World Synod of Bishops To Begin With View of Church Problems
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 23, 1971 PRICE 104 V.ol. 15, No. 38 © 1971 The Anchor $4.00 per year
Msgr. Ch.ippendale I.Retires as Pastor I
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Most Reverend Daniel Cronin today acceded to the ",1;'questof Rev.' Msgr. John .", Chippendale and accepted
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VATICAN CITY (NC) - The third Synod of Bishops, which opens in the Vatican on Thursday, Sept. 30, will begin its formal meetings with an overview of the Catholic Church problems today. Bishop Ladislaw Rubin, general secretary of the synod's permanent council, told a news conference that the presentation of a "panorama" of contemporary Church problems is a departure ftom the regular meetings of a synod but had been suggested by the synod council . because of the desire for information by various conferences of bishops. The "panorama': will be read by Archbishop Enrico Bartoletti, apostolic administrator of'Lucca, Italy, but is not scheduled for discussion by the more than 200 elected or appointed participants. After the over-all view is presented, the synod will begin with the introduction of the first major matter of study on its agenda, "The priestly ministry." The second subject will be "Justice in the World." It will be introduced once general discussion of the priestly ministry is completed. Both topics will be treated :not only in plenary ses-
resignation as pastor of St. Patrick Parish, Wareham, which parish he has headed since September, 1948. Born in Fall River July 16, 1895, Mosignor Chippeindale is the son of the late Thomas and the late Nora (O'Leary) Chippendale. After elementary education at St. Joseph Parish School in Most Reverend Daniel A. CroFall River, he attended and nin, S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, graduated from Holy Family today announced the assignment High School iit New Bedford. of a pastor, a rector, a priest-inHe prepared for the priest- charge, .the transfer of seven ashood at St. Charles College, sistant pastors and the appointCatonsville, Md. and St. Mary ment of Area Scout chaplains. Seminary in Baltimore Md. Most Rev. Msgr. Robert L. Stanton, Reverend Daniel F. Feehan or- rector of St.'/Mary's Cathedral, dained the Cape priest at St. Fall River, has been appointed Mary's Cathedral on May 26, 1923. Msgr. Chippendale has served in Our Lady of ~the Isle Parish, Nantucket; St. Mary Parish, Mansfield; Our Lady of the Rosary Parish, Fall River; St. Patrick Parish, Wareham. On July 20, 1967, Pope Paul VI named the Wareham pastor a Domestic Prelate and he was invested in the robes of his new honor by Most Reverend James L. Connolly. The seventy-six year old pastor, while serving as assistant ,at St. Mary Parish, Mansfield, learned Italian so as to better serve the immigrant parishioners in that area. His new language was most helpful when he became pastor of Holy Rosary Parish in Fall River for some ten years. In every parish that he has MSGR. STANTON Turn to Page Two
sions but in study. sections' broken up into seven language groups. Latin, English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and German. Bishop Rubin also announced that during the synod, participants will be given a statement on the proposed constitution of the Church-the Lex Fundamentalis (basic law)-but added that the controversial document would not be debated on the floor of the synod. According to Bishop Rubin the fathers of the synod will number' 205, with som~ possible .additions. He noted that under synod membership .rule.s, the Pope could name 28 personal choices but so far had limited himself to 25. The official opening of the synod on Sept. 30 will be held in the Sistine Chapel, where Pope Paul VI will celebrate Mass and deliver a' sermon on the aims and intent of the synod. Bishop Rubin said the. synod meetings will prob~bly last throughout October. He did not specify a closing date, which is normally determ'ined only when the main course of discussion and business has been completed.
Bishop Rubin said a number of special liturgical ceremonies will be held during October with the synod fathers expected ~o attend.
Member$hip Scope Global VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Americas-North, . Central and South-will comprise the largest geographical contingent of prelates among the 210 attending the worldwide Synod of Bishops in Rome. According to figures released by the synod's permanent secretariat, this is the breakdown: 44-the Americas (including four from the U. S. and Canada) 4Q-.Europe 32-·Africa 2Q-.Asia ~Allstralia and Oceania 25-·personal choices of Pope Paul VI 2Q-.Nineteen cardinals of the Roman Curia and Bishop Rubin the Synod's Secretary-general 14-Major archbishops of the Catholic Eastern-rite churches. 10 - Representatives of religious orders.
Announces Assignments
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CHIPPENDA~E
Bishop's" Charity Ball Planners Meet Sunday, The annual meeting to plan the Bishop's Charity Ball is .set for 2 on Sunday afternoon at White's Restaurant, No. Westport. . Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan director of the Charity Ball said: "The 17th annual Ball will be in honor of the Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D. The Bishop is deeply interested in this charitable and social event of the diocese." The Ball Committee will meet with all members of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul and the affiliates of the Council of Catholic Women. These two diocesan groups are co-sponsors of this Winter social. affair to be held Turn to Page Six
Prayer of Faithflil ' Bishop Cronin directs that the special Prayer of the Faithful in Preparation for Synod of Bishops . as found on page six is to be' recited at all' Masses of Obligation on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 25 and 26.
Easton Parishes Open CCD Year With Mission Holy Cross Parish, So. Easton and Immaculate Conception Parish, No. Easton will open their combined course in Christian Living with a Mini-Mission for high school juniors and seniors. Turn to Page Twelve
the pastor of St. Patrick's Parish, Wareham, succeeding Rev. Msgr. John A. Chippendale who has retired. Rev. John J. Regan, assistant pastor at St. Patrick Parish, Falmouth, has been appointed rector of St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney, assistant pastor at St. Patrick Parish, Wareham, has been named Priest in Charge of St. Rita Church, Marion, while remaining as assistant pastor at St. Patrick Parish, Wareham. Assistant pastors who have been transferred are: Rev. John V. Magnani, assistant pastor at St. Mary Parish, So. Dartmouth, to St. Patrick Parish, Falmouth, as assistant pastor. Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, from sick leave to St. Joseph Parish, Fall River, as assistant pastor. Rev. Ronald A. Tosti, Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, to SS. Peter and Paul Parish, Fall River, as assistant pastor, while remaining Diocesan Director of the CCD and' responsible for the pastoral care of the Hussey Complex. Rev. William P. Blottman, assistant pastor at St. Joseph Parish, Fall River, to St. Mary Parish, So. Dartmouth, as assistant pastor. Rev. William W. Norton, Director of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, to Holy Name Parish, New Bedford, as assistant pastor, while continuing as Director of St. Mary's H<;>me and as Chaplain to the Bristol County House of Correction. Rev. Owen E. Smith, assistant
pastor at Immaculate Conception Parish, No. Easton, to St. Francis Xavier Parish, Hyannis, as assistant pastor. Rev. James W. Fahey, assistant pastor at Our Lady of the Assumption Parish, Osterville, to Immaculate Conception Parish, No. Easton, as assistant pastor. Tum to Page Two
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Lower Cape CeD Plans Program For Teachers
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The CCD Executive Board of Lower Cape Cod will sponsor a series of lectures over a four week period by Rev. Ronald A. tosti, Diocesan Director of the CCD with the topic "What Ever " Turn to Page Twelve .'.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFalf River-Thurs. Sepf. 23, 1971
Father Downey Offers Mass
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
OFFICIAL ASSIGNMENTS Rev. Msgr. Robert L. Stanton, from Rector of St. Mary's Cathedral to St. Patrick Parish, Wareham, as pastor. ,
Rev. John J. Regan, from assistant 'pastor at St. Patrick Parish, Falmouth, to St. Mary's Cathednll, Fall River" as Rector. Rev. John V. Magnani, from assistant pastor at St., Mary, Parish, So. Dartmouth, to St. Patrick Parish, Falmouth,' as . assistant.
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REV. JOHN V. MAGNANI i' to I.' 'St. Patrick's, Falmouth , . " ,
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WILLIAM P. BLOITMAN to St. Mary's, So. Dartmouth
Annouhc'es Assignments
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All' assignments are effective three years during the Korean War, the new Cape pastor also Wednesday, Oct.' 6, 1971. The Most' Reverend Bishop served as a Commander in the Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, from sick leave to ~t. Joseph alSO appointed six ptiestsas Chaplain's Corps of the Naval Parish, Fall River, as' assistant pastor. area chaplains to the Boy and Reserve. Girl Scouts of America. They Monsignor Stanton has also Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney, as Priest in Charge of St. I are: served as moderator of the Fall Rita Church, Marion, while remaining as assistant pastor at Rev. Martin, Buote, 'assistant River Catholic Nurses, a teacher St. Patrick Parish, Wareham. pastor at St. Joseph Parish, Fall at St. Anne's Hospital School of professor at the River, as Chaplain for Boy Nursing, Rev. Ronald A. Tosti, to S'S. Peter and Paul Parish, the Fall River IArea. Dighton Novitiate of the Domin.Scouts of Fall River, as assistant pastor, while remaining as Diocesan Rev. Norman Boulet, ~ssistant ican Sisters of Charity of the Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and repastor at St. Joseph" Palrish, At~ Presentation of' the' Blessed Virsponsible for the pastoral care of the Hussey Complex. t1eboro, as Chaplain' for Boy gin Mary, member of the DiocScouts of the Attleboro' and esan Board of Education. Rev. William P. Blottman, from assistant pastor at St. , Tanuton ' Area. : I Father Regan Joseph Parish, Fall River, to St. Mary Parish, So." Dartmouth, Rev. John F. Andrews, assistas assistant pastor. " I Rev. John J. Regan, the new ant pastor at St. Marg~ret Par~ . Rector' of the Cathedral, was ish, Buzzards Bay, as Chaplain Rev. William W. Norton, to Holy Name Parish, New born in Taunton on June ,16, for Boy Scouts of the :d,ape Cod Bedford, as assistant pastor, 'while continuing as Director of 1927, the son of the late RayArea. ,I '/ St. Mary's Home and as Chaplain to the Bristol C()unty House , .I' Turin to Page Four :Rev. Arthur K. 'Wingate, as- " of Correction, New Bedford. . . " ' '.' " '. ' , sttant pastor at St:- 'Uawrence Parish, New Bedford,' a1s' Chap~ Rev. Owen E. Smith, from assistant pastor at Immaculain for Girl Scouts of Bedlate Conception Parish, No. Easton, to St. Francis Xavier Par.. ford Area. I' ish, Hyannis, as assistant pastor. Rev. Robert F. Kirby, assistant ,Most Reverend Daniel A. Cro· at Holy Familyl Parish,' pastor 'Rev. James W. Fahey, from assistant pastor at Our Lady nin, S.T.D., today confirmed the East Taunton, as Chcip,lain for of the Assumption Parish, Osterville, to Immaculate Conceptransfer-appointments' made by Girl Scouts of Taunton ~and Attion Parish, No. Easton, as assistant pastor. the Superior of the Portuguese tleboro Area. 1-" ' Vincentian Fathers, Very Rev. Rev. Terrence F. Keenan,. as" Fernando Vega,' C.M. The above assignments are effective Wednesday, Oct. 6, sistant pastor at St, IFrancis 1971. Rev. Jose A. F. dos Santos, Xavier Parish,. Hyannis, as Chap-, from St. Michael Parish, Fall Rivlain for Girl Scouts of C~pe Cod er, to St. John the 'Baptist Par- . Area. I, APPOINTMENTS ish, ~ew Bedford, as assistant. Rev. Martin L. Buote, assistant pastor at St. Joseph Monsignor Stantoh Rev. Joaquim da Silva, from Parish, Fali River, as Chaplain for Boy Scol;lts of the Fall 1 St. John the Baptist Parish, New' Born in Taunton on ,S~pt. 10, River Area. Bedford, to St. Michael Parish, 1917, the new pastor of St. PatFall River, as assistant. rick' Parish, Wareham,l is the The appointments are effective . Rev. Norman Boulet, ,assistant pastor at St. Joseph Parish, son of the late Daniel A.and the , • I Friday, Sept. 24, '1971. Attleboro, as Chaplain for Boy Scouts of the Attleboro and late Dorothy (Lynch) Stanton. Taunton Area. Bishop. Cronin also has conAfter graduating frdm th~ Immaculate Conceptiort parish firmed' . today the transferRev. ,John F. Andrews, assistant pastor at St. 'Margaret school and Taunton High School, appointment!;> made by Very Rev: Parish, Buzzards Bay, as Chaplain for Boy Scouts of the Monsignor Robert L. StaJton at- Fintan Sheeran, SS.CC., provinCape Cod Area. t~nded Boston College. He pre- cial of, the Congregation of the pared for the priesthood! at St. Sacred Heart Fathers. They are: Rev. Martin Lucia, SS.CC., to Rev. Arthur K. Wingate, assistant pastor at St. Lawrence Bernard Seminary, Rothester, Parish, New Bedford, as Chaplain for Girl Scouts of the New N. Y., and St. Mary$~minary 'St. Francis Xavier Church, Acushnet as assistant and Rev.• Bedford Area. in Baltimore, Md. ' '\ Patrick Killilea, SS.CC. to St. Most Reverend James E. Cas- Joseph's Church, Fairhaven. Rev. Robert F. Kirby; assistant pastor at Holy Family sidy ordained him to thel priestParish, East Taunton, as Chaplain for Girl Scouts of the hood at St. Mary's Cathedral on Taunton and Attleboro Area. Nov. 27, 1943. I Necrology , . I. " Msgr. Stanton has senred as SEPT. 24 Rev. Terrence F. Keenan, assistant pastor 8:t St. Francis assistant pastor at St.\ Mary Rev. Joseph E. C. B'ourque, Xavier Parish, Hyannis, as Chaplain for Girl Scouts of the Parish, Attleboro and _Immacu- 1955, Pastor, Blessed Sacrament; Cape Area. late Conception Parishl Fall Fall River. River. Since May 1964 he' has' SEPT. 26 The above appointments are effective today, Sept. 23, 1971 served as Rector of the iCatheRec. John J. Donahue, 1944, dral in Fall River. I . ,Assistant, St. William, Fall A D. S. Navy chapialn for River. I ' SEPT. 39 ."mmm""m""".""m"""";~,~m~~'~~'~';""'''''''':''''r""""""m,,. Rev. J. A. Payan, 1899,' Founder, St. Matthew, Fall River. Second ·Class Postage Paid at Fall River. Bishop, of Fall River Mass., Published e.ery Tlulrsday'l at 410 SEPT. 30. Highland Avenue. Fall River. Mass. 02'722, Rev. John J. Griffin, 1963, by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall ' .. River. Subscription price by mall, i postpaid Pastor, St. Paul, Taunton. 54.00 per yo.r. I
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Bishop Approves Four Transfers
Rev. Stephen J. Downey, pastor of Holy Ghost Paris~, Attleboro was the principal celebrant of a concelebrated Mass of Christian Burial for his stepmother, Mrs. Mary S. Lynch Downey of· fered at 10 o'clock on Wednesday morning in Holy Name Church, New Bedford. Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Di· ocese of Fall River, was present in the sanctuary and read ,the committal prayers at the conclusion of the Mass. Concelebrants with Father Downey were Rev. Henry T. Munroe and Rev. Lucio B. Phillipino. Interment was in St. Mary's Cemetery, New Bedford. In addition to Fr. Downey, survivors include her husband, Stephen J. Downey and Father's two sisters, and one brother, namely, Mary and Ellen of New Bedford and Joseph of Wisconsin.
Discuss Synod With Car.dinal DETR01T (NC) - Midwestern priests, after meeting here with Cardinal John Dearden to discuss the upcoming world Synod of Bishop~, said he told them he does not favor:a~change in the Church's mandatory celibacy law for the priesthoo.d. The priests noted, however:, ' that 'the Detroit cardinal said he would make every effort to see that the celibacy issue is considered by the synod. The 40 priests said they'represented priests' organizations' from dioceses in Michigan and Illinois, including the Detroit- and Chicago Associations of Priests. Cardinal Dearden is one of five U.S. bishops who will participate in the synod, opening Sept. 30 in Rome. He is president of the National Conference ofCafholic Bishops.
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Pastor Retires Continued from Page One served, the distinguished prelate has been noted for his e~ergetit leadership' and his zeal, especially in the field of instruction in the faith. He has served the Diocesan Tribunal as a ProSynodal Judge. And, in Wareham, he has served with distinctionon the Board of Trustees of TQbey Hospital. Msgr. Chippendale will take up residence in the Priests' Hostel in Fall River.
DOLAN-SAXON
Funeral Home 123 Broadway
TAUNTON VA 4·5000 /
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BROOKLAWN
FUNERAL
HOM~/INC.
R. Marcel Roy - G. ,"orraine Roy Roger LaFrance ,
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FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 Ir~ir;"gton Ct. New Bedford '995·5166
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese o~ Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
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CENTENNIAL CELEBRAUON IN NO. EASTON: Top left: Bishop Cronin is principal celebrant at a concelebrated Mass of Thanksgivng offered Sunday afternoon in Immaculate Conception Church, No. Easton. Concelebrants were: Rev. Martin L. Buote, former assistant; Rev. Robert Brennan, CSC, of Holy Cross Parish, So. Easton; Bishop Cronin, Rev.. Joseph F. Donnell, pastor of the centennial parish. Top right: Marybeth McDonald finds a friend in the Bishop as the Ordinary of the Diocese discusses with her brother William the reason for the crutches. Other members of the McDonald family are Rose Marie and Mrs. Grace McDonald. Bottom left: Kelli Ann Moran, third front, bubbles with anticipation as Kathy Crowley meets Bishop Cronin as Mrs. John Crowley, left rear and Kellie Crowley, front center waits her turn.
Congress of Religious Education To Cover Wide Range of Topics WASHINGTON (NC) - Virtually every aspect of religious education-from pre-school and parental involvement to adult education - will be covered at the 13th National Congress of Religious Education at Miami Beach Oct. 27-30. More than 5,000 religious educators from. throughout the United States are expected to attend the congress, held every five years and sponsored by the National Center of Religious Education-Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. Father William Tobin, assistant director of the national center, said the congress' purpose is "to provide for those concerned about the growth and development of religious education an opportunity to meet with the catechetical experts in education, social sciences and theology." He added tJiat the meeting would give religious educators a chance to evaluate their programs and plan for the future. More than 270 speakers have been scheduled for the congress. Adult Education Topics to be explored by the religious educators include: the theology of revelation and faith
in the light of communications .skills; media and Christian awareness; understanding the learner and the impact of culture and the environment upon him; the Church as missionary; curriculum planning, goals, and evaluations; adult education; parish co-ordination of religious education; media and religious education; family supportive programs; programs directed toward the culturally and economically deprived; programs encompassing. various age levels; and the mentally retarded. Also included among the topics are ecumenical dimensions in catechesis and catechesis of the Spanish-speaking. Among the speakers for the congress are Dr. Urie Bronfenbrenner of Cornelf University; Dr. Sidney Simon, professor at the University of Massachusetts and author of "Values and Teaching;" Dr. Christiane Brusselmans, noted educator and author of children's books on religion; the Rev. Boardman Kathan, general-secretary of the Religious Education Association; and Bishop Gerard L. Frey of Savannah, member of the U. S. Catholic Conference's committee on education.
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'THE ANCHOR.:-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Sept: 23, 1971 ..... .,',.
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Little Church Influence ,on, Legis,lation , Fath'el'_ Drinan Worries Abou,t Silence Father Robert Drinan, s.i, the first Catholic priest to be l'elected to' the Congress:· (the only other ·.priest~Con
of Churches probably thoughtand, for all I know, still thihks~ that 'it's own position on the admiriistration's welfare bill' 'was' , more "progressive", than Father Drinan's. I don't happen to agree wi~h the NCCin this regard. In other words, if I had been in Fath~r Drinan's:' .position, I probably would have. voted for Title 'IV of the welfare bill, as he
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'as the country wants itl to move. The problem, then" isl how to . get the country to push \congress to ·move a little further and a little faster. The answ~r to this one, Father Ddnan suggests, is more effective lobbying - and who; h~ asks, could lo~by more effectively than the churches if they ever decided to galvanize their forces for this particular purpose? . \
gressJllan: was appointed, not elected): has come to ,the con',elusion, after his first six months , on the Hill, that "the' churches of America are unable or unwill. ing to have their voice heard in '. C~ngress." To buttress his criticism' of , Related Questions the churches in this regard, I By Father Drinan says" for examAs a theoretical ,c6nstruct, ple, in. a signed artiel,e in· the, Father Drinan's positionl on this MSGR. Sept. 10 .issue of the-National matter of church 10bbyi~g probCatholic Reporter, that the ablY has 'a certain validity. In churches of America gave him GEORGE G. other words, t,he churchbs obviand the other members of Con,ously h~ve some kinQ lof role gress "virtually no assistance to play III the legislative arena. HIGGINS and no guidance" when the adOn, the other hand, it s~ems to ministration's massive welfare me that F~ther Drinan hlas even reform bill was up for a vote in did with a hope and a prayer asked, much less answered,' a the House. last June. that at least some of its' obvious number of questions whith have Father Drinan, will ,have to deficiences would be corrected a direct.' bea:t~ng on the \subject under diSCUSSIOn. . I ' forgive me as an old friend and in the Senate or in conference. admirer, if I say rather pointedly Among these questions lare the For present purposes, however, that I am not greatly impressed following: Who speaks for the by this particular complaint. If all this is beside the 'point. The churches? How do the churches· that Father Drinan, in point is I know Bob Drinan, he really arrive at a consensus ort comdoesn't feel that church groups, the very a.ct of lamenting and plex legislative matters? Does it criticizing the silence of church as they. are properly constituted, ' really make any' sense to preare particularly well qualified to 'groups in the legislative arena, tend, at this late date, that the has come close to proving the advise him (of all people) on the National Council of Churches intricacies of this "enormously opposite of what he. set out to represents 50 millionChtistians prove in the first place. complex and important social in the political arena? Who is To refer again to his NCR problem." really listening to the ch'urches column, his argument is that on legislative matters? \ Support Not Guidance church groups are failing to In my judgment, Fath~r DriThis is more than a hunch on give, guidance to the Congress nan begs all 'of th~se ~rid a my part; it's a matter of public on complex legis.fative issues., number of. r~lated questiorts in a But what he ends up saying is .!,e~ord. That is to say, in the that these groups' really not rather ~avalier fashion b~ stat"very' J'/CR column in which he. ing, all too emphatically lin his qualified to' give such'guidance. laments 'the' "silence" of the NCR column that "to thi'nk that This, being the case, what's the' churches in the legislative arena such activities (lobbying) 6n the Drinan goes out of his way t~ excitement all about? Why part of organized religion, are bother asking for guidance from say, and very emphatically at improper is a totally naivb and that, that he was totally unim- religious groups' in whose judg- indefensible concept." I ment one has so little confidence? press~d by the arguments adI find this statement to be vanced by the one major church' Nation Moves Slowly very simplistic and doctrihaire. org~f.lization which did go to I know I don't have to tell It literally cries out for a Inurnthe' trouble 'of contacting him on the issue, namely, the Na- Father Drinan - and I hope I ber of distirictions, some of pon't have to tell the readers of which I hope to raise, fori purtional Council of Churches. this COlumn, especially those poses of discussion, in a subse"I am sorry to say," he reports, that the arguments pre- who agree with Drinan-that my quent release of this cOlumh. purpose in raising these quesPo~er Questioned ji se~ted by these (NCC) represen. : I tatives of some 50 million Chris- _ tions abol!t his NCR column is not to score po!nts in a purely MeanwhIle,·I can't resist pointtians were, to say the least less than impressive." Or· again.' "Re- academic debate, but simply to' ing out that Father Drinan'~ ap-, spect for the credibility ~f 'the ' suggest that, the role, of the., parent confidence in the pbwer legislative arm, of the National churches in the field of legisla- of. the churches to infIuencJ the Council of Churches ~as not en- tion is, in my opinion, neither as ' ' legislative process is increa~ingsimple nor as clear cut as Father Iy being questioned by a ~umhanced by its performance conDdnan makes it out to be. ber of competent observerS incerning the program for welfare As a resident of Washington eluding, for example, F~ther reform which passed the House who has watched the legislative Andrew Greeley, of the Natibnal , in late June." process rather closely, for 10 'Opiriion Re!!earch Center. ,I ,~his means (to the present these many years, from a disIn an' article' on integrhted Writer at least) that Father ,tance of approximately two housing in the SeptemberDrinan:- ~uite understandably- miles, I think I know what's ,October issue of The Ctitic from hiS pomt of view and from bothering Father Drinan in his Father Greeley writes as fo1l6ws;' mine as well-is impressed by "It is remotely possible th~t a role as a Congressman. church pronouncements on comBy his own admission, he de- . large religious. body like Ithe plex legislative matters if and cided to run for the Congress Roman Catholic Church could be when said pronouncements coinbecause he was convinced that po~erful enough to make imporcide with his own point of view that's where the action was. But tant beginnings in the subject of on these issues, whereas he finds no sooner had he arrived in metropolitan integration. But !the them totally unimpressive and Washington then he discovered Catholic Church, exists to~ay altogether lacking in credibility when they advocate a position to his chagrin, that there isn't in a state of organizatiohal nearly as much action on the c h aos, near collapse - and \ is different from his own. Hill as he thought ther~ would scarcely able to face its own In other words, what he really be. internal problems much less hJv€ wants from the churches-or so He realized, in other words any influence on the rest of the it seems fo me - is not "guidI that the Congress, as a rule,, city." , ?nce" as such but massive polit- . 'can move only as: far and as fast This mayor may not be Ian Ical support fo!, his own point of exaggeration on Father Greeley's view. "', part, but it does raise the pos'si, Learning bility that Fath~r Drinan may be Criticizes Sihince If you wish to study men you wasting his time worrying abdut ,It is interesting and rather must not neglect to mix with the silence and/or ineptitude lof ironical ,to note, in this connec- the soci~ty of children. ~the churcl:Les in the area lof , tion, th~t the National Council -Torrey federal legislation. I
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FATHER TOSTI FATHER NORTON Assistant ASsistant SS. Peter and Paul, Fall River Htlly Name, New Bedford
Announc'es
Assign~ents
Continued from Page Two mond J. and the late Gertrude C. (O'Neil) Regan. A graduate of St. Mary parish school and Msgr. Coyle High School, he prepared for the priesthood at St. Charles College in Catonsville, Md. and St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, Md. He was ordained to the priesthood by Most Reverend James L. Connolly on May 22, 1953. Father Regan has served at St. James Parish, New Bedford' Sacred Heart Parish, Fail River: and St. Patrick Parish, Falmouth. He has also been the Cape Cod Director for' Special Gifts for the Catholic Charities' Appeal and is a member of the Diocesan Commission f~r Divine Worship.
Son of Antonio M. and Norma (Ginese) Tosti, Rev. Ronald' A. Tosti was born in Taunton on Nav. 2, 1936. He prepared for the priesthood at St. Thomas Preparatory Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn. and St. Mary Seminary in Baltimore, Md. He was ordained to the priesthood on May 11, 1962. Father Tosti has served at Our Lady of the Assumption Parish Osterville; Sacred Heart Parish: Fall River. He was appointed Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine on June 11, 1970 following special studies, for a Masters in Religious Education at Fordham University. '
Father Magnani
Father Blottrnan
Father Tosti
Rev. John V. Magnani, son of ' Rev. William P. BI~ttman, son John N. and Frances (Sensoni) of Kathryn M. and' the late John Magnani, was born in Boston B. Blottman, was born 'in New on Sept. 28, 1934. Roc~elle, N. Y., on April 7, 1934. After'studies at St. Mary parHe prepared for the Priesthood ish school. in North Attleboro , at St. Philip Neri Seminary, Bosand North Attleboro High ton, and St. John's Seminary, School, 'he prepared for ;the Brighton and was ordained to priesthood at St. Charles College, the priesthood on Feb. 13, 1965. Catonsville, Md., and St. Mary's Father Blottman has served at Seminary in Baltimore, Md. Holy Family Parish, East TaunMost Reverend James L. Con- ton; St. Mary Parish, North Atnolly ordained him to the priest- tleboro and St. Joseph Parish, hood on April 25, 1959. Father Fall River. He was also the AsMagnani has been assistant pas- sistant CYO Director for the tor at St. Mary Parish, So. Dart- Attleboro Area. mouth, since ordination. Father Norton Father Delano Born Feb. 15, 1941 in, Fall Son of Keryneth E. and Isabelle River, Rev. William W. Norton (Tatro) Delano, Rev. Kenneth is the son of Willia~ B. and J. Delano was born in Taunton Madeline (Walsh) Norton. on April 12, 1934: ' After studies at Cardinal O'Connell Seminary and se He prepared for the priesthood John's Seminary, he was orat Our Lady of Providence Sem-' dained to the priesthood on May rnary, Warwick, and St. Mary 20, 1967.. .Seminary in Baltimore; Md. Most He has served at Sacred Heart Reverend James 1.. Connolly or· Parish, Taunton; St. Kilian Pardained him to the priesthood on ish, New J3edford. He is director April 10, 1960. of St. Mary's Home in New BedFather Delano has served at ford and the chaplain of the St. Patrick Parish, Fall River; St. Bristol County House of Correc~ Patrick Parish, Wareham;' St. tion. Mary Parish, New Bedford. Dur- . . Father Norton has taught at ing a period of convalescence, he Bishop Stang High' School and has gained national reputation the Pre-Cana Conference. He is for his studies and lectures in also moderator of hte CYO for astronomy and its relation to Turn to "Page Twelve theology. Father Mullaney . Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney was born in Fall River on Oct. 28, 1936, the son of Judge Beatric (Hancock) Mullaney and the late Joseph E. Mullaney. After studies at Cardinal O'Connell Seminary and St. John's Seminary, he was ordained to the priesthood on Feb. 2, 1962. Since his ordination he has been assistant pastor at St. ' Patrick Parish, Wareham.
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Survey Shows Bishops' Working To Combat Diocesan Problems NEW YORK (NC)-The nation's bishops are combatting current diocesan problems: by emphasizing communication with priests and laity and better vocational recruitment programs, A survey of U. S. bishops, released in The Gallagher Presidents' Report, a weekly newsletter to corporate chief executives, reveals that the American hierarchy believes its most urgent diocesan problems are vo-, cations, personnel shortages, inadequate finances, religious growth, polarization between liberal and conservative Church elements, and a communications gap with the clergy.. Other problems cited as less serious are escalating departmental costs, lack of respect for authority, inefficiency and lack of facilities. The Gallagher study was based on a scientific sampling of 31 bishops in a geographic crosssection of 155 dioceses. The bishops represent 13.4 millionor 28 per cent-of the nation's 48 million Catholics. Vocation Problems More than eight in ten (83.3 per cent) of the bishops cited vocations as the most urgent problem they face. Over half (56.7 per cent) said they would be willing to consider the use of women in liturgical functions and in administering some sacraments. Nine out of 10 emphasized communication with priests and parish members to overcome vo,cation problems. Three out of five, according to the report,
viewed the bishop's role as a commuications bridge between practicing 'Catholics and' nonCatholics,. Seventy per cent of the bishops said they regard mandatory celibacy, a critical issue, with 23.3 per cent saying demands for optional celibacy will probably, increase while 5.7 per cent foresee a decrease in such demands. Nearly two-thirds (64.3 ,per cent) recognize mandatory celibacy as a major factor in the departure of priests. ', But the majority, 75 per cent, also said they thought most priests leave the ministry because 'of neglect of prayer. Vocational mistake was cited by 71.4 per cent as the possible reason for departure. Clerical Departures The report stated in a news release that it believes much of the current thinking as reflected in' the study will dominate'the world Synod of Bishops this Fall in Rome. The report noted a relaxation in bishops' atitudes toward clerical departures since its last survey of the Church. Nearly half (48 per cent) of the respondents said they viewed former priests as faithful to conscience, compared to 16,7 per cent in a similar study two years ago, and 84 per cent said they believe former priests as psychologically unsettled. Three-fourths (76.7 per cent) said they think clerical departures are still a critical issue. But over half (56,7 per cent) think departures will decrease.
THE ANCHOR-
Urges Christians Look to Cross F'or Assistance, CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) Christians must look to the cross and Christ's sufferings in meet- . ing the challenge of today's world, Pope Paul VI told visitors at this year's last general audi, ence at his Summer home here. The following day the Pope ended what he had described as a "working vacation" here in the Alban hills and returned to the Vatican, where he began 'working on the last details of preparation for the upcoming Synod of Bishops. The synod opens in the Vatican Sept. 30.
The Pope told the general audience that "even in the Christian environment we see how , PLAN CCD TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAM: Final- there are attempts to' overthrow' izing plans for the New Bedford Series at St. James Parish the cross." Other remedies to toare, seated: Mrs. Vincent Worden, Sr. Marianna Sylvester, , day's trials are being offered, he such as "moral indifference RSM, and Sr. Theresa Sparrow; RSM. Standing, Rev. James said, and unscrupulousness." R. McLellan and Rev. Joseph D. Maguire. He continued: "Sin, it is said, does not exist. It is 'tabu.' It is the fancy of physically weak persons. It is annulled by discarding every moral sensibility, by abolishin,g every scruple, by The St. James parish religious them in modern techniques of smothering every remorse." education staff of New Bedford communication. Comfortable Delusion will sponsor a monthly series of Other areas of concern will be CCD teacher training sessions to fundamental principles of EduPope Paul warned that men in be held on the third Thursday cational Psychology, classroom turning their hacks on the evening of each month at 7 preparation and activities and teachings of Christ路 on the cross o'clock in the church hall and the art of creative lesson plan- "turn to worldly things ... with will continue throughout the ning. the comfortable delusion of sav'coming school year. These sessions are provided ing the world by adopting its Rev. Joseph D. Maguire, par- for those involved in religious tastes, its habits and its morals." ish CCD, director, has announced education programs of the parBut the cross, the Pope told that each month an expert in ishes and schools in the great.er his visitors, "has not wholly disthe field of religious education New Bedford area. However appeared from the walls of our will come to direct an evening parents and other interested per- houses. Christ is there, hanging, of learning and experience. sons are urged to attend for re- dying, with his tacit language cent black. But Msgr. Thomas The first session will be given ligious education is the work of of redeeming suffering, of undyW. Lyons, Washington archdioc- by Fr. Ronald A. Tosti, Diocesan the entire Christian community. ing hope, of conquering and livesan director of education, said Director of Religious Education. ing love. This is fine. It is he, was sure that "in the minds Fr. Tosti's talk will be "Religious strength. We are still Christians, Deny Connections of some p.eople there's a certain Education in Perspectiv'e." By at least by this sign." amount of (racial) fear, the kind means of process education, the With Mercenary He told the audience not to that grows out of making gener- speaker will develop the modern ROME (NC) - The Verona catechetical approach in its rela- Fathers missionary society has be afraid "that the cross may ali~ations about people." . .. Man,y of the people (10 the tion to the past as, we look to denied accusations made during make OUr life sad and feeble" citizens group) unfortunately the future. the trial of rebels in the Sudan because it "lovingly bears the The purpose of these sessions that the society sent a German sorrowful and glorious stigmata just don't think black" childr~n can behave themselves, he said. is to provide the CCD teachers mercenary, Rolf' Steiner", to the of the cross. The, Crucified in 'the greater New Bedford area Sudan and was in contact with Christ is God's wisdom." Hopes for Solution with a better understanding of him. Msgr. Lyons said 93 per cent the complex structure of modSteiner was accused of being of the students who gra'duated' at the school's old location last ern catechetics and its demands involved in the abortive coup CHAS. F. year went on to college. That for new approaches and proce- last July against Maj. Gen. Jaadures. far Numeiry, leader' of Sudan's location will be leased to the. The Vatican Council has ruling Revolutionary Command District of Columbia for use as stressed in its Declaration on Council. . an adult education center. In Khartoum, Sudan's capital, Msgr. Lyons said the high Christian Education that the reschool students seem to he tak- ligion teacher be "ever ready the public prosecutor, in his inOIL CO., INC. ing their ill reception "pretty to renew and adapt" and hope- dictment speech against Steiner, fully these monthly sessions will charged that Father Tarcisio 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE well," adding: contribute to a realization of Agostino, superior general of NEW BEDFORD, MASS. "They come in the morning. this goal. the Verona Fathers, had met They stay on the grounds all Through these sessions, the Steiner in Kampala, Uganda, day long. When school ends they group hopes to help meet the and sent him to the Sudan. go home. They want to get home problem of making the life and The headquarters here of the as soon. as possible because teaching of Christ personally Verona Fathers, also known as HEATING OilS many of them have part-time relevant and practically useful to the Sons of the Sacred Heart of jobs." COMPLETE the youth and adults of our Jesus, issued a statement saying: . The education director said community. HEAliNG SYSTEMS "Father Agostoni never met nor . that although going back to the , The aim is to provide CCD IN.STALLED even saw Rolf Steiner while he old building would, Be a "severe teachers in our area with a was in Kampala." hardship" for the school, risking sound background in doctrine, 24 HlOUR OIL BURNER loss of accreditation, he hoped scripture and liturgy and to give SERVICE a solution could be found "with- them an awareness of their creout that kind of bitterness that ative potential as witnesses to BUDGET PLANS might result in harassment." the gospel of Jesus, and to assist The Vargas Oil Co. protects Kalorma citizens might beyour family's heating comfort Eagerness come better acquainted with the all year round. high school and its students Enthusiasm is at the bottom through the zoning hearings of all progress. With it there is TRY US FIRST process, he said, thus losing their accomplishment. Without it there 3-6592 fear of bad effects on the neigh- are only alibis. porhood. -Henry Ford
N'ew Bedford's St. James Parish Plans Teacher Training Course
Reside'nts of White Neighborhood Oppose Black Catholic School WASHINGTON (NC) - Residents .of Kalorma, an exclusive white neighborhood here, have banded together to try to prevent a largely black Catholic boys' high school from operating near their homes. An attempt to get a court order restraining Mackin High School from opening was denied, but a group called Concerned Kalorma Citizens succeeded in getting a rehearing before the city's zoning board. Until the rehearing Oct. 13, the school will operate double sessions on an old ruling that permits 150 of the school's 350 students on campus at anyone time. The citizens' group said it 'was afraid students would threaten "peace and tranquility in the neighborhood, cause crowding, traffic congestion, and' lower property values, and stir apprehension in the elderly, women and mothers with young children." Ra~e issues have not officially been mentioned, although the school's student body is 85 per
Booklet Explores TV Possibilities WASHINGTON (NC) '-:- The United States Catholic Conference has published an analysis of the possibilities television holds for diocesan education systems, The 53-page booklet, "Diocesan Learning Networks" (USCC Publications Office), explores opportunities for diocesan work in commercial, educational, cable television, and other systems.
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Priest -Senate Elects New Officers -
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
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'''The greatest hazard to survival which American The Fall River Senate of youth's must pass successfully to reach adulthood" is the Priests had their first meeting automobile. ' on Friday, Sept. 17 with the newly elected Senators being , So 'says a new Federal study by the National Transpresent: Re~. Walter Buckley, portation Safety Board. The report indicates that thouRev. 'Msgr. Bernard J. Fenton, " sands more 15-to-24-year-old drivers than their proportionRev. Edwin J.' Loew, Rev: John J. Murphy, Rev. John F. Hogan. aLshare of all drivers are dying on American highways Also, Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, each year. Rev. Francis 1. Mahoney, Rev. Whether the young person is a driver or a rider, his John J. Steakem, Rev. George W. Coleman, Rev. Robert Mcgreat hazard 'to living is the car. . Gowan, Rev. Robert Carter and , The study cites the increasing a~ility of young people , Rev. Edward C. Duffy. to own and maintain their own cars-':"'a result of this unNominations and Election of officers were held with the elecprecedented era of luxurY-,-as a factor that has increased , tion of Rev. George W. Coleman the numbers of young people on ,the highways. , as president; Rev. Walter A. SulAnd the study also 'brings up other disturbing factors livan as vice-president and Rev. Richard R. Gendreau as secre~ """:'the attitude of young people to alcohol, and drugs and tary. A'treasurer will be elected changes in respect for law and ordei~ later. All these add up to some grim figures-thirty-one per , Reports were given by several cent or 17,700 of the nation's traffic fatalitie~ in 1969, the of the committeees, concerning the NFPC "Moment of Truth last year for which complete statistics are available, were Statement." The results will be " in the 15 to'24 year-old bracket. sent to all the priests. No wonder that the program, for highway safety is A report was given on the election for two new members a continuing, one. No wonder that the Vatican felt conto the Personnel Board with the strained a short while ago to remind those who believe final stage of this election takin the Commandments of God that dangerous driving is ing place this month. . Prayer'1 of the Faithful an' offense against the injunction, Thou shalt not kiiI. , A report was read on Cathedral Camp by Rev. Walter A. But it still remains for all persons to appreciate fully in Preparq,tion for the Synod Sullivan concerning new guideand completely and with some degree of fear the potential lines and salaries for the Semifor destruction that car has every single time they, step Priest: Dearly and sisters: in oneness narians next year. into an auto'mobile as either driver or passenger. Bishop Cronin was in attendof heart let us raise our prayer to God the Father and he clarified several ance for the HOI~ Church of Christ and for the salvapoints concerning his response tion of the world; let us pray in particular for the to the proposals submitted to Lay Experts, coming Syndd of Bishops in Rome; that the work him as a result of our special The Vatican has announced that five lay experts will of our pastots may be guided by the Holy Spirit June meeting. attend the Synod of Bishops that will convene next ThursA resolution was pas$ed by and may ben1efit the Christian people and all men. -I the Senate expressing sincere' day. Lector: For the holy Fhurch spread throughout the world: gratitude to' M~gr'J .TQhnBoyd ",' . The names of the experts give a guod view of the that she maYI faithfully proclaim the good news of for all the years of 'service and "make-up of the Church. Lady Jackson (Barbara Ward) of Christ and that she may work tirelessly in the unity leadership that he has given to -I England is a well-known writer and economist. Maria Del , the growth oj the Senate since of faith and love, , ' I let us pray to the Lord. its inception. Pilar Bellosillo of Spain is head of the International Union People: Lord, hear o~r prayer. of Catholic Women. Dr. Candido Mendes of Brazil is certainly a representative figure from', a vast contin~nt that, :lector: For our Hol~ Father Pope. Paul VI and' for the Charity Sa II bishops meetihg for the Synod: that, being enlight,is~sooverwhelmingly Catholic. Professor Kinhide MushContinued from Page, One ened by the HplY Spirit and open to his inspirations, on Friday evening, Jan. 14, 1972 akoji .is, from 'Japan, and 'will add his expertise from the they may lead the People of God in ~he footsteps at the Lincoln Park Ballroom. . point of view of the growth of Catholicism ~mong the -_Orientals. And- Aloya Munyangaju of Rwanda will repre,of Christ, the: way, the truth and the life, let us Proceeds from this event help to provide for the promotion and pray to the Lord. 'sent the Church in the emerging world of Africa.. ,expansion of the facilitieS for I The very listing of these experts reflects the global , People: Lord,hear out prayer. the 'exceptional and underprivinature and global mission of the Church. It would seem _Lector: For' all the priests of Christ's Church: 'that being leged children. ,that their pre~ence at the Synod, will help guarantee that , , ,-' filled with jo~ for the gift received JromGod for These facilities include the St. de Paul Society , every con~ine.nt and culture will, be given a voice. . the generous ~ervice of their fellowmen', they may CampVincent and Catholic Boys' Day -fulfill with zealand fervor their priestly ministry, ,The cosmopolitan make-up of the experts 'also indi'Camp for the underprivileged I . ' cates to European and North American Catholics that their ,' le~ us pr~y. tO the Lord. " ,' children, the Nazareth Camp for the exceptional children and the own point of view -on many matters may be just that- People: Lord, hear OUtI prayer. Mashpee Camp on the Cape for ,I ' a point of view that may not necessarily take into account older cultures, newer cultures, emerging cultures, different- Lector: For all the m~mbers of the People of God: t~at, ,St. Vincent's Home children. being' consciolls of their bapti~al dignity and BEmeficiaries of the Ball also cultures. . , mission, they tPay be living witnesses to the Gos- include the four schools in operation for the education, of the The choice of these experts certainly shows that the pel, let us pray to the Lord. exceptional children., These Holy Father and his advisors ,are most anxious to' provide - , schools are the Nazareth Halls the Synod with attitudes and opinions that truly reflect People: Lord, hear our II prayer. Attleboro and, Hyannis and Lector: For all men of goodwill, especially those who bear in the whole Church. two in Fall River, Nazareth Hall the greatest resiponsibility within their nations: that and the Pre-Vocational Training they may strive fraternaIIy and without ceasing Center. for the estabIi~hment of peace and justice in the Committee assignments will be given to all members present world, let us p'tay to the Lord. at-the meeting. People: Lord, hear our \prayer. Lector: For our ~ommunity gathered here: that, as true Diocesan Office CathoIi~s, we ttiay share by prayers in this moment OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL RIVER Manager Named in the life of th~ Church, let us pray to the Lord. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River TOLEDO (NC) - A layman , 410 Highland Avenue People:' Lord: hear our brayer. , " who has been an .investment "" I and tax adviser has Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 Priest: Almighty and eternal God,send in abundance the ,counselor been named full-time office man,PUBLISHER gifts of your Spirit upon out bishops gathered in, ager of the Toledo diocese. Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O., S.T.D. the SyYlod that ithe Church, stren~hened by their Frederick W. Kendrick has also been associated with two labors, may giv~ the world a new proof oj your GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER major glass companies here and this) through Christ otir Lord. love. (We ask Rev. John P. 'Driscoll 路'Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shelloo, M.A. , I ' has taught business administra~L~,lry Press-Fill River People: Amen. I tion at the University of Toledo.
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@rhe ANCHOR-
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Deplores, Slighting Needs Of Im'poverished Nations (This week the Bishops' Synod opens in Rome, with World Justice one of the two major issues to be discussed. Barbara Ward, -our regular columnist, is a consultant to , this Synod, and does not wish to publicly express hervie~s during this period. In her absence, Mr. Jennings will pre- inflation suggested to Miss Ward sent significant background "a grave lack of political candor." data on the issue of world justice.) Hostile Confrontation
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
Hospital Honors Late Adminis;trator Mother Pierre Remembered by St. Anne's Family
Most Reverend James L. Connolly, formerly bishop of Fall River, surrounded by the priests, religious and laity associated with St. Anne's Hospital, formally dedicated the hospital chapel to honor the hospital's beloved "ma mere" - Mother Pierre Marie, O.P., on the third The impact of the internaThe effect upon international anniversary of her death. Bishop Connolly had weltional elements of President monetary stability of U. S. miliNixon's new economic policy-' tary ventures in Southeast Asia comed the zealous nun to the the U. S~ refusal to redeem and other regions of the world, Fall River Diocese in 1943 and however, have not gone un- he praised the nun's simplicity, ~~nl~@]~::~~~n;rt:t1,·llimmm.:.:" sincerity and goodness. "I am noted by Amerca's allies. i :-:: not saying she was a saint," the The recent hostile confrontabishop commented, "but she certion in Washington between U. S. tainly looked and acted like one By officials and the five-man dele- and the city is the poorer for gation from Japan highlighted losing her," JAMES R. this dilemma. When U.S. spokesA white marble plaque commen attempted to pressure the memorating the event. reads: JENNINGS Japanese into sharing the cost of "The Mother, Pierre Marie its defense, the Japanese coun- Chapel. May our consideration tered by pointing out that, while for others be a living memorial the U. S. annually spends $650 foreign-held dollars into U. S.- million in Japan for maintenance to her." Mr. Fred Pansera, Jr., a memowned gold, the imposition of a of American military facilities a 10 per cent surtax on certain and troops, Japan spends more ber of the physical therapy deU. S. imports and a 10 per cent than $100 million in the U. S. partment, presented a gift of $1,700 to the hospital "as a symreduction in U. S. foreign aid- for military equipment. bol of th.e love and gratitude the will not be known for some time. Furthermore, they noted that employees feel for Mother It is clear, however, that the equilibrium of the monetary the U. S. has rent-free use of Pierre," Rev. Mother Therese des system of the West and the eco- thousands of acres of Japanese nomic health of the U. S. in par- property valued at more than Anges, O.P., former mother genticular have been in jeopardy for $4 billion with a potential rev- ~ral, was the official represenenue of about $500 million. tative from the mother house many months. in France. . Europeans are also quick to Undoubtedly the American point out that much of the U. S. Employees participating in the dollar was in serious trouble in is· a direct re. financial difficulty Mass and representing the hosthe world money market, and it pital's 700 workers were: Donald the Vietnam war rather suit of was necessary for President than the relatively minor costs Souza of the pharmacy depart. Nixon to attempt some remedial of defending Europe. One of the ment, lector; Gerald Desjardins, action. Although the current major failures of the U. S. has maintenance, lector; Miss Bertha crisis has been caused by many factors, several fundamental is- been its inability to convince its Janson, housekeeping, offertory European partners to support procession; Miss Dorothy Jeff, sues should be underscored. materially America's view of the business office, offertory procesOne question that has persis" communist threat in Southeast sion. tently reoccurred is who is to Asia. Likewise, Europeans have The Prayer of the Faithful was pay for the defense of .the so- failed to dissuade the U. S. from read by Miss Virginia Martin, called "free world,'~ To police the its self-apPointed mission of record room; Miss Patricia Selworld, the U. S. maintains mili- containing communism in that leck, x-ray; Miss Marguerite tary personnel and their depend- part of the world. Gauthier, diet department. ents in numerous countries At a reception that followed Negotiating Point around the globe. Expenditures the Mass, the following were to support this deployment conAn additional breakdown in hostesses: Miss Rita Bertoncini tribute to the dollar drain, understanding has been evident school of nursing; Miss Germain~ amounting to $40 billion in the in the question of financing Poulin, pharmacy; Miss Jean last decade. NATO. Although both parties ·Gonet, . inhalation therapy; Mrs. hold common views about the Leonora Souza, intensive care. Additional Strain ,High Pra.ise need for a military presence in Describing the, event as a Going into the Seventies, these Western Europe as a deterrent direct military expenditures to the Soviets, agreement as to' "witness to the' influence Mother abroad are running at an annual the financing continues to strain Pierre Marie exercised," Sister rate 60 per cent higher than that . relations between the U. S. and Jean Marie .Perdriault, O.P., pres- . ent hospital administrator, deof the early Sixties,. despite the its NATO partners. "winding down" of the war in A negotiating point currently clared: "She made this hospital Vietnam. offered by the U. S. tha.t other what it is." "The wonderful spirit of its An additional strain on the nations owe the' U. S. something U. S. economy has been the in- in repayment for its efforts over personnel," the administrator creased involvement in the war the last· 25 years to defend the continued, is one of the greatest which generated inflationary free world is not well received assets of the hospital. "The pressures in the U. S. on wages, abroad. Many Europeans recall years ahead will be challenging prices (including U. S. exports) that U. S. leaders, in order to and it is encouraging to know and interest rates. Barbara generate domestic support for that we can rely on the cooperaWard's description of the infla- the Marshall Plan and NATO, tion of St. Anne's family' to keep tionary effects of U. S. massive used the argument that, if the in Fall River the spirit of Chrisinvolvement in the war was de- U. S: had not re-armed Western tian charity and dedication that tailed in her column of March Europe after World War II and Mother Pierre Marie provided. 1, 1971, entitled "Arms Expendi- supported NATO during the The patient was her first conCold War, the cost of defending'" cern, may it be ours in an in· tures Feed Inflation." Miss Ward's thesis is that as America would have been sig- creasingly complex world," America stepped up its military nificantly greater. Resolution of the question of English Plan Survey expenditures for the war in the mid-sixties without correspond- how to finance the defense of ing increase in taxation "the the free world awaits further Of Celibacy Views LIVERPOOL (NC) - A major pressure generated by purchas- hard bargaining. sessions being power (resulting from high tween the developed nations of survey to discover the views on employment) unmatched by suf- the West. Regrettably, it seems . celibacy of all the priests of ficient civilian goods began to that the needs of "the impover- England and Wales will be unrise. Inflation set in." Failure of ished nations of the Third World dertaken by a conference of American leadership to acknowl- will continue to be slighted as priests. The survey will also include edge publicly. the link between negotiations among the industhe views of lay persons. U. S. spending for Vietnam and trialized giants proceed. ~~
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HONOR MEMORY OF MOTHER PIERRE: Most Rev. James L. Connolly, former Bishop of Fall River offers' an , ' anmversary Mass in the chapel for the late administrator of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River on the occasion of the dedication of the chapel in her memory. Assisting Bishop Connolly were Rev. William J. Shovelton, left, pastor of Our Laqy of Mt. Carniel Church, Seekonk and Rev. Robert Blais, OP., hospital chaplain.
New College Three-Year CUll'riculum Stresses Modern Problems SAUSALITO (NC) - Sophomore slump is out and classes that deal in everyday concerns are in at New College of California, thanks to the school's first president, Jesuit Father John P. Leary. Father Leary, formerly Gon'zaga University president in Spokane, Wash, and most recently vice-president of the University of Santa Clara in California,· said his school which opens Sept. 27 in Sausalito, is not going to fall prey to teaching subject matter "which smacks of 30 or 100 years ago." "Why not take students where they are ," he explained, "with the problems they are vexed and anguished by - insecurity, wa'r, hunger, injustice, the vast im.. personality of our times, their own love life, religion and identity? Then work backwards and forwards' from there." . In the list of innovations at New College will be the suppression of sophomore year. There
just won't be a "leaden sophomore experience," Father Leary said. However, to keep the college in line with Western Association of Colleges' standards, there will be longer classes and longer semesters in the three-year curriculum. At New College, which expects 50. students in its first academic year and an entering class of 250 in Sept. 1972, classes will be taught in analysis of problems, building imagination, discipline, the city today and others designed around tile problematic-from meditation to the role of conviction in jUdg~-1... ment.
Big Three Three grand essentials to happiness in this life are something to do, something to love and something to hope for. : -Addison
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Su;e'd,e Boo,ts Are App,ealing But Beware' olf Wlet W,eather Accessories are elegant this Fall-ladylike, classical, and important. Boots are just as important as they were last year at this time and they appear in a variety of . colors, materials and heights. Along with the popular . patents, which have returned, in a 'wide range of cglors, we my handbag when I finally get around to cleaning it out-on will see a variety of suede~. second thought maybe I'm sure Fashionwise, these suedes I could write a book on it. are just great because they bring with _them glorious and' soft
By MARILYN RODERICK
shades that were impossible to whip up when the designers were using just patent leather. . One warning should go along with the emphasis on suede for boots and that's the fact that suede cannot take a wetting, and snow and suede mix like oil and water. Getting suede boots caught in a snowstorm results in a whfte ring (where the snow ended) that is all but impossible to remove. If you do pick up any of these smart looking suede boots as a fashion accessory make sure they remain just a luxury item because suecie is not /' iu?ractical material. Belts are another big fashion item this Fall and while they are extraordinarily good looking, their prices are also way up there. Don't flinch when you see man'y of them with 15, or 20 dollar price tags (and even more for ~hehand-tooled variety). If you ,are'very good with your flying fingers you can macrame yours~lf ,a stunning individual waist-cincher.
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Handbags Shoulder bags are the leaders in the leather goods line and not only are they attractive but they are practical as well-with many :of them having a multitude of pockets for us gals to carryall our junk in. (Someday I'll do a' .,. column on just路 what I find in
Sponsor Mental Health Research Center
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Asks Nuns Wea'r Rei i'gi'OU's Habits
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fail River-Thurs. Sept. 23, lnl
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NEWARK (NC)-UNICO National, Italian-American service organization, and the Mt. Carmel Guild, social welfare agency of the Newark Archdiocese, will jointly' sponsor a national mental health research center to be located at guild headquarters here. Plans for the center were approved unanimously at the re_ cent UNICO convention in St. Paul, according to Dr. Benjamin Cottone of Scranton, Pa., its president, who said the center will concentrate on the prevention of mental health problems. Noting. that the program will be launched at a time when private ~ and government spending in this 'area have been cur_.tailed; Dr. Cottone' said UNICO '. "has m~de' mental health its major commitment for support" for the. last 50 years.
Smart designers make their bags classical looking with a combination of leather and suede. For the evening look bags become'small again and the little clutch is back-again in an array of great colors to match -any outfit. , Even though skirts are of the longer variety (although the midi advocates lost out) legs are still important and therefore hosiery is too. For evening, especially around the holidays, all eyes will travel down as pantihose become decorative lind glittery. Some manufacturers have already appeared with this look but others will wait until holiday clothes appear on the racks to send out their accessories. AccesSOries Finally, in the jewelry line, Fall and Winter this year will see a big emphasis on gold and plastic .,-- not necessarily as a combination. The gold comes from the Greek influence and also the handcraft rage that is sweeping the country, while the plastic is a return to the jewelry of the forties. Scottie dogs, red elephants and other campy' items will' hang from chains, decorate wrists or cluster together in duos to light up the plainest sweater. Many of the gold items are ch.unky and elegant looking with a design trend toward -articles of nature such as ,shells and fish. Whatever your outfit, you'll need a few accessories to make it outstanding and this year, in particular, you'll have no trouble finding them.'
FORT WAYNE (NC)-For the second time an American bishop has publicly requested nups in ,his diocese to wear some type ,of religious habit when teaching. Bishop Leo' C. Pursley of Fort Wayne-South Bend said in a memorandum, published in his diocesan I edition of Our Sunday Visitor, that it is his wish "because it is the wish of the Church, as expressed by Vatican II and our Holy Father, that some adequate outward sign of identification be preserved by our Sisters when they are functioning publicly and professionally in the / pursuit of the vocation to which they are called." Bishop Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh, N.C. recently issued a similar request and added that any nuns who did not wish to comply could not work in his diocese. Bishop Pursley wrote that if his order posed "an unreasonable and arbitrary request, it should be rejected." But he continued: FALL RIVER CLUB HONORS BISHOP: Members of "If I am reminded that externals the Fall River Woman's Club opened the year with a night, are not essentials, I agree fully, .honoring Bishop CroI1in. Among the prinicpa.ls present but I do not accept the concluwere: Rev. Msgr. John IE. Boyd, club moderator; the Bish-. sion that externals are therefore, op, Mrs. Harold Ward, vice-president; Mrs. James A. insignificant and unimportant., "The clerical collar does not O'Brien, president: Mi~ls Dorothy C. Sullivan, a 'past pres- make the priest, but it does make ident. ' him known as a priest to people , I 'who have a right to know and .it does help him to remember that he is a priest when there is some inducement to forget. In today's world, this is not a rePriest Says Mos~t Americans' Favor Return mote possibility-for any of us."
Asks '~m'endm,ent
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Of Prayets in Public Schools
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WASHINGTON (NC)-A priest the Congress to act," he said. has told congressmen it isj ti~e Father Howes, a Worcester to fight the, ban on prayers in priest currently working here, public schools because evidence said what is at stake is not so shows that Americans bver- much sub~tance 'of a prayer amendment "but the right of the whelmingly endorse such prayers. , Father. Robert G. Howes~ na- American people to decide the路 tional coordinator of Citizens for' issue in the 50 states." Father Howes said a nationPublic Prayer, said one of the most important items on the wide poll taken by a professioncongressional agenda this session al firm showed more than 80 should be a '''people's aniend-_ per cent were in favor of voluntary school prayer." There' were ment for public prayer." Speaking to the Congressional majorities in each of the prinFirst Friday Club at'the CapitOl, cipal faith groups, he said. Father Howes said "evidbnce continues that the American :peo- Ask Investigation Plan Special Meeting pie overwhelmingly endorse I the Of financial Link civil right of free prayer and' WASHINGTON (NC)-AmeriTo Study" Abortion spiritual Bible reading in their cans United for Separation of ROME (NC)-The Vatican is public schools. , I Church and State has asked a quietly planning a three-day in"Yet, to date, not one single congressional group to investi- . ternational meeting on worldwide abortion, reportedly hoping bill has reached the floot of gate an alleged financial link beto evaluate the situation rather' either chamber for a normal\ de- tween the Central Intelligence than hammer out a plan of im- bate and vote. The time has Agency and the- Agency for Inmediate action against abortion. clearly come for this session of ternational Development with the Jesuits in Latin America. Informed sources told NC .' \ In a letter to the House SpeNews that specialists would be ,:Wants Farm Workers' cial Subcommittee on Intellicalled together here Oct. 9-11, , gence, Glenn L. Archer, Ameriwhile the Synod of Bishops is Minimum Increased \ going on, but probably would - WA,SHINGTON (NC) - The cans United executive director, not submit any report to the Fair Labor Standards Act I is said the request for an investigasynOd. discriminatory and should I be tion was based on information The special commission on amended further than it was\, in in the book "The Church as a abortion, convened by the Pope's 1966 to raise the agricultural Political Factor in Latin Amersecretary of state, Cardinal Jeim minimum wage level to thatlof, ica," written by David E. Mutchler, a former Jesuit scholastic. ' Villot, will study abortion as it industrial employes. exists in various parts of the The minimum wage for farm wodd. workers is now $1.30 an h6ur Among those expected to at- tompared to $1.60 for industtial tend are Norman St. John- workers. Legislation proposed Iby Stevas, a leading Catholic mem- Sen. Harrison A. Williams, lIr. ber of the British Parliament and (D-N.J.) seeks to raise the minwell-known gefender of the un- imum for both farm and indJsborn; Father Arthur McCormack, trial workers to $2.25 an houl-. 7 Perry British expert on population and In testimony Bossi submittbd Avenue staff member of the Vatican's for inclusion in subcommitt1ee Justice and Peace Commission; hearing minutes, he said the TauntonMass. and Father James McHugh, di- rural life conference does nht rector of the family life division feel "that the wage levels beihg 822-2282 of the United States Catholic suggested would inflict an undue Conference in Washington. burden on farm employers."
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Villanova Law School Dean to Retire'路 VILLANOVA (NC) ...... Harold Gill Reuschlein, dean of the Vii路 lanova University law school since its founding in 1953, has announced his retirement effective September 1972. When Reuschlein became dean there were 70 students and six faculty members. Today the school has 600 students and more than 20 full-time faculty members. _ Reuschlein, a native of Wisconsin, received his undergraduate degree from the University of Iowa, his law degree froID' Yale, and a doctorate from Cornell. He has served on the law school faculties at the universities of Notre Dame, Syracuse, Pittsburgh and Georgetown.
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Truth Strang,etr Th·an Fi,ction Wh,elf,e Family Is Co,ncerned
SU9'gel$t Merger Of 'Conf'erences
Readers who have no children of their own frequently ask me if the stories I tell about my children are true. Those who have kids, know they are true. Truth is stranger than fiction where my family is concerned. Here are a few short stories to show you what I mean. I had two of generally it's something I think the children shopping with .would be better left unsaid. One night one of the girls me. These two happen to came complaining, "I haven't
have eyes like saucers and lashes that wave like pennants in a
By
MARY CARSON
breeze. I was waiting in the check-out line, unaware that the two of them had been passing twinkle-eyed smiles to the woman next in line. She tapped me on the shoulder. As I turned around, she gushed, "I just had to tell you. Your children have such beautiful eyes. They must look just like your husband." While sorting old photographs, I found a very formal, old-fashioned photo of my father, a little boy in a starched, ruffled linen .outfit, seated in an ornately carved chair. One of my daughters asked, "Who's that?" . "You know who he is." . "He's a boy? Why's he wearing a dress?" Another piped up, "Is it cousin Jimmy?" "Nope. He's older than that," I coached. "One of my brothers?" "Still older," I explained. Is it daddy?" "No, he's older than Daddy." "I don't know ANYONE older, than DADDY!" Wins Detention My husband's mother is an amateur concert violinist, playing with a local community orchestra. We were scheduled to go hear her one eyening. Thinking I could use the outing as a little bait for getting the kids moving, I told them, "Get your rooms tidy right this minute. If your rooms aren't cleaned by noon, you can't go to the concert tonight!" One of the older boys, unimpressed with either classical concerts or cleaning regarded the ultimatum: "You mean, If I leave my room dirty, I can stay home?"
got any clean pajamas. All that's left for me is a pair that's too small." Trying to placate her, I said, "At least you can get into them. It's better that you have those than none at all. Why don't you learn to count your blessings instead of complaining?" My Supermouth son was lis- . tening to this lecture and commented, "Gee, Mom why don't you count your blessings. You've got seven kids you can get along with. I'm the only problem. Seven to one are pretty good odds." Do things like this happen to you? Write c/o this paper and tell me about your favorite incident with your family and I'll try to use it in a future column.
Ask Continued Israeli Control of Jerusalem WASHINGTON (NC)-Despite the Vatican's call· for internationalization of Jerusalem. the National Coalition of American Nuns has called for continued Israeli control of the city. In a statement issued by the executive council of the 2,000member coalition, the nuns opposed "any possible internationalization of the Holy City." The statement continued: "Jews have always been in Jerusalem. It is their spiritual home and the daily prayer of the Jewish people voices their enduring historic relatioIY to the city. Further, Israel has rebuilt Jerusalem, pouring into it millions of dollars and, more especially, untold human resources. Jerusalem is now available to all faiths and never before have the holy places been so protected and maintained." . The statute of Jerusalem-a 1947 United Nations-approved plan calling for the internationalization of the city into a "sep~ arate body"-has hlld papal support from both Pope Pius XII and Pope Paul VI.
Plan to Evaluate Catholic Charities
WASHINGTON (NC) - Two thousand social work executives will be asked to weigh the validity of charity under Catholic auspices during the 57th annJ,lal 'Pretty Good Odds meeting of the National \ConferOur school principal, in' an ence of Catholic Charities in attempt to enforce punctuality, Minneapolis. started a system of late passesThe Society of St. Vincent de three late passes and you had to - ?aul will meet concurrently and stay for detention. Our youngest in joint sessions with tre conobviously didn't understand the ference. punitive connotation of detenOne joint session will be a tion. She went skipping into the luncheon to be addressed by Coprincipal's office one day, all adjutor Archbishop Leo C. smiles. "Sister, I got the third Byrne of 51. Paul-Minneapolis. one. Where do I go to get a This year's meeting has been detention?" planned to envoke "new ideas I have one son who regularly and directions" for the conferopens his mouth before his brain ence, which represents the nais in gear. He has something to tion's largest non-governmental say about everything. . and program in social welfare.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 23, 1971
NEW BEDFORD SILVER JUBILEE: Miss Jane Langis, president; Miss Mary E. Foley, banquet chairman; and Miss Delia Dowd, past president light the candles on the cake commemorating the 25th anniversary of the Msgr. Noon Circle from 51. James Parish, New Bedford. Established in 1946, just prior to the death of their pastor, Rev. Msgr. Henry J. Noon, V.G., the organization is dedicated to charity and parish projects.
Prles,e1rv:e Di,v,ersity Parents to Continue Seeking Government Aid For Nonpublic Schools Charles J. Tobin, secretary of ALBANY (NC) - Parents of nonpublic school students will the New York State Catholic continue to seek government aid Committee, urged the regents to and are not afraid that their at- assure adequate support pro· tempts will be "politically divi- grams for nonpublic schools. sive along religious lines," a "Today no one has a clear noCatholic parent told a hearing of tion of the wisest course to fol· the State Board of Regents here. . low," he said, citing the fact that J. Alan Davitt, a Catholic school recent Supreme Court decision official who addressed the reo approved some forms of aid . gents as a parent, said that par- while banning others. Tobin did not urge a specific ents of nonpublic school pupils program, but asked the regents would continue their "efforts to preserve diversity in education to review "alternatives for aid and, as needed, seek reasonable that are available SQ that New York may have on its statute a government assistance." Davitt, the father of five non- variety of programs which are public school students, is execu- within permissible constitutional tive secretary in the New York guidelines." State Catholic School Superintendent's office. Archbishop Decries He also took issue with the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Illegal Abortions LUSAKA (NC)-The Zambian June banning forms of public aid to nonpublic schools as uncon- government has accused Archstitutional. The high court ruled bishop Emanuel Milango of Luthat such assistance caused "ex- saka of· "cheap sentimentalism cessive entanglement between and sensational religious propagovernment and religion" and ganda" because he charged that "political divisivenes!1 along re- , Zambia's doctors are performing illegal abortions. ligious lines." The archbishop has continued Davitt said he supported the his assertions despite government "political rights" of parents to send their children to church- ,allegation that he is exaggerating. He told the archdiocesan related schools. Council of Lay Apostles here He said the court decision dis- that unborn babies are "crushed, enfranchised !Jim "because my smashed and chopped" in stateeducational convictions are har- run hospitals. monized with my religious beArchbishop Milango said he liefs." knows of government officials "For us to remain quietly in who send contraceptive pills "to the rear section of the street car their girl friends in the schools." The Times here called the proband not disrupt or disturb legislative disregard and exploitation, lem of unwed mothers "Zambia's we would be less the citizens and running sore." The paper said a lesser men," he told the regents, survey showed that 136 girls who have responsibility for the dropped out of teacher-training education of all children in the colleges because of pregnancy in 1969-70. state.
. ATLANTA (NC}-The Conferences of Major Superiors of Men and Women should merge into one organization, an official of the men's superiors said here. "It would seem that a single conference of American religious men and women is commensurate with our common witness and service to the American Church and the world, "said Father Francis Gokey, an Edmundite who is executive secretary of Conference of Major Superiors of Men. Speaking at the concluding liturgy of the week-long annual assembly of the Conference of Major Superiors of Women, Father Gokey said: "The time has come when we should recognize all that we men and women religious have in common. We should take up all these good things and be pilgrims together where the Lord leads us." Father Gokey said the diffi· culties involved in unifying the two groups-how, when. bv what steps, and how to insure freedom and independence-would fade "when we ask 'why not?', and 'How much more can we not aceomplish together and what a qualitative improvement interconference unity can achieve for us both and for the world?' " He cited the Canadian Religious Conference as a merged group including religiQus men and women. The Women's Conference has a total membership of about 650 heads of women's religious or" deI'S in the United States, and the men's conference about 250 leaders of men's orders. The major superiors represent the leadership of 55,000 religious-order priests and Brothers and 160,000· Sisters in the country.
Priests', Council SYDNEY (NC) - A National Council of Priests was formed at a meeting here and resolved to give special attention to world development, to the Aust.[alian aborigines and their development, to migrants and to the ,elimination of racial discrimination.
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Anglican Bishops Urge Restraint
THE ANCHOR, Th~rs;, Sept. 23, 1971
Asks Legislature To Revise Illinois School Aid Bill ,CHICAGO (NC)-Gov'. Richard B. Ogilvie,ha,s asked the Illinois General Assembly to revise a three-part aid package for I,lon,public schools, making it conform to the U.S. Supreme Court decision restricting such assistance. "A refined effort can be made, and should be made, to bring the bills, into the most perfect conformity with developing constitutional principals," said the governor as he sent the three bills back to the legislature with sn~c;fic recommendations for change. ' Ogilvie's action was hailed by Cardinal John Cody and Auxiliary Bishop William R. McManus. The cardinal said he hoped the' Illinois legislature "quickly will provide urgently needed state assistance to supplement the $100 million which CathOiics will have to invest in the archdiocese's Catholics schools this coming years." Most of the major changes are recommended for one of the bills (senate bill 1195) authorizing grants to parents for use at schools of their choice. Ogilvie proposed that the grants, instead of 'going to the schools, be fun-. neUed through the local public school district and go directly to parents for use only for textbooks and auxiliary services. - The $30 million package was approved by the Illinois legislature in June, a few days, before the Supreme Court struck down laws in Pennsylvania and Rhode Island that authorized state payments for teacher salaries in non/ public schools. ,i "With the recent decisions," Ogilvie said he sent the bills to the legislature, "we have the opportunity to review the bills in the ,:light of "the latest, most authoritative constitutional guidance." He added that the changes are designed'to remove from the-aid , '. package any "impermissible or , excessive entanglement" between ,church and state, as outlined by the Supreme Court's decisions. The governor reaffirmed his support for nonpublic school assistance in a message to the General Assembly. "Aid ,for nonpublic schools is -a sound, economic investment of public funds," he said. "It protects the public schools from additional burdens on their resourc~s, saves the· taxpayers' money, stimulates the continued investment of private fund!i in nonpublic schools, and most important, contributes to the educational development of our children. In my judgment, it is good .public policy." ,-, "OriginaUy, Senate bill 119;5 had aUotted $20.5 million .for state grants of $48 to $60 to parents of nonpublic grade school children, '. and $60 to $90 to parents of nonpublic high school students. The governor asked in his rec-' ommendations that' the' same amounts of money be set aside for textbooks and auxiliary services, which he noted are normallypaid for by parents., His suggestion eliminates use of funds', <- " for tuition and teacher salaries, among the largest cost factors in .".,;::, .,,'" most nonpu,blic schools.
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BELFAST (NC)-Stressing the distinction between terrorists and the Catholic community as a whole, Church of Ireland (Anglican) bishops in' this British province called on Protestants to practice "restraint in the face of extreme provocation." Five Church of Ireland bishops, including Archbishop George Simms of Armagh, issued a statement declaring: "We ... along with countless others, view with deep concern the continued reign of terrorism that exists in our province which has led to death and wounding of many, including those who are here to protect the lives and property of all citizens. "We are especially concerned with the wide spread intimidation which' has led to the break-up of homes and the severing of good relations with neighbors. Intimidation is a despicable thing from whatever 'quarter it comes."
A SCENE FROM 'GODSPELL': The new musical bglsed on the Gospel According to St. Matthew, conceived and directed by John-Michael Tebelak, with music and 'new lyics by Stephen Schwartz, produced by Edgar Lansbury,' which recently opened in New York to wide-ranging ct:'itical acclafm. NC Photo.
"Godspell " Delicious Piece of Theatre NEW YORK (NC)-"You are i"baptisms" clad in vividly colorthe'salt of the earth. ' 'ed clown gear. From this point "But if' that salt has lost its they sing, dance, mime and clown their way through such flavor, "It ain't got much in its fa- scenes of St. Matthew's as the parables, the beatitudes and the vor." What applies to salt applies, Old Testament references. The in the case of "GodspeU," to ~he I passion and death of Christ are treated in an extremely solemn gospel as weU. ' "GodspeU," a new musical and moving manner. Missing celebration of St. Matthew's GosNotably missing,' however, is pel, tries to put some flavor into the gospel through theatrical the resurrection. One might think presentation. The result is a de- that such an integral part' of the gospel would provide the perfect licious treat on stage. ' "GodspeU," conceived anddl- spring-board from which to rected by John,Micheal Tabelak, launch a show-stopping final reopened to wide-ranging critical prisal. A joyous reprisal does inacclaim and recently received the ,deed aC,company, the curtain National Theatre Arts Confer- caUs, but without any" reliance 'upon the resurrection' theme. ence's· Dineen A..:vard. The entire show makes use Arriving in the, spring, the of innumerable inventive tricks' show rode into New,York on the and traditional theatrical gimcrest of the present Jesus remicks. More serious and thoughtvival movements. The number of ful direction results in, scenes "Jesus Freaks, seems to be gro~-• such as Jesus kiSsing a hestitant ing. "Jesus Christ Superstar/, ! Judas. I' another: rock show based or The cast of 10 is a weU inChrist's last few days, is schedtegrated company of polished uled to open' on Broadway lat~r young performers., Their enjoythis mont.h. Yet despite its timement of the' show is obvious. liness, "GodspeU" is quite capWhen one of their rrlembers soable of standing on 'its, own' as ,~ , los, the others stand aside watchshow. ' ing with proud grins. Their roles Little Man are balanced, and it would be dif"GodspeU" begins with a ficult to single out either a best tongue-in-cheek sendup of the part or a best performance. most influential figures of world Wide Range philosophy, from Plato to NietzThe music spans a wide range. sche to Sartr~. Such thinkers ar;e It moves from rock to soft shoe accused' of "babbling far above to lyrical folk tunes. It's refreshthe rable" from their "ivory tow- ing ,to note that the score is ers." The ,arrival of John the never played at the deafening Baptist and, Jesus are heralded " level tha~ so many of the current as triumphs for the little man. 'rock musicals seem to' consider Christ is asked to "save the peo- , integral. There is never any atpIe; not thrones 'and crown, but tempt to be deliberately antagome~:~~ nistic toward'the audience either The cast reappears after their in word or action. There is no
nudity-and no four-letter words. The audience reaction is spontaneous and real. It has a positive effect on the quality and vigour of the performance. New York audiences are not easily moved to hand clapping. In this audience, however, one could see 'no person who was not on' 'his feet clapping in time to the finale. And that. cannot be credited entirely to the delightful idea of having the audience join the actors on' stage for a little wine during the intermission. Pokes Fun The show often pokes fun both with and at the gospel's words but never mocks them. It has the power of the strongest straightlaced sernton. One might wonder if it is properthatreIigious property be treated so lightly. Is it necessary to "sugarcoat" the gospels to make them more palatable? Indeed not, and there is an important point here regarding any of the reljgiously ,oriented shows. "Godspell" is, first and last, a piece of theatre-·not a religious work. Any religious sentiments generated by the show_ are entirely personal. The hand-clapping exuberance of the spectator is a direct result of theatrical manipulation rather than human- . 'istic fervor. This is not criticism.. It is to '''Godspell's'' credit that the potentials of both source and stage are so dramaticably and beautifully exploited. "Godspell" is an evening of , pleasant music, superb showmanship and unanimous delight. The only thing that might bother some at its end is deciding who enjoyed it more-the audience or the actors. The question answers itself.
But they warned: "Do not confuse the activities of the terrorists with the whole Roman Catholic community. This is a danger and could lead to sectarian strife which should be repugnant to all Christian people. We are fully aware that the majority of Roman Catholics are sickened by the violence and want peace as much as we do, so that we may all learn afresh to live and work together for the good of our community." The statement acknowledged a "daily tool of murder, destruction ,·of property and business" concerns, and the attempt to paralyze life in Belfast and throughout the province," but ,called on people' to maintain "restraint," to check all rumors and not to impede the security forces by creating crowds, but to assist them in every legitimate way."
Invites Nominees For Future Bishops ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)Bishop Walter P. Kellenberg has asked priests, nuns and laity here to submit names of priests they think would make good bishops. The action is similar to that taken recently by Cardinal Teeence Cooke in the New York archdiocese and by Bishop Francis'J. Mugavero in Brooklyn. Both asked priests and selected Religious and lay people to submit nominations for bishop.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 23, 1971
Conference Asks Massive Relief For Pakistani WASHINGTON (NC)-The 25member administrative board of the United States Catholic Conference has called on the United States to take the lead in promoting a billion-dollar international relief program for East Pakistani refugees. "Our government should ask the United Nations and the more favored nations of the world to mount a program of relief to be administered by the UN," the bishops declared in a statement. They said the massive'relief effort should total at least a billion dollars, "to which the United States would set an example by pledging at least $300 million." The bishops agreed that "unless a relief effort is mounted on a more gigantic scale than that which is presently going on, no hope whatever can be held for hundreds of thousands of those who are already, suffering so tragically." 'None More Tragic' The bishops noted that in past months storms and floods have caused countless Pakistani to flee their country. It has been estimated, they reported, that 25to-40,000 refugees cross the border into India each day. The bishops' statement said: "In an age that has witnessed more than its share of tragedies that have darkened the lives of thousands upon thousands of people, there is probably none more tragic than the plight of the millions Of 'refugees from East Pakistan who have fled into India to save, if possible, the lives of themselves and their families." The bishops added: 'Widespread Famine' "An international approach of this type would not only provide the immediate needs of the refugees, but couta cope with their long term needs and their rehabilitation as distinct from the immediate need for' survival. There is plentiful evidence pointing to the certainty of widespread famine in East Pakistan by October. Food must be supplied on a massive scale directly to the rural areas of East Pakistan on a politically neutral basis. "This should be accomplished through a greatly augmented United Nations staff with a specific mandate and adequate facilities for effective action. IIi order to facilitate this massive movement of food and supplies, we urge the government of Pakistan and the leaders of the Bangia Desh moveme,nt to cooperate fully with this emergency humanitarian program. The conference adm,inistrative board said it would also ask Western European bishops to urge their governments to take part in the international aid effort.
Apartheid Po'licy PRETORIA (NC)-South African Prime Minister Baltazar J. Vorster told two black African Lutheran church leaders that he intends to continue the government's apartheid policy of strict racial segregation in South-West Africa despite their objections.
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Dispute Causes Of V,iolence
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~~ CATHOLIC SCHOOL FAryIILY: Looking for a school book the night before a test could be frustrating for (front row, left to right) Barbara, 11; Jeanne, 10; Paul, 8; John, 13, and Cathy, 7; and (back row) Mary Beth, 16; Bob, 18; Patricia, 20; Mark, 17, and Jim, 14, shown here with Lisa, 3, and their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schaffer of Kinsman, Ohio. The family will drive thousands of miles this year to keep the children in 'Catholic schools. NC Photo.
10 Schaffers Attend Catholic Schools Ohio Family Digs Deeper and Does Without. KINSMAN (NC)-"It's just a matter of deciding what's more important-color TV, a new car, a vacation or Catholic 'education," commented Robert Schaffer as he worked on his well-travelled car. The speedometer registered 110,000 miles-and the transmission was not registering at all. "We have to put first things first," the 43-year-old draftsman- ' farmer said in an interview. "And we ,both regard Catholic education as first." His attractive wife, Esther, 41, nodded. Eight little Schaffel's will squeeze into the family's newer car (mileage 80,000) and head from their farm home near Kinsman to classes in two Catholic schools in Warren, _25 miles away. They are probably Ohio's champion Catholic school commuters. Ten of the 13 Schaffer children are in Catholic schools and colleges this year. Swelling the pupil population at Sts. Peter and Paul, Warren, are Cathy 7, Paul 8, Jeanne 10, Barbara II, and John 13. Boosting Warren John F. Kennedy High School's enrollment are Jim 14, Mary Beth 16, and Mark 17. Patricia, 20, will begin her senior year soon at St. John College, Cleveland. Bob, 18, is enrolling on a football scholarship at the University of Dayton. Farmer by Night By the dollar standard, the Schaffers aren't rich. And when Ohio's bishops in July announced a $100 minimum tuition for every, Catholic school pupil, a less determined family might have tak路 en the cheaper and more convenient course-and enrolled their children in public schools. But the Schaffer children have never gone to other than Catholic schools. (Daughters Iris (Savach) 23, who married in 1969
and Judith, 22, have finished school, and Lisa, 3, has yet to start.) "We didn't consider for a moment withdrawing the kids," Schaffer said. "We figured we'd dig' a little deeper and do without a little more." The family has never had a vacation. By day, the father is a draftsman for Westinghouse in Sharon, Pa., and by night tends to a herd of white fa~e Herefords and raises corn, oats, wheat and barley on his 160-acre farm. "Tractors have little things called lights to make this possible," he joked. Children Help The family d~cided to move from Greenville, Pa., to the Trumbull County farm eight years ago because "the $50 monthly milk bill was just' too much." Now, they have a cow which gives three to four gallons of milk a day, and what's left over goes to the family's 12 cats and two dogs. Twenty-five chickens keep the family supplied with eggs. Mrs. Schaffer cans vegetables and fruit from the farm, and each weeks she bakes 20 dozens buns.
Ask Parents Control Sex Education BUFFALO (NC) - Sex education programs that tell a' child he is the ultimate judge of his own actions undermine parental, church and community authority, according to an association of Catholic priests, Religious and laymen here.' The group, CREDO, said that sex education programs should not be state' controlled but should be made optional and parent controlled. "Individaul morality promoted by the new sex education con路 tributes not only to an intellectual climate receptive to further drug abuse, but, by undermining authority at all levels, leads to crime in general," said CREDO.
"We could never do the work without the children's help," Mrs. Schaffer explained. "They make their beds in the morning and put away their clothes. Before school, the boys help their father do the chores." Mrs. Schaffer drives the children to Warren to school. Her husband goes to his job in Sharon, also a 25-mile drive. To get all the work done, the family rises at 5:30 A.M. Despite the long day, the parents find time for school and parish activities. Schaffer is vicepresident, and Mrs. Schaffer a member, of the Sts. Peter and Paul Home and School Association. Schaffer belongs also to the Kennedy High Boosters. Both go to Kennedy High football games, and this Fall will watch their son, Mark, play the linebacker spot.
New Clothing Rules At Fatima Shrine FATIMA (NC)-Women wearing hot pants or miniskirts may not enter the famed Marian shrine here, according to newly posted notices. Men are asked not to enter in shorts, not to smoke, and to keep their heads bare. At one time women were not allowed to enter in slacks, but the prohibition was dropped because so many women came to the shrine wearing them.
SANTO DOMINGO (NC)-A charge by the Dominican Republic's bishops that violence is becoming a way of life in their country has stung the government into an angry reply. A spokesman for President Joaquin Balaguer said violence has many sources among the Dominicans. He complained that the Church should work with the government in solving its causes rather than attacking Balaguer policies. Coadjutor Archbishop Hugo Polanco Brito of Santo Domingo said, in response, that the July 30 statement by the bishops did not place blame for the situation on any single factor. Archbishop Polanco stated in a newspaper interview: "We did not accuse any specific sectorthe government, private groups, nor even political parties - for the wave of violence, but rather every part of Dominican society." The July statement was the latest in a series of appeals by the bishops since 1967, when political tensions led to many killings. Since then some 600 persons have been killed by terrorists or police. The number of victims has steadily increased since the formation of vigilante groups at the extreme right and left. Archbishop Polanco said those who deny there is any violence in the country would "not dare to walk at night in certain sectors of town for fear of being assaulted, robbed or killed."
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Priest Sentenced 'On Absentia' SYDNEY (NC)-The chaplain to the Slovak community here in Australia, Divine Word Father Jan Krasnansky, said he was sentenced in absentia to four years in jail by Czechoslovakian authorities. The priest said he received word of the sentence from his brother. The reason given for the sentence was that in 1968 Father Krasnansky had not returned to Czechoslovakia after the expiration of a four-week t.ourist visa. The priest had decided to stay in Austria to work among refugees. Last December, he was transferred to Australia to work among Slovak immigrants.
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12
Legion of Mary 'Special Joy' To Pope Paul
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
Ad,vi~es Teaching
Children Re'lig'ion, ,Not Doctrine
VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Legion of Mary's fidelity to the Church in an age of upheaval One of the most popular topics in catechetics today has brought "special joy" to is the emerging idea that teaching religion to chi~dren Pope Paul, says Cardinal Jean under twelve is harmful. Like many ideas,' this holds some Villot, papal secretary of state. 'validity but to accept it as absolute IS more' than harmful, Writing to the Legion's presi- ' dent on the 50th anniversary of it is escapism. Last Spring, the founding of the prayer and not long after the book, change. The ,Mass did. It became a~tion ,association, the cardinal a game of gimmicks arid we '''Children, Church & God, said: mustn't allow the same thing to 'A Case Against Formal Re- happen in religious education. FATHfR FAHEY "In this time of renewal after FATHER SMITH FATHER DELAND ligious Education," by O'Neil and Assistant Assistant the council, which is a time also One point in our favor is that, Assistant Donovan' came out, I spoke with the readiness for change is here. North Easton of upheaval, it is with special St. Francis, Hyannis St. Joseph's, Fall River joy that the Pope notes and Parents know we have to imcomments on the fidelity of the prove our present programs and members of the Legion of Mary catechists are beginning to wonder if the old one-hour a week, By The new Hyannis assistant to the pastors appointed by God Continued from Page Four 'classroom kind of religious ed the New Bedford Area and chap- pastor studied at Bliss and for His Church, and above all, can work with today's kids. DOLORES lain for the New Bedford Cath- Richardson Schools in Attleboro to the Apostolic See." Should we teach children re- 'olic Nurses' Guild. The Legion of Mary was foundand graduated from Msgr. Coyle , CURRAN ligion under the age' of twelve? ed in Dublin on Sept. 7, 1921, High School in Taunton. Father Smith We should stop' teachin'g, them He prepared for the priesthood by a small group of laity who doctrine and start teaching them Rev. Owen E. Smith, the son at Our Lady of Providence Sem- wanted to develop themselves religion. There's a' whole' body of Owen J. and Teresa (Lennon) inary, Warwick, R. I. and St. spiritually while helping those in of reliable research which"proves' Smith, was born in Attleboro John',s Seminary in Brighton. need. Requiring of its members that it is not only futile, but even Most Reverend James L. Con- , weekly prayer rpeetings and fUla group of catechists working harmful, to continue teaching on March 19, 1942. nolly ordained him to the priest- fillment of charitable works, the with parent programs, We dis- formal doctrinal concepts to chilhood on May 3, 1969. legion has spread to over 60,000 cussed the many successful proFather Smith has been assist- centers on five continents. Its dern who can't possibly undergrams dotting the country and stand them. Theological explanaant pastor at Immaculate Con- current president is James Cumthe need for more publicity on tions and distinctions of sin, anContinued from Page One ception Parish, No. Easton, since mins. them. Interest was high and the gels and the Uke is not only in- The program will be conducted ordination. ' Model for Statements discussion enthusiastic. comprehensible to little children, on Sunday, Oct. 3 from 3 in the Cardinal Villot praised the Ie1 Then a young man stood and it can be easily, frozen into a afternoon to 9 in the evening at Father 1 ahey gion for avoiding change for the said, "We are closing up our child's understanding of it for the Holy Cross Retreat House, Rev. James W. Fahey, the son sake of change, but exhorted parish religious' ed program in life. No. Easton. of James L. and G. Irene (Wal- legionaries to move boldly into the elementary grades and putOne of the best ways to exA ,team of area priests will ton) Fahey, is a native of Taun- modern times by "combining ting our total resources in the piain this puzzling dilemma of present individual talks, encour- ton. unity of spirit and essential methsecondary years. We accept 路the doctrine versus, religion is to age group discussions and con- . He prepared for the priesthood od with deep respect for the research that, teaching religion draw an analogy between religion clude with a concelebrated at St. Mary Seminary in Balti- riches of cultural diversity." to children is dangerous." and citizenship. We don't try to Mass. The cardinal also said that more, Md. and was ordained in There was a moment of si- teach our young kids the meanThe evening's theme will re- Fall River' on May 1, 1970. He the first 40 years of activity by lence and then a rush of ques.- ing of the Constitutipn and Bill - volve around the dignity. and has served at OUI' Lady of the the legion served as a model for tions. "What do you do when a of Rights. We know they can't uniqueness of each person and' Assumptioii' Parish, Osterville: the ~preparation, of the' Vatican child of nine asks about God?" , understand it or the alternatives the importance of the concept since his ordination." Council's statements on the laity "What about early sacramental to a representative form of gov- of self-worth in the maturing and Catholic Action., He praised participation?" "Will you ignore ernment, so we wait until they process. particularly the Legion's spiritual celebrations and liturgy for thos& are eleven or so and begin askThe mini-mission' team information and devotion to MarY under twelve?" which the cardinal said, has been ing, "Why are we best? What cludes: Rev. John A. 'Gomes, Continued from Page One Finally, in minor frustration, other 'systems are there?" Then Rev. Maurice H. Jeffrey, Rev., Happened to the Church I Once "the springboard for your action 'the gentieman spread palms up we begin teaching them the phil- James H. Morse, Rev. Thomas Knew?". and the secret of its fecundity." helplessly 路'and said, "Well, let's osophy and actualities of social- C. Mayhew. The discourses, starting on face'it. ,Our program'isn't work- ism, democracy, communism and Also, Rev. Edmund J. Fitz- Sept. 29,' will be given on four _ Editor t.o Retire ing anyway and we figure this so on. gerald, Rev. Gerard A. Charbon- successive Wednesday evenings CLEVELAND (NC) - Joseph 'is;,a good'way to di,e gracefully." Rote Religion " neau, Rev. ,Robert J. Carter and from 7:30 to 9:30 in the Holy Gelin will retire at the end of the spiritual directors of the pro- Trinity Parish Hall, West Har- October as managing editor of Improve Present Programs But, prior to eleven we don't gram, namely .Rev, Robert Bren- wich. the Cleveland Universe Bulletin, Face saving! This particular totally ignore areas related to nan, CSC, and Rev. Ower E. The series is intended princi- ending 33 years with the diocpally to clarify the teachings esan weekly. He started out in '. device of pride plagues every our country. We teach a pride ill Smith. ~",,'parish and tempts most pastors. our past, a rich heritage of a The above group will be as- of the Church., With reference journalism with the now defunct Time and again, I've seen pas- people who wanted a better way sisted by th'e parish team plan- to the dynamics of change, daily Toledo News Bee, working " tors grasp the idea of parent ed- of life, a knowledge of our his- ning the junior-senior program Father Tosti will Jrace the his'路 there nine years before joining ucation, not because they sense tory, songs, heroes, symbols, and for the year. tory of the Church from the the Catholic press in 1938. its validity but because it gives feeling. High school juniors and sen- Council of Trent through the 'Our kindergartners learn post-Vatican era. them an "out" of a failing CCD iors may register for the Minia~out, the flag and the pilgrims. program. Other topics will include the paris~ after the Mission in either subject of revelation and the Wise catechists and parents Our third ,graders learn the rea- ' Masses on Sunday, Sept. 26. history of salvation with emphaPLUMBING & HEATING, INC. will question the motivation for son~ that drove early settlers sis on literary form and an una totally new program in the ,West and our fifth graders study Sales and Service '~; derstanding of Sacred Scripture. parish. If those in charge can about other peoples who are Nun Named Editor for Domestic and Industrial '~ Father Tosti, a native of Taunanswer and explain its value rea- feeling the same stirrings today. Oil Burners Likewise in religion. We must Of ,Diocesan Weekly ton; was ordained in '1962 and sonably, then it's vital that par995-1631 HELENA (NC) - A nun has 'holds a Master of Arts Degree ents try to understand and sup- stop this nonsense of trying to 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE been named editor-in-chief of the they teach children concepts in Religious Education' from port it. If it's merely one more NEW BEDFORD desperation move, then it should can't possibly understand. We weekly Western Montana Regis- Fordham University. by Bishop Raymond Hun. tel' laugh about childish phrases like be rejected before it's begun. "He suffered under a bunch, of thausen of Helena. Futile, Harmful violets" and "I am hardly sorry Sister Mary Catherine Dough......'~(~:. . . ." but we should find them erty of the Sisters of Charity of .,,>. We've all seen the results of li- disturbing instead. We should Leavenworth, Kan., will be the turgical 'changes instituted before the parish was made ready ask ourselves why we are both- new E!ditor-in-chief, a position in. for them: The people didn't ering to teach children incom- the Catholic news field rarely prehensible material and what held by a woman. She succeeds long range effect it might have Father John Shea, who was ROUTE 6-between Fall River and New Bedford ' killed in an auto accident in 'Nation Under God' on them. 'One of Southern New England's Finest Facilities . Can we laugh so l;omfortably July. Week Proposed when we hellr our children Sister Mary Catherine is from ALEXANDRIA (NC) - A Ma- mouthing perfectly the answers Butte, Montana. She has taught Now Available for rine ',war veteran's group has peti- to rote religion questions, know- in elementary schools in Kansas, tioned 'President Nixon, Con- ing also they don't understand Missouri, Colorado and Montana. gress and state governors to ob- what they are verbalizing? For the past six years she has serve a Nation Under God Week My space is gone again. Next been on the staff of Helena~s FOR DElAILS CALL MANAGER-636-2744 or 999路6984 to coincide, with, communism's week, we'll talk about what we diocesan office of religious eduMay.Day celebrations. should teach our children. cation.
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THE ANC~OR-t>iocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
Priest Asserts Religion Alive In Russia SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - A Benedictine priest who visited Moscow in April said here "the spirit and practice of religion is not dead in Russia." Writing in The Monitor, San FranciscO archdiocesan paper, the priest, Father Mark Tierney, said he toured Moscow on Holy Saturday morning and "saw men and women bringing eggs and bread, wrapped in linen cloths, on plates or in baskets to the churches to be blessed by the priests. "All over Moscow people were doing the same, and when I visited some of the churches I found lines and lines of the faithful waiting their turn to have these offerings blessed. "This is an old custom in Russia," he said, "and the blessed eggs and bread are eaten at breakfast on Easter Sunday morning. No one interferred with these Christian people making such an open and public avowal of their faith." , Father Tierney. said he at路 tended the Easter Saturday night vigil in the Orthodox Church of the Epiphany, which "was nearly packed when we arrived at about 10:45 P.M." He said that "when Archbishop Benjamin held up the paschal candle at midnight and said in modern Russian 'Christ is risen,' the whole congregation shouted back at him 'Yes, Christ is risen.' Inner Spirit "There were so many people who could not get inside the' church that the archOishop had to go outside and show the paschal candle to them, and received the same enthusiastic reception as he got from the congregation inside. "The church," he said, "was lit by hundreds of lights, and each of the congregation was given a small candle. I asked who was paying for all this and was told the state." Father Tierney said two choirs sang continuously during the ceremony from 11 P.M. to 3:15 A.M. He was told they were all members of the' Bolshoi State Opera Company. ' "I can honestly say that the spirit and fervor of the Russian people in the Cathedral of the Epiphany on last Easter Saturday night surpassed anything I ever witnessed before," Father Tierney said. "The communists have tried' to kill God and religion in Russia," he added. "The inner spirit of the Russian people, and the secret workings of the Spirit of God have been too much for them."
Archbishop Names Hospital Director MIAMI (NC)-Father Richard P. Scherer has been appointed director of hospitals by Archbishop Coleman F. Carroll. Father Scherer, a native of Pittsburgh, has served as chaplain of Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale for the past three years. He said his new post will keep him "in regular contact with all those who perform, services in the four hospitals of the archdiocese, particularly in the area of moral and ethical problems."
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Gives Permission with Misgivings
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JACKSON (NC)-Bishop Joseph B. Brunini of Natchez-Jackson said it was "not without deep misgivings" that he gave a diocesan priest permission to rtfn for the Mississippi senate on a ticket with Charles Evers, brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers. The bishop told his diocesan newspaper, Mississippi Today, that his approval of the candidacy of Josephite Father William Morrissey of Fayette "does not mean that this diocese has a generally permissive attitude in these cases." "As a matter of fact," the prelate added, "the diocesan policy is that priests are not to run for 'public office in Mississippi. Permission is being granted by exception to Father Morrissey." Bishop Brunini said that in granting this "extraordinary permission,'" it should be clearly understood that no endorsement of his candidacy was implied or denied. "His candidacy must be
weighed on its own merits, as indeed every candidacy should," he stated. Father Morrissey, running with Independent gubernatorial candidate Evers, will, oppose Democratic nominee Troy Watkins, a former mayor of N'atchez.
Hispanos Studying To Become Deacons TOLEDO (NC)-Two Hispano laymen, active in the Apostolate for the Spanish-speaking, are studying to become the Toledo diocese's first permanent deacons. James Campos, 52, and Jose Romo 40, both of Toledo, expect to work in the area's Spanishspeaking community when they complete their two-year training. Both are married and hold down full time jobs. They commute one night each week for classes in Detroit. The Detroit archdiocese sponsors a permanent diaconate training program for Hispanos.
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Second helping~ please?
HOMILIST AT LA SALETTE: Most Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Archbishop of Boston, delivers the homily at the prayer service held at La Salette Shrine, Attleboro in commemoration of the 125th anniversary of Our Lady of La Salette when the Mother of God appeared to two peasants 'and chided them for the anti-religious feelings of that period.
Help for the mission-pooll' must be given over and over again, but then - that's love! Your g\ving to the missions means so much because it expresses that love! Please give again today to help our missionaries
'Overriding Concern'
give that love to others even more.
Ambassador Says Africans Approve World Justice as Synod Theme WASHINGTON (NC)-African leaders arid people he has talked to are happy that the coming world Synod of Bishops will deal with development and world justice as one of its principal themes, the U.S. ambassador to Burundi in East Africa said here.
Nor, he said, had predictions that misstonaries would be ousted from A.frica along with the former colonial governments been realized. Missionaries are in Africa in greater numbers and are welcomed by the African governments, he said.
The ambassador, Thomas P. Melady, former chairman of the department of Asian studies and non-Western civilization at Seton Hall University, South Orange, N.J., said "the overriding concern in Africa is with development. This doesn't leave much time for international issues."
Joy Among Catholics
He said the people of Burundi and most black Africans, while 'opposed to the racial segregation praCticed in South Africa and Rhodesia, are more concerned with their own problems than with' those of blacks in those countries. There is no widespread criticism of the United States or other developed countries, Melady said. "You just don't have at all the sort of criticism of the U.S. and the developed world that's present in Latin America." Fears among U.S. government officials in the 1960s when African nations were gaining independence that those nations would swing leftward politically have not been confirmed, Melady said. The U.S. officials "just didn't give the Africans credit for independent thinking."
The ambassador predicted that the African bishops at the synod would be more concerned about the theme of world justice than about the priesthood, the synod's other principal theme. He said the African clergy do not place great importance on the issue of priestly celibacy and, in fact, tend to resent the emphasis given the issue by European and North American pTiests. "I've noted more joy among Catholics in Africa than in the United States," he said, adding that there is little theological ferment in Africa. Speaking about Africa's future, he said, "I'm optimistic for this decade, not for magical solutions but because of the growing determination of the peoples to solve their own problems." Melady, 43, born in Norwich, Conn., received a B.A. frOm Duquesne University in' Pittsburgh and a Ph.D. in international relations from the Catholic University of America in 1954.
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For the love of God and my fellowman, I enclose my sacrific~ of $ - - - for today's missionaries bringing this love to others.
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The Soelety lor tbe Propagation 01 tbe Faltb Send your gift to:
Rev. Msgr. Edward T. O'Meara National Director Dept. C, 366 Fifth Avenue New York, New York 10001
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Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considlne Diocesan Director R 368 North Main Street .. , Fall River, Massachusetts路: 02720
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THE ANCHOR:-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Sept. 23, 1971
Interest in Mary's' Role in the Ch""rch Casseroles Savory to Taste, To Grow 'at Time of Beatification While Simple to Prepare By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick
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I was recently complaining to my wife about the amount of trash we seem to accumulate in our house, ~nd so, I decided to attempt to get to the bottom of. the trash problem., Since there are five people in our household, there is necessarily a great deal of traffic and everyone who tries to please her offspring h h as far as meals are concerned, I brings t hings into t e ouse refused to bow to their favorites that has'· to be thrown out of chicken and hamburgers es-
Kolbe's death was the supreme witness of the discovery he strove to dramatize everywhere: he volunteered to take the place of an innocnt man condemned to die. He did this so that the man- , a father-could return to his family, and so that the nine others also condemned could have a priest with them as they died. With them he entered one of the infamous "starvation bunkers" of the Auschwitz death camp. With them he was stripped naked and left without food and water to die one of the slowest and most terrifying of deaths: starvation ,and dehydration. "What was Fr. Maximilian Kolbe's secret? What is the key to his life and his death? "The response is simply and unquestionable: his love for Our 'Lady, the Virgin Immaculate. A love not in the least sentimental, but springing up from the depths of theology and the unfathomably rich reservoir of tradition. "The marvelous Chapter VIII of Lumen Gentium, dedicated to 'Mary, The Blessed Virgin Mother of God, in the Mystery of Christ and of the Church,' sums up in a powerful outline all his Marian teaching."
eventually, .put this really isn't pecially since the man of the the crux of the problem. The house has these two items high problem lies in the packaging on his list of "blah" meals. (I done by manufacturers. wonder how one does go about It seems that almost every pleasing everyone). thing we use comes 'in a multi- - When my 'offspring do dislayered package which must be cover my new casserole cookdiscarded immediately after use. book they will no doubt rebel Milk which came to us in bottles and I threaten to conveniently which were washed and returned, lose said book ..for me. However, now comes in bulky throw-away being of stalwart heart and good containers; soda,comes in throw- New England upbringing, right away bottles; paper towels have will prevail and casseroles will , become ubiquitous and have re- .appear on the meriuat the Rod.placed the old-fashioned dish erick's house at least once a towel in the kitchen. All of this week. I'll tell them of the great has increased the amount of need to please their father but trash at least two-fpld in bur I carefully won't mention a thing house. about casserole being the easiest meal possible for the working Trash Freeze homemaker. As far as I can determine While most casseroles have a though, the most unnecessary lengthy list of ingredients, the culprit is the useless mail we procedure for preparation ' is get each day. I have deter;:mined mostly Seton Hall Forms a toss-it-all-together that of every fo pieces of mail one. This casserole is from the University Sen~te we receive at least half is thrown Redbook Casserole Treasury and SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-After away unopened. In addition to it's a great way to serve the two years of preparatory work catalogs, general' advertisements, tasty zucchini squash that's on ARTIST'S INTERPRETATION: Lloyd, Ostendorf, the a university senate has been and flyers from different stores. the market 'right now. artist, placed the two crowns in the hands of the Blessed launched at Seton Hall Univerthere are any number of worthVirgin to represent the purity and martyrdom which the sity here. Italian Zucchini less pieces that fill up our wasteof God offered Fr. Kolbe when he was a youth. Mother It will have power second only baskets. 1 pound small zucchini to that of the board of trustees The problem, of course, is tfes and overwhelming cruelty he By Fr. Bernard M. Geiger, 2 Tablespoons butter or marin directing the course of the compounded by the no-burning had witnessed. garine, university in a variety of fields. Renewed interest and perhaps law which is in effect in Massa"Human fellowship is hell," he 1 small onion sliced Establishment of, such a sen· controversy regarding the role of chusetts. Now everything must Y2 pound ground beef chuck would hiss. ate was one of several student the Blessed Virgin Mary in the' finally b~ carried out to the 1 1O~ ounce can Italian' meat Church is certain to follow the demands which had the' campus To prove to him that God is street to be picked up by oversauce formal beatification of a Cath- indeed in our midst and that his in a continuing state of controburdened trash collIection units. Y2 cup water olic priest in Rome next month. power does change men and versy two years ago. Wnich!liads us to suggest, half 2 Tablespoons grated ParmeWhile the chairman of the ',:' facetiously, that we need a trash A biography of the priest soon make therrl heroically unselfish san cheese senate will be the university when they reach out to him, Win,freeze in addition to a wage1) Wash and thinly slice' zuc- to be published here indicates price freeze. For one week we chini and arrange in bottom of a why: the central charism domin- owska wrote the story of Father president, Msgr", Thomas G. Fahy, the organization will have should all buy 'materials in non- greased 1Y2quart casserole. ating his life was the gift of Kolbe. the authority to override his disposable containers and deterdramatizing Mary's importa~ce, In 'the process she traced the vetoes, subject to the approval " 2) Melt but~er in a skillet over mine how long it would take to low heat add onion and ground presence and role in the con- steps of Kolbe's marvelous dis- of the trustees. finally clean up our yards" our covery of Mary, and Mary's part beef, cook and stir until lightly tinuing work of salvation. homes and our city streets. The· priest's name is Maxi- in the struggle to free men from browned, stir in meat sauce and water. milian M. Kolbe. He is Polish, selfishness, sin and alienation, In the Kitchen and a Conventual Franciscan. and draw' them in the blessed 3) Pour this mixture over "Mal, how about a casserole unity and· peace of her Son's, zucchini. Cover tightly., ~ake 35 'Pope Paul:will publicly honor for a change:" was my husband's Kingdom. him with the title of "Blessed" cry the other day and while I minutes: ,Remove cover and in St. Peter's Basilica on Sunday, Responding to this awareness promised one would be forth- sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.' October 17th. He has been dead he founded the international 15 minutes or Bake uncovered coming I didn't do anything barely 30 years. Marian movement known as the about it until I came across a until brow~ed in a 350 oven. Fr. Kolbe's cause has a local Militia of the Immaculate (the small paperback cookbook in "M.I.") to propagate and develop ·Names inter:est because members 'of the 'Clara !,:', one of the area discount stores Santa Conventual Franciscan Friars of its implications. called Redbook Casserole TreaNew Vice-P'resident St. Anthony of Padua Province sury. (I ¥ery often need a good SANTA CLARA (NC) _ The serve in 'four parishes in the Dinudge to get'me moving in the ocese of Fall River: Holy Cross right· direction). Universit.y of Santa Clara has Paris.h, Fall River, Our Lady of WE~LL named educator and businessWith over 190 easy to prepare man Herbert G. Carhart Jr. vice- Perpetual Help and St. Hedwig '(great for the working gal)' .president for the school's devel- in New Bedford, and Queen of 'dishes this small tome, that had the Most Holy Rosary Parish in opment 'program. been marked down to 79c was a Carhart, 49, of San Mateo, Taunton. buy I couldn't pass up and I Calif., has been active in instituThe biography referred to is vowed to try one of the recipes tional planning, public relations Maria Winowska's The Death each week. and fund raising in the Bay San Camp Proved Him Real (Prow, Now, while Joe loves casserole Francisco Area and was presi- . 95c). It will be available October FOR' (they were our favorite recipes dent of the Carhart Company, a 1st. ,when. there were o'nly two of consulting firm. Death Camp takes its title BANK-BY·MAIL (post-paid) ~ITH us 'w please), the kids really For the past year he, has been from the reason why'it was writ- , "turn off'" when they see dinner vice·pr~sident· of development at ten. Winowska, ~erseIf a survi'coming to the table all in one Golden Gate College in San ;~~ vor of a Nazi "concentration dish. In fact, Jason's reaction' Fra,ncisco. For three years pre-camp", undertook the book when 307 M~in St., South Yarmouth, Ma. 02664 to, such a meal is generally so vious he was vice-president for a comrade from the camp was *At Bass River, 2-3 yr: term deposit certificates yield gutjural that I would be hard university relations and develop- unable to shake off the profound ., 6.18% per year when compounded 'daily from day-ofput'to 't'ranslate it into ,print. ment Gonzaga Unive-rsity in disillusionment and despair that deposit. $1,000, minimum deposit. And while I'm often a mother Spokane, Wash. gripped him following the atrociI
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River.Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
15
this Pr(wioce 'so all you have to do is pick them up, A lot of good kids are using dl1lgs, Our kids, You don't lllwe tH hUy anything. Y(to don't eVen Nice Kids, And they're taking lots of them. They have (0 ask ftlt them. Just pick up the pitn1phleb sniff them. Thev smoke them, Thev shrlot them with and read then1 until vou start to undentand some of neerllcsinto wills, They swallow them, They get' lhe things (hat are going on. so they can't live without them They get hurt _ Then start lHoking around yt)U, Seriously. Look Pushers get rich. And the kids'? They die. Or for kids WllO,se eycslook like they're someWhere mllybee\Cn W(1rsc, they damage themselve& forever< else. They probahly an.~. Look forldds Who are WhHt dr' you k09w ~lXrut drug~'! p(J you knoW borrowing. more flloney 'lmu is usual , Keep On 'what speed is'! What it can do? What LSD is? How', looking and k)okIng nnd !()(lkif\l$. And listen, Listen it teaus'! f)(l you know what amphetamillCs are? to What the kids hav9 to say, Why they are saying it He.min? Cocaine? MescttHne? Hashish'! DMT? ceause that's whnt . !XlytlU know what a;'h~ad" is? A "Hie? A "Drop"? .. Then start doing sOnlethi this whole (hiogb about something about II Qr"Acid'''! Wdl, you shoUld know\ All of us had seliNls and widespread pr()bJem, hener find out lmd we'd beller find out fllst. just what Serlou, be~ause this prohlem is sdti int1kted, wc're rlocog. And no one isimmunc bec:nuse drug . St'fif)uS because sornewhere something is very wrong abuse is happening everyWhere. when thculternative is a urue. $¢rl\)uS hecnu,c a lot , We're trying 10 help. We've put aU the dl1lg , of gt.KKI kids aren't Si) goo<!.lll1ymo re . . facts we can think onn l,.1asy·tlHead pamphlets. Anp They're out kids, Let's hdp thcn:t Ndtfightthcm, we've pUt the booklets in almos1 every tlnJgstore in
Do you know what YOU're doing'? CODA Council On 'Drug Abuse.
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16
THE, ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-T.hyrs. Sept. 23" 1971 . -_..:.-.
KNOW YOUR FAITH Church as People 01 God II
Coming Together as Believers,
, You can tell a lot about how of you who believe;' and "people people think Of you from the of God" are different expressions way they greet you. We can tell of the same reality. For him the a lot about how the first Chris- Church was obviously people. tians thought of the Church from When people gathered together the greetings they used when in answer to God's' call, they they wrote to different churches, were "people of God" or "the ,Here, for' instance, 'are the Church." It ~as that simple. greetiilgs from some letters of Paul: "To the church of God which is at Corinth, to all who are By c~lIed to be God's people", (Cor. 1; 2). ' .. FR. QUENTIN "To the church of God in Corinth, and to all God's people in ._ QUESNELL; S.J. all Greece" (I Cor. I, 1). ' "To the. people of -the church in Thessalonica" (I Thess. I, 1). "To, God's people who live' in This was especially obvious Ephesus" (Eph. 1,1). in the language in which he '''Greetings to the churches of wrote. The Greek word that Galatia" (Gal. I, 2). we now translate "church" "I write to all of you in Rome, would have sounded to Paul and whom God loves and has called his fellow-christians more iike to be his own people" (Rom. "gathering," "assembly," "chosen I, 7). group." There 'would be no The letters are written to the question that the "gathering" or whole community. Sometimes he the "assembly" or "the group" says "church" or "church or' referred to all the people who . God." Sometimes he says "peo- came together in answer to ''r l14iJ(tJ'r FIGuRE)) VAr !loW /(#.£(//JAjr /r i Sj i]<.j r) OA/lNY,/ 'S- I r /NWt.-vtJ>, ,pie" or "God's people" or "those God's call. , I called to be God's people." Paul writes to these people So~etimes he simply addresses to express his friendship and At a recent stocholders' meet· was never formally discussed at "all of you." _ love, to, encourage and exhort, , ing of one of this country's larg- the Council. Finally in 1943 Pope Church: People to correct and chastise, to argue' est corporations, the president Pius XII issued ,his encyclical For him, "church", and: "all and to ,teach. He calls for deciproudly proclaimed, "Ladies and "Mystici Corporis"-on the Mys-, sions.' He calls for actions.' He gentlemen, it is good to see that tical Body of Chr.ist. But times calls for changes, and. reforms. we are one big happy family!" kept changing at an ever in/ But he - addresses the entire We all use symbols and images creasing pace, and so did group. to coommunicate with each, other. images., , "One big happy family" was In additiOn to using the Mys~ Didn't they have church offiSANTIAGO (NC)""':'The top ed! here used to describe a gigantic tical Body image, the Second ucation official in Chile's Marx- cers then?, Yes, but he doesn't >cqrporation. In common usage Vatican Coun'cil (1962-1965) re- ist government has declared that usually address. them. The one . . the heart,": .although a mu.scle, turned to,the use 'of several early private schools can continue to time he mentions them in his ,,;,::.., ). ':l?y)1'ibolizes love. For many today , images of the ,Church., In fact, enjoy their constitutional right, greeting, he puts them after' the ,,:'. };~ ,.,~fl clenched fist symbolizes unity the DogmatiC 'Constitution on to exist., people as a part of the people. ':t~·, X1..~n<;! soliqarity in a' common the Church uses the .. following The statement by Education (Which is exactly where Vatican Scriptural images - sheepfold, Minister Mario Astorga Was an IIputs them in Chapter II of the flock, field of Goil, b'uilding and effort to allay, fears caused by temple of God, and spouse of previous, official statements that Christ. (Chapter I) The' Council steps would be .taken to phase F By Fathers' then' proceeded, to de-' out private schools, including . ~:"'i- ~:O\ ~ .. vote the 'entire second chapter about 1,000 under Catholic ausFR. GEORGE K of the same docwnent to another pices: All Chilean, schools -were Several weeks ago I was asked ' -MALONE scriptural image, that of the to be nationalized by 197'7., to speak to a group parents "people- of God." ' At the beginning of the school and religion te'achers. When.l The Scriptural background of year, here in March, President arrived, I found the meeting , mU8mmlIi,mr:murffUg this 'image embraces both the Sa,lvador Allende had said that room very well prepared. Chairs Old and the New Testaments, In private schools are undemo- , were neatly arranged fac~ng the cause. The New Testament uses over the Old, the' specially chosen cratiC and, promote' social class front of the room where there ,'. 90 images to describe Christ's people of God was the people of divisions. was a portable blackboard, an Church - such as the bride of Israel.' Obviously, this image had But Astorga has now declared: overhead projector, ,a slide proChrist, body of Christ, sheepfold, a definite racial foundation. In: "Private schools will continue jector and a large screen. Beheavenly Jerusalem, and so the New, according to Christian 1 to function in tile normal way. tween the screen and blackboard ;-r>forth. At various eras in history belief, the new chosen people Parents, operators, teachers and ,was a lectern or reading stand. and in different parts of the of God is the entire church of students of private schools must By the time I arrived to check world, different images had dif- Christ, in which there is no dis- have full trust in the govern- the equipment and roomartinctioI) between Jew and Gen- ment's assurance that it will re- rangement, people were already , fer~ntmeanings. , For .'many centuries the main tile and which is universal. spect and safeguard their con-, seated ,in orderly rows facing' image "of the Church for _many stitutional and legal rights." the front. Chosen, Race' Roman Catholics was that of the Astorga explained that the I began the session by asking The special significance of the earlier pronouncements on pri- the people to look at the ar"Kingdom Qf God." This was quite understandable, since at location of this "people of God vate education meant only that rangement of the room and to that time the prevalent form of chapter" is twofold: the government 'wanted t6- re- reflect on what" if anything, the I) It reminds-us'that we are vamp school programs and cur- room arrangement suggested ,European society was nlonarchical. But as forms of society called. by God to be saved and ricula under some sort of, uni- abput religious education. It was ,: changed, different images of the not only as individuals, ,also as fied approach, 'and that any not long before parents and members of a community, .God~s transfer of private s,ehools to the teachers began expressing their -< Chl!fCh took on new meaning. own people. In other words, as .state would .be done by mutual observations: ',Images of the Church . ;\.Pf~Ii,J:ninary plans for the First we work qut our salvation, we agreement. "The 'room is set up for us to 'Vatican Council (1869-1870) had don't have to "go it alone." We Other sources pointed out that listen to you give us a lecture." propbsed to discuss the Church have brothers and sisters to help, the present government could "We came to get answers from II): ,its image of "Mystical Body_ comfort, ~onsole and guide us in not finance the education -of all- ' you, and the room is arranged, of Christ." But due to political our hours of need, just as we Chilean youths. About one- to make this possible." "Reli,.'factors and the outbreak of the are there to help them.. third of them attend ndnpublic gious education' is mainly hand.Franco-Prussian war the topic schools. Turn to Page Seventeen ing on to others the truths of ---_---:.~--~
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Chilean Private Schools to Stay
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Constitution on the Church!) He writes "To all God's people living 'in Philippi who believe in C~rist Jesus, together with the church leaders and helpers" (Phil I, 1). James and Peter Now this was not simply some peculiarity of, St. Paul. _James' does the same thing: "Greeting's, to all God's people, scatte'red - over the' whole world" (James I, 1): 'Pete~ 'does it: "To God's ch'osen people, who live as refugees scattered throughout the provinces" (I Peter, I, 1). It must have seemed the' normal way to talk in those early days when you could see the church growing and taking shape day by day as more and more believers came together. These "gatherings" or "assemblies" or "churches" were still' small enough then to fit into one man's house: To our friend and~ fellow-worker Philemon, and the church that meets in your house" (Philemon I, 1). It must have been easy in that situation to look to the whole group to make decisions, take actions, initiate change., You could see before your eyes that the people were the Church and' the Church was the people of -God. ,·'1 Today, when the Church is very large and very organized, and has existed for a very long , time it may be harder to remember that the Church is really the "gathering," "assembly," on "calling together" of the entire people of God. But we must remember it. For greater ,or small,er numbers and the passage of ,time don't really change the nature of Christ's Church.
Educating God's People' II
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of
,our faith, and we look to you ,to explain the truths and how to hand them on." "You're a priest and know the Church's teaching. We came here to learn more about the teachings of the millhM,,,,,,z@mllf;m:::rNZl
By
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FR. CARL J. PFEIFER, S.J.
Church and how to teach them to our children." Arrangement Significant I asked if the room arrangement and the general trend of their observations suggest anything about the Church. After a moment or two for thinking, without further comment about the question, I suggested that we rearrange the room. As I moved all the equipment off to one side, I asked the people to move their chairs into a more informal arrangement. I sat down with 'Turn to Page Seventeen
II I
THE· ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
Chapman Writes Account Of Henry VIII's Sis:ters
17
Educating God's People
Continued from Page Sixteen We learned how easy it is to them as a member of the group. use words that mean one thing Everyone knows something apout Henry VIII, one of When everyone was settled, I while using those words in a asked how they liked the context that practically negates the most fateful' figures in the history of the West. But change. Most' seemed to like it their meaning. We speak today hardly anyone knows even of the existence. of his two although some obviously felt . of the Church as the "People of sisters, Margaret and Mary. They were both queens, Maruncomfortable. I then asked God." We say that God's Spirit garet of Scotland and Mary whether the change in seating is at work throughout all levels of France. Hester W. Chap- him, which brought a horrified arrangement suggested anything of God's people, that everyone rebuke from Henry VIII, who about religious education and has particular gifts which are man writes about them in professed to be affronted by the given by God to build up the the Church. The Thistle and the Rose very notion of divorce. A very lively discussion fol- community. All of this is (Coward, McCann and GeogheShe got her divorce, and marlowed for almost an hour before soundly grounded in the New gan, 200· Madison Ave., New ried a still younger man, one we broke fo~ coffee and donuts. Testament and in the teaching Harry Stuart, and continued her Disagreement and strong feelings of the Second Vatican Council struggle for the ascendancy in were expressed. "I think we (see columns by Frs. Malone and LEADER: John T. Gurash Scotland. However what authorcame to ·hear you tell us about Quesnell). By ity she managed to grasp ended heads a new advisory com- religious education and the Build Community when her son James reached the mittee of community lead- Church's teaChing." "But who is RT. REV. age of 17. He then began to rule ers to help determine future the Church? Not just Father. We Yet we frequently speak these in his own right and in disregard are the Churc~." "The. hierarchy words in an atmosphere and conMSGR. of Catholic schools in the of his mother's counsel. Margadoes not have all the answers." text that effectively says that ret's tumultuous life ended in Philadelphia Archdiocese. JOHN S. "It's not like just sitting here the truths of faith, the imperaNC Photo. 1541. listening to Father. I have to tives of normal life, the guideKENNEDY Her beautiful siste~ Mary, think and try to share with the lines for Christian holiness are born in 1496, had a shorter life group. "Maybe religious educa- chiefly known by bishops, and a much shorter term as m'ft"--;"';);~~\&~ tion involves more than learning priests and Religious who hand truths from a teacher. Maybe it them on to the laity. As long as York, N. Y. 10016. $6.95), a book queen. When she was 12, her has more to do with becoming that is the ordinary experience not notable for profundity or lit- brother arranged a marriage with SEATTLE (NC)-The bishops a real community of people who of Catholics, the new words and erary grace, but giving a clear, the future Emperor Charles V, skimming account of the two who was then only 8 years old. cannot guide the Church in to- stand together for something." images of the Church as "God's A proxy marriage took place, but day's world without consensus Synthesis people" will remain only new relatively obscure women. Charles never sent for her. from the people of God, CoadjuAfter the coffee-break, I tried words with little impact on life. Margaret, born in 1489, was tor Archbishop Leo C. Byrne of to summarize their ideas. DrawHenry'S Anger Religious education--on every the plainer of the two. As a St. Paul-Minneapolis, a U. S. del- ing on my own educational backlevel from pre-school to adultroyal princess, she was expected So, at the age of 18, she was egate to the world synod of ground and personal experience, should enable Catholics to expe.to be something of a pawn in married to Louis XII of France. bishops, said here. I was able to clarify and organ- rience in the light of tradition, 'the international marriage game· Louis was then considered an' Archbishop Byrne spoke to ize more systematically. It was a and cooperating in the building whose object was the consoli- old man; he was 52. He had 140 participants from five north- surprise to all of us how much dating of power. When she was many ailments, was all but tooth- western states, .including laity, in insight, religious experience, doc- up of a genuine community of 12 years old she was married less, and he drooled. He died 82 a consultation to discuss the trinal understanding, and com- believers dedicated to coming to by proxy to King James IV of days after his marriage to Mary. ~ two topics on the synod's agen- mon sense emerged through this grips with today's issues and challenges. Scotland. She was Queen of France for da: priesthood and world justice. approach. James was an enthusiast for something over two months. Not all agreed with every At the consultation, Bishop the legend of King Arthur and Before she returned to En- Sylvester Treinen of Boise, Ida- thing at the end of the evening, the age of chivalry. He was also . gland, she secretly married but I think we all were more Continued from Page Sixteen an enthusiast for golf and foot- Charles Brandon, Duke of Suf- ho, suggested the possibility of aware of several important finding another way of life for' 2) It reminds us that the ball, and took an interest in the folk. This was in direct violapoints about religious education words "hierarchy," "institution," latest development in medicine, tion of Henry VIII's command, priests who have left the active and the Church. ministry so that they may be and "Church" are not identical. surgery and dentistry. A versa- for the king had plans of marryaccepted into the Christian comFor many years people tended tile man, but not a very wise one ing her to Charles, still unwed, munity without stigma and, in Salvation Essential· to identify the Church with Reliin some practical respects. or perhaps to Charles's grand- some circumstances, ,even return gious, priests, bishops, cardinals, Mission of Church father, the lately widowed Em- to the priesthood. and popes. Even the usage of the Regent of Scotland CARACAS (NC)-Salvation.peror Maximilian. . Father Ibar Lynch, a pastor not liberation-is the essential term "churchmen," usually r~ James' marriage to Margaret Her brother's anger could be in the Seattle archdiocese, sugmission of the Church, the secre- stricted to the clergy reflected " ~" was intended to forge a bond stayed by only. one thing gested changing the process of tary general of the Latin Amer- this tendency. • : ,<.,::,_ between Scotland and England, money or treasure of some sort. selecting bishops and limiting ican Bishops' Council told a Partially in order to offset. \", "'... but James could not resist lining So Mary. and Brandon extorted their term of office. He urged this rather one-sided top-heavy '~f;;, .~~: up with France, then at odds what they could from France as making celibacy optional for meeting on development here. "There is a lot of talk about view of Christ's Church, ttie·j,·\~·:' '~~ with England. He got a nice sub- due to a dowager queen, and all priests and advocated weighing ~ •.. sidy for so doing. But in 1513, of it went into Henry's grasping the possibility of allowing women liberation these days," said Bish- 'Fathers of Vatican II decided to"~~>;l.:, , ,. op Eduardo Pironio. "Some fear insert this second chapter as an '~.. ' he fell in battle with the English, hands. But even that was not to enter the ministry. the word ,others abuse it. But overview of the entire Church to be succeeded by his and Mar- enough. He levied a kind of in....._._~,/.",'~. Mrs. Carver Gayton, a Seattle liberation does not fulfill the es- and as an introduction to the "", , garet's son, James V, then only demnity upon the couple, with housewife, criticized the meeting sence of Christianity, nor does it following chapters in hierarchy, .r" 17 months old. notice of arrears, for the rest' as being more concerned about include the full mission of the laity, and Religious. It thus Margaret thus became the re- of Mary's life. celibacy than social justice and Church." serves to put these following gent of Scotland, but she had to for inviting a black lay women The bishop said' that salvation chapters in their proper perspecAbominable Age fight the Scots lords, an unruly to be on a panel at the confer- does, and that what really mat- tive - that while there are lot. She married one of them, Mary died in 1533, before ence and then ignoring her. ,.. ters is the kingdom of God and varying ministeries of service the Earl of Angus, who was five which time Henry had deterHis justice-preaching the cruci- within the Church, we are all years junior to her. This did not mined to rid himself of his wife, fied Christ as the way of true equal in our dignity as part of improve her position, for there Katherine o~ Aragon and marry Terrorists Damage the people of God, that we are liberation." was rivalry among the lords, as Ann Boleyn. Mary, who had Convent in Chile To use the Latin American indeed "a chosen race, a royal well as between them and the known much kindness from 'CONCEPCION (NC) - The bishops' 1968 guidelines on so- priesthood, a holy nation, a purregent. Katherine, sided with her rather hea9 of a congregation of nuns cial reforms to justify revolution chased people . . . who in times than with th.e king in this nasty here who care for the sick said and guerrilla warfare, the bishop past were not a people, but are Marries Again business. leftist terrorists tried to burn sai.d, "is totally twisting the con- now the people of God." (I Pet. The two sisters were different She was a formidable' adver2, 9-10) their convent after smearing its cept of liberation." sary, scheming and battling con- in many respects. But they had walls with Communist slogans. stantly. In fact, she gained a rep- one thing in common. Each had Sister Guillermina Uribari of 111111I1111I11I11I11I11I1111I11I111111I11I1111111111111111111111I11I11I11I1111I11I11I1111I111111111111111111I111111I1111I1111I11I1111I111I11I11I' utation of being a kind of fiend, a granddaughter who was executhe Servants of Jesus said only so vindictive was she. Her for- ted under one of Henry VIII's the help of neighbors avoided a tunes fluctuated; sometimes she daughters. Lady Jan Grey, Marys major fire after members of the granddaughter, was beheaded in was in command, sometimes , 'NATIONAL BANK the reign of Mary Queen of Leftist Revolutionary Movement she was helpless and in flight. threw a torch through a convent of BRISTOL COUNTY She and' Angus fell out, and Scots, Margaret's granddaughter, window. the reign of was beheaded in he moved into a position of conJust because a bank offers you The Sisters serve in this introl. She determined to divorce Queen Elizabeth. The splendor of the royal dustrial city of 200,000 as visita Savings Account courts of the sixteenth century ing nurses for the sick. Their Actuality doesn't mean it can offer you is depicted in this book, as well convent is near Concepcion UniThe question for each man to as the wretched lot of the poor, versity, a leftist stronghold. a checking account "We live on contributions prosettle is not what he would do the prevalent brutality, and the if he had means, time, influence' vicious contest for power. The vided by relatives of the patients . But We Do and educational advantages, but age was colorful, even gorgeous we care for," Sister Guillermina what he will do with the things in some respects but in many said. "We want to do our job ·NORTH ATTLEBO~O (2) MANSFIELD (2) ATTLEBORO FAL~S. -Mabie ways it was abominable. he has. in peace." 11I1111I1111I111I111I1111I11I1111I11111I111I11I11I11111111I111111I1111I11I11I11I11I11I11I11I11I11I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I11I1111I11I111I11I
Stresses Need Of Consensus
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People of God
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MANUFACTURERS
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18
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. s.~pt. 23, 1971
The Parish' Parade
.Criticizes 'Evaluation' Of Priesthood Survey
Publicity ganizations news items Anchor, P.
02722.
