers Association of the Diocese of Portland meeting in Portland City Hall here in Maine.
A parish penny .$ale is sched uled for Saturday, Oct. 16 and Saturday, Oct. 23. The Women's Guild will spon sor a whist party at 8 tonight in the parish hall on Brightman St....eet. Boy Scouts will meet at 6:30 tonight, also in the Bright man Street hall. Cub Scouts will enroll prospective members at a meeting to be held after sc'lool this afternoon in the sc,ool haH. New CYO officers for the senior unit are James McKenna. president; Ann Marie Connear nE'y, vice-president; Ellen Mc Carty, secretary; Alan McAn drew, treasurer. I
ST. LAWRENCE, NEW BEDFORD
New Couples Club officers are and Mrs. Donald MacMullen, presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. St. Pierre, vice-presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hart, trea surers; Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Tynan and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred :S. Coutu, secretaries. ~Jfr.
ST. ANTHONY ~F DESERT, FALL RIVEIt New officers of the Blessed Mother Guild are Mrs. Olympia Aqad, re-eleeted, president; Mrs. Florence Habib, vice-president; Mrs. Zelma Habib, treasurer; Mrs. Marilyn Nasiff and Mrs. Elizabeth cabral, secretaries; Mrs. :Mary Lou 0 Sabra, program chainnan. Jnstallation of Holy Name 80 ci('ty officers will precede T o'cloek Mass Sunday evening, Sept. 26. Refreshments will' fol low the Mass.
Eyening Courses Stonehill College Continuing Edueatlon Division is offering :!4 courses in its evening session beginning Tuesday, Sept. 28. They include offerings in the fields of liberal arts, business and special interest. A brochure dellCribing all eourses is avail able, and applicants may regis ter at the eo))ege.
St. Francis
Residence
POI YOUNG WOMEN .196 Whipple St., Fall River Conducted by Franciscan Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS
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. ST. GEOR.GE, WESTPOIlT
.J
The Women's Guild will o~
its lOth year with a cake sale te
be conducted in the parish hall
after Masses Sunday, Sept. 28.
Business meetings will beghl with a potluck supper Monday night, Sept. 27; to which new members are invited.
OUIt LADY OF LOURDES,
TAUNTON
The Msgr. Coyle CouncJl
Knights of Columbus will spon
sor a Living Rosary to be held
on the church grounds, Sunday
evening, Oct. 3, at 8 o'clock.
The Holy Name Society wiD
have a Communion breakfast
011 Sunday', Oct. 10, following
the 8:15 Mass.
A Communion Supper will be
hp]d under the sponsorship of
the Holy R.osary Society on
Sunday evening, Oct. 10, after
t~e 5 o'clock Mass.
The CCD for gr"des one
through eight have started the
year's study on Tuesday after
noons.
SS. PETEIt AND PAUL, FALL •.I\'E. A ham supper will be served
Tuesday, Oct. 19 by the Worn:
an's Club. Mrs. Noel Harrison ill
chairman. The unit plans a rum
mage sale from 6 to 8 Thursda:t
night, Oct. 28 and from 9 to lol
Friday morning, Oct. 29. Bowl
ing will be resumed Thursda)t,
Oct. 21.
The Women's Guild will spon
sor its annual parishola at •
Monday night, Sept. 27 in the
u!'per church hall.. Chairmen
aTe Mrs. Rocco Postiglione,
Mrs. Mary Tyrrell, Mrs. James
Walmsley and Mrs. William
Sunderland Jr. Mrs. John Pache
eo will be in charge of refresh
ffil'nts.
ST. .JAMES, NEW BEDFOIlD .\lsgr. Noon Circle announcetl
a giant penny lillIe for Tuesday,
Nov, 30 and Wednesday, Dec. 1.
Med School Dean MILWAUKEE (NC) 1>1'. Gerald A. Kerrigan, " ' has been
named dean of Marquette Uni
versity School of Medicine. A
member of the llChool board fJi
directors, he has been actinc
dean .!!inee last February.
