Finalize Plans. f()r .New·Boys' High
.Fall·:Riverites to Attendr'Classes Temporarily in·New.St. Williams~
CeD Building Pending Completio;m of Bishop 'Connolly High -
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An estimated 200' incom ing freshmen for the 'ne~ Catholic Boys High School in Fall'River named .in honor
READY PLANS FOR OPENING OF FALL RIVER BOYS HIGH SCHOOL FR.
P.
Supt.
J.' O'NEILL
FR.
0/ Schools
J. .Y.
J.
L. CONNOLL~ ,Diocesan Ordinary
O'CONNOR
BISHOP
Jesuit Provincial
MSGR.
R. T.
CONSIDINE
Acting Vicar Ge11eral
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The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Oct. 28, 1965
Bishop Connolly Makes ·ClerQV Appointments The Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the .Diocese of Fall River, a~nounced today the transfer of three assistants and the appointments of three priests to - Youth work in the Diocese. Rev. Francis M. Coady, assistant· at St. Joan of Arc Church, . Orleans for the past seven of the CYO and CYAO for the .years, has .beell transferred See city, succeeding Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, who is continuing as ·to Our Lady of Victory Diocesan CYO Director and .Church, Centerville, as assistant. Rev. Bernard F. Sullivan, assistant at St. Mary Church, Norton, will serve as assistant at St. Patrick Church, Somerset. Rev. Donald J. Bowen, assist.ant at St. Patrick Church, Somerset, has been transferred to St. Mary Church, Norton, as assist.ant. Rev. Paul F. McCarrick, assistant at St. Mary's Cathedral, . Fall River, will become Director o
Vol. 9, No. 43 ©
1965 The Anchor
PRICE lOc $4.00 per Year
Director of Cathedral' Camp, 'East Freetown.' Rev. Roger D. LeDuc, assist-
.~~~ '::tl~~::'dW~eab~CO~u;~~ rector of the Catholic Young Adults Organization, Attleboro Deanery. Rev. Donald J. Bowen, who will serve as assistant at St. Mary Church, Norton, will act, as Director of the Catholic Youth Turn to Page Two
Roman Experiences Breathe New Meaning into Freedom BY MSGR. HUMBERTO S. MEDEIROS Diocesan Chancellor - Council Peritus
Three incidents in my life yesterday brought home to me dramatically what has been called the "thorny" problem of religious freedom. Bishop Gerrard and I attended the solemn ceremony of beatification of Blessed Jacques Berthieu, S.J., a missionary said in clear. and unmistakable priest who was shot down terms, "it is reaffirmed that the for the faith in Madagascar true religion, the one willed by on June 8, 1896. Before or God, is the only one; it is the dering his execution, one of the chiefs of the Menalamba told Father Berthieu: "R e n 0 un c e your vile religion and stop mis leading the people; we will take you and make you our chief and counsellor and won't kill you." Father Berthieu's last words were these, "I can never
agree to that, my son: I prefer to die." We left sT. Peter's' Basilica at noon, as the Holy Father ap peared at a window of his apart ment to pray with the people gathered by the thousands in the Square below and to bless them. Pope Paul VI spoke first of'the approval given by the Council to the Declaration on the Church's relationship to non Christian religions. "In it," he
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one which we have the good for tune to have and the duty to practice; at the same time it is recognizeo. that we must have respect for other religions, for whatever true and good they may contain, and must treat well and love those who follow them. The law of charity is enlarged and is applied to alL"
Then he prayed with the peo ple for all non-Christions, espe cially the ·Hebrews with whom we have a spiritual relationship, and also for Moslems. We left our place in St. Peter's Square to look for a taxi to take us to the hotel. As I scurried about for one, Bishop Gerrard )'\Tas held up by a group of pil grims who wanted his blessing. Turn to Page Seventeen
Rev. F. M. Coady'
Rev. B. F. Sullivan
Rev.. D. I. Bowen
of Bishop Connolly will be ac comodated temporarily in a $200,000 addition to the fonner St. William's Church, Fall River, pending completion of the new B~shop Connolly' educational facility. Registration for the new school that will be staffed by the Jesu its of the New England Province wi,ll start Saturday Jan. 15, ·1966. . Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, pastor of St. William's Church and acting Vicar Gen eral, has announced that a sec ond floor is being added to the parish building, the for mer church, at the corner of Chicago St. and Stafford Road, Fall Ri ver. Seven classrooms will be available on this upper level. The ground floor will continue to be used as the parish audi torium. It also has a kitchen. Two new entrances at street level are being installed. Brick facing is being placed around' the exterior of the structure. Msgr. Considine said the par ish buildiflg program had been: scheduled before Most Rev. Bishop James L. Connolly began looking for temporary class room space for the new high school. "It was something we planned to do anyway and had already started," Msgr. Considine said. Because of the high school problem, Msgr. Considine of fered to push a crash program that would enable St. William'a ';l'urn to Page Five
Pope Proclaims Five Decrees Today A clear view of the pf'oo. ducts and by-products of the Vatican Council is available this week in that Pope Paul . today officially proclaims five decrees and the Bishops get down to preparing further de crees and making adaptations in other fields. Today, Pope Paul, as the Su preme Shepherd and Eldest Brother of the Bishops, accepted the final votes of his fellow bishops on five decrees or doe uments and gave them his offi cial approval, thus making them binding on the whole Catholic world. During the week, however, the Bishops in council expressed their opinions and decisions in Turn to Page Twenty
Diocesan Clothing Appeal' World Under-Privileged Look to More Fortunate for Cast-offs To Keep Warm; Collection. Will Start Next Sunday •
"Our Diocese has done a splendid job down through the years and I am certain it 'will respond as generously again this year." Rev. Francis A. McCarthy said today as he announced the annual Thanksgiving Clothing Appeal will start on Sunday next, Oct. 31. The diocesan clothing appeal director, who is also pastor of St. Patrick's parish in Somer set, noted that U.S. dioceses have been assigned different weeks because of the vastness of the project and the way it haa grown in this Ml1ntry
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"The emphasis this year," said Father' Mc
Carthy, "is on blankets, remnants, men's cloth ing, work shoes and Clothing for infants and small children." The need is as great as ever, the diocesan director asserted as he urged the cooperation of all in the program which helps to clothe the under-privileged in all parts of the world. "Look over your wardrobe, and, whatever you can spare or discard, we will gladly accept if it will provide warmth for someone DOt . . fpri l 'Pat.e" Iaa aai.cL
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Men Wanted,
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
All men of the Attleboro areIl are urged to join St. John t~ Evangelist Nocturnal Adoration Society to . provide continuoU8 Adoration at the Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament on First F rid a y s. Numerous. spiritual benefits are to be derived from membership and participation. The. organization Is sponsored by St. John's Council No. 404, K. of C. Lawrence N. Dufanny. president, says men may selec* any hour between 9 P.M. and , A.M. Call 222-6782 to register.
Diocese 'of Fall River OFFICIAL TRANSFERS Rev. Francis M. Coady, assistant at St. Joan of'Arc Church,. Oi:1eans, to Our Lady of Victory, Centerville, as assistant. Rev. Bernard F. Sullivan, assistant at St. Mary Church,
Norton, to St. Patrick Church, Somerset, as assistant.
Rev. Donald J. Bowen, 'assistant at St. Patrick, Somerset,
to St. Mary Church Norton, as assistant.
Mass Ordo FRIDAY~Mass of
APPOINTMENTS Rev. Paul F. McCarrick as Director of The Catholic Youth Organization, City of Fall River, and Catholic Young Adults Organization, City of Fall River. Rev. Donald J. Bowen as Director of the Catholic Youth Organization, Attleboro Deanery. . Rev. Roger D. LeDuc, Catholie Young Adults Organization, Attleboro DeanerY. Rev. John E. Boyd, st. Patrick, Church, Fall River, from Administrator to Pastor. . Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, St. Louis Church, Fall River, from Administrator to Pastor. Rt. ,Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, Our Lady of the Angels, Fall River, from Administrator to Pastor. . Effective date of transfers and appointments, Wed nesday, .Nov. 3, 1965. .
REV. PAUL F. McCARRICK
Clergy Appointments
~~./~;;5;" Bishop of FaD River
'Proper of the Mass Feast of. Christ the Kil1g INTROIT: Worthy.is the Lamb who was slain to . receive power, and divinity, and wisdom, and strength, and honor. To. him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. 0 God, With your Judgment endow the King, and with your justice, the King's son. Glory be to the Father, and to the SOn, and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning; is now and ever shall be world without end. Amen. W9'rthy is the Lamb who was slain to receive power, and divinity, and wisdom, and strength, and honor. To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. GRADUAL: He shall rule from sea to sea, and from the River t~ the ends of the earth. All kings shall pay him homage, all nations shall serve him. Alleluia, alleluia. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that shall not be taken away, and his kingdom shall not be destroyed. Alleluia. . .
