09.29.66

Page 1

Bishop' Appoints Priests PRIfSTS' .. llev. Raymond '11'. Considine, St William, F-aR River .. !Rev. Alfred J. Selldreau, St. James, Taunton lit- Rev. John A. SiMa, St Jobn the lBaiJItist, New Bedford .. lIIey. Thomas F. Walsh, St John the Evangelist, Attleboro .., Rev. William D. 1T!Iomson, St fll'300is Xavier, Hyannis lin. John E. Boyd, St. Patrick, Fait RiveII' ~. lester L Hull, Sacred Heart, Fall RileI' lin. James F. Lyons, St Peter, Dighton lief. lLuiz G. Mendonca, St Anthony, lEast falmouth' Ian. Robert L SUlI'!t@l1, St Mary's Cathedral, Fall River lief. Reginald M. Barrette, St. Roch, Fan River

l

:Senate and

SENA'It Rev. Gerard \Boisvert, St. Anthony,' New Bedford Rev. Joll!! !P. Driscoll SS. Peter and' Paul, Fall River Rev. Bento R. fraga, St. John of God, Somerset Rev. John IF. Hogan, St. Mary's Home, New Bedford Rev. !Edward J. Mitchell, Holy Name, Fall River Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill, St. Paul, Taunton Rell. .Iqseph l. Powers, Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro Bev. Albert F. Shovelton, St. James, New Bedford Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, St. Mary's Ca.thedral, Fall River Rev. Columba Moran, SS.CC., St. Joseph, Fairhaven Rev. Felicia~ Plichta, O.F.M.Conv., Holy Cross, Fall River

Pastoral Council PASTORAL COUNCil Members of the Priests' Senate Mrs. Aristides Andrade; 165 School St., Taunton Mrs. John Mullaney, 51 Tanager Rd., Attleboro Mrs. Gilbert Noonan, H lantern St., Falmouth Mrs. James A. O'Brien, Jr., 37 Forest St., Fall River Mrs. Rodolphe Paradis, 42 Mt. Vernon St., New BedforaB Hon. Philip M. Boudreau, 43 Southfield Lane, Osterville Dr. Carl J. DePrizio, 1 Park St., Mansfield Maurice F. Downey, Esq., 646 Rockdale Ave., New.Bedford Richard K. Martin, Esq., 262 Chase St., North Dighton Hon. William A. Torphy, 316 Montgomery. St., Fall River

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Advisory Boards to Aid B.ishop In accordance with the provisions of Vatican Council U's Decree on the Bishopgo Pastoral Office in the Church, the Most Reverend Bishop has today announced the es­ tablishment of the two bodies called for in each Diocese a Senate of Priests and a Pastorai Council of Priests, Laymen and Laywomen. The Senate of Priests, a,s explained in the Motu! Proprio, Ecc1esiae Sanctae, for the Priests' Senate and the sions and recommendations oil of Aug. 6, 1966, for the im­ Pastoral Council are for a period .pastors, assistants, priests with plementation of the Decree, of three years; one third of the special responsibility for youth t\.. i,s a grolip of priests repre­ members will be subject to re­ and family life, supported by senting the body of priests in appointment or replacement judgments of the laymen and! women who are invited to take the Diocese who, by their coun- each succeeding year. The ap­ ; sel, can effectively assist the pointees will meet quarterly with membership in the Pastora1l 'i P.ishop in the matters affecting proviso for extraordinary ses­ Council, we will be able, God­ sions according to diocesan need. willing, to work together for the the good of souls, in the further­ In setting up the advisory, advancement of all the faithful, ance of the temporal administra- r with clergy and religious as well, Uoh of the Diocese as a whole, boards the Most Reverend Bish­ and in the' material ~oncerns of op reflected the prayerful hopes to tpe realization of our initial, particular parishes as well. The. of the entire Church, stating:. goal, the glory of God and the "Hopefully, through the discus- wlvation of souls." Senate, which will work in col­ laboration with the Diocesan Consultors, is composed of ten pastors, ten assistants and two 0 religious priests. The members of the Priests' $4:00 per Year Senate were chosen on the basis ~ 1966 T~e Anchor of the balloting done by the PRICE IOc priests of the Diocese in conAt the personal request Of Pope Paul VI, the rectors of junction with the planned Di­ the seven Roman universities and academies have organized! ocesan Synod. . The Pastoral Council, as ex­ a' Congress on the The0logy of Vatican n.More than 1400 plained, in the same papal letter theologians from throughout th~ world have answered the

f<lT the implementation of the request and met in Rome at the Domus Pacis:

decree, is composed of the twen­

ty~two Priest-Senators and five

.Theology ~eeting Pope's Letter lllymen and five laywomen. Its Bishop Connolly has designatea. Sunday Oct. 2nd, as. fimction is ~o investigate aU Theology profess.ors, ~'f!Cmmary . "In essentials,' unity; in non­ a,nd, theQlogical faculty mem­ .nfl'aternity Sunday in the Diocese. In an appeal to all" th:ngs pertaining to pastoral ac­ essentials, liberty; and in all bers, "qualified exponents of ec­ . e Bishop reminds that we have a duty to br.ing Christ tivities; to weigh them careful­ things, charity/~ St,l<eh ,i$ the ly and' set forth practical con- 'clesiastical studies" and the like' norm, according to Pope Paul VI" uPto our world and this we do by the force. <?f O\lr faith and , elusions concerning them sO as came to Rome at the bidding of. fur deliberations he lias re"" ~ample. In. emphagizi~g the . Whatever we do; however we' t() promott: con~ormity of the life the Pope. A few lay perSOnS were quested concerning the theology .U to the . Lay Apostolate, reel, we have an impact and an lind actions of.the People of God also invited together .with three of' the Second Vatican Council, . with the Gospel. .or four Protestants'. A' personal' ~ahop Connolly sw,ted, "The ·Though the Council was de­ Turn io Page Two The episcopal appointments Turn to Page Nineteen ooithful should be vigorously signed to face' the. practical prob­ Ill'ged to take up their duty lents of the Church of today, the c)f carrying on the apostolate Holy Father stressed that it "in 0lle.h according to his state and no way extenuated or diminish­ ed the role of ~heologians. In lJbility. "Whatsoever you do for these -fact, today more than ever the lDY brothers, you do for me," exercise of the pastoral office $t. Matthew 25:40 demands that the spiritual life . The letter: . Between them they've given over 100 years to the '\Y0rld of .education. They've touch-. o~ Christfans be supported by Beloved in Christ: a firm foundation of truth and Sunday, October 2nd, will be ed the lives of more than 100,000 schoolchildren, They've visited every elementary schooC that they be given' correct and in the Diocese uncounted times, always bringing cheer and encouragement with them, safe orientation in order to avoid! l£ept as Confraternity of Chris­ tian Doctrine Sunday. The pur­ Now they're retiring and with Diocesan- School Supervisors Sister Felicita and Sister the dangers of modern errors ~ of this is to remind us that whose force is such that it aims Miriam go the good wishes we have a duty, all of us, .to and gratitude of teachers, at subverting the natural foun­ \!)ring Christ into the world. This dations of faith." \We do by the force of our faith children, pastors, school di­ . The Pope pointed out that the rectors and .co-workers from aIDd example. tE'achings of the Council' "con­ No 'One live~'completely apart. one end (\f. the Fall River Dio­ stitute proxi~ate and universali cese to the other. Turn to Page Seventeen The grateful ones will try to express their feelings on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 9, when teachers and friends from all parts of

the Diocese will converge on

Pope Paul, in a special letter Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall Cssued }\ugust 15, has confirmed River, for a testimonial honoring' bis earlier decision on restrict­ the two Sisters' of Mercy. Illig the use of the vernacular and The Rev. Thomas Corbisn. A specialty group from the ll'ctaining Latin as the usual lan­ Coyle High School band will ley, S.J.~ distinguished schol­ guage in the daily choir office play for the occasion and chil­ ar, will speak on the Ecumen­ of monks and certain other Reli­ dren from St. Patrick, Holy ical Movement in England a:ious clerics. In no way does this Name and St. Anne schools in to' a gathering of priests, reli­ 0Ktend to parish liturgy, how­ Fall River will present enter­ <aver. gious and laity of the Diocese of taimnent. A spiritual bouquet Fall River on Thursday, evening, The papal letter cites the de­ from all the schoolchildren in Oct. 6, at Mount St. Mary Audi­ 0.l'ees of the Council, a general the Diocese, nearly 20,000 of torium, F~l1 River, at 7:45. funstruction implementing these them, will be given to the Sis­ Father' Corbishley was for <:recrees of Oct. 26, 1964 and an­ ters, and among those who will SUlPJERV][SORS JRE'Jl'!JRJE: On eve of retirement as many years Master of Campion. other instruction issued on Nov. express in words what lies in ~, 1965. the hearts of all will be Mother elementary supervisors in Diocesan school system, Sister Hall; Oxford, and Superior of The letters asks for the faith­ Mary Kieran, Provincial Supe­ Miriam, left, anli Sister Felicita of the Sisters of Mercy the famous Jesuit Church' on Farm Street London. During the ful observance of these decisions rior of the Sisters of Mercy; Rev. chat with young student, typical of over 100,000 youngsters week of Christian Unity earlie'l 'Eum to Page EighteeilJ Turn to Page Eighteen they've influenced in course of 25 years. Turn to Page ~hteeml

The ANCHOR -

~

Pontiff Calls Theologians To Clarify Council Aims

Ep'iscopal Letter Sets Oct. 2 as CCO Sunday us

the

It

.~lementary School .S,upervisors Retire, Look Back Over 100 Years Service to Children

Monks to Retain latin Office

English Ecumenist To Sp'e,ak Here Oc,tober' 6


2

THE ANCHOR-DjoceS~ of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 29, 1966 "

Cardinal Tells Bus'ia1essmen Publicize Income Sh'aring NEW YORK (NC)-Businessmen are "solemnly en­ oouraged" to publicize, "always faithfully," the facts con­ ~rning the distribution of their income between workers and shareholders, a high ranking Vatican official said here yesterday. Paul Cardinal, Marella, president of the Va.- scored by the documents of Vat­ tican Secretariat for Rela- - .ican Council II and in recent papal encyclicals. tions with Non-Christians, "Pluralistic responsibility in addressed the 50th anniversary world convocation of the National Industrial Conferenee Board. "Dissemination of the facts concerning distribution of income is of great importance to all religious 'and moral forces of the world in their work of religious social education," the cardinal .said. Stressing the political necessity of subsidiarity of the state

to private initiative,.he said this

has-long been a central principle

of Christian social doctrine.

economic-social planning for the common good" and "the creative economic primacy of private en­ terprise" -were among the topics covered in the cardinal's address. Ten "self-evident truths or postulates of the economic-social . order in freedom" were enumer­ ated by Cardinal Marella and described by him as basic as­ sumptions regarding individual and social life.

Ten Truths Cardinal :Marella said the sig­

nificance .' of this principle ­

'which refers to "the building up of the 'international community through private individuals and gtoups which ·undertake, as part Of their responsibility' towards the common good, multiple ac­ tivities to' overcome hunger, ill­ ness, and ignorance"-is under-

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Rev. Rene Gauthier assistant at St. Anthony of Padua Church, New Bedford, was celebrant of a Solemn High Mass of Requiem on Saturday mornil1g at 10 in st. Roch's Church, Fall River, fO! the repose' of the soul of his late father, Ignace Gauthier. . Most Rev, j~es J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop .of the Dio­ cese was seated in the sanctu­ -ChaplaiIls. to the Bishop

\vereRev.' William E. Coliard

'~nd Rev. Ub"iilde""Deneauit.·. ., -·.1. ' . , '. . •... ".' " .', ," ,.

ary.

.,.;. Assisting' Father·" Gauthier were Rev. Thomas' Morrissey, deacon; and Rev. Bertrand Cha­ bot, sub-dea~.

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·Rev. Anselm E. J. Kwiios, O. F.M.'Conv., former assistant and p:1stor at Holy Cross Parish, Fail River, from 1941 to 1960 died unexpeCtedly on Friday: The' 58-year-old ,priest was stricken while drivin'g an auto­ mobile on the Massachusetts Turnpike and died later the ·snme day in a Southbridge Hos­ pital. Father Kwilos' was scheduled' to be one of the main speakers Sunday evening at the Jubilee banquet of, the Holy Cross Par, ish, Fall River. Ordained March 21, 1931" Fa­ ther K wilosoffered his first Solemn Mass at St. Hedwig's Church, Detroit, his home parish. A Solemn High Pontifical Mass of Requiem was offered Monday morning in St. 'An­ thony's Church, Willimansett, MasS. by' Bishop· Christot)her 'J. Weldon of Spriri~jeld:·.·· .. '.

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Three interfaith panels are scheduled for the month of Octo­ ber in St. Anne's School Audi­ torium, Fall River. Open to the In addition to his priest son, Mr. Gauthier is survived by his laity of all faiths, members of wife Mrs. < Aurore Gauthier and l.eligious orders and the clergy, a- daughter( Mrs. Maurice Meti-' the: first panel on Wednesday vjer, of Swansea. eveni~g, .Oct. 12, will have as its topic the Decree of the Vatican Mr. Gauthier died Thursday,' Coundl on the Apostolate of the Sept. 22, after II long .Illness. Laity. ~ev: William B. Taylor of the First Baptist Church, Fall will Serve as moderator Oppose Waiting Period River, of a panel made up of laymen. .The second panel will be mod­ !For Marriage License CLINTON (NC) ":-ClerkS of erated by Rev. John E. :Boyd, on Wednesday evening at 7:30, District Courts in Iowa have en­ Oct•. 19, pastor of St. Patrick'. dorsed elmination of the three­ Parish, Fall River, and will dis­ day waiting period prior to is­ cuss the Declaration on Religioue suance of marriage licenses in Freedom. " this state. The Decree on·· Ecumenism . . "The pri.ncipal reason for pro­ will be the topic'of the' third posing to abolish the three-day meeting scheduled for Wednes­ 'cooling-off" period," according day night, Oct. 26. Rabbi :Man­ ~ Hary Gorman, clerk of Clin­ delhorn of Temple Beth El, Falll ton' County District Cour~, '''is, RIver, will aCt as moderator. to alleviate the hardship to eouples living at theifar ends of a county. Under the 'ppesent law, they have to co~e to the . FORTY HOURS county seat to apply for a marri­ age license, and then return three days later to obtain it.'"

DEVOTION.

(;(>rman said the law, enacted four years ago, was designed flO curtail the influx of couples . from Illinois who came over to Iowa for "hasty marriages.". But since that time, the marriage minimum age limit of 14 for girls and 16 for. boys was raised . to 16 and 18 respectiv,ely, 1m keeping with 'Illinois .laW, 1M! ~i~ .

Oct. 2-St. John of God, Somerset. Our Lady of the Immacu­ late Conception, Taun­ ton. 9cl. 9-Our Lady. of the HolY, . Rosary, Fall River. Our Lady Of the' Bo~. R~~, Taunton.

ATTLEBORO MISSJONERS: Principals at theLa SalE;1'tte Shrine celebration ofthe 120th anniversary of the ApparItion of the Blessed Virgin whic)l gave birth ro' the ,mis-­ siomiry order were: Most Rev.' James L. ConnollY,seated with Very Rev. Roland Beda,rdp M.S., provincial superior, and Rev. Ubalde Deneault,· as Rev. Donald Paradis; M.S., New Bedford native, delivers the sermo,n note. ­

Continued from Page One·' called Vatican II,-has' issued a mandate ·to us all: "Know Cnrist, influence, for better or' worse, on each other. No one needs to live Christ, bring Christ to the tell you that there's a marked world." This includes us all, old selfish trend in the world. That's and young. ,Either we change the our worst side asserting itself. world for the better, or we go We ought to show the b~tter from bad to worse with the sen­ side more. After all, we do call sual, selfish trend. ~rhere's no ourselves Christian and Catholic. in-between for indifference. One definitE! way of helping We ought then to grow daily, more and more, like Christ. And ourselves, our famill7 snd our how can we do' this unless we friends is by showing our' fa'ith by the way we talk, live and are interested in making this world a: better and a safer place think. We are invited, even sum­ to live'in? moned to. do just that!:>y'the ,call to tbe Lay Apostl)late.' "The The Holy Father, and the J£c­ um~nical Council of Bi!1hops,,- . ~aiihful should, be . vigorously :urged. to take up their 'duiy' .of ;.: carrying on th:e' apQstoiai~ eac'h FRIDAY':""St. Jerome, P:ri'est, . according. . ., " to'bis , .. sta.te· ....~lnd. .~biliiY. .-',.

Confessor and Doctor 'of : the ~pr¢ad i~he\ .~!>spel. t~" aIi.~ .~~n;

.. Church; III Class. White.. Mass.P~~!~\ote, qhri~tian ~.llc:~~i~~!. ta~e "" Proper;' 'Glory;; no' Creed; part m the' devotional life of the "'! Common Preface:" Tomorrow .. Church;~ recogiiizen~~d.~iiiri.·~~:­ ,; 1's the' first Saturday 'of Oct.' ci.al N;~H~e.t pi~~#ce c~a~~ffl':,OJo ""SATURDAY' _ M a'ss'of ·'the all. Love one ~motheX:J as I. h<\ye Blessed Virgin for Saturda'y. ..1 0 '(e,d YQU,~;lY.S the :r,;(ir~:""(PaS, , toral office of :Bishops) !<V-Class. White. Mass Proper;. AgaIn,' quote th,e;C~u'ilCil G 1 a r:y; 2nd ,.Prayer .,' St. and the rules that sho'uld inspire Remigius; no Creed;, Preface " of 'Blessed Virgin. . and govern us: "Past'Mil should OR bring the faithful'·to 'a" full knowledge of the mysterY of .St. Remigius, Bishop and Con- salvation, thro,ugh '. C.atechetlcal fessor. White. GloJ,'y; 2~d . .Prayer Blessed Virgin ..tor instruction adapted to each one's Saturday; no Creed; ~OmmOD age. In imparting this instruction,they seek the.aid Preface.. . ~ '.' , .'Should ... ..

SUNDAY-XVIII Sunday after not only of sisters; or brothers, PenteCost.. II Class. Green.' but also the co-opE~rationOf Mass Proper; Glory; CJ:~; laymen and women, a,nd should Preface of Trinity. set up the·programll;1e Of the MONDAY _ St. 'Therese .of the Confraternity (If Chrilltian Doc­ Child Jesus, Virgin. III' Class. trine." (Cfr. Pastoral Office ~ White. Mass Proper;. Glory; Bishops-III, Sec. 30, paragraph no Creed; Common' Preface. . 2) . .. TUESDAy-st. Francis of AssiOur Diocese is blessed, already, ai, Confessor. III ClaSs. White. by the ge~ero\lls sharing cd de­

Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed;.

Common Preface. . Necrolog~y WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ­ ous Sunday. IV-Class. Green. OCIT. 'I

Mass Proper; No Glory c:r :Rev. Caesar Phares, 1951,

Creed; 2nd Prayer SS. Placi­ Pastor, St. Anthony of: the Des-.

dus and Companions; CornmOD en, Fall River.

Preface.

OCT. 10 OR .I Rev. C. ~. RJran, 19118, Assist­ SS. Placidus and Companions, ant, Immaculat4~ Conception, No. Martyrs. Red. Glory; no Creed; Easton. " Common Preface. ocr. 11 THURSDAY-St. Bruno,' Con­ Rev. James A. Dow:ney,. 1952, fessor. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; DO . Creed; Pastor,;Holy Ghost, AttleborO.. Common Preface. rat IIIi1Ct1011

One Voti've Mass iln honor o!l Jesus Christ, the Eternal High • , .Second Class P,ostmge /'ala lit IIlYtf..t

PUIlIIsheL 8VI8r) Thursday at 41u Priest is permitted. Glory; 2ncll Mass. Highlanu .Avenulll. Fall' River. MaSs.. ··02722

PFayer St. Bruno,. No Creed; by the. Catl10llc ,.ress 01 tile· Ol~ese /II. faD

Rive, Subscrlptlav.· prIce by 111811•. i)O$tPlal<J . Common Preface. ..,,' \4.00 PllI ]AlIIf. ,; . ",,; .

Mass . Om-do,

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o :yqted men and women in tho '

.,task of building up better und~r­ standing of our Christian heric> t3ge, practicing it, and passing it on to others. The programme of ~e Confraternity of Christiaril Doctrine has helped inspire anell express the apostolate of thc:l laity. But we could always cOO more. We could always do' bet­ ter. So we emphasize, again, the importance of this precious shaI'o ing by parents, teachers, respon­ sive souls, in the priestly mission '''of "preaching, ~n 'season !Iud o~ of' ~ason, instructing, admoni!lh­ i~g." Whatever' you' do, in \Vo.rell or hi.' work, Cia 'aU for' tile "gtpry '"Of;GOd: No .one lives'to himi;~l!4 "and' no' one' 'dies ·'to·him'self. Whether we live or die; we' "'ate the Lord's and the soul you savtl will ~ your own. ,! & .iet .uS p'r~yerlUnY sUPPQ~ share "0. in, . and.' benefit by :ihG :tp~at. PJ:ivilege: of :·bringi ng te , C)t~ei'S,. and ourselves as .well,·.fl kno;wledg~ . and love ,of, "ov:t' Christian Faith. So doing, . ''We will serve as apostles in the. beflt ~nse. Our impact on thE:, worM will be felt; our lives will gam in value for family and commy.. nity. We do all to· glYll '11 soul totbe world; . : Faithfully yourS in Christ, ,. JAMES L. CONNOLLY,'

, r of.. Fall Ri,;_

.Bishop . , ,

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Michael C. Austin. Inc.

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Prelate Asserts

Gomu:lka Re¥ecds' .Red Attitude PHILADELPHIA' ~NC)­

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Ittternefl ., Japanese In World War tI

ANCHOR-

Thurs., Sept. 29, 1966.

Fr. Mailhot Maryknoll Teacher Studied in Paris on Ford Foundation Grant

3

Council Stresses Bishop's Role As Teacher

lish OommW!1Wt Father J. El'nest Mailhot, M.M., of Fall River, who studied in Paris on a Ford PITTSBURGH (NC)-The ghief Wladyslaw G}omulka Fou d t" 1 6 lor his inadvertent contribution n a Ion gmnt in 9 2, is teaching French at the Maryknoll seminary in Glen Ellyn, teaching role, a bishop's pri­ ~ the observance of the millen­ Ill. FaltherMaHhot, has a master's degree in French from the University of Montreal, m'ary function, in relation tdum of Christianity in Poland celebrated the 35th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood on Feb. 1, 1966. with the laity has taken on :vros expressed here by Arch­ . Since his ordin8Jtion in 1931 added importance as a result of bishop John J. KilO! of Philadel­ Fa-1Jher Mailhm has served in directives of the Second Vatican phia. v:arious teaching 3iSsign­ Council, Detroit's Archbishop "When the histOi'Y .of this t i1 th M k 11 So John F. Dearden declared here. iPolish millennium is written," men s 'Oi" e ary no ­ In his sermon at the consecra­ A:rchbishop Krol said a1; a ban:.. cl.ety at seminaries in California, tion of Auxiliary Bishop John Massachuse~, New York and guet marking the observance, Dlinois. B. McDowell of Pittsburgh in ~e world win nevel' be able St. Paul's cathedral here, Arch­ 180 understand how the leader of En June, 1938, he was assigned bishop Dearden reminded that 13 nation that is sn per cent to foreign mission work in the the teaching office was the first t1atholic could have refused per­ Kyoto area of Japan. At the out­ commission given by Christ to mission to Pope Paul VI to come break of World War II in 1941, the Apostles. !fD Poland. Father Mailhot, who was then "It is the work of the bishop pastor of the mission church in to make the teachings ~ of the "They will never tmderstand Nara near Kyoto, was interned. Church relevant to the people bow he could have refused bish­ He was later returned to the of his time," the Archbishop de­ ~s from other lands permission United States aboard the ex­ clared. "He in union with all ~ come to pray in gratitude for change ship Gripsholm in Au­ the bishops of the Church, is to fol~n~'s . t~,ousand: 3'ears (!)f ­ gust of 1942. . . see to it that the Christian un­ ~rIsbamty. Among the teaching assign­ derstands his faith as a commit­ But we owe Comrade Gomul­ nnents filled by the missioner ment to God and to his neigh­ h a debt of gratitude. were an assignment as vice rec­ bor." "For his attempted interference tor and later rector of the Christian Accepts with religious observan.ceS, I Maryknoll Junior Seminary in The Archbishop said a living, 8m not grateful. Mountain View, Cal., where he vital faith that "expresses itself Empty Cblllir served before the Japan assign­ in deed no less than in word "For refusing the Pope and ment. must be" accomplished by the TRAINS SEMINARIANS: Seminary training in for­ the bishops opportunity to come 'Fhe 64-year-old Maryknoller. to Poland, I am not grateful. taught at the seminary in Mary­ eign languages is a key element in the curriculum of a bishop for "the Church's teach­ "For this empty chair, pre_ . knoll, N. Y., from 1942 to 1945.. foreign missionary society such as Maryknoll. Father J. ing today." Archbishop Dearden add e d pared for Cardinal Wyszynski It In May of that year he was sent am not grateful. ' t o the society's junior seminary Ernest Mailhot (facing camera) uses the latest techniques that in today's Church the "B t I g tef 1 t C til Brookline, Mass., which is and equipment to teach French in the language laboratory Christian "accepts 'and takes to u amrauoomt" ho fM himself what is taught." JlBde Gomulka for having drawn lIlOW a rammg use or ary- in Glen Ellyn, Ill. "But his role is not simply to aside the Iron Curtain and hav­ knoll Brothers. The Glen Ellyn Seminary accept; he, too, in his own way ing allowed the world to see the Father Mailhot has a brother, where Father Mailhot is cur­ is called by word and deed to ~tensity of the persecution of Mr. Alfred Mailhot, 70 Ruth rently assigned is a liberal arts make his Christian conviction the people and the religion of . Street, New Bedford. A sister, college with an enrollment of live and bear witness. It is at the people of Poland. For this Mrs. James Pettey, lives at 72 some 400 students. He was vice . this point that the doctrine of :we are grateful." WARSAW (NC) --: Priests of Fern Street, New Bedford. the teaching or prophetic office rector here for six years. the Fort Wayne-South Bend Archbishop Krol said Gomul­ of the people has its greatest sig­ 1m "has finally betl'ayed hiB diocese unanimously accepted nificance. The doctrine is devel­ Iland." Bishop Leo A. Pursley's propos­ oped in the Constitution on the ChurCh," Archbishop Dearden "The world would not have als for formation of a diocesan council of priests during a day­ said. bown the fierceness of the per­ Bishop McDowell, 45, superin­ secution of the Church in Poland long meeting here. NEW YORK (NC)-The New Jewish day schools, said the or­ The Bishop proposed that tendent of Pittsburgh diocesan •• '" Well might we say to him. sMools, was consecrated by 4$omrade Gomulka, you have priests of the Indiana diocese be York State AFL-CIO has called ganization will question all can­ 4Ione the Polish people and the divided into six groups of 15 to for elimination from the state didates and publicize their views Bishop John J. Wright of Pitis­ tllburch in Poland a tremendous 15 members each, with each constitution of the Blaine prior to the November elections, burgh. Bishop William G. Con­ iavor, and lor this to you we are poup electing a chairman and amendment, which bars direct at which' delegates to the' 1967 nare of Greensburg, Pa., and and indirect aid to 'church­ eonstitutional convention will be .Auxiliary Bishop Vincent M. eoohairman who in tum will be­ jrateful.' • related schools. ehosen. eome representatives to the di­ Leonard of Pittsburgh were Vie State AFL-CIO president Rayoeesan council. It was further co'-consecrators. Neommended that one of the Raymond R. Corbett saip the Lutheroll Minister abainnen-representative.s in each Blaine amendment should. be Guest Lecturer group be a pastor and the other -replilced by language similar to that of the First Amendment of . DAYTON (NC)-Pastor MaK lin assistant. Lackman, opponent of the nazi In addition, each of- the· 11 the U. S. Constitution. movement in Germany in the I18ligious orders of 'priests active "Because -the state constitu­ i930's, win be the first guest Ia the diocese will name one tion provision is far more nar­ lecturer for the 1966-67 Univer­ IlIePresentative to the diocesan row and restrictive, there is sity of Dayton Religion' in Life eouricil, which will have 23 substantial doubt that it is even lJOries. constitutional," Corbett said. members. Bishop Pursley said the dioc­ The Blaine amendment was The German Lutheran minis­ fleI', who spent three years in esan council will "communicate used by 'State Supreme Court Ute infamous Dachau PriSoit the mind" of ~ clergy of the Justice T. Paul Kane as the eamp during World War II, wiD diocese to the bishop and will basis of his recent ruling declar­ lilPeak Friday, Sept. 30, on meet with him regularly for that ing unconstitutional a program under which tpe state .would -After the Council - What l\MItpOse. Row?". ., have provided textbooks in sec­ ular subjects to students ill Pastor Lackman attended the Moyable Churches· grades 7-12 of church-related fJDur sessions of the Second Vat­ schools. !nan ·Council as an observer for For Housing Areas the League of Evangelical-Cath­ Justice Kane said, however, CHICHESTER (NC)-A mov­ Aft Deposits olic Reunion, with which he has Open

that he felt the .prc;>gram might able church to test community INSURED

been affiliated since 1960. also be unconstitutional under Fri. Nights

needs and suitable sites in new the First Amendment. In Full

Til 8 O'Clock

housing areas was recommended Divisive. Influence by a study group for the Angli­ Suicide Prevention Calling the Blaine amendment oan diocese of Chichester here Agency Kept Busy "a divisive influence in our' fA England. Seating about 100 persons and statewide community," Corbett SAN FRANCISCO (NC) including a simple vestibule said it "has prevented the state Monday morning blues are evi­ with lavatories, a vestry office from providing state-paid ser­ dently too much for some peo­ ""~'~11 ple, according to the Suicide and store, the small movable vices and facilities that would "~," contribute to the growth and de­ Prevention Agency here which building would allow experi­ velopment of children in the na­ lleports it receives more calls for mentation with internal ar­ tional interest." help on Monday than on any rangements, and would thus pro­ !lather day in the week. vide experience useful in brief­ A major statewide drive to Bernard Mayes, director of ing an architect for the church replace the Blaine amendment eperations, also confirmed that that would replace it. has been announced by Citizens 8be agency continues to' receive This plan, the group said, for Educational Freedom, a non­ !IS many calls during the day­ non - denominational would also provide the time partisan, elme as it does at night and earit'· necessary to form a recognizable organization which seeks equal HOME FIX-UP LOANS'" • AUTO LOANS'" lIDOrning. treatment for children in public: pastoral body, determine a pat­ PERSONAL • 15c MONEY ORDER CHECKS "No one expected this," MaYelil tem of community worship, and and non-public schools. lidded, "but it looks as if theN help to decide a realistic financial CEF state vice president Reu­ lIll'e so many suicidal people here plan for building a permanent ben E. Gross,an attorney who is . the father af slX childreJl ia _ tIlat ther: need Ae~ all the time'" eIlwraa. .. *mIM'm-~~~~~~'R~7i;'~= ~TlR~»;.. •.. ,.:::.

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THE A,-v"',fJI0"'-Dio'ceseof Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 29,1966

Gua!r\ant'~~id ~nnua~~n~ic:me.

Concept GaninDng SUjf)[P'ort By Msgr. George C. Higgins, (Director., SociaJl Action Dept., NCWC) ,On June g,O, Bishop John J. Carberry of CDlumbns, Ohio, ,came out v,ery forthrightly hl favor -of a guar~U1te€d

annual inoome and, significantly, did so with impunity. To the best 'of m,y knowledge, in, other words, he has not be~n .accused bY ~n:y,one of becaLU:le.at - this stage -of ·the bemg :a ,crypto-:soCla11st or a game,whue the concept -of the siany-ey.ed visionary. iBish- guaranteed income is, raJ)i(lly Op Carberry's statement was gaining sUPp'0rt -e,v-en in avowed-. 1yconser~tive eIrcles, ther: ~re honest -dIfferences of opmlOD, among its propo.ner.:ts .as to the best way -of pu~~~ng It mto effect.. Two major approaches ar-e currently being considered. The tirst ,woul~ make use of existing public aSSIstance. programs, but would extend their covera'ge ·to all these now living in poverty and would increase the ibenefits to guarantee ,everyone an il1COlne up to some iPl'~determi,3Ued ievel. The second 1S .a ,deVIce gener­ ally known;as "r,):egative inoome tax:atiGri" or "'negative rates tax­ atiQ]].:' !Under ;this PJ10;posa!l -pay,,:' men1s to the poor would ,be ca!l­ cula-ied ~n :tlhe' basis ~fthe un­ used e~-emption~ .and1ieduetions ' to 'wl11ch ,t~ 1l~)D-taxpay-ers ",'0u.1d be entItled If theY. 'were payIng taxes, or, m-ore Slmp1y, on.:the ~is _of the .amount by wlridl then- mcome faUsbelow :up '.chilldlren' IJ?rQ,per1yag.ai~st the <p r eod e t e r min -e-d. pover­ overwhelming ()tilds," 'he sald. toy leve!. "':Should ,oot 'suchpaH'el1ts;" he Smaller Moves .as1ced,"ibe given aD adequai-e ill­ The'smart money inW~jng,sialOO inoome, :relieving ;them <of ,ton SOl3'S that budget stacuns .and 'the 'pressing anxieties of mere political ,caution wlilil rule -out subsistence linstead :of :the gov­ .eithec -of ,these tw.otrol1tal :ap­ ,ernment Ih:iringendless varieties proa~es in the shori run. , d parent .substitutes, oSuch as 61­ Alan L. Otten, a Washington .J1iciliJIlt'mt t~s .and flec.rea­ correspondent for the Wall tioniists?" ,Street Journal, I'ecently wrote, 'This questi-on, me ,eonc1ucled, for e=m,ple, that tAle neg.ative 'js 'basic .to :tibe people of our income tax and other costly "in­ times and cann')t be avoided. come m.aintenanee" :schemes for N 'iP~peBll'eam'direct government payments to > ~ . be.' ';an ifam1ilies whose inoomes fall 'The fact that Bishop.'Car ny'S ,below certain 'POverty [evells. .are fortbMn'ht statement m favorof t f H. _ ..." f .'l-.' . '''-6 . 'QU .'0 'lIl.re qu=""on . or 'llJ"'" ~na guaranteed inc.om~ and '1115 ,defl~li;t-e tu1Ju:l'e. ''':In:steal:!,'' he -reported "ibhere p1ea 'for '''a re-thm~{]~,? 'of ilhe question ·of job .defn:uhons. 'a~ owill[ 'be:a .series of smalle; moves corresponding roles lJ1 'socIet,: some to be unveiled in next .iJan~ provo'ked Httle 'if any 'Pub'hc uary's legislative program and criticism is, as noted' 'above, budget to patch up ,and fatten highly significant. Ten y~ars existing Government programs ago such a statement by a blSh­ that head in the same direction: op or ~ny?ne else would have bigger Social Security benefits, been dIsmIssed out o~ hand.. as .a modest expansion of public­ an utteray 'llonsenslcal pIpe' assistance coverage and .pay­ drea,m. .' ments, more rent supplement Ask the man ",me ifiil'St iPopu­ money and other -,subsidies for larized the concept ·of<the gwu­ Jow-income families ,and more anteed income m the Un1t-ed !public employment f~r poor peo­ States - Briiti:sh-!bcmn economist 'PIe "-':00 ,can't find ,pr-ivaie Robert Theobald. For .several work:" years Mr. 'Theobald was written AccordiBg toithis theory, 'Mr. off indulgently-even, in some Otten 'concludes,"benefits under C:lses, by sophis'icated social re­ these 'and ,other programs would formers-as a lilj:able but slight­ be increased, land anore and more ly "nutty" crank who didn't poor people w.ould, be given know enough to come in out of some sort of help. the rain. Same End Result Today, however, he is being "A few years hence, it's fig­ taken much more seriously, .and, ured, almost every needy family if he lives long, enough, may w,o u I,d actually be getting have the satisfaction of being enough government help to rise able' to say to his erstwhile out of po·verty. Thus the end critics, '''I told you so." result would be much 'the same Major Approaches as "':hat of the negative income In other words, it is en.til"el.y tax and kindred schemes." possible that within the fore­ ,Isuspeci that Mr. Otten's seeable futu;e, the concept 'of l1eadill'g ,of the Administration's the guaranteed income will .be tea leav.es' is reasonably accu­ implemented in one form or :r:a te . In other words, I am in­ :another by the !federal govern­ clined to 'share 'his opinion that ment. ' political realism may compel the Administration to rule out -in I say "in one form or another" the short run, .at least-a direct frontal :approach to this problem, "in favor of a more .gradaal sneakJng-up on the objective." PATERSON (NC)-Some 10,­ This may lIOt 'be the best pos­ ,<)00 volunteer workers will take sible way ,of implementing the :a complete census of the Pater­ concept of the guaranteed in­ son diocese Nov. 13, visiting come, but if, realistically, it's the 'more than '230;000 homes. The only feasible 'way 'of 'golng about census was orde;red by BiShop it, so be it. The' important thing Lawrence B. Casey, who said 29 training m~·" .... '~" "''''lunteers is to k'eep moving in the rigbt will precede the census. direction.

'lTead iby the Chairman of his Di­ ocesan Ecumenical Commissiod at'a public rally in Col u m bus climaxing t h,e Ohio Walk for Adequ~te We1­ fare. The bish­ op . noted his support of the marchers' de­ rnand for "ade­ 'quate' weIfal'e pay m ,e n t 5 in Ohio - 100 per cent ,of a . standal'dbased ,on today's cost ,of i1iving:" He also asked for '""new and ·cr.eative ;approaChes" to the problem -of ipu'btic w.elfare, inc1udin.~ the ()onsider~tion of. :a Iluaranteed. income. . .,. "Consider the responSiib1hties ,~ fue 'Pa21ent in one-ipoCU'ent ~'ilies w:ho is attempting to bnng

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ENTERS RJEL! G '[ 0 N: 1\[iss Pau[!ine Gagne,daugh­ ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gagne, New Bedford, has en­ tened the novitiate, of the Silsters of St. Joseph, F:all Rh er. A graduate :Of St. Joseph'~ e1ementary school, New Bedford,sne ..attended, St.J ,osep h'sPreparatory School., FaBRiver.

Wonderful Rc)ast Lamb Mom will .ReguIar be Proud to Serve and Priced I»ressecll for Thrifty Savings

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Editor .,1fPilot

,B,apthit's" CctholDcs

In Joonll' Discussion WASHINGTON (NC) - The Holy Spirit is setting in motion an unpredictable plan for .s,peed­ ing Christian unity, Auxiliary Bishop John S. Spence of W:ashington told ;a discussion meeting ,of iBaptistsand Catho­ lics oat the First !B:aptist chuJ1ch ,in suburban Sil'V'er "Sprillg, Md. '''Wedon''t know how it will be," he said. '''We ,don't have a formula. 'But someday," he con­ tinued, "an God',s own gC)od time" the Christian world will ;achieve unity. Bishop Spence :addressed some 50 iBaptJist and Catholic dergy ,and ~aj,ty who met for ,dinner andd.isc.ussionof ,their Chcisti,an he.ritage. The meeting was joint­ ly sponsored by the ecumenical commission of the .W.ashing.ton ,arCibdiQcese ,and the leadership of the District of Columbia Bap­ tist .Conv,ention. • ,'.) ... ! I, t-,

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s. D. A. ClttOICi GRADE OI~LY

lbe King of 'toasts, flf for a King

Lauds UNESCO

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - :A.tl editor maintained that with the United Nations .Educational, Sci­ .eontific and Cultural OI;ganiza­ tion "man has made the begin­ nings of an experiment in inter­ national understanding and co­ opera.tion unknown b~lfore in human history." !l\:Esgr. Fl-.ancis J. Lally, 'editor of the Pilot, Boston archdiooesan ~lewsPa.pe,r, said the '20 years ,of UNiESOO's existence is '~a short time in whiCh to make a judg­ ment of so vast an enterprise." . "Let it :be said, however, 4hat it is even .now a venture full of promise for mankind," the priest-editor added. ' Ms,gr. LaUy came here :as' del­ ,e;gate .of the 1I1:ation:a1 Catholic Welfare C(J)nlference;£or the con­ "enmon <of the United States Commission !for UNESCO. The -eoJ'nmission of 100 'mem­ ber.s ,plus invi.ted coltlaborators, reviewed the progress made SiJ1Ce '1:946 and ,planned future pI:ograms, Commission members serve by invitation ,of .the state Department, advise 0 the U. S. g-overnment on techn'ical aspects of UNESCO programming and provide a means to interpret UNESCO work for the American people.

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5

fHE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 29, 1966 ----

Red G~ard Enters Picture Of Chi~a UN Membership

Ho~v

Gh@$t Ordelf In Rome Office

_WASHINGTON (NC)-Tlae reConvening of the United Assembly briug:j liP once more the ques­ tion of the admittance ()f Red China to that world organi­ .tion. Communist China has lo'ng sought to have the UN lIeat held by the Natiooal­ Meanwhile, back in Red' fBt Ohinese government 00 Chifi'<ll, the youthful Red Guard 'hiwan. The United St8ites launched its campaign of hoUi­ bas been in the forefront of ganism, and this, it is fett by the ()()position to this· substitu­ many persons, must certainly ]Jf~' General

M.on and only last year beat back another move for it;' But the margin of victory has . dwindled over the years, and not JI.oog ago there were those who­ ~icted that Red Chioa would make it this year. Iaut in recent days it has been (J!lid here that a quiet "head !IOUnt" among UN members had convinced the U. S. administra­ tion that it could muster enough -rotes ro head off Red China membership in the UN again this .rear. This brought a quick assertion ebat it was a change of this country's position. Some observ­ am; said that only days before thia announcement advocates of. ette ''Two China" policy were convinced that they had finally ooUd President Johnson on their fOrmula. The "Two China" plM'l \Would admit the Peking regime 00 the UN while permitting the 'lI.'ai-wan governm~nt to retain Us aeat at the same time. .,. Choice of Options Mministration spokesmen sai~ ftbey knew of no new decision _ this point, but their remarks I1rel'e interpreted in sevel'al dif­ ~ent ways. Some people here Mid President Johnson was sinl­ 1\)1,. biding his time and leaving IlMmself a choice of optioes wheft ilIIle time. came to take a stand.

Offers First Mass .. College Chapel LEWISBURG (NC) ~ Mass was offered for the first tnne in flbe two-year-old Rook Inter­ hUh Chapel of Bucknell Uni­ '3'lersity here. Officials of the university at­ 6ended the Mass, which was of­ ~ by Father Bernard H. lP'etrina, chaplain of the Newman . llpostolate at the university. J1ather Petrina said the chapel Il\ad not been utilized previously liolr Catholic services because Chel'e was no full time Newman IIDaplain to serve the 400 Cath­ lliic students. Mass will now be ()ffered each Sunday in the 0hapel, he said. "Liturgy on campus will now be the focal point of the New­ man apostolate," Father Petdna aaid. "We have been very well JlleCeived by the 'university ad:' ministl'8tion and by the offices 0f the campus. chaplain. They are I?leased that Catholics finally are making use of the interfaith ~apel."

"an NOITl~Sectarian uHalf-Way' House MILWAUKEE (NC)-A non­ sectarian "half-way" house to· l'lelp rehabilitate young men pa­ roled from the state correctional llnstitution will be opened here in @ctober by the local C()uncil of ~ S1. Vincent de Paul Society. Council president Peter J. 130tsch described the project as fA "bridge" between the institu­ &n and the community, where (lhe young men can stay for llIllief periods while they find ~bs and readjust to society. Those considered more likely (to succeed in' their rehabilita­ ltl'ltR will be accepted, he said. Toey may stay for periods up (Q several months, and will have ~!lilable to them all services of 6b.e corrections division of the 1Ib4ie public welfare department.

ROME (NC)-The Holy Ghost Fathers have moved their world-wide headquarters to Rome from Paris, whel:e the Order's central. administration had been situated for 21M years, 235 of them in the same house. The Congregation of the' Holy Ghost, for many years- an almost exclusively French community, today is established in 31 coun­ tries and is planning foundations in two more in South America. It has 5,300 priests, Brothers and seminarians, 1,800 of whom serve in Africa. The move to Rome was de­ cided on at the Order's general chapter of IBS2. In the United States the Holy Ghost Fathers have an eastern province and a western vice province. They are established in 24 U. S. dioceses. American Holy Ghost -Fathers 'have mi,.,. sionsin Tanzania in east Africa.

C()ntt'ibute toward the continued exol-usion of Red China from the UN. It has been pointed out that opposition to Red China has al­ ways been based largely on its conduct at home and its attitude toward the UN itself and its own Asian neighbors. The world­ shocking acts of the Red Guard, it was asserted, certainly made the image of Red China no bet­ ter than it was before. Observers at the UN head­ quarters thought that uncertain­ ty regarding Communist China was growing among member nations that had supported it for UN membership, in the past.

law Scholars Back Housing 'Proyision .

WORLDMISSION AWARD: James J. Fahey receives the Worldmission Award of the U.S. Catholic mission-send­

ing societies from Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, national din~c­ tor of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith·, in Washington. Mr. Fahey, a!1thor of the book, "Pacific War Diary," has donated all his book royalties to the missions. NC Photo.

- WASHINGTON (NC)-Three Catholic law school scholars We1'e among 26 law deans. and professors defending the consti­ tutionality of the fair bousing

section of the 1966 civil rights Chri.~iQn btU in a- letter to Sen. Philip. A. Hart, its Senate floor manager. Hart cited the letter in :II Sen­ ate speech and placed it in the WASHINGTON (NC')-Chris­ Congressional Record. Among tians need to do mucb'more in its. signers were Father Robert fighting poverty in tke nation 11. Drinan, 8.J.. ~all of the Bos­ and- the- world' and in living'. by tOft College law scho~~ and dean the spirit of poverty themseives, Hamid Gill Rauschlein and Don­ Sf'eakers told' the- 17tb annual aW A. Gianella of the Villanova meetfng of U. S. miSsion-sending URiversity law school. societies- here. Theme of the. gathering was The legal scholars> letter cited "Poverty and the Missions: The authority for the fair housing pro-vision in the Constitution's - demands of Justice and' Charity." C6mmerce clause and the 14th Some 1,000 priests, Religious and Amendment. Enactment of such laymen attended the meeting, which was sponsored b-y _the a law, they said, was a public Mission secretariat, a clearing­ pol-icy issue for Congress ~ de­ cide and was not blocked by allY house of misSion information and services. constitutional obstacle. Three pries1is well known for their social action work stressed some of the problems in Chris­ tian anti-poverly efforts in talks to separate sessions of the NIAGARA (NC) - "Ciyiliza­ meeting. tion undergoes transformation They were Father Maurice and the Roman Catholic Church Ouellet, 5.S.E., who- was active too is evolving, but moral pdn­ in civil rights in Selma, Ala., ciples, which are the basis for before being foreeeL to leave civilized living remain fix~." there and is now director of Ed­ Father Kenneth F. Slattery, C.M., mundite novices in Mystic, president of Niagara University Conn.,. Father Daniel Berrigan, said here. S.J., of New York,-poet, author Speaking at a Mass opening and peace worker; and Father the university's llOth yea r , Geno Baroni, executive secre­ Father Slattery said: "Despite tary of the Archhishop's Com­ aU the impertinence which con­ . mittee on Community Relations, £Fonts us daily, we are assured Washington, D. C. of unchanging realities: the per­ Father Ouellet called it "trag­ manent character of truth, the ic" that in the' American Catho­ constancy of the moral law, and lic Church there are "relatively tbe unfailing guidance of a­ few men committed to the Church whose author has prom­ poor." ised: 'I am with you all .days, Those who are, he added, get even to the consummation of little support and are "like sol­ the world.''' diers who are given ·sticks in­ Speaking in terms of world­ stead of. guns and ammunition wide innovations, he said there to fight a war." should be no .dismay about liv­ 'We're melevz.nt' ing in a time of catastrophic One reason for the current change. vocations shortage, he suggested, "Events may be in flux," he is that young people feel the said, "but truth is eternal."· Church is not really concerJ;led with human need.

Met~(j)dists "Kids don't want us-,"he said.

"We're irrelevant. We don't care

MADISON (NC)-A priest is teaching a course on the Second for people, and they want no Vatican Council to Methodist part of us-not unless we can show we're committed."

seminarians at Drew Univer­ sity's school of theology here. Father Baroni criticized the

JlJsgr. Henry G. J. Beck, former "hand out" approach to charity

~ro~essor of Church history at and said Christians should be working instead to "change the

Immaculate Conception Semi­ oary, Darlington, N. J., is the structures" of society that create

and perpetuate injustice. first Catholic priest to teach at Too many Catholics, be said, ~ institution.

Commitment Greater Needed in Fighting' 'Poverty

Educator Stresses Unchanging Truth

hatve become middle ela3s de­ fenders of the status quoo. He

Ask San Juan Loity Become Aposfles SAN JUAN (NC)-The Church

will be unable to save the world through the clergy alone, Father Riccardo· Lombardi, S.J., told some WOO; lay people at Mary Help- of Chrmans church here iLl- Puerto Rico. "Vatican Council II made this clear,," FatheF Lombardi said, "by issuing a great call t& the la.y world." If the- Clmrch is to reconstruct the world> in Christ, he continued-, the- laity must "abandon- the idea of a reiigioBc W. worship olllly." There- must be all end to the lay inferiority complex in the CFluycn., he- add­ ed-, and lay men and women must speak the truth to- the clergy in sincere- dialogue. Father Lombardi's appeal to the laity was echoed by Arch­ bishop Luis Aponte l\.1'artinez of San .):uan, who- asked those- pres­ ent to pledge themselves to- "be­ come apostles of the council and of the Church."

cited a white Catholic doctor woo t~ld him he wouldn't want N'egroes ~ move into his neigh­ borhood because mose Negroes 31'e- ll()Il-Catholic and ":E wouldn't want my daughter to· Inaf.'Yy it non-Catholic." Main Barrier Fa-ther Berrigan said commit­ ment to institutions rather than­ people' is the main barrier too ef­ fective Christian efforts to' aid· the poor and live by the spirit of poverty. The· problem is not that priests and Religious 00 not Degree want' to give witness to- po-v­ BALTIMORE (NC) - Allan erty," he said "but the institution J .. MacEachen, Minister of Nil­ '" '" 'I> is betJraying us." tional Health and Welfare of One consequence of over-com­ mitment to institutions, he Canada, was the principal speak­ added, is "an impoverished -er and the recipient of an honor­ imagination '" '" '" Giving our ary doctorate of humane lettets lives to an institution, we are at the fall honors convocation at unable any more to give our Loyola College here. lives to persons." Msgr. Joseph B. Gremillion, director of socio-economic af­ fairs for Catholic Relief Services -National Catholic Wei far e Conference, told the meeting that world poverty is and will remain the main threat to peace "for the next decade and genera­ ~ _,_I1~ WYman tion .." He quoted Pope Paul VI as 3-6592 saying, "Development is the new name for peace."

Honorory

SAVE MONEY ON

YOUR OILHEATI ~t­

CKARLES F. VARGAS

Heliport Plan COLUMBUS (NC) - St. An­ thony Hospital announced plans to build a heliport atop its pro­ posed 16-story tower addition. The heliport win provide acci­ dent victims with rapid trans­

portation, "saving precious mo­

ments," Sister Dolores Marie,

administrator of the Ohio hos­ pital, said.

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

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THE At-.icHOl:!-biocese'of Fan Rfve'r:.-:rhurs. Sept.

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29;'1966

Pnest FON.ees

I"~.

~"Di_lon For Schools

Papal Letter'

,A Pontifi~al letter from Pope P~ul was read at the beginning of an international gathering of theologians tak­ EV.Ab~ILLE fNC)-'l1Ie ing place in Rome. The letter will be criticized by both the 1Jv.an&'y>1.~ diocesain super.iD­ so-called radicals and the so-called conservatives within tendent of schools stated the Church. The radicals will find in it justification of their ,emphatiea~ly that 'parochial deeply-held suspicion that the Pope is "too cautious" in .schools li£e the answer. directing the- implementation of the Council. With their "But the answer to whaP .characteristic lack of patience and-even more deplorable:....­ asked Father James Deneen, b p;,iest ooministrator. . humor, they see no reason why all Council decrees can­ Father Deneen, in an inte:J­ not be put into complete effect this afternoon. view, sai4;that parochial scho. The so-called conservatives, on their side, will see ean no longer, be looked ~ the letter as a comprising by the Holy Father of the doc­ as the answer to "comforting the trines and traditions of the Church. With their blindness eomforted, educating the edao to anything that smacks of the twentieth' century, they eated, and saving the !laved." would like to ignore the fact that a Council has even taken The pl'iest sees the ro1Ie of the par 0rc h i a I school place. as aiding those segments of the The letter is, in fact, a masterpiece of guidance by the population who have not beeD: Pope, a presentation by him of what theologians snould adequately cared for by soci~ be doing in the Church of God which he has been called ,-the urban poor, the migr~ upon to be as the foundation stone. workers, the physically a &4 mentally handicapped, a m 00Jb9 The Pope, with a knowledge of human nature that others. makes l him a truly pastoral figure, has seen that the Coun­ , When asked about the JllOfO eil has been used by many as a basis for such statements traditional view that parochial as-"everything is new," "all the old ideas are gone," "the schools are established for the Church has been a failure," "let's change everything." preservation of the faith; fine priest said: These types have little knowledge of or consideration for "When I hear that I'm remin. people and fail to see that the. updating ,called for by the ed of the pickle jar sitting on 0 ,Council takes a little time, must be done but not in such shelf, lid tightly in place, ·the a rude ,and violent way as to hurt the faith of people. People @lb)(~c&D®mJ~® ~@ pickles soaking placidly in the must be brought to see that the doctrines of the Church" brine. I hate to think ou!" 'goal PYrTSBURGH (NC)-A plea for "humble and whole­ is to raise a generation of w~ the authority of the Church and the Pope, that these have hear-ted obedience" to the Pope during times oJe confliet pickled Catholics." been in no way undermined by the Council. The post-Coun­ in the Cl).urch was made at the National and Inter-American cil period is one of instruction and this must be done with 'lEspeciaUly tbe Poor'

Cathechetical Congress here by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan

care, so that· the faithful will be able to distinguish be­ The superintendent said kl;l of Baltimore. In his closing tween the essential which has not changed and the tech­ foresees that a' new direction fO!i' address to the congress, Car­ today as· He was in the days of Catholic schools will be the 3ft= nique or detail or acc.idental which has been updated. , the Apostles, safeguarding her, swer not only to the money and The Pope, while giving this sound advice to those who .dinal Shehan also paid per­ guiding her, teaching her." teacher problems which haw are chaffing at the bit, has also chided those in the so-called sonal tribute to Pope Paul VI ''The second truth we must bedeviled pastors (a recent sur~ as a '(gentle, thoughtful, wise bear in mind is the fact that vey, showed 80 per cent of 3'liI conservative camp who would like"to proceed with Church and firm shepherd." Christ founded. His Church Oft work as if a Council had never taken place. These cling to Pope Paul's determination to the Apostles, and above all 0lQ parish funds going toward the education O'f children) but alSli) outmoded techniques and to a language that is not only un-. fully implement the decrees of ,Peter, the Prince of the Apos­ as a response to the teaching cd! intelligible but repugnant to twentieth~century man. They. Vatican Council II has brought ties."" . Vatican II. joy, Cardinal Shehan said, "to seize upon peripheral matters and make a do-or-die stand Speaking of the "second "In all the documents, the hearts of all who desire the here, take a detail of religion-like language in the Lit­ the truth," the Cardinal told the Church is telling us to go out Church fully to carry out her urgy-and try to make it the heart and soul of revealed mission in the modern world." congress that "it is P,eter's suc­ into the city' of man," he saiel!. cessor to whom we :must look "I take the words 'especiallJ; religion. They speak in a manner more in keeping with "Implementation of the coun­ as our safe guide and teacher· the poor and those who don't the spirit of two centuries ago than in keeping with to­ cil, however, has b r 0 ugh t as new notions are put forward know God' to mean that tbie day's world. They make of religion a musein piece rather · changes," he continued, "changes concerning Christ Himself or Hill should be our first objective." . than as a vital living organism with Ba-lvation for today's in the presentation of doctrine, mission." But to avoid the chagrin at · obvious changes in the Church's . person. : Union with the POPle, he eon- . the many parents who have jUBi liturgy, changes in discipline. To tinued, "does i'lot, melln me~lY . paid out tpeir money for tbIli The work of the theologian, the Pope has said, is. not those especially who were com­ W 'introduce his own criteria in the interpretation of the · fortable under the old order of a formal ~~d external l>~ofe8BJon year's tuition, the goal-to ed.... CatholiCism as the Church of cate children from affluent fam.. 90ctrine .of the Council, rej~ting' the guidance m the things and shrimk froin any al­ of teration of ,habits, changes have Christ. It. is a uJ~i~n of spirit and ' ilies in the public Schools-cau Church" but, within the liinits of Church doctrine and brought difficuities and even deed. l!t IS, ~ wl1hng llccep~ee . not be aCl;omplished immediatea of the Pope s s.upreme authonty ly Father Deneen said . teaching to enter into the immense zone of. research in, confusion of mind." '"U t'l th . b 'd t , in fai~h an~ morals,. in teaching which is granted freedom to· think and "to express with "To calm alarms and to 'dissi­ and discipline. n I e parIS es e~o e 0 great deal more of theIr, ,.. humility and courage their own opinions in the fields in pate confusion," the Cardinal ,. . , ,sources to adequate religi01llJ said, "there are two basic truths which they a.re competent:' instruction for those in pubHe It is to be hoped that the Pope's letter wiil ~. read " we should all keep in mind." SC~lolars schools and can aid ·parents III Founded on Peter . aJid examined without prejudice, that· the so-called pro­ educating their children • First Qf the~e, he said, is that gressives will not start to sneer and mutter, the .(to them) . home, we cannot safely senCl Christ "through His Holy Spirit NOTRE DAME (NC)-Thirtt.v them to public schools," he said. dirty word "prudence." It is to be hoped that the so-called is as present in the Church of Germans distinguished in theol­ .conservatives will not brush Pope Paul off and wag their ogy, philosophy, law and history, heads with dire predictions of a Church sell-out to the will join American specialists in secular world. The Pope is, after all, Peter, and upon Peter these fields at the Uni versity of

Christ has built His Church and it is not fitting that Notre Dame here for an inter­

Vi§"~inia fRt®trrr®@1' national conference Oct. 10 to 14. members of the Church of God should show irreverence ARLINGTON (NC)-A Fe­ Julius Cardinal Doepfner of LOS ANGELES (NC) - Joe for their Father in Christ, their foundation stone, the Munich will head the European gional convention of Serra Clubs .AI~n, a public relations execu­ One whOSe faith is their faith. group which will include several from five states ann the District

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Srn!ilc~re

rR]@~r F~'~her

.German At Conferel1ace

I

Devorced Men

M©3 k®

tive here, captained an unusual retreat this Summer for divorced Catholic men. Forty-four men made the re­ treat at Manresa retreat house in nearby Azusa. Alvin, who is not divorced, has been a retreat movement participant since the early 1950s, when he assisted in pioneeri~g family retreat movements in Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Foil River California through the Holy · Family Retreat Association. 410 Highland lvenue ...Two specific results have come from the Summer retreat Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 fpr divorced men: a retreat for divorced Catholic women.is ten­ PUBLISHER

tatively planned :10, Casa de' Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., PhD.,

Maria, a women's :retreat house · ~n Santa Barbara; and aD in": GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER ·formal association of men is Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll taking shape and a dinner work­ shop has been scheduled by them MANAGING EDITOR with retreat masters participat.Hugh. J. Golden iDft· " .

@rhe ANCHOR

,I'

Serra 'Meeting In

officials of the' West German oi Columbia will be held heI'O government. The cardinal and starting Friday, Sep~. 30. Father Theodore M. Hesburg, Participants are expected to in­ C.S.C., university president, will chide Lawrence Cardinal She­ be· chairmen of the "Conference han of Baltimore;. Archbishop on the Condition of Western Patrick A. Q'Boyle of Washington Man: The Problem of Freedom .Bishop John J. Russell of Rich­ and Authority." mond, Va., Bishop J. H. Hodges The conferenl:e will examine of Wheeling, W. Va.; Bishop a number of related subjectS, ill­ Ernest L. Un t e r k 0 e 11 e r cd cluding Church-State relation­ 'Charleston, S.C.; Bishop Vin­ ships in conten~porary Europe; authority versus freedom In eent S. Waters of Raleigh, N.e.; Auxiliary Bishops Edward ~ totalitarian systems, and the rec­ Herrmann and John S. SpenCe onciliation of freedom, and au­ thority in the Americlln Revo-' of Washington, and Bishop Nicb­ 01811 T. Elko, of the Pittsburltl lution. A highlight of the conference Byzantine rite diocese: will be a special convocation iD Serra international presideBI the university's Sacred Heart Jan Berbers of Montevideo,. U,.. cQurch Thursday, Oct..13, ~ur- . guay; executive director Han.. ing which Cardinal Doepfner .T. O'Haire of Chicago,anc~ ... will receive an honorary doe­ , ternational vice president How­ torate from Notre Dame and ard V. Corcoran of Wheelin& deliver an addrlesB, , w. Va.. also will attend.


EAST FALMOUTH ceD EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETS: Members 6f the CCD board of St. Anthony's Parish, East Falmouth, are, seated: Mrs. Antone Vieira, chairman of teachers; Mrs. M. B. Pacheco Jr., vice­ president; Mrs. John Meena, chairman of the discussion group. Standing:

FrQnciscans P~an Joint Service In New York:

John C. Roderick, chairman of fishers; Frank Simmons, CCD president: Gil Tavares, treasurer; Rev. Joao C. Martins, OCr> director; John Tavares, secretary. Manuel White, apostolate of good will, is also a membex @f the board.

Ewa~uates' Re~igious

Priest

Training

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Tens Educators Study Youih s Cultu're PITTSBURGH (NC)-The ef-

religious educator going to com-

promises' the 'most and best gen-

'", NEW YORK (NC) ~An~,', fective. religious educator must 'municate to them the l1sefulness uine and h'onest answers." glican and Roman Catholic" ba:aware" of hill pupil's' culture 'and necessity of canon law - ' Father L'Uzb~tak's'point was Francis~ns will celebrat~': and be able to build UpOlJ. its whether it pertains to the for- tbat "a ,knowledge, of culture as

P~r~$h Dl!tes mack To M5ss6oner IEr~

pa~~~~I~B~~~ ~~ed Afo~e,: parish which has roots dating back to the early 1700s when Jesuit missioners offered Masses in wigwarps of Indians. Bishop 'George t.. Leech 01 HarriSburg appointed M s gr. Thomas L. McGough as pastor of S d H ' . acre' eart basilica in Cone­ ,wago. >,. First .wh,ite, settlers came to .the area in the ,early 1700.sfrom Maryland to escape persecution because of their faith. The' first settlerS mainly: were Englisl1 and soon were followed by German and Irish groups. The first settlers found the Jesuits had preceded them to the area and were offering' Masses in wig­ wams and working among the ][ndians. The first chapel to serve the parish was built in 1741. The present church and rectory were begun on the site in 1785.

malities Qf the liturgy ot to mar- " asyst,e~",will, assist communi, cation and education. He offered 'the death of St. Francis' on 'J LuzbetakS V D said here " ",,,,' , . an example' ,'.... d '0 t 4· '. ;'" r,', , ,. . . ., , ,.' • lie commented that "a h i s t o r - · & ...es ay, c . In a comm0ri, , ", The execl.ltive director ,.of the' "".' . ,. " . ." "How'is the religious educator , ',pra~~r servic~ at St. Francis o~ , ,Center for .t\ppliEid ~esear~h in' ,IC~~ :e~pIana.tlOn may help some, , 'going, w 'teach ;juvenile delin-' AssISI Catholic church here. th' Apo tolate ('cARA) in Wash' Y~1!t¥uI, mInds to .understand" qu"'", ts. ,to, ,observe the Seventh ... •• .,' .. ", '~', !?'" . but more than anything else it is' ".,.. ~ather FlnIan KerwIn , P'F M .. , Ii,I'ngton D .C conAeded at th~' ,.,. ", ... ' '. . Commandment?,. Stealing cars is. .. " . ' .• • to. , , . " .,. ':"" "'1,\ structu,ral analysis of. o u r ' · guardIan and pastor of thE! Cath-, ,l2th national and fifth Inter- ·""c till' . dl "th t'a, part' of their 'gang culture' and olic parish and Father Paul'Ken~ ," American Congress. of, the 'Cona 0 IC ways an ,va U~S a tli~y' ~1i continue to steal cars" ''Worthy, O.S.F., vicarof:the An~ '''fraternity of "ChristiaQ. Doetrine, ,'; ,: " . , " regardle'ss 0f''What the religious glican Little Portion Monastery that this was a considerable cal- Stresses Progress educator )nay tell them, regardM Long Island, jointly' an- lenge. ' . '' .",,' ." less- of the sophisticated textnounced that clergy and, laity: , '''Youth today is honest, genanlRace Relt!1lhons books or classr.oom techniques. 6f the ~~iscopal and Catholic uine and despises the least trace LAFAYETTE (NC)-As pub"What I am'saying is that the eommun~bes as wel,l as m~~bers of,phoneyness," he, said. "Youth lic and parochial school integraeducator may very well be a 'of the hierarchy WIll partIcipate today wants to know why, and, tion entered its second year 'part of the best and most sophis-' m the observance. the religious. educato~, must hea-e, the auxiliary bishop of this ticated useless CCD program in Suffragan Bishop Charles F. somehow prOVIde genuIne and southwest Louisiana diocese ex- the, world: the juvenile delinBoynton of the Episcopal dio- honest answers to the most dif- pressed concern that the atten- quents will continue to steal <lese of New York and Auxiliary ficult of questions." tion given recent riots and acts' cars because there is an imporBishop Terence J. Cooke, 'of the lFll~nest Answers of violence tend to obscure the tant functional linkage between 'N~w York Catho.lic archd~oc,:se Father Luzbetak said part of progress being made in the field stealing cars on the one hand be present, It was sald. the communication barrier with of race relations. and prestige and peer-acceptFiJ)JlliJ®Il~O Answers Can youth is "the fact that often the Practically all public schools ance on the other." Heme : . Father Luzbetak said "not un­ . th e 13 Civil The service will be patterned a d u It cuIt ure 'app~ars . InSIncere, In parishes, or coun, EST. 1870 after one held March' 23 when even hypocritical.", He allded ties, which make up the ,diocese til the religioUl:, educator anah b een d esegre-­ lyzes the finds 'gang an culture' as a subsys­ Reg. Funeral Director and Pope Paul VI met in Rome with th a t "forma l't I y an d so-ca11e d 0 f L a f aye tt eave tern and effective Embalmer

Anglican Archbishop Michael ecclesiastical juridicism may be gated. Catholic schools are 10­ stitute' fur stealing as a source 1 Washington Square

{tamsey of Canterbury. It is. on the top, or near the top, .of cated in only 10 of the 13 coun-' of prestige and acceptance is NEW BEDFORD

planned as a respOnse to the, the list of adult behavior that ties ov~.r the 1965-66 school year. there any hope of convincing the second Vatican Council's' call, many of our young.,people conAuxiliary Bishop Warren L. juvenile delinquent that 'Thou TEL. Wy 6·An98 'PRIVA"'E PARKING AREA lOr ecumenism. si~er to lack ~;nuinen,ess.".,. ' Boudreaux cited the progress shalt not steal!' makes sense." . ,The Oct. 4 celebration will be How, then, !te asked, ,IS the, being made throughout Louisi­ : the first formal communication ana in school integration aft wen ltetween the two groups but it is Grant Extends Law as the improvement of the Negro' ~U1HIUIII\lf1l91111111"HlI""IHIIUIII"IIlHIIIIiIIIIIII"IUII11I1","IIIIUIIIJII"IIIU1IlIlIJIII'IIIJIJ"1I111111J1I1IIII@ !Mt without prec~dent among" in ,civic 'affairs an~. better em­ ~nciscans, it was stated. Center Program ployment . oppolitumbes. liVE, CHICKENS " In 1909 priests·of St. Francis WASHINGTON (NC) -'- The § § ,4Ihurch worked closely with' 'Ford Foul).dation 'has awarded U" '. "t P t ,Ang~ican Father Paul Wattson,' $6tlO,OOO to Georgetown Univer. n,vers, Y OS S~." in the establishment at' sity's Law Center to expand and PITTSBURGH (NC} - Mrs. Garrison, N. Y., of t~e Society continue the center's legal in- 'Mary" 'Stilhldreher, widow of .t the Atonement, • community "ternship program. Harry A. Stuhldreher, quarter­ "'til American Franciscans' dedi.. "The' 'gift -- second in three" back of' Notre Dame University's 4iated to ecumenism. 'Father years - will make it' possible "Four" Horsemen," has been :Watt8on, fowider of the Cbair 'to :nnclude internship training named' dean of' women at Du­

e(:Unity Octave, and his entire' 'and experience in the non-ci"im-' quesne" Uriiversity here. Du­ ~. ~

'COmmunity joined the Catholic :inal:-'l~gal problems of the poor' 'quesne is operated by the Holy § UNION WHARF. ,FAIRHAVEN Tel. 997-9351 § AuiCh a short.. ..:..time later.. ..' ~ 'program. 'Ghost Fathers: :t-',j,' ... ::.\' ,

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Children Greet

."""

-Schedule For-eign

AffrQli~f.'S Dio:Jogue

Unsur'plrisab~e

MIAMI BEACH fNC)-An in­ depth session on international! affairs will be a feature of the 33rd national" convention of the National Council of Cathol~ Women hel"e starting next Wee. nesday. :Key speakers will address tM delegates in concurrent sessions am the' same topic, to create a dialogue ·atmosphere.· The ses­ sions are titled "Vatican Ill: '. Speaks to International Affairs;j~

Mother \vith Anniversarryfete: 1;; k

.

By :Mary Tinley Daly

., Ancient truism at our house, "No use trYing to 8ur­ If>rise Mom, she's too nosey," is true no longer. Because @if that built-in-belief, result of many delightful occasions <I~ver the years but none of them real "surprises," 'due to the nosiness referred to, I "bride," and. Aunt Margaret, sis­ had expected to llve out my ter of"the "groom," both having G),lloted span of days not only attended the original. wedding Each will have a panel of fOwf' and reception, long ago and far zlllsurprised but unsurpris-­ reactors to discuss "needs around m>le. So, when Johnny called of. away. the world," "contributions of D Saturday afternoon, suggesting Highlights Noted' voluntary agencies," "progress we "Come by Let's take up some of the high­ in Latin America," and "socio­ for brunch to­ lights: Close friends of many economic development." morrow with Lu years standing as well as some and the kids more recently acquired, all of The reactors include a nu1'J'lloo and me after the our children and their spouses ber of authorities on the inter­ l.i:45 Mass," we were waiting on the patio with national scene. Among those who aecepted gladly welcoming arms extended. On a will attend are: Eileen Egan. but nonchalant~ table stootl an' enormous tiered project supervisor, Catholic Re­ l!w an invitation wedding cake with the tradi­ lief Services-N.C.W.C.; P a vR extended rather tional silver. knife tied with a Hoffman, Administrator, United f r e que n t 1 Y • white bow. Surrounding this Nations Development Program lt1 was to be our were seven cupcakes, inscribed Richard Reuter, Assistant to th~ wedding I anni­ with the names of our children. Secretary of State (Food for "Qersary, of course he knew that, . Atop the cake stood a bride doll, Peace); Catherine Schaefer, Di­ and it would be an informal . dressed by Virginia, in a repli­ rector, NCWC Office for U.N. family start for a day that I ca of the original wedding out­ Affairs; Mrs. Arthur L. Zepf, l3Uspected (there's that nosiness fit: dress, veil, the remembered board of trustees, American' again) would later include being' lace bows on the shoes, even to Freedom from Hunger Founds­ flaken out to dinner by the Head "step-in!' of that long ago era! . tion, In~. and Msgr. Joseph B. of the J:louse, maybe also to a In another corner of the patio Gremillion, director, Socio- Eco-' movie. was a record player, giving forth nomic Development, CatholiC "Brunch with the kids,"... with tunes of the times of our R~Jief Services--N.C.W.C deed! ..courtship .and marriage. Where The four-day convention has II When we oPened Johnny and they eve!: dug up those oldies. general theme of "The New Lu's front door, we. were bom-' , .,we'll never .know;buLthey~rAIDS REFUGEESA'd f ' ~ard~d with a battery of photo, tainly" added, . a .. sentimentally. . , .. . ' :'] or ~he blind amonJ~. Pales- Pentec~." ,Dright lights, the grinding. of nostalgic note. There:were gifts, tIman re~uge~s is sUPP'?rted iti the Gaza Strip by American movie cameras, and heard a.congratulatorYnotesd~ndtele-,Qatholics thr~)Ugh the Catholic'l'fear East Welfare Associ.. _ piano coming through loud arid . gFams-,;,-one that __ .ation. young men arelearni,:ng to and' Playwright's 'elear, ,with "Here Corhes,'· ~ of .la\.!gl)t~r".signed':l}.oyt· •. ·fr.PJJl .-·thus becomeat-leaat.partially self-supportij}a. NO p;no.to; ';{ , :Bride!!' . my middle-agedbusinessma~ e C o m e d y 'Fac;es TestIf the old saying'be true, "one '. brother. in Omaha' ~ho hasit't . HAlU\isBURG (NC)-A f8M­ picture. is worth a ,thousand been ~nown.as "B~y" !l,i!1t:e iita,t ..., i'iy-style comedy that a Catholie words."ttiOse movies canlt help. origirwl w,edd,inglo.i.u; hous,e had' . . ()""~" ~I~ywni;~t w~rkeQ' on 12. yeilri but show' the most astonished, been, ,~surreptiti~uslysearched, wJlI f~ the stiff test of New lmqUellUOnablysurpril!ed "b:ride" we learned, for old-time pictureii ote. Ex.plains.·.. C,·o . ,.n. ~p· t~ De .. SCf:ibed Y~rk, De?'t ~nth when "!ttY tilat~v~r l1ve~, probably with. and . (;lippings '('iBu,t' Wh~t , W I f e ' 8Qd 1,-" ·written by Bit! ,- ller'mouth hanging open,. ~i' foundmoS't 'were sOuverl'irs and k\ Book of proverbs· Maho~ey of Carlisle, Pa., opens' ' .... eyes.popping, .. " . ' '. pictures of the grandchildren"), " , . , . Monday, .Oct. 10 at Theater . Behind the . movie camei"as:rood, prepared; in the'variouB OMAHA (NC)~Mooern wom- ­ arc~bill~OP said' befol'e Sara WQIl Four" ~e Qff-Broadway' show':' were my sister Virginia, son-in- . kitchens" and brought ··.iO the,: an - married, single; nun or" loyal, before Rebecca' ,,;a5 wise house that 'produced . the, l... . law Brad, Johnny as still pho-' party; consisted "of melon balls ' wi~ow':"-can find the best image" before' Rachel was bel.oved "T~e. Boys from Syracuse." ~..." '. iographer, Mercedes Hayoon 'as" and . other . frUits "served ; in _ ~f womanhood in the .descriptIon . her' liusband, e8(~h was, firSt' Of pianist at the keyboard. scooped-out watermelon sheBs,. of tlie "valiant 'woman"of the' all, a woman." The play is a musical about a 'Why, bless their hearts, came baked ham, casseroles 'of sweet' Book of Proverbs, Archbishop .' In the Gospels, he sa'id, E]jz8~" typical family 'before the era 0If the thought, the family brunch potatoes wit h'marshmallow8;' Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta, Ga., beth prophesied; the widow at television. Mahoney, 39 and .had been extended to include a' Mary's homemade bread sticks, said here. . '.' N:aiin mourned 'for her' (;nly son' father of seven chiidren, said ~ few other close relatives and relishes of all sorts, and for des­ The archbishop told a CODven­ Martha prepared the meals th~' worked on the play 12 years those friends from 'way back,' sert wedding cake and cham- . tion of the Archdiocesan Council Mll~dalen wept for her sins: during his spare time. Early tbis .... d d J' H d P t f C th I' W ·th d year the play ran for 22 SRO 1m ay en. pagne. op wen the corks, pop 0 a· 0 IC omen e wor Mar-y 2t IPinnade "'Jerce es an But, like a "This Is Your Life" went the flashbulbs as the party' "valiant" is related 10 "valor"' - performances 'at the Arena script, the grand entrance was was recorded on film. JIDd '.'value", "Each was a woman -:- some House here. enly prelude to a surprisingly' Where were "the little~" "Woman's courage" he said wives, some single, some wid-' "After watching those 22 per­ beautifully surprising "wedding pIe," those 15 grandchildren? "is certified in the high praise:' ows," the archbishop said. fo'rmances," Mahoney said, "I reception," so expertly planned Their turn came later, trooping 'she is clothed with strength';. At the pinnacle of ·this tradi­ went back to work on the script and lovingly carried out that in after naps, a' trip to the zoo" her value, is attested by her tion, according to Archbishop and have just come up for air. readers of this column might to offer good wishes-and start proven· 'worth';. tender and Hallinan, "there is Mary the It took me three and one-haH like to do the same for their another whole party, winding .thoughtful, she is dressed ill Virgin, who stands for innocence months to do this rewrite." own parents on a significant up at bedtime after III supper strength and dignity." and integrity, and Mary the anniversary. and a family sing. .Mahoney leftofhis job as pro­ "This is the kind of woman",·Mother, who stands for love of gl'am director a radio statiolll . C Why our children gave liS this Surprise? Surprise! ....._ archbl'shop sal'd, "that the her husband and care of her l' I t t' tt·' un: So " In ar IS e 0 rewrite his play. par y )s pre y evident, they world and society require, and n. , , He now plans to start his OWlll wanted to; how they did it is the· American' ~RU'"'S St'"aU that the Church and religion' ''The human nature'of all men radio station in Selinsgrove, Pa; epitome of logistics, result 0If ,'"\' ,. IT Deed." is here, but so is the feminine weeks . M'" . in the word . . of meeting in secret ·ses-. Ph't' I Ipp'lnelsslo'" . Citing ..... e. "rich .-asure of personal·t I y. She IS, ' . c" • mons, with committee and indi­ •• _ HJ...." . Council II, 'the sign II' NEW .ORL·EANS :(.NC) ' ',womanhood tha,t there. ha.s ai--. 0f V a t"lC;m . "idual, assignment. 'Twas done, _ of certain. hope and solace for . of course, in strict collusion with .mIssIon . in,.· the "p,hI.'liP.pines; _~ays .bee.n, . both, in . t~e J"ewish, the . the People, of 'he .Aunt Yirginia,; Sister" of . the staffed 'by SIsters of Mount Car- o.a.nd Chl1sban I me'l with headquarters here, ill'

II' Excavating':' 'CQtholic, No.·.··".Cath.olic ..having .'lUlderstood, :Wom_ail's'role will n,~ver. 'id' be , 't h II tw.ofold vocation effect· .' Urge Parents, Youth' the archbiShop '.Contradofs . -I l,Yl given a new mterest. to' .A·I·d ..... Wo'r·,;..... Sm~'" . 'revealed:a~ it per-' , f . ." '., ' . , ' , · uns to Share Home .American nuris, and has'given' ,"' ......~'.until sh~: is N PITTSB'URGH (NC) ~ The many Filipfna girls a ehallCe to .. DES MOINES (NC)-A turn- ,son with human needs·....:...not·. • , CROSS ST., .FAIRHAVEN I . ene-time residence of the chan­ enter religious life. . about came in the war 00 smut biologi'cai 'tleyiatio!1', 'a social ~p­ II WYman 2.;4862', , cellor of the University of Pitts­ Although. hard-pressed for,' in Iowa when druggistS calied . pendage, or alIl Glcononii,c eom­ ~ ~.~~ ~ ~ burgh here· has been acquired as personnel in Louisiana, the Sis- on parents and teenagers to help' petitor, .

a home for Catholic and non- ters, in order to assist in the' them keep obscene magazines

Catholic nuns. mission work of the Church, an- and publications .off their racks. Bishop John J. Wright said swered an appeal from Bishop 'Usually, it's been vice versa. tile Pittsburgh diocese acquired Epifanio B. Surban of Dumagete, The Iowa Pharmaceutical As­ the' mansion to serve as a resi­ in the Negros Oriental province, sociate headquarters here an­ ., Rt.· 6-BetweenFaii River Cilnd New Bedford ' dence for Catholic Sisters and who ~aid there was a dire need nounced it is distributing to mon-Catholic religious commu­ for SIsters for school and hospi- druggists members, display signs Olae of the Finest fFcu:ilities in Southern New EnsiCoIl1«!1 n'ities of women 'engaged in tal work. He also said nunS could which ask parents and teenagers Available' fer: . studies and research projects at e?courag~. a number of nativ.e to call to the druggist's attention <colleges and universities in the gIrls deslrmg to enter religious and objectionable literature dis... BANQUElrS () 1l'!ESTIMONIALS· vicinity.' ' I life. played. !rAS~~OINl SHC~WS and SPECiAL PARiIE$ · The Sisters of Mercy, who Of the ~O Filipina girls who QaL Woods, Fort Dodge drug-' ~onduct Mount Mercy College have" apphed for admission to gist and assoCiation president, FOR COMPU:n 6NFORMATION CONTACT: here, will staff the ecumenical the SIsterhood, ~5. have been ac';' said the parents and teenagers' WYman ~.-6984 Of' MErcury ,6-2744 residence-to be named Sancta cepted fo~ traIn.I~g here and should greatly aid druggists in 4

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$uggest~'H,~~noring St. Michael With Roast Duck' Dinner

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THE AN'-:HO~Thurs., Sept. 29, 1966

Plan Recollection

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick One advantage of having a baby in the boose is that there are loads of baby food jars available for storing odds and ends. I have' a shelf in the cellar stacked with these little bottles containing tacks, odd sereW1i4 brads and seeds.

Day for Girls The Fall River Marian Com­ mittee will hold its third Day oi Recollection for Girl Scouts and Camp Fire Girls Saturday, Oct. 15 at St. Vincent's Camp, North Westport. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Harold E. Ward and Mrs. Wil­ liam F. Patten, aided by mem­ bers ot the Marian Committee. The program will begin at 10 Saturday morning with a confer­ ence for girls from ages 9 to 11 given by Rev. Paul E, Canuel and a conference tor girls 11 to 16 by Rev. Raymonnd A. Robil­ lard. An outdoor Mass will follow celebrated by Rev. Terence F. Keenan, with music and partici­ pation led by Rev. Thomas E.

They may Mver get used, but at least I have the feel­ ing that I am being thrifty &tid wen organized. The

this elegant game bird. Duck has been mistakenly thought of as a dish to be enjoyed only by ricb go\,!rmets or indulged in at plush French restaurants. Contrary to lJeeds keep perfectly in these lit­ tie jars and some day 1 may get this belief, it can be relished by even the most budget minded ~round to planting them, but illl ibe meantime I will add to my (we bought one fhis week for .38 a pound). It can be cooked as ~lIection again this Fall. . For those people who enjoy easily and with ,as good results starting their own plants in the as chicken or turkey. The only Spring, this is a good time 00 difference is that a duck is more Sltart collecting seed. There' is fatty than either of these fowl. Only "caneton" (a bird undep no special technique for this. If ;vou have been in the habit of she months old) is good for Gutting off spent blooms from Toasting and fortunately this is 170ur annuals, merely discon­ the kind that we find 'frozen in tin'ue the practice on those the local supermarkets. They plants from which you hope to usually weigh between 4% to 5% ' get seed. When the pod ripens it pounds, are cleaned and plucked and only need to be thawed to f:1;' a simple matter tO,break them and put the seed in, a'labele.d be ready for cooking. Because ducks do 'have extra ~ceptacle. 'The seeds can then be stored fat, any visible fat should be. re­ l»r the Winter. I use baby food move.d before co~oking, especially ja'rs for this purpOSIl! .because from the cavity and from around' ilhey can be closed almost air the neck area. There .are also eight' and because they .are ,Small fat glands at ,the base of the ~nough to be stored with '~ittle tail and when they are removed difficulty. One wor~, of adViCe. this area should be' rubbed with Label the jars with labels that salt and lemon' juice. 'l'he skin ao··inside the bottle, ,adhesive along the thighs, the back and, flape will do, so that ,there is no the, lQwer part of thebr:east ]l>Ossibility that the label ;.will should be pricked' every' half inch to help the layers of fat ~me off. Nothing is more frus­ !li'ating than a bottle. of unidenti­ under the' skin to 'escape during the cooking process. An orange Oable seeds. Be sure to collect seed from or parts of an .orange placed in f;llants other thari annuals if you the cavity also help 'draw off want to experiment. For in­ this extra liquid. If you decide to bolster your stance, I picked up some seed from' one of my day lilies last' menu and budget with this royal week which I will start as soon bird you'll find that green peas as possi ble in the garden. A close combine beautifully with it, also rook at azaleas may uncover brussels sprouts. oni6ns and tur­ Deeds which have formed sin~ nips. Of course those .to. whom blooming time last 'Spring' and money i~ no object will find that these may be started 'after a suf";' wild rice is 'a' ,glorious ,accom­ paniment: n'Ctent period of freezing. ' " Glazed Orange :Ducklings Almost all imnuals will pro­ .2 'ducklings, 4 pounds .each i\luce ileed which may be useq, the (one duck will serve about 3 following season. For myself, I v.ery seldom bother with these people)' ,salt tJ1cse seeds because I seldom pepper phmt the saine variety of annual ·'Vi cup· maple syrup Jl:or two years running. Rather, ¥.i cup frozen orange juice X . prefer the excitement. of try­ (undiluted) ing. new varieties of annuals Sauce ooch year and until 1 come upon .The balance of a large cart' of the perfect annual I will con­ tinlle to store seed which I 'Will orange juice after the I,4 cup has b.een take out. probably never use! 1 cup crabapple, currant, Oil' In the Kitchen lIn European countries today, guava jelly 1 cup strained giblet'broth Sept. 29, will be an occasion of ¥l teaspoon powdered ginger many 'celebrations in honor of' ¥l teaspoon dry mustard St. Michael the Archangel. Mi­ 1) Place the ducklings on III ehael is the "knight in shining armour" of the heavenly host. rack in a large roasting pan, He .is also the patron saint of sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roast ina 325" oven, ul1coyered, the. souls in P\lrgatory, .. the qwuntry of Germany, Christian for"about 20 minUtes a Pound. ~ soldiers, painters and $Culptors. you have a meat thermometer and as if that weren't enough insert .between the leg and work for even an angel, Pope breast of one of the ducklings Pius XII made him the patron and ~i:in t.> gla~ when *.he:r~ ef all people employed in the' mometer reads 160" F. If you. oommunication,arts sucb as radi~ do not use a thermometer,' it and television. Because tt1is dUckling is lkme if the drnm­ beavenly Lancelot's feast comes stick wIggles O'l' !If whtmyoil at the time of ·the grape harvest poke it with a fork the liquid . llfId . the duCk hunting season' it that cOmes 'out is not pink: 2) When ducklings teSt done is celebrated in .Europe with remove from. oven, pour off fat !IOast duck and blessed wine. Even in this country St. Mi­ and paint the wps of them with· ehael's Day ~ any day would be a mixtur-e of the maple syrup ,. good time to serve YO\lr family and the I,4 eup orange juice. J) Return to oven and raise Blind Priest temperature to 375 for about 20 minutes. ZUPANJA (NC)-A newly Ol'4) While the ducks are roast­ r.lained blind priest celebrated ing, simmer the giblets and necks his first Mass here in the diocese in salted water to cover., Strain of Djakovo and Srijem in Jugoand mix with the balance of too slavia. He is Father Ivo Mati- orange juice, and the jelly. jevic, who became blind while 3) Bring the sauce to a boil F;t,e was a seminarian. With a and stir constantly until the special dispensation from the jelly is diluted into the gravy. Holy see, be continued his stud- Add the ginger and mustard. lles for the priesthood in Vlenn:&, /I) Cut the duckling into serv­ and completed them this year. ing size pieces and cover with the

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. BISHOP AT JUBlLEE: Irene Jaryna. and Cynthia Moniz, members of Holy Cross Parish, Fall :River, dressed in native costumes meet Bishop Connolly with R~v. Felician Plichta, O.F.M. Conv. pastor, oJl1l,the occasion of the parish 'golden jubilee celebration.

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CHfCAGO (NC)-It's back to the, fulltime. job. as :drama de-. partment head at nearby Mun­ 'delein College for Sister M. Jeanelle-but she's not. li~~ly tl) forget the 1966Summ'er months when' she ,traveled br' bus or. elevated train, worked 9:'to-5 shift in an of~ice' and enj'oyed it . " Sister Jeanelle held down a Summer job at the Natio~1f:ll Broadcasting Company studios in the' programming department. The Sister of C.harity of, the Blessed Virgin Mllry explained the job wasn't offered to her­ she got it by the simple expedi­ ent of "applying fur it." "I had. 'interned' at NBC last year while I was studying 'at Northwestern (University) so 1 just wrote to them, applied for Zl job and was accepted for em­ ployment," Sister Jeanelle de­ tailed. . She was on the regular pay-' roll, the w()J,:'k mai~iy wl,ts retarial, but the experience gave Sister Jeanelle a chance to get a'fir~t-haiui look at iiTV studio iR:l operatiOn. ' '. " '., T~hes T,V «lasses : The experience, Sister JeaneUe agreed, .will be helpful ill ,her: fulltime job at the college where, ita addition to running the drama

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seek New Participation 1ft Diocesc;m Activities CAMDEN (NC)-Participation ill diocesan activities outside their usual sphere of op­ erations will be discussed at a meeting of all diocesan Sisters here. The meeting next Sunday was planned by a pilot group of 16 nuns representing commu­ nities now teaching, nursing or performing other works in the diocese. Principal. speaker at the meet­ ing will be Father Joseph Burns of Sacred Heart High School, who will discuss the role of the lIlWl iBa the' 'm6de~ii w'6tlii.·' '/ ,; ""

I

CatholiC Hospitals' Get: Cancer Research Aid

Speft~

College Drama Department Head Summer as NBC Employee •

Following a catered luncheon, question . and answers sessions will be . conducted by Father Canuel, Father Robillard, Father Morrissey and Rev. John An­ drews, Fall River area director of Scout activities, and in gen­ eral charge of the day's program. Recitation of the rosary, a sec­ ond set of conferences and Ben­ ediction will,close the day. Attendance Grows The first Scout-Camp Fire dall of.. reco.Ilectiolr' was held in 19&8: at Camp Tattapanum, Dighton. with 375 participants; the second was held last 'year· at St. Vin­ cent's with 435 attending. A stinll larger' group is expected for thffi ;year.. .~

department, she also teaches tw@ cIQsed-:-ciI"4it TV classes. "I'll go back to teaching. witb. fl different attitude. The pages of textbooks have, come alive for me. The academic has be­ come the practic;al. I think the students will ,be impressed anA appreciate what 1 have. to say to them," .she commented. ,The "most wonderful" experi­ ence of her, summer, Sister Jean­ elle said, was "the people." "I have never been received more· royally. The people were willing to share and accept me all one of the group. 1 was in­ cluded at coffee break, time, too," she commented.

Sisterhoods Adopt New Dress for Postulants NEWARK (NC)-Two sister­ hoods in this' area have adopted new dress for postulants. 'the Benedictine Sisters of Elizabeth, N.J., have introduced a blac.k· do.uble~breasted, suit with knee-length A-line skirt worn with ,a pill-box hat and a choice of, white overblouse,ascot or; , dic;:key. .' " ,TheSis.~ 6f Gharit,. '0I,~. E.Hzabe.~h .have adoP.ted. a green 'R:Oolcm suit with ~wel neckli~ Dlouse and a, black ,mantilla for chapeL They ~ feature a knee. leagth skirt. Po$hJlants in bo~ cengregations will wear flesh­ oolor stockings, black calf pumps and their own "civilian" coats.

WASHINGTON (NC)-Grants totaling $t54,178 for research and training projects for pre­ vention and control. of cancer have been awarded to Catholic hospitals throughout the nation, Dr. William L; Ross, chief of the cancer control branch, U. S. Public Health S e r vic e.' an.,. nounced. The awards were issued as fl' result of a recent meeting of the Advisory Committee to the Can­ cer Control Program. The funds will be used to im­ plement the recommendation of the President's Commission on Heart Disease, Cancer and Stroke that "improvement in early diagnosis and more wide­ spread utilization of existing knowledge would result in an increased average cure rate."

Prevost Mothers The Monsignor Prevost High SChool Mothers' Guild will meet at 7:45 tonight in the cafeteria of the Fall River High School.

Norris H. -rripp .." . SHEET 'METAt J. lESER, Prop. RESIDENTIAl INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL 253 Cedar St., New Bedford WY,3-3222·

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NYC M®~t;ng

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Sept. 29, 1966

Bm$hOJp M<r;CC@ II'trhy P!l'@B$e$ SO~OOJ~

Acti@n

Wc~k

CINCINNATI (NC) Auxiliary Bishop Edward A. McCarthy of Cincinnati told ,several hundred men and women involved in social aCtion programs that Sacred Scripture, Church tradition, Vatican II, and "the needs of our time" support and encourage their work. He . spoke at a social· action eonference sponsored· by the Archdiocesan Council of Cath­ olic Men on the subjects of pov­ erty, interracial justice, and the ecumenical movement. Cit in' g numerous passages from· Scripture, including the Old Testament, relating to char­ ity in action, Bishop McCarthy declared: "We are truly about our Father's business·in our pre­ occupation with works of love­ for the poor, for those of other, races, al1d for seeking unity with those of. other faiths." "Does it profit me anything," the bishop asked, "if I am· an 'institutionalized' Catholic, never eating meat on Friday, ·singing at Ma·s's at the top of my . lungs, and a member of every society­ but if I' am not animated by this Jlundamen.tal virttie of Christ·?" Love for Poor "It iii in this-the living of the Jove of Christ in a very· special way-that we are engaged," he Aid. "It is Christ's love for the ]pOOr that we. hoPe .will sweep :Dike: a. I'\ew flame through .our eommunity;'~ . The ,~ishop .a1s9 called. a,tten-_ tion to .. the.. Second. Vatil:;i\n Council's insistence that "appro­ priatl;! relief" should be provided for all. who lack the facilities "necessary for living a truly Duman life," ' "Today we must meet the needs of our time," Bishop Mc­ Carthy continued, "with works of love that are intelligent, sound, well thought 01jt, an-d planned in a spirit of coopera­ tion with. others, with respect for ;professionalguidance, with awareness of our social responsi­ bilities as citizens of the commu­ nit~ as well as members of the ,Church, with respect' for the . freedom and dignity .of the indi­ "idual, not seeking one's own advantage,· not representing what js. due ·in justice as an act el· charity."

TRY 'rHIS: Sister Marie Denise, S.U.S.C., offers cracker to tiny refugee from fiFe that swept apartment building across street from Immaculate Conception convent, Taun­ ton. Sisters, parish priests and many others joined in aiding families driven from homes by six-hour blaze. .

Taunton Fire Illuminates Meaning of Words '1. ·Was StraJ1,ger,Yoil Took" Me Jn~ Utook firemen. six hours to control a night-time fire that recently left five Taunton. families homeless. But in the terror-filled hours of that· night,. those families learned very dramat~cal1y what'it ·means to ha~'e good ·neighbors. At :4 :45 that evenin!f, Rev. Barry. Wall looked.,out·the window of.Inlmaculate Conception··Yeetoryon Bay Street m. the Whittenton section of Taunton;'w see fIames·leap­ ' Three men fr.o11]. the parish St.. overd\ie baby· woul!! remain Vincent de Paul Society, William overdue ·awhile longer,' .i~g from the. abandon,ed Fagan, Walter Gorey and James The mother and child rIm were Grand Theater, diagonally Blount, were at the disaster b3dly shaken by the ·filre, the

across .the street. scene almost immediately and Fire engines were on the way helped round up needed supplies. and an excited crowd had gath­ . Women from the neighbor­ ered .. Father Wall, along with hood helped the Sisters comfort others, . rushed into the apart­ panic filled children, al)d the ment house connected ,to the ,pcws of the church were used theater to be sure everyone was several times as changing sta­ out of the building. tions for babies in need of dia­ To his relief, everyone was '.pering. safely out, .inciuding an invalid, Several dispossessed families Mrs. Jean Diak, who w.as.carried . were Puerto Rican, and Sister ';ut i~· her. wheelchair, and Mrs.. Teresita of Bishop Cassidy· High Leroy <!ross, an expectant moth­ School came over to translate. er. for them . ·In the. ·convent adjoining· ·the. Taunton May"o r Benjamin rectory two Sisters of the .Ho(y Freidman· personaily to.ok charge Union saw the· blaze and ran· of Operation Help,· and he and across the 'street .to help the vie­ his administratiVe assistant Em­ urns. . _ . . c,ry Malo worked f.hrol,lgh. the While· fire~en ;from thtee"­ night to find homes for the vic­ ° wwns''battledthefire,·theh~me.;; 'tims·., ,.et I erles .. less {a'/llilies ,weretakeninto:~he ,.BY 8:3~teinporaryshelte·r had iI. 'J!i'riia~l!l~te ~oiicepti.on cliurch';been ;found (or: 'all.ex~¢p~ ·the, II ·J.:l!pugtl~h¢y w.ereurged by th~. Gross·family. ¥rs. Gross, :Whose·. in· line with' deClarations. M; Si.sters· ~~, go ;~~,to ..t1re. ·_co~~en~.· baby .was. a.IreadY two"w~ej4:fi· tile;.se~ol)d" Vatican CouuJil, ·and whet.e th~y,co.uld bf: ~ad~ rn0",:e· - :overdue,. was . take~ tq ]dQrton ·.Po~e Pautthat· "ours is ·a . visu~l' .l;QIJl.fQrta\>le, ti)ey.. p.J.'~fer.r;e.d. .to _'. Hospital.·. .Rer husband, who. age' and thatthe'fi\m is.theart s_wy m .the· v,estibule of. the. works in Connecticut, col.lldn't· an<t·medium of our lime," Sister ,chu~ch.. .:..... .,. : . . " be rea<;he~. ..". ' -8lste,r. Mant; penIse,. on.c .o~"'. ·Meanwhlle, ': the,. five .Gross Mary Hortense, S.U.S,C.,' head' . of :E,~~lish at· Bishop ,Gassidy, the first on the ,s~ene, ~aid· "~.he children,. ranging in age from .21 High School, Taunton, has ·an­ chllrcl,,1 ,~a.~. closeJ.:...~ th,e.flre months to fourteen ... years. ~ld, nOl)nced a film seminar series and th,~y wante~to be ·as close were guests of. th~ HolrUmon open to religious. and public . af, p~sslple, At fust they thought SI~ters . at t~elr convent: .The. sc.hool teachers of the Fall' River the.fue. would· be over very:soon children received the undiVided Diocese. .. and they. could go right back.'.' .. arid loving attention of eight , To be heid at 6:45 Friday The flames leaping int~· the Sisters until it was learned that might, beginning Oct. 7, the se- d.arkening S,ky could be ..se~n· their ~~ther had returned from Ties will concentrate in its four fight across town, and wlthm the hospital. Apparently the long meetings on film language, tech­ minutes over !,OOO people had nique and evaluation. Motion gathered, some· to watch and Catholic' Newspaper pictures illustrating each of some to help. Honors Legi.slator these topics will be shown, and Rev~ James Lyons, who served the feature film High Noon will at Immaculate Conception for ANAHEIM .(NC) - State Sen. ·Charles E. Brown has received be screened at the first meeting, 15 years until his recent trans­ The last four meetings ~iil·. fer to St. Peter's in Dighton, tj1e Wanderer Forum award eenter on three films: Bicycle came back to help Father' Wall made by the century-old Catho­ Thief, La Strada and Citizen in caring for the victims. Rev. lic newspaper published· in St. Kane. An illustrated discussion William O'Reilly, Immaculate Paul, Mimi., for "e';'emplary of the film as art will. also be Conception pastor, was on re­ work as a Catholic layman," held. treat at the time. .The legislato·r, only card­ Date:; for seminar n~eetings· A request was made for sweat­ carrying member of the John iollowing Oct. 7 are Nov. 4, 11, ers and blankets for the home­ Birch Society in the California 18 and 25; Dec, 2; Jan. 27 and less people and within a very Senate, is a brother of Father March 17. RegistI'ation for· the short tin1e, 'neighbors came to the Francis F. Brown, editor of. the series is requested by Saturday, church, their arms laden' with Steubenville· (Ohio) Register Oct. 15. ueeded articles. diocesan· newspaper., _

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Over 150 members of Catholie organizations and universities is­ suing gift annuities and inter~ ested in modern methods 01' philanthropic giving, will ·attend the first Conference of Catholic Gift Annuity Organizations M the Hotel Biltmore in New York Tuesday and Wednesd~y, Oct. ~ _'. and 5. Experts will discuss aIR : aspects. of deferred giving and· clarify technicalities which have . inhibited fundraising in the past. . 'The two-day program is de- : signed to help Catholic uni versi- ., ties and organizations increase : their resources by unaerstanding the latest and greatest potential­ ities open to them: Lecturers and seminar speakers .will include leaders from government, Jew­ ish and Protestant philanthropie organizations. Seminars which will follow lectures on annuities, trusts and other outright gifts, have been . planned so each person ~ttend- ,. . ing can be individually pro­ grammed where he can freely discuss. his organization's prac­ .tical problems. Those organiza­

tions which currently do not

include a gift annuity program

but wish to initiate one will be

offered complete information.

The conference is being Oll'­

ganized by The Society for the

Propaga~ion of the Faith which,

under the· directorship of Bishop

FuIton J. Sheen, was one' of the

. first Catholic philanthropic or­

ganizatioJ:}s to offer an Annuity

program.

Further information may be

.obtained through Mr, James A •.

Cousins, C.P.A., The SoCiety fOlt

the Propagation of the Faith, 361 .

Fifth Avenue, New' York, N. Y.··

10001.

Pr.oe.sts. IOn T',.obute.

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loss of their home and belong-, ings and, uncertainty about the futuJ'e. Where would they spend .' T()LEDO (NC) - .Pastor fl.

the night ahead, they wondered. Umhau Wolf, Lutheran niini~

Good Neighbor ter and ecumenical pioneer was

At this point, another good ,honored by pries~ and ministers neighbor, Mrs, Gerald Cote, a here ata reception at Blessed parishioner of nearby St. Jac­ Sacrament rectory. ques Church, came along· and The group met in a farewelll . took the Gross family under her tribute to Pastor Wolf who is wing, although they were com­ leaving St. Paul Lutheran plete ·.strangers to .her. She ex­ church for a new assignment at plained to' the Sisters that she Texas Lutheran· College ~. would send ·her own five· chil- Sequin, Tex. The minister pioneered in ee-' dren to stay with her father for umenical activities in Toledo is the night a'nd the Gross family would come home with h'er. 1959 when he began an annual . The five Gross children were interfaith .institute foJ' Catholie,·; !!etth~d in front o{"the GllteS TV Protestant and Jewish clergy.., set quicker. than you could say :, men.,~n 1962 he fo~.ed a grouJl "i3. t· . " Ml," ad·' ·Mr,,·· C·ot ' of '. pnests and mlmsters wbe. .. 3 man:. , : n ,..:" . .e .. have since. met for monthly dia- . gavc.t~ . ,chlldrlm an~l thel':: .. J ... . t D; . ·W d S: ..... , , mother .a 'welcome' .and , . ogues. a . ~vm.e . or. em ma17.,.

warm

kept th.ell').' at their home aU the . next· day, until Mr~ Gross arrived' . from (::o.nnectlcuL ..... Two days later Mrs. Gross ··was back· hi .. the. hospital. -- with· ... pl)eumonia. .The.Cotes· have volunteered to keep the smallest GrOHS ehild until the'mother. is well. Taun-. tun welfare workers are arrang­ ing .temporary homes for the· other children. i'I . was' a stranger 'arid' you took me. inY These are words that will have adding meaning to many Taunton peopll~ from now on.

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Religion Leaders Ask ContEnuance Of P~\?erty War WASHINGTON (NC) ­ 'file Interreligious Commit.. tee Against Poverty has call­ ed upon Congress to act promptly 'and adequately to pro­ vide funds for continuance 1M: the war on poverty and has also asked President Johnson to urge iCongress ,to this action. The committee, composed of Protestant, Catholic and Jewish leaders, declared that it "is deeply distressed by the delay in renewing and funding the Economic OpPortunity Act for iiscal'1967." "Over the two shod years dur­ ing which this program has op­ erated," the committee declared" ..it bas benefited millions of the nation's poor, and has thus fltrengthened our whole society. We join all who desire to work for the elimination of poverty, and we strongly support an en­ . larged and strengthened Office of Economic Opportunity with a ]967 'appJ;opriation, on an ex­ panded basis." The committee said "we re-' spectfully ask that you, Mr. President, urge upon Congress' the full and immediate funding of this program and that the Congress act immediately 10 move for the passage of. this !egislation'," Interest Waning:

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 29, ] 966

CCD Teachers Get More Than ,They Give, Says Diocesan C([}YBl friH,ternit y Supervisor'

Rep@[ft M®n8Can

School bells are ringing, not only for Confraternity of Christian Doctrine students, ~~d~an~ ~G'@rrwing lLAFAYETTE ENC)-Southem but for their teachers as well, as teacher training classes begin in central locations in the Diocese. Response should be great to CCD Director Rev. Joseph L. Powers' plea that Louisiana residents of all faiths to a missionary "the greatest need in CCD right now is prepared and properly trained teachers." Six responded priest's appeal in behalf of the out of every 10 school age Tarahumara Indians of northern youngsters in the Fall River Mexico with a donation ()f tons 'of food, medicine, clothing and Diocese attend public schools. other, supplies. This means that the major- ­

ity of our youngsters are getting all their formal religious educa­ tion in their weekly CCD class. How good this education will be depends for the most part on one thing: the training and prep­ aration of the CCD teacher. At the Victory Noll convent in North Easton, the Sister in charge of preparing teacher training courses for the Diocese spoke on the subject recently. Sister Joan Louise, O.L.V.M. is a diminutive nun with a beam­ ing smile - and a big job. As CCD Supervisor for the Diocese, under the direction of Father Power, she travels from one end of it to the other. Major Mission Catechetical work is the major mission of her order, whose for­ mal title is Our Lady" of Victory Missionary Sisters. The Ameri­ can community was founded in the Southwest in 1922 for the purpose of teaching religion. Along with the founder, Rev. John Sigstein, one of the prime movers in forming the· order' Was Msgr. Noll, founder of the At a press conference called to, eatholic weekly, "Our Sunday state its views, the .committee, ' Visitor." Since their mother­ voiced concern that public inter­ ',house in Huntington, Ind. is sit­ est in the war' against' poverty uated OIl a grassy knoll; the seemed to be waning. Committee Sisters made piay 00 words in members said they will take im­ naming the' new commu~ity mediate steps to acquaint mem­ after~ both ,Msgr. Noll,' and the, bers of their respective churches location of their motnerhouse. . with the continuing need for an The Victory Noll Sisters have active effort on a national scale been in this Diocese for 13 years, to eliminate poverty. most of th~m spent on Cape Cod, The committee, which speaks Last December four Sisters in its 'own name, was established moved into their convent in last January b)' representatives North Easton in the Immaculate of 'the National Council of Conception parish. Two Sisters Churches, the National 'Catholic work for the parish and two for Welfa're Conference and the the :Diocese, but all four teach Synagogue Council of America. CCD classes at Immaculate Con­ Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of ception Parish Center. San Antonio and Bishop Ray­ They are well known in the mond J, Gallagher of Lafayette area for their popular Saturday in Iildiana signed the committee morning television program on on New Bedford's Channel Six. statement as co-chairmen. Bishop Gallagher, said an Sisters De Porres and Joseph interTfaith statement on the Adele teach religiol) to thei~ moral reasons for combating "little flock." Sister Martha poverty is being, drawn up by Mary does all" the art work fo'r' the program. ~e committee for ,earl~ issuance. , Training Courses He said it is hoped' this state­ Sister Joan Louise has 'been ment will stimulate "the widest possible discussion" in churches hard at w'oi:k' 'organizing th,e and synagogues of lhe \Ii-gent tea'cher , training, courses which wili ,run for' 2() weeks with 'one religious motivations: for, SlIp'" ,hour of; doctrine and 0l1~ hour poi:tirig this program. of' method given 00 the SAme' evening; once' :i week. . There will' be three levels, of See toH i're L~ymai1 classes.. ,this ,year-'one, for ele­ Business Man~ger ment:lry teachers, one for. high PUEBLO (N8).,..;....The Pueblo', school teachers,' and a, special class for those who have their diocese has decided to' engage a layman as fulltin'ie' business certificate ,in one of the other, manager. . courses. This, is the, first year' The decision was made at a' that such a, ,"gl'aduate course" has been presented. It will com­ meeting of the bishop:s advisory bine method and doctrine and eommittee and approved by will last for 'one hour. Charles A. Buswell, ,wno com­ Quite a few changes have been mented: "It is significant that made this year in the high the first decision maCle by the newly formed advisory council school course. In the methods section great emphasis will be was to hire a layman on a full­ placed on the psychology of the ~ime basis as business manager." teenager. Sister Joan Louise He said applications for the job says that high school of religion are now being accepted by the teachers should be well versed wmmittee. in the subculture of the ado­ The manager will perform lescent so they can begin with duties directed by the bishop to what intel'ests the teenager and facilitate efficient operation of go on from there to the doctrine material and financial programs to be taught. "This takes a lot of the diocese. He will coordi­ of kn<. v· how" she says with a nate budget procedure; compile. knowing smile. • handbook of business operat­ The psychology of children in ing procedures for parish busi­ various gl'ade levels will be ness functions, and study meth­ taught in all the courses. Though ods of fUlrd raising on the diocone particular gl'ade level book , esan and parish levels. and teacher's manual- will be

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The Tarahumaras are a small band, living under Stone Age conditions in the mountains oil Chihuahua State - about 26111 miles southeast of El Paso, Texas. Father Luis Verplancken, n former student at Southwestern University here, said the deatb­ rate among the Indians from starvation and exposure is high. Most of the victim's are children, he added. Fat her Verplancken currently operates a mission school and hospital at Creel iJlil Chihuahua State. The Southern Pacific Railroad offered to transport the supplies free and made available :tliv~ freight ears for this purpose. Volunteers among the local citi~ zenry, assisted by an Army He.. serve company, loaded the train. Father Verplancken's state-> ment was disputed by DIr. Antonio Caso, spokesman for the Instit.uto Nacionai Indigenista ii1 Mexico City. Caso said there are barely 30,000 Tarahumaras, alJUll he termed the priest's claim "ab­ surd' and denigrating."

ELECTRICM ContractOlliSl

VICTORY NOI..L SISTERS: Victory Non Sisters are, practically synonymous with CCD in the Fall River Diocese. At their Nodh Easton convent, Sister Martha Mary pre-' pares art work for popular "Little Flock;' telev.ision pro-' gram, while Sister Joan Louise, at typewriter, readies teach­ er training courses for Diocesan CCD program, of which she is supervisor. used as an example in the courses, to show the teachers how to use the manual and draw up lesson plans, the teachers will be ,given an overall view of the whole ]2 year CCD course. They will learn what is to be accom­ plished in each year's class; while getting an idea of how each year fits into the whole, picture.

Gi,ft Aids Family Planning Study ,HARTFORD .,(NC)--:-The arc)}­ diocese of Hartford has made a $15,000 grant to' .the' Natur~i Family Phinni;lgAssociation, a lay ol'gani:i;aiion' pr(l\~l<'lil)g COUllseling 'and pl'omotillg study 00 natural 'methods' of 'fam,ily plan": '.' Ililrg.· -In announcmg the' grant, Archbishop Henry J .. O'Brien called the study of family plan­ "ning "within a profoundly Chris­ tian context" a matter of !'prime personal and social importance." "Each married couple," the archbishop said, "J'las the right to consider together the children they can, by procreation and ed­ ucation,' bring to life and eternal life. "Factors bearing on this deci­ sion may include health, finances and the total psychological and spiritual development both of family members and of the fam­ ily as a whole, whether in itself or in its relation to the commu­ nity." The Natural Family Planning Association, he said, presents a means of family planning which "accords with the demand of conscience that the Christian commitment in marriage be in no way violated. It gives mar­ ried.couples a means which can be used with' good judgment 10 make a responsible 'decision."

Sister feels that discipline, problems in CCD classrooms 944 County St. could be kept to a bare mini­ New Bedfprd mum if there were in every parish an adequate physical set­ up for classrooms with privacy for each class-and if all CCD teachers were trained in doc­ trine and method. 'Joyful Task "When an untrained teacher :begins have problems he be­ comes discouraged," Sister says, The White... Sisters have ... But with the proper training this same teacher could be fiUed with ' tUrnM from their annual enthusiasm for the jc;>yful task' retreat ...... Me ready te ... of ,Ghristian witness. ,With.so many childre,!1 in p,ub.:. rs-.. ,their Yisiting and ­ lic schools today, she says, par-.. for the ' ent.s 'must be' 'cat~chists right .in . the home, 'al)d there is desperate " need 19r, ,adult- ed,ucation in' re)igion;; , , . ANYONE WISHING TJot_

Over and over one hears CeD AID, CALL

teachers say, "I get so much' more than I give in teaching. It's so 'wonderful, because I'm, ,learning all the time, too." Sis­ Holy, Ghost, ~onvem

ter has' heard teachers expreSs 'D94 SECOND STREET

these sentiments ,countless times. "Their own lives have been so FAII.L RIVER, MASS.

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THE ANCHORi..:.6ioc~se·0f Fcill River-Thurs. Sept.2~, .1966

By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. D.D.

n Is interesting to DOte how the BPirit 01 poveriy aftectIJ \tOme people, for eX~ple, tbe afnuent. ODele the ricb become poor in spirit, more of their necks wW be made out, DOt ee those who arl~ alreaclly rieb, but to those who are poor. A porter on a vain was onoe askecl aIMMri tipS. Be said the .rIeb tipped poorly and the relatively poor tipped genf1l'Ously. Be es:plaIDecI it this way: tbe deb are IEDOWIlI to be ricb, Ulererore the,. need DO~ give a good tip. bed tbe poor give good tiPS to give' all im­ pression of bleing rillh. But .this does no.t ioucb tbe more bash, . problem, namely, wllly is it that an institution tbat, alreacl,. bas 20 million dollars calll raise 5 million easily, while for 10 million lepers in the world lit is hard to raise a huntllred thousand. It is because those who possess give to those who already possess. Jlt is generally those wlbo have Utile who give' to those wbo have nothing.

~y ·Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy

If all historians wrote as well as Sir Arthur Brymn. does, there would be many more readers of history,and per­ haps much less repetition of the mistakes of the past. Sir Arthur is a scholar, a shrewd analyst, an almost entirely iml~artial judge. ~ut in 'ad- gUsh navy which, although con­ dition he has' a magical pen. sidered disastrous at the time, From it flows brilliant nar- eventually served a very good rative which holds the read- purpose; Nelson's astonishing

skin is superbly exemplified 1m: his latest book, The Fire and the Rose (Doubleday, 277 Park Ave., New Yo r l{. $4.95). ".. The contents of this volume are not new. They are drawn from previous books by ,Sir Arthur. . But they have -been revised t!l his. present purpose:,~hich to set forth momeI).ts· of :English 'history when time stood still and something decisive:-f()rc!,!ntu,:" ries in some ~ases, for gen~rations. in others-tr!lmmire4. In. each instance,' men WElrElJ:~adY': to"give theirliyes .for. a CO,nyi\=" tion or .a cause. Sometimes tha~ "rice" was. exacte~.,son}etil1\e~ ..

'S

1Il0~h~'fi~st epis~de'is ,~f ih~iate

'.' ,: I

God Love 'You

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victories at the Nile and at Tra­ falgar; Sir John Moore's para­ doxical service to England and the freeing of Europe' in his re­ treat to Corunna in Spain; and, climactically, the. smashing, at Waterloo, of Napoleon's ,at­ tempted comeback. Much of the matter, it will be . seen, is'military, and Sir Arthur has a gift for inaking us see and understand the complexities of a naval battle or a land engage­ ment. Qualities of Spirit But, probably more important,' he discerns the genius of Nelson and th~t of Moore, the reasons for their successful leadership. Both had concern for. everyone serving under" them; Nelson al­ lowed freedom of action to com­ maridei's whom he bad meiicu­ lously trained and to whom he disclosed precisely. what he had in mind; Mo.ore wanted an army comprisifig not jllst fighting men but thinking fightiIig men. ...,. , It is qualities of spirit that Sir Arthur seeks out,' studies, ex­ plains and holds to be the ruling force in crisis. Not for' him any' determinist interpretation of his­ tory, any merely mat!,!rialist theorizing, any downgrading o~, the will oeman. His viewpoint· is' a refreshment to the reader, and his powers of description a, .delight... . .'. Updike StorieS Joh~,Vpdike is:~onsideied:one. of, the top-m,ost.Americap. artilltll in fictjon ",r.itif:lg today. He is. indeed·a dazzling perfo:r,mer, as, seven books in ~even years have. proved. But the puplication.~ his latest, a collectiori of short stories entitled The, Music School (Knopf: 501 Madison Ave.~ Ne,w York. $4.95), occasions a' seriouS questi~~: What,or how much, does he have to say? These stories are 'technically superlative. They are beautifully put together, smooth, apparent~y unforced and without grinding of gears, burnished. Their verbal felicities are extraordinary, their detailing exquisite. But as one progresses through this collection, 'one feels increas':" ingly uneasy and dissatisfied. There is insufficient substailce to th~ storIes. They are not mer:" etticil)~s as Dali's paintirigs' are; but' they are considerably thin.' And when one gets irilo it story' called ''The Morni.ng," one bas a feeling that he is reading II parody of an Updike story.,'

....'- ­..

Do' You 'Wantt'1J'co Be Rea,ly Rich1

Lauds S'ir 'Arthur B',yantlls 'The Fire and the Rose

er's attention, fires his imagination, leads him to reflect. His

J

, DIRECTOR: Sister Maria Mercedes of the School Sis­ ters of Notre Dame has join­ ed the staff of the National Conference of Catholic Char­ ities in Washington as direc­ tor of the new division of information and research. NC Photo.

GermanCardsFtma!' ·t~· Visit 'Ne,We WASHINGTON (NC)-Juliull Cardinal Doephner of Munich Germarty,and 30 members.of.the· CatholIc' Academy of Bavaria will visit the headquarters of the National Catholic Welfare, Con­ ference here on Saturday, Oct. 8, beginning a three-week tour .of the: United States. . The group includes educators, ·journalists, and government of... ficialso' .' TI)~ operation of the NeWC, 'the Secrettirl::it of the American' '}jishops, will be explained to the German visitors by Bishop' Paul F:. Tanner, 'NCWC general 'sec-' .retary, and eight department' head's:' Later the' entire group will' visit MoUnt Vernon." ,Cardinal .Doepfner " .and hiD ' companions will arrive:in New' York' 'on' Wednesday, Oct. '5. After the visit here, they will go to South Bend, Ind., Chicago, Minneapolis and Collegeville; Minn., Los Angeles and San : Francisco. They will return to Germany from New York em Oct. 24.

The spirit of poverty is not primarily ,economic. ~ is l) 1lI!-. ceptivity, an availability, a. vulnerability to the needs of oth~rs. Just as sometimes a l:lass can be broken,,· by a violin when stru<:k byil. sympathe~c chord, so too, he who is poor in spirit is· capable of being wounded unto service by the 'misery which he sees. He makes .him­ self available to those who fall among robbers and ·throws OUit his arms to those who are sick.. The spirit of poverty, ,once it touches the rich, will give them the greatest.enjoyment of Ufe-that of making others happy rather than themselves. It is generally thought that the rich," are very:: fortunate because money will buy pleasures, in fact,U will buy everything . exCept 'poverty: B~t 'greater. happiness..: , ii" open' to 'thein, nanrlelythe' 'thrill of' 'becoming" one with 1Jbe, hungry, the sick and the needy. A.man'1'ltrue we.a1th ,.i.;i not,~ be found in the ledgE:r but in the, good ,that he doeS· to .othem., As.it has been said, "riches. are not "fl:om.an al,>Undance of worl!ily. gOods b~t<fr()m iI. contentedmind...,-:-· ... , ";'. ','l ',"

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-12th. ,century and..pri!Uarjly inA ISOntente,a milIull cannot eo-exis& witb n clinging toll"ich<e& .. volves .two me~, King Henry ,II .'ll'IIIIere fare two. ways tG have one avoid tbe ..otber. Tbe f4rst, b a'nd Thomas Beckett, Arch9i~11?~' to make out a Will, 1,~aviDg everything to. tbe ·Holy. ,Fatber ·wht!il ." of, Canterbury. Their conflict h~s through his Sociljty f,[)r the· Propagation of the Fai.th. wilR give . been retold, again and again, i.!1 it within tbe year of y,[)ur dJ'ath ~ the po.or missions of the worRlII. " our 'own day, in fiction, on .th~ The. other way is to.tal~e oat lIIn Annuity, receive an, i:ncome wbine, . f'l s·' S'l'r Ar'thu'r's . , ." YOllllive;re~u~,ey!»u,rtax~, a....d let the remainder go to the Holy at age, '.111 th elm. review of it is concise, colorful, lFa$lner to bed~t,ributed that ::vear.· This .. is ,the great advantagcg and judicious; . cf 'giving to Tine Socii1!ty !loll' the Propagation of Faith, the "mid­ . He' recognizes strengths and dneman"for the Holy Father, who gives·it to the poor. Fft weaknesses of· each antagonist, more infor.mation· wrH~ to me ,at 366 Fifth Av~nue, ~e.w. York. and the larger and lasting·mea~N.Y•.IOOO.L God.J,.ove Ji'01lL! . ' rio",·, ing, of what each was iT).tent qn, '. ' , . ",; . ,'.. ~q did. He 'is. perhaps. morEl: • 'GOD ',LOVE, YOU.. ·to M:.M. for ,$3,000. ,,"I have .. ax!vanced can­ symp(rlhetic to the king tt1aq., to., eel' :and know ..that ,this will be· my last gift !for your great work,": Beck~t,. but gives .tile latte.r. ~1J~1 . . . to C.W., a <:atechism pupil, who"gave'oor whole allowance Of mar~s for greatn~ss because of $1 ,for the poor.., . " his readiness "to brav:e and. suf-. fer violent death for the sake of an' ideal." Cut out· this coIUJlrlD; pm yoW' .sacrifice .to: it and mail iii to Battle of Cricy Most Rev~ Fulton JI. Sheen, National Director lof The Societ.~ Next comes the Battle' of' fQr the p.r~pagatiolll olf the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New Yorllt. C're'cy in 1346, where the English New York IOOlU., or too your Diocesan Director, Rt. Rev. Msgll". prevailed because ofa revolu-. &ymond T. COlI1SidiDe, 368 North MaiD Street, FaIR River, Mass. tioriary new weapon, the longbo'w .in the hands of'the Ei1glish coul~tryman. It was this same· White's weapon, in the same hands, Rumanian foliel!m~w Building Contll'C'Jldor which effected something of a "SPECIAt MILK . social revolution in England Expel Seminaraalll$ , Masonry from Our Ow&1l - sOllle 35 years later, in Wat Ty. BONN (NC)-Rumanian PG­ ler's 'rebellion, which ·is the si.lblicemen have' ordered 'almost :a . Tested 'Herd'" jed of Sir Arthur's next chapter. third of the faculty and studentIJ .Acushnet, ~ss. Wy 3-4451 , There is then a jump of almost in Seminary ,of the Alba Julitl , ' to 1651 'when .• Special MUk, rl'es ttl ree cen t u , , di~ese' to leave, -according • Cromwell had defeated the at-' • Homogenized Vito D Milk tempt of Charles II toregairi his ~~an Catholic JieWII ag~n~ • Buttermilk"

throne, and Charles was in peril The -police. interviewed the ~. Ttopiccma ();ange Juice" 1 'JIANmE' STlIIt' '

of his life. At the risk of their seminarians and several pro­ • C,Offee oV'd' ChOc. Milk . 'AIRHAVEN . WY 4-73t1 9wn lives, number of brave' f~rs and notified 'that, ! ' :;'g~ :- .Bl··t~ people, some of them noble, they' COUld IOngerJive lit'~.. 80me .of the rudest sort, con­ ~miijarY,O~Y,83gem~~ari_' trlvedto conceal him, to get him. ...... 'am" e"s ',P'rofess,"o'n~'al..~·· remain fiI. thet5 who had beea' ~ the'coast, and" to send: him off. 1";'111 . 3tudYI_',ng "the.re,'. ," ' . ...- DIVIDEND NEWS I

101100 ... , to safely in ·France; .' . t'O' . .~.nn r . Following . " flDe dismissal, .t. . Mili~y Matters NONE lOG SMAI.Il .

a ftSfEMAJIC The last five in'cidents took.' BALTIMORE (NC) - A pro­ *>me of. the professors, ~-,.ear'I'll3r SAVIftCS place between 1797 and 1915, the fessional city planner, Jack Ladd old BishOp Aaron M.atrOft fill. long and agonizing intervals Carr.. of the Annapolis Planning Alba julia began lecturinc tit a _STIIEII when Napoleon seemed invin- and Zoning Commission; has the seminarians himself. Undell' ;u SAII_ clble and England doomed. been appointed by Lawrence close confil}ement' 0' his ' .... PRINT'ERS • Jl£COUI In succeSSion, we have set be- Cardinal Shehan. to the new house, the bishop eannot Yirdt . . . OM. aneI P11C11111. foce us the muti~ies in the En- Archdiocesan Office for Plan­ the seminarians for classes; tiler feat SIV'IIU

-. Ding and Development. must eome to him. 95' 'Bridge St., lowell, .....

....1 P' °d Carr holds a master's degree lei. 4$8,-6333 ''l/eW resl entl' in city planning from the UniCatholic NEW YORI< (NC) - Sister versity of Pennsylvania and in Aox~'" Planes LONDON' (NC) - Brigadiecr ~lizabeth-Marie Keeler has been addition to his current job in BanI&: By Maat named to succeed Mother M. Annapolis has held top planning , Geoffrey P. ·Hardy-Roberts, 59, . aosTC*I Joques Egan as president of posts in Charleston County, S.C., a convert and a Knight of Malta, . We Pay The Postage 'CAMDEN, IG.J. Marymount Manhattan College, and Philadelphia. has been appointed Master of the • SOUTI YARMOUTII OcEANPOftll', IM.J.. Who becomes provincial of the The new archdiocesan·' office Household by Queen Elizabetlla • D£IOOS POll MIAMI U.S. Eastern Province of the Re- was established on the recom­ II. In this position, be willi blI2 • HYANNIS

llgious of the Sacred Heart of mendation of a 'Baltimore urban responsible for the domestic IJtAWNCKE:1, loll.

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Educator Soya ~~. Ca,tholic Schools Need ~w Vision

'PHI:

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'fflurs,, Sept. 29, 1'966

13

Munich Cardinal To Visit U .S~

MINNEAPOLIS (NO) ­

A top u.s. Catholic ~ucator a8Serled here: "C8Itholic ed­ ucation will l'I.ever be aban­

WASHINGTON (NC) - Mu­ nich's Julius Cardinal Doepfner will lead a group of 30 German Catholics on a United States doned. JIt will be re-evaluated, visit highlighted by conferences restructured; its phYSIcal and at the Washington headquarters human resources will be reap­ of the National Catholic Welfare portioned." , Conference (NCWC) and at sev­ j'But it has a contribution ~o eral universities. make and it will make it," Msgr. Cardinal Doepfner will arrive James C. Donohue, director of in New York Wednesday, Oct. 5 the Education Department, Na­ and go from there to Washing­ tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ ton for a tour of the capital's ence, told some 3,600 teachers official buildings and a reception and administrators at the annual at the German embassy. On Sat­ Minnesota Catholie Educational urday, Oct. 8, the prelate and Association forum. his companions, all members oX In this era of criticism of the Bavarian Catholic Academy, Catholic education, the mon­ will visit 'NCW·C headquarters signor said, there is need of a for a tour of the building and Dew vision for Catholic schools, explanations of the operations of 11 vision which emphasizes pro­ the various departments. fessionalism. . Following the NCWC visit, the This vision must speak to the gr.oup will visit George Wash­ heart of the human condition, ington's Mount Vernon home must arouse wonder, which is a and then return to Georgetown confrontation with God and the University for an ecumenicaX only unfailing antidote to bore­ discussion. The next day the cardinal and dom, he said. his party will fly to Notre Dame .Joy of Teaching University to receive an honor­ The potential for Christian ary degree and take part in a llumanism has never been great­ WELCOME TO ecCD CLASSES IN SEEKONK: Rev. John J. Murphy, ·administrator four-day international sympo­ er than at present, he continued. of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish, Seekonk, and Miss Emily Medeiros, teacher, wel­ sium on the condition of man. ~'Education is the key to the hu­ Following the conference, ~he -come young parishionerS to the CCD Center as the year's religious instruction classes man renaissance in the city." group will fly to Minneapolis, begin. . Msgr. Donohue called the joy where Cardinal Doepfner will of teaching the greate8t, chalpick up another degree, this time lenge to the Christian educator ' , ·from st. Thomas' College in St: today because "the making of Paul. A three-day ecumenicaX joy must be learned by each of . " study at St. John's University iJ:l you on your lonely own;" and Coliegeville· will follow. . must bloom from ·se)f-donatio~. .Followihg his visit to st. John'£! .the cardinal, will fly to.. Loo '. Asking' the nuns in his· audiAngeles and San· Francisco for ence to be "gentle women who short visits, and then return tc .By Patricia Fraaeis· radiate compassion," he noted New York for an Oct. 24 depar­ that the greatest harm a teacher A young, New,Bedf.;id eoupl~,married .less' tha~ a~onth-ago·at. .gt. James Church,: .~re 'for Germany. can· do . it "to hold Ii chUd up .., . ridicule." , are.· giving their first y~ar: of ·married life to' God. Paul WillIam .~ngloi~,22~. arid :his·. He stressed the bond between . bride the former' Ann ,Elizabeth· Mosley, ·2~, left the dayafterthelr wed(ll,ng ror a 'C~088" . ~sSerts.· ,~, ~.Iy t( loving . children and ~achinl them. . . . . country 'honeYmool) trip J;~ 'Ta08; }'Il.M. -This month they- starte<ia year-long stint a8 ~

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Nun's Yoeaiton Msgr. Donohue offer~d advice to the emerging nun uncertain of her role m the· .eontemporary Church. "The scope of your vocation should extend beyond your classroom," he said. "But let the avenue to the world beyond your classrQom be the children . within the classroom." Msgr. Donohue's vision of Catholic education included ecu­ menical dialogue and action programs. He said: "As Catholic teachers, you are distinctive. You have something to share with public schools." The monsignor, who is a mem­ ber of the Committee for Educa­ tion on Ecuinenism, added: "Ecumenism doesn't mean I gob­ ble you up and you gobble me up or that I change my spots to match yours." To stress the need Catholic 00­ ucation has :fIor a· vision such ae . he ol!tlined, Msgr.. Donohue quoted from the Book &f. Prov­ erbs, "Where there ill D.O vision, the people perish."

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skills for Dioceses· whic~ ~eed, them. . Paul, the. son cii :Mr. and Mrs. Gerard A. Langlois of Sacred Heart Parish, New Bedford, was graduated from Boston College in June. He is teaching biology in the 'Catholic high school in Taos. Mrs. Langlois, daughter ct Mr. and Mrs. Francis Mosley of St. James parish, -received her degree from Bridgewater' State College in June. She ill the· new first grade teacher at St. Joseph elementary school. The Boston Archdiocese for several years has been recruit- ing young Catholic college grad- uates and nurses for service in

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Dioceses that fteed well-~ucated lay ~postles. ' "Paul heard about it at Boston' College," Mrs, Mosley says, ~'and they decided that ,was what they .wanted to do." , Originally, the young eouple anticipated going to Japan. "But they didn't want a couple there, there was no place for them to live," Mrs. Mosley says. "And they wanted to be married." A call rfor help from the administrator of St. Joseph's was relayed to the two young gradustes as they were in the midst of the frantic last-minute preparations for their wedding. "They decided to go,"· Mrs. Mosley says. "And that was that." Their "salary" :lor their .,..vear·

Diocese Establishes Advisory Boards

'RICHMOND (NC) ',I' h e PROVIDENCE '(N<;::) -...,.;.; s, Richmond diocese·:is eftiablishing Senator Claiborne Pell of Rhode' II· 22-membeX: pastoral cQuncil, Island wa!! presented, Witt! ~ OO~~d Of 'Clergy, R~ligious: highest civilian award ·of the and, laIty, to consult WIth the Knighti oi Malta - the Grand ,- bi~hop on mattersrelatihg W ~ : Cross &f. Merit with Siar..., work of th·e Church. Count John Palffy,.' gra,nd Bishop John J. Russ~n also JAMAICA (NC)-The Second· magistrate of the Sovereign Mg- ann.ounced. the formatIOn., of annual meeting of the Eastern itary Order of Malta, made the . parIsh advlsor~ boards, .combll1­ Association of Religious Voca­ presentation in the senator's 00'- lng, clergy~ laIty, and m. t~os~ tion Directors is scheduled at fice here. The senator was hon- parIshe~wlth schools, RehglOu.s, Bishop Molloy Retreat House ored by the Knights of Malta in to. adVIse local pastors. Provl-. here in New York from Oct. 3 to 1960 with the Order of Merit sions for· both groups will be in­ 5. First Class with Crown. 'cluded in the Fourth Diocean Vocation directors from more Synod scheduled for early De­ than 70 communities are ex­ cember, but th~ process of ~cted to attend. The association electing clergy members to the fa a group of priests and Broth­ first group has already· begun. CINCINNATI (NC) - Arch­ ers of religious communities bishop Karl J. Alter of Cincin­ The step, Bishop Russell said, GJlgaged in recruiting a III d nati has promulgated a decree "is in keeping with the recom- 't ~reening of vocations. establishing a pastoral council mendations of the Second Vati­ Theme of the meeting will be: of the archdiocese and calling can Council, which has given "A Critique of the Vocation Di­ for the l'ormation of tl "parish great emphasis to the active role Fector and His Appraisal of the council" in every parish by the of the faithful in the work of Candidate." . the Church.i ' end of the l,ear.

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'MILWAUKEE (NC)-The only apartment-UI think It's two . discr~miQation pr;icticed by the rooms,'" Mrs;" Mosley .says-a ' 'Knights of Columbus is against stipend· and the feeling of satis- women according to the organ­ faction that comes from doing ization's .Wisconsin state deputy. something worthwhile. Lee· Everts of Appleton, at II Mrs. Mosley says tbe newly- fact-finding meeting investigat:­ weds "took some of their wed- ing discriminatory policies in ding presents with them. The private clubs, termed the K of C rest are put away until they get a "fraternal benefit insurance back." society." He said the K of C has Three weeks before their' Negro members but is unable daughter's wedding, the Mosleys' to list the number because appli­ son was married. Now the couple cations for membership do not IE alone. request racial background. . Mrs. Mosley already has To qualify, a member must be dreams of travel. "If they stay male, 18 years or older, a "prac­ more, than this year," she says, tical Catholic in Union with the speaking &f. her daughter and Holy See," he explained. "OUli' .... mew son-in-law, "I'd lik~ to go only discrimination is again8~ out there to visit." women because they can't be­ In ihe meantime, Paul and, long." , Ann Langlois are starting their life together with loving and· giving hearts. This is their wed­ din~ gift ~ God.

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Receives U.S. Aid ST. PAUL (NC)-The College cii ,st. Thomas. here' l'ec~iv~ $405,942 in U:S:.grants to estab­ iishlish a national program' in , inan~gemerit practice for state·, vocational rehabl1itati4m·· man- '

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':966 .. Names Make News at. Diocesan Highs As Students Fill' Class Offices, Activity Slots .., .••29. . -,..n: ANCHO~:~,~,~-~, . •... ,'" -" .\.

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Names make news this week around Diocesan high schools as brand-new seniors take positions of prominence and underclassmen al~o assume responsible class posts. At :Mt. St.· Mary, Acadertiy, F,tlll River, Jeanine,' Beaudry is senior class . t - vi51·t·mg, the'R ose· ,, .president " dand· ' '. chi'" a proJec; ~omeroom ' VIC~ - presl ' ents Hawthorne Lathrop Home; spon:­ IDclude Andrea Schnell, De- ,soring lectures during the aca=" nise St. Laurent: and Betty', demic year; an~ 'making Mercy

and fasting for peace by Law­ rence Cardinal Shehan in re­ sponse to Pope Paul's encyclical! on peace, Christi Matri Rosarii. . Special observances on the evening of Monday,. Oct. 3 win begin the peace 'program in all Czerwonka.' 'Visitations 6f the si.ck and aged.':' parish, churches where prayers St. J osephPrep School'in Fall Co),'le High Schqol ,in Taunton' ' for peace .will be followed by River reports thlitNormaPelle­ announces that Tauntonian Har-, exposition of the Blessed Sacra-' tier has.been, elected' school ,Old Oromweil has been selected, m~nt and public'recitation of the president. Class presidents, are by the National Merit Scholar­ Rosary during nocturnal'adora­ Marie Deroehers, seniors; Clau-" ship' Corporation, as a Com­ tion. dette Connier, juniOrs; Denise' mended Candidate. He is one of Special Masses will be cele­ Beaudoin' sophomores" Ann 3,000 such candidates who will ;> brated the following morning Braga fr~shmen. Edito; of the compete fore 1,000 positions as and. prayers' will be offered by BChooi pa'perc is Lucille Lambert, . ,cQnt~st finalists.' As a finalist he children throughout the day in aided by Theresa Desbiens as would, be eligible for Achieve­ archdiocesan schools. The car­ assistant editor' and 'Paula ,ment Scholarships ranging in dinal has aske'!d ail to join in Richard . Sandra Racine and value from $1000 to $6000 over a voluntary fasting and abstinence Claudette Leblanc as cirCulation four year college period. The from meat during the day. managers. list of finaltsts will be made The oQservances will be con­ blic Sports are getting' o~g~nized Pl1 , in mid-N~vember. . cluded that evening with Bible at Dominican Academy, Fall The .C?yle semor has bee? a .' and prayer services and special River, where Mary Harkin. c!ass o~Icer and student co~n­ hOmilies in all churches. A par­ Therese Chouinard and Carol cillor for two years, and a wm­ ·ticular invitation was extended Cabral are in charge of volley:' ner of two varsity letters in by the Cardinal to Jews and ball intramurals; and' Carol basketb~Il. .. , BRIGHT bIGHTS: Among Feehan High School re-' Protestants to attend these ser­ Masse, Anne Marie Folster and At BIShop. Feehan .High·, III vices. Gloria Moniz are on the bowling Attleboro Nah~nal Ment Letters· cipients of letters of commendation from the National' Merit . The day of prayer is scheduled league committee. ' of C:0mmendatlOn have gone. to Scholarship Qualifying Test are, seated from left, Jane. for the first anniversary of the Heading a large yearbook staff D?mel Blake, JaI;le Gremer, Pope's visit to the United Na­ at Prevost High, Fall River, will Rlch~rd. MacAdams, Elrse Par­ ; Grenier, Margaret Mulligan; standing, Richard MacAdams, tions where he began his Cru­ Daniel Blake, Paul Jacobs. Not pic.tured, Blyse Parmentier. be Norman Martel, editor; and mentier, Margaret Mulhgan and sade for Peace. Paul'· Carrier .a'n d Richard Paul Jacobs. Rashed, assistant editors. Also At Novitiate potluck supper of' the Mother hootenanny session and various in the line of journalism, the Forty Mt. St. Mary students McAuley Guild was held last skits. New faculty members at OpetrnsBeatgfB<!:l!J,tion Prevost Maple Leaf will be ed­ ,and Feehan band members and night, with proceeds going the Fall River academy are Sis­ ited by Donald Cummings and an additional 40 Feehan students towards the new academy organ. tel' Mary Eleanora, music de-' Cawse of MisSBOI'i1~r Richard Desrosiers. representing classes Class rings are in the spotlight partment head,' Sister Mary . I t· 't' and'llextra­ SINSINAWA (NC) - Bi~hop Prevost class presidents in­ curncu ar ac IVI Ies WI join a~ P,revost; where juniors re-. Timothy and Sister Mary Mich-' William P. O'Connor of Madison lillude Paul' Gendreau, heading students from o~her. schools ·ceived them at the, beginning of ella. Sister Mary Ludivine has officiated at the opening of the Senior A' Richard Rashed Sen­ conducted by the SIsters of Mer­ school. At Mt. St. Mary, juniors been named vice-principal, the ecclesiastical tribunals in the lor B' Thomas Kerns Junior A' cy in the 'annual Fatima Sun­ will be measured !for their pre­ first to hold the position; beatification cause of Father procession ... A math club is in process of S amue I ' M azzu,chelli, O.P., pio­ T t Cat Mother of Mer- cious circlets on Oct. 3. Mount Rober't Rheaume , Junior B:, day N Louis' Albernaz Sophomore A' ey OVI Ia e" umberlarid, R. I. seniors are also busy sitting for .organization by Sister Mary neer missioner in the Indian in­ David Poisson, S9ph<?more B. .' on Oct. 2.. their 'senor pi~tures. That proj­ Virginia and other math depart­ habited Midwest during' the Meanwhile at Taunton's Bish­ The annual magazine drive ect too should be c;ompleted by , ment members at F'eehan; and, mid-1880s. op Cassidy High, RoseJtiaryMc~- 'wi~l open at "Dominican Acad-' Oct. 3.

also at the Attleboro school sen­ The tribunals' were held in Kenna has 'been :electedstudent: .emy,tomoxrow and at, DA, Hply The Feehan band is getting in, ior pictures have been taken and' Queen of the Rosary chapel of liWuncil- president. Electionma- Family, and most other DioceSan' 'trim for 'weekly 'appearances at·, members' of the '67' Flashback the Dominican Sisters' St. Clara ehiIiety followed st~~dard civic' ,Ngh~, t,he Io~aTestll, ~f Ed,u~a- Saturday football games. 'Its ef... staff, are busy with ..layout and ~nve~t her~, in Wisconsin: procedure, with candidates re-tiori~ Development· have )*ien 'fOrts 'be' reinforced' by the· other,. photography. Co-edlto~' ,Th,e. Itali'a,n-born Dominican fluiredto, obtain _nomin~~ion.' ~~E:!~,. bY.lltud~?ts.:. .f'1r~~~~< ,~h~l ,color gu~rd .~p;~ majGr.,., ~ne Lapointe' and l\!larian ,Har':" 'wor~e'd, mostly alone, for 34 papers and signatures of 40 sup- th~e.yearly exams IS to measure . ett~ .. The 'l~ter,: says, reporter riB announce· that the staff' has" years-from'1830 until his death porters, and prospective voters indlvld';laL achievement a n,d r ~arle Fra.tom, wIl~ be marching .• aIready".settled on .,a ' cover,. de-' :' 'in' ""1864'- in' MiChigan, in ~rimary ~nd,f~naI',ele~t~~p:S',a~!1<!~W:lP gro'Y,th, ' . . . ' . .':, ~nnew U~ll!0rm.s thiS season. , ' "Sig~ J.or.the,annual. .. ", ," ..::' WisconSin; Illinois' and t~wa. haVIng to regIster III 0t:der to Qe ,Prevo!lt and,Jesus-Mary Aead"" ~nd Feehall;Ites and, students·....... Sister. .MaryNoel, R.S.M. of Father Mazzuchelli was buried Cliligible to cast ballots.";'" , "'emy have united their sodalitie~" of ·~therar,ea schools are antieh-. ".~he·Feehan...faculty. will attend ill Benton, ·Wis.. -: , ; Also at Cassidy, Donna Perl'l :' to,J'Ornl .the "Christian Youth patmg the annual appearance of, .the.N~w>England School De:velwill represent Southeastern Movement." Activities and' meet- Pl;lyers, ~nc., scheduled this year. ,. opment. C,o.unci! cor;tference in .. " " . . . , Massachusetts at a GirP·Scout· fngi;"ofthe new' group will ~ . for Tuesday, Oct. 11 at Bayview. Lynnfield;: ~ass..wednesday.. , Behind Curtain Council Meeting in De~r.?~t..~E1,r" JI~JcUointly and officers of both- 'To be';offered is a pr?duction o~. ,9(:t,~ 5., The,,subject utIder dis-..,.· MADRID (NC)->-Joaquin'Ruiz selection for this. h0n.0r 'Vl!~ ,former sodalities will form an The. Merchant of Vemce. . . ,c~I9n ,~~ th~ all-:darmeeti?g 'c Gimenez"a teacher and ,president based on her serVIce reco.rd· as" executive council governing the RIbbon . Day at, ~ommlcan ,~Ill,,~ :J;'utt,mg P:oJect,.' Wnte . , of Pax, Romana, announced .here a. Scout .and on a p~rsona! I~~~f­ moxement.. Planned, projects for Acade~y IS s~t. for FrIday, Oct. mt9.1he Classroom." ,that ,the international Catholic view. FIVe other gIrls Will Jom _ the CYM mclude a visit to an 7. ThIS tradItIonal ceremon~" . organization will try to make h~r ~s area ~elegates' t? the. area. nu~sing ho~~, a ~ake sale note~ Nancy Anne GancarskI, IF [j'e~~ ~Il'\)'ft rn n CIhl MIT"" h cOntacts and open dialogue with MIchIgan. meetm~. All ·thelr· ex-' and Issumg of a Jomt newspaper, consI~ts of class songs and pres­ ~ people livin behind the Iron penses WIll be paId. . .. . "Action." . entation. of.green, yellow, red 01ro$\1'nfrMU'@1l lF~aBll1l<dl®@j Curtain. g And at Holy FamIly HIgh In Cassidy stude~t, Gheryl • Mc"- ,'and ?lue bows. to be worn re­ New Bedford junior class pres- .. Cl:!firey ,~a.sPr.esented an honor':' " . s~~ctIve.ly., ,bY' ~reshl,Ilen, sopho­ NEW YORK (NC) - Forma­ idents are William Gushue, able mentIon award iIi 'news::' .mores,'Jumors and seniors. tion of an Institute for Freedom Room 6; an~ Ronald Lyonnaise, . writing' by: 'the Catholic SchoiasAlso:at, D~, C;:hris~mas is al- in the Church was announced at Room 2. Sophomore presidents' tic Pre~s Association. Her sub- ready. m the aIr, as glee club a press conference here. are, Paul Healy, Room 4; and mission, entitled "Junior Digs members welco/TIe ~iste~ Jeanne It was said the institute with a . James Berry, Room 3. Way to Fame," reported the ar- qe, Chantal as theIr dIrectress board of directors of 30 priests, Senior student councillors atchaeological activities of Cassidy r and embark upon ~ehearsals for nuns and lay persons, w.as HF ,are James Tynan, Diane 'junior Andrea TrczinskI . the 'annual Yule program. Two formed to deal with "recurring' CITUES SERvaCE Jriod:hi, .Frances McInt,yre ,a.nd ,~. Also in the.' journalis'tic line" sel~c.tions alreadY' chosen for' problems of personal freedom' , DISTRI~"-",)RS Jay Dwyer. Juniors ~re Ric;hard "' aFthe Taunton'school the Cas.' performa,nce are "Alleluia" and within. 'the 'institutional struc­ Taber, Margaret Mary McIntire, <siay'newspaper mem6rt '. 'fw;illie 'rake YouI; Drum." tures of the Church." Margaret Andrade and Carl'" book, Paw" Prints and ,Corona, 'A new basketball-basebaH A statement of pu:rpose said Gasoline

Champagne; and sopllimlores ";:willbe represented at the New, coach.. has' been appointed at the 'gtoup sees a "l~ck .of chan­ Fuel and Range

are Dennis Tucker, Dianne Jal';;' : 'England Scholastic Press Asso- ' Prevost. The athletic director ill nel~. ~or ..commumca:tIon,; and, bert, Joyce Goodman and John dation's conference .FridaY" 'and, ~o.ugl~J: Baxendale, formerly, m~~a~on In the C~urch,,, lack iGushue·. Saturday, Oct. 28 arid 29. Taking. nil charge. ~f sports at. Diman .. of. ~eva~ce'~ach~ne~y, : a~d Sodality Projects 11 journalism Iich 9l arship exam ~ a~d.,., W~ts?n schools 111 Fall a current pol~rizatlOn WIthlB BUftNERS At Mt. St. Mary the school at :Bosten' UnIversity in the ~.RiV;er...: the Church on ~Sl,JUe8 of personal :rear's first assembly was high- ~ cour,se -of,fhe conference wi~ be." "Jrre~hmen,~ti·~morswill get ~0IlIL For' pr.. Jelivei'y' llighted by brief talks from. Mananne ·~herben" Anne SlIva, . acq~a.lp~ed~ thIS. w~k at Mt. St. &NlgM ~r";iCe aodality officers, who' summa:';' Jane .DaCosta_ a n~,cl., Christine :-~ry' Illt)li , e ,:o~r~'fof an .infoc:-'. 'S'EF'O'RE", y"O" i, l'ized activities at the Summer VictOrIa. ~ .' , , ' ge ...toget~er-.:. eatllnng a ,'" School of Catholic Action helel . Merey Diiy., .. :," ,.-:",: ::.- . ' .' .... , ., c', BUY- BY during the vacation in New ~orlt '. - Hardly wereMt:.St.:Mar~·stu,.;\:.;<."R~bbi ,. luraf ,lottIeci Gas, aty. . . . ~~ntsback at. school 'bef0fe th~i.'::i':~:s6tfrif ORANGE (NC) - A. ;,'

Semor sodallsts, led by Pre­ JOined the filsters of Mercy 'in ' rabbi has joIned the faculty of : , "~"C~HA~NET ~•. : ·leet Car~l Bednarz, have chosen celebrating Mercy Day last Fri- Seton Hall University here. D r ; " ." ..

TAUNTON four mam apostolates for' the day. The festal program included : Edgar "Mills of· Hillside win be OLDSI\~OBII,E' ",

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CEN!ftDt·'¥JLI;E WomenIs Guild membeJlS wiJ1 sponsor 8 WJDmafJe sale in the chureh hall from 10 to 1 Satur­ day., Oct. 1. Miss K-at}Jerine Dooley is' ehairman and Mrs. George Phelan is eo-chairman. A snack bar win be in charge of 1\IIrs. John Bacci and Mrs. Charles Mahen', aided b¥ teen­ age gk-ls of the parish. In process of planning ill an Autumn tea, with MPs. Albert Scaramelli and Mrs. Heyworth Backus in charge of arrange­ ments. The October guild meet­ ing will be highlighted b¥ tl fashion show arranged ~ MH. Edna. Dewey, Hyannis. ST• .JOSEPH, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will spon­ sor a whist party in the school hall at 8 tonight. Boy Scouts wiU meet at 6:30 tonight in the Brightman Street hall.

IIOI¥Y NAME, FALL RIVER The Fall season will begin for the Women's Guild with attend­ ance at 8:30 Mass Sunday morn­ ing, Oct. 2, followed. from 3 to Ii Sunday afternoon by the an­ Dual tea and reception for new members, held in the parish school. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE A rummage sale held last week will be repeated from 1 to 5 this afternoon in the parish hall, under sponsorship of the Ladies 'Guild. . The guild will hold an open meeting at 8 Thursday night, Oct. 13 for all parishioners and their guests. A short business meeting for members will pre­ cede a showing of slides on the Vatican Council by Rev. Edward Mitchell, Holy Name Parish, Fall River. Refreshments· will be served.

ST. PATRICK, FALL RIVER Mrs. 'Norman Desjardins will serve as chairman of the pot" luck supper and silent auction scheduled by the Women's Guild for Monday night at 6:30 in the school cafeteria. Members and their friends may bring articles for the auc­ tion on the night of the affair. Each Guild member is urged to bring a guest. For further information con­ tact either Mrs. Desjardins or Mrs. Joseph Richards.

SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER Troop 17 Boy Scouts will hold a fathers' night tonight in the church hall and Cub Pack 17 will hold its first, full pack meeting of the season tomorrow night. Parishioners are planning a gala Christmas ·Festival in the church hall all day Saturday, Dec. 3 climaxsd by a supper and penny sale.

ST. MARY'S CA'Jl'illEDRAlL, FAL RIVER The Bay Colony Chorus will provide the entertainment for the regular monthly meeting of the Women's Guild to be held Monday night at 8 in the Sham­ rock Room of the Corky Row Club. . ~ Mrs. Henry Urban is chairman of arrangements.

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ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER Mrs. Roger Caron will serve as chairman of the "The Seni~r Citizens Night" that will be the theme of the Oct. 101tu meeting of the Women's Couneil of 'the parish'. .

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WASHINGTONS (NC)-Girls who are interested in educa­ tional, vocational and personal development will receive tui­ tion-free class instruction and guidance at the Stonecrest Com­ munity Center here.. Dr. Joan McIntosh, director, said beginning Oct. 3, girls from the WaShington area between the ages of 15 and 21 will participate in programmed courses in business; nursing aide and home making. The courses will be conducted by volunteer profes­

Does sh~ know something­

you don't...about Holsum'bread?

Could be. She knowe nutritious foods, .like milk, are good for dieters. She beaM H0lsum Bread is, too. But wasn't sure. The:n. she discovered~ ounce for ounce, Holsum Bread bas more protein, less-fat, more iron and B vita· __ than milk. And! slices average less calories that a glass of milk. So

milk and Holsum Bread are now on her family's' diet. Try it

sionally qualified personnel, ift<>

eluding..educatf)rs, home econo,.

mists, physicians, nurses, busi.s.

SACRED HEART, ness women and others, pluS

FALL RIVER guest lecturers. The project is

Mrs. John :1. Burke and Mrs. sponsored by .. the w 0 men's

Arthur Pavao will serve as. cO- branch of Opus Dei. ~hairmen of the open meeting T h ~ StonecrestCommunity and coffee hour scheduled by Center, a non-profit organiza­ the Women's Guild for Monday . tion, ainis toward aiding girls night at 8 in the school hall. Rev.' 10 develop talents for first clasu ·,John R. FoIster will be guest citizenship and productive em­ speaker. ployment.

Holsum .has_it!

tion. This is in keeping with the wishes of the club's founder, Msgr. Felix Childs, now retired, who led it at St. Louis Church from 1945 to 1953, when he was taken seriously ill, and who re­ vived it and led it again, at Sacred Heart, from 1959 to. 1985•. Understandably, other activi­ ties prohibit many from attend­ ing the 6 o'clock Mass on First Friday evenings, but members usually manage an impressive' showing, even in bad Winter' weather. The speaker for· Oct. '1 will be Rev. James W. Clark of St, ,Joseph's parish, Fall River. Hill lopic will be ''The Lay Mission of the Papal Volunteers to Latin" America." Would you like 10 join? Just telephone 4-3008, and leave your name, address and phone num­ ber with John Morgan, who will . assign you to a phone captain . for a monthly call to check a~ . tendance and predetermine the amount of food to be prepared. The cost of the meal is always kept at a reasonable f.igm'e.

J'OW'8~

Twice the Protein of mitk 60% of the calcium 13% less Fat 50 times tile IroII 30 times the Niacin

7 times the VItamin Sa 98% of the Vitamin ... These are _ for oul108 c:omperlsoAs'per U. S. Dept. of Agrk:ultuI8, Handbook No. &

Fall River First Fridians Resume Meetings At Night Mass. Oct.. 7 Friday, Oct. 7, the First Friday Club of Fall River' will resume its annual practice of qbserving nine' consecutive First Fridays. The club, as always, is seek­ ing new members, and all inter­ ested men are most cordially in~ vited to participate. There are no temporal bene­ fits or obligations. The club is strictly spiritual. There are· no· dues, no applications, no initia­ tion, no parades, no ritual, no uniforms and no outside projects or programs! The meeting place is Sacred' Beart Church, Fall River, aJ;ld iU nearby school cafeteria, where men. gather :froIn nearlY every parish in the area, to honor Christ in his greatest gift, 1be Eucharist. Following Mass and Communion, those who ean, go to the school eafeteria for ail -.ening meal and a brief talk by a well qualified and carefullj chosen speaker. Rev. Lester BuD, pastor er Sacred Heart, bas permitted the dub to continue its meetings tbeh\ W1der biB spiritual dk.ee-

011

Holsum •••

-

the bread to buy! .

-.


o

'16

THE ANC~l)h--Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 29, 1966

- ' lUJ I?®® ~~~ (lJJ mlOlh~ W'@weriy OTTAWA (NG) - The Catholic bishops l)f Canada have suggested that a war "on poverty is om~ area in

Anci®~U' Ob$t~c~es [f{]@:Qft~e!l

Latin

E~forts

to

Ra~@

, which Christian churches should unite. In their annuaJ Labor Day statement the bishops under­ scored primarily the q~stion of poverty in Canada is not the massi problem it .is in Asia, Christ has said "the poor you Africr., and Latin America, where the Canadian Church is shall always have with you," the bishops' statement noted, but doing everyth:ing possible. they said this should be a sUm­ , .Joint PrograllllS "Without diminishing in any 'ulus "causing us to strive by every means to reduce the gap way our sympathy ~md gener­ between wealth and poverty osity ,for the poor of other na­ tions, we must begin here at and spread our material abund­ home to assist those whom op-' ance more equitably." portunity has passed Illy and who The bishops said that while are trapped by forces b~yond much remained to be done, they their control," the message said. were confident the problem of The bishops suggested that poverty could be solved through "all Christians join together, mo­ ,Canada's vast raw material re­ bilizing the full talent, energy sources, technical know-how and resources of the entire and motivation.

Edited by JolltlR J. Considine, M.M. From "Social Rev<l)iution in the New Latin America" Latin American maR ~enced in, the nineteenth eentury theculminatioJ,\ ofa prooess of racialfusi(i)l1 that lllad begun three ,centUtr:ies earlier. n is t(!) thecreclitGf the Spanish and ,Forttl~l:!ese t,hat they did not aH@w tM three great etmuceiemeH'ts forts th~t civilization is making that made up ~p.ulatiofl acceSsible to all. tao stagnate int@disparate And this very psychel<ilgjcal segments. But it fell to' the intercommunicatiGn, through the

ve

utII'

!leW republics 10 ,complete thili process. It :was -th~y who. aver-

ooming great internal di:fificulties, abolished the ignominy of slavery. But they did not stgp there: the aboriginal Indi~ an, the former African, and especially the man of mixed blood who, in some p I ace s such as Venezuela, by 1800 made up half of .the population ~onquered, :through war _and at the price of 'manY other sacrifices, the fullness of equality. The aohievement in aotu~l t /§act, and !in the spheres of power, of an effective equal participatio", regardless of .whllt pempous eonstitutional texts might P('oclaim, did' not come in man:t' areas except through V'iol~ce. Many ObStacles The drama endured be' Latin Americans in ,thei'r :searcllJ<n II Illew social orgariization witkiR a framework of democratic instilutions bas been re:gardee lIemetimes with contempt, nat sel~m with aoer.bity and ,almost alway.s wi\h 'injustice. 'The ,emel',gence of Afr,ica ,into' the world scene, populated by Vhose w'he, uRnl 'only yesterday, wer.e deprived of all their rights; their tormented efferts, despite ,thefactMtat in general they were 'nat :forced to endure a long and cruel war of emancipation ,as' in Latin America, may give at lesst an approximate idea of the i3bstades that we confronted in OUI' lands to organ&e the new republics. This, in spite of the fact that, as Bolivar remarked, "we were already old. in the usages of civil society." We bad UBi versities before they e~dsted no North America; we hall minoritres who were well aware 9f leultural developments in Eu­ rope, though perhaps less up tiJ date in the -advances of technol­ ogy; but we also had inhel'ited fl'om the colonial structure huge illiterate majorities who, in many cases, not only did liIot know how to read and write, but had not received the most rudimentary mstruction f 6:1' G!arnin,ga decent living. iHtn=lilJRagihts It is necessary to understand all the real elements of the Latin Americandrama"to visualize the magnitude of the problems and of the undertaking that must be faced by the men of this gener­ ation. Moreover, the very links of solid,arity that today tighten world relations have served to make even the humblest huillan being aware of the fundamental idea of the rights of the human person. To him these ideas are G!mbodied not only in the ,theory of free expression of thought and of participation through suf­ frage in the organization of pub­ lic power, but also in more con­ .erete form in the right to eat 11 full meal, to live under a decent 'roof, to found a family, tore­ eeive an educatien, to have amusement and leisure and to participate in the essential oom-

press, radio, televisien and all other media 'of mass communica­ taion, plus.the il'lcessant ,efforts of commercial 'and' industrial propaganda to ereate new nec­ ess.itiesand increase the Dum­ berof oonsumers, have taught ' our people til> as]Jlire r~ghtfuUyand .sometimes to the detriment of their economic structures--:="'to all these achievements, .such as the'refrig'erator and the air COll­ ditioner, the radio and television sets, the automobile, which all make up the im:a.ge of a modern welfare ,dvilization. After World War I ' The aftermath 'of the first W:orld War was not "without its effect ,on iIlhe mentality afa DeW Latin American generatian; an, effect limited~ perhaps, to the upper strata" 'and~ially to '1ihe inteUectuals.Exeept for the very peculiar phenomenon of the Mexican revolution and some 0 t he r equally unsuccessful movements 'in other counfi'ies, these times were not marked by great upheavals of the masses. However, in the circles of the mteHigentsia" :and espeeiaU¥ in u.niversity, milieus,the ide&log­ ical crisis suffered by Europe had considerable repercussions. The prevalent worldwide un­ rest, the skepticism that sttOGk the more cultured .peoples, th,e 19S5Bf faith in a demBCr.ac~' that had only led .to totalitarian out­ bursts, :the effervescence @f c@m­ munism and of 'fascism, the bankruptcy of traditianal vaiues: aU this was bound to, leave its mark on the thoughts and be­ havior of the generatian that be­ gan ,to act during the third dec­ ade of the twentieth century. The anguish of ,the reality they faced led them easily toward the Marxist ideolOgy that was heginning to be applied­ before the astonished eyes of the world and to the surprise 9f idiots through the audacity of -Lenin. New Ideology It is true that in some coun­ tries-those that had enjoyed a more stablepoUtieal life, such as Chile, Colombia or Uruguay -the old party structures still persisted. But the struggle be­ tween Liberals and COllserva­ ,tives,once meaningful in the context of the emerging repub­ lics, was losing its meaning un­ less it was sustained by the' per­ sonal magnetism of its -leaders. Against those old political structures a new ideology was rising,cradled in the universities and high schools, in literature and the press, and in the embry­ onic labor unions. In countries such Venezue­ la, oppressed throughout the first third of the century by an iron dictatorship that swept away the old parties and kept us isolated from the world in which we lived, the coming of freedem was a clarion call for the new ideas. Old politicians, full of merit, called upon their people ,to re­ build the ancient party organ­ izations, but not even the halo of their sufferings as victims of the tyranny moved the peopl'e to structures that they regarded definitely as a thing of the past. A similar story might 'be told

as

W (I r

Christian community" againBt poverty. "In this day of widespread co­ operation among the churches, ,is not poverty one area where we can work together in design­ ingjoint programs of action boUl in our pastoral missions and in our dialogue at the community level for 11 common Christian witness?" the statement asked.

,

'

INDIIA:

FATHER

.JACOB

.JOHN

HE MOLY :'.""'''''11 MtUtoN AID TD TM& 'aA~NTAL CHURCH

HIELPfINGi From VaySlathale, southlAdia. Father Jacob 'OTHER. JGlfmasks ttelp, not pi\)': "MY'.peopht'a1'e penni· WORSHIP 'Ie',ss, 'yell, and lOme of tl:lem ar.1tung/y bec9use GODWII tutti,nlll rain. But all of us Will work. Just give 'lit; tlle 'ltnolls' ,and see the1eb wewif) do!''' • , • ;n,,. ''toGIs' are mrili;lumber. cement. to give, . .IdIII declent 'church•••• "WheD we.sta:ncf out­ door. fllll' SUfl(lay Mus,non~r.taunt us:' tbiiaua:louaprleat r~.nWa 'mtI5t have a ­ ,new chlJ1'Cll, to Woramp ,properly; anj wt.oknowa '!how many .«l&J1vortsit wiH 'bringl" ••• Tile total ~ltia wry 'low ($3,100, ,for ma'tet1als), for the CIoltar in Imliatoesat ,klast thl'fttimes ali far. ,BelJides, there witt :be 110 c1Ierge for tabor.­ 1'aIl:tler Jecob .andhls people will do-t!lU the wori< tiMifflselveal • • • "For the peran (or family) 11tlit givMall the materials, we wm .reet. p1a;que !!It the 'entrance .asking prayers forever, H 'falther Jacob ,promlsest ",Besides. .'11 ramem· ;bel" ltWl"y donor In eve/y 'Mass." .•• Is this the dlllrahy.ou want to build now '($3,100) as your me>-tirM mission gift? 'Even 'parttal gifts ($100, $'7!i. $50,$25, $-15, $10, $5, $2) -wiRhelp make yltlilh/lppy. You'll know .you'r<t helping others WO;rship God. Mali oomething now.

e. W's

e~sume

that one priest can take care of 1.2SOCllth!llics. To meet that figure, 30,715 ,prklSts 'would have to be ordained If!lmedlately. _ • "You can train a priest overseas (we'll send Jou:hlil name, and ;he ,will write to )'ou) for snlY ­ p:,~ '. month, $1000 year, $600 for the en- ' t~re 's!lc:-year course. We'll sertd ),OU full detail.

ENTER: Four June grad­ uates of Mt. St. Mary Aca­ demy,Fall River, have en­ ,tered the Mother @f Mercy Novitiate, Cumberland. Top to bottom: Joan Bershara., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Bershara, Immacul;;lte COIlception parish, Fall Riv­ er; Joyce Forneiro,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. -James Folt"­ neira, Holy Ghost Parish" Tiverton; Dorothy Morton., granddaughter of Mr. 'and Mrs. Lawrence Corrigan, St. Patrick parish, Fall Riv~r; and Nancy Picard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Normand Picard, SS. Peter and Paul Parish, Fall River.

GR 'I~t of your lIretgift.

·0 ,MAn IPrlaGts studying SCripture In Jerusalem can offer IIFOR promptly tile MaH6S you 'i'equost. (Novamber, YOUIl! ~member, Ie the month of the HoJy80uls.) INT!ENTICiN 8lmplya8f\d ... JOUr Intentfonll.

.

Was: .yotWwttt dnIWh by • ~ correctly? Is It $Itflll.lp-to·ctate1 Haw youprovlded fGr your parllsh, )'O!.IIr Dioeese, and the Holy 'Father's poor? tea your ~wyer our legal \me Is CATNOUU NEA. 'l!Aln'WILf'ARit AsSOCIATION_ __

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TNo of the Dominican Republic, when in 1961 it unburdened it­ self after 30 years of oppressive dictatorship. With cedain variations due w differences in time, it will be told of Paraguay or NicaragulIl when the teams that currently govellP disappear and the people can breatre deeply a.f·the aid of liberty.

filIl3asa

returni'.Upl)11il

.~IZIIlii:I.~'c=IID~._e--

't:lM'H~1UO

'.'14UI IADT WILIlAAIi ADBIUIIATION


Cardinal Scores Lawyers Action On Abortion

THE M'

Thurs., s.

I' I

"', 1966

17

l

-

ChU('~Lu _~~~ncies

_SUPP~[~~ A~peal

LOS ANGELES eNC)­ Support of the California State Bar Convention for re­ laxation of present abortion laws was called "scandalous and deplorable" by James Francis Cardinal McIntyre. The archbishop -of Los Angeles attacked the bar convention ac­ tion in a statement in which he expressed shock that lawyers would endorse action "tanta­ mount to murder." The state bar convention asked its board of .governors to spon­ sor legislation permitting abor­ tions in cases of rape, incest, grave danger -to the mother's health, or likelihood that the child would be born defective. A similar bill, sponsored by_ Assemblyman Anthony C. Beil­ enson, failed to pass in the last session of the state legislature. "The bill, as well as the action of the state bar convention in approving it, is'-shocking, scan­ dalous and further evidence of increasing disrespect and irrev­ erence for basic law and divine moral principles," Cardil1lal Mc­ Intyre said. "The Beilel1SOll measure," be eontinued, "provides- a liberal­ ization of practice that infringes 4)Il the law of nature-the nat­ ..ral law. It would permit, witb':' Ilut legal cuJpability, ~iOll by doctors ~ others that would be tantamount to the classifica­ tion of murder in the general ae­ eeptance of that term. "At the present *ime, in parts of the state of California, the licenses of several pilysiciam are in jeopardy for this type of Qr­ lense," he pointed out. "This bill will justify them and open the door widely for a general practice -of taking innocent hu­ man life. Has Equal R~bts "Tbis life has equal rights te that of tbebom child. Who will favor the taking of the life of an infant because it may not be wanted? Has our American way ,,1" thinking become so dehuman­ iZed?" the cardinal asked. "The innocent life, ills origin, its existerice, will be subject en­ tirely -to -economic, seciological and psychological divergencies," he said. "That an -organizallion -existing ~ protect the practice of the law andeomposed m advocates of the law should in -formal session endorse the unjust taking of -hu­ man life is indeed a sad, disap­ pointing and tragic reflection of our times and thinking," he de­ dared. "If these men advocate a lib­ eralization of law that permits taking of life, how can the pros­ ecutors in the state expect any cooperation from the lawyers, or, in fact, from the judges?" he continued. "The action of the conven­ ti?n," Cardinal McIntyre said, "is deplorable."

LaSo8ette Film Club Re5IUJmes Tomorrow The La Salette Shrine Cinema Club of Attleboro will begin its second year of film showings and discussions tomorrow night. Rev. Leo Thibault, M.S. who organized the club last year in conjunction with the Christian Family Movement, hopes 10 present two films monthly dur­ ing the coming year, with area college students also invited to join the organization. This year's program will in­ elude a series of recent EngIish­ language feature films plus sev­ eral film classics. Members and prospective members of the club will be notified as to the details of each showing. ,: •

. ....

-

_.~

.

" .. :1'

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\

CAPlE CCID OPENS NJEW YEAR: Registration Day at the 'CCD Center of St. Patrick's Parish, Falmouth, found the following present when The Anchor photograph­ er arrived: Step!:Jen Doyle and Michael Galasso, students; Rev. John J. Regan, director of the High School CCD; Sr. Ann William, M. S. B. T., director of the CCD element::iry classes; Raymond C. Knispel, -president of the Parish C e D . . -

Pope Convenes Meetin-g of Theologians C&nunuea from Page One "Regarding the value and in­ llonDS of 'ruth from which it is ~rJilre.tatililn to be given these not permissal:>le for theologians SOlme teacbings(Council's), it is Ilt'cessary to- avoid considering to depart in their studies-."- How­ ever~ w-ilhin the limits of the t.hem as detached from the rest of the doctrinal patrimony of Church's teachin'g authority, t-he Church,_ as if there could there is "a vast area of research" in which the theologians liberty is assured and "in this legitimate liberty itself the progress of the­ 4)l~y finds its foundation." Tbe spirit 6f the Council must pt"rvade the theologian's work. JAMAICA (NC) - The "It is necessary that you recall," well the Pope stressed, "the .start of regular classes at -both the Jamaica campus and great importance the council al­ ways attached to Sacred Scrip­ the BrOOklyn Center began ture in doctrinal explanation..." the 79th academic year -of St. The council planned the work -J ~ h fl ' s University, plagued of theologians: "The council asks ·through most o~ last year by a theelogians," the Pope explain-­ -lengthy administration - faculty dispute. ed, "-to develop a theology which Since -the self-study program -is no less pastoral than scienti­ began in the Spring of 1965, fic, a theolegy which remains ciesely in contact either patristic, -F-ather .Cahill continued, a num­ ber of basic changes have ge­ liturgi-caland especially biblical curred in tht! educational, ad­ sources, a theology which always ministrative, managerial and fi­ bolds the teaching -authority of nancial practices of St. John's. the Church and in particular Tohe priest said that one of the d the Vicar of Christ in lhe mest important of the changes highest esteem, a theology which was the appointment of a lay­ refers to humanity as seen man, Blaise J. Opulente, as eJi­ bistory and in eoncrete actuality, ecutive vice president. Opu]ente a theolegy which is frankly ee­ holds the second highest admin­ umeflical aJld sincerely Catho­ istrative post in St. John's be." structure," Father Cahill said. Referring to those woo may He listed the following among be willing to progress at a speed the accomplishments of the uni­ thought too great or think their versity's self-study: ideas, as theologians, to be valid Faculty salaries and "other simply because they, theologians, . compensations" will be increased thought them, the Pope stressed: $1.5 million annually. "These teachings (of-the Coun­ The board of trustees has been cil), precisely because they are rel;onstituted to separate policy guaranteed by the authority of making fro m administrative an ecumenical council, have now functions. become part of the Church's A university senate is func­ teaching and therefore,' in the tioning subject only to the board sphere of faith and morals, con­ of trustees. stitute the proximate and univer­ University statutes have been sal norms of truth from whrch it revised to establish faculty­ is.not permissible for theologians councils within each college of to depart in their studies." the university. Turning to those who might Tenure regulations and prac­ ·think that the doctrines of the tices have been improved in Vatican Council are something keeping with the 1940 statement absolutely new and therefore, of the American Association 00: 'in a sense not applicable to them, University Professors. the Holy Father stated:

University Head -Cites Changes'

in

lARIVIERE'S Pharmacy

$52,999 Grant WASHINGTON (NC) - The Catholic University of Ameyica Statistical Laboratory has re­ ceived a $52,999 grant from the Public Health Se,vice of the De­ partme~t of Health, Education and Welfare for the training of 12 pre-doctoral students in bio­ Bta tistics. ~.

10..: .}.'

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Prescriptions called fM ond Delivered LOFT CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St.

WY4-7439

New Bedford "

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NEWARK (NC) - Churetl agencies here are backing Il community appeal to Congress 2nd President Johnson to restore {ruts b funds allocated to N ew­ a1Tk for anti-poverty programs. Church leaders were' among some 1,00(} residents of the city WRo made a' personal appeal tv government leaders in Washing­ ton. TIley made the trip in a bWl e:u'avan. Parishioners of sevel'a:l Newark Catholic churches made t.he trip. -Newark last year receivecll $7.4 million in anti-poverty funds, but prospects are th~(l new allocations may be as low as $3.5 million, although tho city's poverty rate is among- thQ big-hest of any urban area. Itfsgr. Josep:1 A. Dooling, ~­ recto:' of the Mount Carma Guild, New ark archdiocesa::l welfare agency, said the appeal ... has the approval of Archbishop Thomas A. Boland. Msgr. Doo­ hJl.g is the coordinator of po~ e~t.y programs for the archeiG­ eCi.'se.

He said that in effect Newaril

IE being penalized f(R naving 0!7­

ga)1~ZOO anti-poverty prograrA5

1Jt>€ _H~pal'ticularl'y those . .

:il e~'mmunity action nature. TM

eity, be saidl, was among the

tiFst ro set up such progl.'aJA@)

~ft~r Cengress voted anti-p&v­

toFty funds and whea 9ti:wlP

OiJ'eas lagged, Newark receive€!.

JiWrll' tunds than had orIginal~

~J; earma'l.'ll:ed! for the city.--

ex-ist a contrast or opposition­ between the two. "011 the eontrnry, everything that is taught by the Second V .. tican Council is linked in full m.rmeny with the preceding eil­ clesiasti~al teaching, of which it is nG more than a continuation, aI'l e:ll:r>lanation and a, growti:l." ·Repeating Pope John's inau­ Understand i~g

gural address, Pope Pau' Ele­ elared, "Nobod'y, therefore, eaFl CI'NCfNNATI (NC)-Some st il1frroduce personal criteria m. Fel-igietlll, ci vic and business thE- iflt-erpretatiQn oi the doctri~ ElU5iness leaders of the CinciJ~ of the council, rejecting the gui1'i­ RaM area have appealed to citi­ ance of the Church's teaching zens of gElod will to work ro­ authority." gerher to solve racial probleJB.!). _ Stressing the liberty t.b<lt Arch-bishop Karl J. Alter ~ should reign in the theologian's € l ncinnati was among the sign­ work, the Pontiff declared: Tne ­ t!.'rs- ef the appC?al, published jJ:l limits "which are demanded by t.he Jlorm of an open letter ill the v~ry dignity of the Word 0f daily flewspaper advertisement!'. Ged, whi«;!l must remain uni­ "Let us lJive together in _ali! 'Xlcal and J:asliing," must be a!rnosphelTe Elf I'I.onlilsty and l'e­ pointed out. l!tut "there is a vast speet fer eacn other," the state­ alea &f research in which j.s fRen.t said. Other signers incluEi.. 1't'C0gnized the 'liberty beth m 00 tfie presicl'ents of Xaviev ecclesiastics and of the laity te UniveFSity and the UniveI'sity ~ investigate, consider and mani­ Q;inCiF1J13ti, m::cmbers of CQIloa fest witb humility and ecurage ~Fess, trducational leaders, he;tde their ewn opinions in the fields o! sll'veral civiiI tights- organi~ in which they are competeRt' tions and of leading business anti industrial £i rms~ "He who respects this iiberly in himself and in others," the P.")pe cencluded, "will never be First too SUFe of himself, will never DAVENPORT (NC)-John I!" d;smiss with contempt the opin­ Na~le. Davenport attorney, ilt.., ions of other theologians, and. tihe first layman named to the will never dare to present as 9c;)2FU of Mary<;:rest College foJ!' truth certain of his own personal women conducted: b~ the Sistern hypotheses, but will seek in hu­ mHity a dialogue with other the­ . ef Humility h1i!re in Iowa. Ologians and over and above his own system and conjectures will always seek truth." I

Communify Leaders

Ask _

Layman

:------------------_._--------. St. frands Residence

FOR YOUI'\.G WOMEN

~96

"hippie St., Fall River Conducted by Franciscan Missionaries of Mary ROOM~ - MEAtS OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3-289'

CENTER Paint and Waflpaper Dupont Pain l

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~.AsSerts

ANCHORI . mE Thurs., Sept. 29, '1966

~

lls' Typical­

AmeriCOR Girl'

',',

F~'nciscGD'a Nuns To Mark C@ffiltUry

Of

MILWAUKEE (NC:)-The ArnePican lllUn' is r-ea.lly the typical American girl, assert­ ed;Mother General Mary .Isa­

City W@rrk

LOS ANGELES (NC) The f'Our young women put simple habits and veils and went into the inner city

on

to face poverty and nurse the

!1P

aiek. Dedicated to God and human­ ity, they ventu~ed into the slums and even onto the battlefield to aid the ,people of God. On Tuesday, Oct, 4 their suc­ «lessors will pause for a moment to dwell on their commitment. The four women became the founders of the Franciscan Sis­ ters of the Sacred Heart and their community - now 500 8trong'- will celebrate its 10o"th birtllday deep in the heart of the inner city among the poor. A century ago the city of their labor was Seelbach, Baden, Ger­ many. Their battlefields were those 'of the Franco-Prussian JlTsr. , Today their ciW is Los An­ geles, as well as posts in Indi­ ana, Illinois and Brazil. There will. be a Mass of thanksgiving here in Our Lady of Loretto ehurch in the central city, a parish of Negroes, Mexicans, Filipinos, Chinese, Tevans, Chi­ iIUlgoans, Brooklynites - AmeriGlans all-and Cubans. ' The Sisters ,conduct St. Anne's Maternity Hospital for unwed mothers, its 100-bed capacity operating at full oecupancy, mostly with teenagers. They also operate Our Lady ~ueen of Angels Clinic where scores of sick come daily for medical service. Auxiliary.: B ish 0 p Timothy Manning of Los Angeles will celebrate the Mass here. James Francis Cardinal McIntyre will preside:

bel of the Sisters of St.. Joseph, Baden, Pa. Describing ~he Alnericlm Sister of 1966" to diocesan voca­ tion directors ,attending a na­ tional conference here, Mother Isabel said that the new candi­ dates bring to their communities an almost, fierce personalism which takes precedence over "system." The prospective nuns felll1' hypocrisy, desire freedom, inde­ p!'!ndence and dialogue and re-' ject docility, Mother Isabel said. , She added that candidates yearn for personal involvement in the conditions of the poor and un­ derprivileged, fear the concept of perfection something that sets them apart from the human race, and are careless about de­ tails such as household cleanli­ ness and simple formalities. Smaller Communities Emphasizing t hat religious eommunities are going to be smaller - "maybe they should be"-Mother Isabel listed ques­ tions that should be asked by vocation directors' in the screen­ ing process-"Is she typical of her generation? C~ she adjust to change? Does - she possess emotional health? Is she moti­ vated?'! Mother Isabel said the noviti­ ,ate is a place for gr9wth, not scceening. "We need to do a lot of re­ thinking in our formation. We shouldn't depend any more on ,environmental eontrols. Brain­ washing for transforming works for a while but it doesn't last," she said.

as

CCD ,SUNDAY: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes are in full session in Holy Ghost Parish, Attleboro, as the Diocese celebrates CCD Day on Sunday. Sr. Mary Helen, M.S.B.T., starts a visual lesson for Deborah Perry, Diane Castro and Robtlrt Bren­ nan in the presence of Rev. Edward J. Sharpe, parish CCD director, Rev. Stephen J. Dow­ ney, administrator, as the year's sessions~pen. ' ,

Elementary

S~hoc~

Supervisors Retire

ods, and teachers are far better Continued from Page One qualified than they used to be," Patrick J. O'Neill, superintend­ ' ent of schools; anq. Rev: Joseph said Sister Miriam. , P. Delaney, assistant superin­ •

tendent.' , ' Organizers of the testimonial, Sister Mary Urban, R.S.M. and Continued from Page One Sister Georgine, R.S.M., who .and the Pope 'expresses his in­ will carry on the work of Sister tention ,not to modify them at Miriam and Sister Felicita, stress the present time when all Cath- ' 'that former pupils and all' olics ought to conform them­ friends of the Sisters are invited selves to the Council's, pro­ to attend the testimonial., "It's nouncements. ' ,not just for the teachers," they Msgr. Frederick McManus, di­ said. rector of the U. S, Bishops' Com­ _ Long Careers mission of the Liturgical APosThe long careers in edu<;ation ' totate, who was in Rome, noted ,of ,Sister Miriam, and 'Sister ' ,that the ietter in no w'ay. affects Felicita have much tn common. the use of the vernacular, in the MIAMI (NC)-The Great­ 'BOtti are Fall Rh~er" natives, :parish' liturgy. Neither is itdi­ .. Miami Inter-Faith Agency 'Sister Miriam from St. Louis rectedto Sisters, Brothers, 'or' Social Justice has been parish and, Siste~ Feli~ita from ,Religious priests who. recite the, ~blished ,by the Catholic St. Mary's Cathedr!ll. Both we~e Office in common. It is for reli­ Diocese :of MiaJ:]li, the Greater ,pubiic ,school tea~hers, before gious institutes, of clerics suCh l4iami Council of Churches and entering religion and both w.ere, as 'Benedi~tines, Dominicans ~r the Greater Miami Rabbinical' teachers and principals at many , Carmelites, wh() have th~ form~ ;rehools i~ the Diqcese before, ,obligation to celebrate Choir 'Association. beginning their work as elemen­ ,Office each day in Latin. Father Martin A~ Walsh, dioc­ tary supervisors. The door has, been left open esan director of the Human Re­ Sister Felicita holds a master's by ..the Pope, -according to the la'tions Council, is chairman of the group which has as its goal degree from Catholic University directives of the Council, it was. "the eradication of all obstacles and Sister Miriam' from Bostoll 'pointed out, for even these Reli­ College. gious institutes to chant their '" flO man;s realization of his dig­ The two assumed their super­ office in the vernacular, if there Ility." " "To bring the concern and the -vt80ry positions in 1941, work­ ,~a congregation of the laity' weight of the three major faiths lng under the late Rev. Edward present. to bear on the solution of com-' i. Gorman, then superintendent munity -problems involving 'so­ of schools. He had handled the cial justice" is a major objective , school office, alone from 1932 <l)f the new agency which will until their advent, and they are Continued from Page' One study and evaluate the policies full of praise for the way in this year, he had the distinction Qf the government and private which he set up the Diocesan, of being the first Catholic priest units to determine if they meet system. They noted that Fall to preach in Westminster Abbey ,the moral tenets of' the three River was the second Diocese in since the' Reformation; major faiths. The agency will the country to initiate a unified The English Jesuit was bom support programs it considers method of supervising school 'm 1903 in Preston, Lancashire :worthy and work to change the curricula and methods. "In most and was educated at Preston others. Dioceses, each religious commu­ Catholic College and Campion, nity had its own supervisors," Hall, Oxford. Ordained in 1936, , Sponsors emphasize "determi­ 'aation to briIig their religious explained Sister Felicita. he held administrative posts in Have the two seen many the Jesuit Order at both Cam­ commitment to bear on socio­ economic issues" in appointing changes in their 25 years of pion Hall and the Jesuit Church, teavel abo u t the _ Diocese? London. committees and chairmen. A housing committee will seek ''There's been a great deal of He has published a number of apen occupancy, an, education improvement in teaching -meth- books including Roman Cathol­ eommittee will seek td acceler­ icism, :Religion is Reasonable, ate integration and upgrade the Ronald Knox the Priest, and A New Editor level of service to the socially New Translation of the Spiritual TORONTO (NC) - Father Exercises of St. Ignatius. Wlderprivileged, a welfare com­ Frederick J. Powers, S.J." as- ' mittee will seek to remove resi­ The religious scholar is also dence requirements for ,welfare , sistant editor of the Canadian well known on English radio­ Rcipients and personal investi­ -Messenger of the Sacred Heart and TV and has made numerous gations which the committee for the past seven years, has contributiQns to the Dublin Re­ considers undignif~ed, he said. been named editor. He succeeds view, ,The Month, The Journal Other committees will concern Father C.C. Ryan, S::r., who has of Roman Studies, Catholic llhemselves with law enforce-' been named superior at Loyola Comml;!ntary on the Bible and IMber reviews.. r-.- ,,~ and comm~i!1' relations. College, Montreal.'

latin' Offmce

Form T ri-Faith

Social Agency

'w

Engiish .Jesuit'

And the best of the best are the teachers of the Fall' River Diocese, maintain thEl Sisters. '"You couldn't have 'more coop­ eration than you recei ve here," said Sister Fellcita. "And you won't find any (.'Orps of teachers 90 ' dedicated,'" added Sister Miriam. - The supervisors ci,ted the readiness of Diocesan teachers, both religious and lay,to attend in-service courses and take Fordham~ graduate work at Mea, colleges and universities. , Then they spoke of their per­

NEW YORK (NC)-Fordham 'sonal experiences over 25 years.

"We didn't have one unpleasant University and the Union Theo­ experience," thCJ'said. ",We want logical Seminary of AMerica to ,thank', every<l,ne with, whom ,will begin a study at Lincoln .we've ~orked for all they've Center for the Performing Arts on ,theology's relationship to, the done for us.",

. The Sisters stressed particu;. '~' , Father Christopher F. 1t{oone}f., 'lady their gratitude tel Father Gorman and Father O'Neill, the S.J." chairman ,of Fordham's -preSent· superintendent. "Every-' ~logy department, said the thing has been given us to make' two schools will be the first in­ , our work as easy as possible," stitutions of higher learning ill the United States to undertake they said. ' such a study. The cooperative From their vantage point of venture, which will start ill experience, the~" had a few January, will be on the graduate words of advice for partmts and level in the form of seminars. ' ahildren. "The home is 1the first The new program is part of school," said Sister Miriam, ''The 'teacher can alwa3rs tell ~l child's the cooperative study of theol­ ogy that Union and Fordham an­ background."

"And," empha:~ize~ Sis t e r nounced last February - de­ Felicita, "the language arts are scribed as 'the first aqangernent at the basis of every successful ,of its, kind in t~ country be­ ~weelll_ a Protestant and ,RomaD school career." Catholic institution. Need of R.eading Father Mooney has also an­ So i~portant (10 the Sisters nounced another departure in , ee>nsider' these language 'arts Fordham's theology' program. that their chief activity in re­ For the first time, courses on re­ tirement will be the formation ligions other than Catholicism of a Developmental Heading are being introduced to the uni­ Tutorial Center at Mt. St. Mary versity's undergraduate currie­ Academy. There they'll endeavor _ulum and theology will, be oi­ to help students with reading fared as a major subject, he said. problems, especially at the jun­ ior high school level. The;y'll aeo cept students of all ages, howa ever, and will alsl() offer tutor ing in other subjects, d:rawing, Maintenance S~'ies

on their rich experience as su­ pervisors in 'all elementary SWEEPERS· SOAPS

school areas. DISINFECTANTS

With such a program, it's like­

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

ly that before long they'll find

their retirement days as busy as

ever, but for the moment two

Sisters who have served the

l886 PURCHASE STREB Diocese -lovingly and faithfully

NEW BED.ORD 7 for decades are ,enjoying ...

Union ,Sp9nsor Study,

o

a

SCHOOL

DAHILL 'CO.

gether a well-earned periiod of

leisure. '

WY 3-3'786,


Fint Week's Scores'Run

According 'to Predictions

By ~ Bartek IDgh &booi football aetion i8 on&y lime week old but already th~:re l:mve been. eleveral important victories and this Saturday promises to pit !JNmY of the top teams against oo,ch other. As n N8ult 01. Jut Saturday's inaugurals Old

Rochester,

F~uth

a 11 d

bore, m 0 :Bristol League game that was to be one of tbe best llou$S in the Capeway gamea of ~ season. The Spar­ ference while Feehan, Stang tans rolled to a 14-6 victory on and Dwiee appear to eave the , TDs by Craig Williams and Mike horses m the Bristol! CollWlty Sylvia. llt looks as though the League. Satur­ Stang club bas returned to form day finds three &fler & poor ~ason in 1965 and h.i g gom es tills being the case the Dart­ acheduled in the mouth Indians will be outclassed. Capeway Con­ Old Rochester by taking ferenee. FalJr­ Dighton-Rehoboth in t 0 camp haven 00 &i Fal­ will have a 2-0 mark. The OR mouth, W;Jire­

Bulldogs have picked up where ham lllt JOeilnis­ they left off last year by down­ Yarmo<ith 0 n d ing Fairhaven last week. BOlu·r.!Je is ot Cliff Lopes is the engineer for Barnstable. Last the Bulldogs and in the season'a week-end Law­ opener he ran for two' TDs, the renee Eligh of l~ 0l1e the deciding tally with Falmouth knocked oaf Can~ less than two minutes to go. The 14-8 in e non-lea~ elash. OR running game is too strong It wes tl 4 yard pass from Co­ fIor the Fl,!lcons of Dighton. Captain Engram tD Co-CaptBlm Dighton opened the season last Gonsalves and a Il'ecovered loo~ •week by losing a, 19-6 decision ball m the end zone by Joe Car­ ~ Woonsocket, R. I., reiro that gave the clippers their WillOW medgoB'd Elt' 'WeymoueUn margin ca vidory !~st week. Fairhaven dropped II 22-HI The Crimson of New Bedford nod to Old Rochester but'looked 'C'Jill travel to Weymouth this strong in the process. Tom John­ week-end for their first Subur­ son after passing hom his 20 to ban League game. New Bedford the one, bulled it over for the rocked Rindge Tech 20-0 last first Fairhaven ~re. Johnson Saturday in its 1966 opener. later tossed to Less Smith fur Touchdown runs by Dennis La­ the lleCont't tally. belel, Gil Rua and Cliff Kershaw Thus M will be ~ new Pro produced the victory for the offense of the F;Jibnouth eleven Whalers and repeat perfor­ against the passing and running mances by these key men could talents crtl Tom Johnson for ~ give them tl big win over Wey­ Fairbaven forces. Chances lM'0 mouth.

Falmouth win take it for two

The Weymouth club downed IJtraight. Brookline 29-8 in a League game 138t week. Favor Falmouth In Bristol County action ~his As Falmouth makes it two in week-end Feehan of Attleboro tl row Saturday, so should Ware­ will meet Coyle of Taunton.. The ham ns it visits Dennis-Yar- • Feehanites .are off a,big opening mouth. D-Y practically demol­ day victory over Taunton High ished the Martha's Vineyard (21-0). Taunton-:was .. being forces last week as they downed picked 211" Q s\lrprise' clu~ and the'Islanders' 34-0. 'The big "gUlll they do ap~ar tp.,l~ave, the abil­ for D- Y was . Gary' Motto Who Scored three 'TDs, , lCaught' the ity .to Ilprint::, a '. few sUrPrises~ , 'only two colhpleted D- Y' passel! , ,~, was, ,the . r~nning 'Qf half­ 'arid gained 195 o{his\eam's260 ·back ·Rick Thorpe that sparked the Feehan eleven and if., ,the yaras. . ' , .. '.. ",'. A stingey Warebl\JI1 defense COyl~L aggregatio~, ~s" goi9-g to a'ndD" beautiful 'inWrceptibn by be .an obstacle to Feehan's title Terry Berriault 'that' resulted in bopes they ~ilihaxe:to"i>t~Pthe l1i pee d y T,h9.rpe. ~lto " sco~ed .8' -60 ~ard' Score; 'powered . the ,_ Vikings to n 15-0 Victory over twieela~ ~eek.,. Speaking .00: Taun'911.' .this Dartmouth High' .last week. Wareham sCored its first tally by could be the week for their sur­ way of an 18-yard reamper by prise. The Tigers will host North Attleboro who dropped its Don Lopes. 'opener to Stang. The' North Even though last week's com­ parative scores' don't indicate a $.lquad could' be in the doidrfuns ·Wareham victory, the Vikinp after having their titie hOPell diluted m tbe 'opening game. should' make it look easy. 'Bourne and Barnstable play Taunton's Joe Hamilton has' the talent to lead bis club to their their first league game Saturday :first victory. ,. .' at the latter's field, Bourne lost II close 6-0 nod ~ Coyle 01. FitmgeraJd High Scorer . Taunton last week and did so Durfee High of l!'all River will on miscues. It was fumbles and host Attleboro 'High Saturday. penalties that proved fatal 10 T b,e Durfee. Hilltoppers clob­ the Canalmen. They will be bered New Bedford Voke 42-0 looking to correct their mistakoo last week while the Jewelry .City this week. combine dropped a 7-0 ~od to Barnstable nicked Mansfield Foxboro. 'i-6 last week which was also III Carl Fitzgerald scored four oonleague opener. Jrt was a 25 tames Jlor the Hilltoppers in yard conversion point, following downing Vocational and if the II penalty. by Steve Bates that Attleboro combine is to come gave the Red Raiders their mar­ borne with til win Fitz will have gin of victory. Mark Powers had 10 be curtailed. Durfee was previously scored on a 29 yard humiliated by Attleboro last romp. This could be n toss-up year but the odds have Durfee game but the edge goes to reversing the outcome' this. sea­ Bourne over Barnstable.

oon.

In non-league frays Dart­ Seekonk Loses First .. mouth will host neighbor Stang' In the Narry Loop Somerset and Old Rochester will visit .Dighton - Rehoboth. Dartmouth crowned Seekonk ,50-0 in last 'will try to gain its first victory week's action. It was Seekonk's but will have trouble against the first varsity game and things ean't help but ·get better. Time Stang Spartans. cures all and cycles begin and Stang Surprises end. Seekonk will be more.in Stang la~t .week pulled n mild its class as it visitli ,Martba'D .: upset by downing North AttIe.- Vineyard saturday.

Wareham loom as the power­

Con­

'L.

.,

NORTON CCD CLAss IN ACTION: Robert Adams, Denise Melanson and Michael .... Gonsalves of St. Mary's Parish listen intently as Mary McEndy the teacher gives I:l blackboard instruction &S Rev. Donald J. Bowen, parish CCD moderator, supervises.

~®~ort

l@J O!fgGni%at~crrn$ ~,~~d C~~~@®~ A~'\7o$e [NJ@w Stl'Ii'Mch.rJrJ'®~,

BOSTON (NC)-"Present lay organizations are not, for ~e . most part, serving the needs of the Church as they are seen in the light of Vatican II," accord­ ing to a report made to the Archdiocesan Council of Catho-

M®fr1hlods

lic Men here by a special' post­ concilior study commission. New structures both on the parish and diocesan levels as well ;JiS new methods of Chris­ tian leadership formation, were seen by the commission as need-

urhleolQgicu'iS Con-wene in Rome menegil.do Cardinal Florit of 'Florence, we r e: Archbishop invitation was sent to noted Pietro Parente (Sacred Congre­ Protestant Scripture and Patris­ gation on the Doctrine of the tics scholar, Prof. Oscar Cullman Faith) and Carlo Cardinal Co­ of the Universities of Paris ;Jind lombo (close personal advisor to Basel, Switz. Pope Paul) who spoke onepis­ The world's top theologians .copal collegiality. tit ere called' to contribute, Also Father Karl Rahner, '5..1., th1'ough mutual 'discussion, "to Father Yves Congar, O.P., Father

the comprehension of the value Jean' Danielou; S.J., F'ather and import of the doctrine 'of' the Jerome Hamer, O.P. and 'Father Secbnd Vatican' CounCiL'" . I Benoit, O:P,. ,,, , Continued from Page One

"

A~ong the topics t~ pe ireat~d

zt the 17 ,general

sell~io:ns" .a~e

(1) the Mystery. of, thl\l, Chllr<;h,

. (2) episcopal collegiality, anll, ~e ;origin of the l;)ishop's.Qffi.<;e, (3) the Virgin Mary ..an,d the Church, (4), the pre~eqce·, of Christ in thecommuni~y:.·.<At .worship, (5) the essel:1tially.mis.sionary office of the .Church apd relations of the Catholic Church with non-Christian reli,gions,(6) the theology of the Hist<?J:Y of Salvation, (7) the ll1ystery ~ Sacred· Scripture and .Traditiop, (8) religious liberty, (9) tile the­ ological foundation for dialogue between the Church and the modern world, and (10) eeu­ menism. .

.,

The matters to be treated are

based on 12 of the 16 counc:il .documents. ·.::'he four other doc­ 'uments were excluded because they deal generally w~th "prac­ tical and disciplinary matten whereas the congress is co~­ cemed exclusively with theo­ logical discussion.." Seventeen g e n era 1 sessions will present 30-minute talks by outstanding theologians (among whom are Bishop John Wright and Father John Courtney Mur­ ray, S.J. who both spoke on reli­ gious liberty). The rest of the congress was devoted to 5,,·talks of i5 minutes each running si­ multaneously in three separate ~alls.

The major speakers were, be­ sides the keynote address of Archbishop Grabriele ,Garrone, pro-prefect of the ·Cong.regation of· Seminaries and Universi-ties, .smd the elosing address· byEr-

.'

....

'.

'.,

.I'"

Among ~e speak~rs ~t" .~l,1e .~ore .. .re~tricte4. session~,:, ~;~l­ lqwed, by inf9rmal discussions, ::were.:· 'Ml?gr.'·Pierre Pavan, lvIsgr. g,erdilla,n,d~, ):..a,lIlprUllchini;, ~F,~­ .~h.ers JIeJ?ri de. Lubac, '~.J.~ ,$.~­ bast.ian .. 1'rpmp, .S.J., ~i~J.i.am ~ertrams, S.J., Edward $chille­ beeckx,O.P.,'Joseph JUl1g'ma,I;Ill, S,J., Dominic Chenu, O,P., Jo­ seph F~C;hs, S.J., Raymond Sig­ mond, O.P., Eamon Carr:oll, O. Cann., Francis Sullivan, S.J.. Avchbishop Garrone outlined two principai fields open to the­ ologians in. the aftermath of. the Vatican Council: (1) expia~n what was determined at the council; (2) to bring abol,lt a progress ,in doctrine and above all to establish theological method and 'cases' for the mat­ ters lett open by the Council,.' In tbe first case, the faithful ,have a right to a clear explana­ tion of conciliar doctrine, all the more so since there is al­ ways the danger that doctrine be "paSsed off" as true conciliar teaching which is not such at all. In the second case, "the Coun­ cil humbly recognized that .it did not have ready answers for all cases, circumstances' and problems. And this is a result 'of the inertia in which we have lived for several centuries in the tranquil possession of a doc­ trine regarding matters which . today on the other band are be­ Ing strongly debated. Such mat­ ters for instance as the relation­ ship between Scripture and Tradition, religious 1 i b e r t y , mixed marriages, and problems concernIng birth," the newly appoipted Curia official stated.

to:

, ed for implementation of decrees of Vatican II "as they rela,te ~

lay pctivity." Formed in 1965 and composed of several prominent laymen, ,the commission based its report on thorough study of cQuncil documents, a questionnaire sur­ vey of Catholics of various backgrounds, and personal inter­ views with more than lOO per­ sons throughout the archdiocese. The basic need of the Churcfu today on all levels, was summed up by the report as being ~Christian awareness," or "a more intense apostolic acti vity, a return to the 'community' spir­ 'it of early Christianity. a re­ lllwakened awareness of our fel­ low-man." ,

Among the commission's, sug­ gestiops for ,promoting sucl/l awareness were: ,: "Creati6n of elect'ed 'board

·.of, . diocesan "ilffairs, represen~

,tiye'o{ the archdiocese geograpb­

.iFl,ll,ly .and RY age and sex" w..i,.U! .c~e~~y, Religiou~ ~d laity iJ~ ,t¥ i~eri1b.ership: T.he board "':'PH~P ~av!,! a fuIl-.~illle paid staff. , .;

"ItS· chief:runctions would be

~ .jnform and advise the.. Orcii­

nary; to offer a channel through

whi~h any' 'member of" the

Church could submit su'gges­

,{ions; to evaluate and impr~ve

~iC)Ce~an organiZations and ~c- ..

tivities. .

. For:mation of parish counci~

whose, function, within the par­

~s~, would be similar to those (Iff

~~e diocesan bpard. The report

stressed that these councils

should Qe established "where

they are wanted," as forced par­ ticipation in the council system loy ;Jill parishes "would only re­ .8Ult in half-hearted compliance by many pastors. The report also cited the dan­ ger of councils "composed of parishioners who because of past service in organizations of the parish, consider membership [) 'right.'" ,

an

ATWOOD OEL COMPANY

SHELL HEATING OI'LS 'South • Sea Streets .Hyannis,

Tel. HV:Si .


20

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of foU River-Thurs. Sept. ~. 19M

COLLEGE ,DAY,· OCT. 12,1966

ON. STONEHILL CAMPUS, NO. EASTON

Sponsored, by StonehiU College and the DiQcesol1l School Depcirtment

ADMINISTRATION BUILDING - STONEHILL CAMPUS

~epres~"'ta~iYes, fro~ 60 C,atl,olic ,ColUeges from" the NUd~~~e~t"t~,:"th.e Atlantic sea

I

'

....

-

. ~~~~,:·:;.win,J)~: present.

.

..

on the Stonehill, .Camipus...· ,: ,

..COEDlicATiONAR:

"MEN· -•.. '. ., , '" ,'. Assumption College . .. ' ,,'.. Belmont 'Abbey' College Boston College' ,~anisius College ". . : College of the 'Holy Cross , The Catholic University of America' F'pirfield UniversIty Fordham University . . . King!s College ' LeMoyne College LaSalle .College Marquette University 'Manhattan College . Merrimack College Marist College Niagara University', . Mt. St. Mary's College St. Bonaventure University Providence College St. Francis College . St. Anselm's College University of Dayton St. John F,isher College St.' Michael's College . University of. Detroit . Villanova University St. Vincent College Seton Hal/ University : ,Siena College University of Notre Dame Xavier University ,

l~;'

Holy 'Family C;;one~ Immcfculata College. 'Albertus Magnus College·Maria Regina Collegl'l Alvernia College .' (Junior C9l1ege) Anna Maria College Marymou~t College Annhurst College Marymount Manhattan College Cardinal Cushing. College :,Mercyhurst College College of St. Vincent, Mt. St. Mary College College of New Rochelle (Newburgh, New York) College of Our Lady of the Elms Mt. St. Mary College College of St. Elizabeth (Hooksett. N.H.) St. Joseph's College' College of St. Rose Dunbarton College of Holy Cross (Windham, Maine) . D'Youville College St..'Joseph's College, Elizabeth Seton College (Emmitsburg, Md.) (Junior College) , Salve Regina College Emmanuel, College Seton Hill Col/ege Georgian Court College Trinity Col,lege

. WOMEN

'arents, .Q-:-'d" Pupils. 'fr:o~'Dioce$an, Private,and Public High Schoolls, ~;e' cordiaUy .invited" . . , ' -

"CLASSROOMS 1o:··Noon , F~ur :Thirty.Minu·te Sessions lForma~ Di$cu.ssi()n on, College

GYM.~ASIUM

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