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18
-mE ANCHOR
Thurs., Sept. 23, 1965
~ollege
President Announces Plans
JERSEY CITY (NC)-The new president of St. Peter's College has announced a vigorous blue print "for excellence" designed STERLING (NC) - Riotous to make the colege "second to none in the East." conduct of youth is a lOgical con sequence of irreligion, Michael Father Victor R. Yanitelli, J. Howlett, Illinois Auditor of S.J., called on the faculty to Public Accounts, told a Rock "join with me in adding vision River Valley Serra Club meet to vision and- dream to dream ing here in Illinois. so that together, in the next four "It shouldn't be surprising years or sooner, we will at least when moral looseness in our have laid a groundwork on society encourages teenagers which a greater St. Peter's Col and young adults to revolt lege, second to none in the East, against authority," said Howlett. can easily be built." "Not long ago we had demon He announced plans for a new strations in California by a l>tudent center, and asked the group of students who wanted faculty "to get to work on plan to popularize four-letter words ['ling what you as faculty would traditionally regarded as ob like to see in a new academic scene. building, and think about ideas "More recently, a police raid for a new auditorium and thea on a sex and drinking party of ter, a new fieldhouse, and dor 300 young people ~n a wealthy mitories which we will use to resort community, East Hamp-. attract top-flight students from ton, N. Y., resulted in IS arrests all over the state and nation." on . narcotics .charges and 10 more for disorderly conduct," be added. . Decline "If we forbid the mention of God in the classl'oom, why should we be surprised if young people grow up believing there is no God," he asked. "The tragedy of our time is the decline in moral standards that has accompanied an advance in technical and scientific prog ress." "We worry about communism abroad. And it is a worry. But the moral deterioration in our own country is a more immedi ate enemy, and a more danger ous one, than the enemy abroad," he said. "There never was a time when moral leadership was needed more desperately in our coun try than· today."
'Laymen Organize Educational Unit
Irreligion Breeds Riotous Youth
IN RELIGION: Annette Desmarais, left, a graduate of Dominican Academy, Fall River, has entered Dominican Sisters Novitiate, North Dartmouth, after completing her freshman year at Salve Regina College. Her brother, Gilles A. Desmarais, has graduated from La Sallette Junior Sem. inary and will continue his studies for the priesthood at Assumption College, Worcester. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Desmarais, Somerset.
ENGLEWOOD (NC)-A coun ty wide Catholic EducationAsso ciation, which includes nuns and Brothers, was organized here in New Jersey on the initiative of laymen. The association's aim is to promote advancement of Cath olic education and welfare 011. Catholic children of all Bergea County schools. Through meetings, symposi ums and workshops the associa tion also intends to serve as a forum where problems concel'll ing education of Catholics can be discussed and solutions de veloped, E. Pat O'Connell of Englewood, the first president, said. Membership is open to all per sons interested in improving Ca"tholic elementary and' high school standards, he said. The group is an outgrowth of the Bergen County Catholic Home School Association.
Obscenity Raids In Puerto Rico SAN JUAN (NC)-For the ttrst time in a quarter-century, charges of violating a section of Puerto Rico's penal code against sale or display of obscenity have been filed against owners of three shops here. .T he filing of the charges fol lowed raids by police who con fiscated more than 600 allegedly obscene magazines most origi nating with distributors in the U.S. The magazine stands were located in a drug store, a photo equipment shop and a travel agency. The police action followed a call by Rep. Antone Sagardia Sanchez for a Justice Depart ment report on enforcement of ~aws against immoral shows and publications. There was, however, no ex planations of wh}' only three establishments were raided. Pub ~lcations similar to those confis cated by the police are on sale publicly at a number of other magazine stands here.
Czech Secret Police Summons Laymen BONN (NC) - ·~overnment authorities in communIst-ruled Czechoslovakia h a v e brought several Catholic laymen before the secret police for questioning recently. The laymen involved have all s<:>rved prison sentences because ot their religious activity, but :recently left prison due to an amnesty, according to the Ger man Catholic News Agency, K NA. The police questioned the for mer prisoners about their rela tions to persons suspected of being active in the ;nterests of the Catholic Church, KNA re ported.
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THE ANCHOR-
Plenty of Good Scholastic Football in Store for Fans
Thurs., Sept. 23, 1965
Sup~eme
Pontiff Urges Devotion To Virgin Mary
By Fred Bartek The leaves are beirinning to ft'D and the pigskins are flying. As another scholastic gridiron season gets under way, players are all confident that their teams are the ones to watch while coaches in their traditional manner turn on their pessimistic Scott White and Wes Widden sound waves, and, at the are the work horses of the line. same time, utter assurances Tom Ruest provides the experi as to how strong the oppo ence needed in the backfield. sition will be. This week-end will mark the opening of the 1965 high school season and, again, Saturday afternoons from the Attleboros to Province tOwn and the Islands will be fined with the Bound. of marcl1ing bands, ., policemen shouting their disapprovals at youngsters jumping the fences, and proud parents cheering for their BOn 88 if he were the only boy on the field. The day will end with BOme disappointments, resolving that next week will be different. The new season should Bee the emergence of new high school stars and championship teams. It's all part of the American football tradition. Spartans Loom BI« It appears as though all local leagues are going to have con siderably tighter races for the top spot than they have had in the past. In the Bristol County League, most coaehes are willing to pick any team but their own 81 a likely ehampiOD. But this Ia only tor the publie, for in wanl17 they belleve. that if things go their way, that fa, no serious injuries and a few lucky bounces of the pigskin, they will have an excellent ehance of capturing the erown. Last year's State champions ill Class C, Bishop stang High School of North Dartmouth, must be rated 88 a likely choice to defend its crown successfully. True, the Spartans ,lost eight of their starting 11, but there are two very good reasons why they should be strong. Strollg Forward Wall First, the Spartan record of excellence. There is not a school in the Bay State that can match the Stang record of the past four years. They have been defeated only twice in that span. So, if the title is up for grabs, the rec ord shows that the Spartan reach is quite long. Secondly, Co a c h Charley Connell's forces are being built around three fine returnees who serve as Tri-Captains. Bob Gastall, at the quarter back position is one of the best passers in the area. Standing 6' .. and weighing 190 pounds, he is ideal for the position. At half-back is Joe Bartek who was in the All BCL ranks last year. He was second in the league in scoring !lue mainly to the tremendous Stang line and his own fleet feet. At end is Paul Matheson. Be ing 6' 4" and weighing 204 pounds, Paul is hard to beat as a pass receiver. In addition, the Spartan offen sive line will be big-it will av erage 205 pounds. Stang will host North Attleboro Saturday. Potential at North The North Attleboro Rocket eers should provide strong oppo sition for Stang'~ opener. North is being picked as one of the top teams this year. In last week's Round Robin at North, the home forces displayed championship potentialities. Nortb aa. size and ~
19
CASTE L GANDOLFO Pope Paul VI took the occasion of his weekly general audience to urge de (NC) -
Paul Medeiros has more speed than anyone in the County. Me deiros showed his prowess in the round robin when he broke to the outside, and, in a 60 yard jaunt, ran away from the oppo sition. Durfee of Fall River and New Bedford Vocational get an early start when they meet at Sargent Field in New Bedford tomorrow afternoon. The Hilltoppers, third in the Class C last year, promise to pick up where they left off. Coach Don MontIe, With a lit tle shuffling of personnel, has come up with a few impressive underclassmen. At quarterback Tom Botelho has the edge over . Pete Lomax. Captain Henry Lord has been switched from half-back to end and Dan Lord, Henry's brother, has won a starting berth as defensive half back. Carl Fitzgerald, "a real scrappy back" will be at the left half~back position. Durfee has probably" the big- • gest tackle in the league in John Azevedo, a tower of strength in pre-season scrimmages. The other tackle position will be filled by Bob Freeman. On the other side of the ledger, the Artisans promise to be stronger than they have been in many years. The Vokesters, with READY FOR CURTAIN RAISER: Captain Bruce nine returning starters, has a Gordon of the Coyle High School football combine and his DeW' found enthusiasm. How ever, bad news has already hit eoaeh, Jim Lanagan, talk over plans for :the season's opener the Voke camp. First sUing which is scheduled tomorrow night against Cardinal Spell tackle Steve Orlowski, who has man High of Brockton at the Brockton Fair Grounds. Gor suffered a wrist fracture, deIi . don is from St. Mary's parish in North Attleb9ro. ( Ilitely will miss the opener. Coyle .. Broektoll Coyle High of Taunton a1sG Jets an early start when it plays Cardinal Spellman High School at Brockton' tOmorroW' night. to Coach Jim Lanagan claims that the "pickins" are slim, but this writer cannot remember NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The eross never went out aU during any Coyle team that was ever death-dealing winds of Hurri ·a pushover. Only three letter the night, even with that much men return to the Blue and Gold cane Betsy crushed Holy Re wind," she said. ranks. They are Tom Kalaher, deemer church in downtown "We took turns going to the offensive guard; Bruce Gordon, New Orleans but failed to blow window to see -if the light was out the sanctuary candle which defensive end and Mike George still burning. We felt that if it at center. Coyle appears to have signifies Christ's presence. went out, we would be next. Flickering near a crucifix Bricks fell all around us, tons of a small team that will have to that hung on the one wall. that them in the rectory yard. But rely upon speedy but inexperi enced backs. Bob Hoye will try remained partially standing, the except for a few through the candle was the light by which roof, we·were saved," she said. to fill the big shoes left by Mark Doherty at quarterback. Likely Sisters of the Holy Ghost and to ~ playing in the halfback Mary Immaculate gauged wheth 110ts are Frank Mooney and Paul er they would live or die. The Sisters who teach in the Cochrane. parish school escaped injury as Drawing an open date on Sat urday is Attleboro High. The the hurricane sheared the church Bombardiers are a team that away from their convent and little has been said about this sent it crashing to the ground. The second-story corridor year. Yet, that is the usual with Attleboro, and, when the season which connected the .convent with the church remained sus starts, Coach Jim Cassidy usual pended in the air 88 if by a mir ly has a surprise contender under acle-a miracle for which the his tutelage. One thing for cer PRINTED AND MAILED
nuns prayed as they huddled tain is the fact that end Dave Hardt is almost certain to repeat under a table in the convent Write or Phone 672-1322
chapel. on the All-County teams. Kept Faith Alive Eyes on Taunton 234 Second Street - Fall River
"When the church started to With Fairhaven absent from go, we thought it was a bomb the league fold, the only other exploding," said Sister Visita Saturday title tion. tilt will be Fee "But there was one thing that ELECTRICAL han at Taunton, really kept our faith alive. The The latter Contractors back wall of the church was left seems to be partly standing, and the sanctu the team most ary candle burning. next to the coaches feel has improved the most. The Her ringtown QUEBEC (NC)-Father Andre ers have two of Leblond has been named to di the toughest rect an information service for running backs the Quebec archdiocese. Father In the County Leblond recently returned here 94" County St. with Mike Del Geo. Hemonel from a mission assignment .. New Bedford Tuna to Pase TweDtF Baa Cristobal, ParaSU87. '
Candle Burns
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votion to Mary and to pray to her for success of the ecumenical . eouncil. The audience was held on the feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. On the same day the Pope issued an appeal for peace because of the new conflict between India and Pakistan and also revealed his intention to go before the United Nations General Assembly O!l Oct. 4 to make another plea for peace. . But the Pope devoted his main talk of the day to Qur Lady, urging his hearers to "honor the Madonna with your ptayers~ during these days preceding the final session of the ecumenical council and also dUring the meetings of the council." 'Pray to Her' "'The apparition· of Mary lin the history of the world," he said "is like lighting a light in a darkened area, a light of the morning, pale and indirect but very sweet and very beautifuL The light of the world, Christ, is yet to come, but the happy destiny of humanity, its possi. ble salvation is already assured -Mary brings it with her. "Now the council which II without a doubt a great episode in the history of the Church and the salvation of the world Deed this Marian preparation." The Pope declared that we "must pray to her so that there may be given to us grace te 1IIlderstand that the council » the hour of God. The birth etl. Mary was the hour of God, the unique and destined hour for redemption of all, We pray __ her that this new· hour in which her hour is continued and re fleeted, may bring for us onee a~ain the saving Christ, that It may bring us a true Christi. regen~ration."
New Editor BALTIMORE {NC)-A. E. P. Wall, Sunday editor of the Hon olulu Advertiser, has been ap pointed managing editor of the Baltimore Catholic Review and public relations director' for the arehdiocese.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1965
O%anam Sunday
Continued from Page ene poor; never wealthy, he gave at least one tenth of his modest in come to charity. He was a writer, . historian and teacher and, more important, says one of his fol lowers, "he was the best kind oJ. son, brother, husband, father, friend, citi,zen." The founder of the Vincen tians died at age 40, and ever since his death the movement in support of his canonization hal grown. His cause for beatifica tion was begun in 1925 and haa progressed to the point where miracles due to his intercession are needed in support of his followers' request for his eleva tion "to the sublime position of • a beatus." Report Favors It is important to report favors received through the in tercession of Frederic Ozanam, say Diocesan Vincentians. "We ask your prayers for the beati fication of Frederic Ozanam," say their spokesmen, "and we ask you to seek his intercession when you are petitioning Al mighty God for favors. We ask also that if any favors are' re ceived through his intercession, all such favors be reported at once to the Vincentians or te your pastor."
Gridders .Await Curtain Raisers C:mtinued From Page nineteen Solio and Bruce Cornell. Both proved this as Juniors. Joe Ber nardo, returning quarterback, has the valuable experience Coach George Hemond needs. The stal wart of the Taunton line is tackle John Hayes. Barring in juries, the Black and Orange will be strong. Watch Oliver Ames Feehan of Attleboro· lost sev eral first stringers via gradua tion. The line is small. Tackles Pete Johnson (195) and Bruce MacDonald (188) have the only appreciable size according to Coach Chet Hanewich. The back field, with Tim Cronin, Brian Frost, and Dennis Nolan has ex perjence but lacks speed. The bright spot for the Sham rocks is the quarterback posi tion. Robbie Poirier, a sopho more last year, won the praise of many area coaches. He has an excellent arm, but the problem last season was getting some body to hold his fireballs. Coach Val Mascato's Orange and Black of Oliver Ames again appears to be in a strong position to defend their Class D championship. The Mansfield Hornets, under Coach Parsons are young and big: They could be a surprise in the Hockomock League. New this year is the Tri-Con ference League. Things still seem a bit hazy in regards the formation of this league, but, as it stands now, it is made up of nine teams. They are: Bourne, Falmouth, Somerset, Case of Swansea, Wareham, Old Roches ter, Barnstable, Dartmouth and Dighton-Rehoboth. Cape Cod Battle Dartmouth is a new comer. The Indians played an independ ent schedule last year and fin ished fifth in Class C. Fairhaven, which dropped out of the BCL last Spring, will join the Tri Conference next year. Somerset and Case of Swansea will com pete in the league this season but their continuance is dubious. The leading choices for, the crown seem to be last year's titlist, Bourne and Lawrence of Falmouth. BettencoJIrt Debut Bourne had an unblemished record of 9 and O. Again this year, the Canal forces will be tough with the return of Manny Britto who, for the past two years, has been the most devas tating runner on the Cape. Old Rochester could be a surprise with eight returnees in the start ing lineup. Don Dorr will again
Prelate Initiates Diocesan Tithing HELENA (NC)-Bishop Ray mond G. Hunthausen has launch 4"d a diocesan tithing plan aimed at providing for almost all ex penses of the diocese of Helena. 'fhe plan will eliminate all but three special collections. Under the plan, Catholics in the diocese are asked to give fi ve per cent of their income to their parishes, and, another five per cent to civic and religious charities. A monthly one per cent "gift tithe"....:..to be talj:en from the second five per cent- is to be given to the diocese for a revol ving fund for expansion, the missions and similar purposes. Only collections to be retained will be for the Bishops' Relief F'und, the Society of the Propa ~ation of the Faith, and a special missionary appeal. The "Offer tory Plan" is already in effect :n 57, per cent of the Helena parishes, but the. Montana bis hop has expanded it to the en tire diocese.
call the signals for the Bulldogs who have an excellent receiver in end John DeCosta. In independent contests, New Bedford High school will play its first game under new Coach Joe Bettencourt against North Quincy at New Bedford Satur day. This will be the last inde pendent campaign for New Bed ford. The Crimson next year will be in the Suburban League. Fairhaven will be at Oliver Ames in North Easton. Other games find Old Roches ter at Case, Wareham at Fal mouth, Dighton-Rehoboth at B'arnstable, Somerest at Bourne, Apponequet at Marshfield, Nan tucket at Nashoba, and Bridge water-Raynham at PlymouthCarver. .
CYAO Goal Continued from Page One government and their present day problems will be offered; the late President Kennedy's physical fitness program will be adopted for the use of the young adult. Activities of the CYAO will be directed at carrying out such goals for the benefit of its members; Started in 1962 The CYAO was established in this area in 1962, for young adults having graduated from high school, age 18 to 30, single. In addition to active member ship, the council has established a special membership for those who, due to work or study, are unable to attend the business meetings but would like to ben efit of the activities. Honorary membership is available to all servicemen and students who live away from home. These members may share in the spir itual benefits of the organization, as well as find the organization's activities available to them when on furlough or on vacation. It is expected that a special pro gram will be established to keep member servicemen in contact with their friends at home. Highlighting social activities of the year will be a ski trip to New Hampshire planned for February.
Negros in South Still Lack Equality
REPORTING FROM ROME: Covering the fourth ses-, sion of Vatican Council II are these four staff members of N.C.W.C. News Service. Top, left to right: James R., O'Neill, head of the Rome Bureau, N.C.W.C. News Service and Father John P. Donnelly. Bottom, Father Placid Jor dan, O.S.B., and Patrick Riley. NC. Photo.
MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - "Ne groes would 'like to be treated like 'full .Catholics'," a Negro priest said here in Minnesota. Father August Thompson, pas tor of St. Charles Borromeo church in Ferriday, La., said Ne groes are not allowed to attend retreats or days of recollection in some Southern dioceses. "In some areas, we NegrI) priests might be called second class Christs, if that's possible," he said.
New PC Head Continued from Page One Father Haas came to Povi dence College from the faculty of Notre Dame University where he inaugurated a special pro gram in religious studies in co operation with Purdue Univer sity. He has also taught at Em manuel College, Bosv>n; Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana; and at Providence College in 1962-63. A 1930 graduate of Seton Hall, Bishop Dougherty has been pres ident of that university since 1959. He was ordained a priest in Rome on July 23, 1933 and was consecrated a Bishop on Jan. 24, 1963 at Sacred Heart Cathedral, Newark. Scholar A biblical scholar, Bishop Dougherty holds a Doctorate in Sacred Scripture from the Pon tifical Biblical Institute, Rome. His work in this field includes the translation of the Book of Deuteronomy for the Confraer nity Edition of the Old Testa ment and the writing of Search jng the Scriptures (1959), a popular introduction to the Bible. Bishop Dougherty has long been actble in many phases of communications. He became a regular speaker on national network radio in 1946 and in augurated the Catholic' Hour television program on NBC in 1951. In 1957, he assisted in the creation and supervision of the award-winning documentary tel evision film, Rome EternaL '
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