10.06.66

Page 1

Bishop to Poles in Exile

o

Polish Mi Ilennium

Mass at Cathedral

Thursday, Oct. 13

The ANCHOR

Most Rev. Ladislaus Rubin, Auxiliary Bishop to Car­ dinal Wyszanski of Poland, will offer a low Pontifical Mass }n St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, oat 8 Thursday night. Oct. 13, in observance of the Millennium of Polish Chris­ tianity. Bishop Rubin is no Rubin offer Mass in a Church stranger to the Diocese of dedicated to Mary under the Fall River. In October 1963 title of the Cathedral of Our he visited with Rev. Adalbert Lady of the Assumption, because faU Rivetl' Il Oct. 6, 1966 1T Thursday I A. Szklanny, assistant at St. throughout its thousand years. Christian Poland has shown a Patrick's Church, Fall- River. special love for the Mother of $4.00 per Year Bishop Rubin will also deliver © 1966 The Anchor N~. God. PRICE lOe the sermon at the Mass. The Pole's veneration of The Bishop and the Fall River "Matka Boska" is .evidenced by curate were in the seminary to':' the fact that today some 600 gether and ~hen Fr. Szklanny Churches in Poland are dedi­ offered his first Solemn Mass in cated to Mary. Under the title of Ghazir, Lebanon, the Fall River Our Lady of Czestochowa, she visitor was his subdeacon. is Queen of Poland.

,At the present time, Bishop Poles throughout the world Rt. Rev.' Thomas F~ Walsh, pastor of ~t. John the

. ,Rubin is living at St. Stanislaus are strongly attached to Our ~angelist Church, Attieboro, and Diocesan D.irector of Rectory, Rome. On the occasion Lady of Czestochowa and have ~e Council of Catholic Women, and Rev. Raymond W. of the millennium in Poland this , built many churches, shrines and Bishop Ladislaw Rubin McCarthy, Fall River area Pit'ector of theCoun~il. of Cath. year, Bishop Rubin was refused altars in her honor. Here in the Polish Primate Delegate permission to return to his na­ ~ic Women, together with United States, the most famous tive land., ' shrine to Our Lady under this voting delegates fro'm the most praiseworthy a~hievements Bishop Rubin is presently 0'11 titl~ is to be found in Doyles­ Diocese heard messages from' of the National Council of Cath-, otic Women," the,' Cardin'al tour as the personal representa-,' town: Pa. and the dedication ill Pope Paul VI and President wrote, "sends pateriial greetings tive" of Cardinal Wyszynski. He scheduled for 'Oct. 16. ,johnson read at the 33rd' con­ , Archbisnop John, ,J. Krol of' t9 the participants in' this year's has already visited Philadelphia, \'Jefition of the, NCCW 'now, in oonvention, 'and prays th,at God' Milwaukee, Baltimore, Chicago, Philadelphia will consecrate the lIeSsion in Miami. may enlighten and, ,direct their'· new edifice and offer an outdoor Cleveland, Brooklyn and is di­ Some 5000 women are attend- ' proceedings to. His.grea!er glor~ Representing the Fall Riv- rectly from, Montreal to Fall POlitifical Mass. Bishop Rubia tJOg the convention (Oct. 5 to 3) deliver the dedicatory ser­ er Diocese at the concurrent , River. wbich has as its theme "The and the salvation of theIr souls, It is most fitting, ~hat Bishop J!lon. In his letter to the convention, national conventions of the

\lfew Pentecost." The NCCW is .• federation of Catholic women's Presi.dent Johnson laud,ed the Society of St Vincent de Paul

"dedIcated women who have, •.... ' ~ganizations representing" some 00 million Catholic women in lent their hands imd hearts to and Ca~hohc CharitIes, to be this fine organization." held thIS month at .the Hotel {;be United States and in mili­ , " , . , ' "~ . ' Jung"New Orleans, WIll be Rev.

\'lacy installations overseas. , 'The forward-l.ookmg PI~-, John E. Boyd, Diocesan Director

The Pope's greetirigs were re­ grams of the ,NatIonal Counc,ll 'of Catholic Charities and Rev

llayed ill a letter from Amleto c:on,~inue ,t? b~ an inspirat~on. to, Edmond L. Dickinso~, chaplai~ ~al'dinal Cicognani, papal Sec­ all, ' he saId, And they plovlde to the Attleboro Area Particu­ DET'ROIl' (NC)-Racial justice is the touchstone of netary of state. ~Ile , .sustained suPP?rt. that lar Council of the Vincentians. the age in determining the sincerity of Christian compliance "The Holy Father, who knows ~menca ne~ds-and ~Ill n:ed- Catholic Charities delegates will \VeIl and appreciates highly the In the cruCIal yea~s ahead. meet' from Sunday, Oct. !D with Christ's command to "love one another," the chief through Thursday, Oct. 13, while officer of the Knights of Columbus said here. Speaking at the Vincentians' meeting is banquet following a K of C "However one barrier has scheduled from Friday, Oct. 7 fourth degree. exemplifica­ stubbornly resisted this leveling thl'Ollgh Tuesday, Oct. 11. tion, Supreme Knight John b·end. It is that of race," he said. Turn to Page Twenty W.McDevitt said the Knights The K. Of C. supreme knight' have committed themselves "to said there are many reasons for ROME (NC)-The pro-pI'cfect of the' Congregation of this eminently Christian objec­ t~e obstinate persistence of this i!eminariesand Universities has given the world's semi-' tive of universal love and broth­ obstacle. He noted that for many erhood." y~ars and to some extent today aary rectors a cautious gl'een light for "experimentation" "It is a goal from which we tr.e Negro has found himself m Implementing the documents of the Second Vatican must not and cannot retreat," he without the education, culture ~ouncil. In a special confer­ or economic means to move free­ added. I-No experimentation is to ~lIlce on Thursday with semi­ "With dramatic suddenness we ly and confidently in society. LANSING (NC) - The go beyond the principles laid Clary rectors attencling the In­ "He has had far more seriou!! have entered an age when the down by the council. celebration of Mass in pri­ hurdles to overcome than other ~l'Hational Theological Con­ concept of human equality has 2-Rectors are to keep the vate homes throughout the immigrants who started at the ~ess here, Archbishop Gabriel congregation informed of the na­ Lansing Diocese has been taKen on vast new significance:' bottom of the social and eco­ (S,anone set three conditions for ture of their experiments. McDevitt stated. nomic ladder," McDevitt said. ~Kperimentatiol\ in matters such 3-They are to introduce authorized by Bishop Alexander "People' throughout the world "Other newcomers ventured to Zaleski in connection with a f!!S liturgical renewal: nothing which is "irreversible," abruptly are striving to achieve Turn to Page Twenty that is, nothing that will become study and renewal program on equality with other men and Vatican Council II. so entrenched in seminary life other nations in wealth, oppor­ , Father William J. Rademacher, tunity and personal dignity. that it will become virtually. im­ director of Renewal Through possible to' withdraw the experi­ , "This is evident in the surge Vatican II, Sllid he expects the 'for independence and self gov­ ment if it is later deemed unsat­ t home Masses to be the high isfactory. e)~'nment by'the peoples of Aisa Archbishoip Garrone said that po~nt for each group during the aad Africa, as 'well as in the nine-week period. swelling demand of the world's' The 12th Annual Bishop's a letter would be sent ,from his congregation to seminary rectors Home discussion groups are ir....poverished to have immediate Pope Paul, in an audience ~harity Ball will be held ,"m. the near future" stressing one of three phases in the dio­ enjoyment of the good things of to the Congress of Abbots Of Wednesday, Jan: 11, 1967 at 'life." , , Turn to Page Two ' Turn to Page Eighteen thee Benedictine Federation lLincoln Park, Dartmouth. in Rome, ~as suggested that llIL Frank Reilly, diocesan ff)resident of the St., Vincent de the monks give more authority Paul Society and Mrs. James A. to their international superior& O'Brien, president of the District and even to the heads of indi­ Council of Catholic Wome'l, will vidual monasteries. be co-chairmen. They will be To all Benedictines, the Holy fExlP~oirroed assisted by a large committee Father asked that they "culti­ Q:Omposed of members of both The "biblical way" is henceforth to be The work of theologians and that of the vate their studies - especially o.rganizations. the "theological way" This was the theme hierarchy is not the same. This the Holy biblil;al and historical, publish "We are pleased that we have books' of spirituality, foster hos­ Father stressed as he closed the meeting pitalityin their monasteries, and f\)een successful in securing the on which the world's theologians, invited of theolvgians in Rome with a papal audi­ L'cturn of Vincent Lopez and his te' Rome by Pope Paul, closed their congress. pursue a dialogue with separated ence The Pope showed the hierarchy, the brothers." I:Drchestl'3 for the 1967 ball," the Fourteen hundred theologians met for 17 Ball directors said, "On our own intiative," he 'major adjresses, 57 talks, a concelebrated Church's Magisterium, as being divinely' Lopez interrupted an engage­ Mass at St. Peter's bisiliea and a papal constituted to preserve and interpret Divine asked for more power for the ment'in Las Vegas last year to Abbot Primate, titular head ~ Revelation. The work of theologians is to the world's Benedictines. He is Jj»lay at the Ball. "It is an.evening audience. "It is not keeping with our times or inyestigate and expose the Doctrine of "titular head" 'because he has that my men and I look forward tio with real pleasure," Lopell: with the indications of the Council," said the Faith; to study and t~ach sacred the- little power other than summon­ ~ented. Turn to Page Eighteen Turn 'to' Page. Eighteen Tum to Page Eighteen

Mass.

"oL 10,

40

Diocesan Women Attending National Miami Conclave

=

Diocesan Priests Attend Cha rities Sesslon ·' ,.In 'South

will

McDevitt Says Race Justice.' Key to Christian Sincerity .

a

Alerts Seminary' Rectors About Experimentation

Lansing Diocese Now Authori%es Mass in Homes

lishop's Charity lall to feature Vincent Lopez

Pope Paul Fa'vors Authority S h i f For Benedictines

lneologians' Work Challenging

,Council to Be

/

Theomogy Is to Mediate


..,"., 2

;Priest· ~es K,lon Role Exaggerated

THE AN~HOf'-"'"

Jhur.s.~

Oct.'. 6, .;)966

Visit to Sh:rine led by Rector More than 200 traveled to the Auriesville Shrine of the Amer­ ican Marty;rs on Sunday under the sponsorship of St. Mary's Cathedral. On 'arrival, the Fall River group under the directio~ of Rev. Robert. L. Stanton, joined a Peace Pilgrimage conducted by the Jesuit Fathers at the Shrine. The program consisted of a pro C e s s i on throughout the gnlunds, recitation of the Ros­ ary, meditating on. the Passion of Christ by,making the outdoor stations of the Cross, participat­ ing in the Pl'ocession of the Blessed Sacrament that ended.in the ravine which was the scene of the martyrdom of .the first J'esuit martyr; Rev.,R~~e Goupil, S.J. . The ceremonies' 'concluded with Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes. Many of the group partici­ pated in Mass of the Croatian Rite that was being offered on their arrival. "

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BRIDGEPORT (He) - 'l'1s.e priest who heads the Bridg~ port cliocese's social aetion worit 1eels reports of intensified ~ tivity by the Ku Klux Klan t& Connecticut are exaggerated. Father Louis A. De Prolio, ~ rector of the diocese's Sociu!l Adicm Department, eaid tbat • though "no one seems to kno~ the Klan's strength in ConnectJ}:. cut," he i?eels "that only a han~ Hul of people are involved." The Anti-Defamation Leagmj of B'nai B'rith in New York an(} · several Connecticut daily neWD= papers have reported that tho Klan is active in Connecticu*, particularly in the· New HaveD and Bridgeport areas. The league . ': l.\aid the Klan is' recruiting t j Connecticut 'and ether easteJriri states. . ". There was a mysteiious"cr~ burning on the lawn of a homv in nearby Stratford II month a~ The house was that of a 10clr1J official of the National AssocDo atioD i?or the Advancement c:1 Colored. 'People. , The Anti-Defamation Leaguo

· bas reported that nationally tho

· rolls of the Klan have increaseQ!

by 10,000 dues-paying membero

since Jan. 1. It said the recruit...

ment campaign in New York.,

. GOD AND COUNTRY: Freshmen of the new Bishop Connolly High School, Fall' New Jersey, Connecticut and!

River, .folluwing a Mass and'- prayers for peace on the anniversary of Pope Paul's visit, , Pennsylvania is under the direC'>

lion of Robert E. Scoggip; grancll to the U.S. raised a new flag to commemorate the occasion. Monsignor Con.sidine,· pas­ dragon. of the United Klan e11 tor <if St. William's Church, Fall River,)s 'assisted by Steven Malek, left, and Michael .. America, Inc., of South Carolina,

Continued from Page One three points: reform of the ~'rati(l) studiorum" or standard curric­ ulum for seminaries throughout the world; a request that rectors Camara, right, in. the presenc(;) :of th,e school principal, Father Cornellier. assign members of their faculties to work directly with the con­ ~~~fRiEY &~ . gl'egation on this reform; and- a request for suggestions on "fed­ rFulIIeral Dome. eration" designed to form closer 550 Locust Str- 'f links between smaller semi­ ~@lw@~@fr®$ QflD IQ)g@~<*$®o$ 1F~r§t hIJ RfveIr. Mass. naries in the same area. The congregation has been OS 2-~91 PITrSBURGH (NC)~Eighteen coming before ·the tribunal., in both civil and canon law,

slow in coming out with any The diocesan tribunal has be- after the manner 0:[ 'the' 'Euro­

Eose E.' Sullivan statement to rectors, Archbishop attomeys began a special course . Garrone said; because it wanted 'of studies here . to prepare' tween 350 and 400 cases filed pean tradition and the doctorate .,.,c"ey E. Sullivan themselves for the role of Jay with it in the course of a year. "utriusque," under. which a1'­ first 'of all to get some "feed­ advocates in the marriage triAbout 20 take on the form of torneys are <:ompete,nt to plead

• .back" on how the coun'dl's Dec­ before either, civil· Clr .eccJ.esias·,;, "... .... '...'...._~ laration on Christian Education bunal of the Pitsb~rgh di~cese. formal trials. ,... ' :. " They will be the first ''lay adThe lawyers were invited to, tical coutis. , , was being received~ and also to vacates .in the diocese's history;serv'e as lay advocates', by'Bishop. enlist the help of rectors them­ The bishop did not eXClude the Where A'" :.:, . . selves and get their i4eas on the The New York .archdiocese in.. ' .TohILJ. Wright. possibility th:lt once laymeh are

'preliminary" c~nference ' functioning as advo,~ate's in the

work of the congregation "in the: troduced three lay advocates" into its diocesan tribunal last 'with' the lawyers, Bishop Wright diocesa'n tdbunaJ SOIne might b€fl. spirit of the counciL" "'. In his talk Archbishop Gar-' - Spring and a ·few other dioceses .mentToned his hope .that' 'in the appointed' to other" tribunal' rone stressed' th~ importance in are reported moving in that di,; . futureiawyers, men and women, posts, such judge:;, defendem' I :~: . . would aspire from thebegi'hning of. the bond and pr.omoters of" the seminary curriculum of phil­ .1.Tection. ' ,. Ii" osop'hy and of a "unified theol­ The lay advocates will 'repre:' 'of their legal training to qualify' . justice. . '. . . . . ... ,.... 'ogy,!' sent· clients in marriage' proce­ . i:: . '.",. . \ "" J.... dures in· the tribunal, :which is

the Church 'court. Their' study- . rP~an:Christ~clnU~ity

Churc'h Weddnngs :BONN (NC)-The:number cd' lectures will conclude Nov. 28;,·. We~1k JanUar)f, (Church weddings has increased' ·after which they will be used in NEW YORK (NC)~CnQrche8 both formal and summary cases some dioceses of communist­ throughout the United ... states , l'Uled Czechoslovakia it was reo­ and the world wiil launch aD pcJrted .by KNA, the German eight-day round of special ac­ Catholics news agency. FRIDAY-Blessed Virgin Mal'Y tivities Jan. 18-25 in observance,

of the Rosary. n Class. White. of the 1967 Week 'of Prayer for

.

Mass Proper; Glory;. 2nd Cnristian Unity. .N'ecrology Pra)'er 51. Mark, Pope ·a n d Celebrated by Catholic, Prot­

QCT~ 14 ' ' Confessor; Creed; Prefa(e Of estant, Anglican and Eastern

Hwy. ftev. Dennis M. Lowney, l!ns. Blessed Virgin. E>rthocioxchurches, the. annual

Assistant, Sacred 'Heart, TauntoD. Votive :M:ass in honor of: &1­ observance has as' its theme fot

"ed Heart 'of 'Jesus not.pq!r­ 1967:' "Called to One "Hope" OCT. 19 . '., HYANNIS mitted. . .. ,. \' . .,. (.IDphesiallll 4:4). Rev. Manuel A. Silvia, 1923, SATURDAY-St. B·rirlget,Wid" .. HARWICHPORT Open. Evenings'·· Pastor, Santo- Christo, Fall Rivelr. ow. IiI Class." White. 'Mass • 300TH YARMOVrn Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer ,,:u... _' 88. SeJ,;gius, Bacchus, Marcel­ lus and ApuleiuS;'Martyrs; nO FUNERAL HOME, INC. .Creed; Common Preface.

SUNDAY-XIX Sunday 'After

lL M3fC&I Roy - Go LorraIne !loy

Roger UlFranCe Pentecost. II Class. Green.

Mass Proper; Glory; Creed:; FUNEftA~ DIRECTORS. wn~HOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBl.EMS Oct. 9-Our Lady of the Holy Preface of Trinity: , 1LS Irvington, Cll. ,. 'Rosary, Fall River. MONDAY-St. Francis Borgia, at the

'95·5~66 Our Lady of the Holy Confessor. III Class. Whitti.

Rosary, Taunton. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; New Bedford. Oct. 13-:-La . Salette, E a s t Common Preface... :

SOMERSET, MASS.

. Brew-ster. TUESDAY~Maternity of the

St. Peter, Provinceto.wn. . , Blessed Virgin.'M~ity. II Class.

.St. Hedwig,New Bed-' White. 'Mass 'Proper; Glory;

. 'ftI8 rnos1lfr~ncl1ly, '~R)ioCratic IJANK offerlllg ford. .. .Creed; :I;Teface ':;01 Blessed

. Virgin. 'J ,

oUr Lady of the:.Isl~' fUNERAL HQME ., CC)mplf~e·OIB'~":'Stop WEDNESDAY':""Mass 01 previ,Qus .

Nantucket. "', :.:';' ',",: <€fuIbAccoun'ls . .Auto Loans

Sunday. IV Class:Gt~en. Mass

4169 Il.OCUST STREEV Proper; No. Glo,ry 'ot Creed;

Checkiing Ac(counhs Business loans

mE IlNl:HCB .' , . /FAll IIlDVER, MA~. Common Preface.';, '

.. t • .Savings ACCCf"riiS' leal Es1tate lo«Ins.

GlIcoml Clau POStage Pala at' Fall RII!.~.l. . THURSDAY-St. Edward, Kina

OS 2-3381 II:lss "U1lI1s/Ic> WOf) Thurscb, ..·iiJ' .<,lW . AI Somerset :Shoppin~ '~~Brightman St. Bridge and· Confessor. III Class. HiaIIlano "veRII&, ]all RlvllI. Mass:.. : '02'122 : WD!frecll c.. .!lames rt ~. tile CathoJic Pross 01 the Diocese of Fall: . White.' Mass Proper; GIClry;, Member Federal fj)epll)s~ ~urai'ICG CorpClration . ~iSCClUS Sullivan, ~. lli'Rll Sullscrl\ltlw: pr!ee. bl' mo!l. /IOSfI;a~' no Creed; Common Prefaee. $4.00 pea yea,.

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says Pope J~hn

Saw Necessity.

,Of' Ren®w@~ ST. PAUL (NC)-An tlJ1.. derstallding of the characteI!' 0f Pope John XXIII is es­ sential to an understanding

Youngesf Marylcnoners. From Diocese, :

Fr~

33~ Brother Loyola F®Jrmm®Jr iestallilJrtanmt WOJrlk®rs

Mullen R@~h

Tf1f ANCHQRThurs., Oct.' '6, '1966

26

3

Says Education Gr®@'&est N~~d

Food preparation may be the way to mor~ things -than the heart. It may, for in­ mance, .be the route to Maryknoll: it seems to have been for two young missiopers from the Fall River diocese. They are Father Peter P. Mullen, M.M., of North Attleboro and Brother Loyola (Ronald) Rocha, M.M., of Fall River. Both were in the restaurant bus­ iness before joining Mary­ knoll. Father Peter P. Mul­ len, 33, is currently assigned to Maryknoll missions in the

LOS ANGELES (NC) - Em~ ployment will provide short­ term relief for America's racial problems, but only education on a massive scale will result in III final solution, John A. McCone, fOrIner CIA director, told a Citi­ zenship Day dinner at Loyola University. "If these two remedies are provided," McCone said, "then solutions to other problems ranging from violence in our streets to de facto segregation will unfold." McCone, who headed an offi­ cial commission which investi­ gated the 1965 Watts riot, called for a revolutionary onslaught at every grade level of education to remedy education deficiencies of Negroes and other disadvantaged groups.

of Vatican Council n and the trhurch renewal it has inspired, Auxiliary Bishop James P. Shan­ Elon said 'here. Bishop Shannon, fQrmer pres­ ident of the College of St. Thom­ as, here, opening the college's Neries of public lectures on key documents of Vatican II, traced Philippmes. He is the son of Mr.

Pope John's life from his peasant and. Mrs. Peter P. Mullen, Sr.,

origins to the papacy. of 122 Ellis Road, North Attle­

Bishop ShannOlll said that an boro.

that Pope John had done and Father Mulien worked .full

seen in his life Jl'ormed a "pro­ time for four years in a restau­

Vidential preparation for bis rant before beginning his studies

election in 1958 tso the Chair of . for the priesthood in 1952. Just Peter." prior to his ordination in· 1962 "From this lofty vantage point o he commented, "I planned to

Emd in this lonely position of stay in the restaurant business

power," Bishop Shannon con­ before I got the idea of joining

tinued, ''he received daily more Maryknoll.

detailed evidence that his sus­ "I don't know exa.ctly what it

Segregation, he said, will con­ J;»icions were correct and that the was that attracted me to the so­

tinue and grow as long as the ehurch was losing ground on ciety initially; maybe it was the

level of achievement of the dis­ many fronts: to atheism, to Com­ thought of starving people' in

advantaged - literacy, bas i e illunism, to secularism, and to mission countries."

skills, ability to earn and to per­ Indifferentism. form constructively in a compe­ Father Mullen has a sister,

Mrs. Ronald Achin of 120 Ellis

titive society-is far below aver­ Church ]Irrelevant Road, North' Attleboro. Two

age. "His conviction grew that for other sisters, Patricia and Pris­

He called Negro leaders to great masses of modern' men the cilla, and two other brothers,

turn from marching and rioting Church was neither good nor Eugene and Kevin, live at home.

and find constructive solutions b3d-but simply irrelevant to Brother Loyola' Rocha - is the

to the problems of their follow­ their daily fears, their hopes, son of Mr. -at:ld Mrs. Henry'T,'

ers. fueir pains, their ambitions." . Rocha of 231 Linden Street, Fall

For this reason, Bishop Shan­ River. At 26 he is the youngest

non said, Pope John called the full-fledged missioner from Fall

('ouncil and those things that River. (Father Mullen 'is the

WASHINGTON (NC) - Five have since happened in the REVEREND PETER P. MULLEN, M.M. next youngest.)

vice rectorships have been es­ ehurch "are in great part the Brother Loyola is the only

tablished in a reorganization of North Attleboro . burden and the glory of John Maryknoll Brother from the

the administrative structure of XXIII." diocese. He took his' triennial

the Cathatic University of Amer­ Those who view current dis­ oath, normally the last oath be- . and a brother. They are Mrs. Aaron, lR.S.M., stationed at st. ica here. The action was taken to sidence in the Church as a sign Linda Dupra of 172 Blackstone Mary's Convent, 261 Spring fore final oath,'in the Spring of meet the. need for more direct "that Vatican n was a mistake," Street, Fall River; Sister Mary Street, Newport, R. 1., and Henry this year. decision-making and for the uRi­ Bishop Shannon said, "fail to Rocha' of 194 Beach Street, Fall vtJrsity's future development, Before joining the society in realize the towering faith of River. 1961 he was a short order cook Bishop .WHliam J. McDonald, Pope JQhn, the role of the Holy and counter. man in a restaurant rector, said. Spirit in guiding the Church, and in Fall River. He took his postuthe evident signs of trouble SO . Iancy and novitiate at the . NEW YORK (NC)-A bust of visibile on all sides in our s0­ Brothers' House in Brookline, ciety." Mass. He is currently assigned as Pope Paul VI - said to .be the only one done from life and 'Tough-Minded' Realist JERSEY CITY (NC) St. ~k at the Maryknoll Junior with the official permission of Peter's College, an all-male in­ I "Praisers of time gone by," Seminary in Clarks Summit, Pa. he continued, "who long for Brother Rocha has two sisters the Vatican - went on public stitution since 1872, has wel­ view for the first time at a din-. comed its first coeds. The 121 .those idyllic days and who la­ ner here on the first anniversary girls are outnumber\,!d .18 to 1 ment the conflict arid tensions of the Pope's visit to the United by males. ~

/'jf our day in the Church and in Nations. '

.The presence of the' young . dviI society, are essentially ro­ Pietro Lazzari, the sculptor, roantics unable to cope with the ladies caused Father Victor R. AND NEW. YORK (NC) - Francis brought the bronze bust here Yanitelli, S.J., .president 'of the eomplexity of the world and buman afairs as they really are." Cardinal Spellman blessed and from Rome. Lazzari said the in· college, to remark that St. spiration to do the head came Peter's this year had the "most Pope John was of Ii different dedicated the Archdiocesan In­ structional Television Transmit­ In Units of $500 or More from the Pope's televised plea gorgeous freshman class we've cast and definitely would not ap­ preciate the paternal cond~scen­ ting Facilities at the Empire . for peace. The sculptor said: "I ever admitted.~_

sion of these critics who i1ream State Building here. Federal thought that I must do this gal­ of returning to the quiet security Communications Commissioner , lant head in bronze."

Minneapolis, Minnesota of the Catholic island in a 80­ . Robert E. Lee participated in

The Roman-born sculptor re­ for detailed information the ceremonies. eiety which cares little for Christ, The signal emanating from the ceived permission to do the Pope write to eompassion, charity, or catechet­ Empire State Building is a link from life after waiting in Rome ies. for about a' month. Lazzari said "For all his gentle kindness, in the TV network' that eventu­ ally. will serve 437 schools of. the that the piece is all Roman, Angelo Roncalli was a tough­ even the bronze casting. He said: Registered Representative

minded realist who saw the archdiocese which enroll 224,000 "It seemed right to have a bust elementary and high school stu­ 145 Pond Street

Christian witness in our day be­ af the Pope cast in a RQman ing squeezed to the wall in the dents. Educational courses to be foundry." . Winchester, Mass.

. beamed to the 4,700 square mile atena of public affairs and hu­ 365 NORTH FROt.lT STREET 9-2696' Andt PA area which will include Spanish, , man society. Unwilling to pre­ mathematics, language arts, so- ....-•• NEW BEDFORD Nr<lme _ uide over the Church of Christ cial studies, arts, music and WEAR while this terrible trend con­ Address _ religion. WYman 2-5534 tinued he decided on a drastic Shoes That Fit The programs, b<>th in color City _ step." ' "THe FAMILY SHOE STORE" The resulting council, Bishop and black and white, will origi­ 19trannon declared, called all to nate from the new communica­ John~s a "clearer vision of the role of tions center at St. Joseph's Sem­ inary in Yonkers and will be . a Christian in the world." relayed throughout the archdio-' Rt. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport eese by transmitting equipment . 43 FOURTH STREET at six IQcations. Fail River OS 8-5811

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., 'Oct. 6, 1966

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Advises Labor Movement's , Cri,tics Look for Facts (Director, Social Action D~pt., NCWC) By Msgr. George C. Higgins The Anrerican labor movement, during' the '30s .an<1 early'40s, was the darling of "liberal" journalis'tsand acad­ emicians, but, :according to one of them, "ever since World War II, it has been estranging the people who produce tlistribute, and conspicuously . -claim to be an expert on the consume ideas . . . Many of subject. them no longer regard the His criticism of organized labor movement as protector labor is less abrasive than Mr. of the underdog." By rOl~gh Fritchey's and is put forth'more count, at least 25 liberal intel­ in sorrow than in anger. Para­ lectuals h a v e phrasing the ·familiar .line of. so sa i d substan­ 'many disillusioned liberals, he tially the same says that the labor movement is thing about 01'­ in a, state of "spiritual deCline" ganized I abo I' and has lost "much of its souL" . during the past Labo'r leaders, he adds, "are four or five _ inclined to be old, highly paid, years in col­ high-living, often self-seeking, umns, articles, public-relations conscious"" *" and books, .Not moreover their constituents, ahis all of them and alack, have joined the mid­ claim to be ex­ die class and thus have gone the perts or' special­ way 'of all flesh. ' ists in labor ec. . In 'joining the middle class, onomics, labor relations or labor Mr. Brooks notes rather sorrow­ history. fully, "the blue-collar man has Some of them are admitt~dly largely kept his cultur.al style, amateurs, with little if any spe­ gained in material comf-orts, and eialized training ar first-hand lost his ideological fire-and experience to back up their ~og-' - with the last, one fears, some-of matic criticism .of orgamzed his self-respect," l a b o r . S u g g e s t s Leg Work 'Lost Its Youth' It would be foolish, ·of oourse, Curiously enough, the am ato deny that there is .a certain teurs are often more intemperate , amount of truth in these .and in their c,:iticism than some of similar liberal attacks' on the the experts. Columnist Clayton American labor movement. On Fritchey, long-time associat~ of the other hand, I get the imjres­ the late Adlai Stevenson~ IS a sion that many of its disillu­ case in point. sioned critics are out of touch "The truth is," Mr. Fritchey with the labor movement and wrote in May of this year, "that .are spending too much time in the American labor movement their book-lined studies and too has lost its youth, both literally little time digging around out and figuratively. The zest and in the 'field. enthusiasm that once gave un­ If they were to get out and do ionism liew life ,has. evaporated. a little more honest-to-goodness There are few new leaders with leg work, they might discover. fresh ideas either in the ruling that the labor- movement, ~ith councils or on the horizon." all its faults (which we can talk Mr. Fritchey is almost, but not about so'me' other day and which, quite prepared to agree with in any event, are all' too well Congressman A dam Clayton kno~n to the public) is still very Powell's somewhat less than ob­ much alive and still has much jective opiJ~on that the AFL-CIO to 'contribute to the cause of s{)­ leadership is "senile, puerile, and cial reform and social recon­ sterile." struction in the United States. He grudgingly admits that The labor reporter f-or News­ ~perhaps" it would oe fairer. to week is setting a very 'goodex­ say that the labor movemerit's ample to labor's liber.al ·critics top leadership, "is aging rather in this regard. He' has been out than senile, an.d static rather beating the bushes in an effort than ~terile, but in any case it to discover what is really hap­ has obviously lost vigor and pening these days on the labor imagination." beat. His findings, as reported Policy in Asia in the Sept. 26 issue of News­ By co~paring AFL-CIO presi­ week, run directly contrary ta dent George Meany's position. in . those of Messrs. Fritchey and the labor movement with that of Brooks and other liberal theo­ Vice President Humphrey in the rists. ·New.i\lilitano:y' Administration, Mr. Fritchey un-. Two years ago, Newsweek!s wittingly gives his hand away­ reporter points out, the labor or so it seems to this observer. It would appear that what he is movement seemed' to -be in the really (or principally) mad doldrums -'but "that' was two 'about is Meany's, "unquestioned years ago." As of "last w.eek," ·he support of U. S. policy in Asia." repol·ts,"a riptide of new mili­ One gets the impression, in tancy was flooding (the) placid -«lther words, that Mr. Fritchey landscape in a sea of revolt." would probably take a mW;h less "'Clearly," he concludes. "it's' jaundiced view of president too early to say whether aU this Meany' and Vice President adds up to a genuine social revo­ Humphrey if they were to make lution. But cveil if the tide of an open break with the admin­ militancy ebbs, U. S. labor has istration on foreign policy and staked claims where it has never line up publicly with Senator been before-and the ecoilOmie' Fulbright-or with Mr. Fritchey. landscape will. never be the Indeed he might even De in­ same." . clined to hail them enthusiasti­ A brief visit to the recent con":' 'cally as progressive and far­ vention of the United Steelwork­ sighted statemen if they were to ers of America in Atlalltic City, say what he would like to have N. J., served to confirm my own them say about the war in impression that Newsweek's an­ .vietnam. alysis of the present position -of 'Spritual Decline'? organized labor in the United John Brooks, author of a re­ States is substanti<illy correet~ cent history of the past 25 years or, in any event, much closer to in America entitled The Great the 'truth than the more, pcssi.,. Leap (Harper and Rciw,.. Ne}V niistic line which is being York, $6.95), is another liberal. pushed by so many of labor's critic of the labor movement erstwhile friends and supporters who. I should think. would, not' in the liberal intellectual camp."

.

.VISITOR: The Most Rev. Constantine Koser, Acting

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I?ifojectr lEqu~lity COLUMBUS (NC)-Six reli­ denominations in Central Ohio have committed their multi-million dollar purchasing .power to the nationwide 'Project Equality movement for racial justice .and -equal job ,opportu­ nity. The interfaith 1,lction was taken by the Presbytery of Columbus-United Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A.; the Ohio West Ar,ea Conference of the Methodist Church; the Roman Catholic diocese of Columbus; the Episcopal diocese of South­ ern Ohio - Columbus Regional ·Council; the First Unitarian Church, and the Central South­ east -Association of the Ohio Conference-United Church of Christ, Project Equality is an equal employment opportunity pro­ gram originated by the National Catholic Conference for Inter­ r.acial Justice. which has head­ quarters in Chicago. . Participating institutions agree t~ combat racial discrimination in hiring practices by contract­ n g only with suppliers of goods alJd services which have merit ~mployment standards, in addi­ tion to the usual requirements Q.f pI:ice, quality and service. ~ious

i:

COll'dgn<a1 Retires ~ARIS (NC)-Maurice Cardi­ nal Feltin of Paris, 83, has an­ nOunced that he has as!<ed to reEre in conformity with the -decisions of the Vatican Council and the recent suggestion ·by· Pope Paul VI that the clerg)' reti re at 75"

There are those who say that the Steelworkers International is a classic exam'flle of a union w,hich has run out of steam and is content to settle complacently 'for the status quo: Don't you believe it, 101' it simply isn't so. The S~eelwork­ ers union is still full of vim and vigor.. Ask the reporters who 'covered its recent convention, It is my guess that, almpst to ,a man, they win tell you that it, was one of the best conventions in the International's 30-year history and that the new spirit of democracy and responsible miJitancy which were so evid~nt througthout the entire conven­ lion augurs very well indeed for the future of general labor movement, of which it forms such an important part. . The moral of all this is that it's much too early to begin mak­ ing plans for labor's funeral. But what to do with all those liberal obituaries? I would suggest that th~y be .filed in the wastebasket.

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THE ANCHOR-

Nationa! Catholic Charities Meeting to Ope~ Oct-' 7 .

Thurs.. Oct.

Non-Catholics Join Faculty

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-"Catholic. Charities in the lHodern World" will engage the attention or some 1,500 UJeI'~ns involved in combating modern social problems dur­ ing national meetings here sta1I"ttng Friday, Oct. 7. The ~ion will be the 52nd dressed by Mrs. Hale Boggs, a .nual joint convention of LadSI' ()f Charity and wife of the National Conference of Congl'essman Boggs of Louisiana, The National Conference of WhoJic Charities and the t50ciety of St. Vincent de Paul, and the tbird, biennial meeting ~ the Association of Ladies 9f f:Mrit,. of the United States. An important, topic of discus­ iion foI' the Vincentian society ...n be the operation of salvage libops that belp finance its pro­ pam of aid for the poor. ~Aewal of the Church ....rough Charity," win be the theme of tbe Ladies of Charity meeting. The' keynote address will be given by Msgr. Leo J. ~,., director of Catholic Charities in the archdiocese . of JrQshingt6l1, D. C. 'lftte meeting will also be ad-

Catholic Charities meeting· Will open Sunday, Oct. 9 and confer­ en.ces, workshops, and institutes wi" precede the annual business mecling, to be held Wednesday, Oct. 12. This will be followed by the annual meeting of diocesan dif'ectors of Catholic Charities. Topics to be discussed at the confet'ence will include programs £oF s~rengthening family life, volUftteer aid, world hWlger, mental health, community ser­ vice, the war on poveny, wm-k fGl' tbe aged, governmental par­ -Mcil;)ation in social welfare, and the application ef Vatican coun­ cil documents to the Catholie Chat'ities movement.

Increased Help for Minorities Common Respensibility of Ami JrAIRFAX (NC) -No one in. ... society is "free to stand OR movement, with au its admitted faults, has much to offer them." the sidelines as a passive specta­ United St&Dd . . . of the national effort to Management, 'Msgr. Higgins IIPgrade living conditions of the poor and minority groups, Msgr. 'cGAtinued, must make ewery ef­ Georie G. Higgins said here in' fori to "maintain and enforce non-discriminatory policies in ~ginia. hiring, upgrading and dis­ "This is our common respoosi­ charge." Mit,. and not merely an· elec­ He recommended that _tiO,l1al Give, so to speak, for the few," the director of the Social Acti()n employes' organizations and Department, National Catholie tFade associations -"come to the assistance. of their individual .Welfare Conference, said at a­ employer members by taking a Mass at St. Leo's church. Much has been done in recent united' stand in favor of equal ;,ears, Msgr. Higgins il>0inted out. emp:!oyment opportunity." In, the area of government, he· But he added that "time is of the 6JSSence and all must be prepared IH'ged that a permanent Federal "" make whatever sacrifices may F air Employment Practices Committee "with statutocy pow­ IlJe required to spread the bene­ el[' and sanctions ilnd with the fits of our phenomenal produc­ widest possible jurisdiction'" be .."ity more equitably among aU established. pewle of the United States," "It would be the duty of this He called for stepped 1lJ) ef­ ag.ency· of government," Msgr. IlK1s tobelp the poor, partic\ll­ lad,. the' Negro, by labor' and Higgins said, "to JJtamp out ra­ Jaanagement, federal and state cial discrimination in hiring, fl:lOvernments, and individual upgrading, and firing, on tile J;}Ql"t of employe"! engaged ift .AMericans. interstate commerce .and. 6f 'lihe <Much to Offer' ~ organized in their iBdus­ Union officials and "raDk-aRd­ lite" members, he said, must k-6es _ trades." .uminate sue h discrlminat~r~ pr'actices as refusing t& ear&lt Lutheran'Stresses

lI'egroes m apprenticeship pro­ ,...ams arbitrarily restricting. the Corporate 'Reunion­ IMIII\ber of Negro apprentkes, ~NION CITY(NC) - Past~ .nd c()t}fining Negroes to second Mal( Lackmann, German Luther­ dass membership in so-callea an pastor visiting the United -.xiliary locals. states to get support for Chris­ Be also ealled OIl Neg~ tian unity, said in an interview workers not to let legitimate here ill: New Jersey that, corpor­ Sl'-ievances against some uni(HlS ate reunion, not conversion, is "'I\unt them against the labor thejway to ChriS'Uan unity. lIftOYement as such nor discour­ "Corporate reunion means that Ilge them from taking an active we come not as heathens, but to laterest in union affairs." fulfill our heritage by Catholic "They have much to offer the regeneration. In the same way hbor m(}vement," he said, "and in the past the Catholic Church __ the same token the latltn' . has been reunited 'with Orthodox boQies." The L u the ran ecumenist forms Commission stressed, however, that he did not want future reunions to be To Study Vocations one-sided, but expected that a NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A compromise would be worked 'I'I'OCation development commis­ out. Pointing out that Eastern IDon has been formed here w Ch~rches joining with Catholi­ lItudy means of increasing voca­ cism gave up many of their old tions to the priesthood and Reli­ customs, the, pastor said that. lPous life in the archdiocese of Lutheran reunion would, me~, ))Jew Orleans. fOf example, Catholic acceptance At its first meeting the com­ of II married clergy. mission approved the 'hiring sf til professional researcher w Names Advisors guide planning and to conduct lIIecessary studies to determine DODGE CITY (NC)-An 18­ whether current vocation efforts member diocesan board of ad­ awe relevant to young men and visocs has been established by ~men. Bishop Marion F. Forst to serve Charter members of the com­ the Dodge City diocese. The rnission include 12 lay persons, board will consist of nine priests, Ilhree priests, a Sister and a three nuns, three laymen and Elrothelr. three laywomen.

5

6. 1966

;';i;~~:'-;

~,,;':.;"

MIAMI C6NVENTIONERS:_Leaving the Taunton Bus Terminal for Logan Airport and Miami, voting delegates to the national convention of the National Council of Cath­ olic Women are greeted by Miss Margaret M. Lahey, candi­ date for national director. Left to right: Mrs. John J. Smith, So. Dartmouth; Mrs. James. ,W. Leith, Miss Kath­ leen C. Roche and Mrs. Elmer Paul, aU of New Bedford; Mrs. Charles :{..andry, Attleboro; Mrs. Adrienne Lemieux; Taunton; Miss Lahey, Fall River.

H.ospital Needs Financial Aid PATERSON (NC) -The Sis­ lers of Charity of St. Elizabeth may have to curtail their char­ itable work at St. Joseph's Hos­ pital here unless additional 1li­ nancial assistance is forthcoming, Bishop Lawrence B. Casey said here. Bishop Casey spoke at cere­ monies commemorating the ded­ ication of an $8 million addition to St. Joseph's Hospital, New Jersey's largest Catholic hospi­ tal. "There is no alternative to in­ cr.eased aid," Bishop Casey said, citing the "staggering burden the Sisters are carrying." City and county governments, he said, pay only one-fourth el. the amount the hospital ex.pends to care for indigent patients ami those on welfare rolls. He ,said "something has teo give" because the Sisters of Chariiy are heavily ie, debt, throughout the state. He said "it is evident that the chief respon­ sibili tyo f&r providing. money-for medical care of the indigent rests with government."

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. CHESTNUT HILL (NC) - A Jewish biblical scholar, a Luth­ eran theologian, a former Epis­ copal priest, and a laywoman theologian have been added to .the Boston College theology de­ partment. Dr. David Neiman, who is Jewish, and formerly of Bran­ deis University, will teach courses in biblical literature and history. Dr. Joseph A. Burgess, the Lutheran, will teach intro­ duction to Scripture. Dr. Paul D. Felton, who was an Episcopal clergyman before his conversion to Catholicism, taught at St. Jo­ seph's College, Philadelphia, be­ fore coming here. Dr. Mary Daly, who holds a doctorate in sacred theology, as well as Ph.D. degrees in Sacred Doctri,ne and in philosophy, will te:lch a course on the Church and a course on the thought of the late Paul Tillich-contem­ p&rary Protestant theologian. Dr. Daly and Dr. Felton are the first Catholic laymen to teach theology at Boston College, while Dr. Burgess and Dr. Nei­ . man are the first non-Catholics in the department.

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, THE ANCHOR-,:-Oiocese of, Fall ,River-Thurs.',0ct."6, ..1966 . .' - . ., . "..' ~.

.

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:Glory' and, Sadnl?ss

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. . ,Praises ".aith:::~

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",I

.: Of Poles

;,'

.United States Representative Charles Longstreet Welt­ ,ner has shocked many by' his announcement that he was 'giving up the Democratic nomination in his Georgia district and thereby giving up virtua~ reelection because' of a prin­ eiple: he could not abide by a party loyalty oath that would have him support arch-segregationist Lester Maddox for g-overnor. The Representative makes a worthy candidate for any, future expanded' ,edition of "Profiles in Courage." . There are those who feel that this is story-book gesture and look at it' with perplexed wonderment. There are others who see 'in it the nit-picking of a tender conscience since they themselves would have no difficulty dissimulating and double-talking in a like situ-. ation. ' There are those who look in amazement at an act of such forthright and uncompromising directness~ But there are none who do not admire a man who can thus .stand on principle at such a great personal sacrifice. The Representative has said very simply, "I cannot violate my oath, I cannot violate my principles." . .. '.

, That is all there is'to it. A man of principle, an action , of' prinCiple.. And· the. sad.nessand glory is th~t people' are both surprised at such, but forced to aomiration of it.

BALTIMORE (NC)-'" Polish people have kept theil' faith strong despite mq' ,years of adversity and hMie much to teach other Catholics lit this time af change in tbe Church, Lawrence Cardinal She-> han said at Holy Rosary chud here. . Cardinal Shehan preached . , . sermon at a Mass commemOl'. i:t:lg the Polish Millennium. 'JrJllfl Mass was offered by Bish_ Ladislaus Rubin, personal 1'eP'" resentative of Poland's StefaIJ Cardinal Wyszynski to Polef! abroad. . ' , Having traced Polish histCDI: from the conversion of its rolei' 'in 966 to the outbreak of WorM War II, Cardinal Shehan said CIlll its recent history:

"There is no need here to ... view the recellt tragic years' cd 8uffering Ii!) d disappointJD8Dt which have been so deeply . . 'graved on our' ~emory.' ~ amid so many reasons for . . spair the Polish people ba8e never lost hope. ' Jubilee magazine tells us that from/the answers of Devotion to Mary two-thirds of the priests polled by them, a reappraisal of "They have remained stead­ priestly celibacy is favored. At first glance, such an opin­ fast," he continued, "intbel!' Pr~~.ate Tells Serran.s Eo'se Shor,rage loyalty to the su'ccessors of. sa. ion by sixty-six and two-thirds per cent would seem to ,merit Peter. They have retained' theb' .!By IExam~~e of'Christian livi~~9J much attention. ' . strong tender devotion to tile A further. reading of the story thEm indicates that DE KALB (NC)-The short- urged the Serrans, who areded-'Blessed Virgin Mary, Our Lacto; five hundred priests were asked' to give their opinions. age in vocations will be'over- icated to fostering vocations to . of, Czestochowa. Their long IJliBo. Weli, this does narrow the number asked, doesn't it? Then come, not by speeches, but pri.., the priesthood, to plan future ac-' tory has taught them not to put we find out that of those asked, only one hundred and marily by the example of tivities in accordan,ee with the their confidence in men or _ twenty-five gave replies. So the conclusion is· based on Christian living, a bishop assert- council's Decree on Priestly For- ,the things of this world, but Ill. ed here in Illinois. mation. . the goodness and might of God the opinion of two-thirds of one hundred and twenty-five Bishop Loras T. Lane of RockThe Bishop called upon Ser- and in the intercessory power 06! priests-eighty four men. ford, chaiqnan of. the.U. S. bish- rans to lead the lait~T toward:re- His Mother." Speaking of the post-conciliar And there are over fifty. thousand priests in the United ops' committee for seminaries alization that the shortage of and priestly formation, told a vocations is everyone's problem period as a. time when ~ States. district convention of Serra In- and the task of remedying it is "whole Church is striving fOf Q It would certainly take a strange type of wizardry ternational here that pessimistic the task of every Catholic. deeper consciousness and luBel' to project the opinions of eighty-four men and come up specuiation that the priesthood The solution will not be ob- ·realization of her nature, bel' with a valid sampling of what over fifty thousand men as we know it will become ex- .tained by mere propaganda, ' destiny, her mil\sion' in the WOll'Jd tinct. is utterly lacking in theo':'. publicity and speeches, but win of today," Cardinal Shehan COllJloo think and wish. logical' foundation. result primarily from the .exam-· mented that resulting changee This kind of poll remin.ds ~ne of the remark of the, "There have been times in the pIe of the whole community liv-' ,have "not always been easy:" late Fred Allen. He maintaned -that a pollster could count history 6f the Church, and this' ing in a fUlly- Christian way, he' New Trends the number of 'grains of sand at the bottom of a birdcage is one of them," the Bishop said,' way, ,he said. . . " '''Renewal has meant ferment;­ and come up with the amount of sand in the Sahara, desert. . "when the number going into the He!lited the efforts of. fanll~~' he said, "and. out of fermeDll priesthood is very il)adequate, . and parish· ,groups, and, ~eJr , have arisen some new tre'nds and. N umbers are such' flexible things, aren't they? Hence the 'crisis in vocations'.'" need to properly introduce tG'. some confusion which have beeB ·X Bishop' Lane said the time-' 'young pe~ple the idlla of religi:-: troubling especially to 'those who worn' programs and approach~s' ous vocatIOn. have felt comfortable and seClIlN , , ·A district court judge in Denver has asked parents. of the past seem to have lost . ,in conditions. 'which had imc 'to cvnsider the si~ "d's". as a basis for .a code for ,their,s<ms theil: appeal for the you,th' td.; prevailed in the Church. " anddaughters--:decorum, dress, dating, diversion, drinking today.,. ", 'piniOn IIVI e, ' ,"In conditions '~hich ~'U,e . ." . -. . . . . E~erY9~e's Problem . I· 'existed ,in Poland ,during .tIIe and qrlVlng. T.he ~ou~g ~?p'le ,t~e~selves sho~ld look n~to", ,'As with so ma~y 'othe~ pro'n, .~un s 'or". ~past quarter-:century', 'there b~ these areas and be gUIded :m formmg correct attItudes about. . grams we must look tel·· the " ,MIAMi (Nc') _ A divisio:h"~' •~een much th~t, was calcula~ them. . words' of the Second' Vatican 'opiillon has arisen iJ!l the 'rank8:' to cause c~nfusion and' a,?~~~ , . No one can expect young people to' simpl~ grow. up C:0u~,cilf.orguidancean~ direc.:. of the "American Ch'il LibEirties ,'. In the Jn1dst of !lucp c~r~~ the right way. They need example, and there IS preCIOUS tion" .Bishop Lane saId., ,He Union over employment here'@: .stances, Poli~h Catholic,! .~~ little good e.xample around, They need the security of ,a who would WE,ar reii'gious, tea~h us the Importan,ce of ~ - DO OiL gar~whiie directing ail· anii-: basl.c truths: .. " norms. They need to be able to see into the rightness and .oeese to . uselTve poverty program . First, Chnst pJ;'omised that Be yvrongpess of acts and draw on the .strength of others Dol.osh M.ollennooum' . . . Himself would abide with 1lbe Ii'" • The U..S. ?ffice ~f EconomIc Church all days, even to the tc stand by what is difficult but right. PULASKI (N<;:) -A diocesan ?pportumfy 111 Washmgton, D.C., of the world, arid that He would It is no good for parents to look at these six "d's" observance of the Polish millen- In J~ne appr?ved employment send upon the Church the Holy and to immediat~ly conclude that they have no problems nium of Christianity will be held of SIster. Mane Inf~tn~a of the . Spirit, Who would be tllle with their children 'along these ljnes. These are the same at Assumption church here in ~blate Sisters of PrOVIdence ~s Church's real teacher. ' pareilts who may one day ask themselves in stunned be- Wisconsin with Bishop Stanis- . director of a day care ~enter lD "Secondly, He founded 'Jim . laus V. Bona of Green Bay, pre- the Dade County antI-poverty Church above all on Peter, who wilderment-Why didn't I see what was happening? And s i d i n g . ' program. The, nun, who. i~ a together with his successors, by then it is usually too late to do anything. Celebrant of Mass will be Negro, ~ould wea~ her relIgIOUS to be the living center of Hi3 Father Dacian Bluma, O.F.M.,· garb whIle on the Job. Church." , superior of the 500-member Indicating the issue may cul­ /Pulaski province of Franciscans. minate in court litigation, RichFather Remigius Steczkowski, ard Feder, head of ACLU's Flor- C«1lUf@tJ'lmog Offers O.F.M., former superior' of the ida branch, said employment of' '1 200 ~dllOlall'shlips. Assumption province, will, the nun wearing a religious 0 preach in English and Polish. habit in a government position LOS ANGELES (NC) - Tl:1e may be unconstitutional. State Scholarships CommissiOllll "State courts already have ruled' 'oj:·ened competition for. 7;200 against employment of nuns.' scholarships provided by ~nOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF IrALL ~uVER R.e»ectTheQ)D@SJi~Q1H Trainin'tri o~ Women, wearing religious garb as teach-. ftrnia. to high school senioiil. :II ers in publIC 0 schools," Feder ,Fr. Herman Hauck; S.J., of f?­ Published weekly'by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fa" River BUDAPEST (NC)-A propos- 'said. ,", F:oancisco, chairman of the schoA­ ,flO Highland Avenue 'al that women be admitted to Feder said the situation in- arship and loan commission, e8ti­ the Central Theological Acad- volved the principie of the use - , m3ted 2,700 scholarships will be Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 emy of Budapest was rejected of religi01,ls -symbolism wpil!! in' .. open. to .new winners, and' 4;000 ',.: by the Hungarian Board of government employment.' " .. - . will "be renewals to presentJr PUB~ISHER Bishops at itS meeting here. Melvin Wulf, ACLUrepresen-, "enrolled scholarship winnerS;' . ' Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD., Among other subjects consid- tative in Miami, previously'had ',He 'estim~ted that 24,000 bJgti I ., ered by the bishops were litur-, asserted "there would seem w',' school seniors and co]]eg~ .... GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL ~NAGER' ,gical, matters, regulations' eon- " be no reasoit why she could. be ., derits' would enter the 12th ... Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll cerning fast and a,bstinence, and. barred from the job becauSe Of, ' nual competition. Whiners the Holy See's instructions re- this one factor since that. would, ·dtend, colleges of their, chOiee MANAGiNG EDITOR lating ,to the retirement of. amount to'religious.disc:rbDJna-·" 'in Cl!lifornia. Maximum aw8n1 . Hugh J.Golden " bishops. tioJ?: ill employment,'~ . Is $1,500 per year•

,Flexible Things

Vocations Crisis

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@rheANCHOR

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:StOnehill'SttUkRt Am ,Director Gires Financial ~dvke 'to' C~e.Bo~nd· High'S~~lers

By :Dorothy Eastman When the ·high school senior thinks 6f college years ahead his imaginings are probably full of classrooms. football games. and brilliant conversation' over sodas at the Student Union. But what his parents' are thinking is something quite different and and can be described in one word: MONEY. How much will be needed for college ex­ penses? Where will it come from? Daniel J. Reilly. Stu­ dent Aid Director at Stone­ hill College, North· Easton, has some helpful suggestions for

parents and students on this suo­

~ adding that this is the time

· of year that high schoolsertiors

·tIDonld 'consult -the Aid Director

at the college of their choice if

··Oi~rE!' are any problems.

· :"Mr. 'Reilly is of the optimisttc

"oPiiiiOrl' that money is noi an

· fnsoluable problem for any aca­

demically qualified student~ Bilt planning is needed and now is thetiine to do it. What are the foreseeable ex­ penses' that will have to be met tn the college days ahead?'The : first and probably largest 'ex­

pense will be tuition. This' can

range from $1,000 a year:.::.:.tne

tuition at Stonehill-to well in

eirc'ess of $2,000 a year at some

· colleges. Added to this will:be special fees for lab expenses, ap­ plications, etc.-usually abOut $50 a year. . Resident students usually have to pay as much for room and board as for tuition. At Stonie­ bill room and board, health and .' STUDE1'i{'][' AllD COUNSELOR:' Daniel Riley, student . infirmary fees come to $940 a

(;chool year.

aid counselor at Stonehill College, discusses problems of ']Dormitory students should' be financing education with two undergraduates. sure to inquire as to exactly

what the room and board fee

will cover. Provision should be to· be a major source of long governme£lt's. Educational Op-· made for money for' personal term loan ,funds for. students. portunity Grant. These grants items, laundry, dry cleaning, The .first statewide plan of its are given to the neediest stu­ blankets and linen. kind in the United States, it was . dents, and range from $200 to'· Commuting students will' not organized with the' cooperation $800. This is a new program, Mr. have room aild board expense of the Massachusetts Bankers Reilly points out, and there were but will have to plan for travel .Association. It enables commer- 30 such grants given to Stonehill expenses and lunch money. .. cial' and mutual savings banks, students this year. Clothing is another big item .- credit unions and federal savings Scholarships have always been In 'the' budget. The size of this and loan associations to inake,· a major' source of additional budget will differ from student ':UhsecUted perSonall<ians to stu- 'inoneY'·for college expenses, and· to 'student but a minimum' first ,,' d~'nts 'to help pay'expe'nses'''of 'many are given each year by the year's clothing expense would'.be " 'higher' education. " ' . . ' colleges;' by' parishes" clubs and .$200: '" . \:, " :', How It Works commuhities. The Massachusetts , .., . Social Life When a student :'recclves' a . 'State' Scholarships however,are · .", 'College finan~ial experts Say HELP loan he signs an original '. ~holarships that many students that the average student '.will ;note due for pay~ent not:less "'overlook,' Mr. Reilly says,and ae'ed another $200 a year f()f'per- than 'nine months nor'more than he believes many more students ·'Sonal expenses and entertain-. on~ rear a.!fter the date of his should, be applying for them. · Mento 'Parents should keep 'in antiCIpated graduation. Upon ' ! The·, Parents' Confidential

'inind that football games arid 'all i maturity of the note, if..the·loan -".Statement, that is filed by the

those snacks at the Student "ds .mQf.~ than $2,000, .the student :' family of. a student applying for

·VriiOti. will not be free,' and' it· .may. elect to sign a renewal note ,~ither.a s~holarship or a grant, would be unrealistic to fail to . providing .for repayment of his IS perhaps one of the most im­ plan funds for a reasonable so- -loan in .monthly installments. portant pieces of paper the 'par­ cial life for the student. .' A student may borrow up to ents will ever fill out. Books and supplies are another $1,000 a year, but not in excess On this 'statement is requested big item - u sua 11 y running .01;., $5,000 for undergraduate informati.on about the parents' around $100 a year. years. HELP guarantees to the income, size of the family and Other expenses might be med- bank 80 per cent of the unpaid other' matters, that will serve as !cal, dental, health and car in- balance 'of principal amount due a guide for these making student surance-all these should be pro- on ~tudent loans, and pays inter- awards. These statements are vided for. est on the loans when the ad- filed by the College Scholarship Now on the question: where justed ,income of a student's Service 'in Princeton, N.J. Mr. will all this money come from? parents is less than $15,000 a Reilly has the highest praise for Ideally' it would come from year. this service which, he says, is lJI,lVings that parents have put Mr. Reilly points out that the doing an "excellent job in mak­ away for the purpose over the HELP loans, which are being ing available to colleges an ef­ years, plus any money· the stu- made available to freshmen for' fective and standardized deter­ dent can earn during vacations~ the firSt time this year, must be mination of a student's financial 'Unfortunately such money is not applied for in a student's home need." lIlways available. community. Package Deal Not many years ago an empty Another Source While there is more financial savings account would have Another source of income lior help available now than ever spelled the end of hope' fol' students is the Federal govern- before, it isn't recommended ,Johnny's college education. But, ment's Work-Study Program. that a student plan to "borrow lantastic though it sounds; the . Under this plan, a student can his way through college." Stone­ great American dream of a 001- work on campus up to 15 hours hill, like most other, colleges, lege education for every l\lCa-' a' week, doing many kinds of discouJ;ages a student from bor­ demically .qualified student may ,wOl'k-from landscaping, to sci- 'rowing more than $4,000 for his IiIOOn become a reality in Mass- ence lab assistant.' - foury'ears of higher education. ac;:husetts. . . ..' , The 15 hour a week maximum . Many students will rely on a , :rite. good fairy that may gl'ant t.ii iJ. built-in-safeguard of the. p~kage deal-some money from "lis. wish to students low on ilFOg~in, Mr. Reilly says. Stu- HEL,f;, ./lOme, ~om the work­ · funds but high in' ambitions "dents' doing any kind of work study p'rogram, or an off campus '~~rs .tI:te unlikely niune of. the . ~ncampus or ofi':'-should rea- . Jll!lrt-tiine job 10 supplement .. Hi,gh Education Loan Pian, li~ the. p'oientiafdaqger to ~lieir 'filiniiy' ·saviilgs.. the. Massachusetts Higher 'Educa-' bealth and academic status if ' .' Mt." Reilly and aU' his feilow . ~~m' As,s~sta!1:ce Corporation.. AP- .. ', t~eir' ·work. many mo.re· hours Aiit' Pirectors in collegeS acr"ss II .L,rppr:~ately.. called HELP" th18 ,t~!\~. thl\t. ,'tliecoti.n~ry;'are there to help a plan, a federal. and $tate sponAnother source of funds~but st6dent' map 'out his financial sored loan program, is desi~Eid one limiteclto. fre~hmen-=iS the plan for college year&. .

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FORMAL

SESSION

SpOnsored by STONEHILL

COLLEGE

and

DIOCESAN SCHOOL OFFICE '."

.•

CO[Ell)~CA "il'ROINJAIl.

Boston College Canisius 'College Catholic University of America Fordham University LeMoyne College MarquefteUniversity Merrimack College Niagara University St. ,Bonqventure University St. Fr:ancis College University of Oayton University of Detroit Villanova University

MEN Assumption College Belmont Abbey College College of the Holy Cross fairfield University John Carroll University King's College LaSalle College Manhattan College Marist College 'Mt. St. Mary's' College Providellce College St. Anselm's College St. John fisher College St. Michael's College St. Vincent College Seton Hall University Sieria College' . University of 'Notre Dame Xavier. University

WOMEN . Alb,~rtus MagnusC;olleg9 A1vernia College Anna 'Maria 'College ':Annhurst College Aquinas School 'Cardinal Cushing College College of Mt. St. Vincent ,College of New Rochelle College. of Our Lady of the EiRla College of St.' Elizabeth College of St.. Rose. Dunbarton College of Holy . Cross 'D'Youville College. Elizabeth Seton College (Junior College) Emmanuel College Georgian Court College Gynedd - Mercy College Holy Family College Immaculata College Maria Regina College

(Junior College)

Marymount College'

Marymount Manhattan C",lIege Mercyhurst' College Mount Mercy College Mt. St..Mary College (Newburgh, New York) Mt. St. Mary College (Hooksett, N.H.) Nazareth College Regis College • Rivier College Roscify HiIICorlEige St. Joseph's College (Windham, Maine) Sf.. Joseph's COllege . (Emmitsbl.lrg, ~d.) St. jO~E!ph Colle.ge " (West Hartford, Conn.» '. Sfllve Regina College

~ti(~~imJ~<rn:~-'~~~i';yH~~II;;~ege


8

THE.ANCHOR:-Diocese: of Fc:stl River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 19~6

Educator Hits

SchOol Study

Guest Room in Home F~~~s To Meet C~d fric\; Sf~ ~ dl ~ If@§ ~y

BRIDIGEPORT (NC) - Thxl

rriginal director of th%massivQ

study of. U.S. Catho!ic schools

p'olblished by .the University oil'

Notre Dame in August has .

strongly criticized the complete<1

survey.

William H. Conley, now pres-­

;dent of Sacred Heart University,

here, said the study suffers from

outdated statistics, inadequate

qolestions and poor sampling

tt'chniques.

The study, carried out aj

Notre Dame, with a $350,OO@'

grant from the Carnegie Corpo=

r .. tion,was launched in 1961.

. While praising many parts the study, Conley criticized othel?

aspects strongly, particularly too

factual data on the schools.

. "That data was ready for pub­

Jlcaiion in October, 1,963," bel

·said in a statement. "It ShouWl

· ha've been released then.' It iB very misleading .now. The changes have been so dramatic in the past years that it shoulcll immediately. be done over.'; : 'Conley said that "for examplll., we know that teachers' salariei! · ·have increased rapidly in tbe 1)3st five years. We know that · more' te.achers have, gotten ~ · lege degrees. But these advancelil don't show in the study.';. .

lW&ry 'finley IDaly

Ever try making like a guest in' your own home? It's ~n experience. Somewhat like the saying, never judge any­ body "a bad Indian". until you've w:alked in his moccasins for a day, we decided to tryout our own guest room, try it ''''as is." We tried it, sans such as "Basic Physics," "Princi­ preparation, no rooourse to pIes of Economics," "Modern " a.ny other room in the house, Sociology," and, a batch of col- ­ "checking in," bag .and bag­ lege' yearbooks. Not even a

gage> after a '10-day vacation Gideon'Bible! 'during which we'd slept in a dif­ Had our guests been inclined iererit roo m . to drift off to dreamland soothed mea r 1 y every .by such soporifics, they would might. "Bet our have been hard pressed for light, own iuest room' . the nearest lamp half a room iean hold its own away on what had once served against any of as a study desk.: $hem," we told' .' Observing our self-made rule «Klrselves smug­ not 'to enter any of th~ other 'liD': Indeed, 'ev­ Tooms, we' retired. Wen, beds ery twilight were' good,-the place was quiet­ . ihe road, we'd qu~et, t~'at is, ,u~til. '!"~ h.eard ~ F AMIL Y DAY: Following. panel discussions' on the iRart searching fly buzzmg over oUl:, hea. ds . Ugh.. , Enthronement of the Sacred Heart in the Home the first fo r a m'o tel And the only fly swatter down­ -.. ' . " ' " . '. . promising'the "Five Basics;' ~ stairs in the kitchen. 'Waking in FamIly Day of the prIests, brothers and SIsters of the wanted: 1; Clean room; 2, Com­ the .pitch dark,. we realized that Sacred Hearts closed with a refreshment hour:~Very Rev. Daniel McCarthy SS.CC., provincial, offers· coffee to Sr.' :flortable bed; 3,' Quiet: ,away the room lacked not only a fly from turnpike, noiSellPutside,sw~tter,'b"!t~ di~ ~i~~t,light 10 Julie Louise SS.cC. while' Thomas Clark and Leonard Cejka ioud parties inside; 4, 'Re~son:' 'gUIde :o~ unfamIliar WIt~ s~r" . . ' be' . 1.' I" . able coSt, and 5, Finally, that roundmgs. ' :Also" no' . dl'lnkmg walt. to I:!erve< . :welcome sign "Vacancy." glass in 'the bathroom. Folded Our travels had landed us in' newspaper' took care of the fly, Hyac;:inth Cird~ No., 71, many a Byde-a-wee, Rainbow cupped hands at the 'faucet, tbe The election of· officers for tbe :inns in four st'ates, now and thirst:···· . · Hyacinth Circle No.. 71, Daug~ then a JapaIiese Sandmail,'a Came 'the' mprni l1 g,sunshine Prelate Tells .Wo'men, 's Co.nvent.icm ·ters .cdIsabena, New. Bedforcll. Swiss chalet, '~iMike and :E;.llie's full 'in' our 'eyes ~,...,.. A bed may ,.will take place at the Oct. l1Ul 'Ch. u. rch Needs' O.rgo.nization.s .. Place, Motor Havens, as well as" be good mattress-wise,' but bet­ .. meeting and '. all members. are ritandard'}zed . Cabins mairitaine-d 'tered' by' placenie~t faciJ1g away ~ske~ ,to be present the fono_ by national motel chains';' only froni theeilsterh window;' MIAMI (NC) -'The .ChurcH that it is very difficult.'" · ~ng morning, Oct. 1~, in, the Holy differen'ce; lobster' served '. in . No'" 'nder our' euests had al- '. exists iii. and doei; the work ' 'He quoted St. Viol:eni de Paul, . Name ,Churc~I, New Bedford,.~ . Maine; {irifs in" South Carolilia. ways"been 'up' bright and. early! .of Christ through Christian com- who told' a nun beginnhig her D o'clQck to o~er the Holy Sa4:~ .' ·Bi.te in the. 'pockelboo~ expe­ .. Yep, 'Our 'gllestrooln ..fulfilled . niunities, and the f8rmation of .. first· assignment among-the' pOOr J'ifice of .the Mass for their de<> riences' kept us whizzing by·the "F.jve·Basics,'~ especially ibe such communitfes at the . parish, that "it ·is only for your love, par.teci ~embers. . .' til6se advertising 'sUch lures as "vacancyH, and D()-bill bitt,' , .~iocesan,' 'and . extra - diocesan alone, !hat the 'poor 'will forgive H swimming:· pools,- sauna baths, ' B'ut, you may be sure, as·the levels is the prime work of Cath- . you the bread you give to them. '4!ntertainment" ·TV . aDd tele­ old soilggoes, "There'l~ Be Some. oUc organizations,' Archbishop'He said Catholic (.rganizations phones in every room. Swim- Chang~s. ¥ade!" ­ ,. John F., Dearden of. Detroit said should develop "pI:Qgrams cd Jning? Not this .time of year; .. hNe at. the. 33rd .national con:­ meaningful sharing with per_ sauna, nix; same for en'tertain­ 'W ... , 0 . t·· .vfntion of the National Council sons in need." ment. Phone in room? strangers omen rganlza Ion of Catholic Women. "This means," be added, II in··a·strang~lan(i,we know~ To Ha've,New Nam~ Inthisageofrenewal,hesai~" sharing 'riot c)lily of money", but ene to .call and Could alway's ~very' Chrl'st'an 'AGO N" C) Th' 7r:' ~, 1, ,or ga' nlZ at'IOn of pe'rsonal service as,' well." CHIC phice a iong-distance call home " ( . ,-' ,e.":' which "is a hindrance to Chris­ from a pay boot~. As for' TV, year-.old national fTatermll in­ ti.an· Community. either because Speaking OIfrene,wal in the PRINTED AND MAILED " omnipresent 'as the' Gideon Bible, surance organ~zati9n,' the Wom­ cl!f its exclusiveness' or narrow­ liturgy, the Archbishop said that we could take it or leave it en~s Catholic Order of Foresters, ness, or its triviality'" ,.. • must be ",)ur people' aiter their long BO­ Write or Phone 672, 132~ alone, leaving it alone most ·of wili change its n'ame this month ,prepared to pass from the scene," joum through the narrow ways the time' at home' anYw~y.All· to the National Catholic Society be declared. . of personal piety must learn now 234 Second sireet. - Fall Riveti' we asked of a motel was peace of Foresters. The organization . There are, however, many the joy' of comrilUnity participa­ and quiet, al1d money left'in our lias accepted men as members' ways in which Catholic organi­ .tion in liturgical action." since 1958,' and has placed in­ t wa 11e. .. zations can' contribute to the Packing each morning, un­ creasing emphasis on providing 'formation of Christian' commu­ packing each night,. we believed family-type insurance programs. nity, he said, urging the' NCCW we'd run the gamut of guest Mrs. Lucy Domino of Rock­ to "communicate to their mem­ rooms. ford, .Ill., national president, said bership .. '. an awareness of their Now for the unrehealfsed try the name change was decided on responsibilities in the renew­ in one at our h01Jse! Let's see \ because "many men are reluc­ cd Church." how our guests had been tant to become affiliated with an He' discussed Church needs in faring oj, ,.. '" organization with the word, thE' areas of charity, liturgy and Matter of fact, none of these 'women' in its title." ecumenical activity.. had been ,designed originally as The group, which. has more Share With Needy "guest rooms,H they are simply than 90,000 members in 19 states,. '''We think sometimes that it empty cocoon, bedrooms vacated is a charter sponsor of the Na­ ~rav8te~ '17@~ by our children after they mar­ tional CAR T A Foundation is easy to dispense charity," the ried. . . (Catholic American Radio and Archbishop said. "The truth is For our e:iq:ier~inerit, we chose Television Apostolate), a char­ the' most likely, 'one where ter member of the National ice Cream S.ocial Aids guests had actually stayed abour Council.of Catholic Women, and house.' . .

belongs to the National Fra­ AfriCan f\Aissiona'ry : Much Lacking

ternal Congress 'and 'the Cath­ LOS ANGELES (NC)-Teen­ Whoopsl No luggage rack, nor olic Press Association. . a~ers o:f St. Bernadette's Chi Rho straight chairs to hold suitcases; Club gave a party for a mission­ The cha'rmingl 6V:2 room e~rly American Ranch acloseJ; half full of out-of-season ary in absentia, House,complletely furnished,. in SLEEPY' HOL­ elothes; nothing to read, except Appeals Court Upholds The ice cream' social featured lOW, off AbbQft Run Volley R~ad. in 'Arnold's a bookcase full of college texts Anti-bbsceni.ty Law Sukiyaki Splits, Sayonara Spe­ cials, Tokyo Twosomes, Yoko­ Mills, Cumberland. ,.It is beautifullyc(>n~tnJc" ALBANY (NC),-The New homa Yummies, Karate Kakes,' Bishops Ask .Prayers York Court of Appeals has up- . Soft Saki and Saki Sanka. .,ted by tho~e fine builders~Alphqge F~rlcin~&' held constitutionality of Their adopte!i missionary, Fa- . Sons of IPawtucket., ,".'.'. :',., .. ~ '.' .. .For Cafhoiic -'€~I ie'g~s .1965 state"raw-'bar:r'inif sale 10 ther 'Dermis Diilton, ii1liome­ MILWAUKEE (NC)-Bishops Y'JUng 'people 'under' 18' of' ma-' .Where in South Africa. :

t~lial intended 10 "exploit lust··

througho~t Wisconsin have des­ HOUSE IEA1ITIFUlL is open 'daily froM 1:00 p.m. to Dusk; .' jgn~ted next SUnday as Wisco~':' fvr·commercial gain:" . . .... ;' ,The la'''y 'clays excePted : . , uP:' '

11m Catholic College Day, aSKing' '. Th&eOurt.<iiv'ided, ..4-3, .: ... for prayers ,fpr the continued .jn- '. b,<jldin~)!t" l~w: ' T.he majority;

'Directiona . ~', ' ~n~ctual growth lirid·· succe~" opinion. was, .writ1-en .by J~d8e"

Kennet!1. B .. ~eating: .

'of Wisconsin's' 11 '€ a th6iic col­ Drive Aorth oft Hhl leges and one' 'university: . . . . The' cease . involved the con-··

11-4, .'til see>th~' $leepy.·.Hollow... sign. Turn, right into Noting· that more tI13n2,400 vJ.('tion of' a ~New York book­ Hiflside, right ag.:rin at the Co~",unjty Librar,y into Abbott students .annually receive' de­ .. seller who' was fined $100' and Rvn Volley Road, thence to SLEEPY HOLLOW., gl'ees froin these institutions, the given' a30.:day suspended sen:'; bishops said the. schools are con­ tence 'for selling two magazines· tributing to the growth of the to a 17-year-old boy i1n' July, Olll' , Cm state, the nation aiid the Church. 1965.

en

on

First· Task'·

LEARY PRESS

s

MONTHLY,' CHURCH

BUDGET ENVE,LOPES'

-

IheSISTERS OF MERCY

tw 'f7isit .the

the

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For Y

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'Di~m~~d

R~od,'

.

:


THE ANCHOR­ 1l'~lJrs., Oct. 6,

Rosary ·Can' :Aid Family Peace ~~ Wen As' W(D)rr~dCoD1cor@

'iJ96~

Auditor Ret~res After 47 Years·

By Josepnua1lQalI lW'M'li]YllIl ROOeYicl! One cannot be a garoener without hearing a great deal

EWout "organic gardening." Not a month goes by that I

00 not reeeive at least one pamphlet extolling the value of

(;IS~turning to the soil what ts of the soil." Books by organic

gardening enthusiasts Goo.'

in lyrical terms the eould be ~ setting for a family

moo

rosary this Autumn month, as

this is .one time of the day when

aU members of the household

<lIuced in their gardens. For most are generally together and have

lid us, however, organie garden- a little time to share. If there

mg is limited to adding°~ are very small children in the

~ olllr garden soil. home a very lovely set of beads

Composting ill an e.asw. ~b. is one that is called "a. child's

8imply stoted, it is a matter c~ rosary." These are large wooden

aUowing the ll18tural precess, of beads with each decade painted

1Qacterial decomposition to oct:lllr 1Il different vivid color. They can

tn our gmrden wastes. There Ilre be bought at religious stores in

myriads of bacteria .which '~ct the area. Not only are they

wpon dellldl organic mat.ter. til sturdy but their colorfulness

such a way that its chemical helps young minds and eyes to

composition is broken ,down into concentrate on' them.

simpler compounds, our job is Selfishly, I hop~ to' introduce

merely to give the. bacteria the the recitation of the rosary not

. !!Jest possible co~dition/i.in which o~ly.to promote world peace tn operate. This usually means but also to initiate a bit of' din': &1dding garden soil, fertilizer anm ner table peace, if only between water to the compost. the main course and dessert. A ",I usually have .two '01' three peaceful: meal iIi a .household 'eompost heaps' going at one time. ~i:th; ;small .children . is . ain)ost, . . ; '!'hey are small, but 'serve my .n~n~xis~en~ .. ~ n d; .to?ethernes~ '., N I ' . ' •. ' . '.. 'purpose. One'isstarted'in,eat'lv becomes a bit suffocatmg as the

. ' EW BEDFORD TEA. EnJoymg the annual member­ Spring, another :in'mid..Summ.eor dinner hour approaches.

Ship' tea of, Hyacinth, Circle .No., '71, Daughters .Isabella, and ~notber in the Fall. Eacll In many homes the children New Bedford, are Mrs Ernest R .. LeTendre, 'regent; Mm. heap 18 aUowed. to decom~for are fed before the gro~ups, but Richard:g. Manning, chairman of,· the membership tea; ~ 1e~ I!l )'e~ before ~,18 ,used eves though. there are good Mrs.. Philip H. Richard new :member' .' ' .,' '. . ~.. the gorden. ' . . . . , , :.. ;: words to be saId for this method,

j ' . There are elaborate techniquetJ in our home we ~a~tly cl~g. " .laSed in oomposting but J .fiend.the to the belief that dinner is a' JoUowing effective: ,Pile debtiB family affair---0:6~r$,~~.swim; anlJ ' .. : .. from, the prden about ~ generally, from the' amount of ,klches deep, cover with t9(0 .. M' roUk spilled in the' course of one '" '.Franci~(m, 'Mission~ry, Superior' three inches of soil and an incll of .these lessons in manners, we el manure. Continue addin{t could do .either. On One oceasion .. Affected Government' Edict layers of prden· elippings, ,soU 'lrilen I had prepared a meal that :MAN~A (NC) A FilipinG petied from their own religious Md manure untU the. eom.post Joe, partieularly enjoyed, he fol~ llleap beeomeseither uDwield,. lowed, up the- saying . of grace lum who had. worked as a Fran- bause in March, 1966, they

.IM' unsightly and then Illiow lit with an appeal. to Melissa tIo ciscan Missionary in BurmafOl' moved to a house whose ren.!; 18 years is among 29 of her con- was paid by a kind Catholic .itJ deCompoSe. spill her mi~ and to Meryl to .gregation recently eX'pelled from Burman, She ·said. : ' From time to. time )'0Iltn.a!" fall .p,ff her chair so .we could that southeast Asian nation. In the meantime, the nuns find it b2nefieial. to give··the ge~ all the . accidents over and She is Sister Maria de Agreda, made, their living giving private ~ap a good hosing but tms is enJoy our dinner in peace. superior of the Bhamo school in piano lessons as well as English ~t really necessary if you make ' ~is ·~tro~le at. ~ table" is a depression in the top ofeom- ,llpuot'.at,pw:,. house my ,friends RangQon,. :which had an . enrpU... lesso,l).s.. "The, Rangoon bis!:aop [Archbishop Vic to I' Bazin post to aUow,rninfaIl to· gather liISsure" m(!,. o.Ile,.Qf our. close::;t rnen\ o( 100 elementary and higp school ,.pupils. M" .E ,p"J . • ' '. and'. ':8' urniese friends and slowly seep through the .a~ ~0st tt:U,ttuu~ ~end~. tells , .' ;Burma "has expelled .fore~.gn also,.gave us financIal help," she decaying ~atter. 1Q ,pla~ ofh()~ w~p. brs ~airly l~rg~fa~­ lnissi9nari!,!s and. nationalized all @id. ..' . manure you may prefer to use Uy reached an age where' they The Sisters' final expulsi<m a ~cw handfuls of cbemi.cal fer- .coiJld :all sit. a.round the table mission schools. and hospitals tilizer such as the type used to for the evening meal, he de'cided without.~ompensation.The gov- came in August. By September's fertilize the lawn. .to enliven the menu with lively ernment, however, has not inter- end· no foreign. missionary Wall .fered with the practice of reliallowed to remain in Burma, she' There is no question that com- democratic discussi~ns fro gion. . " added. posting helps the soil. However, each. Needless to say, this form .Asked . about her expulsion, if you intend to have an open of democracy can get out of Sister Maria Agreda said the eompost it is a good idea to keep hand an~ be~om: ~ bit upsetting government use d. foU River Women m mind that such a heap is a to the dIgestIve JUIces, so now a Burmese '~peaceful means of ejection, H The Fail' Ri vel' District Coun-' Eterfect breeding ground for mice monarchy reigns in bis house­ · Md othel:' undesirable garden' )wId if only at the dinner table. namely, a summary reading in cii of Catholic Women will meet April, 1965, of an edict to "na- c at St. Michael's Church Fall pests,' f:O some precautions The recitation of the rosary' tionalize" the' congregation's River Thursday night, Od. 20'.. should be taken in this regard. certainly may not hea solution school. . All members of affiliated grouP!' People who compost on a large to the problem of hectic meals,

The Sisters, she said, were told axe invited. ,8Cale usually build their combut it. could add that soothing to hand in all papers and SW'­ post pits with cement blocks or note that is needed. render the entil'e property and BOme similar construction mateThe following recipe was gen­ cash, but were allowed to stay rials to deter pests. erously contributed by Miss MeGIl in the convent while go~rn­ So this Fall be sure to gather lissa Romaine Roderick of the ment officials and teachers aU the leaves which' bave fnllea Immaculate Coneeption Parish took over their school. from yours and neig'hboring Fall River; and Ilheguarant~ When they Were finally extrees and attempt a compost me that it is so easy it can be heap. For myself I wiU most malile even 'bya five year old. ltSSuredly some of my leaves Jokinb aside, it is a delicious Eleeted to Office for composting, for pl'9recipe .that can be made by the Miss Lydia Pacheco, New Bed­ tecting some of my plants and children of the household with ford, has been unanimously re­ liIOme for an Autumn fire. whicn li~tle assistance and supervision elected president of the Daugh­ I: cannot :forego at this time af from the adults. tet'S of Isabella Past Regents rear. Cboeo-Nnt Ikops Club af Massachusetts. With her III the Kitehen 2 .SQt1ares unsweetened choco- will . serve two other women Pope Paul VI has appealed ~ late (2 ozs.) from the Fall River Diocese. the ,Catholics of the world!J;J 1 can sweetened .condensed Mrs. Mary-Lou Silvia, Fall pray the rosary during the milk. River, .will be a trustee of the month of October to ask olllr :!h' pOund ~hredded cocon~t organ ization; and Mrs.. Gertrude Lady to intercede for world lhcup"chopped walnuts Stiinton, North .Attleboro, will · f)eace. This is certainly a worth1) Melt the chocolate in tM be scribe. . while project to undertake 'as a top of a double boiler over very tJamily affair: The dinnet' 'table hot .!Water: . . .... , ." ': . -~-St:~F;~~·;i~"·· UTa ... 2) . Stir in condensed milk, . . . Diocesan Nurses. . coconut and nuts. Mix thorough-

b,rger and more abundant :th-uits and vegetables pro-

of

:~xpel·led

,From'.

Burma

Nun

by

..

WASHINGTON (NC) - Offi· cials and fellow workers at th~ National Catholic Welfare Con­ ference bonoretll a veteran member of the staff who retired after 47 years of service, to be­ come a consultant to the Genera! Secretary of the NCWC. Agnes J. Martin, head of the financial department, has the longest record of service at the headquarters of the U. S. bishops' agency. She joined the organ­ i:l;a~ion on July 3, 19HI, shortly. after its name was changed from Nation\U Catholic War .Council, World War I agency of the Cath,. oUe bishops of the United Stat~ located since then at 1312 Massa­ chusetts Avenue, · , N . W . ' ·lV!ir<$ martin has worked under all folix ,of ,NCWC's general sec~ retariel':'o-l\1sgr. John J. Burke, Q.SP,; Bishop Michael J. Ready. Bishl>p Howard J. Carroll and its present head, Bishop P~u1 ~. Tanner. . . Bishop 'Tanner, at 1'a~ewen ceremonies ,held in the Bishops' Room of ,NCWC (Sept. 29) spoke informally; citing ·the long and faithful term. of sel'Vice by MiG3 Martin, some of: it. during· the trying depression .y.earn of t!<e early ',3Os. , . " The.bishop·paid tribute to her loyalty, and faith in, NCWC. F.ar her ~edicationto her work,MJiro Ma;run has reCeived two papal ·hoIwrs. In 1960 Pope John XXIII awarded !:leI' the: Pro ,Ecclesia et Plmtifice"medaI. In 1949,..Pope , Pius· XII awarded ner tiie Benemerenti .medal.

Aids Vocotions .. JERSEY CITY (tIlC)- $t.

Peter's College here has ,an­

nounced a $59,827 donation it

has received will be used to prG­

vide scholarships for young men who intend .to study for the 'priestho~d.. The gift came from ~e estate of the late Marion A. L~h.ofthk city. '

ELECTRICAL Contractors

m

use

some

944 County St. New Bedford

7'9c lb.

a

Se·Q

.First Federal' Savings

Members of the Dioc~~~n' ,.. lY'3) Drop by teaspoonfuls onto •eounciI' at· Catholic Nurses will" oaking' 'she'et 'in "the. shape of

; atrend 10 o'clock Mass Sund~ ·oonb'ons::'

· JiDQnUng, Oct. 9 at St. Mary!s. • ·4) Place in a preheated 350·

Church, Taunton.. A . breaklb,lt.· eWell•. Twn .. off. heat and, leave ,1lI'l11 follow at Bishop CassiIil17 tnt" candy in the oven for 15 to liIJgh School, and Robert F. De- 20 minutes or until it has m l:m.e¥ will be iuest speakei'. '." glazed appearance. ..

~~~J~:'~~ME~

FOR .,,'.....

.

".I:

IlOOM~

',MiAis

11Iq";.,. Ol;

~-289'.

' ...

.

U% ;"'''ipp!e 'St" Fc:*ru Rive... Con~",detl" by .Fra.ridseel~ MiSSionaries of M«llfW oVo:qlli'GH1' +lOSPI11\,llm

~

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. 4 ~,%()h a~jSay'i~gs Account's ' • .,

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10

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River':"'Thurs., ,Oct.., 6;"1966 . ,

Bishop

','MRS; JOHN J.MULLANEY·

Names

laywomen To Advisory Boa'rd

-- MRS• .ttRISTiDES )('ANDRADEMRS.JAMIESA: O'BRIENi JR.

'. MRS. GlILBERT'N(IONAN .,'

'. MRS. RODOLPHE 'PARADIS

'(""Mrs:

John .r.. MulHmey,pi'esent,· ~ <Mrs: -Aristides 'A.'Aridrade';'tbe '. ", Mrs.,. James A .. O'Brien' iTr., . "Mrs. 'Gilbert Noon~m, 'a' mem" ' : ,Mrs. ,'Rodolphe' ·Paradis,' 'the, bel' of St. 'Pairick1s 'F'arrsh,"F'al:,; , for,mer Claire,' Auger, is, a ,arad-. 'director' ahd parliamentarian 'of wife' ofJttie ~late <Atty.' Aristide's present president of the Pioc­ the 'Fall River 'Diocesan: 80unci'l A'. - Ari'drad~' ':of . Taunton, 'is "an esan ,CoUncil of Catholic Women, ' mouth,' isa gNlduate of· SimmOlllJ uate'-ef Wellesley .college in, the , dass of 1929 and 'has.done g.rad- ' 'llfCatholicWomert;·is the·former-·. assistant clerk"O{"the' S'i.lpefior')S the former Gertrude K. Ready College;' Boston. ",.. ',",", .. :Rose'Marie F'J;igom- ,r, '.. ' , , ' 'CourtrBristdl County;", ,,' . ' and a member ofSt: 'Mary's Ca'­ "" She servedils presfdent of'the . uate,work"'at the 'Sorbonne,\ M,,",," '''f:.6ng''active' 'ill 'Diocesan',M..;' "i" ,. '. , . " thedral Parish, 'F'all River:", Dfocesan'" Council' 'of" 'Catholic:­ Gin University and, earned all fairs,' Mrs.: Mullaney ,has ,served '. 'The'mother'of one~~n,:Pe(er ; 'Married to 'Repr~sentative Women'ourihg 196f-6'2:'Her'ser- . M.A; in French'from MiddlebuJll.1' !, .' , as 'pr'esident of District No" ,4 of, R., Arrdrade; 'a junior ',at 'Boston' , JO;lmes A.' O'Br~en,· they ,are the ~ices'; to ihe Church nave' in'" College.. the Diocesan' Council 'of Catholic : 'College, "Ml's..' Andrade -is a",pastpar.ents of three children, Jl)mell eluded past regent of,the'Daugh- ' . A~present : te~ch,.ingat No..­ tel's of Isabella; past p'resident·Of mandin . Junior' 'High, School, 'Women; chairmen ,for ,the first president"of'the F,all':EUver"Uioc-' p,.. nr,' 14; Kathleen:,MaTY, 11; and Confraternity of ,Chri'itian 'Doe:,;',- esan Council- 'of· Catholic: Womei) , Timothy', Pa'trick,'6. :c,;' , District 'No: 5,Dioces'an COUIlcil. New Bedford; ',:MTS.. Paradis is trine,'courses' gi'Ven in the' Dio.,. and present member of the Dioe-' Mrs. 'O'Brien'holds nlember~ of Catholic 'Women, past' vice::' past president of thePatronesseII eese. esan Board. ' ship in the Cathedral Wome~'s president of ,the' Diocesan,Retreat, of the Sacred" Heart ~ome, Ne~ ,.',Mr. and Mrs. ,M.ull';lney ate , ' " ",', . 'Guild, Cathedral'¥others' Club, League,' and' "is ,now s"erviilga.s B~dford, 'and was the first pres:" members of'St. 'John the EvanA 'me~ber ~'ot St. 'Anthony's' Msgr. C'o y I e' ,High School president"of St. Patrick's Wom­ ident of the New Bedford AreQ, . J:elist Parish, A~tlepol'o, arid a~e' Parish;' Taunton, she -also' se"rves Mothers; Club; Catholic 'Woman's en's Guild. lDio/lesan, Council .. of CathoHe . the pa"re,nts of one daughter" on the' ,Diocesan Board of' the' Club of Fall, River, Sacred "Mr. and' Mrs. 'Noonan reside' ''women. Colleen who teaches school in' Confraternity of ,'-Christian' Doc:" Hearts Academy Alumnae Asso­ lllt 11 Lantern Lane, ,Falmouth., . Mr. and Mrs. 'Paradis ,are Los Angeles. trili e. ' · ; ciation .lnC!. Friends of St: Anne's members of st. Joseph's Parish, HQspital, Fali .Riv~r. New Bedford, and the paren1.!l Pey' Prroperrty 'Tax A past president of St. Mary'li of two children. Pierre, an at­ ,Ho,~,rarchy Cathedral Guild and the Fall Printing Plant torney in New Bedford, and River Council of Catholic Wom­ Daniel, a teacher at the New GLEN· ROCK (NC) - The en, she is now serving as secre­ C~ntinuity ,~f Paulist Fathers have agreed to Hampton School for Boys. tary to the. Bishop Stang Day MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The innovations while others act im pay property taxes on their Church's hierarchy is an essen­ insure the continui'ty of doctrine, Nursery Corporation and Board printing plant in this suburban of Directors, a member of the New Jersey community. .. tial control element in the con­ despite the changes. Couples' Panel for Pre-Ca'mi in tinuity of Church doctrine, a , Taxes this year' are estimated The Second Vatican Council, the Diocesan Family Life Bureau sociologist told the American at' $34,000 on property assessed he said, demonstl'ated how the and for four' years was Diocesan at $805,000. .. Catholic Sociological Society Church's resiliency to pressures chairman of the Family and , In view of the Pauli,5t decision, here. and strains works through, a Parent Education Gommittee. COMPANY the council unanimolJsly voted The society's cOllvention was combination ,of the ,Church's to drop its claims for 1964 aild also told by other speakers: power structure, its ethico.dog­ 1965 property taxes. .Th'e council Catholic students entering 'matic system and the character­ Sisters Volunteer

Complete Line at . first granted ' the' pilUlist college have "a· poor 'under­ istics of Church membership. Fathers a tax-exempt 'st~tus Materials 'Building standing of the meaning and ~or CCD PlI'oject

"In ,a Church which ,has tradi­ when they moved their printi'ng structure of the Mass." JERSEY' CITY (NC) - More tionally stres'sed its definiteness a'nd distribution operations here ,. SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN Catholics, tend to ,vote for and uncl)an'geable fidelity to a than two dozen nuns from sev­ In 1964, but later sought' pay­ Democratic Party candidates and system of beliefs. and norms,' eral congregations ba've vol un­ ment when business interestS WYman 3-2611 Protestants, tend. to vote for. there appeared in the'course of ieered to teach in a novel tCD , protested. Republicans. school here Saturdays this the council radical modifica­ Winter. . . , Father, Rocco Caporale, S,J., a tions," Father Caporale said. sociologist at ,Manhattanville ,The school, held at All Saints , Teaching 'Authority College, Purchase, N. Y., said , ' 'parish, will' be directe4 to non­ "As far as' we can now evalu­ . some bishops act to ~fing about c:atholic children in . all inner i . :" ate them', the modifications not' eity area and will ~ concerned ", 'only do, not disintegrate the with more' than religious in": Seton Hall . Honors Church structure but make it stniction. Classes' will try to more relevant and open new meet 'the commi.ll1icatiOll needs .! ,. ~ardinal Wy.s~ynski avenues of. influence in society." of the children. , NEWARK (NC)-Stefan Car­ 24.Hour~" ;Wretk~r This was ,made ,possible" be The schooi is an outgrowth of dinal Wyszynski,' Ihimate of said, "by the ability of the hier­ a . Summer' program' cond uded Poland, was awarded: :an" honor­ archy to guarantee continuity in the area' with the help Of 'ary degree in absentia by Seton 653, Was,hirigton Street, Fairhaven and traditional identity' ,even 'anti-poverty funds. The Winter Hall University at 'ceremonies when a, ,refol'lnulation takes school will follow the same lines "W¥man 4-5058, here 'marking the 1,000th anni­ place." as the Summer one, but add versa)'y of ChristianHy in Po­ Tt'Jigiou~ orientation not ,possible The Church's, teaching author­ land. \:mder the Summer project. The aegl'ee was presen.ted by ity, he'said, is torn between the necessity' of defending, and pro­ Msgr. Edward Fleming, execu­ FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU claiming thedeposft of faith and tive vice-president of the uni­ versity in South Orange, N.J. the necessity to present it rel­ ONJ:-STOP BANKING evantly to 'each generation. It was accepted by Bishop Lad­ DISPENSING

islaus Rubin, the cardinal's per­ "Whenever the Church ap­ OPTiCIAN

sonal delegate to' American cele­ proaches' a situation of potential Pre.crlptiOlWl

brations of the Polish millen­ disruption at the level of its f.... Eyegla .....

nium. membership, the hierarchical Filled

Office Ho....

The presentation took place gro1Jp goes into operation to 9;00 - 5:00

at a'dinner after a Solemn Pon­ bring about needed con~ctions, OF TAUNTON except Wed.

tifical Mass offered by Archbish­ primaril;; by redefining its Fri. Eve,

. •rtlOIlll, W. Main ~;t:-:-I!oynhom, Rte. 44-Taunton, Main St. op Thomas A. Boland of Newark ethico-dogniatic system and con­ 6:30 - 8,3D

llllIoll'lh !Dighton" Spring St.-North Easton, Main St. in Sacred Heart cathed,:al here. sequently the power alignment 1ll00m 1 Bishop Rubin preached at the and the conditions of member­ Member Fednrol lDepos~ Dl'lI5U;cnce Corporation 7 No, MClin St.. Foil River OS 8,64'2 Mass. ship in the Church.

:il ,

Church's For

Esse_ntial

Doctrone

On

fAIRHAVEN' lUMBER

.................................................

on

BI!~AiLLON/S

,I

,GARAGE

Service

will

................................................

ANTONE S•. FEND, Jit

,FDRS1II·MACHINISTS

NATIO'NAL BANK


11

ME ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thuv$., Oct. 6, 1966

Loy Members of

Any. RICHARD K.,MAR1'IN

Diocesan

JUSTICEPHPUP M. BOUD,REAU,

.. "Atty.' Richard'K.,.Mar.tioj ,a . ,.SpeciatJusti(tc PhiHp.M.&u­ member' of St., Joseph's Pal'ish, dt:eau" a member, of. Our Lady of , ;No•. Dighton,' jlJ, a graduate,' ,OJf ·theAssumption ,.Parish;,.Oster-: 'J1aunton .' High' School;. George," . ville, ·was ,educated, at H'!Tvard w'Wn Univel,"sity,' <Washington, . «:;,ollege .. ,.8ndj ·lIarvard., , Law and studied law at Harvard Uni.. I5chool. whfre ,he ,recei~eQ, his ,'versitywheJ:'e, :he, received . bis, LL.B. degree "i.~ 1.951; , ,,' law degr~ in 1942. ' J ; > u r i n g W~rld ,,'Var ".n he Mr. MaJ;tin served four Years . Sf;!r~ed ,8S, ~ J~e,utenant, in. the with the S.'Army'in the Pac~-' \1. S.. Navy.' " " 'cific arcjl being, discharged ,'as':a Since 1951" )~e ' has ,Prfl~ticed . ' ," " . ..~a~ in Hyapnis ,and was, . ap.)i'irst Lic\ltenant. Mrs. Martin is ,the former, poiJ1ted 'a special justice April Nanl;:y . C. 'Regan. 'The Martins 6, 1961 for ihepistri~t courts' of' have three sons: Craig, 7; N~i1, 5; :Qukes County, Edgartown. ~' and Bruce, 4. This meiT!~er of the newl)[: He serveq as Chairman of tb~ ,.created Pastora.l. C;ouflcil is al!lo 11965 Catholic Charities Appeal serving the Diocese as a mem;­ as his father J'oseph H. Martin ber of,the Diocesan Ecumenical of T;lUnton, did in 1944. Commission that was named by Bishop Connolly.

V:

Enquire Into' ,Adm'ission Policies Of Fraternal Organi%otions MILWAUKEE (NC) -At the a of Gov. Warren Knowles of Wisconsin, Joseph C. Fagan, G:hail"man of the state Industrial , Commission, met for three days with leaders of secular and reli­ gious fraternal organizations to inquire into their ad,nissions , JPolicies. The meetings were precipitated by demonstrations held by ~ youth council of the, NAACP before the homes of several prominent members ,of the Eagles, a club which reportedly practices racial discrimination. Local Grand Knight Ervi~ Kotowski of the Pere' Marquette Council of the Knights of Coreq~lest

I

.

Greek Archbishop' ~o Visit Vietnam " NEW YORK (NO) ~ Arch­ ,bishop Iakovos, Primate of the Greek Ol·thodox Church of North and South America, will "isit Viet Nam during Thanks­ giving "week. The Archbishop will meet with Greek and Eastern Ortho­ dox servicemen in Saigon and other designated places in the war area, will conduct an East­ ern Orthodox Thanksgiving Day service and possibly will go to the front lines to bless service­ .en. The Archbishop, who is eo­ president of the World Council of Churches, is accompanied ~ several dignitaries of the Greek Orthodox Church. The party will also make stops at Orthodox Communities in Japan, South KOI'ea, the Philippines &ll1ld Hawaii.

.. , DR. CARL

~.

DeflRIZIO,

DONAT BOISVERT

~rganizatioA.

, :ATTY,~AURICE,F. DOWNEY.

JUSTICE WILLIAM "'.TORPHT

Dr,..Car.1 J. 'DePrizio, ,graduated. ,.. Atty,., ,¥aurice,:F,. ,l)Q;Wl)ey, It. ,'Specjal Justice. William,' A from HoJy Gross ,College in 19211 graduate,of Holy, ,Family, High" 'f:orphy, a member of, th~ }Jo}y and received his medical degree, lloshm 'College," ,andHG!lward ' Name Parish, Fall River, is maTl" fl·om. the . Harvard ,Medical LaW'ScJ:iool, is ,a me;mber ,of St. ried to the former Anna P.·Gib,­ School in 1928. He '~S,seflior ,as.. Lawrence's P;I.rish, New,Bedford. ,)in: A graduate ~f Boston Cl>1­ sociate surgeon at "the Sturdy - Married to the. former Anne' lege and Harvar~ Law, School\, Memorial' Hospital, Attleboro. he is a. d.rector of. St. Vincen~'tl M. Harrington, they are the par­ Home Corporation, Fall RiveF, ents of. four children: William, He was honorably discharged and a member 'of, the. executive from theU. S: Army· Medical Margaret, 'Paul and Matthew; , The New Bedford attorney 'is committee of ,the Clover Club ~ Corps in' 1945 'as a' lieutenant Boston;. ' G:olonel' .after service' in China, a :member of Serra International, They ;Ire the parents of Iou!? Burma 'and India.. ' , an Education Councillor for children: William A. T01:phy Jr.. ' Boston College in th~ New Bed­ Dr. DePrizio is a past presi­ ford AI'ea, and a member of the of Boston; Mrs,. Edward,W. nay dent of'both the, Holy Cross Club Jr., Crai1ston; Mf!;. 'Arthur JJ. Diocesan Commission for Chris­ of. Bristol County and the Serra Morgan, Purchase, N. Y., antll tian Unity. C.1ub ,o.f the A-ttIe,?oro District. ' The Downey family resides at' Atty. Frederic J. TorphY of Fa)ll. River. The author of many articles, 6~6 Rockdale Ave., New'Bedford. The Pas tor a I Commissioli1 and abstracts' for medical jour­ member' also served as parish nals, he is a member of St. Former Councilman chairman for the Catholic Me­ Mary's Pal'ish, Mansfield. morial High School Campaigi\l Ordained Priest Married to the former Viola held in Fall River in 1.963. M. Romn of Worcester, they are WILMINGTON (NC)-A for- _ the parents of four married mer Philadelphia city council­ daughters. 'They are: Mrs. Carla mem and politician was ordained ~E • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • D ~ LaPlante, Mrs. Leah Priestly, here Saturday, as a priest of the ~ Mrs. Judith Ellis, and Mrs. Oblates of St. Francis de Sales. Elaine MOI"gera. Fr. John M. McDevitt, Jr., 42, m ~ with eight of his classmates from

the Oblates' seminary in Hyatts­ Catholic Students i111le, Md., were ordained at St. Anthony of Padua church here • So. Dartmouth ~ At Jewish Rites by Bishop Michael W. Hyle of : <tlll11d Hyannis : PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Forty . Wilmington. He served on the Philadelphia Catholics students, including City Council for six and one­ • So. Dartmouth WY 7-9384 ~ some seminr.rians and nuns, at­ tended Rosh Hashanah services half years, then in June, 1962, : Hlyannis 2921 : resigned to study for the priest­ jll Jewish synagogues and tem­ hood. ples .here. ~ ~

lumbus told the commission that there are no Negroes in the council, 'whose headquarters 'are located in a predominantly Negro section of downtown Milwaukee. Kotowski said' he had held his post only since July and does not know whether there has even ever been' a Negro in ·the 'Pere' Mai·quetfe. Council. He added that any male Cath­ olic over 18 and in communion with the Se'e ,of Rome is eligible Stud~mts <from 'Rosemont, La for membership in the Catholic. Salle and Chestnut Hill Colleges' fraternal ,organiza~ion., . and the Unh'ersity of PennsYI..:' Question, Irrelevant vania Newman Clu'b attended; Lee Everts of Appleton, Wis., .along with six deacons from St.~ State Deputy of the Knights' of C ..'arles BorrOlneo' SemInary and Columbus, told ·:the, cQmmission , sf>veral'''nUlis, mostly Sisters of that he does not know how J1lany , ,Mercy. Negroes are numbered among Wisconsin KI')ights since the question of race is irrelevant for admission. Judge Robert Hansen,. past president of the fraternal order INSURANCE !-GENCY, INC.

of Eagles, said his club has the 96 WILLIAM STREET

right to reject applicants on any grounds it chooses because NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

private' club is an extension of the home. WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167

The NAACP youth council PERSONAL SERVICE

demonstrated for 12 nights lI'e­ cently in suburban Wauwatosa at the home 0Jf Judge Robert Cannon. Similar demonstrations MEN 17 - 25

have been held at the homes of other prominent Eagles: Rep. JOIN THE NEW

Clement. Zablocki and County Judge Christ ,Seraphim. Society of ,Brothers of The NAACP group take~ the Our Lady of Providence position that the political figures For information write, to:

should either quit the Eagles or quit their jobs. Judge Cannon FATHER MASTER

has said he :would rather work SU. Joseph the Worker

for reform of the Eagles' admis­ Novitiate

sions policies hom within the Warwick Neck, R. I.

a

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thul"$" .O~. 6, 1.966 ..

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bakely to

The world ill' relation ~ the Church caD be sometimes right and sometimes wrong. Ilt is wrong, for example. when it bids th<a the Church to give up 1II1lortification saying, Come dOWllll from the Cross." It is right wllel1 it says to us who fall away lirom om' loyalties to Chriist, ''Bmlt YOU also were with the GaliUleaa" as ihe servani girl toad J'eter. The woll'ld today pointB Ai!! finger at the wealth of some in Ute Church. This criticism should be seriouslY evaluated, ba1~' we sbould n~ forget that &be Chnrch has been a ihoosaDd tinl~ more eritioal of .nell on ~ poiDi than the worlCl..

meaning, poses question after is brought to trial. Of the .trial

question. And it' is uncommonly and its issue we are told nothing,

successful both . . for. the book ends with Yakov as' an engrossin,g . about to be brought into court. narrative and as Insists on J[nnocence . apr 0 v 0 c a _ During his years in' prison, tive commentary Yakov is subjected' to every sort . M.I S 1,0 N. S: Appoi,nted on the human ohdndignitYi both by the au.:· .'personnel rep.res~)}t;ative Jor th6i'ities and by fate.' His sUffer-' th e' M'IsslOnary . . .. SOCle . t y·O. f 'St condl·tl·on.. Its " central charac- . ings are excruciating, and he ter is Yakov racks his brain to find meaning. JameS the Apostle, to enlist Bok, aged 30, . in ~hem. Every hope which he . priestS fo:r service in Latin who lives in aentertains is dashed, every trust' America,' is Father 'John village not far Violated; every human' tie se,j- Raymond· Moore, San i:>.iego fro m K i e v. . ered, But he 'holds to 'his insis- 'priest who' has served five Yakov IS a fixer; tence on his innocence.·'He will . that is','hedges Odd jobs. He"isnot yield; will .notbetray. ,his.. years with thesociet'y .iQ c:onspicuously unsuccessfu1," and p~~ple.. . ..... :.: .~: ., , Sri~bOte, ~CPhoto<· his' life has "beenbittet'ly,un-' This might appear, fr6m a .

S

Y@M

By Most Rev. lFllIBiOl1il '.11. S\l\eel1t9 11».D.

[8®C60m~. C~@$~~~'

By Rt. Rev. lWsgJr. John S. Kennedy Bernard Malamud's novel The Fixer. (Farrar, Straus

and Giroux, 101 Fifth Ave., New York. $5.75) is the story

of a victim of anti-Semitism in Czarist Russia. But it is

much 'more. For it is saying something about injul;ltice

in any time or in any place, Yakov is imprisoned for two

about freedom,about history, years before an indictment is

about the plight of man. It drawn up, and another six

contains various strata of months have passed before he

o

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'Peru.

Take the VO'R of lloverty.· What did Vatican W ooy? Read Chapter 13 of the Decree concerning the religiolJlS life. These aN· some' of the points:' 1) There should be no owning of' great wealth; investdlents beyond immediatE~ needs 'in "stocks, bonds and real estate are forbidden. 2) EveI")' sign 01 luxuri' is to be avoided. 3) . Rich religious illfltitutions" are' to aid' ~he .~en­ eral good of the" Church an.~ espe'cially the poor: 4) They wilI' share 'their wealth with' .the other me~t>ers of" their society who' 'are in real need: 5)' They !lqot4d

not ·.live 'above 'the level of those whom

they .ser·ve. 6) ME~mbers should renoUnce.

inheritances.. 7) T~e vow of poverty doeS

not mean jUst depen'den(:e Qn 's Superior

(~sking"forwhate"eris .n,ee!ied.·. or to make

11,. t.;p) :.p~td~man~·thl~t'e~ep member .~u. b;e pOOr: '.

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ha~~Y"was" orPhane~' e',~ :~~~, ~~::~~~ i~ t:s:~=;~~::l~~;" -Humphrey ,HailiC,.

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Now. while some an!' aeeUmula'ttitg..·Vl.\St lovesknents.

it mast., '\be'realized' ibat' l~titers ilre DOt~ We"know one missionary· seeleti brought up in a-wretched insti'" unsparingly with harsh reality. 'wHi~II' praeiices 'itOven~ bY seDdin~' 90'per'Cent 'of Its personuel·· ttit!on"married to 'a woman who It is stark too 'i~ the sense of to the Missions. Only 1~.·Peit' eeni of ''tbt'm remaill (fot teaebinc' did' n~t love him,' 'bore him; 00 being written' in. a si~ple, un. admmlSiraticnl)1Q 'the' societ7's' houses iii: Europe. ADotber' children and deserted him. He adorned, knifing style. But, parWASHING,-ON (NC)':- Her­ - ftlig'io~ eOimnunfit,· has ,'IiO' ia.coine"'neePt ·tIlat 'eamaed' b7 ita' hi' hot religious, and" the" little' addxically, 'while "being :stark'i It al~ngof the 16th.lannual:)~·a­ harii bLbor~ Whatts"left'after expeuses 1s··sea.4,to Tbe-. reatling he has been able to'do is: also extraordinarily, riih·. " . tiona!. Gatho}i!:: Yo.uth -W:ee~ eb­ S'ocleti lortbe' Propai"aflClil' of th-e 'Faith for ·the .:pooao 'of tIM' has' made', him-a.sott of free:··n works on the 'imagination; ser:va~ce, YicePr~sident,;Hube~ 'world aDd' th'e CC1:ai~ersioD Of souls. Many ~her religious &"1'08116/' ttHnket. ' . . ..': .' the emotions, . the 'mind as few H. ,lIiJmPhrey,~aid "spirit~ally. parii~ularb"women;lIIve' ina State 1)1' }JO!eri7"1ar below tile IeTeI . .', He leaves ·'the· "village and novels do.· The simplest; thing :iedicated .yo\Uig ~ple",will or eVeD the :P~eSt'"4)ple"iD bit·, cities. " .c.. ,...' ." .... f': .. heads for Kiev; where He hopes that Yakov says or' does or' ell:- help, "us strengthen the valu~ to make money· enough to take periences is connotative, sets the which we as a nation cher;sb.... Give the Church .time to put the. COUlleil into effect. ~ the . him to America. In Kiev he fat:es reader to reflecting and wonder. Millions of· Catholic youths DO' better. until he :comes to the ing.·As the complexities, of the . throughout· the nation are ex­ meantime; Catholics can help by cutting dowD their aid ~ alread" rescue of a man sprawled in the narrative build up, one is, en,,: Pl"cted ,to join the observance rich institutions. It would.:begood it a certified aceountef all snow. He saves this man's life, gaged in 90 many ways-looking :from Get,· 30, feast· of Christ the the money received by any religious group was open to inspectioa and. by way of reward, is of- back at what has led to the King, to Nov.' 6. Theme of the by . th~se who ·substantially. aid them., Bow much. of what the)' fered, first, a temporary job, stage now" reached, trying to week, sponsored by the National receive.is given to the ll>OOi'? The Society for the Propagation of . then one which is permanent foresee what is to come, discern- Catholic Youth Organization the Faith bas II 'good sy.s:tent: 1) A certified' acconnt of what hu and better than anything .he ing further refinements of. federation, .is "P~ace Through been' received is· renderl~ every year 'to 'every bishop. 3) The could ever have expected. meaning. Brotherhood." Holy Father. and his' Com'miS8i'~ demaDd that· every' cent received .: Aceused,ofdMurdell'. Brilliant Mytbmaker, .In a message to Msgr. Fceder~ ·as3.Ims;·'over an!i itbove 'eX~nses, DeE't!nt "within 12'months' to ttle'POOJ: Of the . 'World. 'S)The Holy' Father will not aIlow bi8 ! There are two flaws .in this There is no risk in predicting ick J. Stevenson, dhector, Youth :1rudden change of fortune. One that The Fixer is going to have Department, National Catholic Society "to imtesi .one 'e'ent' of YOUi""'alms in stOcks' arid" bondS or is the fact that the man· saved by tens of thousands of readers in Welfare Conference, of which real' estate.' Your alms Riust all be used for the poor and bring him i: a virulent anti-Semite .the next few months and to oc- the 'CYO federation is a pa~ the falthto the WhOle world.'·Not everyorie is .bound to such'st'riet observances but this is :1}' goOd thing to· MOW when you write ~ho does not realize that Yakov 'casion thousands of discussions. Vice Pres~dent Humphrey said. .!S ,a··J.e~. ;'l:h.e~ ot~er<i~ ~t~at ~~:. '~l!t,':it: is,likely.to.:~ury'iv.e,, tl,lis .....!fPeace through brotherhood is a.;will' 'or make·a sacrifice which I hope' you will 'do 'today to JO\)' .entalls .the n~cesslty l,)f 1l~- . generation and to·becomeaclas;.. .. .' .. . ' . '. . . show' you, too, are poor' in spirit. .' ing"n a district wHich is ·forbid.;,.· .~. k -' d t" d 't" be' an· lllspmng· theme for the .16th -'-­ . .).. ' ..... . '. . .'" :- SI<;,; :l.a o.v seems. ,~me ,f?J , Annual Observance of National den to Jew ll. . ' a. fIgure 10 contemporary Amer'. , GOD. LOVE YOU c. G.' "Stilce oar personal finaDoeII Yakov ,takes the pim~anent iimn writing, . ," t;.thOll~ YO~t:Ulw,:~ek. I wo~~ won't allow US to send Yl)U a contribution for YOUII' missiou work;. job,is .looked askance' at by , . This wilL be. becimse' Mr..Mal-' . mos· gra e. . I you wo~ .. his fellow employes'who regard . d' 'rt; b "11"'t th c~nvey.my greetings to partlcl­ please accept this jewell.,. Which bas only been &"atherin&" dust . . . . amuse a IS a rl Ian my - '. ts th h t th t' . hi~ 'as'a':spyfqr the'owner, is '. maker,. one' endowed 'With ·the .:~ ~iUgc'rou. e n~ Ion llll' waiting ior a busy hOllS'e wife and mother·to wear them.'" to Mrs. F. G. for $100 seDt ioII thanksgfiving. fearful of being expose~. But he. rare power of .fashioning a tale . . 111 .. ou '. an 109 annua ~ca­

is making>more ~oney than he Which,. while e!1grossingas an' SlOn.

even though pOSSible, eats well,. account of what happens to one . "In his' unforgettable addresa

Send 118 your old j.~well'J' ---,. the bracelets 01' ring you _ has comfortab~e quaI1ers. . ' . man, is much more telling' :and : before the United Nations, Rig

longer wear, last :rear's I~old eyeglass frames, the cuff . links 70U Then a boy IS found murdered significant in its commentary on, :H:oliness Pope, Paul· VI articu­ never liked annvay. We, will resell them and use tbemoneJ' _" In a cave, 'his body drained of and questions concerning, mortal b~d'all mankind',s yearning for blood: The crime is attributed..to·. existence. . . '. . a. 'r'0rld without, war,'8 w~rld to aid the ltnssions. Your semi-precious stones will be winning precious souls lor Christ. OUr address: The Society for the Propa­ Yakov, and is depicted as a ritAnti-Semitism" is, unnustak- with conscience, concern and ual murder; one perpetrated by ably in the foreground' through- ~passion. This is the type of gation of the Faith, 3f!6 J~i1th Ave.ftl!e, New York, N. Y. 10001. a Jew in order to secure Chris-' out The Fixer. Yakov, when ar-' world you' and so many .other tian blo,od for the making of rested, "readily confessed he was. deyoted spiritual leaders are Cut oat ftds IWIuma., pba 701&1' sacrifice to Ii a.ad mall it .. matzos. . a Jew. OtherwiSe he was inno- - belpingto' build by:your inspirMost Rev. FultOllI J. SheeD. Naiional Direetozo of The Society Yakov is arrested. There is cent." And the prosecutor sums lug work with young people•• ,'" for the Propagation of tlite Faith. 366 Fiftb AveD8e, New yon. . 1lI0. evidence against him but up the whole case when he says, . N.Y. 10001, M to year Director, Bt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T.

pl~nty of it is concocted.T~e "A ·Jew is a Jew,and that's all School/BoCDrds Get ConsidiDe, 368' Nortlll 1lI![am Street, Fan IUvu, MassachuseU&.

man w:hose life he saved, .lies, there is to it." In our time, and as do his daughter, Yakov's fel- for centuries back, this has been Youth .Corps Grants low employes, the !?oy's mother. . a cOmmon attitude,' resPonsible . T.he authorities'seize upon the for enormit.ies· beyond numberWASHI!'1"G,!O.~.(~C)-Cat~o:. incident and its groSs misiepre..:. and measure. . lie' orgaruzatIonsIn three dlO­ seiltaiion as a mell~s'of .stirr:iiig ....Mr.. Malamud . epitomizes the . ce~e~'are ~~ng the sponsors re:­ up popillar passion against the elaborationS on th'is ,gross injus- '·.,.eeIvmg,.,u..s, Labor. Department : lNCC)RPORATEO 1937 . : Je~s,'S,uch;a hullabalc?O w:il("ditice which'. have'.been .~r(lllght,,'. apPi"9val' for' 30 . Neigh15orhood 'vert the people's attention fr9m . '. the extremes "to' which' it ·.has' ¥o~th' C()rps. proJects .for 23,488 th~ir ,inis~ra~*.lo~ -lind f~e go'v~.:~·' !ie¢n .¢~h·i~, .thec};fri1es,~l>er.~-, ·.. joun~people in 2~ .s,~!~~; ", l'I . . '. . . : • lernment's failure' to·· redeem' triitedbecause of'it'ThEislckl1eSs" '·,..The Catholic Youth Organiza­ pledges to better it. and the shame of anti-Semitism tion of the diocese of Br'idgeport, , The proper legal procedure is are here more forcefully con":; Conn., was named for a $121,~ 'examination by art investigating.. ' ..veyetl ,than by. ·any: amount, Of. federal' grant: toward' a $135,660 "' • , .. , ...._ .. ,- " • 'ilnagistrate. then i~~.ictment .J(. sta~~stics .0X:.ll!ID,1men~", .,.,..,:. " ... pro~~~fpr 2~(), ~Qrollees. T~ 1ilI...... ,there are'grounds,the.n trial. On . This is a novel which beginS' Catholic schools . 01' the dioce~ .; . ," --'." ,JjAMES..fI:Il•. COLLI.~, ;~,E.•,.: Proo•., : ;the outcome'of'tlie"irla.l' 'd~pe'nd's ':labbhig' the ·.Oil:'t'liJe 'first' WicliUli>'Kan., wrll receive·~ 'Re~i$·te~ecr~h~U~ ,~nd .~t;.uC:.tu~al, Engineer,. ill Whether the accused' is penalized"" page"'and 'never stcifls"doin'lf' so:;,:··, $134;340 ''''federal-' :grant towa~ g~::"~':," : Qr goes free. It is discomforting from first to a $150,690 program for 250 e~ IDn~ ....,' ~e'!1b,er ~!'!IJ,~~,'~!~.!ety .~rojessjonal .. Engine"r~ . But the proper legal procedure last. It exceeds the reach of most rollees. ~'" lmAli\!Ci$ill GOUiNS,Ja;,· Tf'INSo' ... ../11 !~ no~ followed ;:iri~his .ins.t:i,nc~. novel$ to strike 'the heart, .. and : ,,'rhe... largest ,federal grant 'jg 'il'MOM:AS' K. COlUNS; ~ . . I D cThe investigating 'magistrate as... stir ·the ·,conscience;.. It is it: s'upe- .,..of ·$376,960: goes to the diocesaa 'm ".," ",: .. ' '. '... '.. . 11II :lIigned to the case is humane and rior work of art. which speaks school board of Pittsburgh,Pil" ".. ·.bonest, but he is thrust aside strongly to our time and will be for a $435,690 program for 700 .by the police and the prosecutor. relevant be'yo~<i our time. . enrolees. '111I11.11I • • • 1IJ11111C1IlDIIIQI.IlIIa. III. III. III • • • • • • • • • • • •

Youth Week

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GEIIERAIl ·(O"IRAOORS ., '" .':'ilnd ENGINEERS'

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Nuns Hear Congregation, Expert's Views on Religious Life Renewa~

THE ANCHORlhurs., Oct. 6,

COVINGTON (NC) - An ex- and persons dedicated" to reli­

pert from the Congregation for gious life. Religious must show

Religious in Rome told repre- the world a new life, strength

sentatives of 15 sisterhoods in and energy which will express

the Covington diocese what is Jesus Christ to the world and

expected of nuns in the renewal make Him present, he said.

and adaptation of religious life The Vatican council h1'!s given

called for by the Second.Vatican a new manifesto, Father Gam­

Council. bari said, which must unite all

Father Elio Gambari, S.M.M., the people of the Church into a

eondueted two conferences dur- dynamic, generous and dedicated

ing a three-day religious insti- family, burning with desire to

tute here in the auditorium of build up the Body of Christ.

Holmes Public High School. The message of the council

Some 850 nuns attended. Only must be absorbed by all, bishops,

a~sentees were cloistered Paspriests, Religious and laity} he

sionist nuns. stressed. The council documents

Covington's Bishop Richard H. are not something academic to Ackerman, C.S.Sp., told the nuns be read and kept with respect, he had been trying for several Father Gambari said, but the years to get the Montfort Father, stimulus to a new vitality and a canon lawyer for the Congre- unity in the Church. gration for Religious most of his Bonie Visits . priesthood and a teacher at The stress in all the council Propaganda University in Rome, conferences was on ,genuine re-: · to conduct such an institute. newal in ,the spirtual. life of t' Bishop Ackerman said in it!e Religious as well as .their com­ · Church today too often opinion munities; and a willingness to is taken for fact. Any opinion, adapt the rule of religious life. he said, is a judgment that hangs to the conditions of modern so­ between' the extremes of eer- eiety, Father Gambari said. tainty and error. . The council's chief purpose , New Life, Sire~gUt was to help each individual The bishop stressed that gen- 'find his proper place in the, uine' . renewal involves going Church; thete isno contradiction back to the sources. He said the between self-fulfillment on ;l accommodation of the Church human level and' self-fulfillment · and of religious life to the mod- ,in God~s plan, he, added. . . ern world must be under aUIn answers to some questions; thority and direction, not like a Father Gambari said he favors Don Quixote sparring with. more frequent "home visitS by windmills and running off in "n Religious, more generou!! recre­ directions. ation, an intensive' study· of the . Father Gambari said the doe- reasons· why, ~rrie - Religious uments· of the Second Vatican abam;lon the life· and·n,eW " ap­ Council, must transform and il.. proachet! to' vocation ,recruit­ luminate' reli.gious communities, " ment. , '

Pion Re.;evaluation'

On

of ,Apostolate.

Non-Catholic' College Campus

'WASHINGTON (NC)-A top­ to'-bottom nationwide reevalu­ ation of the' purposes, programs and structure of the Church's apostolate on the non-Catholic eollege campus is now getting underway. The study will be' conducted by students, chaplains and oth­ ers active in the Newman apos-' tolate. Its planners hope its rec­ ommendations will be ready by the time of the 1967 Newman Congress next August in De Kalb, Ill. The study is an outgrowth of the recent Newman congress in Dallas, Tex., where, according to participants, a spontaneous con­ iSensus developed among stu­ dents and chaplains that a re­ evaluation of Newman work is needed. A 20-mernber Catholic Com­ mission on the Church in the · American University-made up of 10 students and 10 chaplains -has been established to direct the study. By Oct. 15 the com­ mission will submit its" recom­ mendations for the agenda and method. of conducting local dis­ lCussions. It is expected that these dis­ lCussions by students and chap­ lains On campuses throughourt the country will lead to dio,;, lCesan or regional talks and ulti­ mately to proposals on the na­ tional level. ' Study in Depth Bishop James' W. Malone, apostolic adrrtinistra~or of- the Youngstown, Ohio, diocese aDCl

'Sa'fe'g~ard Vessels . BUDAPEsT (NC)':"":"Because oi the ' sharp 'increaSe 'in ciiureh robberies throughout Hungary ill .;. recent months, the' Hungarian bishops have issued 'instructions l'equiring that monst'rances 'and other sacred vessels be removed from churches in tbe evening Imd secured in the Jl'eCtoriee vvernight.

INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - The nve Catholics Sees in Indiana have joined to form a statewide C13tholic Conference to promote Ibeir general welfare. The new' Indiana Catholic Conference will have officers here with a fulltime executive secretary-James Brennan, 47, former executive officer With the Ohio Education Association. The governing board of the ('onference will be comprised o~ the archbishop of Indianapolis dnd the bishops of Evansville, Fort Wayne-South Bend, Gary and Lafayette.

Names Four More Newman Chaplains DIOCESAN ECUMENICAL MEETING: Members of the Diocesan Commission meet with other Church leaders at 'Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven.:lVIra. Cornelius Murp.hy of Attlel)(m), seated. Standing:' Rev: Philip Douglas, rec­ tor 'of Grace Episcopal Church, New Bedf@rd; Rt.. Rev. Henri Hamel, pastor of St. Jean the Baptiste Church, Fall River; Rev. Bruce Hansen, reeto.r· of Grace Episcopal 'Church, No. Attleboro; Rev. Allen llellis, rector of the Con­ gregational Church, Fall Rive!'.

Canon Law Society To Hold Seminar

LOS ANGELES (NC) - FOUl? pI'iests have been added to the fulltim~ - Newman Apostolate .chaplains Serving in the LOfJ AT geles archdioeese. James Francis Cardinal Mc­ Intyre said they bring to 'nine the total number ot' priest!' ser­ v_rag the Newman Apostolate fulltime, Thl'!y work at seven fflajor colleges and at two uni­ l't'rsities pal'ishes. The four new chaplains are, Fathers Robert O'Keefe, O.S.M.; Gregory O'Brien, O.S.M.; Charles Gi~low, C,M.F.; and, John Gee­ Dey, C.S.P. They will be station­ ed at Califiornia State College, Fullerton; East Los Angeles Col.,. lege;, Vn.iversity .of California at 1M; Angeles, and Claremont Col.,. letl~, ~lar.emont.' The university pdrishes are at the. University :01' S.:luthern' California arid, Uni­ vf'rsity of California' at Santa , Barbara., ' '

for that woncierlul.'leeling •• e SWITCH TO .ELEC'TRIC HOME. HEATING

IT1SfLAMELESS

Cubans Plan Shrml1l~ To Honor Patroness MIAMI (NC) - A permanent

shrine honoring 091' Lady of

Charity of'EI Cobre, patroness of

Cuba, will be built here, Bishop

Coleman F. Carroll of Miami has

announeed. '

The proposed ed~fiee "may" well become a, national shrine" symbolic at the gratitude Of tt.e thousands' '.. Cuban refugees .' welcomed, bY the United' States, Bishop "Carroll: said: ' , .The shrine wiil be eompletelY fiiumced, designed and clevel- ' oped by Cubans "as an indication of the depth of their faith and as 11 definite contribution to the eommunity," the Bisbop said. It will be located on land overlook­ ing Biscayne BillY made avrolable kw the Diocese cf Miami.

13

f~Ye India~a S~es f@rm C@rmferr®~(6®

'PITTSBURGH (NC)-ThiI'ty­ ebanceUor of the Gary, Ind., dio­ lCese aildchairman of the pr~ five scholars will attend a three­ day seminar on ,the role of law gram, said the seminar will be held' in response to the growing in the Church here Saturday. ,The $eminar, sponsored by,the , J)eed ,for a reeyalu!ltion of, law Canon Law· Society of America, in the Church. He cited a 1959 will be" a period 01. intensive request ,of. Pope John XXIII for study and discussion amo!1g au- n' renewal .~. Church 'law 'anp , 'ihorities in canon law, theology, a recent. speecb C?f Pope Paul VI philosophy and related fields. envisioning. ~ . new era. foF Father J:ames Coriden, eo.. Church law..

episeopal"moderator'of'the Na- ­ tional Newman Apostolate, de- . scribed the' reevaluation as "study in depth· of the entire' apostolate of 'the Church 'on the American, eollege scene." "The priests and students view this as a mandate' of Vatican Council II," he said in a state­ ment. "What the council did Ifor the whole Church, the Catholic Commission on the Church in the American University should do for the Church on the· secular campus." Father Philip J. Branon, pres­ ident of the National Newman Chaplain's Association and Cath­ olic chaplain at the University of Vermont, stressed· the need of "making the Church's mission honestly relevant to modern so­ ciety." Father Branon said Newman chaplains, besides working with the larger commission, plan a .study directed specifically at their own professional role. A five-member committee has been named for this purpose.

1966

- Trouble .Sf)()U1 in' the ·'h~me· disappear. with the ,many forms .of ~lectrie .beating available. E~en floor space i8 more' comfortable with the installa­ tion of basebOard units;' Investigate electri~ -homehea-iing th~ modern,.waY wheat yOw home. Call your Electrical 6ontrac~orJ"oJl' '

FALL RIVER ELECTRIC, LIGHT COMPANY


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Coyle High Stud~ntN,amed Na,~ional A. '00 ' ,Merit Semifinalst, 'ftmong. 14;0 ' ' . ' ' Honored Acros's, United' States , ,

=:c::~tl~e~;;~f::r ~i~

cheerleadiDg ,~ignments un~er direction, of ,pres~t varsity members. Ten girls will eventually make the squad, with try:­ outs and final decisions to take 'i " Scholastic c;rops sowed laSt year are yielding harvest place at a later date. ' , intis Autumn. At Taunton's Coyle High, Michael.Felong has Senior student councillors at 1l>een named a ,National Merit Semifinalist in the '66-'67 Prevost ,are Robert Lambalot Merit Scholarship competition. This praces him amortg the and Daniel Gauthier. SC activi­ , , ties will move into high ge~ hlg'h-scoring' th18' 'month. Also at the Fall , students in the tre!lSJ.lrer. Heading the athletic oornmonwealth. Also garner- association will be Monique von Riv,er boys' school, two new ing schoiastic honors in the ,Trapp, 'president;, Ann 'Marie clubs have been established: Merit Scholarship arena are Folster, vice:"president; and Chess ',and Pllot~graphy. In the Daniel Gauthier and Edni6nd Elaine Fisette, secretary. planning stage ar.:e groups ,de:­ voted to Math, Science, Driving St"u d ents''at B'15h op Stang H'19 h 'Tremblay of' Prevost High,' Fall 'River. Both have received' let.:. ;in North'Dartmouth 'are"driVing and Social Studies:'

oors:t>f commendation for their ''nlore carefully s'ince hearing an New ClIJ.eerIell.clleril ' work in the, national' exam. address: by' Bob Harkey; Indian':" .' Cheerleading' "is' iii" the' spot­ i" ,Semi-finalists number 14,000 apOlls, veteran' of 18 years of tight' "at"Jeslls-"Mary; whe~ ,ac,(.()ss the nation; and 38,000 ~tu;- ,automobile 'racing, Mr.' Harkey, ' Charlott~' "Dulle "and' Suzette ,dimt,s have re~eived cOIPme~d~; one of ,a team oLeighLdrivers Guilm~he, '~arsity and JayVee . '.,' who have presented safety proh'ead" cheerleaders'" have held ,ti9'n letters. ,' . Baby clothes were the order gra.ms to more than 10 million ,~, ....tryouts' sophs'"aild frosh.·Var~ , of the day at Mt. St. ~ryAci~- ~~-ag~rs in, the paSt 12 years, . siiy sUbs chosen as' a result are <lmlY, Fall River, as freshmen,spQke "qlJ. ::Highway S a f e t y . I s C h e r y l Dobson; Jeanine Daign­ were welcomed to the schocii by '~Q ~ccident" at II Stang assemault and Louise McNern~Y.'. New -Senior "big sisters." , ,qly.; , ". "', jayvees are Elaine Dufault, , , College Day : As well as explaining the dif-'Diane Froment, Denise Pietra­ 'And students from all Dioc- ference bet wee n controlled" catella. J9an ,E;mond, janice ~art highs' anticipating speed thetace 't~ack'arid unServant, and Denise Petit. ' ,'Stofiehill College's annual ",CoI- oontrelledspeed on the highway" Dominican Academy seniors '~ge'Day, to be held Wednesday, "the':one-time'IndianopolisJI/,lotor h,a'(e' ,had'tlieir memory book 'Oct: 12, the 'Columbus Day holi.,. Speedway competitor showed a portraits sarely snapped and !daY.Representatives from. 60 ,movie of race track action. 'SCHOOL LEADERS: School' leaders at JesUEi~MaryjuIliorshaye been measured for 'Catholic colleg'es wl'll be on the :' ''. 'Parents to Meet . . . thel'r rl'ngs Now begl'ns the wal't­ Aca;demy, Fall River, are, s,eate!l f,rom" "lef,,t",",Pauline Dumas;' ',' North Easton campus to discuSs Feehan high will hold 'its first ing' period, with all juniol'l! h~p'their institutions with parents "parent:..teacher meeting of the ',!Jtudent' council president;' The~a St" Pierre, vice-presi- iog that the rings will arrive for 'liUld'students. ,year·, Wednesday, OC,t. 19, when . dent; . standing, Alice Dqmoulin, ,senior class prEisident; their prom next month. The program will include four Rev, ,James Kelly, St. Mary's .Zenaida, Iturvide and' Mariette Castonguay, junior class The Feehan Flash has made ,OO-minute sessions in individual parish, Mansfield, will speak to presidents; Janice Deschenes, sophomore class president.. its'firiltapearance of the school eIassrooms beginning at 10 and parents of freshmen and sopho- , ", , .', , ' , , ' y e a r in the Attleboro Sun." A eontinuing until,noon, and a free mores. ' , , more effortless way to produce exchange period in the college Meanwhile at Prevost'" High emy are Donna Ferreira, Bar- Ratte, With other officers to ,be 'aschool paper 'could hardly be gymnasium with all college rep- the Mothers' Guild has begun bara Picard and Deborah prys- , elected later. Faculty ,advisor is 'imagined!. 'resentatives available to supply its calendar of activities. Offi- tac; and class elections ,are also SisteJ.:' Mary Agnes; O,P.. Also And Jesus-Mary' seniors are nnformation and literature. . cers are Mrs. Raymond Poisson, in' the news at Jesus-Mary, a~ DA :Diane Pichette, Mary now on retreat at La Salette'Re-; There's 'no place to hide at president; Mrs. Norman Berube where:presidents are Alice Du-, Cummings" Linda Wa.rd and treat House in Attleboro. Theme Feehan High in Attleboro these and Mrs. J~an- :Qemers, vice- molin, seniors; Zenaida Iturvide Lo'uise Beaulieu have been ap- of the three day exercise which days. All students are supplied ,presidents; Mrs. Rene Tremblay and' Mariette Castonguay, jun- pointed libra~ians and Therese will end tomorrow is "Is God with green and white name and 'and Mrs. 'Mary" Sabra; 'secreta- iors; and Janice Deschepes, Chollinard is being commended Dead?" A retreat for underclass­ dass pins worn on jacket or ries; and Mrs, Albert Berger, sophomores. Freshmen will elect, . for 'her :high rating in French men is being conducted concur­ blazer. , , treasurer., ','" in November, when they've had achievement tests on the College - rently at the school by Rev. Sisters at Jesus-Mary AcadDebaters Bishop 'Cassidy: -the chance',to· get ,acquainted. Entrance Exams. Raymimd Lacasse, M.S.

G!my, Fall River, have joined the High will attend, wor:kshops at..,·The student .council has elected Members or'the Feehan Pep',' Who~si'or Candy?

Iol'" I.!"ha''''''''t'' t d' ,a swmgmg " ..,,,' Also ",'". "",the annual ' , candy , ve ,s ar:e, at JMA "~eligious "fashion parade" ,with the Hotel Lenox,': in:"B,'ostOn" to-:'"" Colette FO,rcler school secretary 'r"Uu new and simplified habits ': £ea"" ',,! fuor.row aiJ:d' at BayView :on 'Sat~j,,~~d Elaiije ,Dufault scho.ol treas- ,,,'se.aso,,'n,~r .c,h,eering F,e,eha,.n to ,bar ,driye, ,is, in progress, with turing a' new-style head'p iece, Urday. Th, ey~ll al,so,"" be ,r,epre,~'~:,:·: er. president Pauline Wt a l ? S "t T aun t OIi~' Wl ' th 'a" the ,go,al this, ye~rof acquiring . :,91', D : ;S,,chool Vl< : : , . ois ry ;·Ci:g shorter veil and shorteI:skirts. sented at aSp~echDeb~teCresti~·/:~.ll,rnas., c':,' '~ame sc()re, of 21-0. 'lhe Pep' new desks for 'the school' and,an

Also at JMA, s~udents, ar~~vV~~..;val Satll,rda~;}Oct,29';at.HOiYoke";/",:" " )Wany Changes ,.cll~?,: is:~ire~~eoYby SisterM.individual prize of $100' for the

Cl:oming a new principal, Mother, High Scp:ooI: T~eY'v~',alr~a~y~;a,t- ,:.: 'Cha~ge is ,the order:of the day "Sheila and 'baS as studenUeaders. high salesman.

3ane Francis. Mother St., Lau- tended a' session '-at;~he':U!!ivet-.. ',: at St. AntHonY's,whe-te the sci: ~. I'eIlt, former principal; is"now sity of,Rhllde',:Island,.:~·dj~~,"eriC:e depattment'basacquired a "ii' ,,',: ,,; ,.,"

assigned to a teaching post in ~e~re~entatives fr.om:~oly"~~-~,:;,,n~~,)iol0gy lab, tlie library has' ;':" ,1: ,," ':, '" ,

HI Paso, Tex. Other new faculty ilys .~~.- ;..)icK~9~·Jt:··D~b~~'~".:_:movitd:·'and':'~reshma~._ and seph- . ,;,"" .,-'1."

members include Mother ,T~, Societr·' Tbe'~"studeIi~:nav¢;a~',''o'uior'e-,clasSrooms,'are also- re!,," ';',"";­ dore, junior homeroom, histOry , o.ew'nt~derator al\"!l;' ,n~~ coach'.,: shiIfne<L: offiCe" has been

and religion teacher, as well as this y:ear.Sis~er,~a!j Evarige~'''opeheddoi'the'~hool guidance ,',':, ,':,"'"",

.." .:.:, {; , .: : academy lil~rarian. Mother Mary R.S.~. , is' t~e '.m~~r~~!?r," and>,,(~u:p~M~r, i,~\~he: director's first' "

of Carmel 18 sophomo~ home- Atty. ::R0bert L; ~t1rpl'eD.:~t has floor'quarters;and a physical' ,',

room teacher and also mstructs taken ~ver, tberems ,as,' CO~~· education 'program has beeR

in science and directs the glee, " The ,Memory Book;'staff~t·Do-: " added ·'to, the' c~rriculum. '

club. Mother Augustine is in -ininicail Academy introduced its ' ,

marge of 'junior and senior En:" thefuefor the~upcomilig:yearatHomerooinrepresentatives at.

@:lish classes. a school assembly. "Carpe Diem Bishop Cassidy are Nancy Kelly,

Student COWllCiD. -Seize the Day," is the chosen Joanne Murphy and Margaret

Newly inaug~rated at St. An- the'me, ,but doubtless DA's em- " Hanna" seniors; Anne Marie Sul-,

thony' High in New Bedford' .is , ph~is will be different, on those livan, Mary Berube, Rosemary

the student council. Officers are words than was that 6f 'ancient ,Ducnarnie' alld Noreen' Sherry,

Paul Fredette, president·, Louise Ro~e. juniors; - Virgfnia McDermott, ,

h ld Mary Brennan, Mary Mogan and h t d ts h Machnik, vice-president; Diane Fee an . s u en,. ave e" Claire Eagan, sophomores. Normandin secretary' D ian e class meetmgs to discuss events

Schwartz treasurer- Susan 5a- of particular interest to each At Holy' Family, students

voie, parliamentaria~' and! Rene class. Seniors had' under consid- beard' !lspeech by Rex. Edmond

3ette, chaplain., Moderator itJ era~ion theJr prom, the junior- D. Walsh, S.J., director of admis- :

PaulO. Guy. 'senior "social and the traditional sions' at, Boston College. He

A "kickoff mixer" at Bishop ,senior Privilege; while freshmen sPoke on'" admission require­

Cassidy High in Taunton for were ,'told about co-curricular ments and' course offerings at

Cassidy 'and Coyle studentBactivities available at the Attle- Be"then answered student qUe&­ started off the football season iii horo school. , 'tions; Thi]lki~g fine style. Special guests were "Father Corbishley Student Council president at

members ,of Taunton High ' Mount St. Mary girls will be DOminican' Academy is DillM

19- ~rEW School's student council· and" : atteIlding, a lecture at 'J:45 to­ their dates. ",.iiJ.ibt in 'their ,auditorium by

Our new c;u auto loans are STilL the And at Holy Family High, Ja', 'Rev.' Thomas Corbishley, 5.J.

. New Bedford the first orienta'-' ,,'The' event will be ,open ~ the ' " Lowest In Town 'only $4.50 'aMual tion program for. the freshmaa, ,public and the topic of the noted·, ,GERA,l~"" service charge for every $109 bor·, telass has been held' at 'Kennedy' ;Jesuit sch~lar,'will be "The EcU- ,

, ' .. r~ed. Ste,p In'at our ¥aln Bank or.

Center. P\1rpose oft~e sess~ men~ca~ movement in:-Erigland.!', (0., In~ was to .encou.rage new students T~,~joint sodallties,:of:PrevCSt ~t -'}" . ,:,', , .. ' • " "Iny of ,OUlr cQIlvenlent 'neighborhood'

to participate in extracurricular and :J~l!u.s-Mary..¥a~~my; !i~'! " ...

activities. <,"'c' known' as -the Christian Youth

454 MAlIN STREET. The glee club and athl~tic, ,as- Movement,plana' 'Peace';'ally sociation at rai~, River's DO~i~:i- among-:'this:~'~I;)~~~!S activitiell:, "

SOMER5ET~ MASS.

can Academy have held' 'their Also "in.progresS., is, a card sale annual elections,Qleec!ub:offi- and -(IPeorriing\'W~I.',be a day. of

"i ",', ,'c""~ , eers are Su.e Br!>deur, prli:sid~r:t; recolt~cti.on~.'''~',~, 0; ".' t1ELIEPHONIE 675-7992 Terry Chouinard, vice~PI~S!~!;!,I,J,!;; Seriior stugerit' c;ouncil repre­ and Bev':Stinton,,' set;rettu,'y- sentatives·'at~M~',st. Mary Acad,-, ;,;II,;,_....._ ...'-!~~"""' --" c'••

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8'1'. MARY. ~ :' NORTH A'rI'LEBORO· Apostles of GoOd Will, II diw­ sion of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, have begun activities in the parish and mem­ bers are discussing the findings of Vatican Counciil II as they apply to the layman. Two ecu­ menical activities are being planned: Ii Christian discussion group and a Unity Octave ser­ vice. Parishioners interested in join­ ing the group may contact Rev. Arinando Annunziato, modera­ tor, or any member. Chairman is Albert Gallant. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER Parish men are invited to Ii Communion supper in the school hall following 5 o'clock Mass Sunday evening, Oct.. 16. Rev. Arithony Rocha, chaplain of the Catholie Memorial Home and the Earle Hussey Hospital, will ~ak. . ST. GEORGE. : WESTPORT The Women's Guild plans a dessert card party at 1:30 Wed­ nesday afternoon, Oct. 19 at White's restaurant. In charge are Mrs. Ralph P. Souza and Mrs. John B. Caron. There will be a whist party Saturday, Nov. 5 in the school hall on Route 177. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women will hold a living rosary cere­ mony at 7 Wednesday night, Oct. 12 in the church. Mrs. William Tache, chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Oscar Phenix.

NOT~E DAME (NC) Mr. and Mrs. Patrick F. Crowley of Wilmette, Ill., founders of the Christian Family Movement, re­ ceived the University of Notre Dame's 1966 Laetare Medal in a eeremony here from Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., university president. Crowley isa 1933 Notre Dame graduate. He and his wife are the first couple to receive tilf:l. Laetare Medal, which is the unim versity's highest honor and bas been awarded annually since 1883 to an outstanding American Catholie lay person. '!'be Chri.stian Family Move-­ ment was founded, by the Cro.... leys in H49. It DOW numbea .ore ,1banlGO,OOo eou~. iB eoYery state' of the 'UDi0ll amd .. :Iorei8ll eounbies.

Oct. 6, 1966

15 . !

IT. JOHN THE BAPTIST,· NEW B~DFORD The following will serve as of­ ficers for the Ladies' Guild for the coming year: Mrs. Charles Rodriques, president; Mrs. Ar­ naldo Con do, vice-president; Mrs. MarY Rodericks, secretary; Mrs. Mary Botelho, treasurer. Serving as chairmen are: Mrs. Edward Costa, program; Mrs. Albino Santos, hospitality; Mrs. Hilda Pacheco, ways and means; Mrs..James Boyle, publicity. Future events include a coffee hour on Wednesday, Oct. 19; an address by Mr. John Clemente of the Catholic Welfare Bureau, Sunday, Oct. 9; and slides to be shown by Father Ferreira on Nov. 6, depicting his European tour.

MILWAUKEE (NC) - "The Sisters of America are the healthiest, most dedicated, best­ educated, longest-living group of women in America today," Dr. James T. Nix of New Orleans tpld the Conference of Major ·Superiors of Women here. Dr. Nix and Dr. Con J. Fecher of Dayton, Ohio, also distributed copies of their newly published manual on medical care for Religious.

School Gets· Grants

Does she know something you don't ...about Holsum bread?

VISITATION GUnLD; NORTH EASTHAM Mrs. James Bowman and Mrs. J 0 h n Connors, co-chairmen, . have announced that ihe Guild.· sponsored ch'icken pie supper will be served at 6:30 on Satur­ day evening in the Eastham· Town Hall. . The supper will be prepared· by the Job Corps' of Wellfleet und·er the direction of George' Clai'k. Adults, $1.50; children"

ERNAKULAM (NC) -Prime Minister Indira Gandhi helped She told an audience. that in- . 15c.. Arrangements have been com-· eluded Archbishops J 0 s e· ph Parecattil of Ernakulam 'and p~eied for the rummage sale in' Jl)seph Attipetty' of Verapoiy 'th~ Church Hall, Massasoit ~d.,· .. that, when a man is educated, No. Eastham, OIl Saturday, oct.·. 15, starting at 10. Donations may only one individual is educated, whereas' by educating a woman; be made to Mrs. Edmond He-. bert, 255-0981, or any member one educates an entire family•. inaugurate an educational foun­ 'of the Guild. The next regular meeting of dation sponsored by the Catholie the Guild is scheduled for Mothers' Union of the archdio­ eese of Ernakulam, providing , Thursd~y night, Oct. 20, at 8 in scholarships, loans, training in­ the home of Mrs. Donald Wal­ stitutes, and employment for wer, Wamisco Rd., No. Eastham. girls.

Notre Dame Honors Founders of CfM

ofFoll.Ri~r-T"ur5.,

The manual was a result of years of study of Religious, by Dr. Nix, his late father, a noted HONORED: Miss Julia New Orleans surgeon, and Dr. Frances Maguire, former Su­ F'echer. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, Some of the discoveries of the. preme Regent of the Daugh­ FALL RIVER study, Dr. Nix told the superiors, ters of Isabella, has been are: Mrs. Evelyn. Martin is chair­ man of a cake sale and malasada awarded the Papal Cross,· From 1905 to 1950 the average breakfast to follow the 8, 9:30 Pro E~clesia et Pontifice, by . age of Sisters has climbed from and 11 o'clock Masses Sunday Pope Paul VI, which was 37.6 to 45.3; the percentage of morning, Oct. 9, under sponsor- ' presented to Miss Maguire Sisters above 45 has doubled ship of the Council of Catholic by Archbishop Edward J. and that of those over 60 bas Women. Hunkeler of Kansas City, at tripled. Council members are re-, Stair-Climbing Burden quested to participate in a pro­ St. Francis Hospital, Topeka. cession honoring Our Lady of NC Photo. Breast cancer is the most com­ Fatima, to take place at 7 Thurs­ mon malignance causing death day night, Oct. 13 in the Church. of nuns but it occurs in the aver­ A membership tea for the age Sister 15 years later than in Council will be held from 2 to ST: LOUIS (NC)-St. Louis' the average white single Ameri­ 5 Sunday afternoon, Oct. 16 in TI'niversity school of nursing and can woman. the parish hall. Mrs. Hilda heaith services has received Heart disease accounts for 24 . Amaral, chairman, announces grants from the U.S. Public per cent of nun deaths. Dr. Nix that Mrs. Herve Cummings, Or­ Health Service totaling $148,918. said the stair-climbing expected ganization and Development chairman for District One of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, will speak. Representatives will attend a living rosary and open meeting of 'the District Council to be held at 7 Thursday night, Oct. 20 at St. Michael's Church, Fall River. Corporate Communion will De received at 8 o!clock Mass Sun­ day morning, Oct. 30.

ST. MATHIEU, FALL RIVER The Holy Name Society will open the year with a father and son Coni m u n ion breakfast scheduled for the last Sunday in October following the 7:30 Mass.· Tickets will be on sale on Sun­ day, Oct. 9, following all ,the Masses. The program for the year will .. be outlined at the Communion breakfast.

Gandhi Inaugurates Catholic Foundation

~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese

Par~lde·

....: Possibly. She prefers f~ds, like milk, that help provide balanced nutrition with. many nutrients. She found out Holsum. Bread does. And 2 slices avera age even less calories than a glass of milk. So it's milk and Holsum Bread for her family. How about milk and Holsum Bread for yours?

Joint Retreat . MANILA (NC) - A Catholic:' . Protestant retreat· took place at the Jesuit retreat house in An­ gono near here under the direc­ tion of Father Paul M. Sheehan. ~.J. l!n the group were three Aglipayan. (native Philippine dE-nomination) bishops and two priests.

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-the, bread to buyI .

• "6I-lMI.W.•. U»l8 • •-1. .

Twice the Protein of milk 60% of the calcium 13% less Fat 50 times ·the Iron 30 times the Niacin. 7 times the Vitamin 8, 98% of the Vitamin 8. ThHG ate DUMe for ounco comparisons", . U. 1.1lopt. of Airi.ultu,., Hendbook No... ~I


'16

\

THE.ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., O~t. 6,1966

Dayton. Students Retreat OptionaI

Of Ew®rw Two Latin 1J@~JHif~s/ One M®wer -Attends ~~n;ooB From "Social Revolution illl the New Latin ·America" Edited by Jolm J. Considine... M.M. After World War H the' 'impact of the great" ~world eurrents on Latin AmeriCit was even stronger ,than before. They were divergent and complex cm:rents, but all centered around ideas that hammered al; the conscience of man; 59­

. sial justice, better distril1u~

tion of income, the dignity' M 1lh.e human person, the ecoo-' omy at the service of man, access of the people to political and economic power, struggle against coloni. ­ alism and im­ perialism; in a word, the strug­ hi' the attain­ ment of sover:"

eignty, nGt only

fiR the political

field, but in the

eulhtl'al and

e eon 0 m i c

IiPheres as. ",ell.

AU these ideas,

surging in con~

IIttsion tbrough the conscience'

.. modem: man, struck·a Ch04'd

ef deep pain and anguish when

fllKIfronted 'With .the realities (){

Latin America. ­ 'We Latin Americans realiile «Itat it is time to fulfill the desQiny ()f our peoples; but at the­ aame· time we are aware (){ the fearful obstacles that our social reality places in the path of this Jformidable ·task. It is no longer a matter of maintaining cultural elites, but of incorporating- into the process. ef development all the segments ef our population. Reality is begining .to be stud­ ted through scientific analysis and interpretation. Statistics abound, and, as they are re­ peated they increase anguish, DIe anguish of time; the anguish of conscience, the suffering of a attn unconquered destiny. For a population exceeding, hundred million, the tiifie­ passes and can only be reg,mielil with optimism in the measure ¢bat lUQkes noticeable the mag­ aitude of the problems faced a~ helps to.(uiiderstand the- u~nt Ileed t{) plltl'l and- execute a PI'O­ lJGUfid change of structures, Eloquent Statistic5 In rou~ terms, of' ·~ver:y tWQLatin American families,_e m­ . Ilaabits a dwelling that daes not meet the minimum requirements (tf comfort, hygiene and Imlnan ciecency. The report Of tlle e-J(­ "perts for the meetings -at Punta del Este in 1961 pointed oot ~at Ute heusing deficit was growing by more .than one million uftits each· year. ()f every tW{) _ ehildre~ ~f' liChool age, one is entirely· de­ prived of any chance to- attend 'scho{)l, and a high percentage­ flt has been estimated as high as '00 per cent--do not complete their primary education. In 1960, according to the New Yock Times figures, per capita annual income in Latin America was.es­ timated between $300 and $300, as compared. with $2,400. ift the United States. But of our 26 cwuntries, only five attained. or surpassed this average; the other 15 fell below it.

_0

I

Prayell' Crusade NEW YORK (NC)-The two million members of the United Church of Christ have been urged to. pray for peace during October. The appeal came from the Rev. Dr. Ben Mohr Herbster, president of the churcn, in the wake of the worldwide plea fm' prayers for peace made by Pope Paul VI. The National Council of Churches also joined the prayer crusade.

In Bolivia' and Haiti, the shocking figure was less than $100 per person per year. If we analyze the distribution a~ong the various' social stra·ta we reach truly horrifying figures.. ~-f' have mentioned ooly Some of. the outstanding items which shock the conscience ·of Latin American leaders. Going. fl'Om effect to cause we find that they are rooted in the very structUl'e (){ our economies, and ao little re'Jearch uncovers facts that exasperate man's. innate setl6e (){ J' ustice. Prodigious- Haudieaps More than a cen·tury after in-_ dependence we continue- to Pe pl"Oviders of raw materials. The international markets, dominated by the industrial nations, have Etften· experienced· annual price fluctuations between IO per cent aDd 20 per cent, witb a tendency to· decline or at least remaiR static. Meanwhile. there bas been a fWstained increase in the prices ()f manufactured products, thus resulting in a progr,essive deteri­ I),'ation for the Latin American economies, of the international terms of trad~.· As it has been- observed, :i .consequence has been that in 13 years the value of goods ex­ ported by the United States to Latin America has tripled, while the v!llue of 'raw materials ex­ ported by Latin America to the United States bas not even «roubled. .A consideration of these facts r. essential to an understanding of. the political mentality that pl'evails on eur continent. The­ course of events cannot be left. c.o- the gradual development of natural forc:es. especially when these are often influenced by the selfish interests of m{)oopolies or {)ligopolies .rather than by the ~etleral interest. Yet the social. process: aodvances Q.ynamically. Balf OW' population Js under 18 years of age. Meanwbile tbeproeess of itt.­ dustrializatiOB and the progiess of technology demand an even greater investment of capital wbile offering employment to' a proportionately smaller nI:lifi­ ber af per-sons. Thus the unem­ ployment index rises and OSCi1­ la'es between .)() and 14 pel!' Cent. . Revolution Needed . 0 n}\y revolutionary change caR alter the trend of these fig­ uresand set'a new' course for the future. ·We accept the rejection of the term. revolution' when used as a synonym of violenee and .unrestrained impulse to change everything. We acknowledge the observa­ tions which, based on the above definition were expressed by p{)pe Piu's XII in his Pentecost message of 1943. and Pope John XXIII in his encyclical Pacem in Terris. But to uncounted Latin Amer­ icans who defend institutions w h i 1 e demanding structural changes, as once lucidly pointed out by Hubert Humphrey, now Vice:'President of the United States, the word revolution car­ ries the sense of a change that is neither gradual nor sponta­ neous, as mere evolution sup­ poses, but rapid, deep and at the same time guided by new pro­ grams and ideas.

REV. LEO THIBAULT, M.s.

CO' unc-.- IIm C-.asses Open Tonight Rev. Leo Thibault, M:S., 6ithe La Salette Shrine, AttleOOI'9; . will conduct the- first of tea classes tonight. at 8- on "The' Church in the Modern World"; which will consider the relatioa ,of the Church with the mode-rAt day world- and its pmblems. Father Thibault studied for seven years. in Rome and Paris. He holds degrees in theology anci. philosophy and has served . as professor at the La salette Sem­ inary, Attleboro, and Assump­ tion College, Worcester. Appointed to the Attleboro Shrine in 1965, It, viewing. and ·discussion of modem films uRder his direction became· a first illl the area. Father Thibault has also made a special study of Teilhard de Chardin's thought which}s re­ fleeted in the Constitution ()f1 the Church in the Modern World,

Diocesan Language

Center Aids 5,300'

PATERSON (NC)--':A total of. 5,367 people - most of them Spanish-speaking - have been. helped in the first six months . of operation of the multi-lingual center conducted by the Spanisl! Apostolate of the Paterson di{)­ cese. The center, opeI'ated· in. eml­ junction with Paterson's anti-' I»verty program, aids- those needing help because ofa '14ln­ guage barrier. Expansion of the cent~r's ac­ tivities is now planned, particu­ larly in cultural enrichment fer young people and in marriage and pre-marriage couRseling.

DAYTON (NC)-Compulsory retreats for Universitl7 of Dayton students are being abandoned for the first time this year and are being replaced by optional, off-campus retreats of from one to four days, designed to fit the inclination and schedules of the students. ·A second major chnnge in the retreat program, announced by Father Cyril G. Middendorf, S.M., director of university reli­ gious activities, places adminis­ tration of thE! retreats in the hands {)f a group of stud~ts. Four seniors have been em­ ployed on a part-time basis to handle publicity, coordinate re­ treat activities, plan itransporta­ tion, make ~lrrangements for food, lead discussion:., and ar:­ range for counseling, he said. In previous years at. the Mari­ anist Fathers' university, one-' day obligatory retrl~ats were held ~or grouI:'s of fmm 400' to 500 students~ The ORe-daoy eVeRts

_ .... ~Jf'

Tribute to Prelate BROOKLYN (NC)-Archbish­ op Bryan J. McEntegart, bishBP

of Brooklyn, was presented with the United Services Organiza­ tion's . (USO) silver anniversa.,. award here commemorating ~ . years of USC) service to the It8tioo's· military-personnel.

BE HAPPY

'illtl HOLY .ATHllIlI.. 'MI88'DWIAtD T~ THI DRIIINTAL aNURa..

,i:

tRAIN . Thera's a·.girl In India woo nBeds- your helP. She A wants m. become a Sister. Helping her can NATIVE mak& you happy•••• Her family Is. .penniless, SISTER unabl& to help her give her life to· God. We'll send you her name If you consent to be her sponsor, and she'll write to thank you for your goodness.••• In India her two-year training will cost only $300 altogether (conveniently payable 'lit $112.50· a month or $1508 year). M long·.s :ahe lives. she'll pray for' you, be your represen­ Itative to children and God's poor.••• What makes laughter in a convent the happiest sound 11)1} earth? Sisters are happy becausl! they de­ -I[)rlve themselves for others. Let's hear from you right now. You will be happy, too!

.••" 'IOU [} BRien r(;~ . BIRTHDAYS AND- ANNIVER· HAPPINIESS HINT8

llARIES (yaur own· aa ·well, ·ofcourse) by en­ 1"OIlinc your friends and relativu (and their lemil/es) in· this Association. They'l[ benefit In ihe MasseS and sacrifices- Of our prl.. and Ulsters, and' 'you'lt be heJpins. brmi. aoufs te» (furist. Membership due&- . . only $2-a·year for' 1m Individual- ($25101' ~, ·$lO-..YllM for • f'amr1y ($-100· for life)•••• -A8J( ua te" sand the person- youenrott. 8fft card-;with'tfle.certlftca~. [} 'FEED"A REFUGEE fl'AMllY FOR A MONTH. It coste only $1&. W8.'B: send yw M ollv.wOOff ~tosa"Y

ffqm the Holy lafld~

El THE .DESERT IS COLO' AT NIGHT. 8uy b ~ ($2 each)-.for tit. ,*,,,Uen lhdouiM ltt·tfteHoly Lend.

H.'"

. [} LET THE HOLY FATHER DECIDE. lid YDur strlflgless lift (In any amolHlt) where It'. fleede6 most. (:J, QlVE A CHILD A CHANCE. For the 25,000 .pllGJ)le In her, or. InSyrltl, Doctor 'anny TOrn~ne.d. medicine, SOIlPi fOod. Witt you live $20, $10, $Sf

YOUR OIlHEA'!'

~

In addition, there will be spe­ cial closed retreats and a four­ day Cursillo in Cincinnati. Most, af the closed retreats will be held at Dayton's Marianist Re­ treat House, but one bas beeD. scheduled at the Trappist Re­ treat House, Gethsemani, Ky. At the one-day events, one of tIbe four' scheduled talks will be given by a lay faculty member, Father Middendorf said.

HOW

'TO

SAVE'MONEY ON'

~

now will be for groups of about 70 students in a series of 33 Sun­ day retreats at Emmanuel church in downtown Dayton.

WYmCIII

3-6591

CHARLES F. VARGAS

JELL YOUR -ILAWV.

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

Your lawyer wMJ'want to know our legal tit.. lIItlen· he provide. In your will for aid to Near 1;lSt mlsslons. Tell- him nowt it'. CATHOLIC' HIlA. I!lmWilLPARl! AISOCIATIOII.

_._------------- ....---

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

Dear

••

1I~ICLOaIilD PLIJMIl PiND

CO

$

...

McmsllMO' Nolana C'CIiIl

Please return COUpot\l with your . offerl"1J

H'IMl!lr

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ITRBBV::.­

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_

_

.,.-STATIt_ _ IIP C O D I -

THII DATHClLlII III I SUI IliA.V WILPARI "BIDDIATlaN

NEAR EAST­ MISSIONS fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President MSGR. JOHN NOLAN, National Secretary Write: CATHOLIO MIZAR EAST WELFARII Assoo. 330 Madison Avenue New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon G·584O

a

0

ew:n..

tti1liWi'tt t

:

Me eft -

liAtt· -#liM •


I

Cha rity Agencies To Hold Meeting In New Orleans

THE ANn::·

West Harwich ~apal Volunteer A.sks Aid For Slum, School in Bogota, C~lombia

ii:lurs.,

Two-thirds of the way through a three year assignment :'\8 a Papal Volunteer in Bogota, Colombia is Jeanne C. Olsen. She teaches second grade boys.at Colegio San Car­ charities in the modern world los, a Benedictine school in the .capital city of the Latin American republic. Daughter of will be weighed and explored Mr'. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen of Holy Trinity parish, West lfarwich, she attended Bradford by more than 1,500 lay, clerical Durfee OoUege (now SMTI) bility ·of materials and laoor for and Religious delegates to the in Fall River, and Bridge­ rooms in the convent. But 52nd annual meetioghere·of the . water State College. She top­ I tw-o the more des}rerate part of the National Conference of Catholic j ped ·off her training with a ~roject is the school. Charities. )

Control of Schools

FALSE TEETH

More Firmly in Place

. Red Cross Elects JERSEY CITY (NC)-Fathel Victor Yanitelli, S.J., president of St. Peter's ColIege here, has been elected president of the Jersey City chapter of the American Red Cross. He will be installed at a meeting Monday.

Do your false teeth annoy and em­ barrass by slipping. dropping or wob­ bling wben you eat. laugh or talk? Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates.ThIs alk,dinc (non-acid) powder bolds false teeth.more firmly and more comfortably. No gummy. gooey. pasty taste or feeling. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor breath." Dentures that fit are essential ~ health. See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH at all drug counters.

"This school. although only ·a

. few ~'ears -old, gives the appear-­

"1

'

JE1\.NNE C. OLSEN

ccirnpletion of ·permanent quar­ ters. We've decided to help with this project· (those of us who teach at San Carlos and possibly a fcew Peace Corps workers) and so have taken on the responsi­

Amba$$~rl(!)r

Voaces

SUlJ>POi't foil' U.N. CINCINNATI (NC)-The gov­ ernment of Ireland is i'n fun ac­ cord with. the support of the united Nations voiced by Pope Paul VI when he visited the -or­ ganization's headquarters in Oc­ tober of 1965, the Irish ambas­ sador' to the United States said here.. Speaking at the College ()f Mt-. St. J<l5eph, Ambassador Wll1iam P. Fay said that unc()n­ djponal. l:>Upport of U.N. as the necessary way to achieve peace in. the .modern world" is a basic element . of Ireland's foreign policy.

17

Schools Plan EV«Jlfuation

NEW ORLEANS (NC)­

.\

6, 1966

~otho'rc

The relevance of Catholic

Representatives of some 1,100 four -month crash course in <latholic charitable agencies ~nd Spanish language and culture at the Catholic UniveJ;:sity of institutions across the country Ponce, . Ruerto Rico, before are expected at the Oct. 9 to 13 starting her Bogota assignment sessions. in 1965. The convention theme, "Cath­ olic Charities in the Modern Not only is she busy with her World," will be discussed by regular school duties, but the A~xiliary Bishop George H. lively young Cape Codder has Guilfoyle, executive director of recently taken. on Saturday Catholic Charities in the New catechetical classes in a ..slum York archdiocese, at a Mass district of Bogota. In connectio~ officially opening the proceed­ with this work, she has sent ings. Diocesan friefJds a letter of ap­ . Shriver to Spealt peal for help for the 20,000 peo­ Principal celebrant of the ple served· by her, her fellow Mass at St. Louis cathedral will Papal Volunteers,and two Sis­ ters. . be Archbishop Philip M. Hannan of New Orleans, convention host. She explains that the Sisters The... opening business session - have moved into the slum area, will feature a keynote address Barrio Asuncion, to help.in set­ by Bishop Raymond J. Gallagher ting'upand maintaining the ed­ of Lafayette, Ind., honorary . ucationalsystem in the parish ehairman of the National Con-' sl'nool and also to staff a dis­ ference 1>f Cath1>lic Charities and pensary. its former secretary. He will dis­ N:ot Poorest cuss "Catholic Charities and the "Barri-o Asuncion is not the Individual." poorest barrio in this city, but "Catholic Charities and the I'm sure au, of y~u would ~e Community"· will be the s~bject appalled -at the sight of it. Some -<If an address by Under Secre­ 20;000 -people inhabit Asuncion tary of Labor John F. Henning. and are taken care of spiritually Addressing the closing general and physically, for the most session will be Sargent Shriver, -part, -through the parish, in director, U. S. Office of Econom­ which tITe Sisters play a major ic Opportunity. role. . Vincentians to Meet "Which brings us to the prob­ Workshops, sectional meetings lem-or rather the pl'Ojects, .at and "curbstone" conference will hand: the convent, the school. be addressed by a wide variety "For the past five months the of speakers from public and pri­ Sisters have been living ip two vate social agencies. very tiny rooms while awaiting The annual business meeting following the general sessions will be conducted by Mother Lay Boards Gaining Mary Charles, NCCC president who is .superior of the Omaha, Neb., province, Sisters of Mercy. ·ALBUQUERQUE (NC)-Cath­ Meeting here in conjunction olic schools in the Santa Fe with the NCCC convention will archdiocese are gradually being be the Society of St. Vincent de . tumed -over to the contr-<ll ·of Paul and the Association 'Of sChoOl bOards made up almost Ladies of Charity ·of the United entirely -<If lay members, aCC<lrd­ States. iog to .a survey just completed The St. Vincent de Paul Soci­ by the. Catholic Office of Educa­ ety sessions (Oct. 7 t1> 11) will tion in Albuquerque. focus principally -<In the opera­ The . survey showed that 14 tion of salvage· stores by which the society finances its programs ·of the -parishes operating schools i.J1 the archdiocese now have lay of aid for the poor. Discussions ooards and two have board~ in will touch management, store personnel and wages, ·promotion the process of ·formation. There are close to 17,000 stu­ and merchandising. dents in the .archdiocese's ·46 el­ ementary and seven high Announces Changes schools. Elementary teacher.s in­ clude 133 lay persons and 244 In Administration Religious; high school teaehers BUFFALO (NC) - Bishop include 70 lay persons and fi9 James· A. McNulty of Buff-alo Religious. has announced several adminis­ trative changes in the diocese . Semi.nary Rector of Buffalo aimed towards imple­ mentation ()f Vatican Council 11 . PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Ms.gr. decrees, including the addition T~lQmas J. Welsh, vice chancel­ of two vicars general and for­ l"r of the Philadelphia archdi­ mation of a senate of priests. c.cese since 1963, has been named Named vicars general were rector of St. Charles Borromeo Auxiliary Bishops Pius A. Ben­ Seminary. here. Msgr. Welsh incasa and Stanislaus J. Brzana. succeeds Msgr. John P. Connery, They join Msgr. Bernard J. Mc­ who has gone on sick leave Laughlin, chancellor,and Msgr. alter havjng been in poor health Albert RWlg. The senate of priests will be for some time. composed of 15 to be elected in five seminary class groupings How To Hold ·by all the priests of the diocese and six to be appointe.d by the bishop.

Oct.

anee of falling into ruin, while actually the problem is that it.'s never been finished. There are no wind<lws and only two doors on the entire building, which is filled beyond capacity with 250 students. "Although most of the build­ iJ:lg materials have beim ob­ tained, it has become necessary for the parish to rely on local assistance in erecting the build­ ings. 'Unskilled' labor, which is considerably understated, was responsible for the building of the present school, but because funds have been ·needed in many other areas· of the parish, work on the school 'has been at a standstill for almost a year. "We don't mean to construct new rooms on the school or try to solicit $10 or even $5 from each ·of ~ur friends at home so that maybe enrollrilent could be expanded by another 100 stu­ dents ·or so maybe each student could have at least one textbook next year. No, our plans aren't so complicated or expensive. Finishing Work "We're going to tr~- seeing ho~ m}.lch finishing work we can do on the present school. By this I mean we're going to put in ceil­ ings and floors where there are june, plaster the walls, build <l few bookshelves, put in a few windows and maybe a few doors. "Whatever we do will de­ pend ()n you! This is a dollar drive (may as well be blunt about it). If -each of you sends .one d<lllar as quickly as possible and we C<lmbine our pesos with them, we'll be able to complete this job in a few months -where otherwise it might not get fin­ ished for several years.' God bl'ess y()u!" Donations may be sent to Jeanne at A.A. H328, Bogota 2 D.E.,Colombia, South America. Air mail is recommended and postage is .10 for an ordinary letter.

PEORIA (NC) A criticall sclf~nalysis of Peoria's three Catholic high schools is planned .for this school year with the aid -of the National Catholic Educa­ tional Associatioill. Findings apd recommendations w4U ·be evaluated, in the seC<lnd phase, by educational specialists from Bradley University here in BJinois and the NCEA. ·"The multi-school study wiJll -be ·of national interest because its findings wilt" be made pub­ lic," Father C.' Albert Koob, O. Praem., acting secretary general for the NCEA said in announcing· the study. Sharing in the mutual ex­ change and progress of a graSll roots study will be Bergan High School, the Academy of OUi' Lady, and Spalding Institute. The study will be financed by t.he Peoria diocese and coordi­ nated through th,e office {l::/ Father Eugene L. Finnell, super­ intendent of diocesan sch()ols.

Boston A!1'~hdiocese ~'ans New Hospital BOSTON (NC)-The ·new, en­ lar-ged Sancta Maria Hospital ·now -under construction bere wHI -be ready for occupancy m the Fall of 1967. . . Richard Cardinal Cushing .ed Boston announced it will replace. a -hospital of the same name. 10-. t.'ated.in another section on prop­ -erty which has been sold to the Massachusetts Institute of Tecb­ noklgy. The new hospital, one of U .administered by the Boston archdiocese, will accommodate 15tl iPatients. It is operated by the Daughters of Mary of the Jmm2culate Conception.

DO~:~NELLY

PA~~,~TING

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Commercial • ·Industri~'·· Institutional

"Pi?inting ondDecor-ati~g.·.

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Wins ·11 Awards NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The Clarion Herald; New Orleans archdiocesan newspaper, won 11 awards in the annual competi­ tion sponsored by the Press Club of New Orleans. Competing with daily llewspaper~, press services, TV. and radio, the Clarion Her­ ald w,pn three first-place awards :--<Ine for an editorial, one for .:3 religious ·story and one for ·a feature story.

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THE ANCHOR-, .. 1.:8·· . ", 'Thurs., Oct. 6, 1966

To' 'Medi,ate

Mass "ow, [H@mes IC::ontinued from Page One· <&esan program of study, discuss . and implement the Vaticarl: council de·crees. Other·' phases

include lecture-seminars and workshops for Religious and lai­ ty, and eventual study imple­ mentation of other conciliar doc­ I!!ments. Pastors of all parishes in the lt5-county Michigan diocese have received authority todeternmine 1lhe time and place for home Masses in connection with the ''''home discussion group" phase 0f the diocesan Renewal Through

Vatican II program. Every parish has groups of :00 to 15 persons who meet· week­ ':b' for nine weeks, in a home to study and discuss the con­ stitution on the Church, one of 1'6 documents enacted by the oouncil. Some parishes have 50 such groups, and each one, when Practicable, will participate in one home Mass during the nine­ week period. Bishop Zaleski noted that in fhe early years of Christianity Masses were ordinarilly cele­ hrated in homes or similar set­ tings because t~ere Welre no .cl1urches. "We are not 'trying to take -Qle MasS out of the church and put it back into the home," the Bishop said. "But for the pur­ poses of prayer and instruction atrictly .in connection with out ':renewal study program. it seems desirable to have smaller group .participation' in a home 'Mass." , The Bishop, lfsted other po­ 'iential benefits form the home Masses such as: Aiding in a fuller understand­ Ing and appreciation for the 'Mass as the central form of pub­ Ik' ,worship' uniting all Catho­

THEOLOGIANS: Father Edward Dhanis, 8.J., rector of Rome's. Gregorian Univer­ sity,addressed the' congress from the rostrum .i~ the .presence of A~chbishop .Pie~ro Parente ()f the Doctrinal Congregation; three offICIals of the CongregatIOn of Semmarles and Universitie.s, Archbishop Gabriel Garrone, Giuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo and: Archbish­ op Dino Staffa, 'and Msgr. Antonio Piolanti, rector of the Lateran University. NC Photo.

Expl~nation. of

, . Continued from Page One Ermeriegildo Cardinal Florit, Archbishop of Florence, in the· concluding address, "that one simply makes use of biblical quotations to prove a thesis, which used to rest mainly,' on theological reasoning. Nor does any theological formulation, however, elaborate, ever exhaust all the riches and aspects of re­ vealed truth."

The theology set in motion by the Vatican Council, the Car­ dinal went on, "will have to· be inspired by continuous and im­ mediate contact 'with the Word of God, and not only because it must find its foundation and starting point in it, but also be­ cause revelation, considered un­ der the aspect of the riches con­ tained in the Bible and their Bes. -Demonstrating the Mass as perspectives, comes to' be con­ 811 ,intimate family meal with' sidered as subject to explanation by means of all the aids science ehrist. , '. -Assisting participarits to· a places at our disposal. fuller understanding of their re­ ''Theologians, therefore" will lationship with each other as have to go beyond pro~lems of members of the family of God. a merely ontological' and, so to :, it is believed that the· per­ speak, metaphysical n a t'u r mission for home Masses is the posed by revelation; and"give firstslich Ijliocesan-wfde' author­ ciueconsfderation as _well to con­ Nation granted in the United ,crete and existential 'aspects, States. . that is, to the history of salva­ , To the Diocese' of Fall River,. tion which then becomes some­ wiass" Similar home ,Masses have what of a 'general framework al­ been authorized for more thaft ways to .be kept in mind,' even Oiie 'year for jlny home where when dealing with sPeculative a parishioner has been con­ questions." tined to bed or home because In a concluding statement, Of protract~d illness. Father- Edward Dhanis, S.J., Rector of the Gregorian Univer­ sity, Rome, outlined the work cut out fO\~the theo16gi4ms after Continued from Page One ~he Secom Vatican Council. ing congresses of abbots. , 1'), Foud ing the lead of the "And let also the due author­ Vatican ~lliouncil' theologian~ ~ of other abbots of the indi­ must recog ize that, t~eir. work elosely'joined even the sure spit:­ is of grea importance to the itual profit of the monks is .the itual profit of the monks, in the bonds of obedience and love, be brought back to that pristine "'igor which the Benedictine Funeral Home lPUles so gravely prescribe," the Pope suggested. 511 Second Street

In recent years, the authority fall River, Mass.

Glf individual abbots has tended flo lessen while that of national OS 9·6072

Benedictine congregations has MICHAEL J. McMAHON

tended to grow. The congreSs of Licensed Funeral Diredov

the monks going from Sept. 19 Registered IEmbalmer

to Oct. 4 is to be continued in 1967.

e

Authority Shift

O'ROURKE

New President LORETTO (NC) - St. Franels eollege inaugurated a new presi­ dent and conferred an honorary <ioctorate of laws upon Bishop James J. Hogan of Altoona­ .JohnstO'Wn at a convocation here fa Pennsylvania. Father Vincent It. Negherbon, T.O.H., is the new r..."

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Continued from Page One ogy. The position of the theolo-­ gian is that of a "mediator". , He stands between the Magig... terium (the teaching authoritw of the Church and the "lived faith" as ·shown by toe faithful.

The theologian is to evaluate the concrete faith as it is lived by the People of God and then propose solutions to problems that arise between the "lived faith" and the Word of God. Concerning the Magisterium, the theologian is to present the teachings of the Magisterium to the people so as "to form the faith and moral observance .·among them,"

" The Pope cautioned theolo­ gians against being so independ­ ellJt that they would lose the humility which the faithful show them or the security which the Magisterium offers them. "To wander from it (Magiste­ rium) in your investigation along personal arbitrary paths would easily expose you to the danger of being alone-teachers without faithful-and labouring in vain without producing vital fruits for the community. "It might even expose you to the danger of, deviating from the ·correct way, choosing your own judgment as, preferable to the thinking of the Church as a cri­ terion of truth. This would be an arbitrary choice - the road toward heresy." , The pope then wl;lrned the theology experts he had called to Rome against an "exaggerated ' confidence in themselves" and exposed the dangers to the Church and theology as such if such a confidence were realized.

Christian life of today; . logical studies when the Second Vatican Council opened.' ,The 2) Theology is not only a sci­ ence for specialists but is also American Jesuit thus concluded: to be endowed with a profoundly "They are not much interested religi()us and pastoral character; in the Council because they are way ahead of the council." 3) The Church must be view,,: ed and studied as she is on the Four 'problems exist in the march toward the Heavenly' Je­ u'. S,. Father Murray pointed rusalem with the Risen Christ; out: (a) diffusion of what is called "the new morality", (b) 4) Mariology must be studied both in its relationships with the division between pre-conciliar Church and with the Separated and post-conciliar mentalities, Brethren; (c) a "new indifferentism", and (d) a lack of leadership on the 5) The missionary and· ecu­ I menical dimensions of the part of bishops. Church must occupy the spot­ The' good side oj: the "new light of post-conciliar theology; morality" is that "it raised the LINZ (NC)-A joint telephoM question of what -is the objective service for dispensing religious 6) Theologian!! must ponder the mysteries of the multiple -moral order." The real dhTision information has been established presence of Christ in the Church; 'between pre and post conciliar by Catholics and Protestants mentalities does create a "diffi~ hE"re in Austria. A Catholie '7) .There must be a re-affir­ priest or Protestant elergyman mation of the connection that culty of communication." can be consulted in this roun~ must exist between the' work of The "new indifferentism" theologians and that that exists found in the U. S.,' the Jesuit the-clock serVice. between Sacred Scripture and theologian explained, seems to Tradition ,and the Magisterium assert that it is not important of the Church; , to be a good Catholic but rather 8) The. conciliar doCtrine on to be "a good Christian." religious liberty must be' studied and its reflections in the thought Concerning the lack 9f episco­ of the documents of the Magis- pal leadership, the 4merican : terium must J:>e prought into the ,'theologian stated, "This is un'" open; derstandable and rna)' be a good, 9) Theology imist not only be thing, sin~e they mil:ht lead in a source must a saving wisdoin­ wrOlig directions: Yet it doeS a way of life" a means of'dia-. create 'a good deal of unrest. logue between ,the Church and There's a danger of oscillation the wotld;' . from 'left to right. ~r9 pat ~he 10) Finally, it is the work of right on the head and then to pat theologian~ to make kn"own the· the left on the head is not lead~ real doctrine and teachings of ership.~ Vatican I I . · . llJ. S. Problems As far as the United States is concerned, .Rev. John Courtney Murray pointed out that Amer­ ,ican Catholic youth "seems' to Rt. 6-Between' Fall River and New Bedford

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Feehan~

Durfee "on'd Stan.g Bid for Top 'Grid, Honors By Ji'reI' Bartek

,

Last Saturday's rain may have dampened the spirit \iJf some high lSChooU footban w& but it didn't dampen the

THE ANCHOR-Dj~~~e of Foil River-Thurs., ,.\,

Pau' Mandeville of New Bedford:

Oct. 6,l966

..

Bridgeport Football Star Outstanding Despite Size

winning ways of the "Big Three" in both the Bristol County League and the Capeway Conferenee. After opening game By Joe, Miranda victories Durfee, Stang and 00 ll-ll. ][n 'all likelihood the Feehan WeJre tapped as the passing of Coyle QB Bob Hoye At five-feet, three inches, and 140 pounds, to be a college football player you must power houses of the Bll'istol Mould prove too much for the ',have courage. Paul Mandeville, a tailback with the University of Bridgeport in Connecti­ Loop while Falmouth, Wall'e- Artisans and the Warriors will cut, and former New Bedford High outstanding gridster, is all football player. P'W I, who ham &nd Old Rocbester were se- have their first league nod. was named as New Bedford's top scholastic athlete in 1963, his senior year is a physic&! ']ected ~ the favorites fun the Tbere will'be two non-league education major and in his " C to p e 'liT a y games for County teams Satur- last year at Bridgeport. The Cireui!. All six day. Attleboro will travel to of tlllese iavoll'Masconomet RegionaJ.The MasSports Publicity 'Office at

it e a emerged G:Onomet eleven is 2-0 for the Bridgeport issued a state.

:fI:rom last week,

end's mud and r.U.ID. victoriOUB snell thus preserve their seled" Elt a hn" 'Without nn y clloubt the big game in ihe 18i'istol County League this Saturday will be lOuriee High of Wall River ~t Stang High of North Dartmouth. Dl1J':fee breezed to its second consecutive win by downing defending champions Attleboro 30-0 last week. ' The Hilltoppers bave thus amassed III total of 72 points to the oppositions' zero. Joe Roque was the big gun for the Durfee club by hitting pay dirt twice last Saturday. While Durfee was breezing to victory Stang High took a 19-0 nod over cross-town rival Dartmouth. Speedy Dave Broughton scored J twice for the Spartans. Stang employed a tenacious running game piling up 208 yards on the ground to only one in the air. Thus Stang carries an ,identi'cal '2-0 record bito the Durfee contest. This one is Iteally diffilImit to pick. Durfee definitely will Dot be able to roll up the , score against this Stang' eleven but probably will go bOlDe'with' n close victory. Feehan-North Another' ,big .game on tap Satlllrday is Feehan High of Attle'horo lit North Attleboro. These . ' next door Y kneighbors . I 'have d be-" co~e :ver . een nva s an anythmg can happen. Last ,', d Saturday, ." · the F eeh amtes coaste to theIr second win by taking Coyle High 20-0." ' " Again Rick Thorpe talli~ twice for Feehan while lineman Pete Cosgrove got a thrill by scoring a TD on a recovered fumble in the end zone. Jim Parker picked off his fourth in.._ t' f "",rcep lon 0 the young season in that contest. It seems as though the. roo1l d ' N th h as f a II en In on e or squa. Upset by Stang in its first game, the pre-season favoritetlsuffered the loss, of five starters by way of an unfortunate accident last week. Taunton Higli took fuU advantage of the situation last Saturd ay and dropped t h e North :!lotte via a 28-8 score. Even though keen rivalries as this . . . game are often IDlsleading it "'1;' h ~ N th Id S h ou .,.,. ee an over or. Bob Boye Suong New Bedford Vocational and Coyle of Taunton will both be l:eeking victory number one at the latter's field saturday. Yoke. had last week off while Co Ie , y had its season s mark equalled

TV Award NEW YORK (NC)-The NBC Catholic Hour on television :re­ received a certificate of merit for "Images of Hope," a fow-­ part series on mental illness, from tbe American Foundation of Religion and Psychiatry, The series was honored for contrib­ uting to greater understanclling of work in the field Of religion and psychiatry.

year having dropped Hamilton- ment on Mandeville saying,"that

Wenham 22-6 last week. Another a player o,f his size could find

rough afternoon for the Jewelry ,his way to a collegiate gridiron

City combine. and then become a star is most

Taunton Higb, plays ,Middle- amazing. Paul's record as a start­ town, R. I. this Saturday, The 'ing back during his juriior arid

Taunton Tigers came up with a' sophomore years, can not be

big win last week over North termed amazing, but fantastic.

AtUeboro and appear" to be on Bridgeport spectator!! have

the winning road. Joe Hamilton tabbed the New Bedford star,

of Taunton had a fabulous day "The Mite-ty Knight," a glow­

against North, by scoring all of ing tribute to the Purple

his team's 28 points. He ran for Knights' leading ground gainer.

three TDs, intercepted a pass for The fourth leading runner in

50 yard TD, scoted the 'conver- the ~astern Football Conference

sion points and amassed over last season, Mandeville's best

200 yards by rushing. game was against Trenton State

lFavors New Bedford, when he gained 115 yards and

New Bedford High had its title scored two touchdowns.

aspirations smashed 'in its first The best game of his collegiate

league game last Saturday by, career, however, came a,1l a soph­

dropping a 36-8 decision to Weyomore when he ground out 153

mouth. That brings the season yards and scored twice against,

mark to 1-1 with Brookline on Central Connecticut.

the agenda for Saturday" This' 'As a sophomore, Paul aver­

Suburban League tilt will be at" aged better than six yards per

New Bedford and' should be incarry, lugging for 280 yards in

teresting, The Brookline club 47 attempts and was chosen on

lost to Weymouth ,29-8,' two one Eastern College Athletic

weeks ag,o, In a close one, New COI~fercnce's wee k I y All-Star

lEledford over Brookline. teams.

In the Hockomock League two In his junior season, 'Mande-

old time rivals square off as ville lugged leather 79 times and

Oliver Ames of Nortb Easton picked up 313 yards or four pero hosts Man~field. Mansfield ill carry. Paul also came into his 0-2 after losing to Franklin in own as a receiver, catching 12 its first league tilt. .As usual the, passes for 92 yards and was OA Tigers are, strong and are ,given honorable mention on, in the ruuning for the'champion-:' :1l.1PI's All-New ,England -team. ship, Mansfield should, '00 lbO", 'The diminutive back possesses' obstacle., ", .. : ; l a good sense of humor. Paul said S~kODk's~iM, .' this year, referring to a trio of ]n t:he Narry t.eag~e, :PIghto~.,.. 200-pound backs who' will do his Rehoboth should rum Seekonks : blocking, "I should be able to home debuf~ Seekonk earned the' hide pretty well 'behind :these first VIC ' tory 0 f 'th e sch " hiS-", fellows."

00,,8 tory ,by topping Martha's >Vine-' , After being given honorabi~

.:. k b u' t D'Igh"'" .

y ard'i ast 'wee, ....,n ns mention on the All N'E j·t am" , ....... t f Seek k' I I: t h ' ,e CUB 0 ~n s c ,ass" n, 0 er ~nd chosen on UPI's All-ConI " .j.t '. :·.r games ,we .plck NantucketI' o~er " necticut team, Mandeville stated, , Club ~n~~al scholar~b~p ~~ard, . 4',)utlltanding footban tale~t~ that ~arthatShvmeyard:INtorMton, 'f~llnd"I, just try to get through the the highest honor besto~ed,upori 'won him a gra;Dt to Bridgeport, ,,' , but coach Nlcolau's courage. nJ;Dg ,a ,~)JJlle agams . e d Ie " holes before the defenSe' sees a Crimson athlete. ' .As 'a junior at New :B~dford ' Many colleges were interested in King Phlhp over Case m'Swan- me." ,' sea, and, Old Rochester over? . Paul is not a 'scatback tyPe Paul' spearheadedbis footbail' tht' Crimson back, untii' they mates to an unbeaten season and' heard of his size, but Nicolau, Somerset 21t OR. ' ' . ItUnner, but instead runs like a The game of the wee~, m the fullback, choosing to go through in nis se.n~or year the ,Whalers anticipating a free substftution Capeway Conference IS Fal- rather than around defende'l'n finished witb a 5-2 record. ' rule, took the chance and it has th t W h 'B th .••.., lIt was not only Ma';deville's paid dividends. mou a are am. 0 um... despite his speed. ' are 2-0 and appear to have the Coach Nicolau notes that Paw strength of the league. Last is not as small as his appearanee. k F' 1 ' th 'd th t _A , wee a mo? ro e. e oe..... T~le Bridgeport strategist Bays La~ry FerreIra to VIctOry over Mandeville has the legs l:lMi Falrhaven (!-6) .. The Clippers build of lBO-pounder. scored the first time they, bad Mandeville, one of the' best the ba~l 21nd then held on forbackll to come out of the FaD. .. , d.ear hIe for the rest of the River Diocese, and an' All-State game. baseball player at New Bedford Wh'l F 1 th d d t ' DOMESTIC & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS ' I, e a mou e ge OU, a was the recipient of the Fathero'' VIctory WarebaD?- ,toppe.d Denml!i­ Yarmoutb 14-0 In a wmd-swept ~'Dnsto"ation . lSiG DIVIDEND NEWS i m i n th at saw little b u t d ef enSlYe t g I b b th 'd A ' MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEE 'STREH, FALL RIVER s ru g es y 0 Sl es. , «me SYSTEMAne IJ yard pl~nge and a recovered SAVINGS Yf!8I' fumble lD. the en~ zone proved eHVESTMErn ~e . margIn. «Ii VICt.Ory ,for ~ Ii year VIkIngs. Th~s one .IS, anybC?dy s SAVINGS • •••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 •••••••••••••••••••••• game but we 11 g~ With Wareham. etEGULAIi Barnstabll/! WIll be' at Dart­ II th d both te ' 1 I' year SAVINGS mou an ams are', - " baving won their openers and losing last week. Another ;tig~t ooe but the choice is Dartmouth. INDUSTRIAL and , DOMESTIC Deimis-Yarmouth ,will be 2i Bourne tC>round out the Cape,­ Bank By Mail way action. Bourne rolled 'to a 22-17 nod over Barnstable' last We Pay The Postage wee¥; but it toOk a fourth qual';' ",' ,. . @) SOUTH YARMOUTIIJ' ter rally. Walt Iwaszko scoroo ," , @) BENNIS PORT two TDs' for the Can'ainien' anell CONTRA~rORS @) IlYANNIS a1Jlother productive day like that @) YARMOUTH SHOPPi"' .I'UZI 312 Hillman Street " WY 7-9162 New Bedford will briilg victory l10r Bourne Ii> OSTERVILLE wer D-Y. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••••• e ..

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20

THE, ANCHOR-~

Thurs., Oct. 6,' 1966

fami~war ~~sues

face TQ"ibullud

In N<ew Term WASHINGTON (NC) The U.S. Supreme Court be­ gins its 1966-67 term with a docket full of old, familiar

Vincentians

Just,ice"

Anglictln l.eader Wears Pope"s Gift

Continued from Page One. Father. 'Boyd will address, Vincentians active in salvage store projects on Oct, 7 on "What the !:It. Vincent de Paul ~tore Means to Me," Father Dickinson will be keynote speaker at the Viilcentians' Saturday luncheon, His topic will be "The Nature' and Meaning 6f Vincentian Spir'­ ituality." The Attleboro area chaplaJn is also slated to add ress a workshop Monday, Oct, 10 on "A Review of the Mechanics of Twinning.'" The. Vi n c e n t ian Twinning program is a project by which councils "adopt" Vin­ centian units' in mission areas,

OTTAWA (NC) - Arch," Repres~ntatives of thecl,fnited bishop Michael Ramsev of, Presby.terian, ~utheran, Baptist and Greek Orthodox churche§ · . " '1 I" 1 ,Ca~ t erb.u~y, SPIlltUcl ed( er were also present, Of 44 mIllIon members of the, P'ossibilities of Unity Anglican Church throughout the world, .has been wea'ring a ring which was presented to him by Pope Paul VI during his tour of Canada .

.- , . Arc,hblshop Ralll;sey told the" cap~CI~y congregah~~l here t?at Chns!lans should , be "read~ng the SIgns of the hmes WhICh point toward real possibilities of Chris,tian 'un. iiy. . ' 111 speeches and, serOlOns the" Anglican primate 'repeatedly has He said Christian denomi~a-: referred to the historic m;eting tions still are divided by a num­ he had with the Pope last Mal'ch . bel' of obstacles but-' many dif-. as evidence of the growing un- ferences have been eliminated. derstanding and communication' As an example he refE:rred to the between' Anglicans and Roman' Christian Pavilion which eight Catholics.' . .. Christian. denominations ate helping to build in Montreal for the world Expo 67 in Canada's 'In his public appearances in centennial. yea,r, and the com­ Canada, the archbishop is re-: mon declaration whit:h. he and' ceiving further evidence of that ' Pope Paul signed following their' fraternal spirit. In Montreal he was greeted by Paul Emile Car- ­ .meeting in Rome, Archbishop Ramsey said the dinal Leger, of Montreal,' and here in Ottawa two ,Catholic search for unity betwE:en Roman prelates attended a service Catholics and Anglicans is only which the. primate addressed in part of the larger se.al~ching in which all Christian denomina­ ,. the Anglican'Christ Church Ca­ .thedral-Archbishop M. J. Le­ tions are coming to. view each mieux of Ottawa and Bishop other "not as rivals but as allies, ,P. E, Charbonneau of Hull. ' in the search of 'God and man',",

Continued from Page One this country by their own choice, fired with a burning desire t@ improve their lot in life. The Negro was brought to our shores in chains, the 'victim of a vicious slave trade." . "Even after .his emancipation he was left bereft of a human prize far more precious thalll wealth, c'ulture or education. His years of ruthless ser.vitude had r,')bbed him of "his self respect and human dignity. This is a­ great 'irltangible assert which cHnnot be acquired as easily or as quickly as land or learning. "Furthermore, much as the I\mercian Negro strove to over­ l'ome the handicaps of fate 'his color left on him a, mark for prejudice which ,was far more obvious and, more difficult to remove than a brogue, an ac­ cent or a name." . Whatever the background 011'

the reason for. this prejudice,

present-day requirements of hu­ man brotherhood make it clear tnat "any discrimination of any ,kind which conflicts with a per­ Eon's human dignity· must halt ,forthwith," he, declared.

issues 'demanding hard, 'new Qlecisions. The ceremonial opening of the lllew term Monday found the <oourt confronting cases on, such matters as church-state relations, ~scenity and civil rights. Only Priest All are familiar problem-areas Al soon Father Dickinson's mol' the court. But this year all program is attendance at a meetdemand new' rulings to clarify ing of a committee working for , QOmplex questions, some of them the beatification of Frederic al"ising out of the court's oWll ,Ozanam, founder of the Vincel1decisions of the recent past. tians. He is the first and only , Cases in the area of church priest to be appointe<L to the 3t1d state are potentially among ­ otherwise lay group. ttte most significant that the Theme of the Catholic Charil~ COUI't will decide in the coming ties meeting will be "Catholic nine months before it adjourns Charities in the Modern World";' oometime next June. At ,issue in that of the Vincentians, will be 9ne is the key question of "The Renewal of the Church whether 'public 'fun,ds may con­ through Charity." stitutioilally be used for seclilar Iilducational purposes in church­ related schools. College Aid Case ' This is the issue posed by the ]).(.w famIliar Maryland college aid case. On June 2 the Mary- ' land Court of Appeals, by a 4-3 ftlargin, helq. ~that grants voted by the state legislature to three c&'hurch-related'colleges weI:e 'un­ ooristitutiona~.because of. the' acbo01s' "seCtarian" character. . While ruling against the gnjllUi , .1, • ,these three colleges, the Maryland appeals court upheld' ~e constituti~nality'of a similar grant to Hood College, Freder­ ick, which has ties with the United Church of Christ. It said We h9ve worked with a sense Hood's sectarian character was minimal and state aid to' the of pride and satisfaction 011\1 oohool was therefore permitted, Constitutional lawyers h a v e the planning, construction an& pointed out that the Maryland decorating of thi~ new. Parish C4lOurt thus made the sectarian eharacterof institutions, rather Center benefiting both young than the secular purpose served by the aid, the test of the consti­ and old of St. William's parish tutionality of state assistance 'to church-related schools. ' This is expected to be a cen­ teal issue when-and if-the Su­ premeCourt agrees to assume jUl'isdiction in the case and hear arguments. Tall: Exemptions Another significant church­ -------------------....;.----~,------------atate case from Maryland is also pending before the high' cow't.· This is a challenge to the con­ stitutionality of tax exemptions g Compliments of

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