. I have. managed by only a moderate amount of deviousness to get hold of the "evaluation". of the NORC report on ttle priesthood that the American bishops commissioned. Without, this "evaluation'" the majority of the American hierarchy was not .., obviously there are differences permitted access to the reof taste and judgment that exist port, and even with it, the among sociologists. When you're American clergy who coop- paring a. questionnaire down to erated in the study 'and the American laity who paid for· it are not permitted to see the
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size, these differences become crucial. Nothing the evaluators have to say would cause me to change a single item were NORC to do it over' again. ' The document, as I have said, is the sort' of thing social, scientists write about each other's . work, with the condescension and covert nastiness that usually find their way into "evaluations." It's the way the game is played, and I find the work of the "evaluators" no more offensive than any other' such effort.
chairmen of paris,h or· are asked to submit for this column to The O. Box 7, fall River
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ST. FRANCIS ASSISI; NEW BEDFORD The Ladies League of St. Fran· cis Assisi will hold its first meeting of the season at 8 o'clock tonight in the chl,1rch haJI at Mill and Newton Streets. Mrs. Anita Belliveau, tt~e new-' Iy elected president, will preside and she has extended a special invitation to all new members and encouraged them to attend.
lI>r. F. Mackenzle Shattock
ST. JOSEPH, ATTLEBORO The senior cheerleaders will conduct 'a car wash in the school yard on Saturday afternoon, Sept. 25 and Sunday morning, Sept. 26. The cost is one dollar and proceeds will complete payment on their uniforms. Informal group discussions on contemporary trends in religion are being formed for. afternoon sessions and will be held under expert professional guidance. Contact Renee SoUlard at ~22 6679 or Anita Maigret at 2226525 if you wish to join this group.
ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL,
f'osters Women . In P'riesthood
ST. THERESA,. SO. ATTLEBORO The Mothers' Club will con-· The Confraternity of Christian LONDON (NC) ..:... You won't duct its first meeting of the year Mothers will attend Mass and find Dr. F. Mackenzie Shattock at 7:30 on Tuesday night, Sept. receive Holy Communion in' a body prior to each monthly picketing a Playboy Club trying 28 in the. Cathedral School. REV. An acquaintance hour will fol- meeting the practice will start in to liberate the bunnies. Well, low the business meeting. October. ANDREW M you probably won:t find her there; Members of the Confraternity it's hard to predict what Dr~ F. ST; KILIAN, GREELEY are completing plans for the Mackenzie Shattock is going to NEW BEDFORD Christmas Bazaar 'scheduled for do. The Women's Guild will spon- Nov. 10 and 11 "in the church For more than half a century, sor a cake sale in the church hall. Proceeds will be for the , Round One Dr. Shattock, a retired psychia- basement after the 5:15 Mass on benefit of the new CCD Center. report. The bishops in question now trist, has been doing the unex- Saturday, Sept. 25 and again It is, on the whole, the kind of A. Fashion Show with Bunny document that sociologists write have the few catch phrases they pected-in 'the great tradition of after all of the Masses on Sun- North narrating is scheduled for day, Sept. 26. about each other's work"':"'partic- need to dismiss the report in F:ngland's genteel eccentrics. March 10, 1972. For most of that time, she's Donati~ns . of pastry may be ularly when they have had little conversations 'vvith each other, experience with the' methods of with their priests.' and, with the been working with the British left in the church basement or ST. JOHN OF GOD, those whom they are criticizing. all the important reference group branch of St. Joan's Alliance, a in rectory kitchen on Saturday. S O M E R S E T < - : i fiercely Catholic, 'fiercely fem"in- Proceeds will benefit the general Mrs. Manuel Nogueira, presiThere are two principal criti-' of the Roman Curia. ist group that demands, among dent of the Women's Guild, will church fund. In'a way. I must take off my cisms leveled ~i the NORC efgive a· resume of the history fort: (1) The analysis, while cer- hat to the bishops committee. other things women's rights to SANTO CHRISTO, and events of the organization tainly professibmilly competent, They released th'e basic findings, ordination. at the year's first meeting Dr. Shattock is now head of FALL RIVER is not detailed or complete held up the report, and then go~ Mrs.' Helen Oliveira, president scheduled for 7:30 on Wednesenough. (2) There are many as- an "evaluation" which they can the. British branch of St; Joan's pects of the priesthood-the spir- use ·to discredit it-all in all a Alliance, which champions wo- of . the Council of Catholic day night, Sept. 29 in the Knights itual life, the professional self very slick operation, worthy of men's rights with all the feryor Women, has announced the of Columbus Hall' on Milford image, the cultural life--which . political masters. Of course this of its namesake but without the coming events of the organiza- Rd., Swansea. A catered buffet will be ,changes the reality that the re- . crudities that some times mark tion. Corporate Communion at are neglected. served and anyone planning' 'to the antics of the Johnny-Cornethe 10:30 Sunday morning, Oct.. port documents, but then reality I must admit to smiling Lately "Women's Lib." 3. Members will meet at 10 attend is asked to contact Mrs. slightly at such judgments. They is not all that important. Founded in 1911 o'clock in the church hall and Armand Lebel at 8-7735 no later I can be a good loser. The revealed how little the "evalu, Gabrielle Jeffery a' cardproceed in a body to the church than Sept. 24. commitee won this round and I ators" have experience of the ~carrying suffragette who chained proper. acknowledge defeat. difficulties of large scale survey herself to a lamppost outside Mrs. Emily O. Borges and Mrs. ST. THOMAS MORE, But it's not the last round. research. First of all, the report Holloway Prison· in solidarity Lorraine Lima will head a large SOMERSET was just a research report, not with hunger-striking women im- committee for the membership The first meeting of the year a comprehensive monograph. prisoned there for participating scheduled for 3 o'clock on for the Women's Guild will be '.. 'Even as a report it was still 500 in suffrage riots-founded the Sunday afternoon, Oct. 17 in the held at 8 on Thursday night, 'pages .long:· The kind of detailed Oct. 14. Rev. Howard A. WaldAlliance.in 1911 as the Catholic church hall. , and exhaustive monograph the Mrs. Mary Almeida and Mrs. ron, pastor will celebrate BeneWomen's Suffrage Society. When ·:,~'''~.eval.uators'' wanted would be CASTELGANDOJ:;FO ~NC) the movement's first goal of vot- Mary Gagne will serve as chair- diction for the group and then ::,~, perhaps three times that length ; . '. and. would require two years or The , fund~mental questIOns of', ing, by women was achieved in man and co-chairman, respec- all proceed to the hall for a ~an s destmy must ?e.the essen-. 1923, the name was changed, and tively, for the penny sale br!ef business meeting. more to prepare. tlal concern of ChrIstIans, Pope the Alliimce moved on to ever planned for 7:30 on Thursday A reception for new members Do not misunderstand my Paul VI told thous~nds at his 'more progressive causes. night, Nov. 18 in the church will follow and an entertainment point: I do not think that any The primary aim of the Alli- hall. weekly gen~ral audIence at his by "Flossie" will conclude the critical issues were missed, but Summer reSIdence here. ance at the moment-and for the A Christmas Party will be held evening. report (usually written under the Miss Rose Mullaney ang Mrs. "Does o.ur life finish here on past' 12 years-has been getting in November but plans will not gun of a contract deadline) and earth; :.or does it continue in women into, the priesthood. In ~ be finalized until the next meet- Sherwood McClure, co-chairmen exhaustive monographs (usually' ing. of hospitality will be in charge written over a long. period of some manner, andif so how, in 1963 the AUiance passed at iis Nomination of officers will be of the coffee hour. another world?:' the' Pope asked. annual council meeting a resolu-' time and at leisure) are not the same thing. And anyone who M~n~s whole concept of life is tion stating- that if the Church - made at the November meeting. has done much survey research conditioned by how he' answers decided to "extend to women the' ·IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, those questions,he said. ' dignity of the priesthood, they . TAUNTON knows this. "The evaluation of human and would be willing and eager to reRev. Barry W. 'Wall, assistant Differences of Judgment ONE STOP temporal values, that. is, one's spond." . at the parish from 1962 until his SHOPPING CENTER Secondly, it does seem to me phil()sophy of life, depends on af. recent assignment to the Cathe• Television _ Grocery , that considerable attention was firming or denying, or even Public Affairs dral in Fall River, will be hon.' Appliances • Furniture paid to the spiritual life of the merely supposing, a future life, Director Named . ored at a reception from 2 to 4 WASHINGTON (NC)-Chester. . on Sunday aftern'oon, Sept. '26 priest (a whole chapter) and to the immortality of the soul and 04 Allen St., New Bedfo~d his: professional life - not as of its responsibilities before a M. Cragie, a public relations ex- in the church auditorium. 997-9354 ecutive, has been named director. much as we would have liked, judging ,God," the Pope said. Christians, he said,' must keep of public affairs for the Washing- NOTRE DAME, but, given the length of the survey document, as much 'as was the ultimate problems of life ton archdiocese by Cardinal Pa- FALL RIVER clearly in mind. Today, secular- trick O'Boyle. possible. The Council of Catholic Women Cragie has had experience in will hold a membership tea at Again the evaluators .inexperi- ization "leads us to lose our ence in survey research shows. awareness of the tremendous newspaper and magazine writing 7:45 on Monday evening, Sept. See Our questionnaire ran 48 pages risks regarding our future des- and public relations in New York, 27 in the Jesus Marie Audito. About Chicago and Washington. Most rium. and took from three to 12 hours tiny." , And there is also a tendency, recently he was promotion direc,Father Bertrand Demers, to fill out. If we had asked all the .questions the evaluators 'he warned, to appeal to "charis-, .tor for the National Council 'of O.M.I., retreat master for the wanted. us to, many priests matic and prophetic attitudes" Catholic Men here. Archdiocese of Manila in the Cragie will handle press rela- Philippines, will show slides and w6uld stiil be working on it. that make many ambitious perA~tu;llly, earlier drafts of the in- . sons believe they are self- tions for the archdiocese and will speak about his work in the Philstrument included most of the sufficient "in passing judgment do public relations work for the ippines. material that the evaluators on the strict requirements of' diocese's charitable and educaEach member of the council Falmouth Wareham 'Iamented- was absent. Those Christian life and human des- tional services, Cardinal O'Boyle is urged to sponsor a new mem548-3000 295-3800 said. ' . ber. tinies." 'drafts were 125 pages long. .f'A~L RIVER
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• THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 23, 1971
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SCHOOLBOY SPORTS IN THE DIOCESE By PETER J. BARTEK Norton High Coach ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• « •••••••
Race for League Laurels Begins for Area· Gridsters Cries of "We're number I!" will echo through the halls of many area high schools tomorrow. as students flock to the auditorium for their annual "Jtickoff" pep rally. Students and teachers alike will rally behind their football . heroes to help prepare the gridsters for Saturday's sea- Coach Joe Bettencourt's Whalers will open Sunday at Sargent son opener. On Saturday the Field in New Bedford against scene will be the same from rival Bishop Stang High -of one end of the diocese to the other as thousands of fans cheer their favorites on to victory. The scholastic high schools football season will be underway. The 1971 campaign promises exciting races in both the Bristol County and Capeway Leagues. Likewise, teams like Somerset, Old Rochester of· Mattapoisett, and Case High of Swansea are expected to do well as independents. New, Bedford High' which shared the Bristol County title with Attleboro last year is favored to retain the crown.
Dartmouth. Coach Charlie Connell's Spartans hope to rebound from their opening game loss to Msgr. Coyle-Bishop Cassidy High last Sunday. The Spartans battled Coyle right down to the final seconds .of the 'contest before falling 12-6.' Defensively the' Spartans appear to be strong, but their offense is suspect at this time. If Stang i~ to spring. an early season upset, it will have to contain a. highly touted New Bedford offense and at the same time muster an offensive, attack of its own.
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THINKS BEST TO TEAR DOWN SAN QUENTIN: Father Arthur R. Harrison, a chaplain at San Quentin, thinks the structure should be torn down to make way for a more modern penal facility. NC Photo.
Chaplain Sugges,ts Tearing Down Prison Says San Quentin 'Gigantic, Clumsy Thing'
Taunton May Surprise In County Circuit Co-champion Attleboro defeated New Bedford Vocational 20-0 in a County curtain raiser last Saturday. The Bombardiers coached by Jim Cassidy are once again rated among the title contenders. Although young and . _ inexperienced the Jewelry City boys proved Saturday' that they are a force to be regarded highly. Attleboro will host New Bedford a week from Saturday in a crucial County contest. Taunton, the surprise team of 1970 in the BCL, will host Bishop Feehan High of Attleboro Saturday in the only other league game scheduled for this weekend. The Tigers came on strong toward the mid-way point of the past football season to beat New Bedford and then continued undefeated through the remainder of the campaign. However, early season losses negated their chance of winning a title. Coach Charlie Benoit's charges will be
Wareham-Fairhaven Saturday's contest could prove to be an omen for all Capeway and Bristol County League clubs. Barnstable is known to be strong; Durfee is always a con· tender for league laurels. The exact strength of each club will be known following Saturday's game. Coach Ed Keys of Durfee is no stranger' to Barnstable although he is in his first year at Durfee. For the past two seasons Keys guided Dennis-Yarmouth of the Capeway circuit and is therefore well acquainted with Barnstable. Old Rochester of the disbanded Narraganset League will open its season against New Bedford Vocational. The Bulldogs looked impressive in the annual preseason Wareham jamboree held ....
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SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-"The mate~ and prison administration, that once a con, always a con." There are exceptions, he said, thing to do is to tear San Quen- he said, did not extend to the out to avenge those defeats this tin down," said Father Arthur R. outdated penal facility or to the some rare individuals who are year. And, based on last Satur- Harrison, chaplain at the Cali- public's attitude about convicts. willing to take a chance and hire day performance Taunton may fornia prison where George "The normal citizen doesn't an ex-convict. He added: be the team to discredit pre- Jackson's recent escape attempt give hoot about the guys doing 'They Are Men' season forecasts. resulted in the death of the black time here. Now everyone's inter· "U's funny. It's very hard for ested in what's going on, but it's people to say 'yes" that first Cardinal Spellman High of militant and five other·s. just morbid curiosity mostly. time, but not the second, even 'place has been, built "This Brockton, one of the more highly People love to' bemoan prison if they've been burned. They see rated outfits in the state, took a hunk by hunk since the 1850s," life. But just let them see a guy it wasn't all that bad even if the exI1,lained. "It's a the priest 14-0 lead into the locker room . in prison boots and their attitude guy fell on his face.. at half-time last Saturday and gigantic, clumsy thing. The adis 'get the kids off the streets.' have ministration would love to "If 'good people step forward, ' had to hold on to win 14-8 as It;,'s the public who makes sure the ex-convict will make it. But,'; Taunton stormed from behind in a streamlined, efficient prison, I'm thoroughly convinced that',the second half. If the Tigers but it's stuck with this old clunk. half the public doesn't really" "And the place isn't built for can get untracked early, there Establishes New care." . may be no taming them this the efficient movement of inDiocesan Posts Father Harrison said he would Father Harrison added. mates," year. NEWARK (NC)-The new po- not be changing his style of min~ The priest told The Monitor, In non-league contests slated sitions of episcopal vicar for ed- istry even if. the prison should San Francisco archdiocesan for Saturday Coyle will host ucation and archdiocesan repre- become more restrictive. Bourne of the Capeway Confer- newspaper, that he was on his sentative for the apostohite of "Right now my job is dealing way bac;.k from vacation the day ence 'and Durfee High of Fall of the Jackson escape attempt. world justice have been estab- with human failures. You have River will play at Barnstable. to take each man as he is. I can't The Red Raiders from Barn- He rushed to the prison, but said lished by Archbishop Thomas A. ' afford to run from him or be stable are favored to win the it was too late for him to' do Boland of INewark. Msgr. Joseph P. Tuite was afraid. I work here as I, would Capeway title outright this sea- anything. "But I felt I had to be there," named vicar for ,education and in any parish. I'm a priest, not a son. A year ago the John Cheska specialist. I just bring my coached Raiders shared the he added. He described the pris- will relinquish his title as archdiocesan superintendent of priesthood to' these men as I as "a mess" at that point. on crown with Dartmouth. "The tension was just awful," superintendent of schools to take would to anyone else: They are the new post. not just inmates to me. They are in Capeway Inaugural he said. men." The justice and peace repreFather Harrison brushed aside a little over a week ago. He said he hoped something charges of brutality by prison sentative will be Father Vincent J. Prestera, founder of an arch- good would come out of the Coach Gerry Oliva has his guards after the killing~. diocesan mission in Honduras . brutal tragedy. charges in excellent condition: 'Morbid Curiosity' who this year will teach theology "Maybe something will come for their opener with Vocational. and developme.nt in the Third of all this. to help the normal . "Tlfe guards were sick with If the Bulldogs can win in World. of developing nations at inmate," he said. "I hope it's not' New Bedford Saturday, '. they' grief ... But if the public were a seminary in England. a big waste." its' assumptions about right in may be off to one of their best football seasons in many years. brutality, half the cons would be dead," he speculated. . Wareham a 34-0 winner over Father Harrison's sympathy Dighton-Rehoboth ·last Saturday will help to inaugurate the Cape- for the guards, imprisoned inway season when they play at • Savings Bank Life Insurance Fairhaven this weekend in· the • Rea! Estate Loans only Conference game scheduled. &' • Christmas and Vacation Clubs In non-league games involving • Savings Accounts Capeway clubs Somerset, a 2-0 Over 35 Years loser to Barrington, R. I., last • 5 Convenient Locations of Satisfied Service week will be at Dartmouth, LawReg. Master Plumber 7023 rence High of Falmouth will be NEW BEDFORD JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. at Dracut and Dennis-Yarmouth 806 NO. MAIN STREET' will travel to Dighton to meet fOIr Fall River 675·7497 the Falcons. C
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THE ANCHOR~Oiocese of Fall Riv~i·Th~rs~.sepf;·23, 1971,.
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Campaign for Human Development Plans . Grassroots Tour 'of . Nine Cities", Washington (NC)-Officials of . the U. S. bishops' Campaign for Human Development will. get a . first-hand look at how the anti, poverty effort is working at the 'grassroots level during a whirl-· wind tour. of nine cities from Sept. 23 to Oct. 8. Heading the tour will be Auxiliary Bishop Michael R. Dempsey of Chicago, the campaign's national director. He said
the officials would brief diocesan Cincinnati, Denver, Los Angeles an extraordinary effort in order representatives and exchange . and New Orleans have been that the campaign may· even ideas with them on the progress schedUled for diocesan campaign better last year's record coUecof the campaign. . directors. The campaign staff tion of $8.5 million." Stops in the tour include: will tour self-help projects in,. Father Robert V. MonticeUo, Boston, Sept.' 23; New York; New York, San Francisco, campaign executive director, and Sept. 24; Cincinnati, Sept. 28;' Phoenix and Miami. ' Robert B. Beusse, director of Denver, Sept. 29; San Francisco,' . The purpose of the tour, the U. S. Catholic Conference's Oct. 1;' Los Angeles,' Oct. 5; Bishop pempsey said, is "to be communications division and in Phoenix, Oct. 6; New Orleans, sure· every question regarding .charge of alI public information Oct. 7; and Miami, Oct. 8. the Campaign for Human Devel- and promotion aspects of the Regional meetings in Boston, opment is answered and to make . campaign, will also make the
trip. They will be accompanied by campaign staffers and members .of the National Committee on Human Development, who wiII speak at the meetings. The campaign has already funded more than $5 miIlion in' self-help projects in the United States and Puerto Rico. The 1971 nationwide campaign coUection has been set for Sunday, Nov. 21. ,:)
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