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OFFERTORY: Ask. of me and I will give you the nations for an inheritance and the ends of the earth for your possession. COMMUNION: The Lord is enthroned as King for ever; may' the ,Lord bless his people with peace! Plea5" Clip and Bring to Church on S"nday
Continued from Page One Organization, Attleboro Deanery. All the assignments and trans fers are effective Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1965. Father Coady, who has served as assistant at St. Joan of Arc Church, Orleans, since July, 1958, was born on May 12, 1921, in Fall River, the son of Mrs. Mary A. Greaney Coady and the late John A. Coady. The new Centerville a5sistant is a Coyle High alumnus and attended Providence College and St. Mary's Seminary, Balti more. He was ordained on Dee. 22, 1945 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by the late Bishop James E. Cassidy. Following ordination, Father Coady was assigned to St. James Church, New Bedford. He then serve.d at' Our Lady'of the As sumption Church, Osterville, and ,for 12 years, as assistant at st. Peter Church, Provincetown. Father Sullivan was born Oct. 6, 1933, in Fall River, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard F. Sul livan. Educated at Coyle High, Cardinal O'Connell Seminary, Jamaica Plain, and St. John'. Seminary, Brighton, the new Somerset assistant was ordained on Jan. 6, 1959, in St. Mary'. Cathedral, Fall River, by Most Rev. James L. Connolly. Since ordination, Father Sul livan has served as assistant at the Norton Church and has also been CYO Director of the Attle boro Area. Father Bowen, who will serve as assistant at St. Mary Church, Norton, and Director of the CYO of the Attleboro Deanery, was born July 1, 1938, in Attleboro, the son of Francis I. and Eliza beth McNamara Bowen. A graduate of Coyle High School, Father Bowen attended St. . Thomas' Seminary, Hart ford, St. Mary's Seminary, Bal-
.Necrology NOV. 6
Rev. Patrick S. McGee, 1933, Founder, St. Mary, Hebro~ville.
DUR~'EE FAI.L RIVER
REV. ROGER LeDUC
timore" and the Theological College, Washington. Ordained on May 30, 1964, in st. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by Bishop Connolly, the new CYO Director of the' Attle boro Deanery has served as assistant at St. Patrick Church, Somerset, since ordination. Fa ther Bowen will report as as sistant in St. Mary ChUrch, Nor.ton, Wednesday, Nov. 1. Father McCarrick, who will continue' to serve as assistant at the Cathedral, was b'orn' April 1, 1931, in Malden, the son of Pa trick H. and Mary A. Kilroy. McCarrick. . A graduate of Boston College High ~chool and Boston College, he attended St: Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, and was ordained on March 17, 1956 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by Bishop Connolly. Father McCarrick has served as assistant in two parishes; St. William, Fall River, and the Cathedral. . Father McCarrick has served as chaplain at Mt. st. Mary Academy, Fall River, since 1958, and has been chaplain of the Fall River Fire Department since 1959. He has also served as a speaker in the Diocesan Pre-Cana program. Father LeDuc, who will con tinue as assistant at Sacred Heart Church, No. Attleboro, in addition to being the newly . appointed Director of the CYAO in the Attleboro Deanery, was born Oct. 'I, 1935, in New Bed ford, the son of Lionel B. and Jeanne B. Charest LeDuc. The new spiritual leader of the CYAO atended College de l'
Assomption, L'Assomption, P.Q.,
Canada, and St. Mary's Semi
nary, Baltimore, and was or
dained by Bishop Connolly on
April 2, 1960, in St. Mary's Ca
thedral, Fall River.
Following ordination, Father
LeDuc was given his present
assignment.
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THE lNCHOI second Class Postage Paid It Fall RIver, Mass. Published every Thursday It 410 Highland. Avenue, Fall River, Mass.. 02722 by the Catholic Press·.ot the Diocese "of Fall River, SUbscrl,t1oo price by mall, fOStpald $4.00 per year.
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.. THE ANCHOR-
Education Owes Maximum Freedom to Religion
St. Francis Xavier Relic C;oming Here
, ,PHILADELPHIA (NC)-A law school dean called here for an expansion' of academic and religious freedom to take account of the religious beliefs of public school pupils, and teachers. Father Robert F. Drinan, S.J., dean of the Bos ton College law schoofcharg merely the law-maker but also ed that suppression of relig- the morals-maker." ious beliefs in all school-rePlace of Religion lated activities is "in vio''The accent in discussions lation of America's traditionally about the place of religion in the deep-seated respect for the re- public school should... be shifted ligious freedom of every per- from the often exaggerated em son." phasis on the no-aid-to-religion, Furthermore, he said, ne- principle to the equally impor !lect of religion in pubilc' tant but often neglected prin schools "creates an unrealistic' ciple of extending the maximum situation, a never-never land, freedom in religious and cul which prevents the public tural matters to all citizens," he school from carrying out one of said. ' its missions-the establishment He called it an' "undeniable of community understa~ding fact" that public schools have despite the presence of religious "not ... done as much as is pos differences." sible to carry out their role in Acute Problem promoting, community underFather Drinan warned that the standing," and added:' problem of giving instruction "Is it not fair to raise the about religion and morality in question whether the silence public schools is today "more about religion in the public acute than most educators will school is the best way to bring admit and more important than ,about interreligious harmony most parents or churchmen re- among the young citizens of the aHze." oncoming generation? "For the danger now," he said, "is not that the schools will revert to some type of neo-sectarianism, but rather that the schools will, pursuant to the most lauQable motives, New officers of the Fall River' teach moral values not as the Diocesan CYO will be among products of any re~gions tradi-. delegates to the national conven tion but as truths to be accepted tion of the organization, to be and adhered to because they are h e 1 d in Chicago Thursday state-endorsed and state-en through Sunday, Nov. 11 through forced." 14. As matters now stand, he said, The newly installed officers a public school teacher cannot are James Gibney, president; eonstitutionally give any reason Irene Gagnon, vice-president; for saying that actions like lying, Linda O'Bara, secretary; James stealing and cheating are wrong, Murphy, treasurer; Robert Kos other than that the state says ka, recreational chairman; and they are. Michael McNally, public rela He suggested that this amounts tions chairman. to saying that the state is "not Gibney and McNally will travel to the :convention, accom '}>anied by Brian' Corey' of St. Re~earch Joseph's parish, Fall River, pres ident of the New England Re gional CYO; Henry Gillette; and WASHINGTON (NC)-Nature Abel Marceline, CYO coordina will bring about a soaring death tor for the Diocese. TV Mass rate unless man finds a solution Diocesan CYO members will to the population explosion soon, form the congregation for, the a population expert said here. weekly televised Mass of Chan Dr. Franklin T. Bayer, direc tor of Georgetown University's nel Six, New Bedford, at 10 Sun day morning, Oct. 30. Institute ,for Population Re Also announced for the group search, made the statement dur is a iour day trip to Washington, ing a lecture on the Church, D. C., to be held during Spring ~irth control and the demo vacation. ' graphic revolution. The lecture was part of a two-week program ,marking the opening of the Yale Names Priest Abraham S. Kay Spiritual Life Center at Methodist - affiliated To Divinity School American University here. NEW HAVEN (NC)-Father Unless massive research on the Roland E. Murphy, O. Carm., problem of too many people is professor of Old Testament at begun soon, Brayer said, "nature the Catholic University of Amer will solve it by bringing back ica, Washington, has been named the Four Horsemen of the a "visiting professor" at the Apocalypse [war, famine, death Yale Divinity School, a nonde and diseasel, some say in the nominational Protestant insti near future." tution. He is the first Catholic "The money available for re priest ever to be named to the search into reproductive physi faculty. ology is about enough to buy the Father Murphy, who was visit match to light the rocket to send ing professor of Old Testament the men to the .moon," he said last year at the Pittsburgh Th(~ in a reference to the U. S. moon logical Seminary, a Presbyterian project. institution, studied at the Cath olic University of America and Conference ~he Pontifical Biblical I?stitl;'-te " In Rome. He has been edltor-ln IMMACULATA (NC) ~ The chief of the Catholic Biblical Movement of Christian Democ-- Quarterly since 1958 and is au racy in Latin America" will be thor of "The Dead 'Sea Scrolls dis~ussed by Radomiro Tomic, and the Bible" (1956) and Chilean ambassador to the "Seven Books of Wisdom" (1960) United States, at the third bien nial Latin American Conference Pharmacists' Mass· at Immacull\.ta College here in Pennsylvania Saturday. Repre The annual Mass for l~ving sentatives of more than 90 col and deceased members of St. leges and secondary schools will James Catholic Pharmacists' participate in the program de Guild of the Fall River Diocese signed to foster and promote the will be celebrated at 9:45 Sun teaching 'of Latin American day morning, Oct. 31, at St. IIiator:v. James Church, New Bedford.
To Go to Chicago For Convention
Need On Population
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Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
HONG KONG-Bitish Over seas Airways has announced 'here that it will fly an arm relic of St. Francis Xavier to the United States where it will be seen in a New Jersey depart menfstore. A portion of the arm of the famed 16th-century missionary ~s now kept in St. Paul's'Church in Macao. It will be flown to the U. 's. and will be exhibited in a Newark department store, as part of that store's "Caravan Out of the East" promotion start ing on Monday, Nov. 8.
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WHITE MASS: At annual White Mass for members of healing professions are, from left, Mrs. Thomas J. Flem ing, R.N., Fall River Catholic Nurses' Guild president; Mrs. William J. Maloney, R.N.; Dr. Francis J; D'Errico, Catholic Physicians' Guild president; Dr. Paul P. Dunn. Mass was celebrated at St. Mary's Cath~dral, Fall River.
Named for States Expect Classrooms in New High School
To Stil1lulate Interest in Neighbors
HADDON TOWNSHIP (NC) -"Fifty classrooms, 50 states it just sort of fell together in my mind." That was how Father Cyril McDonnell explained his idea to name each of the 50 classrooms in his new P,ope Paul VI High School now under construction 'here in New Jersey, after one of the stafes. "By doing this, I cannot help but feel that the stud,ents' inter est would' be stimulated and would make them want to know more about their neighbors. The name 'United States of America' would indeed become more meaningful," Father McDonnell said. To help spur the students' in terest, Father McDonnell asked each governor to supply the school with a state flag and a state seal, along with a letter of encouragement and welcome. So far, 35 states have'respond ed. Eleven have sent full-size state flags, and the others have sent seals, of varying sizes. Those not provided by the states will be bought by the school, but Father McDonnell, hopes the states which have I,lot sent the
materials will reconsider and do so. Have Flags, Seals ,Some states, he added, have been especially generous. "For instance, Gov. [of New York Nelson] Rockefeller's 0 f f ice called long distance to inform us that they would send us aU the materials we had requested. Other states, like Maryland, not ohly sent us the flag, seal and letter, but several boxes of books about that state. A few other states also sent texts and bro chures. Utah sent road maps." Each room, he said, "will take on the character and culture of the state for which it is named. And every student should be' come well acquainted with the history-past and present~and geography of the state. As they go from classroom to classroom, they will slowly but surely ab sorb the pluralistic background of this nation."
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n·n: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Oct.2S,
196~
Says Statistics Prove Population
Explosion I,s Political Expediency
Says Integrat.ion -Restores God-·Given Rights to Negro By Joseph T.
McGloin,
S.J.
'
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Often enough today, you hear people deploring violence the streets, picketing and whatever activity goes with the struggle for human rights. Cf;!rtainly all of us deplore extremists on any side of any question, despite the pious if ambiguous statement of that sage of a past age, that sometime~ the feeling on the part of professedly fair-minded extremism in the pursuit 0 f people, that they are "giving" freedom is no vice. At the'. something to the Negro when same time, however, we also dethey allow .him to .associate plore war, but we go to war with them, even on a pitifully. anyhow when it
limited basis. becomes. neces Deplores statement sary to safe There seems to be a pride in guard or even
accomplishment when a few recapture 0 u r
scared little Negro children are f' w n national
finally "allowed" into a corner rig h t s. And
of an otherwise pure white class while everyone
room. d e p lor e s
. Recently, for example, A violence on our
Southerner (a priest, unfortu streets, every nately) made the'remark that he one should sim- . thought' the white people of ilarly deplore Mississippi were being very gen the v i 0 I .:: nee erous indeed in allowing a few which is too cowardly for the Negroes to go to school -With streets. their children. The statement is There are times in this strug so appalling, especially consider gle, when one feels :very proud ing its source, that comment on of Americans and there are other it seems useless. times when the best you can Still in Ghetto work up to is shame. And since, And while a little child or two in gerteral, the ignorant are often is USed to integrate a. school enough the loudest as well, we technically, we still find the have much to be ashamed of in Negro in his ghetto, North and the rantings of the racist, who South. Especially in the Sout~ is not just loose in our land to we find him still denied the most day but is even protected by our basic of human rights, even as so-called local lav (And this those who should know better despitE:. the pious clamoring for pat themselves on the back for the state's right to "take care" of the splendid job of integration its own problems. they have helped to accomplish \ . Denial of Rights -or at least failed to block. But when we look at the You may, in fact, co~e upon shameful deniai of rights to so these same people discussing the many of our citizens, and espe question most fairly and intelli cially when we examine the gently in some elegant restau "gifts" bestowed in the civil rant where the only non-white rights law, we begin to wonder in the vicinity has to be either a which is the more despicable waiter or some other form of the ignorant, swaggering deity servant. who is a racist, or the ·person And when these good people "with no prejudice," who still are seated in these same plush does nothing about the situation~ restaurants, across the table It is, he says, none of his busi 'from a Negro, discussing this ness," and he seems to think, question as they ~ine, then we when he allows himself to think will be seeing some real prog at all, that he is bestowing a ress. great gift on some of his poor "White Entrance' relatives .by not actively oppos There is still the implicatron ing a civil rights law, which that "our way of life" is ours to "gives" nothing, but only voices share or not to share with our . a few rights which God had .al "inferiors" as we Wish. And ae ready giv~n and which, little sel companying this philosophy is fish men had taken away. the same old tired cliche which Country-Wide Problem began with Lincoln, that ,"it's Now it must be admitted that going to take time - to. change while the most shamefUl abuses our whole way of life." of civil rights usualIy occur in No one can' argue with that. the South, the problem is coun It is taking time. And you still try-wide. But, even when that is see in various places, even said, if would be hard indeed greasy little dumps with their to match the degree of cruelty cruel little signs, "White en - and stupidity seen in Mississippi trance," and "Colored entrance." recently-an attitude wittingly Integration is not a gift we described by a native Who, on bestow. It is not giving at all', seeing the accused sheriff fteed, but restoring what God has remarked that " .... Ole Rainey given in the first place, and what (the freed sheriff) could run for man, making himself a god, has governor now and make it." taken away. This is ignorance and racism in its most blatant form, and the French Missionary
sort of thing that makes a human being sick to his stomach. Priest Beatified
And yet, there is a more subtle expression cif prejudice which VATICAN CITY (NC)-Father may well be worse. There is Jacques Berthieu, S.J., a French missionary priest killed in Africa nearly 70 years ago, was beati Women Auditors fied in ceremonies at St. Peter's VATICAN CITY (NC)-Wom basilico. en are making progress in the The ceremony began with a Church. Now they are first on formal reading of the apostolic the.' official list of council audi brief inscribing the Jesuit mar-. tors. It is a matter of course that '(Y-r ,in' the roles of the blessed. along with the laymen, lay The reading was followed by women as' well as women Reli Mass . offered by Achbishop gious also attend c~uncil session Jerome Rakotomalal of Tanana and take part in various commit rive in the Malagasy Republic. tee meetings. All that's missing, In the afternoon Pope' Paul VI is that a woman be p(lrmitted to venerated the missionary priest address the council, as several in St. Peter's. Benediction of the laymen already ,have done. Blessed Sacrament was given by "That'll come in Vatican Ill, Bishop Maurice Pourchet CIi said one bishop Confidently. Saint-Fle~ J'ranee.
in
TO SPEAK: Sister Euge nia Margaret, S. U. S. C., eighth gra~ teacher at Sa cred Heart School, Taunton, will be first speaker in the annual lecture series spon sored by the literature de partment of Fall River Cath olic . Woman's Club at its clubhouse, ~42 Rock Street. Her talk is slated for 3 Sun day afternoon, Oct. 31. Mrs. Michael J. McMahon, series chairman, announces that subsequent speakers will be Owen T. P. McGowan in Jan uary and Rev. 'Francis X. Weiser, S. J. in March.
Professor Sees Rebellious Youth SAN ANTONIO (NC)-"Skep ticism has so permeated the minds of young men and women that they disagree 'with me be fore I have finished making a statement. .. I have taught in all kinCls of schools, from co educational to boys' schools and girls' schools, from Catholic to state schools, and my experience has been that most of the stu dents lack mental discipline.Dr. Francis J. Kovach, who holds the unusual position of chair of medieval philosophy and of contemporary Catholic thought at the University 'of Oklahoma,' unleashed a sting ing condemnation 'of a growing rebellious spirit of youth as he keynote~ the 1965 San Antonio archdiocesan teachers' institute here: Vicfuns of Times Speaking on "Contemporary Skepticism and the Catholic School," Dr. Kovach strongly. denounced the attitudes of young Americans in questioning long proven facts and well-establish ed knowledge.' "A considerable portion of them. .. are regrettable victims of our times," he said, "imbued with the spirit of skepticism." The Hungarian-born profes sor illustrated by declaring "I have girls in my class who say 'beauty is only in the eyes t~e beholder;' but they beaut~fy themselves before coming to class."
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PHILADELPHIA (NC)-"Most of what we hear on 'population explosion' is based on political expediency without, basis in fact," Catholic doctors and nurses were told here. This is proved, said Dr. Wil-' liam Egan, by statistics presented at the Third Asian Congress on populat~on density at Bombay, India. Dr. Egan, editor of the Linacre Quarterly, official journal of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians' Guilds, was the prin cipal speaker at a luncheon sponsored by the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Physicians Gpild after its annual White Mass. ' Claims of shortages of food and arable land are being used to force a change in the Church's stand on birth control, Dr. Egan said. "The real facts," he declared, "are these:
"Only one-third of the world" arable land is being used; the possible world agriculture eaa support a popUlation of 28 bi)' lion on an excellent diet and could support 92 .billion on the cereal diet to which the people8 of the Orient are accustomed.Present world population II only three billion, he said. Population density of India, singled out as an area whe:re birth control is an absolute nee essity, is less than that of central Europe, he said. He urged the Catholic physi cians and nurses present to make these statistics known, and said they must announce their de termination 10 practice medicine in accordance with God's plan. "The truthful voice of the Catholic physician and the Cath olic nurse must make itself heard above the shrill cries of the anti-Christ," he declared.
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Long before the' word 'ecumenlcar became fash ionable. the Sisters of the Imitation at Christ assigfted to Anchelpetty ill South IfIdia were reo' urMtms ChrIstians the hard way. Anc:helpetty is In a regIon strongly Syrian Orthodox. To educate the children out of poverty, the Sisters opened a primal')' school for all. It has been &0 success ful, the goVernment is now pressiRg them .to teach higher pede ~necessita1inga big. ger school•••• Three Syrian Orthodox priesta at Anc:helpetty have been reunited to the cath olic Church and, reports a diocesan officiaft "since the Sisters arrived, the aeostolate of l'eunion has been gaining ground. ••• H0W5 ever, the Sisters urgently need .an adequate school ($2,100), a convent addition for more Sisters ($1,200), and a real chapel (only $750). They have no hope of raising these sums in a . poor, AOR catholic region•••• Have you been asking yourself what you can do personally III an ecumenical way? When you send whatever you can ($100,$75, $50, $25, $20,.$15, $10, $5, $1) )'Ou wIN be showing the poor of ~nchelo petty what It really means to be a catholIC.
..
••
There's no way' of knowing how many souls wll be released from Purgatory this November bJ the Masses of thousands of priests in the Pope's i'HE Near East missions. (The offerings support ETERNAL them In spreading the Gospel, serving the poor.) &1FT Possibly your own Purgatory wiU be shortened by just one such remembranc:e of a parent (# fe1ative. Someday, a long neglected friend may welcome you aU the way Home With that kindeat" greeting: '"You rememberedl"
# At the tlnlted' States Air Foree Academy, • 'dooly' Is a freshman, esteemed b!Yllpper clas..
IN
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Dear
Monslpor R,yan:
. Please NitIIfn COUpoA with your offering
RlefI as the 1ow.est possible rank of human life. 'Recently at a cadet mass, after talking of the Pope's Near East missions,. Monsignor Ryan was approached b!Y a dooly who snapped to rigid attention, presented an envelope, about faced and marched away. '~ou might wonder about 1he odd amount of my gift," the note read. "We dooHes only get $15 a month, and this is all I have left." Somewhere in the Near ~st today, & dooly's $2.15 is helping a poor family who esteem the lowly dooly a~ the servant of e prOVident God-about 88 hIgh • rank as any human can hope for.
•
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NEAR EAST' MISSIDNS FRANctS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pntsident MSGR. JOSEPH T. RYAN, NatloRal Seeretallf .\ WItte: C«ntoLIC NEAR EMr WELMM AIsoc. • 3SO MIIdIson Avenue ..... York" "Y. JOOW T......... 2J2I\'UIlDII &5840 .
Year's Work Is To Complete National Shrine Sanctuary WASHINGTON (NC)-Work has been begun to com plete the east apse, west apse and sailctu'ary dome of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception here. When completed, the. entire sanctuary area will be finished in· every detail. The work is ex tensive, including marble fin saints-St. Aloysius Gonzaga, St. Stanislaus Kostka, St. Francis ish for the towering walls, Xavier, St. Ignatius Loyola, St. completion of five apsidal John Berchmans and St. Alphon
chapels dedicated to the joyful mysteries of the Rosary and live other apsidal chapels dedicated to the sorrowful mysteries, and the installation of three mosaics, each measuring nearly 4,000 square feet in expanse, )2 life size marble statues and six stained glass windows. The east apse is the gift of the Franciscan priests, Brothers, nuns' and tertiaries of the United States. The west apse is the gift of the Jesuits of the U. S. The sanctuary dome is being given by the episcopal committee fer the chapel of Our Lady of Czes tochowa. St. Joseph In the east apse, a 3,500 square foot mosaic will present a 32-foot figure of St. Joseph as the de fender of the Church and a Scene from Vatican Council II commemorating the inclusion of St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass by Pope John XXIII. Beneath the mosaic will be six lifesize statues of St. Joseph Cu pertino, St. Anthony, St. Fran cis, St. Cl~re, St. Bonaventure and St. Lawrence Brindisi-all Franciscans. TWl east apse will contain ·altars dedicated to the f!ve sorrowful mysteries.
Jesuit.Gift In the west apse, another 3,500 square foot mosaic will present a 32-foof figure of Mary Immac ulate, the woman clothed. in the sun repelling.. the dragon. Be neath the mosaic will be lifesize marble statues of six Jesuit
Rapid USO Expansion Proqram in Vietnam NEW YORK (NC) The USO will be 25 years old in a few months but its birthday party will take second place to the agency's burst of activity in be half of U. S. service personnel in Vietnam. . Known officially as United Services Organizations, Inc., it is a federation of six agencies which banded together' in 1941 to better bring a little bit of home to Americans serving their country. The National Catholic Com munity Service in Washington is the Catholic member agency. It joins hands with the YMCA, YWCA, 'Salvation· Army, Na tional Travelers Aid Association. With the fast-paced buildup of American military men in Viet nam, the USO is working rapidly to expand its involvement there from three clubs to nine. Sup ported primarily by contribu tions given through United Funds and Community Chests, the USO has a 1966 budget of $6.1 million.
Ohio Bishop ~ites' Schema on Jews STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Jews" need not fear the Vatican Coun cil's draft on non-Christian reli gions, even though the word "deicide" is omitted in reference to Jews, according to Bishop .John King Mussio of Steuben ville. With or without the word "deicide," . the declaration con demns what the word implies, the Bishop asserted, adding: "What matters is to have the meaning of the word clarified and the Church's posifton on that meaning stated clearly."
sus Rodriguez. Dome Mosaic In the dome above the sanctu ary, there will be installed' a 4,000 square foot mosaic that has unusual architectural as well as ornamental significance'. This mosaic will heighten and en hance the central importance of the main altar with its imposing marble baldachin. It will like wise link together the three great mosaics of the north, east and west apses, giving final unity to the whole sanctuary area. The dome mosaic depicts ''The Triumph of the Lamb" . as de scribed in the Apocalypse. It has been designed by Millard Sheets of Claremont, Calif., and is being manufactured by the Ravenna Mosaic Company in St. Louis. The architect estimates that the' on-site construction and in stallation in this. area of the shrine will take at least a year. A temporary barrier 20 feet high has been erected separating the sanctuary from the chancel, so that services can continue in the chancel during this period.
Hits 'Easy Experts Of Vatica n II GREENSBURG (NC) - "The always vocal 'easy experts' have decided Vatican Council II is a failure and are doing ·their best to propagate this notion," a priest-sociologist declared here in Pennsylvania. As examples of pessimism, Father Andrew M. Greeley of the University of Chicago' cited recep.t articles in various publi cations, including Catholic ones. The most common technique used by the "easy expert," he said, is to say: "The key issue facing the Church today is * * *" "He fills in the blank with something he knows the council isn't doing anythirtg about and then proceeds to brand the coun" cil as a failure," Father Greeley said. The sociologist said he consid ers the council "a smashing suc cess" when the internal reform of the Church is considered as its main goal. "It has opened up possibilities for asking questions and for · making changes as never before · in the history of the Church," he said.
Archdiocese Urges.
Equal Opportunity
SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken of San Francisco has asked all firms supplying goods and ser vices to the archdiocese to make positive efforts to recruit and promote._members of minority groups. In a letter to business firms, he said the arch~iocese's criteria for evaluating suppliers now in clude merit employment prG grams and practices. The firms were asked to sign · an ~greement to: observe equal opportunity policies at all job levels; communicate this policy to employees and recruiting ser vices; take positive steps to hire minority group members; and provide the archdiocese on re qu~st with a breakdown of the firm's total labor' force and job category.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
5
Boys" High To Accept C.('!l~s in 19~6 Continued from Page One to accommodate Bishop Connolly High School freshmen in the fall. Seven classrooms will be ready by Aug. 1. . The work I being .done at St. William's will cost slightly in excess of $200,000. Msgr. Considine reassured parishioners it would not burden the parish. Funds are aV;:lilable. Most of the money is coming from an inheritance. St. William's was selected after several othe.: sites had been considered. One of them , was St. Anne's School on Forest Street. This was eliminated because it was deemed' unwise to.' intermingle high school. and elementary groups. The d~cision to op~n the school at a temporary slte w~s made after it became apparent that construction of the new faNAMED: Bishop - Elect cility in the city's northeast area Joseph M. Breitenbeck, pas would be delayed. C!ty Slow . tor of Assumption Grotto
parish, Detroit, has been name titular bishop of Tepel ta and auxiliary to Arch bishop John F. Dearden of Detroit. NC Photo.
Seek- Vot'otions Where They Are
A~ong
cIrcumstanc~s ~~ted
by Blshop Connolly bemg, beyond contr?l ?f the dioce~e," has b~e?- the city s s1<~~~ess m provldmg sewer facllitIes ~or the new school. and the nelghbo~hood. The blShop noted" that t.hlS. adversel~ affected plannmg pro~ress.
Blds "':for the new school will' be opened a~ 2 o'clock at the chance;y o~fIce on No~. 4. JeSUit ",pnests wh? w111 staff PITTSBURGH (NC) - Stop the new: ~ch~ol, w111 commu~e relying on "ready-m~de voca tions from a ready-made school !o St. Wl1liam s from Round ~111 system" and seek vocations In Dartmo.uth, wher~ the SOCIety of Jesus IS converting th.e for"where they are and as they are," Bishop John J. Wright of mer Col. Green Estate mto a retreat hou.se.. . Pittsburgh told vocations direc ~he JeSUits w111 move mto a tors here. . resldence hall at the new school In the keynote address to the when construction work is comsecond national convention of pleted. . . . . diocesan v 0 cat ion directors, Msgr. Consldme s81d the dlOBishop Wright urged "more in cese could have waited until the tensive efforts to find precisely n~w school was ready. "But in the so-called secularized BISh~p Connolly ~ad pledged areas of the world men and that It wo~ld op:n. m th~ fall of women disposed to serve the 19.66, an~ IS fulfliling thlS comChurch in priestly and religious mltment.., ' life." . BIShop s Comment "This means," he continued, Blshop Connolly made the fol"seeking them in public schools lowing .c?mment in regard to and secular universities. It may the declslOn to open the new well mean seeking vocations high school in September. among older people than we Father Provincial's assurance h a v e traditionally considered that me~bers ?f the. Society?f likely candidates, people who Jes~s WIll begm. thel.r work In have been themselves deeply in our new memonal hlgh school, volved in the battle of secular in September 1966, is most society and who have, in fact, welcome news to me, and I feel remained or even become Chris sure, to our whole' community. tians as a result." We are .grateful to Monsignor Considine and his loyal parish Not Disenchanted ioners for affording us accom Vocations should not be modations in their n~w center sought am 0 n g those "disen at St. William's. chanted with the world," he Circumstances beyond our said, "but among people whose control-among 'them the pro intellects have been sharpened vision by the city of sewer fa in the battles of civilization and cilities for the neighborhood, whose hearts still love, even passionately, its essential values, but love God and His kingdQIll BEFORE YOU more." BUY- TRY And, ,he stressed, no matter how many vocations are ob tained "from our own schools, clubs' and carefully protected preserves of influence,. you must OLDSMOBILE \ abandon any reliance on ready Oldsmob;' Of-Renault made vocations from a .ready 67 Middle Street: Fairhaven made school system or other seed-bed for providing sure-bet vocations."
have slowed almost to a halt our progress in planning. Now bids are being prepared for. the award of contracts. By early November work should be 'in progress. I hope our confidence in the home city will be met with complete cooperation, so that by the late fall of 1966. a complete sanitary system, free from bottlenecks, and adequate for the needs of the school and neighboring area, will be. com pleted and functioning. We are doing our utmost ,to assure growth ana development for the whole community. With co operation we can go a long way together and experience mutual gratification in the good we do. Jesuits Rejoice Very Rev. John V. O'Connor, 5 J provincial superior of the S~~iety of Jesus of New Eng land said: "'The Jesuits of New England rejoice' with Bishop James L. Connolly, that we shall be able to greet in September, 1966, the first freshman class of the new Jesuit High School, which at the request of the Jesuits and many good friends of his excel lency will be named the Bishop . Connolly High School. "We are grateful to Right Rev. . Msgr. Raymond T. Considine and the good parishioners of St. William's parish, who, by offering facilities, have made it possible for us to keep to our original' schedule:':cWe look for ward to the. opening of the school with great hopes and expectations. "Beginning Saturday, January 15, 1966, and' the following 5 a t u I' day s, officials of the school will be available for interviews. Meantime, inquiries may be addressed to Bishop Connolly High School POBox 128 Fall River Mass:"" . No principal' has been desig nated for the new high school. Lack of laboratory facilities in the temporary classrooms is no problem for the Jesuits. Freshmen get a general science . course with stress on fund amen tals and theory. There are no Jesuits at Round HilI. They will move in wh~n renovation work is completed in December. The facility will .be known as Our Lady of Round Hill Retreat House.
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6
rHE ~NCHOR-Diocese of Fat! River-T~urs., Oct. 28, 1965
o
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.
Challenqe of Leisure" . ..
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The late Pope Pius XII was very concerned about lei sure. He foresaw many years ago that with the incr~ase of automation and the movement toward-shorter. work weeks, men would have -much more time on their hands than ever before in the history of civmzation. And he saw that one of the great problems would be the problem of leisure-how .wou~d men spend their free time. -' The problem is here now~ The perS"on working at an ordinary' job has more free time on his hands and more money to spend than ever before. . . . . This leisure can be occupied with various educational and cultural and social activities. But more and more is it being devoted to recreation. And this presents sev~ral problems to religion. One problem is that religious facilities must be made available to those' so spending' their leisure. An official of the National Council of Churches has said that churches mt,Ist take to the tourist resorts, national parks, ski lodges and coffee houses to reach a population whose free time is constantly increasing. The official commented that lei sure is no longer a matter of filling a spare hour or two in a "neat little community with a village green and four churches on the four corners. The new crisis in leisure is going to come from people who have large blocks of spare time be~ause of longer lives and shorter work weeks. They will not be where the church is now." Another problem is that increased recreational fa cilities and the time to use these can blunt a person's spirit of religion. The emphasis on having fun and en joying a good time can easily pass from a wholesome re creation of the body and spirit-which is entirely· good and necessary-to hedonism, the pursuit of pleasure which can stifle such things as regard for the spiritual, the place of mortification, moderation in the use of the appetites. These are challenges that religion must face. People . must be encouraged to cultivate their creative faculties, to pursue educational programs and those that benefit their neighbors and community, to use leisure in a· -productive way and no(simply to fill it witll self-indulgence. And they must never be allowed to forget that the best use.of time is ·the pursuit of God.
C
D
.•" Edward P.
~eDona~.
(News of parish flonfraternIQ ., Chrlstlall Doetrlne activitia . are welcomed' for this colum.. as are suggestionS' of subjects fol' iu'ture eolumns; Correspondence may be directed to Edward P. McDonagh. 5 Hunting' Street, North Attleboro, Mass. 02760.)
; On the second Tuesday night of any month at 8 o'clock you will find eight conversations -about CCD goI' . ing at once in a conference room z.~.T.I at Taunton's Bishop Cassidy ../" High School. The members of the Fall River Diocesan CCD Executive Board are in the proc , 111 ess of bringing each other up i:: If I to-date before the start of their ."t regular monthly meeting. The people gathered there are .. doubly committed to CCD, be e cause most of them are officers on their own parish executive boards. The previous night they were.facing the same problems • that' most parish boards experiBy Msgr. George G. Higgins ence: the search for active work ers; a hard case referred to the (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) Fishers; transportation for stuPope Paul's ruling that the matter of clerical celibacy dents who live on the very edge should not be discussed on the floor of the council but, of the parish. These and man-y . more. instead, should be handled by means of written intervenTonight· though, as they. start tions, apparently came as a severe disappointment to some their meeting with the familiar of the reporters covering the - prayer,. they shift gears. The policy for the .Church. Diocese becomes their parish P d t J d t Counc}'l and some of the ru en u gmen and their problems take on a other laymen who are folSurely there is something to new dimension. Instead of lowing its proceedings very be said for the point of view thinking in terms of hundreds intently from the sideline'i. On of those who place such a high of students, they must now think the other hand, it is my impres- premium on free and open of tens of thousands.. The School sion that the discussion of all the problems of Religion expands to 100 HoI y Father's facing the Church, including the Schools of Religion. Training A Not Guilty verdict has ended the second trial of Ku ruling met with problem of celibacy. The coun- must be supplied to hundreds of Klux Klansman Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr. in Alabama for the approval of cil itself has dramatically dem- teachers in locations convenient the alleged murder of white civil rights worker Mrs. Viola the majority of onstrated the advantages of such to every community in the discussion. pal'l·sh. Gregg Liuzzo. the Bishops and Moreover, the Holy Father's Diocesan President a Iso of the Without passing judgement on the strength or weak ruling that celibacy should not priests who are be discussed on the floor of the The layman who opens their ness of the testimony, without going into the sufficiency of . as per~ council was based on a pruden- meeting and who must guide proof needed to convict without a reasonable doubt, people serving iti or "experts" them to the answers to these tial judgment with which indivi all over the nation and the world are still going to wonder at the Council. ual Catholics are free to dis- very large problems is Jim Kelout loud and voice some inescapable conclusions. Why this diagree with respectfully. leher, Diocesan Board, President. As for myself, I happen to: Jim is also president of his One is that it wouid appear most unlikely that any vision of opinthink that the Holy Father made parish CCD board at St. Joseph's, Southern jury will convict a Ku Klux Klansman in a. civil ion as betweer.. the hierarchy and the clergy on a wise decision. If there is need Taunton, so opening meetings i. rights case, especially if the person alleged to have. been the one hand and a sampling of not new to him. When' not busy a thorough study I of the WI·th CCD h e teac hes Eng I'ISh a t murdered is a·Negro or a white person working for Negro 'laymen on the other? Some have: for problem of celibacy, would' Bridgewater-Raynham Regi<mal suggested rather harshly th~t it rights........
stems from the fact that clerics' prefer to ,see it carried out by High. Jim holds deg'rees in Edu Rightly or wrongly, men and women the n~tion over a post-conciliar commission. . of all ranks - including the cation from Providence College .are saying that here is an area where-for the present, at Pope, presumably-are squeam-" Little TooSorc and Bridgewater State. He,his least-a' person can literally get away with murder., ish about sex' and -would find. it·: An international committee of wife Eleanor, and the two Kelle And there is many an anguished Southerner who muet rather embarrassing. to talk· Cath~lic ~aymen recently sent... her children have just completed about it in public. This strikes . the, c;ouncll Fathers a memoran-. the task of .moving into a new be' gravely disturbed that such i~ the case.. . me as being a rather sillyob- . dum' in four languages' urging - home. Jim has been' active in' the . Another 'coriclusion is that the civil rights movement servation. " that such a commi,ssion be set CCD Apostolate for seven years in this nation· is still in its developing stages. The legi~la Crisis;, Real or' Alleged? . up "in order .to reconsider the _ -and' for the last three has- served Others tend to ascribe the di-. present combination of pastoral on the Diocesan Board. tion has been passed and that is good and necessary. But· _. Jim Kelleher shows pardon law is only the beginning. The law must be administered by vision to what· they regard as· duties with celibacy.", a congeni.tal unwillingness on The signers of thismemoran-. able enthusiasm when speaking men~and men are still subject to prejudices that are die the part of bishops and: priests dum point out that they "do not of CCD in the Diocese. With hard. .' to wash the Church's dirty linen by any means wish to say that over 34000 students and 1 700 Men must realize that the only safety of the nation and _ in public. Those who advance it would be better for all priests teachers' the Fall River Dloc their ultimate personal safety lie in the law. Let any law this explanation of the council's to marry," but "merely would esan CCD Schools make up one overwhelming approval of the submit that the Church should of the largest educational sys be mocked and the breakdown of democracy and the move HoI Y Fat her's ruling are consider, whether she ought not terns in :lVIassachusetts. As large ment toward anarchy are encouraged.' c42nvinced that the ,Church is to enable her priests to occupy as it is now our CCD system' But;- above all else, men hearts must be changed. The faced with a serious crisis in the their office of their own free must expand dramatically to will either in the married or the handle' the ever-increasing problem of civil rights is fundamentally a moral problem. matter of celibacy. In their opinion, this real or unmarried state." school population. The solution is in virtue. alleged crisis is one of such No one contests the right of Through the efforts of his alarming proportions that it laymen to offer su~h advice to Board made up of men and ought to be brought out into the Council. On the contrary, it wome~ {rom every section of the open at the council and thor- might even be said that they the Diocese Jim Kelleher coor oughly discussed by the Fathers have an obli~ation to make their dinates the' CCD school system from every angle and from every views known to the Fathers. On and the other important CCD point of view. They are also of the other hand, it seems to .me units. Projects underway include the opinion that the council's that the signers of this partic- an eight-week doctrine course wide-open discussion of the mat- .ular memorandum referred to now being given at five loca OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER tel' should be ,fully reported above are a little too sure of. tions in the Diocese. . themselvel!. Future Board plans call for Published week:y by The Catholic Press ot ·"~.Diocese of Fall River by the general press. All arguments to the contrary Questionable Qualifications two courses in' teaching ntethods 410 Highland Avenue . based on the virtue of prudence. Some of their conclusions· scheduled for neJj:t Spring. A Fall River, Moss. 02722 675-7151
merely' tend to confirm their might well have been stated less. Jr.ethods course for teaching ex PUBLISHER
impression that clerics as a dogmatically. After all, why ceptional children is also plan Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O.• PhD.,
group have yet to understand bother setting up a post-concilar ned for early .1966. In January, GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MI' ·.~GER . that ruthless honesty, in the commission to study the problem Jim Kelleher will meet with Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Sholloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll form of open and unlimited' of celibacy if a random group other other New England Dioc MANAGING EDITOR di§"~~!ls}on ,ol,al1, per prQblems, of laymen, whose qualifications, esan CCD Board presidents to .. -._'-'Hugh J: Gord'.fn .' is the best and only .defensible . Turn to Page Seven Turn to Page Seven
Solution
@rhe ANCHOR
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THE ANCHORThurs., Oct.' 28, 1965
Says Ecumenism Needs. S.uppor Of All Churches'-: .
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Overturns Belief Test· for Jurors
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. 'NEW' YORK (NC)-"The . outstandingreligiou8 fact of' ~ the 20th century-is undoubt.. . edly ••• the' strongly fel~': desire on the part of an Chris~
ANNAPOLIS· (NC) . The MarYland Court of Appeals l\as overturned a requirement of the state constitution that jurors swear that they believ~ in God. By amargln of 6-1 the court reversed the conviction ~f Lidge Schowgurow,. a· Buddhist, who was sentenced to life imprison ment for shooting his wife in January, 1964. Schowgurow argued that. he was denied equal protection of the laws because people who share his religious beliefs could not serve on juries that indicted and tried him. Judge Reuben Oppenheimer, speaking for the appeals court's majority, said that under the . rulings by the U. S. Supreme Court any "inquiry of prospec tive jurors, oral or written, as to whether they believe in a supreme being, is unconstitution
Uan churches to restore that wiity in faith and communion which they once posseSsed, .but which had 'been lost in the eourse of centuries." The speaker was Father John G. Donohue of St. Patrick's cathedral here delivering the keynote address to the fifth bi ennial convention of the Na~ tional Federation of Sodalities of Our Lady. "The unity that is being Ilought is not of man's design," Father Donohue said. "It is the unity that finds its cause and ex emplar in the oneness of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, a unity brought about by the participa tion of ail in one faith, hope an~ love manifested through a visible structured society." aL" Father Donohue warned that -ecumenism ends in dismal fail The Supreme Court In 1961 ure when the Christian. people . HAPPY FAMILY REUNION: Bishop Coleman F. Carroll greets Mr. and Mrs. Antonio declared unconstitutional a - have no part in it." Maryland requirement that a . He cited two attempts to heal Cancio-Bello after a 24-foot boat trip from' Cuba to Florida where they joined two sons candidate for the office of no . the 11th century schism which who left. the Carribean island three years ago. The young fellow, front center, made the -tary public declare belief in the existence of God. separted the Patriarchate of trip with his parents. His brothers are Antonio, left, and Jose, center. NC Photo. Constantinople from the Holy See, the Second Council of l . Lyons in 1274 and the Council Funeral of Florence in 1439. Home Inner'Conversion :;> EST. 1870 "The principal reason for the 1 Washingfon Square failure was undoubtedly the fact cmCAGO (NC)-A. renewal left to the Local Ordinary or to that freedom of conscience be NEW BEDFORD that ordinary Christians-the of canon law to take into account conferences of bishops; that respected and safeguarded; and lower clergy and the simple the rights and responsibilities of laws formulated "in the histor that "the work and experience Reg. Funeral Director and
faithful-of both East and West individuals and societies. has ical context of conflict with of the United Nations and the Embalmer
took no active part in the union," been recommended by the Canon Jew s , Protestants, Orthodox . World Council of Churches be PRIVATE' PARKING AREA
he added. Law Society of America. and/or other religious or secular taken into consideration in the TEL WY 6·8098 He reminded the delegates More th.;m 200 canon lawyers . bodies" be carefully scrutinized; formulation of the new law." that "personal renewal or in attending the society's a~ual terior conversion of Catholics meeting unanimously approved is necessary In order that new 17 recommendations calling for' attitudes of mind ••• as well as a'reevaluation of the nature and deep love for our breathen, may purpose of the law, consideration take root in us." of the objections of non-eatho · . '!'he second keynote speaker lies on partS of the law, protec was Arthur D. Wright, director tion of the rights of individuals, of New York's Cat;bolic Inter : and transfer of decisions and racial Council. p~rmissions now reserved to the • Although there ill increased 'Holy See to the local Ordinaries, participation of many religious wherever possible. groups' in active civil rights dem The society also askedtbat onstrations," Wright said, "no penal laws be reduced' and sim .religious. community, Cathloic, pllfied and their application be Protestant or Jewish, has parti cipated. yet as much as th~ are going to have to in order 'Continued from Page Six
to resolve the problem." Coordinate Regional plans.
Renewal Instrument
Long-range goals in the area of Adult Education· are being Continued from 'Page Six, laid down and Jim Kelleher · bY' and large, are ·no. better than looks forward to the day when the CCD will be one of the prin the Ilext man's, have .~ready ,ar cipal instruments of renewal in rived at ail the ~ers? In summary" if' there be need the Diocese. The multiple projects of the for ·.a reexamination . of the' Board keep it busy, but its pres-. · Church's discipline with regard to clerical celibacy, let it be ident· rightly insists that it ex made in peace and quiet by a ists for only one reason-to help post-conciliar .commission with the parish boards. To do so ef the aid of specialists from all fectively, it must know the prob lems of the individual parish of . the appropriate disciplines, including some, but not. all; of units. Jim's. board. members· have .practical experience. in the signers of the above-men every CCD unit and they are tioned m.emorandum. The non-specialists among the. willing to answer a call from anywhere in the Diocese. Simi signers - including the Ameri cans--would be well advised not larly, they would like to learn of CCD success stories in your to try to anticipate the commis sion's findings nor to try to parish which -might be applied stampede it into adopting their in other sections of the diocese. Jim Kelleher th}nks that the own ready-made, highly impres ,key to this two-way communi sionistic conclusions. cation lies in the minutes of the parish board meetings and he suggests that they be forwar~ed Lay . BILBAO (NC)-A consulting regularly to the Diocesan-CCD . eouncil' of 18 laymen, inclUding Office, .70 Holcott Drive, Att\e industrial executives,' workers, . boro. I'm inclined to agree with him. journalists, scientists and teach ers, has been, established .by Bishop Pablo Gurpide of Bilbao LOS ANGELES (NC) - The, to help him run his diocese here In Spain. Its assistance will be Urban League and the Archdio parallel to that of a council of cese of Los Angeles are cooper priest-advisers already ill exis ating in a job fin~· and place tence. IDem program.
Re~ppraisal of Rights and Duties. Proposal Concerns Individuals, Societies
Favor
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lHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan INver-Thurs., Od. 28,1965 '.,
Marriage Course
For Sisters
It's, Wholesome, Not Morbid To Pray.for Holy Souls By Mary Tinley Daly 'A friend who lost family· member S'Ome months ago, recently remarked, "I'm glad November is almost here, . 80 Frank can share in the' prayers and Mass his friends and relatives will be offering for the Holy Souls. People were wonderful at the time · ()f Frank's death," she went those who ·have 'passed,' then make the children think of them · ()n. "They called and had for an entire month.' III this · Masses s'aid, but people do true?"
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forget. It's only natural." And
as ·a special reminder, ill, lBU! Octob'er she mailed to close friends an ex tra copy of the little card printed at the , time of Frank's
death, with a
'Short note ask
Ing for his in · elusion in their
prayers during -the 'month ded · teated to the departed., "Do you think this seems morbid?" abe asked ,us anxiously. Far from a morbid gesture, this, to our way of thinking, was ·the "holy and wholesome : thought" carried into direct ac tion. Prayer IS something we aU can and should do for those who .have ,died. We, were glad to be reminded in this gentle way. Our friend, still saddened, has nevertheless recovered from the initial shock and is handling her life . in a thoroughly Christian manner. . Men and women - and boys and girls, too-have, during the upcoming month of November, the· privilf1ge of participatin~ with the Church in the pious and charitable custom of praying for 1be souls in purgatory. ' Caught up in the. fast-paced ,and somewhat materialistic at mosphere in which most of. 1U live, it would be so easy-so "natural" as our friend said-to overlook or postpone intensive prayer for the dead. But, thanks to Mother Church who knows human nature so well,this one month out of 12 is set aside for this very purpose, remembering, and "doing some thing about it." As to participation, by ehil dren: There is and probably al R~YS will be, a rather baffled reaction on the part of some peo - pIe. . "You don't actually urge your children to think of their grand parents who have 'passed'?" we were asked. Isn't this frightfully depressing?" . Quit~ the contrary. They liked to hear of their own: how Grand pa Daly had worked on the same newspaper on which the Head of the House,then Johnny, had worked; how' Grandpa Tinley had the same practical, line-it all-up organizational methods of his grandson Johnny. They were glad to be of service by their prayers for these and other fore bears. . Back another generation, we ean remember the same startled i'eaction when Mama and Papa . ~lnstilled into us' value of prayers for the departed. I recall a neighbor saying, to my mother: "'Mrs. Tinley, (they didn't use first names freely then) I under stand you Catholics 'make your children write out the Dames of
the
01 Elects New officers of Assumption Circle, Fall 'River Daughters of Isabella, will be installed Thurs day, Nov. 11. They'are Mrs. Ann Hoar, regent;· Mrs. Cecilia P. Mello, vice-regent; Mrs. Mary McCormick and Mrs. Cecilia Kelleher, secretaries; Mrs. Sally ,Trainor, treasurer.
Ecumenls_1n Those Day. Mama, in her gently diplo matic manner, tried to explaill the efficacy of the Mass, purga tory,prayer, also the healthy resiliency of youth." I don't think she succeeded. We didn't get to play with the Petersons much after that. Now in this, a more sophisti cated generation, perhaps the parents of our grandchildren are getting the same, possibly amused reaction as all make out their "November lists." Our own list grows longer each year-so long, we have to scrunch our writing to include 'all the· beloved names: those Of the long past who died of pneu monia, typhoid, cancer (then mentioned only in whispers) and of plain "old age." Our children'. lists are shorter; grandchildren'. ,even shorter, though they do contain names of contemporariell -some blasted off by war, others })y horrible automobile accidents. As one of ou:r:s put ft, "I'mgla.d I can do something--something really worthwhile-for the guy. and gals who didn't make it." Same thought. was expressed, far ,better, 15 centuries, ago, by St. Monica to her son,' St. Augua tine: . "Lay this body wherever It may be.' Let no care of it disturb You. This only I ask of you, that you should remember 'me at the altar of· the Lord wherever yoli may be." "Dona ell requiem sempite.. ·
Dam."
Man Throws Objects
At Cathedral Altar
NEW YORK (NC)-A mM threw an orange and a cocktail glass at the main altar of St. Patrick's cathedral here in full view of about 100 visitors. Corraled by ushers and turned over to police was a man identi fied as Leland McDonald, +1, who told officers the or~ge represented "a symbol of anti 'Catholicism" and the cocktail Ilass "my habit." On April 22, a 23-year-old man was arrested after he threw a Molotov cocktail at the maill altar. A woman kneeling in prayer was seriously' burned when the bomb hit the altar railing. On April 16, another man threw a five-pound concrete ehunk at a glass-enclosed statue of Pope Pius xn. The glasa was broken, but the statue was unharmed.
Pope Receive~, Officers Of Women's Council , VATICAN CITY (NC)-Mrs. Marcus KlIch, president of the National Council of Catholic Women, and Margaret Mealey, the organization's executive di rector, were received by Pope Paul VI. The Pope sent his ble8 sings to all of the NCCW'. 10 million members. The two women presented Pope Paul with a copy of the proceedings of the 32nd national convention of the NCCW, which discussed the ecumenical coun cil. The Pope asked his visitors to pray for })eace and fw Aim.
ROCKVmLE CENTRE~ct' -More than 400 Sisters frOUl religious communities in the di ocese of Rockville Centre h~ enrolled in a seminar 110 help them understand marriage 'bet- ter. The seminar, entitled "Mal' riage in Contemporary Socie~ and the Nun," Is directed by. a nun and moderated by a prien. Sponsored by. the Sisters of st. Joseph, the seminar is open .. all religious communities 'el women. ~We would like to see mo_ discussion groups between Si~ ters and married people," MI'. and Mrs. Richard Stimpfl, • Rockville Centre couple wile > were among the featured spe'" ers at the first meeting, said. . Topics "Married people have to thld In terms of food, clo~hing and shelter-immediate problems .. which many priests and nu~ don't give a second thought," the couple pointed outr "Our vows to each other In a real way vows of 'chastity," they said, "for we pledge to be long to no else, but only to eaela other. and to Christ." .Topics to be discussed at __ ture sessions of the seminar :ia elude, "People in Marital CoD fllct and the Nun"; "The Medical Profession Looks at Marriage"l "The Nun Helps Her Student. 1ft Preparation for Marriage~ and "Problems in Marria~ Faintly Planning."
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COUNCIL AUDITOR: Mrs. Catherine McCarthy of San Francisco, in St. Peter's basilica greets a Council Father .from India. NC Photo•.
. Marking System Mid-West Catholic School Survey Reveals
Te_achers Favor- National Evaluating Plan
CHICAGO (NC)-A national marking system. for evaluating pupils in' Catholic elementary schools is favored by half the .Catholic school teachers, a mid west opinion survey reveals. Fifty per cent of the teachers are favorable, 36 per cent are .opposed and 14 per 'cent are un decided. More than 4,000 teachers III 965 schools in nlinois, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, Indiana' and Iowa participated in the poll, accoi-ding to Everard Blanchard Of the De Paul University school
New Theology Center
Memorial 'to Pontiff
CHICAGO (NC) - A ' center devoted to the encouragement of creative theological studies has been estblished at St. Xavier Coll.ge here, Sister Mary Olivia, college president, announced. The center, named in honor of Pope John XXIII, will provide programs facilities and materials for scholars of all major faiths to conduct research and carry on dialogue on contemporary theo logical issues. Father T. Patrick Burke, formerly of the Univer sity of Iowa, has been appointed director.
~ of education, who originated the survey. Author Says VietnaM,
Other survey findings were: Asked whether newspapers Wants U.S. Help
give "too much coverage" to LOS ANGELES (NC)-Viel schools' extracurricular activi 118m wants independence a n-4 ties at the expense of education wants Americans to help her at al ~ctlons, 76 per cent of the tain it, author Genevieve Ca. teachers said yes, 15 per cent field said here. said DO, and nine per cent Miss Caulfield, who Is bUnd, were undecided. has spent four decades of her To the question -do teaching life establishing schools for blind machines really teach?" 22 pet' ehildren in Southeast Asia. cent of the teachers said yes, Addressing the Los AngehW 45 per cent said n.o and 33 pet' Archdiocesan Council of Cath cent were undecided. olic Women, she expressed Queried whether the organi amazement at the opposition of zation of the typical Catholie . lome Americans to U. S. poller. elementary school eurriculm in Vietnam. provides for "experimentation "Of course the South Vietnam and research" by the teacher, ese want us there. If they didn't 52 per cent said yes, 37 per cent they'd tell us," she said. "They said no, and 11 per cent were are dead set against any neutral undecided. Ist arrangement. This would mean America gets out, Red China would come in," she stated.
Newton Infirmary
NEWTON (NC)-Francis Cal' dinal Spellman of New York has dedicated· the $250,000 medical center named for his brother, Dr. John Spellman, at Newton College of the Sacred Heart here 1ft Mass.
Fatima Statue Begins
South Vietnam Tour
SAIGON (NC) - A three month tour of South Vietnam dioceses by the "Pilgrim Virgin" statue from Portugal's shrine of Our Lady of Fatima began with a motorcade from the airport to Saigon cathedral. Archbishop Angelo Palmas, apostolic. delegate in Vietnam, and high-ranking South Vietnam nulitary leaders took part in the ceremony. The statue tour is sponsored by American membera of the Blue Army of Fatima.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
Now Is Right Time to' Prepare Bird Feeders for Winter
Taunton Group To Insroll Nov.. 1
By Joseph ~nd Marilyn Roderick As Winter comes to our gardens, it is wen to prepare feeding stations for the birds. We have already set up a few stations; a newly acquired window feeder, a small feeder designed with a bar which will not support any bird larger than a chickadee, and two 81let feeders. This is not an erossed the pages of an old Eng elaborate arrangement, but Ush novel seemed to be reme died by a steaming cup of, broth; It is sufficient to keep a and each nationality has its
The installation of new offi cers for the Queen's Daughters of Taunton will take place fol lowing a dinner to be served Monday night, Nov. 1, in the .Sacred Heart School Auditorium, Taunton. Officers to be installed are: Mrs. William P. MacLean, pres ident;' Mrs. Joseph V. Webster, vice-president; Miss Mary Mc Grath, corresponding secretary. Also, Mrs. John Cross Jr., fi nancial secretary; Mrs. James W. Blount, treasurer; Miss Mar garet ,Slattery, recording secre tary. ' ' Dr. Paul van K. Thomson, of the Providence College faculty and vice-president for academic affairs will be the guest speaker for the' evening.
.teady stream of birds feeding par tic u I a r soup to restore at our window. The children strength to the patient. Jove them and we keep a bird There are' an infinite variety book handy for quick identifi of soups, ranging from clear eation of any new birds we see. stocks, bouillons and broths to So far we have identified spar the hearty meat soups as oxtail. rows, and more sparrows. We The 'Italians have their mine also have two ,chickadees which strone, the R u s s ian s their teed at our station all day long. borsch (beef soup), the French 'l'hese amaze me by their' per their delicious onion and sophis sistence. They are with us con ticated Vichyssoise, the Portu tinually from seven in tl,te guese their hearty Caldinho, and morning until late in the after the Jewish their chicken soup. noon. They fly to the 'feeder, This recipe is for chicken soup take one sunflower seed and fly was given me by Mrs. Sidney away, only to return a few min Brotkin of Temple Beth El' in ' utes later for another seed. At Fall River. I have enjoyed Mrs. Dorm for Niagara the rate they are feeding, now, Brotkin's Jewish' cuisine for NIAGARA FALLS (NC)-Ni I expect it will cost me about over 20 years and in my opinion agara University will break a dollar to feed them for the ground for a new $2.3 million . Winter. Except for an occasional she 'has few equals. Her meats melt in your mouth, her dump dormitory during September. blue jay and the ubiquitoUS The building, which will house starling we have nothing of any lings are Ught as a feather and her soup a cure for an ill, that 414 students, is expected to be BPecial interest this year. In completed, in S-eptember, 1966. tact, we have never had any would stump the Mayo Brothers. The dormitory is the third build of the birds that everyone else In fact, the last time she made ing in the university's 10-year seems to get as regular feeders. her famous chicken soup, her development program. grandaughter Ellen, observed, But' at least our sParows are "Gee, Nana, how come you made loyal. chicken soup when' no one's This S~er we did have a sick?" McSwin~y Circle ' «reat many robins feeding on Chicken Soup Father McSwiney Circle, Hy
our blueberry bushes. These in- ' 4 pound fowl ORPHAN MOTHER: This young Vietnamese girl at anilis Daughters 'of Isabella,
furiate the children, because , 2 carrots' ' ,
Quinhon refugee camp still manages a smile. Orphaned by will join with Mother Cabrini
they eat the bluberries just be 2 stalks of celery
a Viet Cong raid on her village, she now has the responsi Circle, Buzzards Bay,' and the tore they ripen, when they are' bility of caring for younger brother, too. They are only two Falmouth Circle in installation 1 large onion'
tinged with red, and there were 'ceremonies Monday night, Nov. salt to taste ' f 80 many robins that the children 1h cup fine egg noodles .. of the thousands 0 refugees entering Quinhon daily 1 at Riverway Lobster House,' nevel,", did get to taste any ber:: 1 Cut up your fowl or have 95 per cent of them Catholics. NC Photo. South Yarmouth. ' nes. Next year we plan to use nets to protect the berries or your poultry man do this: 2 Pour scalding hot water else put up a facsimile 'of ,an , Elected Chairman owl, which we understand to be' over' chicken piecees and drain. 3 Scrape carrots and cut into Sister Mary Augusthie, R.S.M.,
very effective in frightening quarters. nursing division director 'at
the birds. Salve Regina College, Newport,
Raleigh Diocese to Realize Estate Money
As of the moment, howevel,", 4 In a large pan place chicken has been named chairman of the
we will be satisfied to hear a pieces and cover with cold wa New England Council of Higher
After Death of Tomcat and Canaries
bluejay tapping against the ter. Add carrots, 'onion and celery stalks. Education for Nursing. She will
feeder trying to break a sun 5 Add salt, about one tea CHARLOTTE (NC)-If a cat tet's mOther have passed away, serve for two years.
flower seed or to watch the spoonful at' first. More may be really had nine lives, the Church the estate will be divided equal ehickadees trying to evade the would have a long wait for about ly between the diocese Qf BParrows. In the meantime we added when broth is ready, 6 Bnng water to a boil and $100,000. Raleigh and the Charlotte Reha will scan our bird-finders' book, bilitation and Spastics Hospital As°it is, the Church and a hos waiting for exotic -specimens simmer covered about I1h hours pital in this city must await the for children. Uke siskins, finches, towhees, or until fowl is tender. 7 Skim off fat if there is any death of a tomcat and two ca juncos, and grosbeaks, knowing tull well that we will have to on top of broth. Remove chicken naries before they can inherit Supper, fudge Sale be satisfied with our common from liquid. Add noodles to soup the bulk of a $200,000 estate. and cook about 15 minutes long St. Catherine's Fund Raising. In providing for her pets, Mrs. 1Il'ban winged friends. CITIES SERVICE er or uritil they are tender. Andre O. Montet specified that Committee will sponsor a spa DISTRIBlI"'ORS I'D the Kitchen 8 This ,is often served by Mrs. the canaries, Gigi and Coco, and ghetti supper and fudge 'sale Sad to say, the season for Brotkin by placing a large slice' from 5 to 7 Saturday night, Oct. toughs, sneezes, virus germs. of £chicken in a soup bowl and the cat Tommy, should live in 30 at 37 Park Street, Fall River, Gasoline
her home until "the death of mY flu epidemics, etc., is upon us. covering with the rich broth. Dominican Convent hall. Tickets mother and lintil the death of my Fuel and Range
If you have children in the will be available at the'door. birds and my cat." house, there always appears to However, the trustees ,of the Interfaith Speakers,
be one patient in the process estate must, also employ some of coming down with an ill or OIL BURNERS
one to care for the pets "until recovering from it. In my home Address Women
I have a couch that is constantly CHICAGO (NC) - That An , the death of the survivor of For prorymt delivery.o
Truck Body Builders them." occupied during this season by tagonism among Roman Catho Aluminum or Steel & Day & Night Service
After the p~tsan,d Mrs. Mona tiny convalescent waiting to Ucs, Jews and Protestants is 944 County Street be entertained. . waning and the ecumenical NEW BEDfORD, MASS. G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS One food item that seems to movement strengthe~religion In Who/s Who eome to mind immediately when , was ,tl}e opinion of, Catholic, wY ,2-6~18 Miss Ann Mary Turner, daugh we're thinking of feeding a sick Protestant and Jewish speakers Rural Bottled Gas Service ehild or adult is a good warm at the ninth biennial conference , tel" of Mr.' and Mrs. Roger, A. , 61 COHANNET ST. bowl of homemade, soup. