10.27.66

Page 1

Ii:

...

·,Fr.Luiz Mendonca, to Direct· Fall ,River, Parish

BISHOP NAMES EAST F,ALMOUTH ADMINI~TRATOR~ NEW ASSIGNMENTS FOR FOUR ASSISTANTS

lFR. LUIZ G. MENDONCA }<'all River Pastor

Most Rev. Bishop James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the' Diocese of Fall River, announced to day'the ap­ pointment of a pastor, an' ad­ ministrator, the transfer of two assistants, and the assignment of two priests as curates. The Bishop also announced the appointment of· a new' dean. They are: .. Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca, pastor of St. Anthony Church, East Fal­ inouth, to St. Michael Church, Fall River, as pastor. Rev. George E. Amaral, as­ .sistant at Immaculate Concep­ tion Church, New Bedford, to' St. Anthony, Church, East Fal­ mouth, as administrator. The above appointments alt'e ef~ective Thursda'y, Nov. 3:

The ANCHOR

,Rev, Robert F. Kirby, assistant at Our Lady of tpelsle Church, Nantucket, to. Hoi y G h 0 s t Church, Attleboro, as assistant. Rev. Edward J. Sharpe, as­ sistant at Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro to Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantusket. The two aforementioned ap~ pointments are effective Wed-. nesday Nov. 2.

FR. GEORGE E. AMARAl, Falmouth Administrator

'.

Bishop's Charity BaUP~ans Move

l1

~@.

43 © ]966

The Anchor

$4.00 per Year PRICE IOc,

Clothing ,Drive for Needy' Takes.' Place Next Week 'l'he Annual Fall Clothing Drive conducted by American ~atholics to aid the needy of the world takes place in all

parishes of the Fall River Diocese next week, From Mon.,

Oct. 31 through Sat., Nov. 5. The appeal is f<;>r used but 11Isable clothes, with special OOlphasis upon blankets and ~Iothes for children and in~ts. As will be announced ift Churches on Sunday, parishioner's al'e to bring clothes into Uteil" own parish centers, tttroughout next week. There the dothes will be boxed and tied ""d properly marked and ready fi&r collection from the parishes ... Mon., ,Nov. 7. ·?be clothes will be picked liP -.d brought to ~entral collection ~Ints in the various. areas of tbe Diocese. From here it wiUl! t.e shipped through the' courtesy lIi Hemingway Transportation teompany to the depot on Long Island. Here it is processed and baled and shipped overseas within a very short period of time. It is most likely that some m the clothes will he on the backs of the needy overseas by '!'hanksgiving. Representatives of the National Catholic Welfare <Conference - Catholic Relief Services will see to it that the clothes are given to the needy without regard to race or creed and they will also be the guaran­ tee that none of it reaches "black markets." Diocesan Director and coord­ Dnator of this year's Appeal is mev. John F. Hogan, Catholic :Welfare Director of New Bed­ &ro>.!!.'l11.

' All collections from the parishes will be made on Monday, Nov. 'l.

~eports

}<'R. DANIEL E. CAREY. V.F. Dean of Islands

Diocesan, Music Committee Sets Interim Directives For Use i'n Sacred Rites

fall Rivelf Mass.,,' Thursday, Oct. 27, 1966' ~heQdRapidly Vol. 10,

Rev. Americo DaSilva Mar­ tins, C.M., to the Immaculate Conception Churcp, New Bed­ ford; as asistant. Rev. Joachim Ferreira Fer­ nandes DaSilva, C.M., to Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford as assistant. The effective date for the above two appointments is Tues­ day, Nov. 1. Very Rev. Daniel E. Carey, V.F., pastor of Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantucket, as Dean of the Dukes. and Nantucket Deanery effective yesterday, Wednesday, Oct. 26. Father Mendonca The new pastor of St. Mi­ chael's Church, Fall River, suc­ ceeds the Most Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Bishop of the Turri to Page Two

At the organizational meeting of the 1967 Bishop's Charity Ball Committee,' Miss Margaret M. Lahey and Mr. Jehn E. Kane were selected as Co-Chairmen. Miss Lahey and Mr. Kane, representing the 'District Council o~ Catholic Women and Society of St, Vin­ cent de Paul respectively, will direct the entire production of the '67 Ball. The new Co-Chair­ men will serve in the capacity , formerly filled by the President of the D.C.C.W. and the Dioc­ esan President of the St. Vincent de Paul who now become "the Honorary Co-Chairmen of the annual charitable event. Turn to Page Eighteen

The Diocesan Commission on Sacred Music today is­ sued interium directives to pastors, organists, choir direc­ tors and all others who are involved in the musical programs throughout the Diocese. Members who serve on this com­ , mission under the chairmanship of Rev. James F. Lyons creases in holiness in the degl'ee are Rev. Joseph L. Powers, that it is intimately linked with liturgical action, winningly ex­ Rev. William G. Campbell, presses prayerfulness, promotes Rev. Paul G. Connolly, Rev. Al­ solidarity, and enriches sacred! bert F. Shovelton, and Rev. rites with heightened solemnity. Maurice Souza. The Church indeed approves of In addition to the six members all forms of true art, and admits of the clergy, three sisters and them into divine worship when two members of the laity also they show appropriate quali­ ties". (Constitution on the Sa­ serve. They are Sr. Stephen Helen, cred Liturgy Chapter VI) It is with these sentiments of S.U.S.C., Sr. Patricia Gertrude, S.N.D., . Sister Mary Eleanora. implementing the Decrees of the R.S.M., Mr. 'Norman Gingras and Council that the Diocesan Com­ mission on Sacred Music wishes Mrs. Edawrd Studley. to present to pastors, organists, The report is as follows: choir directors and all others in- / "Holy Scripture, indeed. has volved in the musical programs

bestowed pra~se upon' sacred in the parishes the' following

song . . . and the same may be recommendations and directives. said of the Fathers of the Church Article I. and of the Roman Pontiffs who In keeping with the spirit of in recent times, led by Saint the Papal docurilents on sacred Pius X, have explained more music we desire to encourage the precisely the ministerial func­ use ' of contemporary sacred tion supplied by sacred music in music as it does not offend in the service of the Lord. a secular, profane, or unbecom- . Therefore sacred music in- ing way the sanctity of the place Turn to Page Eleven

Given at Clergy Conference

Bishops ,O'Keefe And Sheen Head

Dioceses.

The priests of the Fan River Diocese met together in conference Tuesday to hear reports on various phases of education in the Diocese; It was' also annou;nced by Bishop James L. Connolly that the Priests' Senate would hold its first organizational meeting· , "WASHINGTON (NC) &It Monday morning,. Oct. 31, at 'Bishop Cas,sidy High, School, Taunton. The plans for the Pope Paul VI}:las made the meeting were outlined by t~ 'Most :Reverend 'Bishop and include the election of the following appointments in officers of the Senate. ' the 'hierarchy of the United States: \ FATHER O'NEILI~ FATHER POWERS MONSIGNOR HAMEL The Most Rev. James E . . A report on the activities A scholarly report on the Kearney, on his retirement as It was only six short years state of diocesan education bishop of Rochester, is trans­ ago that an all-day institute of the Christian Unity Com­ ferred to the titular see of as found in the parochial Tabaicara. of the priests of the Diocese mission showed it to be in the forefront of ecumenical and regional schools of the heard the Most Reverend The Most Rev. Ralph L. activity both in New' England Diocese was given and illustrated Hayes, "who has resigned as Bishop strongly urge the estab­ and even in the United States. by Rev. Patrick O'Neill, Ph.D., bishop of Davenport, is tranfer­ lishment ... a strong CCD organ­ ization in each parish. There The Diocese of Fall River is Superintendent of D i 0 c e san red to the titular see of Narag­ Schools. were then only five such active , one of, the !first to have pro­ gara. parishes; now the number is 70. duced guidelines for ecumenical Showing that up until the '60s The Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, activity. The national gUidelines the emphasis in education lay in auxiliary bishop to Francis Car­ Amid the progress in CCD ac­ produced by the Episcopal Com­ tivities in the Diocese is the es­ providing as many schools as dinal Spellman of New York, mission of the U.S. mentions only possible, Father O'Neill explain­ tablishment of a Diocesan Exec­ and national director of the So­ utive Board. This board groups five American dioceses with ed that now the emphasis lay ciety for the Propagation of the together Confraternity members guidelines-Fall River is one of more in curtailment and in Faith, is appointed bishop of 'who are experienced on parish them. stressing the quality of education Rochester. levels. In the past ,~hey have and keeping it in proportion to The holding of monthly meet­ The Most Rev. Gerald F. provided wee ken d institutes ings, with the aid of non-Cath­ our resources, O'Keefe, auxiliary bishop t® Turn to Page Two Turn to Page Eighteen Turn to Page Ten Turn to Page Ten

/'


2

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F.oil River-Thurs., Oct. 27., 1966

Mass Ordo

OFF~CIAL ()

Diocese of

Fa i I

River

AI?l?OllN'FM!IEN'.JI'S

Rev. Luiz a. Mendonca, pastor of St. Anthony Church, East Falmouth, to St. Michael Church, Fall River, as pastor. Rev. George E. Ama;:al, assistant at Immaculate Concep­ tion Church, New Bedford, to St. Anthony Church, East Fal- ' mouth, as admillistrator. Appointments effective Thursday, Nov. 3, 1966. Rev. Robert F. Kirby, assistant at Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantucket, to Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro, as assistant. Rev. Edward J. Sharpe, assistant at Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro, to Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantucket, I,IlIl assistant.

FA'I!.'HER SHARPE

Anlltounces Clergy Assognments

Continued from Page One Brownsville Diocese, who served as pastor in the North End parRev. Americo DaSilva Martins, C.M., 'to Immaculate Con­ ish of Fall River for almost six ~eption Church, New Bedford, as assistant. years until his appointment 011 April 20, 1966, as Bishop of the Rev. Joachim Ferreira Fernandes DaSilva, C.M., to Our Texas Diocese. Lady of Mt. Carmel Church. New Bedford, as assistant. Father Mendonca, the son of the late Luiz G.· and Maria Ro. Appointments effective Tuesday, Nov. 1, 1966. Almeida Mendonca, was born in New Bedford on Sept. 26, Very Rev. Daniel E. Carey, V.F., pastor of Our Lady of 1919. A graduate of Holy Family the Isle Church, Nantucket, as Dean of Dukes and Nantucket High School, New Bedford, he Deanery succeeding the late Very Rev. James E. MCl\1IahOD. attended the Seminary of Angra, Terveira, Azores, and was. or­ Appointment effective Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1966. daine~ on June 10,. 1944, in St. Mary s Cat.hedral, Fa~l River, by the late BIS~OP CaSSIdy. . As an assIst~nt he served m the Santo ChrIsto Parish, Fall Riv~r, and the Immaculate Con­ cepbon and Mount Carmel Par­ iahes in New Bedford'. Bishop On Sept. 26, 1962, Father Men­ donca was named administrator of 0u~ Lady of Health Church, Fall ~Iver, where he served un­ til May 13, 1?64, at which time There has been.a 6,000 student he was ~ppomted pastor of St. Continued from Pal!._. One

Anthony s Church, East. Fal­ thr-oughout. the Diocese. Now, increase of public· school stu­ . they ...re available to come to dents in the CCD 'since the.·last mouth. Father. Mendonca will report. census was taken. NoW, 'approx. the aid of any parish in. the

his new assignment on Thurs­ , process of establishing· the CCD imately 43,000 diocesan .students to day, ~ov. 3. . in public schools should· be in the in. the parish. Twelve such par­

Father Amaral ishes have been visited since CCD program.' Of this, some 83 Father Amaral was born Aug. per cent elementary students September. The seven priest area directors' have registered while another 14, 1922, .in Raynham, the son of and Maria Souza fiO per cent of the high school , Manuel have also' provided a great con­ Marques 4- mar a I. Follo~~ng tribution to the success of the students have signect up. More than 1,275: lay teachers graduatiOn from. Coyle High CCD. They' have staffed· many of the training. clalJses and have are actually giving. courses in School, Taunton, he a~tended St. parishes. Not all are adequately Charles S::ollege, Catonsyille, and increased and faCilitated commu­ 'nicatiori between" variow areas, trained though some 365 are St. Mary.'s Seminary, Baltimore. Following ordination on May presently receiving s~cial train­ parishes and organizations. The T.S.B.C. (Teaching Sisters' ing in each of the areas of the 31, 1947 in St. Mary's Cathedral, .Fall River, by the late' Bishop and 3rothers' Committee) has Diocese. The adult religious program i1I Cassidy, ~he newly appointed ad­ dipped into the religiou's com­ munities of the Diocese and to be encouraged throughout the ministrator of St. Anthony's Church, Ec.~ Falmouth, served Diocese. At present, 135 discus­ has reaped great help for train­ ing courses and coordination of sion clubs are active in some 51 as an assistant in St. Michael's parishes while 20 inquiry classes Parish, Fall River and three New activities. The successful Leader­ Bedford Parishes, namely, Mt. ship Day in Taunton is evidence are involving 469 people. The inter-parochial progrinns Carmel, St. John the Baptist and of the great work of which it is capable.. and the pooling of resources are Immaculate Conception:' Father Amaral was named a The Victory-Noll Sisters of producing encouraging results. No. Easton have provided. lllS Much planning and preparations notary in the Diocesan Matri­ monial Tribunal in 1951 and a are already at work for an in­ with trained experts in the cat­ crease in such a needed activity. Pro-Synodal Judge in 1961. ~hetical field. Two sisters .are He will succeed Father Men­ . Father Powers closed his re­ working on a diocesan basis. They have been' busy' with port with the announcement of donca in the Cape Cod Parish 011 Thursday, Nov. 3. teaCher-training courses, TV the New England Regional Con­ Father Kirby 'gress to be held this year at work, and parish visitations. Father Kir.by was born in No. Assumption College, Worcester, Though all this, plus the suc­ eessful Regional Congress held from Nov. 10 to 13. Much can be Attleboro on April 5; 1933, the· last year, adds up to much prog­ gained from ",hat speakers will son of Mrs. Aurore M. Boutin ress, there is still very much to have to offer, the Confraternity .Kirby .and the late Robert F. be realized. Director explained, but there is also a treasure available to each of us in the sharing of ideas and experiences that can o~ly give fruit and growth to the work of FORTY HOURS

the 'CCD in the Diocese of Fall DEVOTION

River. Oct. 3()....-St. Thomas IVr 0 r e , Somerset. . CI~rgy Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs. MONTEZUMA (NC)-AIumni of Montezuma Seminary here illl JIll AIICHOR New Mexico account for 20 per· SGcond Clan postag~. Palo at Foil IlIver" cent of all priests in Mexico and WYmClllr~ 3·0911 IIIlass. PUbllsha, aval) Thursday ot' •.410 25 per cent of Mex1can diocesan Klllhlano Avanue Fall Rlva,. Mass.. 02722 . by tile catholic frass Of the DIocese of FaD clergy, the seml"nary's 1965-66 I!lIver. SubscrlptlOll prlC() br Iilllil. pO$tpalll report discloses.. ~ lIOr YOllf. Appointments effective Wednesday, Nov. 2,

19~6.

Father' Powers Reports' on CeD

FATHER KIRBY

Kirby. A graduate of No. Attleboro High 'School, the new assistant in the Holy Ghost Parish, Attle­ boro, attended Cardinal O'Con­ nell and St. John's Seminaries in Boston. Ordained by Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, on Jan. 6, 1959, IF ather Kirby served as an assistant in St. Roch Church, Fall River, and for the past seven years as an assistant at Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantucket. ]~atllJ.er Sharpe . Exhibitiolnl Father Sharpe, the son of Mrs. Richard F. Sharpe and the late The Discalced Cannelite UUnIJ Richard F. Sharpe, was born in of Dartmouth will benefit frOlll Needham.. He attended SS. Peter an exhibition and sale of eeramc and Paul Seminary, Detroit, and ies that will be held Sundlrl1 St. Procopius' Seminary Lisle afternoon, Nov. G, from 2 to II TIl. ' , lit the Catholic Woman's Club-­ B ish 0 p Connolly ordained house, 742 Rock Street, Fall Father Sharpe to the priesthood :Givu. in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fan' River on March 22 1958 Th~ assistant at' Hoiy . Ghost Church, Attleboro, will report to .. ~ NOV.6·· his new assignment in Nantucket· ' Rev. Patrick S. MeGee,' 19~ on Wednesday, Nov. 2. founder, St. Mary, HebT9nville. Father C~rey Tbe. ne~ Dean Of Dukes 'and

Ceramic

Necrology

~Nantu'cket.,·DeanerY·

is., a

'native.',,'

;"",;,,_....:,;.;.·..i·,_

of Fall River, and attended' St. "

Charles College, Catonsville, 'and" . i..I.' i. " C' A' .' .

SL Bernard's Senunary, R~ches. ter, and was ordained in 1934 in , .- Inc. .:,' St; Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, \ by the late Bishop Cassidy. .FUNERAL SERVICE . '. : Father Carey ,has beenpast'OO­ .of Our Lady. of the Isle Church, . ", NEW BEDFORD, M~S. Nantucket, since 1960," Jl d ' 549 COUNTY STREET served as an assistant at' the Island Church from 1952 until he was named administrator of Mt. Carmel Church, Seekonk; in ~

,",eRae

ust;n

a

1959.'

.

---

IJ

~ GRACIA BROS"

Father Carey also se'rved' as an assistant in St. Mary's Cl_urch, I No. Attleboro, and many Cape Excavating

parishes including Our Lady of .: the Assumption, Osterville; .Cor-. Contradors

pus Christi, Sandwich·, and St. ': I·' .' , Peter the Apostle, Provinceto'wn. CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEN He saw service as a chaplain WYman 2-4862 during World War U and 'la~er .:' served as an assistant at Sacred ,~ ~~ Heart Church, Taunton, and ·St. . .James Church, New Bedford. The new Dean succeeds the - NO JOB TOO BIG late Very Rev. James F. McMahon who died unexpectedly NONE TOO SMAll on Sept. 8, while attending the Annual Priests' Retreat at Ca­ thedral Camp, East Freetown.

. II'

SULLIVAN BROS.

PRINTERS

JEREMIAH COiiOLAN

Mexican

FRJDAY-SS. Simon and JU~ Apostles. II Class. Red. :M~ Proper; Glory; Creed; Prefaul of Apostles. SATURDAY - Mass of ~ Blessed Virgin for Saturdav., IV Class. White. Mass Propel9l Glory; no Creed; Preface ~ Blessed Virgin Mary. SUNDAY - Our Lord Jes~ Christ, King. I Class. Whi~ Mass Proper; Glory; CreedlS Preface of Christ the King. MOND~Y Mass of previom:J Sunday. IV Class. Green. Ma£;J Proper; No. Glory or Cr~ Common Preface. TUESDAY-AIl Saints. I Clasa,

, White. Mass Proper; Glo~

, Creed; Common Preface. HoIe7.

,Day of Obligation. . . WEDNESDAY - Commeinomn tion 01. all the Faithful :Ds", parted. I Class. Black. Ma~ Proper; Three Masses maw be offered by every priest, the first Mass is offered accordin:!j to the intention of the cel$'> brant, the second for all ~ Faithful Departed, and tb© third according to the inteJ1lo= tion of the-Pope. The SequenCfj is said in the principal Ma&B only. THURSDAY -Mass of previo~ previous Sunday. IV Class, GrE!en. Mass Proper; No GloTl\ or Creed; Common Preface, One N"otive Mass in honor ofJ Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest, permitted. Glory; no Creed; CommCl€l Preface.

PLUMBING 6' HEATmNG'· 699 Bellville Avenue. New Bedford .

Main Office and Plant

.95 Bridge St., lowell, MIllss. Tel. 458-6333 Auxiliary Plants BOSTON CAMDEN, N.J. OCEANPORT,. N.J.

'.'

MIAMI

'fAWTUCK~~

RoU.

PHILADELPHIA .


.,orld Poverty New· Ch~nenge

Tru~t

Funds Aid Laton Ames-mcan

To Coni~iemlce

WASHINGTON (NG)

World poverty today con­

fronts the Christian eon­ science with a new and lap­ gely unmet chal1eng~, two lay

leaders agreed here.

Se.if",H~~p P~an NEW YORK (NC) A grant of $30,00 has been made by the Charles

Norris is assistant to the exec­ uti ve director of Catholic Relief Services National Catholic ,Welfare Conference, the U. S. Catholic overseas relief agency, while Maione is past in,terna­ tional president of the Young ~hristian Workers, Toronto. The two men spoke at a U. S.­ eanadian planning conference for the Third World Congress ())f the Lay Apostolate which will be held in Rome in October, I:967. About 70 people attended the meeting in suburban Bethes­ da, Md. lBefilllg lLost

A century ago, Maione said, it was sufficient for the inhabi-. tants of wealthy western C::oun­ tries to pray for the victims of an Asian famine because news of the disaster did not reach them until long after it had hap­ pened and no other response was

possible.

But today, he said, "technology

puts a heavy new load on our 0Onscience, for noW instanta­

neous communications allow us to make a choice. He who only prays today and does. not try to develop policies that will as­ sure modern agricultural methods and distribution of food is In reality far from salvation."

JH[OLY CROSS ALUMNUS IDllEIDlJICATES NEW HALL: Most Rev. Frederick A. Don­ aghy, M.M., Bishop of Wuchow, China, and a New Bedford native, was joined by his brother, Rev. William A. Donaghy, S.J., left, and Very Rev. Raymond J. Swords, S.J., right, president of Holy Cross at the dedication of the new Mulledy Hall in Worcester.

Services-National Catholic Wel­ fare Conference to sponsor the three self-help community de­ velopment projects in Latin America. The funds will be used to purchase necessary supplies and equipment for the projects, one in Chile and two in Honduras. The project in Chile is a fruit and garden cooperative directed by Father James Ward Mundell, M.M., a Maryknoll priest from Washington, D.C. The coopera­ tive serves Araucanian Indians in Chol-Chol where Father Mun­ dell is pastor of Our Lady of Carmel parish. . One Honduras project is a radio school operated by Accion Cultural Popular Hondurena and offering courses ranging from pre-school to college level to peasants living in remote areas. The other Honduras project, under the direction of the Asoci­ acion de Promocion Humana, is training local people in. ihe or­ ganization of cooperatives. credit l111ions and other community de­ velopment activities.

UnQverii»ity N@m~$ L@ymen to Posts

PITTSBURGH (NC) _. The Holy Ghost ]i'athers' Duquesne University has acted to involve laymen more intimately in the university's affairs. The university has named Dr. Kenneth R. Erfft, former vice In 1956 Bishop Donaghy was president and treasurer of Rut­ assigned to Taiwan. Among the gers, as vice president for ad­ important posts he has filled ministration. since being assigned there are It has also restructured the regional vicar and regional su-· university board of directors so perior. In 1962 and 1964 he at­ that five laymen will sit as tended sessions of the Second members. Previously the board Vatican Council. comprised Holy Ghost Fathers.

Alumnus Dedicates Holy Cross Dormitory B.·shop Donaghy of New Bedford Officiates WORCESTER; MASS _

Mulledy Hall, named for the first President of Holy Cross At present, he declared, the The Most Rev. Frederick A. College, Rev. Thomas F. Mul­ worldwide. war on poverty "is Donaghy, M.M., D.D. Bish­ ledy, S.J., was opened in Sep­ being lost." OIl of Wuchow and a 1925 tember. The dormitory, con­ ''The actual fact is that the graduate of Holy Cross College structed as part of the college's abyss between the rich and poor . presided at the dedication and long-range $20.4 million devel­ . is growing larger and tends to . blessing ceremonies Saturday opment program consists of ac­ become more dramatic with each for the college's newest dormi- commodations for 386 students, passing year," he said. tory. Mulledy Hall. and includes two large television lounges, eight carrel equipped study rooms and a typing room in the basement. In· addition to

, the 187 double rooms and 12

single rooms, Mulledy Hall pro­ vides quarters for four proctors NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Hun­ He asked: "What will it re­ and a house master..

dreds of millions of people have quire, gentlemen? A few thou­ less to spend each day on all sand dollars. Is that too much to Very Rev. Raymond J. Swords,

their needs than the average expect from men. of heart and S.J., opened the ceremonies with

American spends for a package action and who tr<ice their his­ a welcome address.

toric beginnings back to an Oza­ f)f cigarettes, Bishop Edward E. Bishop Donaghy, brother of

Swanstrom reminded the Society nam and a Vincent de Paul to Rev. William A. Donaghy, S.J..

of St. Vincent de Paul at its 52nd whom no task or challenge was '31, president of Holy Cross from

1»0 great if it were for God's 1954 to 1960, now stationed at

annual meeting here. The executive director of poor?" Boston College, is a native of

Asks New Life Catholic Relief Services - Na­ New Bedford, and has spent 37

Bishop Swanstrom told the years in the Maryknoll mission

tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ ence, told the Vincentians that convention that new life should fields of the Orient. He attended

Americans have two wars to be given the program "because, public schools in New Bedford

:a-age-"the war on poverty at dear men of St. Vincent de Paul, prior to enrolling at Holy Cross

home, and the much greater one if there was ·ever a day when a where he served as president of

against a poverty of global pro- . sick and weary world needed the music clubs and captain of

your hand and heart, this is it." the varsity cross-country team.

portions." Speaking of the "great gulf International Poverty Following graduation fro m

Bishop Swanstrom described between the rich and the poor," Holy Cross in 1925, Bishop Don­

he said that despite new recog­ tile vast proportions of interna­ aghy entered St. Mary's Semi­ nition of the poor in America, nary, Baltimore to prepare for tional poverty in urging the So­ ciety to "make a fresh start" on for most Americans "the world the priesthood. He entered the

still presents a face of some Maryknoll order in 1928 and

the program of conference-to­ calm and orderliness." conference adoption or "twin­ was ordained the following year.

"And even though," he contin­ ning" which it began seven Bishop Donaghy worked from

ued, "we now find ourselves 1929 to 1938 in the Kaying Mis­

years ago in an attempt to ex­ sending many thousands of our sion of South China. He returned

tend charity "across internation­ 1M frontiers to the neediest areas young men to Vietnam to engage to the United States in 1938 and

in a war to stem the tide of was consecrated by Bishop Cas­

of the earth." He said that the program has communism in Southeast Asia, sidy in St. Mary's Cathedra~, Fall

already accomplished "untold our own individual lives have River as Titular Bishop of Se­

and immeasurable good" but not been caught up in the inces­ teen and Vicar Aposetolic of

that the hopes and expectations sant upheavals that have afflict­ Wuchow.

with which it was launched ed so many human beings whose Bishop Donaghy spent five

"'have been only partially real­ fate it was to be thrust over years as a prisoner of the Com­

ized." frontiers as .refugees, or to be munists following his arrest in

B ish 0 p Swanstrom recom­ part of the post-colonial areas 1951, the same year that Holy

Blended that a secretary be hired battling their way into freedom Cross awarded him the honorary

tID devote full time to the inter­ and struggling from ~ome sem­ degree of Doc;:tor of Laws in ab­

/)lance of stability." raational »roaram. sentia.:

~ick,

E. Mer­

rill Trust to Catholic Relief

Wealthy nations' have the technology and the resources to end world poverty but up to ~w they have lacked the will to do so, declared James J. Nor­ ris and Romeo Maione.

'WlJ!,!r

.3

. THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Oct. 27, 1966

Weary World Needs You' Prelate Advises Vincentians

"MY BANK!" m",dm<1~&~llR~1m:,',:,:'J,):mt~,:i1!IBi~:,n:'Eg:t,r@m::;:mml'i§llKi@)iW&flt,

"Greater ran River's ~ fa.ity Banking Center" ~.•;,. SAVINGS. HOME LOANS HOME FIX-UP LOANS* • AUTO LOANS* PERSONAL'LOANS* • 1Sc MONEY ORDER CHECKS

llimm@mm:~'e.,-.;,l~:::~'~~~'::-='~:'~":~.~

4 SO. MAIN ST.

corner of Bedford

All deposits insured in full under law

Open Friday Evenings Until 8 O'Clock

~l'

~ ~


4

Prelatl'~~

·toiscuss

ID frofien'UiJ@U'D@rril«%l1 AmdJ

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Th.urs., Oct. 27, 1966

1I~[(®® @@@[f@®U'@W'cru ~QD[f@®@[J\)~

~®W®~@~ ~®W []={]@@[fU' V@~~® NEW YORK (NC)-The latest of four major heart valves to be developed at Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, is On display a~ the American Heart As·, sociation Convention being held here. The latest heart valve, culminating eight years of research, is known. as a "unit has fewer moving parts. The Georgetown surgeons tri-Ieaflet valve." It was de­ gained international attention in veloped by a three-man uni­ 1954 with Dr. Hufnagel's first

versity team of open-heart sur­ geons. They are: Drs. Charles Hufnagel, professor of surgery and John F. Gillespie and Peter W. Conrad, assistant professors of surgery. Improved Reliability The new valve is a device which appears to be three leaves. It can be sewed into the human heart to replace a diseased or disabled valve, that part of the' heart which regulates the over­ flow of blood from gushing back into the heart. It also diminishes · the threat of thrombosis because of the developmeni of" "Hepa­ cone," an anti-clottin{~ chemical. The coating of the new valve is siliconized rubber, impreg­ nated with "Hepacone." Experi­ ments have demonstrated that the coating prevents c:otting successfully in .all valves, thus eliminating the major cause of. heart failure, the I'esearchers believe.. Pioneers· in Field They also pointed out that the unit tri-leaflet valve is an i.m,.. provement over the three previ­ ous valves developed at .George­ town because it is more similar to a natural heart valve, simu­ lates the natural blood flow and.

replacement of a diseased aortic heart valve with a plastic ·one. The first plastic heart valve, it revolutionized heart surgery. Thousands of heart patients benefited from the now ·out­ mQded ball-in-chamber valve before research advances at Georgetown and elsewhere made it obsolete. Aided Several Hundred The ball-in-chamber _val ve was used clinically until 1958 when artificial aortic leaflets­ made of pliant plastic and simi­ lar in appearance to artificial thumbnails--were introduced by the Georgetown researchers. The leaflets later were ·modified by tlther surgeons. In 1963, 'the three Georgetown sur-geons announce.d the -devel­ opment of a plastic caged-discoKi va~ve. Despite the valve's 'suc­ cess, it presented one 'PFoblem: it .acted as an obstruction to the natural flow of the ·blood .and caused it to flow.around the disc­ shaped object. It is estimated that some 500 heal·t patients are alive today bescause they are wearing the three artificial valves made ·pos­ sible by Georgetown's historic research in arterial substitutes.

The Pari5h Parade ST. JOHN BAPTIST, · NEW BEDFORD

ST. JOSEPH,

FALL RIVER

The Ladies Guild will hvld its monthly 'meeting at '7:W' Sunday · night, Nov. 6 in the church hall. Slides will be shown by Rev. Manuel Ferreira depicting his European pilgrimage.

Junior CYO members will sponsor a Halloween party in the school hall from·7:15 until 10 tomorrow night. Costumes ·must be worn. The Women's Guild will hold its annual Communion bre<lk-. ;ast following 9:30 Mass Sunday nOl'l1ing, Oct. 30. Mrs. James A, O'Brien, president of the Dioc­ esan Council of Catholic ·Women, will speak. Ticket deadline is today.

ST. PATRICK, }'ALMOUTH

New officers of the Women's Guild are Mrs. Gilbert J. Noon­ an, president; Mrs. R. Frank Stone, vice-president; Mrs. Jo­ seph Brown and Mrs. Manuel Lopes, secreta'ries; Mrs. James Swett, treasurer. A continuing guild project is a rosary for peace said on First Saturdays on the hour between noon and 5. A Christmas food sale' is planned with date and place to be announced. IMMA,mLATE CONCEPTION, .FALL RIVER

The following members of the Holy Name .::ociety were recent­ ly installed by the Diocesan Di­ rector of the Holy Name Soci­ eties, Rev. Henry R. Canuel of New 3edford: Romeo Potvin, president; George Henai re, first vice-president; Victor Carrairo, second' vice-president; Roger Rioux, secretary; Everett La­ fleur, treasurer. The socie.y's annual Father and Son Communion Breakfast will be held at White's Restau­ rant' following "the Channel 6 Televised Mass on Sunday morning, the i'east of Christ the King.

HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild a,lI1ounces a buffet and dance Saturday nighf, Oct. 29. Tickets are avail­ Clble from board members. GUILD OF THE VISITATION, NORTH...EASTHAM

Members of t\1e Guild will re­ ceive Corporate Communion on Sunday morning at the 9:30 Mass. All returns for the turkey drawing and penny sale prizes must be made at the next meet­ ing ·scheduled for Thursday, Nov.. 17, at 8 in the Church Hall· on Massasoit Road. The penny sale will be· con­ ducted at the Visiation Hall on Friday night, Nov. 18, at 8. Mrs. Arthur Gestaro is serving as chairman for the affair. NOTRE DAME, FALL. RIVER

The annual turkey wht~t un­ der the sponsorship of the Holy Name Society will be held on Sflturday night, Nov. 5, at 7:30 in the NotI'e Dame S~hoo' Hall ST. MATHIEU, on St. Joseph Street. FALL RIVER Among the vm;ious prizes will The Holy Name Society will ,be 40 turkeys an.d many door sponsor a Father and Son Com­ awards. Tickets may be obtained munion Breakfast on Sunday from committee members, Holy morning, the Feast of Christ the Name Society men and at the King, following the 7:30 Mass. door.

ROME TO PHILADELPHIA: A piece of rock from the tomb of St. Peter was mortared into place at the corner­ stone-Iayin,.g of the new Cathedral of the Immaculate Con­ ception, Philadelphia, Pa., ·by Archbishop Ambrose Seny­ shyn, Metropolitan-Archbishop ·of Philadelphia for the Ukrainian Catholics of the U.S. NC Photo.

For Training Poor Permanent, Not Tempo"l1'ury Jobs

Greatest Need

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Ca­ re'ers which are .permanent rather than jobs which. are tem­ porary are the greatest neea of the poor today, Dr. Arthur Pearl, University of Oregon pro­ fessor and co-author of the book, "New Careers for the Poor," told the 52nd annual convention of the National Confere,~ce of Catholic Charities here. In· order to provide such careers, Pearl said society must get away from the idea of serv­ ice to the· poor and learn to .ask service from the poor. The poor also need jobs before ·e.ducation, he added.

Handocrnpped Pupils

Aided by. New Law JERSEY CITY (NC)-Under a new law enacted eal'lier this year, 17 multiple-handicapped students at St. Joseph's School for the Blind here are receiving substantial assistance from state and local funds. The law permits school. dis­ t. iets to purchase special educa­ tion services from private· insti­ tutions when they are not avail­ able in public schools. The 17 youngsters here-about a third of the school's enrollment -come from almost as many communities, with school dis­ tl'icts paying $200 a month tui­ tion fee. They are reimbursed for most expenses by the state. Each child has to be tested by . a doctor and others from the sending district before !?eing ap­ proved for the 'pl'Ognim. The . state must certify that the nec­ essary services ,can onlY be ob­ tained from a private institution.

. A few years' training ion school will not solve their needs, he said, nor will a neigh­ borhood job corps position. The hltter,.·in fact, can make us an "accessory to crime," he main­ tained, because a youth with a job that lasts only a few months will often spend the money he \'eceives and incur obligations that will be' a burden later. Something Wrong Pearl pointed out that the -poor child has no real fl'eedom (If choice in education or opportun­ ity. , It is often felt that the ·pom are poor because something is ·wrong with them, he said, but J'eally they are poor because they are locked out of choice and opportunity. Under the present system,so­ ciety offers no intermediate careers, he declared. There arce the untrained and the well edu­ cated. But for the person who is .an - '!almost doctor," an "al­ most lawyer," etc., there· is ·no real future. The poor should be given the options that the rich have now, Pearl said. They should -be able to work as teacher aides or family aides and become edu­ cated while at work.

{OR~~n~

&. SO~P.S

OW STOP . "~O"'Il)ING CENTER • Television • A.-_O~-"ces 1/}4

- Furniture • Grocery

Enjoy Dining

3 Sovings Plans

iN. THE

tN!A~~el"AI~

(0.- ~~.~ A, JIVE I!& AllftK Wl Main

S~

Wareham. Mass. felephone 295-2400

Bank·Bo·Mail Scrvico Available

Fellowship !Program .Benefits Colleges WASHINGTON (NC) - Silt € a tholic colleges were listed among 72 institutions tlfhighcll' learning which have r-eceived an infusion of new teaching talent through the National Teaching Fellowship Program, the U.s. Office of Education has aD­ ntJunced. Peter P. Muirhead, associate commissioner for h.igher edu·ca­ tion, said the program is de­ signed to assist promising bull <financially limited smaller col­ · ieges to recruit outstanding young scholars and to retain them for their faculties. '. The institutions which bene­ fited by the program were Immaculata Junior College, Washington, D.C.; Mercy Col­ lege, Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.; Mount · Angel College, Portland, Ore.; · St. Bernard's College, St. Ber­ nard, Ala.; St. Martin's College, Olympia, Wash.; and Villa ,Julie Junior College, Stevenson, Md.

Williams' Funeral Home ':51. 1870

.Reg. Funeral i);rector and

Emb,.,t..,er

1 Washmgton Square

N~W BEDFORD

TEl WV ,._.. n~8

'ltv' -F; PM?U"NGAREA

SAVE MONEY ON

YOUR OILHEAT!

~

eatt

WYman 3-6592

CHARLIES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BIEDfORD, MASS.

Aile" St.. New Bedfor'd 997·9354

Oflerring You 1-10"'1" Financing

OTTAWA (NC) -The CanllF dian Catholic Conference has Cis<> cided to appoint a committee caa bishops to set up a national funq)l to aid developing countries. The committee will be com-. posed of four to six bishops frOm! both the French and the EnglisTa sectors. Lay specialists will joiIiil the committee in making finitil plans for the organization. The bishops agreed that the organi.­ ZCltion should be established as [l "bishops-clergy-Iay association.'" The first objective of the new organization will be information and education, the assembly of bishops said. The bishops speci­ fically urged the new group W "create among our Canadian people an awareness of thei? cl'llective responsibility to coun­ tries in need, especially with re­ gard to government foreign aid programs." The organization aims to fi­ nance community development -projects and p~ovide funds JIoo emergency needs.

JOltY

;;

WU ALER

--AND­

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS Always Free Parking.

,.;fl/iclt detMt,1JI

~S~~

4EAT~NG

OIL


Congre~$

Again

Thurs.,

favors ~~~ool Aid M®@~Yres WASHINGTON (NC) Acting within a few hours of ~ach other, the Senate and! House approved federal aid to -elementary and secondary achool in bills calling for ex­ penditures far in excess of the figure asked by the administra­ ~on.

The Senate's bill provides $6.4 lltlllion over two years while ~e House voted a $5.7 billion two-year program. A conference committee will resolve differ­ ences between the two measures. The administrai'ion had asked ilor about $4.4 billion. The legislation extends both ime Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965-designed mainly to benefit children whose achools are "impacted" with the children of federal employees. Eligible children in non-public schools benefit from the main Jl)rovision of the Elementary and Secondary E d u cat ion Act through "shared services" ar­ ll'angement. Non-public school pupils and teachers are also eli­ gible for books pnd library ma­ terials under Title II of the. act. In a key move the House ap­ J1)~oved an amendment limiting the authority of the Office of Education to bar federal aid to school districts it believes are practicing racial discrimination. The amendment would require the education office to prove discrimination in order to hQld up funds.

Plan Award Day For Y outi'il Units Some 200 boys and girls from lilt parts of the Diocese will recei ve Marian Medals and· .Ad Altare Dei Crosses in ceremonies at 3 Sunday afternoon, Oct. 30 M Notre Dame Church, Fall River. They are members of Girl Scouts, Campfire Girls, Daughters of Isabella and Boy Scouts. Additionally, the Pope Pius XII medal for Explorer Scouts will be presented for- the first time in the Diocese. It will go to Donald P. Corriveau, Fall River. and Normand G. Audette, New Bedford. Bishop to Speak BishOp Connolly will present the medals and crosses, while Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski, ad­ ministrator of St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, will preach. A newly lormed mixed chorus from Immaculate Conception Church, Fall River, directed by Rev. Paul G. Connolly, will sing. General chairman for the serv­ ice is Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Diocesan Youth Director.

. ._-_ _.-: _,. :1 v

tJ j

q

FATHER KASZYNSK1l

5

THE ANCHOR-

Oct. 27, 1966 Qliveira, Legion of Mary Dioce~a~ Head;) Seeking Teachers Meets Frank Duff in Dublin

,

By Dorothy Eastman. Two priests and 16 laymen from the Diocese have just returned from '8 Legion of Mary Pilgrimage that took them to Dublin, London, Paris, Rome and Lisbon, Lourdes and Fatuma. In Rome they were part of a general audience with Pope Paul VI, in Fatima they met the older sister of Lucy dos Santos, one of the three children to wh9m Our Lady appeared, visited Frank Duff, founder of the Legion. Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, spiritual' dit'ector of the Legion of Mary in the Diocese, shepherded the group on a three week tour that included nine airplane trips, several train journeys and one bus ride. Others in the group were Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira, assistant at St. John the Baptist parish, New Bedford; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Medeiros, Mount Carmel, New Bedford' Miss Bernadette Var­ gas, St. 'Joseph, North Dighton; Miss Rose Mattos, Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton; Miss Mary J. COlTeira, Mount Carmel, New Bedford and Mrs. Hilda Rocha, also of Mount Carmel. Father Ferreira's mother, Mrs. John Ferreira, and his aunt, Mrs. Helen Lee, both of St. Peter's in Provincetown, made the pilgrim­ age along with Mr. and Mrs. Manuel P. Vargas of St. Joseph, North Dighton. Miss Patricia Silva from st. Elizabeth, Fall River, a niece of Father Oliveira, was along, as were Miss Antoinette Costa of Our Lady of Lourdes in Taun­ ton, and Mrs. Mary Morris arid Mrs. Margaret Roche, both of St. James in New Bedford. Upon arriving at Shannon air­ port, the group left immediately for Killarney where they spent two days exploring the beautiful district of mountains and lakes. Ne'Kt morning they left Killarney fo~ Cork, where Mass was· cele-'

bl'ated at the Shrine of Our Lady of Grace. Blarney Castle was the next stop and a few of the more adventurous in the group kissed the famous stone. Meets Frank Duff The next two days were spent in Dublin where the world head­ qua'rters for the Legion of Mary is located, It was here that Fathel' Oliveira had' a three hour private meeting with the vener­ able Frank Duff who founded the Legion 45 years ago and has guided it ever since. . The 73 year-old Mr. Duff had just returned from a three week bicycle tour through the coun­ tl'ys.ide south of Dublin. He was on what he called his holiday and took the opportunity to visit with fellow Legionaries on his route. Father Oliveira described Mr. Duff as a slightly built man but young and vigorous looking for his age. The rigorous life he leads in his tireless work for the Legion would exhaust many a· younger man, but he seems to thrive on it. "He's a man of tremeadous faith-completely convinced that the world can be saved by Mary bl'inging the world to her Son," Father .Oliveira says, describing Mr. Duff as "a holy man in touch with the problems of suf­ fering humanity and the whole world." During their talk, the founder told Father Oliveira that he was pleased that there had been no special Decree on Mary during Vatican II. "The Council clari­ fied Our Lady's role as part of tlbe Church itself and not as a separate entity," he said. Mr. l)uff, who attended the final session of Vatican II as an observer, had the distinction of being the only laymar. mention­ ed by name in the general ses­ sions. When his name was spoken by Cardinal Suenens in an address to the Council, he was given a tremendous ovation

~ns~ru~t

To

Deaf

LOS ANGELES (NC) - Six simple and repetitious rules to guide a teacher for the deaf' are -simplify, simplify, simplify, re­ peat, repeat, repeat. They indicate the infinite pa­ tience and ingenuity a person with normal hearing must bring to teach a deaf or hard-of-hear­ ing child. The rules, incorporated in a report from Gallaudet College for the Deaf in Washington,.D.C., have been stipulated here by Father Fachtna Collins who is looking for persons to train as teachers. Father Collins said these were the ground rules for the teacher training program of the Catholic Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, which he heads. The training of teachers is sponsored by the Ephpheta So­ ciety of the Archdiocese. Toni Takehashi, professional teacher of the deaf, said recruits would be taught to teach religion to deaf children. Classes, she said, are very individualistic and usually re­ stricted to three or four persons. "Simplify, simplify, simplify," she said.

Stone From Tomb In New Pavilion

WITH LEGION FOUNDER: Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, Diocesan director of the Legion of Mary, meets Frank Duff, founder of the worldwide organization, at Legion head­ quarters in Dublin. Father Oliveira led Diocesan pilgrims on tour of points of Marian interest in Ireland, Europe. . , dramatic indication of the them on the outstanding work

respect the world holds for this of the Legion in the Fall River

man. Diocese.

At the Legion headquarters

Paris was the next stop for the the Fall River group saw files group and they had two days with reports from Legionaries there to enjoy the "City of all over the world. In his office Lights." Highlights of the visit Mr. Duff has a huge map of the were tours of Notre Dame Ca­ globe where Legion envoys are thedral, the Eiffel Tower, the pinpointed. "He's like a general Arc de Triomphe and the planning his moves," Father Louvre. Oliveira says, "except that this Fat h e'r Oliveira celebrated is a spiritual campaign." l\'Iass at the Shrine of the Mirac­ Edel Quinn ulous Medal at an altar where Legion envoys are special "ad­ the heart of st. Vincent de Paul vance groups" who go any­ is enshrined in a glass case. The where there is great spiritual need. Many have been sent to· altar in an adjoining chapel Africa and South America. The holds the miraculously preserved body of st. Catherine de Laboure. famous heroine of the Legion apostolate, Edel Quinn, was Mass the following day was such an envoy in Tanganyika celebrated by Father Oliveira where she died and is buried. and Father Ferreira at the Basil­ Father Oliveira brought back ica over the grotto at Lourdes. from Dublin the news that the From Lourdes the group flew cause for her beatification is to Rome where they had five now under study in Rome. busy days in the Eternal City There are Legion Praesidia in with visits to the Catacombs, the every country in the world, in­ Vatican, the Colosseum and cluding Red China. Though per­ FO'rum.The high point of the secution of Legionaries in Red Roman holiday was an audience China has been fanatical and with Pope Paul at St. Peter's.

martyrs there number in the

Lisbon was the next stop on thousands, every once in a while the whirlwind tour and then a Frank Duff receives w 0 r d through refugees that the Legion trip to Fatima where the priests celebrated Mass in the Basilica. is still active behind the Bamboo Later that day they had the rare Curtain. privilege of a visit to the home "I didn't hear him utter a single word of pessimism during of Lucy dos Santos where they our entire discussion," Father had a short conversation in Por­ tuguese with her sister. She told Oli veira says, "in spite of the terrible news he is getting on the priests that she visits Lucy once a monthat her Carmelite the suffering in Red China. He's very optimistic that Our Lady convent in northern Portugal. They also met a brother of the will win in the end." Mr. Duff feels that the Legion other two children of Fatima, and Father Oliveira described will change with the times and them all as simple and humble that now Legionaries should be­ people untouched by the fame come more involved with social that surrounds their village and problems in their apostolate. their families. In Paris That evening the whole group The next three days were met Mr. Duff and were pre­ spent in sightseeing in Lisbon sented with autographed copies and then the next stop for the of the Legion handbook. He took weary group was Massachusetts, the opportunity to congratulate and home.

-3

ST. LOUIS (NC) - A stone from the tomb of Queen Isabella of Spain-who sent Columbus on his voyage of discovery in 1492-was presented to the City of St. Louis to serve as corner­ stone of its new Spanish pavil­ ion. The pavilion, which will be a civic center, is the same struc­ ture that represented Spain at the New York World's Fair. It is being rebuilt here. Presentation of the granite stone from the Queen's tomb was made by the Marquis de Merry del Val, Spanish Ambas­ sador to the U. S., to St. Low; Mayor A. J. Cervantes. 1It11111111I11I11I11III11I11I111111I11111It1t1I1I11It1l1l11ll11l11m POllSH~ENGLISH

MASS BOOKS

PRAY THE MASS contains complete Ordinary-Canon of Mass, 120 Polish­ English Hymns, Stations, Gorzki lale. Confession-Rosary Guides. 160 pgs. cloth $2.85 160 pgs. paper $1.75 At your religious dealer Of write: REV. PAUL P. WYSOCKI St. Adalbert Church, Thompsonville, Conn. Free Descriptive Literature 060ll! 1I1U111II1111111111111I111111I111II1111U111111U11111111I1t1l1flllll

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD, MASS. WY 2-6618

It

~~

ELECTRICAL Contrac'oll'S

~ ~

~

944 County St. New Bedford

#4r •


. . . Oct. 27, 1966 .," _.:..-_--...;.--------_:.-.._----­ 6· THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., .

;.

,. ',~ Priests~ Union?

,<

IIi reading any news stories about priests' unions-"-such as the one Father DuBay is talking about-or prie,sts', associations-like the one formed in Chicago-a few facts should be' kept carefully in mind. Priests of a diocese and their bishops are all men with consciences, are all Christians, and so are concerned ,with one another although the first concern of all must be for the glory of God and the welfare of the people for whose salvation they have committed their, lives. A bishop and his priests have the same goal-the glory of God an dthe welfare of souls. They are not rivals nor are they adversaries; they are partners in the work of God. The relationship is not that of boss an'd employee but father and son. The priests 'are the extension of the bishop in the diocese. Another fact is that the priesthood must not be seen in political term)';. When one talks of unions he all too often thinks in terms of AFL-CIO. The unions in that amalgamation are worthy· groups. But the priesthood simply dosen't come under that heading. Th~ minute anyone thinks of the priesthood in that way he loses sight of its essence-it is a spiritual reality, a. sharing of the priesthod of Christ, a vocation that is filled with and surrounded by the mysterious workings of God's grace. While the priest is 'a man working out his s'alvation within his vocation and in human surroundings, he is above all else a man of God and the burdens of his life is to' cry the Gospel by word and work and by his very being. To some this may smack of foolishness-but it is the folly of the Gospel. Perhaps what some priests' associations are trying to do is- to convey more clearly to the bishop the thinking and advice and wisdom of the priests: Vatican Council II, has provided for that in the Priests' Senate (already es­ tablished in the Fall River Diocese). And, of course, there is no hindrance to any priest's writing to the bishop or calling him on a telephone. Indeed, there is not a bishop in the world who would not' be somewaht frightened to I have a priest open a cO.t:lversation with him with the words: I have a problem, or, I have something very serious to' talk to you about.

,

,

'Archbishop

'

THANKSGMN9

Codr

Supports School

CL01lfING'· COLLECTION

Bond Issue. ST. CHARLES (NC) ­ A:rchbisoop John P. Cody dl Chicago endorsed a $25 ~ lion bond issue for pubJia

school construction, urged fu...... er cooperation between publill and non-public shools, and calle4 for educational leadership 112: an address before school 86­ ministrators here In Illinois. Speaking before the Fall e-. ference of the Dlinois Assoclaoo tiOD of Scpool AdministratMll, the Chicago prelate recalled ... 1890 address by' Archbisha-. John Ireland of St. Paul to the annual convention of the Na­ tional Education Association. Archbishop Cody related tmdl the suggestions Archbishop :Rea land made at that time for in;.. creased cooperation betweei:i public and Catholic schools weE{) denounced as part of of "a Roa man Catholic plot" by publi'O school educators and as a "herea tical departure from Catholiti principles" by Church leadeJl& E~WJ(f;@li's@~ tl)<efj:»@ p~@ D'n~ ~rYg "Were the same talk read tL:1 public school administrators te­ ~@fr'@(f;l1no@~ ~~[}u@@~~ ~@«;®- Cerru~M$ day," Archbishop Cody said, "tho reception would be favorable. WASHINGTON (NC)-One of underutilized, l'redominantly Ne­ "Though all would not agref<i) the nation's top Catholic educa­ gro Catholic Schools in the inner with the archbishop's specific tion authortties has disclosed city. plans for a nationwide racial IDis'pute Charges proposals, there would be, lL ,census of parochial schools. A number of charges have think, vir t u a 11 y unanimoUB Concerned about charges that been made in recent months agreement on the importance 4ldil Catholic schools may be thwart­ about tlie role Catholic schools the fundamental issues which: ing integration by siphoning may play in reducing the num- were the main points of his adoo white students away from public ber of whites available to inte- dress. schools, Msgr. James C. Dono­ grate big cit~r schools. Sees' lBIetter Mood hue; director, Education Depart­ Complaints have been raised "Since 1890 the national mooo ment, National Catholic Welfare' by citizens groups in Philadel- has changed for the better," he Conference, said "we want to phia and in New York, to the maintained, pointing out that examine the whole situation to . effect that Catholic schools ought' "today's national mood not onlY, see where we are falling down to be denied federal aid. Catholie allows but encourages an ee­ -if we are !falling down-and school officials disputed the umenical search for a solutioa wha~ we can do about it." charges, pointing out, that in to the vast problem of religiotUI , Msgr. Donohue said he hopes many ~ases there ,was more in-' illiteracy among millions of ow the' racial survey could be com­ tegration in parochial schoolJl nation's school children." . pleted by January. than in public schools. Speaking of the duty of aD , The American Lutheran Church has issued position Moral Obligation Noting· that only two per cent citizens to be concerned with paper hailing the growing dialogue between Protestants Once the facts are in, he said, of the nation's Negroes are both public and non-publie and Roman Catholics. But it adds: "The new situation a conference of key Catholic Catholic, Msgr. Donohue empha- schools, Archbishop Cody called has its dangers, suggesting to some persons that the unity schilol superintendents will be sized that the predo".!.~riantly on Chicago's Catholics "to eJI­ scheduled to discuss steps pa­ white enrollment in Catholic' tend their sights to the critical of the church can be brought about through the application rochial schools could take to schOOls simply ref 1 e c ted' . needs of public education." . of good will alone, overlooking the real theological dif­ help bring about an end to de the fact that most Catholics ar~' urged Catholics to partiCil­ ferences which continue to divide the churches." '" facto school segregation, if such white. This, however, does not' pate in community discu~sio. . It is always a danger "to look at' one side of a picture a situation is evident. excuse the Church from an'obli':' ' on school needs attend ~chool "I think we have a moral ob­ gation of playing "as c,6ristrue-' 'board meetings,'and to become and those who pray and work for the unity of Christendom ligation to develop a set of tive a'role as possible" in'help.: 'well informed, on public school , do not do so at the expense of truth. Theological differences guidelines to make Catholic ing . to solve the" crucial prob..;' questions before voting in ~chool are concerned with truth~one group accepting as truth schools outstanding examples of' lem of de facto segregation, he " ejections and referendums. what another group does not. These are barriers to unity .the full implementation of Cath­ said; ," . ' , olic teaching on-- racial justice Pointing out that nearly half and can never be brushed aside as unimportant or as fall­ charity," he said. the 13,000 students in the paro-" ing before ali onrush of good: ~ill. The Roman Catholic and Msgr. Donohue early this year 'chial schools of Wasbington; position is, of, course, that these differences must be ex­ succeeded the late Msgr. Fred­ D. C., are Negroes, Msgr. Dono­ amined to see if the differences is one of language and erick C. Hochwalt as NCWC ,hue said the survey may show TRENTON (NC)-New Jersev: not 'of ideas. If the issue that remains is one, of irrecon­ Education Department director: that many Catholic school sys­ Formerly he was superintendent tems do have a' significant has liberalized adoption proce-: cilable concepts, then the matter must be referreq to fur­ dures relating to religious affi1a of Baltimore Catholic schools. amount of integration. He indi­ ther paryer and the hope that Almighty God will enlighten Under his leadership; the Balti­ cated, however, that more could iation. The new policy will enabro minds to see the truth and wills to accept it. The Cath~ more archdiocese began a pro": be done throu"h pupil exchanges, olic Church holds that it is the Church of Christ and has gram of transporting white cooperative programs with pub­ couples who profess no religioD. adopt foundlings whose nat­ been given the truths of Christ although others loving truth pupils from overcrowded subur­ lic schools, and other imagina-' to ural parents provide no evidence ban parochial schools into the tive, yet-to-be-devised solutions. can' help her., see more deeply the ramifications of those of religious preference. truths, their applications, the full depths and riches of The change was announced b;v. ~@~~ ~@frtkl@~g~u' rP[f@~®$ff@mlff the New Jersey Bureau of Chilo­ them. dren's Services, which in tho .In all ecumenical endeavors it is necessary that all C@~\l'C"DbllilftDomls past arbitrarily assigned a relia religious groups in~olved state unequivoc~lly what' they OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) Attending the two-day con­ gion to an abandoned child ,on. believe and make a clear presentation of what is essential Catholics and Protestants have vention were representatives ration basis. State law requires 'thaf adop­ and what is only discipline or technique that can change. at least one thing in common, a . from more than 50 dioceses, ill l~ading Methodist told the first addition to executives from mor~ tive parents have the same rea. annual convention here C1! the t~an a dozen professional fund­ gion as the child, so coupla National Council for Diocesan raising organizations" ,who could not provide proof GIl Support Programs. Msgr. Joseph C. Walen of religious affiliation were inelJ,. That is, he said, that they aver­ Grand Rapids" Mich., president gible. age the same number of dollars of the year-old national group, A spokesman for the bureq . per year in church support. said the convention's main pur­ indicate that in cases where • "Both," Dr. Gilbert G. Stout pOse was to encourage the eX­ baby is left at a church, convent added, "are equally low." change of, ideas among particl­ or other religious institution 1(1 Dr. Stout, who is director of pating diocesan fund raisers. will be taken as evidence GIl OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER stewardship and finance for the In remarks before the con­ parental religious preference, ·ublished weekly by Tho Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River General Board of Lay Activities vention, Msgr. Walen said he even if the parents cannot be '10 -fighland Avenue

of the Metp.odist Church, said advocates "stewardship;" which found. Fall River, Moss. 02722 675-7151

studies have shown that three­ would develop in Catholics a' Msgr. Patrick D. Trainor, cD­ fourths of all church income is greater spirit of generosity. rector of Associated Catholie PUBLISHER contributed by one-eighth of "Perhaps the biggest need is Charities in the Newark archdioo Mo~t Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD., American families. for the Christian to project his ocese, said the ruling "seems _ GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL. MANAGER Partly to blame for that, he Christianity outside himself," he be another step away from the Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. Johr P. Driscon said, are present' church finance' said, "and a sense of stewardship recognition of religion as a val­ MANAGING EDITOR systems which "discourage gen­ wsuld make him realize that uable contribution to a chil~ Hugh J. Golden erous giving." where his dollar goes, he goes." develWllmenL"

Lutheran Reminder,

l?fJ'm'@Ii))t1'

a

He

·ChangeAd-option Rule on RelcSJion

ChUlrf<.eh

Are EquaUy low

@rheANCHOR


\:.; ... 'Peace'

. A-.; Students.

Rany.. l:PI.,,~~

'~'.~~ Tqnig~t

'By·' Prevost, M To Answer Papal;'\App~I~. ; I' ; , )

"

(

.

, 11 ~ Happy Halloween! Among' 'celebrantS· will ·be students ·of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall Riyer, who'll attend "Hor-, !'Or Balloo," a spooky party to be sponsored tomorow by junior class members, headed by Judy Sullivan, Mary Beth Conlon and Sharon Haggerty. S H A Fairhaven girl~ had Diane Pichett and Nancy Gan-· their festvities last night, carski. And JMA cheerleaders win directed by Nancy Langevin, soon dazzle their public with

Cindy Moniz and Jeanne Thi­ , new uniforms. Changeover will vierge. A peace rally is planned be from a corudroy pleated dress for tonight by the Christia.n .of blue and white tQ a navy blUe .' ".': 'Youth Movement of Jesus'::'Mary double breasted suit. ,I : • :Academy 'and Prevost" High DA juniors are' awaiting their :.' ,.. School, both Fall River. "Bishop class rings, 'due to arrive next 'iConnolly had been inVited to month. Also .next month will give the opening rema'rks and .be the junior. prom, slated for Msgr. Henri Hamel will speak, , Wednesday the 23rd at White's as 'will a 'representative of Atty. restaurant. In charge are class Gen. Brooke. Rally's theme is presidents Sharon Andrade and "How Peace Can Be Achieved" Elaine Senechal. and it has been planned in . And Mount cheerleaders, like :response to Pope Paul's appeal JMA girls, will have new uni­ for world peace. An ecumenical forms this year. Head cheerlead­ peace service will be offered by er Judy Raposa will wear a a priest, a minister and a rabbi white tattersall plaid and squad and' a "peace hootenanny" will members will be in red tatter­ conclude the program. It is set salls. for. 7:30 in Jesus-Mary audi­ Math CDmb torium and the public is inVited. Math is in the news at SHA mUiate Freshmen Fall River, where a Math Club Freshmen have been in fear is being formed under direction and trembling at Diocesan highs of Sister Barbara Mary, with as initiation periods approached. members of all math classes At New Bedford's St. Anthony eligible for membership. STANG SPORTS LOVERS: Active in sports programs at Bishop Stang High School. High, students entering the audi­ A college bowl is planned by North Dartmouth, are, front, from left, Craig Williams, Donna Grenon, Geraldine torium on freshman day were National Honor Society mem­ Souza, Tom Wolstencroft; center, Ted Lynch, Dave Broughton, Art Mead; back, Mark greeted by a dummy hanging by bers at Jesus-Mary. To be held his neck from the balcony. Judge next month, the program will O'Donoghue, Mike Boff, John O'Donoghue, Henry Fortin~ Phil St. Pierre. Mark Camara and aide Laura feature four teams, each of Gobeil imposed penalties on all, which will include a freshman, Catholic Education week and offertory. Mass hymns have tons in a fundraising drive un&et which having been carried out, sophomore, junior and senior. American Education week will been paraphrased to familar folk leadership of Linda Ward and the new students were adjudged The NHS will also arrange talks be observed in Diocesan highs tunes, such as "Michael Row the Monique von Trapp. full-fledged Anthonians. by college students who are Nov. 6 through 10. Among plans: Boat Ashore," and "Five Hun­ A freshman basketball team Imagination ran riot at Jesus- graduates of the academy. a tea at Bishop Cassidy in Taun­ dred Miles." "The Battle Hymn has been named at Bishop Con­ Mary where new girls had to They'll brief the high schoolers ton honoring principals and of the Republic" was para­ nolly, headed by Mike Manning ride tricycles in public, propose on college life. eighth grade teachers of area phrased for a recessional. as captain and Steve Malek as . Foreign lands were brought schools, together with school to a statue of Lafayete, sell rocks manager. Also in the liturgical depart­ to a statue of Lafayette, sell rocks close to girls at SHA Fall River supervisors. ment, DA girls participated in a College acceptances already! pear in fetching ensembles fea­ this month as Anne Tourgee, Bible vigil led by Rev. Antoine' Daniel Gauthier at Prevost has Head Orchestra. turing inside out uniforms, a '57 graduate anq Peace Corps been notifed in the affirmative M. LanOue, O.P., at which fresh­ ponytails and freckles, and volunteer in Malaysia, addressed .Orchestra officers at Mt. se. man and senior Bibles were by Northeastern Univ. School of ; nylons worn with saddle shoes., students on "Youthful Leaders ,Mary Academy are Geraldine blessed. And students attended Engineering. And Prevost Chess '. ,:! Final reward was a p a r t y . . ,and the Peace Corps" and Sister Bliss; president; Gail Martin, an anniversary Mass today for Club president is Gerald Beau­ ,; , At' Bishop Stang in' North Jane Raymond,. principal,. for;­ vice-president; Veronica Plaziak, the .late Mrs. Denise Corey, II chesne, while at Stang Kenneth Dartmo~th, boys had to' we,r mally presented Elisa Soto of ·secretary; Gail Silvia, treasurer.' . former .DA teacher. Also today, Texeira heads the chess buffs girls' uniform hats and gi·r.ls ~uatemala.to the student body. ,Junior .sodality members are , interested girls will hear a talk with Stanley Walsh as statisti­ sported plastic shower capS, EHsa. guest for the year o;f the headed by Betty Ann Picard, b¥ a representative from the cian. The Stangites are preparing while both wore placards read­ .. John Powers ifamilyin Swan­ vice-prefect; Joyce Oliveira, sec.. business· world on requisites for ~ meet New Bedford High in ing "I am a lowly freShman. sea, is at SHA under the foreign, :retary; and Sheila Correa, treas­ competition. a successfulseeretary. Have pity on me." Each. fresh­ st,udent program of the National urer. The girls will prepare Also at Stang, the math team Cassei,Cassidy science club, man, reports Catherine. Giam­ Catholic Welfare Conference. "Thanksgiving baskets for the plaeed fourth among 20 compet­ malvo, had to memorize' and. Bishop Stang senior class offi.. . needy, visit the aged and ill at ,took a field trip to Lakeville ing schools at the season's first Hospital, where the physio­ recite the Ten Commandments eers are William Muldoon; presi­ Earle' Hussey Hospital and adopt Notre Dame Math Meet, held in . therapy department was ex­ ef the Senior Class, and failures . dent; Donna Severino, vice­ an Asian refugee child through Boston. plained to members. Also at Cas­ to comply with senior regula­ president; Kathleen Rose, secre­ a mission program. Seniors at Holy Family High, tions were penalized with an ap­ tary; Terrance Barrett, treas­ Also in· the mission activity sidy, in a frosh-soph round robin New Bedford, will hold their basketball tournament, teams pearance before Judge Francis urer. Also at the North Dart­ line, students at Stang are pre­ senior dance, "Mardi Gras," headed by Carol Viera and Eliza­ Methe. Punishments Included mouth school, National Scholar­ paring "Dooley bags" as a Ca­ tomorrow night. beth Michney were victorious: eggrolling with the nose and ship letters of commendation tholic Students' Mission Crusade Class rings have been received singing for an audience. have been received by SUsaR project. These kits, named in Somewhat gentler were up­ Cabral, Claudia Luchetti, Ray­ honor of Dr. Thomas A. Dooley, at St. Anthony High and Bishop Germans Aid Work perclassmen at Dominican Acad- c mond Purdy and Alan Roskie­ will go to Vi~tnamese children Stang, in both cases with appl'Q­ priate ceremonies. Latin America emy, where Memory Book staff wicz. and contain toothbrushes, tooth­ DA Athletic Association mem­ members sponsored a "get­ Day of Recollection paste, soap, face cloths, paper, ESSEN (NC)-A total of $3.3 acquainted contest." Winners Girls at Mt. St. Mary Acad­ pencils, gum' and small toys. bers are selling sweatshirts, million in German Catholic as­ megaphones and booster but- sistance to the Church in Latin were the freshman who recog­ emy, Fall River, will be among CSMC officers are Frank Mi­ nized most seniors by name and participants in a day of recollec­ randa, president; Susan Gracia, America 'has been distributed this year. the senior whose name appeared tion Friday, Nov. 11 at Mt. St. vice-president; Jea~ne Dearing, Stresses Church's

most often on freshman lists. Rita Convent, Cumberland, R.I. secretary; and John Bums, treas­ The fjgure represents nearly Coming out on top were two Prevost debaters will journey urer. Teaching Authority the entire amount of the German 'sisters, Elizabeth von Trapp, to Boston College Saturday, The JMA Glee Club has begun BOSTON (NC) - Catholics national Adveniat -or Christmas freshman, and Monique von Nov. 5 for a workshop, as will preparations for its Christmas who. attempt to interpret the' collection of last year. Trapp, senior. . Holy Family dittoes, and also at 'concert, directed by Mother findings of the Second Vatican The aid is being directed No problems at Fan River's Prevost, yearbook "situation pic­ M;ary' ~f Carmel. Among featured Council to their own liking were largely toward training of lay Bishop Connolly, where every- tures" have been taken. !TED numbers will be the Hallelujah criticized here by Richard Car­ catechists, building of catechet­ one's a freshman! ". scores have been received, plac­ Chorus... . dinal Cushing. ical centers; and improvement 'Fishy Business ing seniors in the 99th percenti1!e, Several innovations have been Speaking to a Knights of of press and radio programs and Something's fishy at Sacred. juniors in the 95th and sophs in ~. intr~duced at First Friday and Columbus meeting, he urged facilities. Hearts Academy, Fairhaven; 'the 90th. . other special occasion Masses at Catholics to follow the teaching ·namely the scallop supper'," 'Bishop Connolly classes plan I! Mt. St. Mary's. The entire stu­ authority of the Church regard­ planned by the alumnae asSQcia-' parents' night in November, dent body is invited to submit ing recent changes in the liturgy. tion. It'll take place from '5 to' with the added inducement that individual petitions aloud at the He said: "All the changes have a Saturday night, Oct. 29 at the the ciass offering the best per­ Memento of the Living. Before been made for your welfare-to Maintenance Supplies academy and will feature, in fOrmance will be excused from Communion, the celebrant comes bring you closer to the altar. ·addition to scallops, fried' fish a Series of English tests. Also OR down to give the handshake of Every organization has a certain SWEEPERS - SOAPS

and fish chowder. the program will be a discussion peace to several students, who in amount of unity to it and that DISINFECTANTS

Also at DA the top 10 senionl of school policies for parents and tum pass it down throughout the unity presupposes' authority. FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

have been named on the basis a sOcIal hour. entire assembly. At the Our ''The Catholic Church, estab­ ef' their average' for the first Dominican Academy seniors, Father, everyone joins hands, as lished by God Himself, has sur­ three years of high school. They led by Sister Ann Mildred, 02.. a symbol of Christian unity in vived, humanly speaking, for the are Denise Turcotte,. Theresa visited Temple Beth El in FaR the family of Christ. Senior past 1900 years because of the 1886 PURCHASE STREET

Chouinard, Joyce Macek, Har­ River last week. Their host was Sodality members have become bond of unity it possesses. The NEW BEDFORD

liet Kelly, Suzanne Croteau. Rabbi Ephraim Mandelcom, ae­ part of the entrance procession, teaching authority of the Church Muriel Boissoneau, Beverly tive in ecumenical circles in. the and have also offered the bread keeps us all together," the ear­ WV 3-3786

~ton. Bernadette Rodri~ eiW. and wine to the priest at ¢he lliinalllaid..

In

SCHOOL

DAHILL CO.


THE AN<::HOR-Diocese of

8

Fan River-:-Thurs., Oct. 27,1966

Parents, Teens Air Problems At Parish ,Workshop :By Mary Tinley Daly "They don't understand us, and sometimes we think they don't even try." These words were written ""d two separate sets of notes from "which "chairmen" were to speak at a recent Teen-Parent Workshop, or Tri-Une, held at our parish. As the first chairman, representing eon­ civil; their questioning of reli­ sensus of. parents, pronoun­ gion-and their fondness for ced the words, ,there was an motorcycles.

Pion to Up-Date

NCCW

Program

MIAMI BEACH (NC) :- An np-dating of its program which will replace 18 committees with four commissions in areas spe­ cifically outlined by the Vatican Council II Decree on the Lay Apostolate has been announce411 by the National Council of Cath.­ olic Women. Effective July, 1967" the Ne CW will program its ,activities through commissions on Church 'Communities, Family Affairs, Community Affairs and InternaI tional Affairs, subjects which were the main topics of discus­ sion during sessions of the 33rcll ' national' ,convention of the fed­ eration here. In' announcing the new pI'Ooo 'gram, Mrs. Marcus Kilch, re­ , tiring president, explained to .he more than 2,000 delegates that the Second Vatican Coun,cil had , made it "abundantly clear that Catholics must live their Cathoi­ icism in a dynamic, vibrant maJP Der. , "They must be concerned witll the welfare of all men, bm especially the poor and undep­ privileged," she said, pointing' out that the new program struc­ ture is the result of a study on reorganization begun in 1959. Inauguration of the commis­ PREVOST. MOTHERS: Beginning their club season, siOns is the first major' change members of Prevost High School Mothers' Guild.in Fall in the NCCW program since it River enjoy a coffee hour. From left, Brother Roger, Pre­ was founded in 1920 and wi]! vost principal; Mrs. Rita Forcier .and Mrs. Gertrude Vezina. affect some 14,000 women's groups in the United States rep­ Mrs. Rhea Michaud pours. ' resenting 10 million members. The 1968 convention will ,Joe held in Denver. '

'Twas not easy for the teenage audible gasp from the teen side spokesmen, both boys and girls, of the room. "Us? Not under­ to .stand up in front of parents' s tan d them?" and report the findings 'of their T his surprise, peers on '''what we dislike about mutual to the parents." 'Here, briefly; are the tw 0 groups, .results: They (parerits) don't, was no surpdse want our suggestions or let us to Father Fred­ , have a say'in family' discussions; erick B 1 0 '0 m, they try to pick our friends and one of the priest when we dress and act like the moderators of other kids they treat us like the workshop. hoo<Js or criminals; they over­ Nor was the protect us; they expect above­ second, corol­ average school performance and lary to the first, the difficulty of communication if we don't deliver they ground us on weekend nights; they between the two genel·ations. Stating Problem hold up a family image but they "We find almost the same don't live up to it; and we don't problems in every gathering of want them to force religion on parents and teenagers we visit,'" us. Open Discussion Father Bloom said in an inter­ view afterward. "The young From then on, there was open want independence, are unwill­ and free discussion among par­ ing to go along with the wisdom ents, teenagers and the priest­ of parent; the parents decry the moderators. 'No resentment on selfishness of their children. anybody's part was voiced, just Both viewpoints are perfectly a general accord that such a natural to the respect.ive stages meeting had cleared the air, of life. Certainly there is nothing that teenagers are people and so more selfish than a baby. are parents. Both parents and Tuition Grants "The teenagers are not as the i l' almost-grown children CLEVELAND (NC) - Passage selfish as they were whIm they were trying wholeheartedly to Mrs. James R. Mcllwaine of Nashville Is Chosen of a bill extending tuition grants , were babies. They're stri ving to understand one another, to admit President for Second Two-Year Term grow up, to be appreciated as by their very presence and to students attending private Ohio colleges is being predicted adults, but they have not. as yet frankness their desire for love NEW ORLEANS (NC)-The Harry R. White, Chattanooga, by Citizens for Educational reached the stature of mature and family unity. " Association of Ladies of Charity, Tenn., fifth vice president; Mrs. Freedom here. ,adulthood achieved by their Such a one-evening confer­ Fred N. Eckhardt, Pittsburgh, parents and marked with willing ence could hardly be expected to of the United States, elected recording secretary and Mrs. Mrs. James R. McIlwaine of acceptance of sacrifice and un­ This booklet Is the solve completely the intricate Nashville, Tenn., as president Robert F. RUbarth, Austin, ,Tex., selfishness as a part of love." first In 8 new series parent-teen conflict that prob­ treasurer. '

for a second two-year term. Joint session of the Tri-Une, ably has existed since Adam and 'New board members include

or three meetings in one, fol-' Other officers elected include: Eve's children were teenagers. Mrs. Robert Lee, Jr., Buffalo; lowed separate meetings helq si­ Mrs. Charles S. Vargo, Chicago, But it was a start, and a Cecile R. Kennedy, Philadelphia;

multaneously. Under direction of first 'vice president; Mrs. Paul Mrs. John A. Coakley, Youngs' one of the 'priest moderators, wholesome one. J. Mackin, Pasadena, Calif., sec­ , town, Ohio; Mrs. Edwin F. Katz,

parents met with the other priest

ond vice president; Mrs. John J. Milwaukee; and Mrs. Alois J.

moderator to discuss the same

Binghampton, -'N. Y., Cepelka, St. Louis.

subjects from the teenage point OSpl S Buckley, third vice president; Katharine

of view. V. Nalley, Washington, D, C.,

At the joint session· which fourth vice president; Mrs.

followed, the desire for underCOLORADO SPRINGS (NC) standing, the willingness 10 -Administrators from 14 Cath­ 10 help explain how Y.All Paint and Wallpaper communicate, were evident on olic .Inspitals in Colorado were an carry oft the work Cope" Islands, DCCW bOth sides of the aisle, though' told here to get rid of bureauc­ Dupont Pain' CI Vatican Council II 'iewswere divergent. ' New: officers of Cape and , racy in their hospitals. , In Y.mII ,ptI,..h ." cor;' Middle St,: Starting with the positive, Islands District Five of the ,Dioc­ , ,~22 Acus~. Ave. several parent-chairmen ,t 0 1 d . F~ther ,Traff,oJ:9. Maher, S.J. ~'esan Council of Catholic Women I~ 'catholic has a ,part .. , what they like about teenagers: ch,aIrJ~an Of ~l1e, dep~rtme'?t of , are Mrs. James Kerwih, corr"e­ ~Cot ,Ne;"" Bedford' play in the great movement

~eir 'enthusiasm, sense 'of,fair-' e~uc~'lO~ at .. S,t:,L.ou16 U)uver.., 'spondiDg' secr"etary; Mrs. Gilbert

, lbegunbY,the Council. No one' • , PARKING ness, ,their resP9 nse to challenge, , Sity, tpld 129 deleg~tes to t~e , J. No~nari; 6rga'nization and d~­ ·ilI too humble' for a challeng­ . , ',Rear of St~re: ing and exciting role; TheM' willingness to work and solve Colo~ado ConferenC!'l o!- CatholIc , velopmenfcommitt~e chairmap; Ilooklets explain why aod how. tiieir own probiems, ,theiI: ,_hon- "Hospitals: ' . ,' . Mrs~ ehester, Savery, youth . Attractively printed in four esty .and' forthrightness, their "VO\ll1ad better get rid of bu­ chairitian; Mrs. George Cahoon, eolors;,they bring the ,Council eourtesy ("especially to others l'eaUCl'acy, in your hospitals or' publidty chairman and historian. message to the hearts of every outside of home") and, the fact circums.tances will' make "the ,parishoner - yet each coste .'. . ,.' that "they come through when change for" you." less than a first-class post. ftBmp! the' chips are down.'" , " He said le'adership by coercion 'BEFORE YOU SOlD ONlY TO itA. ISHII Spokesmen for the teena~e and fear will no longer. work 'AND SCHOOlS BUY - TIRV groups admitted that parents and supervisors and administra­ Ask your pastor canhave a 'lot going fo~ them: tOrs; not only in hoSpitals but in They're :'there When ,you need other institutions and corpora­ JAMES P. SHEEHAN them, give you a feehng of se- tions, must have human under­ 52 Burkeside Ave. curity, and "theY'reaUy try to standing if they are to succeed. make you happy." ," . \ Brockton, Mass. 02401 South • Sea Streets OLDSMOSDLE As_ to dislikes parents cited Hold back a httle of your own 617-587-4231 Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renauh the odd way teen'~gers dress and talent," he advised, "and all~w Hyannis 67 Middle Street. Fairhaven Tel. HY 81 act; their sloppiness, self-center- persons on ~our staff ~~ exerCise SlOW local field represenl/;lllVEl g4_ _• for PAUUST PRESS , edness' argumentativeness' defi- some of their own abIlity. ance authority, parent~l and "They are never going to lt~arri ,how to do'the job if you keep White's Far.m Dairy doing it yourself," he 'added. ON CAPE COD

ladi-es of Charity

THE CHURCH

RENEWED

Scores H · t a I

F'or B' u reauc racy

, CENTEr.

~

v,

,

-,------"""'------, PARK

MOTORS'

ATWOOD

OIL' COMPANY

SHELL

HEATING OILS

to

~i

df

Harvest Whist

The Friends of the' Presenta­

tion of Mary Novitiate will spon­

sor a Harvest Whist at St. Anne's

Nursing School Auditorium, For­

est St;, Fall River, on Saturday

!light at 8.

Mrs. 'Henry Berthiaume is

ehairman and will be 'assisted by

Mrs. Emile Dozios who will con­

duct the jackpot raffle and, re­

freshment', chairman, ',Mrs. 'Mar­ " ia'ret 'QuiD,Ji, ':: ::r, '

"SPECIAl MILK From Our Own Tested Herd"

DOLAN-SAXON

Funeral Home 123 Broadway

TAUNTON ~

. VA

.. ':

~

...

~500C!l

Acushnet, Mass. "11'( 3-4457 • Special Milk • Homogenized Vito ID Milk • Butterm ilk • Tropicana Orange Juice •

Coffee and Choc. Milk,

', • . '''':-q.s, ...:

B.,'te,r

" ,.. ,

JOHN HINCKLEY & SON CO. BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0100

49 YARMOUTH ROAD HYANNIS. AMPlE PARKING


Children .Celebrate All Saints' W'mth PartY9 C.(Ookie Bake .By

Jos~plJu

alOO!! lWariHY1!il

Rooe:d.~lk

Eve:ry year about this time I like to do III column. Oft birds in the hope that I might influence readers who have not yet started feeding birds to do so. We get so much pleasure Glut of them that we feel others will too. We have graduated from t h row i n g kitcheI1l I!lcraps and scratch feed~:1l ample se~ 1:01" them by their .~ . b ' ~.. name saint, they too will wear the 1awn IAJ uymg I>w·O the crown of glory upon enter­ feeders; III small chickade0 ing the kingdom .of heaven.

THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 27, ,1966

P

Stresses Ro~e

As Chdstians

I, I

!~.

BURLINGTON (NC)-Unleso Catholic educators help young people to realize their true role as Christians, the witness of the young may be lost to the Church, a Maryknoll priest said here. Father William' J. Richardson, editor 'of 'Maryknoll publications -and a former missioner on Tai­ wan, spoke at the VerlTl;0nt Catholic Education Convention. "C.\1,ildren tod~y," he maintained, "hilVe a one-sided concept Ol: their' 'tl1ristianity which neglects their role as witnesses of Christ. ~wiiHe it is-still important foi: schoof'i;lhit'nten to' coll~ct thei,r· '0 niCkels :and' dimes 'for the mis­ , sions.::....;tl'iis is: only 'part of their ", total "c;l.E;veiQpment as Christians.,.' "The·' 'children can witness' Chrlstianiiy by their charity 'and!.' concern for other children-in the school neighboI'hood and around the world-by learning to understand their culture and history * * >1''' But Christian witness - "the external selfless expression 011 love to human beings in need"­ must 'be initiated and developed in the young by Christian teaChers, be said.

"

reeder which has t:l bar em Along with emphasizing this which the btrds stand to get. at fact, the simple matter of 1"011­ the" feed and, .which, will not I'll.", ing out the cooki~, dough and llo,w" a large ,bird to, fe~4, .and I) cutting around the paper or foil Jl.arge, window feeder... " ' .. I , ' .. pattern for the crown is wonder.. This latter is particularl7·, ful e}terc~se for finger coordina­ worthwbU~ beeause it"give!!·W\ tion. .

~he"oppQrtunity. toge! ~,elq13?"" Both ,the baking of symbolic,

view. Qf the birds. The ,chUdr~JIl.I foods and the search~rig into the

derive 11, ,gr~at de,al ofPle!lsu~" origin and history of a child's flcqm, watchmg them ~d, they", saint are very good 'ways to cel~ !':lave learned to sit quietly, nex,t, " ebrate the Monday and Tuesday 00 t~e window so as not to of Halloween and All Saints' flrighten birds away. , Day (Nov. 1). The practice of Up Wltillas~ Winter, ~e fo~nd celebrating this day to honor feeding the birds relab:vely 1lD- all the saints has come down to expensive. About the first of WI from as :far back as the Del;ember, however, a flock of eighth century and in 1484 the G!v,ening grosbeaks descended, on feast was raised to. a holy day us ~Ild threatened to eat us o~t of, @f obligation by the Wliversal bouse and home. These are very , Church. It you want to know 'fllretty birds but they have '(ora- more about your child's patron wous appetites. 011" even your own, along with I was in the habit of filling a, wonderful dessert recipes, a Jj)ie plate wit:l a mixture of SWl- book to own is My Nameday­ Answers Teenagers' flower seed and scratch feed Corne for Dessert by Helen Mc­ and this had been suf1icie,nt to Loughlin, published by ,The Questions on Drinking llast at least two days until we Liturgical Press, Collegeville, WASHINGTON (NC) - The were visited by our northem,. Minn. National . Council of Catholic friends, the grosbeaks. They Sugar Cookie CrowDli Women headquarters here has managed to eat what had for-, , 2 cups sifted flour produced a program service en­ merly been a two day sup~lv Of 1lh teaspoons baking powder titled "Can We Answer Teen­ !Wod in less than one mornmg. lh teaspoon salt agers' Questions on Drinking?'" Needless to say, they were not :If.! cup butter or margarine made available to its 1400 mem­ gi ven their fn~ or we would 1 teaspoon vanilla extract ber organizations and to home bave been penmless by now. We %. cup sugar: UTTLE BAKERS: Preparing for All Saints' party, and school associations for use got around the problem by feed2 eggs well beaten children at Holy Union Kindergarten, Fall River, make at group meetings and paneK ing our normal S~pply ?f sun1) Sift together the flour, bak­ flower seed and IDcreasmg too mg powder ~nd salt, set aside. crown cookies. From left, James F. Powers, Robert J. discussions. Msgr. Frederick J. Stevenson, amount of scratch feed for the 2) r.ream together until soft­ Griffin, Mary Beth Unsworth, Valerie Pereira. Supervising, National Catholic Welfare Con­ sparrows and grackles. aned the butter or margarine is Sister Armand Marie, S.U.8.C. ference Youth Department di­ Mentioll of the. sparrows and the vanilla. rector, was special consultant in brings up another pomt worth 3) Add the sugar gradually the production of the program mentioning. I was very m~ch Cl"eaming until fluffy after each service. disturbed to read an luticle add't' t 'd of 1 IOn. The service kit, produced in ld h to which to o~ ge . n . 4) Add the beaten eggs to the consultation with the Women'a sparrows by usmg selective POI- creamed mixture beating thor­ Aged Nun, Former Missionary, Qualifies

Division of Licensed Beverage sons which would ~ill them an~ oughly after each addition. Industries, Inc., contains texts of !!lot harm other birds. This bit FiitaUy add. the dry sifted in­ For Citizenship, Medicare

speeches for a program chairmalli. af information I will not pass on gredients to the egg-creamed 00 you, but I will say that I, am mixture and blend thoroughly. CONVENT STATION (NC)­ problem and then enlisted the and ,additional speakers. They just ashappy to see the span:oWSl Chill this dough in the refriger­ It'll be hard to convince Sister help of the U. S. Immigration analyze and summarize research on teenagers and drinking ift feeding in my yard DS I a~ to ator. Mary, :Finan Griffin of the Sis­ and Naturalization Service. ters of Charity of St. Elizabeth see . 'some of the .rare 'bJrd~ 6) ~oll chilled dough out on The two agencies tracked' relation to the influence family.· «Which, C9Dle to. think. ~~ it, a floured surface and cut with a that government is heartless. down ,the necessary, records to church, school and ,community l:leve~r: seem to ,g~t anyway).~" paper'pattebi of acrbwn' or' n Ef~orts ,oli· government offici,als enable the, aged nun to qualify can, exert on adolescents to fos­ have enabied the 84-ye'ar':01d fOt', the medical assistance., Then ter ,sourid decision-making re-" At aJ,lY rate, If you. h~y~ ~~t floured crown cookie cutter. lllad the pleasure of feedmg e 7), Place on a greased cookie native of Ireland and former immigration, officials visited her garding use of ,alcoholic bever- , birds, do so. Not only w~ll you sheet and bake in a 375" "oven China 'missionary to qualify for to help her y.rith her citizenship ages in adult.life. enjoy yourself but you WIll, also for 10 to 12 minutes. Medicare and become a U. S. cit­ petition. . flJe doing the birds a good turn. These cookies may be trimmed izen at the same time. And to top'it off, Social Secur­ Sister Mary Finan is retired· ity officials infonned her that ID the Kitchen ',,; with COlored frosting or other and lives at St. Anne's Villa here starting. this month she will re­ What's' in a name? Evidently nke decorations.' in New Jersey. Sixty-six years' ceive $35 monthly under a pro­ II .gl'eat deal more than any of us ago, she emigrated to Boston' vision of the law granting bene­ A "(eM realize is given to us when ,we first Catholic Baptized from Ireland, then came to New fits to people 'over, 72 who have are 'baptized, for ~o't only' d9 C Old T Jersey "in '1907 and joined the never ' "worked under Social we acquire a nanie, weall!0 acin enturyown No Withdrawal Notice Requitoed Se~urity:"" .. , ilIuire:'-~ , saint', who, belon!ts'..e.x CAMANCHE (NC)-Matthew sisterhood after nursing training. She spent 13 years at St. Eliza­ InquIre Fof' Further Detaiis elusively to us, and all, O~l'lI Joseph Blumer has the distinc­ .ith our name. '" tion of being the first Catholic beth's Hospital, Elizabeth, N. J., 'St~ before going to China 101" the The· children in Fall River's to be baptized in this century­ Holy Union Nursery Sch~l and old Iowa community. The infant next 27 years. She returned to New Jersey Kindergarten will be able to son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard FOR, YOUN.G WOMfN

from Hong Kong in 1951 and tell all about their personal pa- Blumer of this city, was bap­ , 196 Vhipple St., Fcdt River

spent seven more years, in her tron very shorUy for on Monday, tilled following the Sunday Mass nursing career before retiting in Conducted by Frcmcisccm

Oct. 31, they will dress up' as the in the town's Garner Hall by and LOAN ASSOCIATIO~J 1958. Missioncuies of Maty

118int for whom they are named, Father 'William F. Wiebler, cur­ In February, she applied fut:' ROOMS ,MEALS

and tell It little story about him ate at St. Mary's church, Clinton. OVERNIGHT HOSPIT 1<un

or her at an All Saints' Nameday The ecumenical spirit hail been Medicare genefits but there 1 North Malj, Street, Fall River ar,d l"quiPe OS 3-'!89~

149 G.A.R H;ghway Fife 6, SCr.""ers~~ party. moving rapidly in this century- were complicatious over, her Sister Mary Da:vid, the in- old eommunity on the banks of status as a permanent resident. IItructor at the school, began this the Mississippi. Mass was offered Social Security officials in the (!lustom a eouple of years ago to for the first time in June in district office in nearby Mor­ teach her pupils the true mean- Garner Hall. Recently the Rev. ristown and the regional office tug of the celebration of the Donald Forbes, pastor of St. in Newark wresfled with the Feast of An saints. Last year, Mark's Methodist church, loaned Rt. 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford

along with arraying themselves his church school building to l!S their patrons and learnirig 11 the Catholics on Saturday morn"' One of the Finest Facilities in Southern New England

Mttle about them, the children ings for catechetical school, con­ In~s Available for:

JlDcorporated a cooking lesson. duCted by the Sisters of Charity llrito their festivities by baking of the Blessed Virgin Mary for Reg. ~aster Plumber ~930 BANQUETS 8 TESTIMONIALS 1lQ00kies to observe the 'day. some 50 youngsters. ' 1 GEORGE M. MONTLE "This year ~ister Mary David The 75 Catholic families from I FASHION SHOWS and SPE!C,Al, Over 35 Years . . PARTIES liratenda to have each child bake this lIlrea have petitioned for a Satisfied Ser~ice ' fOR COMPLETE INFORMATION, CONTACt:· 12 ,,'=rown-shaped cookie, .cut' out permar\:ent' ,parish here, and m;, 806 'NO. MAiN.STREET 999·6984 636·2744'" ai' tQUe~ d,ough" to sh~W :tlIat ,t€ . site now is, being.. sought b¥ a" Fall River 675-7491 til~y follow \he' eXemplartV" 'ex:..· . 'ilaW1dili~' com'miUee ' ' ,I

Slash Red Tape

INVESTMENT SAVINGS

, Francis - Residence

FIRST FEDERAL

SAVINGS

OF FAll RIVER

LINCOLN PARK BALLROOM

Montfe Plumbing & 'Heating Cos,

,'.

"of

or:

.


10

Sees EUmh~atiU1l1 Of Wart ~@ssible

THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 27, 1966

CG@'\f'~rr[)'j)M®ln)liAo«f]$

NOTRE DAME (NC) - Dr. Linus Pauling, winner of two Nobel prizes, was given an ova­ tion by University, of Notre Dame facuIty and students when he said "we shall succeed in wiping from the earth the great immorality of war. Pauling, in the first of the 1966-67 series of Challenges illl Science Lectures at the univer­ sity, said the world should be operated according to the Golden Rule. He said he expects the world to treat him in such a way as not to cause him .suffering, and that he expects to treat the rest of the world likewise. The chemist, well known as an opponent of the proliferation and testing of nuclear weapons, aSked: "Why should we have suffering in the world as' a re-' suit of selfishness?" In all things, scientific, ethical or moral, man must use his head and not accept dogma and rev­ elation unless he. is convinced it is the right thing to do, he said. . Basing his message on the lec-' ture topic, "Molecular Disease and Evolution," Pauling said there is a basic fallacy, ill u. foreign policy' in Vietnam. .He said the l,r.s,'·policY of be': 'ing in the .Asian country be-' cause "we want" to'save the Viet:" 'na~ese people from having te live under communist rule" sut.... fers from the basic faliacy that "no one can accurately predict the 'future of the world." , .

~nB~~ O(6cC@fr[}u©~C~

S4:~<C»@~ W>1f@D~ct SWANTON (NC) - The U. S. Office of Education has awarded a $56,820 planning grant to Union School Dis­

trict 7 here in Vermont to for­ ward a unique project in which the resources of one Catholic and four public high schools will be .combined in a single "educa­ tional complex." Plans now call for the unified junior and senior high school complex, under development for nearly three years, to open next • Fall. The federal furids were awal'd- . ed under Title III of the Elemen­ wry and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Title III <funds go to selected school districts which have proposed "unique and in­ novative" approaches to educa­ tion. The id~a for the unified edu-·. eational complex originated with Father John R. LaBrake, S.S.E., principal of st. Anne Academy; bere. Join Resources FRIENDS OF ANNE'S: Among more than 250 gue~ts ~ttending the annual can~ll~-, The plan, endorsed. by reli­ gipus and .civic leaders and state light ball and; dinner' benefiting St. Anne's Hospital ,Building Fund" Fall River, were,seat­ and federal government qfficials,. ed; Mrs. Philip Jameson; Mrs. FranCis J. D'Errico; standing, Dr. Philip Jameson, '·Mrs. . ifl. intended to, join the r~sources Daniel A. Sullivan,Dr.. ;Francis D'Errico,' Atty. Da,niel A: Sullivan. e>t, five small,. educationally in­ 1\dequate schools into a single cl,lmplex providi,ng quality edu­ c<ltion. to some 1,200 students. The new complex will include \ \ .Continued ,from Page One ments in most fields. Though apostolate does not cover all is both" private 'and public bu"iJd­ not in our school system' have . In the Diocese 00' Fall River, diocesan schools, especially high ings. The private facility, al­ . it was shown, . enrollment has schools, are somewhat selective, Dioc:~ses 3. Since private religious ed­ 1hough a part of the whole op­ ucation cannot be extended to dropped over the past few years. the qualitY,of education found Cimtin~edfrom Page One eration, . 'will be planned, bu'iit all through our school systems, Yet more schools 'have fleen in these youngsters is spectac­ and operated wiui private funds.' some new. patterns of organiza-. Archbishop Leo Binz of St., built and there has· been a 1:Ilar. The private facility will con­ tion are called for. Some would. . Paul-Minneapolis, is. appointed.· Fifty per-cent of high school centrate on religious 'and moral teacher increase, e s p e c·i a 11 y probably be shared services be­ bishop of Davenport. among the laity. This only proved graduates' of the Diocesan high iUidarice courses which 'ca~not tween the private and .public. that the intent now lays with schools have been accepted in Msgr. James L. Schad, pastor' legally be taught in public' systems, centralized financing, of Most Holy Redeemer church, schools: All students, regardless improving the kind of education four-year c'olleges; another 25' regional schools. Westville Grove, N. J,., is ap­ per cent .have been accepted in' of religious affiliation, will be, given. 4. There is a: large segment pointed titular bishop 'of Pana­ The curriculum, thanks ·to the junior colleges. Among me-rit', eligible to take these courses on of our Catholic population' that. toria and auxiliary to Archbish.. efforts· of the late Rev. Edward scholarships; three youngsters an elective basis. cannot or w~ll not ·enter. our· "Students who choose' such J. Gorman, Superintendent' of have been finalists; another' private system,' More attention, ()p Celestin~ J.': Damaniano, bishop of Camden. Diocesan Schools for 30' years, three have been semi"-finali'sts eourses will fit· them into· their. should ,then be paid to the CCD ...·These appointments were an­ ordinary ~aily class schedule.' has· ,been sound and unified. and 31 have won commendations: and to' the Newman Ap9stolate. Present efforts have' ' been de-· For the' f,uture, wnat are the nounced' here by" Archbishop' "This arrangement .is' much dif­ It has been a .scandal that those to' maintain the ·high . , fen;nt and much better than the· signed standards he set. pj-osp'e~ts for a continued' 'stress', not·. in our school· system· hvae Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Dele­ !W.- called released -time pro~ on quality ot education in the. sometimes. l;>een . thought of, as gate' in the United States. "The, Religion courses have, I?i,ocese',s schools? . ' grams of religious education,. ac- .. ., second-class citizens, It must be c().rding to Girard· Lamphere, been' modernized to drop the gross.'learning of, facts ,'and in-' ;.1. It is. just as necessary n<l~. emphasized; that ,tp,e' .pub'ic chairman of the union school stead ·Iay the groundwork fOr il' 8n,d i~. ever !las ,been to. pr~:-. ll~hool stu~ent, an equal par~sh.,. bpard. religious formation; fOUllded. -in vide amI l;eceive a religioj,ls-Qr-' i(mer,. has. also. an ~qual right , l\'idely Separated . to all the equ,ipment aDd facili­ scripture and the liturgy, which' ient~d education in dioces;ln The need for the unified edu­ tjes .found in our Catholic Arth.ur Janson, Reg. Pharm.

will prepare sincere ·and· confi­ .s<:hqols, To state that the coun­ eutional complex is underlined dent leaders. The teachers have try is no longer missionary or schools. DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM

by the 'geographical and educa­ 5. There is today a real need themslves followed special pre­ that there is no longer a hostile,' SUPPLIES

tional facts of life in this Ver­ paratory CQurses and the Sad­ anti-Cathol.ic atmosphere is not for the support of all the clergy mont area near ·the Canadian 204 ASHLEY BOULEVARD

in the effort to provide a fruit­ lier Series text is now standard enough. Rampant materialism border. ' New Bedford'

~ul Catholic school system. It is in all schools.' and secularism are just as dang­ The five' schools in the region' not t.he exclusive burden of WY 3-8405

In .other departments, there erous. To thfnk that a separate are widely separated, small and some. Priests too should.. share has been a complete cha'nge in education. is' somehow anti-ec­ unable to offer remedial or en­ s,ome of the teaching burdens the Mathematics" Science, Art umenicaUs false. Before shariQg rj~!lment' courses. or to provide for ~he work is not oniy the re.., and Music fields, Special courses and understanding one' ap,-: pl'p\:i,de m o,d e rn educational l!g~ous' but that of all. . have been provided. by' the Dio­ other's religion, there had better efl!Jipment. ,.... cese to aid the' teachers. The' be a'.' .'cie;u'" .understanding of .. Almost ha~f the families in the

:!!nllllllIllIIIllIIlIIllIIIlIIIlIIIIUllllllllllllilllllllllllllll!: r,e,gion have annual 'i~comes of Reading ,and Language Arts. one's own' faith' and religion. DRY CLEAN~G .. ~ '2. The~e a~e pr~ctical,'~h~rt­ less. than $3,000 and :.a quarter neldshave always been"strong. . In general, teaching conditiol)s ages. that .must be faced. The' live in homes' without indoor

and' ~"HeCiting pfu'mbing. . '. > ' . in ,the' Diocese' have also im..: supposeq ide~. of eve~y C.qtho~ic: :' ~.. "FUR STORAGE

~ '.' fart of the feder~l pla'nning proved over the past yeaTS. The. child in a Catholic school ill im­

rush to provide facilities in the PQ~sible.Th.ere~c;>re,~h~' shall gr~nt will be 'used to study ways ot further reducing ,~he educa':' '50s did· bring. with it a certain be elected? This question has

_365"'ORT", FRO"!t ST-REEr tional -finai'icial burden ufthe neglect in class sizes but a "rea­ . n.everb~en adequ.ately an.swe~ed.

.sonable, maximum" has now· It would seem' that to reach as NEW BEDFORD € o mmunities involved from pub­ been achieved though even this irnmy' a~ p~ssi ble J6t~e 0/11y § 34-44 Cohan net Street §: lic and private resources. s.w er,. ,M is. an }ns.~rance tha~ at 992-5534' The project here i~ 'looked on is not the ideal. Taunton VA Much.progress was also shown .. least some .leapers will be p.ro­ t;r its: planners as a w:ay not only ·:il/lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliW' in the educational background vided: At present, among reli­ &1: making religious and moral of the .teachers .actually. at work gious vocati~ns, it 'ft! sh~wn 'that

education available to· students ,."ho wallt it without infringing' in the Diocese's schools. It·it; '71 per ~nt' of the candidates'

a tribute to much hard work on have attend~d'par()chial'eleme~-'

00 constitutional prohibitions. the part of individuals and pro­ . t~ry schools' and 74 per cent grams and is most ~pcouragiilg. h,ave. ati~nded 'icathoIi~,bigh.

Opens DQors' .,.\ . ·Earnest activity is stm the order I!!,choo~~. .

OTTUMWA (NC) --'\'Ot'tumwa . of the day in the ever better True, '. it .is·a vast amount of Heights' CoJIege, which has pre­ formation and preparation of resources· expended on a rather viously offered its two-year ,lib­ teachers, especially lay teachers, small' number ~ probably' only' eral at'ts course only to women,' so that a "temporary minimum" 50 per cent of· the catholic Inas decided to admit male stu­ is never satisfactory. youngsters. Yet what other apos­ dents beginning next year. The The studen1ls who are recipi­ tolate of the Church reaches llChool is conducted by the Con­ ents of all this intensive care 50 per cent of those in that need? . NEW BEDFORD, MA C:S. 1]5 WILLIAM ST. gregation of the Humility of in the Diocese's schools, have Not the Catholic hospital; nor Mary here in Iowa. shown above average achieve- Catholic welfare. Because ODe

S:

81;.

Father OIN.eili .Addresses Clergy .Confere~ce

H.ead

JANSON'S

, Pharma~y'

'DEBROSS OIL

I ..

"an­

co.

='

Oils

.I . DERMODVI

,a"d Burl1e.r$.

ICtEANERS·

~

I'

2-6161"~

"Save

W~t~ Saf~ty."

~

NEW·" nEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK


Interim Directives

THE ANCHOR--

Thurs., Oct. 27, 1966

Continued from Page One .

<Dr the liturgical music it is in. tended to serve. ArticDe III The rendition of Masses, mo­ tets, hymns, and other Church music in manuscript form is, for­ bidden, unless the written per­ mission of the Diocesan Commis­ sion has been obtained. Article ll.IlI. Musical Instruments 1. if sacred music is to take its proper place in the renewal of the liturgy, concerted action should be taken to insure that the principal liturgical instru­ ment, the organ, in all Churches and chapels is musically and artistically suitable for the sa­ <ered and solemn ceremonies of the liturgy. The classic pipe organ is the only instrument to be.used at ceremonies. Since the pipe organ is recognized as the most suitable instrument fOl' the Church, serious consideration should be given by pastors and administrators for the instaila­ tion of a pipe organ as the !first ehoice. The electronic organ may be tolerated temporarily when means of buying a pipe organ, even a small one, be lacking. S'ome electronic organs are. uTI-' suitable for use in church due in aU cas~s' to their banal tone' qualities, and, additionally, ' 'in sOlne cases,' due to' their lack Of sufficient manual and pedal' notes. . ,, 'When space and/or eCOll.omic: ~i'mitations exclude the installa:' iion of a' pipe organ, the' 'elec-' tronic organ selected should 'have' a tone quality which closely re­ sembles that of a pipe organ. When a decision has been made to purchase an organ, electronic or pipe, the Diocesan Music Commission should be consulted. . On solemn occasions the violin, similar stringed instru­ ments played with a bow as well as brass may be used as an intrinsic accompaniment. No other instrument may be used without consulting the Music Commission. ~.. On the Sunqays an,d Fet:ials O!-, Advent, and Lent, witl1 .the exception of the third SlJnday of Advent . (Gaudete SundaY). and the Fourth Sunday of Lent (Laetare Sunday), and at all Rcquiem Masses, the organ may be used only to accompany the flinging. 3. The use of the organ is for­ bidden aIter the Gloria of the Mass of the Blessed Sacrament on Holy Thursday until· the Gloria of the Mass on Holy Saturday. 4. The organ must be silent when the celebrant sings the Prefacc or Patcr Nostcr anddur­ ing thc chanting by thc Deacon and Subdea~on. The organ must not be played during thc Conse­ «il'ation of thc Mass: , 5. It is recommended that the organ be silent during the bless­ i)1g at Benediction. Singing .dur­ ing the blessing is never per­ J)1itted. Article IV. Church Choirs and High MaSs It is recommended that where­ ever possible, choirs' ·should be formed where they' do not now exist, and maintained with en­ thusiasm where they do exist so that the active vocal partici­ pation of the people might be initiated and sustained by a ~rt;)up which is especially pre­ pared to give this support. With this, active interior participa­ tion of the pcople will' therefore be fostcl'ed through the choir's artistic rendition of the musical trcasures of the Church whose &piritual message serves to en­ rich the people's moment of meditation. Choirs should be situatcd in the church where they will ren­ der the greatest help to the

1. In any MClss or pious exer­ cises, motets or hymns m,ly be sung in Latin, or in the vernacu­ lar of that Mass or exercise. 2.' Wherever practical, it is preferable that the choir be located in the nave of the church to lcnd support to the congrega­ tional singing. 3. Pa$£~rs should take care that all 'singers, adults and chil­ drcn, should be given an und~­ stari'ding according to their ca­ pacity. of the text that they sing. 4. It is forbidden to play or sing any music with secular con­ notations, or music in the style of saecular or romantic composi­ tions. All arrangements of opcr­ atic mclodies, folk tunes. love songs, and sentimental types of hymns arc absolutely forbidden, either in Latin or in the ver­ nacular.

singing of the faithful. Accord­ ing to the Instruction on 'Sacred Music and Sacred Liturgy of 1958; this proper location of the' choir is as close to tbe s,lIlctuary a~ possible, where it will be visibly evident to the congrega­ tion that the singers and the organist form part of the united community of the faithfui. When the choir is located in the sanc­ tuary area, all members of thc choir should be properly vestcd. So ,that musicians might in­ crease their understanding of their role in the liturgy a pro­ gram of study, reading and dis­ cussion of matters pertaining to the liturgy should be organized for them by priests who are available to serve the Church with their God-given talents. 1. With the increased role, of, the laity in the Mass, and· with constant' attention to the ,im­ portance o!f thc roleso~ the parish choir and congrcgation" an impressive manifestation of the new liturgy can be brought tAl· our people with greater dig~ nity and simplicity. It 'is recommended that 011 Sunday, High Mass be sung in evcry Church' in the diocese', except during the' ·Si.llumer months. The idcal 'of every parish is to have the central and family Mass as the parish High Mass. 2. At all solemn and sung Masses all the simple responses are to be sung by the faithful. In addition,' it is highly recom­ mended that the ordinary of, the Mass; that is ·the Kyrie, qioria, Credo, Sanctus, BendtCius; and . Agnus Dei, be sung wherever possible by the people with 'the assistance of· the chofr, cven if the congregation only sings part C1f. the text. The language of the musical settings is the vernacu­ lar. (At the Sanctus the cele­ brant is directed to sing the Sanctus or to wait until the choir has completed this text); What­ eve'r parts of the service that are sung by the choir should not be repeated.by ·the celebrant. 3. The Proper chants, that is, the Introit; Gradual-Alleluia; or Tract, and its Sequence, if there . ill one, Offertory, and Com­ . munion, most always be IIUn~. and *hat by ibe choir, for it is the primary Ji'ole of. the choir not the eongregation to sing 1lhese texts. 4. lit is recommended strongly that the choir sing one or more motets from treasury of Sacred . Polyphony, provided it does not delay unduly the celebrant from the sacred Action, at the offer­ t9ry limd eommunion. Particu-

"IT.

Article Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament Before the liturgical service 011 Bcncdiction any approved hymn that has reference to Our Lord or Blesscd Sacrament is permit­ tcd. in Latin or the vernacular. The liturgical service of Bene­ diction begins with the TalltuJJll larly, at the rcception 'of the the Mass should' be sung by Ergo, response, and oration, and Holy Eucharist by thc' congre­ the choir as soon as the celebrant ends with the Divinie Praises. gation'much time is 'afforded the begins to distribute Holy Com­ ]. Immediately before thc ac­ choir to sing supplementary munion to the people. If there is iual blessing with theMon~' hymns or motets, whereby the no' distribution, the Commu\lion strance, the Tantunl Ergo, re" vcrse should begin as soon as sponse and oration, are to be' congrcgation can ~editate upon ,thc Sacred Text. 'the celebrant has consunled sung in that order, and with' the Sacred' Species from the nothing intervening. 5. If a supplementary hymn or chalicc. antiphon is sung by the congre­ 2. It is recommended that the' 4. The Libera of the absolution gation, or a motet by ihe choir organ be silent during the bless-' at a Funeral Mass should ,be iJ1g at Benediction. Singing dur­ at the offcrtory or communion of a sung Mass, the choir or sung according to the approved ing the blessing is never pel'­ )jequiem Masses. mitted. 1Ichola must first sing the re­ 5. The choir should sing the quired proper text in their en­ 3. The Blessed Sacrament is antiphon, In Paradisum, as the to be rcposed immediately afteJi'

tirety as given for each Mass. Processional and recessional c.elebrant escorts the body to the recitation of the DivinE hymns in which the choir and the Church. This antiphon is to Praises, during which timc :!l be repeated by the choir as the recessional or hymn proper to congregation take part may be employed at the Sung Mass. If body is carried out of the the season may be sung. Church. the processional hymn is uscd, 4. Congregation singing ail fl. Organ music during other it must not delay unduly the, Benediction is highly rccom­ silent ,parts of the Mass is pro­ beginning of the Introit. In keep­ mended. ing with thcspirit of thc ncw hibited. Article vm. Weddings liturgy" and with the custom of Article VI. Low Mass and Care must be given the choice singing a recessional. hymn at, . Congregation Singing of appropriate music for wcd... · either a low or sung ,MailS, the Religi,ous singing by the peo­ dings bearing in mind the reli-' congregation should be encour­ ple is to, be skillfully fostered,' aged 'to join with the choir' in so that in devotions and sacred gious of the occasion. Musifi selected should be sacred illl singing 2 verses or more of a' exercises, as also during liturgi­ character with care takcn if) hynm,which the choir can finish: cal ,services; the voices of the as thc congregation leaves the' fai.thful may ,ring out according avoid types of music which' church. The choir may sing to, the norms and requirements would bring about a mundane' lmother recessional hymn or' of the new rubrics; (from the effect at the religious ceremony. 1. Thc Nuptial Mass must be' anthem. Constitution of 1964), Both the , sung or said only when permit­ '6. The National Anthem or a instruction of 1958 and the Con­ ted by the rubrics. fitting patriotic hymn is per­ stitution of 1964 declare that 2. In addition to the pJ'Oces­ mitted on appropriate occasions the mcasure of participation in' sional and recessional, musie as a recessional, ego Indepen­ thc low Mass is much increased dence Day, Thanksgiving, Labor, by thc introduction of suitable may be provIded by thc OffeF­ tory and Communion. If hymns Day, etc. hymns in the vernacular. By 7. Thc Sacred Silence must be these the faithful are brought arc sung"'during the Offertory "­ and Communion, they should be observed at thc Canon, from to closer sharing and expression appropriate to that part of thE after the Bemidictus until thc of their role in the Mass. The Our Father. Neither Mgan or object is not purely the singing Mass. . 3. All music which is saecular choir. shou~dbc heard. of, ·the hymn for the sake of in stylc, which 'was not com­ congregational action. Therefore,· Article V.' Funeral' and poscd for church use, or whicll' , Requiem Masses both decrees require that the violates the principles contained Sincc it is especiaJly at 'Fu-' context of hymns be such as is in thc law on church music, must neral and Requiem' Masses that suited to the action of the Mass. 'be scrupulously avoided. . Good liturgical taste requires ou'i:- Christian' concepts ofdcath 4. At weddings apart from that there be a proportional,bal­ and eternity should be empha­ Mass only that music which has sized,' the music for all Requicm ance between singing and re­ the requisite qualities of sacred Masses should reflect simplicity sponse required during the ,Mass. music should be used. Approve4 and peace. Thus, mournful, . Accordingly, four (4) parts of hymns in the vernacular may' be . sonorous,and doleful renditions' the Mass offer the most suitable sung. No singing or organ musie as well as the dramatic should· and occasion for the singing of is permitted duri~g the actual' .be avoided: Consult the: 'ap-' hymns: marriage ceremony. . . a. At the entrance of the priest proved listing of Requiem '5. The Wedding marches o!/ to the altar. This is in the nature, ,Masses. Wagl1cr, from 'the opera Lohen­ of a procesional hymn. ,1. All parts' of the Requiem grin, and of Men"elsohn, from' b. At thc time of thc offer­ Masscs and Burial Services mllst Midsummer's Night Dream, are be sung in entirety,' including tOI'y,following the offertory­ purely se~ular in style. They . antiphon, and/or the prayer of aU verses of the Dies Irae. were not composed fo'r church the Faithful. This should be in 2. The proper' funeral proces­ use, and are against .thc pI'inci­ monal is the'Subvenite which the nature of a hymn of offer­ pIes of papal documcnts OIl ing or of a scasonal quality. should be sung by thc choir as chul'ch music. ,c. The third opportunity ariscs soon as· the celebrant has' com­ Article IX. at Communion time, while Holy pleted the cntrance psalm and The instructions and regula~ has begun to lead the funeral Communion is being distributed. tions of the Catholic Church Oln procession down the aisle. The This hymn should be Eucharis­ Sacred Music are preceptivc illl tic in character. Introit and the Kyrie should fol­ character and bind in conscicnce. d. The fourth and final occa­ low immediatcly even while the (cf. Motu Proprio, St. Pius ~ cclebrant is changing vestments sion presents itself at the con­ Constitution on the Sacred LiI~ at thc Sedilla. clusion of the Mass as a reces­ turgy: Chapter 6) 3. The Communion verse m sional hymn.

CLOTHING: Vietnamese refugees, driven from their villages by the chaos of war, arriving in camps bereft of all their belongings, receive clothing distributed by the American Catholic agency, Catholic' Relief Services-NCWC. Your donation to the an­ nual Catholic Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign (starting in the Diocese on Oct. 30) will help the poor and vveary, the homeless and the deprived, somewhere in the world. NC' Photo.


12

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaU River-lhurs., Oct. 27, 1966 '.,

", :•.'

,.:;,',J

.

:

'"

Soul or Bod" first'"

~

~~d l~w®

fPffais®~ Mrnfmo~~elTi1~,~<1!)@k ,

.

'

By

@rru E@M~(mio@ITiJ @~ <C~®f[~W

M@s~

Imev. Jli'uUt@ll1l .1J. Slluel2l1il. ID>.JD).

Many a catechism asks the question: ''Of which should I takGl more care, the soul or the body?" The answer given is: ''The soul.'" This is quite true if it means spirituality must have precedence over physical well-being. But it is untrue if we think of milD mil the Greeks'did with the soul in opposition to the body; Bibl1C2l thought conceived of man as a unity rather than as a duality. Our psychosomatic medicine of today furthermore shows the impossi­ bility of cleavage between body andl soul. What effects one effecw the other. '

By IlU. !Rev. Msgr. Jolm S. J[illImImOOY

Walter D. Wagoner, is an ordained minister of the 'United Church of Christ (Congregational). He has been a chaplain at several leading universities, a' delegate to the 'World Council of Cpurch Assemblies, a member of the U. "S. Conference;." World Council of Churches, Com- points out that 63 seminaries mittee on Information' ,and were' founded in the United States in the last years, and that Support, and· executive di- two-thirds of the plajorsemi­

, 'We flinclI this ooclIy-solllB unity behinclI 0wl11' lLorclI'll 1II111D01lln~ ment 'of the Eu.charist-lFive,· ~hc;i:i,tsanil· People followe4l! llllim. iliJb, the D3!;iIls ~way from the viUsl\'es. Thef , '.. " were hungJ:'Y. Tine disciples sai,d~ "sena '\ : .' them ...iiIt~ ,tile vilaag';: ~o., bUY '~reail/~"'" ~dJ:'ew did rapid calClllUatiqns. ~p'clI sMtlI' ': ' a )~asket fulD., of bread and, driecll ffSh" wQuUd not suffice 'for so ma~Y:'But Our Lor~ badetJb.e Bnultitu.de sit ci~wn ,~, .:, Be multipiiielil, the ,food. ,TheD"a~d olib " then, did llIesImounce the Eucbarist. 'Be;' , did "Dot say: "Listen! I give yoU lood for your soul. ,Forg'et the body." James, who' W2IS there that day, remembered the lessolll and ,years later wrote: "Never say to a hungry man, Trust in God: Feed him!"

rector of ·the Fund'for Tlteologi- nanes have feW,er ,than 51)- stu.,; busy ,man: : dents 'each. He:. 'sU!ggests' ',that But he has re- " there, besome,centriilized"direc­ ~eriUy 'i;p'ent"'a'" tion!andunifonn skndards: yeat arid a ' h a l f ' I s ,ola,tioD JF ......om,.. ·w,.or,lcll,'· ,",' visi ting Catholic :' I'l e m 'j il u· i e s' ,\ He is critical: of. the Catholie' in "'the' 'United seminaiy for 'what .he 'considers Je~wa!t.

States and Eu, its iSolation from, the world of' rope. His o p i n - ' leami,rig aDd culture and; indeed, ron of the Cathfrom the world 'in general. v ~ U'liij(ill olic seminary He advocates,: n·, rigGrous, aca­ Ibir...I " - fl)"stem, as comdemic .reappraisal, and. suggests nll~OYo pared to ProtesCl!tholie participation in the WORCESTER _ Rev. Ai­ tant seminaries, American AsSociation of Theo­ is given in his logical Schools, indicating in lil fred R. Desautels, ,S.J., a8~ book The Seminary: Protestant footnote that, at the 1966pien­ sociate professor of ,French Now this'is our problem in' the ivnssfons. Not just saving ~uJs. and' Catholic (Sheed and Ward, nial meeting of the Asociation, at Holy Cross College will 64 University Place,' New York, five Catholic major seminaries be recogrii7;ed by the French but helping persons. We cannot teach, them when their children. ~). ' were a d m i t t e . d ' g o v e r n m e n t Nov. 7 for hi,S con-. as bappenedin India recently, eat sand. The Congregation of the In the course of his friendly He is strongly in favor of tne tribution to the French cult~re. Propagation of the, Faith, which distributes all your sacrifices, scrutl'ny, he ma'de many diseov- seminary's being on a university The decoration of "Chevalier ordered us to send $175,000 to feed these children. Practica11yaiU were Hindus. It was not the moment for .catechism. One missional7 ~,"]·'es. One 'was Catholic Rome. campus, possibly that o£ a secu­ ~. dans . l'Ordre des Palmes Acadwrote in his diary: "I dare not take. the message of God befo~ He sees irony in emiques" will be conferred upon O f tllis he writes at considera.ble lar university. ' h t ' lellgt' h both' m' thoe' text and 1'n a th e f ac t th a w ereas, 10 the Father Desautels by Monsieur those hungry men who have no lustre in their eyes. 1t is good enough to talk of God while we are: here after a fine breakfast Middle Ages, theology was the Edouard Morot-Sir, counselor 0 f most l'nteresting appendl'~ ~ enand sure of luncheon. But how am I to speak of God to those who titled "Rome and the Protestant queen in the university, now' , . " Catholics take pains to keep J!~rench culture and representa­ Scholar." Another was the influ- '

tive of French universities in the must go without two meals a day. To them God can 'best appear as bread, shelter, education for, their ,children or medicine for '2Oce' of Rome on the Catholic ,their schools of theology far United States. The former chair­ their aching bodies ... To this end, Oh, God, we offer our lives thilJ seminar,}' however remote it may fIoom the university.

'man of the department of mod­ be. " " ' H e contends not only that theday." , ology demands a university set-, ern languages at Holy Cross was Spiritual Formatlolll ting, but also that higher educa­ chosen for the decoration' by th~ \ There is BO earinlr for the soul without the body and Die Further discoveries lIlave to tion greatly needs the Catholic Minister of Education of France earing for the body without the soul. The catechism is for chil­ de with the seminaries them­ presence, both in the form of the working in conjunction with M. dren with Jail tammies, Dot empty ODe; food is the catecbis.m selves, Mr. Wagoner treats most­ sehool of theology and other­ Morot-Sir, his U. S. representa­ for the starvinlr. Food 'is even the PrCSeBce of God amooz them. ly orthe major seminary (phil­ wise. tive. Why not teach yoUI' children to give a percentage of their candy osophy and theology), with only Diseussea VoeatiollS Father Desautels was apPOint­ ~d soft-drink, money to the hungry? Why Dot dve a percenta6e a brief and passing reference to He advances three proposals: ed chairman of the department of your food bJiln each month to the starving? Not out of what tbe minor seminary (high school "1. Merge and move many of modem languages in 1955 you spe1ld 011 food, but caUing down on purchases that amount. and junior college). present seminaries into clusters and held this position for 11 Tra~late your piety into action: less novenas tor yourself, more Two things in particular or theological consortiums. years. Under his direction the sacrifices for othen. Take a little more care of the bodies of mtruck him concerning the major "2. Shift a substantial number department bad prospered .and Othe,~ people and YOllr soul wiD grow in spirituality. "Save your seminary. The first is that there of seminaries into a vital and ge­ gained in influence: There were' solll -yes, but remember TOIl will not save your soul except ia the ,unchallenged prior,ity is ographically close relation with only two language majors at that the context of "giving daily breacll" lo those 'Who alsO have God given to the'spiritual formation a few of the better Catholic uni­ time and there are currently: 73 as Father. God Love' You! ' . of the seminarian. The second is versities."· and wTlile there were only two ~at the'seminary is a very close­ "3. Make every effort to, es­ ,doctors in the program the Ilum­ , GOD LOVE YOU ,to Anon. from ;Vancouver, British Columbia l.v knit community. ' tablish at least three or four of her has risen to eight while four Neither of these' notes charac­ . t ruc tors are ca n d"dates for~500.:.to Dr.-and Mrs: D. T. for ,$35,"Y~ur comment about the very best seminaries along­ 0 th er IDS 1 sharmg dmner ~as quite timely. y;e ~pjoyed dinner out last night. teri7;es the Protestant seminary. side an equal number of the 'for the Ph.D. , so we are' sendmg the same amount." , , In 'the Catholic seminar;! five ·great secular universities." Having served as President of times as much time is spent daily Mr. Wagoner considers several' "the 'New England Modern Lan­ , ". .---i:,. . in spiritual ,exercises as In the matters which are under earnest" 'guage Association, he founded,f, , Cllt Old ibis, eoDumn, 'pin YQur sacrifice' to' it and' mail it to

Protestant seminary. " . often heated, discussion' in Cath'- the' Massachusetts' Foreign Lan;, , , M,ost ~ev. FultODLI ~.Sheen, .NationaI: Director of The Society for

The latter, a very loosely, knit, the Propag'atioD olf the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, ,New York, N. Y.

community, is primarily aD in­ otic circles today. One is that of guage Association last year. In vocations., addition to his teaching duties, lOOO~, 011' to· your Diocesan Director, lU. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T.

teUectual center, a graduate He believes that Catholics are Father Desauteis is faculty ad­ ColllSldine, 363 North MaiD Street, Fall River, Mass.

school of theology. A comparison doing too much shouting and visor for foreign students at; OI! the' daily schedules 01( two J' seminaries, Catholic and Protes-. hand-wringing about the paucity Holy Cross. ~1I/1I11I11I1I11I1I11IUllt1mlllllllllll,""II"lIIIlfmIItmIlHHIHlIllIII~UUlllllnmliullllimmlllllllfl","1Ii/Iuui! ..... H'e I'S the' author of "Les Mem'­ _nt, bears out such con ten t'IOns. of vocations, not enough realistic thinking. The requirement of ories de Trevaux," ·published illll - Strengtbs,_Weaknesseil celibacy has something to do 1956 by the Institutum Soci­ -lVII". Wagoner is not sayrnr. that ,with the shortage; in his opinion. ,etaUs, Rome. th¢: Catholic system is'all 'wrong, , On Secular Campus' Fhther . Desautels" has .. been ~~: Protestant system all right, : . But his most provocative point granted' a sabbatical leave' amI. 0l' ,:vice versa: He sees strengths" is that the Church is not where .will spend from .January of atId weaknesses in each, and ad- , 'most of the students llre'-On the', 1967, through the Summer of vooates that one learn from the' secular campus. We have m­ 'next year doing research illl oth¢r. vested so heavily iit our Catholic 'Paris in 'French literature. Where spiritual formaticn is educational system that we can eoncerned, he wonders whether make only seantyprovisions for Following t b e presentati6lill "the quest for charity, the inspir­ reaching the places where, in a Very Rev. Raymond J. Swords, UO!ION ited life, can be so neatly and few years, there willi be four S. J., college president will tend formally separated' from the times as many Catholic siudents a reception in the O'Kane Halll . ~lflilllllflflllt_lInHlftlHttlllllJl~~ bolistic understanding of per­ l!IS in Catholic colleges-the sec­ lounge. 500al growth * * 0 Human be­ 'ular campus. A native of Fall River, Father havior, motivation and developMoreover, "The vocational and Desautels graduated from A»­ BIent is so complex that too nar­ ,career decision of American 8umption Preparatory School ina row a definition of spiritl,lal di­ youth are progressively post­ Worcester ,and attended Assump­ neetion seems highly suspect." poned to later years, and such tionCollege prior to entering DADSON OR.OORMaS

And he has observed "a dis- decisions are powerfully shaped the Soci~ty of Jesus in 1937, at 24·How 0iJI EkDrner Servico,

Clressing variety of what can only by the persons with whom they Shadowbrook, Lenox; Mass. He be called professional compe­ identify during the ~llege holds an M.A. in French from. famOUtl: Reading HARD COAl

tence" in spiritual directors in years." , ': Fordham University where he Catholic seminaries. "It does not This is an uncommonly stimu­ taught" in 1946-47. He broadened ~EW ~GLAND.COKIE appear that'any minimal'stand~' 'lating'book, full of insights and . his foreign language training by ards must be met for appoint­ sidelights, always even-temper­ : studying and traveling exten­ II!lealt as spiritual director." ed, often witty, and deadly seri-' sively in Europe. In 1955 he roe­ Mr. Wagoner was obviously' 'dUS'. about the education' of'the : ceived a Ph.D. from the Sor­ c:utpris~ ,to fipd such a pro~ifc:r- clergy and the excellence of the " bonne, University 'of Paris. llti\>n of seminaries; such <i.upli­ seminary. The author is not to The' son of the late' Mr. ancll' ,. .1: . ." " ~tions, such lack of coordina­ be chewed out; his work is to be ,': MrS. Joseph' DesautelS, he haJJ " .:' TeI,.. 996-827l ,;'. '.. New ,8edf~ In his statistical analysis he ,', chewed on. :'" four sisters and three brotheri:i.

car 'Education.:A verY

F,.a,n., River

Tft be Ho.nofl'.tl!i'l..JJ

"o'

i

i

'j

YES, we have Ko'D NG· ,SiZE,...

I,..

I

jS9c lb. .

~W";'er"ey Lost (.

I

~c:.~~~~::'

SciaFoc:s_._t

SHELL 18Pr,emium" Heating Oils

Mon.

~


ANCHOR13 Asks Vincentians Minister, Priest Offer Course on Ecumenism THE Thurs., Oct. 27, 1966 Open Enrollment At Stonehill College, North Easton Diocese to Open To All Christians By Dorothy Eastmal1l. There is a course being offered at l:W;onehill College for the first time this year on Medlical Clinic NEW ORLEANS (NO) ­

Charity is not denomination­ al and the St. Vincent de Paul Society should open its membership to all Christians, tl Protestant minister told the so­ eiety's.52nd annual meeting here. The Rev. Douglas Snell of the United Church of Canada made his suggestion in describing an ecumenical charitable' venture by Catholic and Protestant men in Canada. Sharing the platform with the Rev. Mr. Snell was Sir Robert S. C. Williams, vice president of the Vincentians' Superior Coun­ eil of Cana(la, who received au­ thorization for Vincentian par­ ticipation in the project from the society's international presi~ent, Pierre Chouard of Paris. The first ecumenical group was formed in Toronto in March, 1965, with a Catholic priest and Protestant minister as chaplains. The joint effort, both men said, has been very successful and an­ other group will be formed soon in Ontario. Mr. Snell told the Vincentian meeting that he had' "come in the spirit of brotherly love, with the support'of the whole United Church of Canada to suggest that what you have been doing so effectively alone could be done even more effectively to­ gether." 'No Problems' He told the convention that from the first meeting of the joint group "everything has gone smoothly." "We have had no problems getting along as a mixed confer­ ence," he continued, The fact is that we have got­ ten along in a most amazing manner. Why? Because all mem­ bers are carefully chosen for their maturity of faith and out­ look on life. "I don't want you to think we have no differen,ces of faith. There are major theological bar­ riers. But the society" * * has as its sole objective the love of neighbor. We go all the way on that. "We begin by loving each other in the society, by the shar­ ing of our Christian experiences and faith-the feeding of our own souls-and out of this rich experience we go into the com­ munity to feed the needy-we feed the physical and spiritual needs of men."

a subject so new it has no textbook. One other notable thing about the course: it's being taught by a Congregational minister. The subject is "Ecumenism" and is taught jointly by the minister, the Hev. Robert F. Hardina and a Greymoor priest, Rev. Donald F. Caul, S.A. Without a doubt the course is a milestone in Christian education. Rev. Robert J. Kruse, CSC., chair­

Mea Culpa!

man of the theology department at Stonehill, describes the course as the college's attempt to testify to the spirit of the Council. Judging from all appearances, the new course, is as popular ,as it is unprecedented. The theol­ ogy department had originally estimated that aoout 20 students would enroll for the elective, which is open to 'upperclassmen. But at this date Room 210 in Holy Cross Hall is straining at the seams with 45 students tak­ ing the courSe. How did students in a college where 98 per cent are Catholic react to th'e minister? Rev. Mr. Hardina, a dark-haired conge­ nial young man, says, "At first it was a reaction of hesitancy. I was kind of an odd duck. Now we have a friendly kind of dia­ lo'gue and the students are not afraid to question me or chal­ lenge me on a point. I think that's a very healthy kind of thing." , The team of priest and minis­ ter work so well together that to see them in the classroom is really to see ecumenism in ac­ tion. Active in Ecumenism Rev. Mr. Hardina, a graduate of the University of Massachu­ setts, and Andover-Newton The­ ological School,' has been pastor of the Union Congregational Church in East Bridgewater for four years and has been active in the ecumenical movement almost that long. He credits his warm friendship with Rev. John Burke, a curate' in an East Bridgewater Rom a n Catholic parish, with sparking his inter­ est in Christian unity. He and Father Burke started a dialogue group with their parishioners several years ago. Father Caul, who has been on the theology faculty at Stonehill for two years, comes by his ecumenical interest quite naturally. The Greymoor Friars could appropriately be called the Ecumenical Order, Their found­ er, Father Paul Watson, was an Anglican minister wh'o believed the Anglicans had a solemn duty to reunite with Rome. He ,preached this idea so long and 'ardently, that, his' congregatio~s objected. •. "Nobody wanted to hear. this on a Sunday morning," Father Caul 'says: Not in ,1908 anyway. Father Watson's position became untenable and soon most of the' pulpits in, ,this country were closed to him. In 1909 he became convinced that his Anglican orders were not valid, so in that year he and his whole Grey­ moor Order, consisting of 15 friars ahd one lay brother, who had been Jewish before becom­ ing Episcopalian, converted to Roman Catholicism. Father Caul's role in the Stonehill course is a discussion of the background of orthodox Christianity and the situations that led to dilWnity in the Chris-

DETROIT (NC) - Two ppl~ce officers on traffic patrol here stopped a motorist for exceeding the posted speed limit. On approaching the motorist's ear, Patrolman James Carey noticed a Roman collar beneath a sheep­ ish face. "Father," he warned, "you're not watching the speed signs. Slow down before you pick up a ticket . • . and for your penance say', five Our Fath~rs .and five Hail"Mary....

ST. LOUIS (NC)-Sister Rose Genevieve of the Congregation of St. Joseph has been appointed to the staff of the Catholic Hos­ pital Association, Father Joh" J. Flanagan, S.J., executive di­ rector, announced. Sister Gene­ vieve will serve as dietary con­ sultant, a field in which she ball 'Worked for, many ye~

Kerrs 'to Receive

University Medal

ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) Ne'Y York -:rimes dtama critH: Walter Kerr and hill ~ife Jean, a playwright and a~thor, have been chosen to ,receive the Catholic Action ,Medal for 1966 from St. Bonaventure's Univer­ sity here. In honoring the Kerrs, the university noted that "both have exemplified Christian principles ,and ideals in their professional and private lives.'" Mrs. Kerr will be the first woman to re­ ceive the medal since its insti' lion in 1934.

Nun Consultant

ECUMENICAL COURSE: Rev. Robert F. Hardina, pastor of Union Congregational Church, East Bridgewater, discusses Stonehill College's course on ecumenism, taught jointly by him and Rev. Donald F. Caul, S.A. with, from left, Rosemary Jameson, St. Mary's parish, Mansfield; Ar­ lene Arruda, St. Mary's, South Dartmouth; Joseph Correia, St. Anthony's, Taunton. tian church. Reformation Study , Rev. Mr. Hardina will discuss the ideas and issues that led to the Reformation and the growth of Christian division. He will also deal, with the counter­ Reformation movements and an­ alyze movements toward unity among Protestants in this cen­ tury. The past few years have seen a great deal of scholarly ":"'ork on the Reformatfon and the factors that'led to it, providing new and valuable insights. "I think there is a less defensive attitude on the part of both Catholic and Prot­ estants toward the Reformation now," the minister says. In the, course, attitudes will be stressed far more than theol­ ogy. "Understanding'" and "sen­ sitivity" are words 'often heard. The students will be called up­ on for' active participation. In ~ddition to class discussions and tea.m projects. they will be given such .assignments as 'visits to seminaries, interviews wit b

Se,minarians, Rabbis Hold Discussions CHICAGO (NC)':-A series )of six conversations with rabbis for Catholic seminary students and faculty entitled "Who Are the Jews and What Do They Be­ lieve" began at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in nearby Mun­ delein. Rabbi Arthur Gilbert, director of the department of interreli­ gious curriculum research of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, inaugurated the program with a discussion on "Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Judaism: Differences and Similarities." ' The series is sponsored by the Catholic Seminaries of Greater Chicago and the Anti-Defama­ tion Leagu~ with the approval 'of Archbishop Joha 1'. Cody of Chicago.:

members of different religious groups, and other work which will involve them directly in the ecumenical movement. Practical Ecumenism "We hope that for the students this courSe will be the basis for a whole lifetime of practical ecumenism." Rev. Mr. Hardina says. , "Our ultimate aim in the ecu­ , menical movement is unity, re­ union. Our immediate aim is cooperation," Father Caul adds. If "dialogue" is the ecumen­ ical word for the day, what of the future? "Cooperative Chris­ · tianity is, the next step," the ,priest believes. "Yes, common · witness," aUirms the minister, who speaks fervently, of the guidance of the Jfoly Spirit in "the work fo.r Christian unity.. , .. ' On Mondays, Tuesdays and · Thursdays in Room 210 in Holy c:ross Hal~ there are 15 students, ,a minister and a priest. And the' Holy Sprit: Indeed there is, the Holy Spirit. .'

LARIVIERE1S

Pharmacy Prescriptions called for and Delivered LOFT

CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 New Bedford

BROOKLYN (NC)-Moved by the need to bring medicine kl the people immediately, the Brooklyn diocese will open New York City's first storefront med­ ical clinic withi.n the next six weeks. Msgr. James H. Fitzpatrick, di­ rector of the health and hospital division of Brooklyn Catholic Charities, also announced three additional clinics will be opened in deprived neighborhoods m Brooklyn and Queens in the next few months. The novel clinics will be staffed by personnel attached to "mother-hospitals" operated by the Brooklyn diocese in these areas. Each clinic will have six doctors, four nurses, a clerk and a social worker; , They will include treatment rooms, X-ray equipment an Cl facilities for immediate labora­ tory work. Msgr. Fitzpatrick' said the clinics will treat between 500 and 700 patients a week with a minimum of waiting time. "1t is necessary to break down the walls and get medicine tc the community. The hospital must move outside its own walls to truly serve the community and make their special personnel and facilities more effectively available to those who need them," he said. The clinics are part of the dio­ cese's new program for addi­ tional hospital facilities which will add hundreds of beds and include an $8 million medical -research centel'.

Chapel at Airport Nears Completion JAMAICA (NC) - The ne~ Catholic chapel of Our' Lady oil the Skies, at John F. Kennedy International Airport here, is ex­ pected to be completed before the end of 1966. The chapel, sponsored by the Brooklyn (N. Y.) diocese, is un­ der construction at Tri-Faith Chapels Plaza, and will stand side-by-side witl). the Protestant and Jewish chapels.

Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL J. TESER, Prop. ,RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL 253 Cedar St., New Bedford WY 3-3222

'S$%>SS'S'SSSSSS'S'SSS ,

.

'

Building' Contractor

Masonry

VICTOR

FLEURENT

"! JEANETTE STREET FAIRHAVEN

WY 4-7321

The First National Bank of Attleboro Membee Fodera. Doposit insurance Corporation

THE BANK THAT DOlES MORE FOR yOU .••• AND ENJOYS DOING

rr


(:j

'14

THE ANCHOR-;'DiOC8Sf ofF:aQ "i~er-Thun., Oct~ 21',' 19"

Says Christian DemocrCl~Y'

Fulfills Latin· Needs· .

,Edited by John J. Considine, MM. From "Social Revolution in ihe ~ew La~in ~eriea· The Christian Democratic party in Latin America has had to overcome many misconceptions. One that is still prevalent is its supposed· confessionalism.Christian Dem­ ocracy is not in ~uiy way a religious movement; nor does it have a confessional charac-. . ter. Christian Democratic many countries where Christian Democracy is a thrusting' force parties include among their in this field. members Catholics, Protes­ Not oniy in Chile, where the, tants, Jews, agnostics, professing movement is already in the gov­ the widest variety of conceptions emment, nor in Venezuela, and creeds. The where it has achieved ~' name Christian front rank position, but also iQ. does not repre­ countries where Christian De.. sent a religious mocracy is still an incipient position but the force, as in Colombia or Bolivia; conviction that Youth gets behind coherent C h r i s t ian iileoiogies that offer complete values and the solutions to the problem:; with spirit of Chris­ which it is concerned. Commu­ tianity can best nism is one of these coherent fulfill success­ syst~ms, seeking to interpret fully the re­ all the phenomena of the cosmos, quirements of from the origin of matter to the . soc i a I justice final destiny of" man; Christian and defeat marxism in the strug~ Democracy is the' only other gle to conquer the roul of the . system that is able to offer a people. similar cohesion, with the ad­ We believe that the Social vantage that it nurtures in the Christian inspiration overflows spirit of youth, its faith in ab­ the boundaries of a given creed. solute values, and makes it feel And it is pleasant £01: us'to ob­ ,that not everything ends with serve how the ecumenical spirit death or has its only expression developed in the Second Vati­ in material terms. can Council has come to rein­ Social Projection force the attempts at rap­ -But what interests us above proachement among all men all is the social projection of who understand and support de­ 9hristian Democracy. The social mocracy, who share the principle problems of Latin America are of social solidarity and defend extremely grave.. They cannot the imperative demands of social be resolved simply by the injec­ justice. tion of a few million dollars: as· You will not be sur.prised by statistics show,' this is less than now when I say that the position what we lose through decreases of Christian Democratic move­ in the prices of our products. ment is definitely revolutionary. A more fundamental change We do not defend tradition for is needed, and this must· be tradition's sake. , clearly understood by the other We- accept from it what rep­ countries of the free world., es­ resents essential values or i3 pecially those to which we are part of the spiritual heritage of . ;reiated, such as the· United our peoples; but we are pro':: ;Stares. The people of Latin fOundly convinced of the' neM·: iAmerica desire a revolutiOnary for change, and that this. chaage change. They want it because must not be gradual 01' saper- they need it. It is senseless. to· ficial;..-- We defend properl~, but ., wait any longer. It is naive 1» we demand that it fulfills. a prepare formulas that operate social function. : ~ioWly, in 'the long run•. We stimulate private initia­ Circumstances are so serious, ttve, as long as it i3 nat incom­ that there are those who, in, good patible with the collective we:l­ faith and even with the support fare.- We believe in friendship of authoritative currents of - amen'g· peoples, especially those Christian theology, come to that defend the same fundamen­ KKeach and maintain the need tal values that inspire Western fol' violence. ei~ilizat~on, but we feel that this In opposition to this, tile fnendshlp cannot be based on Christian Democratic thesis calls d;ependency, privilege. or i.mpo­ for a peaceful revolution, a rev­ tion, but on ~. relahonshlp of olution in freedom. We under­ decorous .equ.alIty.. stand the arguments put forth We m~mtam t~at bt ~rtue of by what we might call the "the­ Intern~tlOnal SOCial JustIce the ology of violence"; we are pro­ wealth.ler and mo.re deyeloped foundly convinced that violence Il:ou.ntnes are oblIged .to l~nd only engenders further violence their support . to those which, and that while it hastens the de­ due to various circumstances­ structive state of revolutions­ not. always or entirelr within that is, the destruction of the t~e.lr control-:-are not In a con­ old order that is deemed unjust . dltlOn to achIeve by themselves, -it obstructs and sometimes In this highly interdependen.t renders unfea~ible, the construc­ modern world, the goals .they tive state, ·that is, the establish­ have set themselves.ment of a new and just order. New Political lForC0 : .... Christian. Democracy is, thereThe growth of Christian De- : fore, firmly opposed to violence. mocracy has modified consid-· In the pulsating situation' of erably the politica: horizon of Latin America, . a victory of Latin America. Only yesterday, Christian Democracy a p pea r II observers saw nothing but. the. mcue .and more each day all th~. communist threat, a dictatorShip . only encouraging alternative. to oppose it, or the so-called. . This does riot involve ~he ex­ popular parties, as a temporary elusion of other social-Political and declining barrier to the for c e s, including Democratic eommunist avalanche. This pan- Socialism, which still has a role wama has changed. to fulfill. The youth in the universities I . But the initiative, the sense of ef Latin America is becoming direction and responsibility' ere:­ decidedly enthusiastic a b,o u t' manded by the change to be ae­ Christian Democratic formulas. complished are so great, that The disquieting stream ()f marx- they require' an ideological co­ ism in .Latin America's educa- hesion and a tactical sincerv tional institutions is beginning'· now found only m ChristiQll to lose ground. We could name' .' Democracy.

;

at. ,'first Rational Stores

Most business peoplGfeel thIs way about"thelr oustome~ but at First National, Work a little harder .to prC)ve It~ . What do we 'mean when we aay, ~'a~ Firat National, You Come First"? Just ~I'. We take extra car. with· everYthIng we sell. Take our own ''Yor'''(iardcm oanned V'egetable.. '!Ie select quality vegetablee that ~urpaa8.yen the .upe~ stallldardsfor Grade "Aft canned vegetables set by the United ,States Government. And our·FIRST CHOiCe MEATS. Butchers always say you can tell agood store lOy its ground beef. W. grind. ours severa.' times a day to insure freshness ••• and do It I.n spotlessly­ clean grinders ••• the way yOll would In you~ own kitchen.When a illen lays .an egg. It's usually Grade ·~A'o •.But will It !be G.rade "AU when~tll'eaches your family table? It wlli - If you bought It at First National. At First National, we're fUSSy about egg freshness. When you don't take eggs from our 'shelves, we doI And we date our egg boxes ~o you can check freshness yourself.' Klriow a better way to be sura? '. ThIs Is the spirit and attitude of all our friendly first National

we

.~.<

, ,

folkel,·too.

theIr

-Because they ilk.' work and knowthellr' Jobs a Bittle better, they are more eager to Ilerve you. Won;t y~ give ql the ohfinoe to show you how - In so many ways - You eomeFlrit at First National Storesl .,.,


'.

. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River-Thurs., Oct. 2'7, 1966

The Bishops' Annual

THANKSGIVING CLOTHING COLLECTION For The· Needy Overseas

LOOK IN YOUR CLOSETS

EXAMINE YOUR CAN YOU

~UREAUS

SPAR~

.

Il

Blankets!

Men's (Iolhing!

Work Shoes!'

Infanl's and Children's Wear~

MONDAY to SATURDAY, OCT. 31 - NOV. 5

. _mnlllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUllllumlHlllllllllllllllllllllmllUlHllllllllllllllllllllllllflImllllllnlllllllnmlllll1I111l11mnmmlllllHHlllllllllllllUlltmlllllllllllmmllllllnlllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllll1I111111111I11I111111I11I1I1111I111I11I1111111111I11I1111I11I111111I1I111111lll11

This Message SPOllso,ed hy Tile following Individuals (JIJd Business Concerns ... n.e Diocese 01 FaR River .FaII

rraver

AlUMINUM PROCESSING CORP~

BRADY ELECTRIC SUPPLY co.

CASCADE DRUG co.

EDGAR'S JAll RIVER - BROCKlOIII

GLOBE MANUFACTURING co.

HUlCHlNSOWS 011 COMIAIG'

IN'fERNAT~ONM.

tM>IES GARMENT WORKERS UNION r.oUIS HAND, INC. MacKENZIE AND WINSLOW, INC. MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS GERALD E McNALLY, CONtRACTOR GILBERT Co. OLIVEIRA INSURANCE AGEtCY

R. A.. Mc:WHIRR COMPANY RONDO FINE FASHION OUllET SOBIIl.OFF BROTHERS STERLING -BEVERAGES, INC. SUlLIVAN'S UXTllE WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA AFl-CIO

North Attleboro . JEWELED CROSS COMPANY, INCo

Taunton MOONEY AND COMPANY,

me.

,.


'-.

N®w York Commottee to Study f~thwfJ'e of N!@n IPMb~ icCg~ ~eges

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 27; 1966

C~t®~

.' On

m

lP@!pe f\!!M~o$ [P@~~ffg~~

~~®®@om

of ·lEX[9Y~®~$~@lf1)

By Msgr. George c.' Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC) Pope Paul VI, in his closing address at the recent International Conference on Theology in Rome, said that S()und -theology must '''always hold in highest honor the Church's magisterium (teaching authority), and particu­ larly that of the Vicar, of in recent weeks, for example, Christ." Contrary, however, one prominent ecclesiastic has to the misleading impression bitterly attacked several so­ which was left-no doubt un­ 'called "liberal" Catholic period­ wittingly-in some of the ab­ icals by name and has chal'ged breviated news releases on the them in effect, with disloyalty Rom e conferand with outright defiance of the teaching authority of the­ IN PEACE CORPS: Clau­ ence which have :-Church.

come to my at­ dette Gacciabeve, ·Dominican In my judgment, this is grossly tention that isn't

A cad e m y graduate and unfair to these particular peri­ all the H 0 1 y daugh.ter of Mr. and Mrs. odicals. Moreover, it runs coun':' Father had to Michael F. Cacciabeve, Fall, tel' to the letter and the spirit of say to the as­ the council's several statements River, is in Mysore State, sembled theolo­ -and very pointed statements Iridia, as a Peace Corps vol­ gians. .<\ f tel' -they were-on the importance of expressing his unteer. She will work with freedom in ':he Church and the perfectly under­ primary school teachers in urgent need for dialogue not standable con­ only between the Church and developing - health and nu­ eern about the modern world, but also with­ ·doctrinal ortho­ trition programs. A gradu­ · doxy, he hastened to add, in the in the Church itself. ate of the University of Mas­ One can defend the freedom · words of the Pastoral Constitu­ sachusetts, she spent her of controversial Catholic period­ 'lion on the Church in the Mod­ junior year at the University icals without necessarily agree­ ern 'World, that "all the faithful, of Delhi under the "College '. clerical and lay, possess a lawful . ing with everything that appears ; freedom of inquiry and of in their pages'. I. myself don't Year in India" project spon­ particularly care for the tone thought, and the freedom to 'ex­ sored by the University of 'press their minds humbly and or the style of some of the more Wisconsin. strident articles and editorials courageously about those mat­ which have appeared from time ters in which they enjoy com­ to time, in this or thaC"liberal" peteilce." t@ publication, and have said so Plea for Freedom These words, in their present frankly and (I hope) courteously lOOrm, were added to the text of to the people involved. ST. AUGUSTINE (NC) - A In All Things Charity the constitution following a rec­ 208-foot high stainless steel But mindful of the ancient cross, called the "Beacon. of ommendation made.on the coun­ cil floor on Oct. 1, 1065, by maxim quoted by the Holy F'aith," will be dedicated here in Archbishop Michael Pellegrino, Father in his address to the the­ Florida Sun~ay, OCt.-30 by Arch­ ologians in Rome last mc:mth bishop Casimiro Morcillo of Ma­ who had just been named Ol'di­ and mindful also of Archbishop nary of the Archdiocese of TU\'in drid, Spain. The 70-ton illumi­ and, in fact, had not yet been Pellegrino's forthright defense nated cross has been raised here of freedom as a vital necessity in the nation's oldest city. consecrated. The new Archbishop, who is a for the Church, we should, I In conjunction with· the dedi­ distinguished scholar in his own think, scrupulously refrain f!'Om cation of the "Great Cross," • impugning the motives or ques­ right, made a strong plea for in­ one-day historical symposium, tellectualfreedom in the Church, .tioning the sincerity and the loy­ which brings together several of alty of those-whose opinions we the country's foremost authori­ arguing, on the basis of histor­ ical experience, that 'al'bitruy may not be able to accept 01' ties on the historY of Spanish 'restrictions on freedom· of whose "style" may happen tl> settlements an~ missions in rub us the wrong way. thought and freedom of expres­ North America, will be held Our motto, in other words, sion deprived the Church of the Saturday, Oct. 29. ought .to be "unity in essentials, new insights of which she con­ Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, stantly stands in need as she is freedom in what is uncer:tain, bishop of St. Augustine, will compelled to face up to new and and in all things charity." A sense of historical balance preside at the dedication cere­ increasingly complex pr0blems and perspective, coupled with a monies and at the symposium. '. in' a rapidly changing wOI'ld. The Archbishop illustrated his wholesome sense of humor, caentral point by referring to would also stand us in good In summing up his own view rertain "injustices" suffered by stead in these days of mounting on the freedom of the Catholic r.eputable theologians in the tension and rapid and unsettling press, Father Purdy writes, in emotional backlash which fol- change. par.t, as follows: "This serene In this connection, the meas­ · lowed the controversy over ventilation (of the inner work­ ured opinion of the distinguished ~, Modernism just after the tum ingsof official Rome) has been British journalist and author, an achievement of the Second of the century, although, he added, "we are all grateful for Father William A. Purdy, \with Vatican Council; the survival of reference, to the freedom of the the Papacy's stand against Mod­ the habit will be a test of the en­ Catholic press strikes me as be­ ernism." during effect of the council. ing full of common sense. Catholic Press Role Responsibility of Critics Father Purdy,' who is an old Pope Paul, in citing the coun­ "It will also be much more Roman hand, is happy-and so eil's 'solemn declaration 011 the am I-that the excessively rigid likely to forestall a crisis of erucial importance of intellec­ rules of secrecy which prevailed authority than any attempt to tual freedom in the Church, ob­ during the early days of the revert to former habits and, viously meant to encourage the language. council were eventually relaxed, theologians of the world to pur­ "The responsibility of the sue their high calling calmly at least to the extent of making it possible for the press to cover critics here is at least as great and objectively, with full re­ spect, of course, for the Church's the highlights of the council' on as that of the criticized. Intem­ a day-to-day basis. perate and uncharitable' lan­ magisterium, but with confi­ guage, . abuse and gossip, .a too Paid Off dence, too, in the importance of In his new book, "The Church pe.rsonal approach; these are what they are doing and' without on the Move" (The John Day part of the price the Church has the nagging fear of being arbi­ trarily censored or called to time. Co., New York, $6.95), he admits had to pay for the (large benefi­ cial) interest ·the 'world har. sud­ He said, in summary, that that certain "extravagances" re­ sulted from the council's belated denly taken in her affairs; when there should be "unity in essen­ and rather reluctant decision to journalists suddenly begin to re­ tials, freedom in what is ullcer­ deal with the memBers of the ga~d ecclesiastic5 as they habitu­ tain, and in all things charity." This same concern for freedom working press more or less on ally regard film stars or.' profes­ sional footballers, this is too their own terms. (j)f thought and freedom of ex­ That was to be expected, for much for the equilibrium of a pression should also be our guid­ certain, though happily not ing principle, it seems to me, rn even "the healthiest revolution," the· current controversy. over he observes, "must have its ex- , large, number of ecclesiastics. crescences." But he hastens to the role of the Catholic press "The capital lesson that needs in the past-conciliar Church. add that the council's decision to be learned in Rome is that if N eel! for Dialogue to deal with the press paid off criticism has properly estab­ This controversy, unfortunate­ very handsomely even from the lished organs it eventually stops ly, is beginning to get a little narrow point of view of creating being sensational and begins be­ edgy in the United States. With- a better image of the Church. i~g effective."

IPrelate Dedicate j'Beacon of faith'

.. t

ALBANY (NC) ...:... A commit­ tee to study the future of private and independent higher educa­ tion in New York State will be appointed by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and the State Board of Regents. In announcing plans for the committee, Gov. Rockefeller expressed the hope that it will assist the state "in charting the course of a balanced higher edu­ cation complex for the years ahead." Private colleges, he' 'said, "have always been and are now more than' ever - a vital resource." , Strength in Freedom .Such institutions, the governor maintained, should not be out­ distanced by state colleges sup':' ported by increasing tax funds, nor should they come increas­ ingly under the domination and ~trol of govej:nment.

"I believe," he said, "the pri­ vate independent colleges and uni versities must continue to stand as a guarantee of academic diversity, a bulwark of academic freedom, and a constant stimu­ lus to academic excellence. "I. believe that their great strength lies in their independ­ ence and their freedom." Gov. Rockefeller said that "it is a function of government to protect and assist those institu­ tions which are in the public interest" and that although the State of New York has taken steps to do so, it must increase its efforts. • He said the committee to be appointed will "devote its best thinking and judgement to ad­ vise me and the regents on an appropriate course of action Ifor the state to adopt to meet the developments of the next dec­ ade."

TDTHE·

UNKNDMlr\, GO.D In Vadanappilly. India, Christ stands under the

open sky In the midst of eight temples and ten

mosques. The catholic Church Is In a state c'

ruin. Too dangerous to assemble In the preser. :

('.AN building, Father Francis gathers his faithful fis' .

A ermenabout him. Little else to offer butth;:. .­

FISHERMAN nets, they give their hands to labor for a Gol.

• BUILD unknown to their fellowmen. Buoyed by the;; A spirit. Father Francis says "they couldn't b'~ . CHURCHr more witting-If only we had .the materIals." Fa:' $3200 lumber. sand and cement can b8 put intr, those ready hands. Help nowand:nameachurch by the sea. You will be remembered forever in the Masses saId. Any amount ($100. $50. $20, $10, $5-, $2) will help. MaU your gift now. They, :~ h"". wi!: pray for you.

# Needs of missionarIes are great. It's- hard som.. needed TO most. Why not let the Holy Father decldet Mark HELPr your gift below Stringless. and send it to us. ,... Ht"y rl~j,~r w;1l tel!· us ~ero it's needed.

NbNDEIlt WHERE

times- to decide just where your help· Is

-

THE Ther-e's no- way of knowing how many souls '-­ ETERNAL be released from Purgatory thl~ November ~ GlfT the Masses of thousands of priests In the Pope'.

Near East missIons. (The-offerings support them In spreading the Gospel, serving the-poor.) Pos­ sibly your own Purgatory will be shortened by just one such remembrance· of a parent-or rela­ tive. Someday. lJI ~ neglected friend may wel­ come you all the way Home with· that kindest greeting: "You "em1!mberedl" ,

ffUNGRY The·haunting eyes of hungry children- follow)'O&l In the Holy Land. "We are refugees." they say. IN ''We can become grown-ups you'll' be proud of:'

-CHILDREN

nfE ••• $500 will provide a three·room home for a HOLY LAND refugee family; $50, a sewIng-machine for a girls' schoot; $10 feeds a family for a month. Please help.

Dear &1onsignor Nolan:

Please return coupon with your offering

--------------~--@ CO

ENCLOSED' PLEASE PIND

$

_

FOR:_...:..

_

NAME,

_

STREET CITY

--,-"STATE

_ ZIP COO'I:.P

_

THE CATHDLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASIIDCIATIDIl

NEAR EAST MISS'IONS FRANCIS CARDINAli.. SPELLMAN, President ) MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National Secretary \ Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue -New York. N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840 .


Leading Clergymen Ask End No~Q'h Viein@rM ~@m@~il)gs

TTHhE ANC HOR- 1966 urs., Oct. 27,

NEW YORK (NC)-Six prominent Catholic, Protestant and Jewish clergymen have urged the United States and its allies to halt oombing in North Vietnam as a first step toward implementing United Nations Secretary General U Thant's peace proposals. The religious leaders, includ­ world organization; as Christians ing Bishop John J. Wright of and Jews, we are here support­ a Secretary General who is Pittsburgh, a~e co-chairmen aingBuddhist," they noted.

C&ID@f1i}@@ t%(l£J~~~

of the Inter-Religious Confer­ ence on Peace. Their statemen'l. has been sent to U Than~ and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Arthur J. Goldberg. The churchmen urge the U. S. government and its allies to "act in conscience upon U Thant's first peace proposal: a cessation of the bombing on North Viet­ nam." They quoted from the re­ cent peace encyclical of Pope Paul VI. 1!J 'I'bant Proposals They also ask that "the U. S. and its allies agree explicitly to state and restate their willing­ ness to enter into negotiations with all parties actually engaged in the war." "While recent U. S. statements

on Vietnam have shown greater flexibility, we earnestly hope that the leaders 'of all forces in­ volved in Vietnam will heed the call of Secretary U Thant to scale down all military opera­ tions in..order to create a climate for equitl/ble negotiations," they

said. U Thant has recommended, as a form u 1 a for negotiations to end the war, three points which include cessation of ,bombing of North Vietnam, scaling down of all military op­ erations by all parties in South Vietnam and willingness of all parties to enter into discussions with those who are actually fighting. Support Buddhist Besides Bishop Wright the signers of the statement are Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath, pres­ ient of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations; Dr. Dana McLean Greeley, president of the Unitarian Universalist Asso­ ciation; Archbishop Iakovos, of the Greek Orthodox Church of North and South America; Bish­ op John Wesley Lord, of the Washington area of the Method­ ist Church and ,the Rt. Rev. Wil­ liam Crittendon, Episcopal Dio­ eese of Erie. The dergymen pleaded for in­ creased use of the United Na­ tions as an agency for peace, "specifically in negotiating an end to the war in Vietnam-a war which is a barrier to the very future of the UN and an increasing threat to peace uni­ versally. "We hope that Secretary Gen­ eral U Thant will continue to implement the work of that

Recommend Parish Welfare Programs BURLINGTON (NC) - Estab­ lishment of effective welfare programs for the poor in every parish has been recommended by the Diocesan Pastoral Com­ mission and approved by Bishop Robert F. Joyce of Burlington. The commission's recommen­ dation suggested that to carry out the program effectively each parish set aside in its yearly budget a certain amount of money for the poor; each parish organize a furniture and clothing distribution center; each parish report back to the commission on its program so that all may be reviewed and further im­ provements recommended. The commission also asked Vermont Catholic Charities to supply each pastor with a list of all non-church relief and wel­ fare services available in bis area.

Commend Encyclical The clergymen said· they be­ lieved the action they recom­ mend would help persuade U Thant to remain for another term as Secretary General. At the same, time, they observed, the United States "could help reverse the trend toward a major war." Thus, they added, nations would be "heeding the warning of Pope Paul VI that statesmen should realize that 'at this crit­ ical moment their consciences are bound by the gravest obliga­ tion,' and that man will esteem their memory if they will have followed their consciences with wisdom."

"We commend Pope Paul VI's recent encyclical 'earnestly be­ seeching those who have charge of the public welfare to strive with every means available to prevent the further spread -of ·the conflagr.ati~n and even to extin­

guish it entirely.'

Indefatigable Persistence "We join with U Thant in ',as­ serting that a settlement of the war' can be reached which would 'end the suffering in Vietnam, satisfy the conscience of the world at large, and remove a formidable barrier to interna­ tional cooperation,' " they point­ ed out. "We of the Inter-Religious Committee on Pe<jce bringing together members of church and synagogue in the U. S., in one voice join Pope Paul VI in cry­ ing to the belligerents in Viet­ nam 'in God's name to stop.' "We also join him in express­ ing the hope that the United Nations, 'responding to the an x­ ious expectations of all peoples, will indefatigably persist in its historic task and. finally see its efforts crowned with success.' "

Adverse Publicity Hurts Vocations TOLEDO (NC) - Bishop George J. Rehring of Toledo said he believes publicity has been an adverse factor, reflecting it­ self in drop-outs among semi­ narians and loss of interest among boys thinking of the priesthood. At the convention of Ohio Serra 'Clubs, the bishop said: "It would seem self-evident that the downgrading publicity on the priesthood and of the Church should be offset, first, by utiliz­ ing suitable occasions to ex­ pound the intrinsic dignity and essential purpose of Christ's priesthood; and, secondly, by drawing attention to the impres­ sive preponderence of good shepherds over the erring and the hirelings."

Protestant Joins Catholic Faculty SAN DIEGO (NC) - Dr. Leland H. Carlson, Protestant theologian and historian, has been appointed visiting professor in ecumenism at the University of San Diego College for Men. Dr. Carlson is a professor of theology ,at Claremont Graduate School and School of Theology. Father John Myhan, chairman of ~he University of San Diego's theology department, said it was hoped his lectures would broaden the religious under­ standing of the students.

Vffi$oU'(Q;~[@O'iJ

17

~WHJ'il~

ST. PAUL (NC)~A trial p~ riQd to examine regulations IllD cloister and other matters c1t renewal was voted with a de­ gree of unanimity by Order «t{ t.he Visitation nuns at a meetin~ here. Mother Mary Regina McCabe. president of the Second Federal-> tion of the Order in Nortill America, said the trial perioo. voted on by superiors from the 14 monasteries of the Order, wiln serve as a prelude to the revi~ sionof the order's constitutions.

POSTULANTS AND NEW ATTIRE: Left to right: Joan Rapoza, Paula Coelho, Ann J\iarie Dupree, Mary Lou Sullivan, and Rosemary Griffin.

Regular Dress Long Habits New Thing of Past for Posh:fonts Joining Holy Union Religious Order New Attire: These young women who entered the convent last month are still wearing 01'­ -<Hnary skirts and blouses. So are .all other postulants preparing to be Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts. Gone are the long black dresses, capes, veils and black stockings for­ merly worn by newcomers to religious life. Now the only veil they wear is a lace mantilla for chapel services. The new style clothes were adopted because it was felt that postulants would be more at ease in theIh in their new sur­ roundings and at their varied tasks of college courses, attend­ ing lectures away from the con­ vent, and performing apostolic works such as instructing CCD classes and doing practice teaching.. At the end of their postulancy they will don the habit worn by the other Sisters but they will wear white veils until they profess their vows. Happy with the change in garb are these five postulants from the Diocese of Fall River. From left, Joan Raposa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ,James Raposa, 12

Hospital Chaplains Attend Irnstitute WASHINGTON (NC) - More than 70 participants from across the nation are enrolled in the two-week orientation institute for General Hospital chaplains being held at Catholic Univer­ sity of America. The purpose of the institute is to help the chaplain to be more effective in his apostolate of the sick in the light of the many changes in hospitals and advancement in medical science.

Harrison Street, Taunton, St. M.ary's parish, and a graduate of Bishop Cassidy High. Paula Co­ elho, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Coelho, 60 Oak Street, Taunton, St. Joseph's parish, and a graduate of Bishop Cassidy High School. Anne Marie Du­ pere, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Dupere, 83 Old Fall River Road, North Dal·tmouth, St. George's parish and a grad­ uate of Dartmouth High School. Mary Lou Sullivan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Sulli­ van, 513 High Street, Fall River, Sacred Heart parish. Mary Lou studied at the Academy of the Sacred Hearts and at Bridge­ water State College. Rosemary Griffin, ,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Griffin, 9 Coram Street, Taunton, St. Mary's parish and a graduate of Bishop Cassidy High School.

While the Visitation comm\IJ= nity essentially is a contempla­ tive order, the nuns also devote themselves to apostolic works such as conducting retreat houses and academies for girls. The nuns may leave the clois­ ter for carrying out their apos­ t.olic work, such as lectures,'­ meetings, and other educationa] projects, it was explained. Also agreed upon was that the divine office, in the vernacular, would replace the office of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In addition, they decided to experiment wiUJ formation centers for the train­ ing ~nd education of candidateZl for the order. Thus, when the.e

were few candidates in one can­

didacy, consolidation would tak€ place with others nearby.

BIG DIVIDIEND NEWS I a vear

SYSTEMAnC SAVINGS

E

INIIESTMENT

year

SAVINGS

5.50% 5 • 00 0/ /0 4 • 5 Oat 10

a vear

REGULAR SAVINGS

Ba$~

River SavitJLlgs Bank Bank By Mail . We Pay The Postage • SOUTH VARMOUTH • DENNIS PORT • HYANNIS • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PlAD • OSTERVILLE

The SISTERS OF MERCY Inyite~

you to visit

t~e

House B·eautiful The charming 6% room eariy American Ranch House, completely furnished, in SUEIEPY HOL­ LOW, off Abbott Run Volley Road on Arnold's Mills, Cumberland. It is beautifully construc­ ted by those fine builders, Alphage Ferland & Sons of Pawtucket. HOUSE BEAUTIFUL is open daily from 1:00 p.m. to Dusk, Rainy days excepted Directions

famous for

QUALITY and

SERVlCE!

Drive north from Pawt. or Provo on Diamond Hill Road, 114, 'til you see the Sleepy Hollow sign. Turn right into Hillside, right again at the Community Libl"ary into Abbott Run Volley Road, thence to SLEEPY HOLLOW.


18

,.Msgr.' Hamel

'THE ANCHOR­ . lhurs., Oct. 27, '1966

Canadi~[l'i)rnsD~~ops ,Hold N~w ~\irle

,Agenda

~®~~oon

OTTAWA (NC) - Cana­ da's Catholic Bishops met here in a "new style" gen­ eral assembly with an agenda , of post-council topics. The Bishops lived together for -ehe week in a downtown hotel. , They met there and in the near­ by general secretariat of the Ca­ aadian Catholic Conference. Council·Type Instead of a three-day sess~on . as in past years, they spent a . full work week on Church busi­ ness. The first two-and-a-half , days were dedicated to "Yatican € o uncil-type" discussions and workshops-"optional" days in­ tended to revive and extend the council's spirit of study and de­ " bate. The remainder of the week was devoted to "official" days for discussion of topicli on the agenda. These included: 'Reorganization of the CCC in the iightof the' new role given national bishops confen!nces by the Council. Some 20 questions'relating to the implementation of Council , decrees. Subjects to be proposed to the first international synod of Bish­ ,QPS, which may be held next year in Rome. Specialists Attend A series of questions under study by CCC bodies in recent months, including possible new fast and abstinence regulations for Canada and an official Ca­ 1'0 OFFER CONCERT: £ive alumnae of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, will nadian Cat hoI i c anti-poverty eombine talents to present, the sixth in th e series of Holy Union Concerts at 8 Sunday program. Presiding over the Bishops' night, Nov. 6 in the academy auditorium, Prospect Street. Seated, from left, Helen Orpen meeting was Coadjutor Bishop Tierney and Margaret Manning Eagan, du 0 pianists; standing, Cecile Clement Grobe, Louis Levesque of Rimouski, solo pianist; Georgette Berube Chouinard. violinist; Sister Barbara Thomas Walsh, so­ Que., elected last Fall to a two­ prano. :veal' term as CCC president. A new feature this year was 'ihe presence of priests and lay specialists at some sessions as pa,nelists and resource persons. Vary of Topics . Bishops registered in advance for the sessions they wanted to attend during the "optional" , "I hated to ask them, but they were a 11 so gracious." That's how Sister Stephen

days in the first half of the Mary, S.U.S.C., its ,organizer, described the inspiriation which led to the unique concert

week. Among the topics covered at these sessions were the Coun­ , the Religious 0:( the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts are contributing this year to Fall

,ci.l decree on Bishops. develop­ River's musical season. Five alumnae of Sa cred Hearts Academy in Fall River are, com­

ing vocations to the priesthood, bining to" present a varied catechetics, "relations of Bish­ program at 8 Sunday night, more she 'began singing lessons New England Conservatory, she ops, priests and laity: authority gave her' graduation concert Nov. 6 in the school's Pros-, under Adam'Furgiuele. and dialogue," education, mixed . , , T h e future religious attended there, thEm repeated it at Sacred marriages, collegiality and re­ pect Street auditorium. They Seton Hill College for a year Hearts Academy. A year of study lations with non-believers. are soprano soloist Sister Bar­ before entering the Holy Union followed at the Longy School in bara Thomas Walsh; Margaret postulate, then attended Pea­ . Cambridge under Boris Goldob-, Manning Eagan and Helen Or­ body Conservatory,' Baltimore, sky, then she started teaching pen Tierney, duo pianists; Geor­ and earned a bachelor's degree in in Fall River. gette Berube Chouinard, violin­ music education from Anna A member of St. Joseph's par­ ist; and Cecile Clement Grobe, 'Maria College. She is now work­ ish, Mrs. Eagan has two daught­ piano soloist. ing towards a master's degree in ers. She has been teaching for BOWLING GREEN (NC) ­ All are close personal friends music at Boston University, 20 years, having an average of Two Benedictine, nuns have as well 'as sharing the of . studying under Wilma Thomp­ 26 students coming for lessons. come to Ohio from Tulsa, Okla., graduation 'from, Sacred' Hearts son.. to serve' on the Newman Foun­ -Mrs. Tierney Sister Barbara Thomas taught dation staff, at Bowling Green A.cademy;and all are "rehearsing Mrs. Tierney, who will play like mad" for next month's con­ at Holy Name School in Fall State University. ' ,' with Mrs. Eagan, began piano les­ cert. "We're all happy to 00 it," River for four years, and is now Sisters M. Martina and M. beginning her third year at St. sons at age 7 under Irene Prevost. 'Ursula will teach Hi of the 20 ,is their reaction to, Sister Steph­ Michael's School, also Fall River. During her senior year at SHA religion courses, offered for en Mary's brainstorm. The quintet will present Ii "I always have my children she began studies at the New Catholic students. They will be special performance for religious singing," she says. After school England Conservatory with Lu­ available for counseling and tu­ of the Diocese the day before the hours she has 15 piano students cille Monaghan. In all she at­ toring. concert. ' arid this year is beginning vocal tended the conservatory three Sister Martina will be the All the performers are natives lessons with four youngsters. years; and before her marriage Sodality moderator and will of Fall River and all but -Mrs. Sister Stella Marie, S.U.S.C. taught piano. She is a member have charge of the 6,000-volume of Mu Phi, honorary music s0­ Grobe attended Sacred Hearts' will accompany her for her con­ Newman library. She has mas­ ciety. Elementary School as well as the cert selections. ' ter's degrees in English and, li­ The mother of five chUdren, high school. All have many years Mrs. Eagan brary science. Mrs: Eagan studied piano un­ 'and a member of St. Thomas Sister Ursula will be adviser of teaching and concert work to their credit. del' Madame Andrea, S.U.S.C. More parish, Somerset, she has )0 the Newman Foundation of­ ficers and executive committee.' Sister Barl>ara Thomas is' a' "from pre-primary through high a son who is a student of Mrs. She has a doctorate in history native of SS. Peter and Paul ,school," and was presented in Eagan-thus keeping things mu­ and has done post-graduate parish, Fall River, and her fam­ a concert at the academy during sical within the SHA family. Mrs. Chouinard ,work at Oxford. ily now lives in St.' Michael's her senior year. She holds the Among 11,000 students at the Also a holder of the prized parish, Swansea. She came un­ SMA music key, a highly coveted college, more than 2,600 are del' the Holy Union aegis when award presented to outstanding SHA music key is Mrs. Chouin­ Catholics, Father ~ohn ,qll~viE;r, '_ she started attendance at the ei- musicians for many years. Earn­ ard, who began attending SHA's Newman chaplain said. Some 'ementary : school as a fourth ing' a bachelor of music degree elementary school in fourth 100 attend the religion classes. Tllrn tG' Page Twenty g.t:ader ,and as an SHA sopho- ,under Harvard Goding at the'

F:ive Sacred Hearts ,Aca'de~y Alumnae Join

To Present Holy Union Concert 'Nov. 6

Benedictine Nuns In Newman Work

Continued from Page One olic observers and participantG proved very successful. ,Work has already begun for a more fruitful celebration of Unity Week in January. Beneficial eM­ perience was gained by also taking, part in meetings at Pack­ . ard Manse and in the 167th An­ nual Meeting of the Church 0If Christ. 'l1he Fall River Monsignor re­ minded his fellow priests, rep­ resentatives in their own locales of the Bishop, that no paternal­ istic attitude would do in the ecumenical field. Following the lead of Pope Paul, Bishop Con­ nolly and the Ecumenical Coun­ cil, the only real atitude can be that of sincere humility and an eagerness to share. A wonderful opportunity Ell afforded each priest, the pastor explained, with the invit,atioI). to join various ministerial associa­ tions, throughout the Diocese. If priests do not eagerly take part, "We ourselves will be the poorer for it," he explained. Together with increased ac­ tivity on deanery, levels, the prelate 'urged sincere 'adoption, of the Council's' requests: in­ ,terior conversion, changes ox heart, prayer, humility.

'~D~rm@[;Q)°~ ~@~~ Continued from Page. OnQ Shades of pink were selected as the colors for decorations; The young ladies to be presented to His Excellency, Bishop James , L. Connolly, will be attired ,in white gowns. Decoration Committee assign­ ments made by the new Co­ Chairmen are: Cape district, en­ trance and reception area; ball­ room and orchestra dais, Taun­ ton and Fall River districts; boxes and seat covers, New Bed­ ford district; Attleboro has been assigned the decoration and furnishing of the Bishop's box. Th,ere will be corresponding Committees in ,the two sponsor­ ing organizations to work OIl all phases of the ball at the dis­ trict 'level. ''The genuine zeal of the Com­ mittee at this date of p~epara­ tion;" the Co-Chairmen said to­ day "promises to produce 'all 'event that will surpass all oUl' previous efforts in beauty and enjoyment."

Sturtevant 6-

Hook

Est. 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford

tHy 6.5661

tie

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

forr Bristol County

Bristol County

Trust Company

,tAUNTON, MASS. THE BANK ON

TAUNTON GREEN

Member or Federal Bett_'

Insurance CorporailoD


... Feehan Moves Closer to Flag:

North Easton's Oliver Ames Bids for Hockomock Title Franklin High may be

~ading

the Hockomock school­

boy gridiron circuit momentarily but Oliver Ames expects

it will be the loop's sole first place possessor after next Saturday's clash between the two perennial powers at North Easton. Coach ·Val Muscato's ~ Orange and black, an easy 15m year of vai'sity conference . t T t competition. . 30- 6 VIC or over ann on Coach Joe Bettencourt's New High in a non-league tilt last Bedford gridders enjoyed one of

THE ANCHQR-Diocese of FQll River-Thurs.• O~t. 27•. 1966

Joe Santos 01 Swansea

!Field General at Plans

Te~ching

Writes Verse Bible

BrEldgeD0~I~t

and CoacJfnn1IDg (CareeIr

lBy Joe Miranda Number 23 on the Bridge­ port University football team is Joseph Dennis Santos Jr. of Swansea, an outstanding

Fall River Diocese scholastic weekend,is one of two schools their best afternoons of the cur­ quarterback when at Case High within the confines of the dierent campaign last Saturday who is adding to the Connecticut cese that competes in the Hock- when. they r~n all over Water­ team's proficiency on the grid­ omock League. Franklin edged town, 28-8, in a Greater Boston iron. Foxboro 14-6, on Saturday last, Suburban League game in the Sant.os was one of the best ath­ to retain the loop lead!. Whaling City. The ebullient letes ever to come out of Case Tremble Ror Hornets Crimson tackle Brockton in their High, who went on to stardom All-winning B i 8 hop Feehan next outing. . at Dean Junior College for two High o:f Attleboro, more contiCase of Swansea, coming oU se~sons before appearing on the dent than ever that it is going to m tie, will play Dighton-Reha­ Bridgeport scene. gFah the Bristol County League both, at the latter's field in the Phys Ell! Major pennant, expects far less trouble only Narragansett League con­ Considered an average student from Mansfield High in its up- test sheduled this weekend. The throughout his scholastic career, ooming Saturday engagement other Narry teams go outside Santos is a physical education than the Shamrocks experienced league competition for their major and hopes. to pursue a in their 27-24, come-from-behind games. career in coaching and teaching. win over Durfee of Fall River Joe is listed in the Bridgeport Shea and Merry last weekend when they regis­ Coach Jim Sullivan's Somerset program as a 5-11, 167-pound tered their fourth league vic­ High lads, who trounced Bristol quarterback and. recently made tory which was lIllso their fifth of Rhode Island, 22-6, will en­ history at the Connecticut col­ of the current campaign. gage Canton at the Hockomock lege by kicking the first field Mansfield, the other Bristol League team's field on Saturday. goal-a 23-yard boot, which County club in the Hockomock Beaten 35-12 on Saturday last gave the Purple Knights a 3-0 competition, is having its trou­ by Wrentham's King Philip victory over Cortland State-in bles this Fall. Usually a power, High, also of the Hockomock the 19-year existence of football the Green Hornets, who have yet loop, Seekonk will take a i'est at the school. to win a league contest, nosed When Santos enrolled at ihis week. out Milford 8-6,' in their last Durfee, anticipating a"breath~ Bridgeport, coach Dr. Anthe1'O outing. They will be meeting one er" . hen it plays last-place (Nick) Nicolau' stated, "his of their most formidable oppo­ strong passing arm should give North Attleboro High -at the lat­ nents of the season whe:. they ter's field on Saturday, now is the Purple Knights their finest go to Attleboro ne:xt Saturday out ot the county pennant ra~ aerial game in recent seasons." to tangle with Feehan. J0e possesses a tremendoull for all practical purposes. In Power-ladened Lawrence High losing to Hanewich's Shamrocks, amount of ability, but does not of Falmouth, now firmly en­ .their second loop defeat, the relax, working extremly hard trenched atop the Capeway Con­ Hill-toppers' superior ground durin-g practice sessions 10 im­ ference by virtue of its 52-0 play succumbed to one of the J)Fove his game. His competitive FOut of injury-riddled Dennis­ sllliYit was displayed during try­ finest-if not the finesi-exbibi­ Yarmouth, batues Old Rochester tions of aerial artistry by a 'sec­ outs for the Bridgeport varsity next. Coach Bob Yates' Clippers. ondary schoolboy in these parts when he began as a third string undefeated and untied in their in the past decade as the uncan­ signal caller and won the stari­ three conference contests, ~nti­ DY accuracy of quarterback John ing 4luarterback assignment. be­ cipate clear sailing to the title Shea accounted for a total of ap­ season got underway. if they continue their winning proximately 265 airway yards jore theThree Letterman ~ays in tbeir next two struggles, that figured in all four of bis Santos competed in footbaD the first against Old Rochester club's touchdowns. 2lnd' .basebal. for two seasonS at at home this coming Saturday This tremendous individual Dean Junior College in Franklin and the ~ond. at Boume the . performance neverthele.ss neces~ and was a three lettterman at tt;llJowing week. sitated the educated-toe of Paul' Case, playing football and base­ Coach ~uss Bums' Canalmen Merry whose three after-touch­ ball under Jack McCarthy and "dropped to the runner-up :rung down placement kicks provided' basketball under Howie. O'Ha~ ~n the Cape conference when it at the Swansea -schoo~.. . :the margin of victory. ~as. held t9 l'\ 14-14 stalemate .', Santos started on the Case kwelers Rebound by Old Rochester last Saturday. Coach Charley Connell's fiery . bllseball team for four years, Victory eluded Bourne when III ,Bishop Stang· High combine of spent three seasons directing 'the late fourth-period field goal try Dartmouth continues in the thick Cardinals football fortunes, but failed. The Burnsmen travel Sat­ . of the county circuit champion­ played the hoop sport only as urday to Dartmouth which had ship competition, having. dis­ a senior. Joe performed for two to settle for a 6-6 tie in its last P<lsed of New Bedford Vocation­ years with St. Dominic's in the outing against Case of Swansea. al, 26-15, in its last test. The . FaU. River CYO Intermediate Powers' Long Jaunt Spartans, undefeated in league League. Wareham High,' which has play but with one less ytin than During his stay at Dean, san­ been idled for the past two their northern county diocesan tos was, described as an excel­ weeks, jo.umeys Saturday to rivals, will be striving to turn lent student and Joe is doing Barnstable which put on an back a rejuvenated Attleboro very well in the all-important electrifying finish last weekend eleven whic~ has now chalked' academic phase at .Bridgeport. to smother Fairhaven, 20-6. up three straight triumphs after The only' son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Powers' 67-yard touch­ having dropped their first two Joseph D. Santos of 2315 Grand . down run on an intercepted pass season's encounters. Army Highway in Swansea, Joe highlighted the Red Raiders' at­ Msgr. Coyle High of Taunton, also has a sister Mrs. Lorraine tack in a thriller that saw an which engages Stoughton next Lavoie, a nephew and niece. scoring accomplished in the Saturday at the .Hockomock Athletics are Joe's hobbies and second half. team's field, was trounced 20-0 . in addition to football, basket­ Fairhaven, having its troubles last weekend by Coach Jim Cas­ ball and baseball, the youthful in the new Cape circuit, meets a sidy's improving Attleboro Jew­ St. Dominic's parishioner enjoYIl more evenly matched Dennis­ elers in a Bristol County League hockey and golf. Yarmouth on its own field this tussle. _ Excellent Punter Saturday. Stoughton of the Hockomock Under McCarthy's tutelage, Norton High, sole school with­ competition walloped North At­ Santos blossomed from a good in the diocesan boundary lines freshman quarterback into an Ueboro, 34-0, last Saturday. in the Clover Valley Conference,

outstanding varsity performer, registered its initial season win,

who led Case to 19 wins and two 18-0, over Martha's Vineyard, ti in 2.7 games at the Cardill1aJl in a non-league affair last Sat­

Observance of National eyO throttle. urday, lifting its spirit for this His high school coach termed Week from Sunday, Oct. 3C weekend's home encounter with through Saturday, Nov. 5 will be him the most talented boy be Dover-Sherborn. Norton baa highlighted in the Attleboro has ever had, noting that Santos dropped three and tied one in im area by attendance at Mass and could do .everything well and said one of his best attributes corporate Communion at 5 Sun­ day evening at St. Mary's was his kicking, although it was ALICANTE (NC) Carlos Church, Norton. Area CYO offi­ over-looked because of his other Herrero Munoz, a school teacher Glers will be installed during the ·accomplishments. . here in Spain,. has finillhed his Mass and a buffet will follow. On the gridiron, Santos gained verse rendering of the Bible, III At 8 Friday night, Nov. 4 a dance the ll'espect of opponents as & I5-million-verse t e ]I t covering will be held at st. John's audi­ sophomore, and finished his jun­ ioEhJm, Attleboro. ,,'. 40,000 ~geB. Clio!!' fleason as the second higbes1l

Attleboro CYO

19

JOE SANTOS of Swansea scorer in the Greater Fall River area with 27 points and was named to a second team ,berth on the All-Tri County Con.ferenee team. As a senior, Santos was prob­ ably the best all-around school­ boy quarterback in the Diocese. Named to a first team All-TCC berth, Joe tossed seven touch­ down passes, sparked his club to II 7-2 record and helped team­ mate Mike Travers become the small school State scoriI;lg cham­ pion. . . Although Santos missed two games because of a head injury in that· final football year, he was still picked as Case's :oUt­ standing gridder and received the Swansea American Legion Award,symbolic of that statl;ls.. A quiet, polite and very' like­ able' boy, Santos enjoyed his greatest scholastic success on the baseball diamond and it is, ex­ pected that the pitcher-infield.er­ outfielder will be prominent on the baseball field for Bridgeport. Best in Baseball Santos' versatility' in baseball was shown during his senior year at Case, when the ,right­ hander was chosen to the All­ Narry League first ,team as a third baseman, after being se­ lected for two years as an AlJ­ league pitcher. As a sophomore, Santos led Harry· .'home run hitters with four, finished with a .302 batting average and his 78 strikeouts and 4-2 mound record earned him a berth on the All-Narry team. The Case star improved in his

jmlioy year, batting .351, leadinr the eircuit with five homers alll CClmpiling a 6-1 mound recor& and repeated' status as an all­ loop hurler. Narry records fell when San­ tos was a senior, capping a' bril­ liant baseball career with a .500 ·batting average, leading the "league in hits with 22 and 'rum

". scored with 25. Joe hit iO'ltT

'homers and' had a 6-1 .mound

record, but coaches felt he' 311)0

merited an All-Narry selection

. at. third ,base ior his stellar ,per­

. . J1o"fmance at the hot corn~r..• ". , Santos continued his b.aseb.<lD ~C1>;eer after high school ;with

" ~an Junio~ College and ~wai)­

:;.ea· im the 7;one Nine Am'i'ric;;m

i.egion League and last, yeai',

,li~ . perforD1ed in the Newport

Sunset League with the Island

M~rchants~ . As a basketball player witDl Case, Santos averaged nini2 Points pel; game, was an excel­ ltlmt Jrebounder and good teamc. playei' in helping the Cardinali; po~t·:m 111-5 record. I,

We H. RILEY', & SON, Inc. CITIES SERVIa

DfSTRI II , '-"RS

Gasoline Fuer and Range

OILS

~c-.......-o_a_o~o_o.-~

IPlan To Build?1 ,

I tf

See Us About

j

,

low Cost· Financing .!

WAREHAM ." SAVINGS BANK j Wareham

':Y 5-38CiG" ~o-o

Fal'mou~ ,

m

Q-~~~:

. . .o.-~0E!9~oe:>Oc=loOC:::::::>O

OIL BURNERS For

,.~.

. delivery

& Day & Night Service G. E. BOILER BURNtR UNITS

RunrlI Bottled Gas Service 61 COHANNEl ST. TAUNTON . Attleboro - No. Attleboro.

.. lunton

b="""" -----"'~


20

THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 27, 1966

Nov.' 6 ' Concert

Th~:

tirade and at t'he same time be- ' to study violin with Sister ~inifred M.arie, S.U.S.C., with ",hom her s~udies continued 'lbroughout 'high school. She I>resented concerts during her lireshman and senior years at the /lCademy, and one of her cher­ fished memories is that Bishop (Cassidy was 'guest of honor at llier senior concert. A son and daughter are among IJtudents of Mrs. Eagan, and her \\laughter, Nicole, who is follow­ &ng in her, mother's footsteps at SHA elemEmtary 'school,' was a prizewinner in a recent science .l.ieir for an exhibit explaining (lIhe properties of sound through ooference to the structl.il·e of a violin. As a high school senior, Mrs. <flnouinani received a scholar­ lilhip to the New England Con­ ,. ilIel'vatory and her work there 'was under Harrison Keller. She ils a member of Sigma Alpha 1lota musical society. After her work at the conservatory, 'Mrs. <ehouinard taught at A.dington Academy and headed the de­ pintment of music at Fernald State School. She has played with the Fali River Symphony and presented many concerts in . ¢he area. She is a member of Notre Dame parish. Mrs. Grobe Mrs. Grobe, a member of St. Anne's parish 'in Fall River, atudied at SHA for four years under Sister Agnes Lucie, and attended Juilli<ird School of Music after graduation. There she studied under Lonny Ep­ atien, combining her own work with teaching theory to other students. She was at Juilliard for three years and four Summer sessions, then went on to gradu­ ate work with Dr. Carl Fried­ berg and teaching in Juilliard's prep division and at the Carnegie School of Musi.c. She has performed at Juilli­ ard, the Carnegie Recital Hall and the Steinway Hall, all in New York City. Her professional memberships include the Massa­ a:husetts Music Teachers Associ­ ation and the National Teachers Guild. She is also active as mein­ bership chairman of the Fall River Music Club and as a aponsor of the Junior Music lClub. . Mrs. Grobe has a daughter, I), whom she teaches piano; and, ~e is proud that the youngster won a second prize trophy in ­ cJ'une as a junior- entrant in a ... contest sponsored for all New England by the Massachusetts Music Teachers Association.

Open paily 9 A.M.' to ',10 , ....

furniture, Wonderland

<e~)Htinued from Page Eighteen'

of ' the' Eost .

....

gao

..

Saturdayi .~

.

Repeatot a Sellout!

Big, Triple Dresser Bedroom,'Suite

From One of A'merica·~s Foremost Manufacturers

,:

"

Commode

i

I I

I

"

~

,:

,FORECAST.

• e,

Smart. Contemporary. Design - Maximum Storage Space

J$259 ,

• Full' Siz~· Bed

J'.,!Exactly As

.

Give Meyer Award To, Union Organizr:er,

• Commodious Chest'

• '72 inch Triple Dresser with Framed, Mirror

The program to be offered by t!he five artists on Nov. fi will !Dclude works by Brahms, Bach, Debussy, Chopin, Schumann illld itthers. . ,

CHICAGO (NC) - Anthony Z;valich, 40, Hapeville, Ga" un':: don organizer, was presented with the second annual Cal'qinal Meyer award by the Young € h ristian Movement here. Named for the late 'Albert Cal'­ <iinal Meyer of Chicago, the award was presented by Msgr. lReynold Hillenbrand, YClV: na­ tional chaplain, Zivalich was se­ lected as the former member of the YCM best typifying the ideal set before the movement by Cardinal Meyer who asked the members to "take the temporal order seriously," From ~,947 to 1950 Zi\ralich served as the first national pres­ ident of the Young Christian Movement. He is married and ~ fathe!: of eight children.

.

.

.' ;:": . 'Iri~ludin'g

"

I

'

I

w~ sold :outin ,a hurty the last time' , : we 'advertised this distinctive bed­ room suite and little wonder when you see the superb quality and craftsmanship offered Glt this low price! Masterfully designed and constructed with smart ~ntempor-

. .

ShoWn'

lines; . d~stp~ interiors Clftd center d~awer. ,guides, ",ade of spe­ ,cially sele~d walnut in a rich, hand-rubbed ffinish. A special ClCIf\o load purchase eombined with, our low rent, warehouse location makes this low price possible. ,ciry

fREE DELIVERY

Convenient Bucllget Terms No Banks

011'

A'CLtIE$ rolF

lrinCllnce

!F.L",/,IE~ 1E'~~i{aN~

Companies'IFl!Il Pel}!, "New [England!'s 1l.e111'ges~ !Furnitull'e ShowlI'ccll\l\l"


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.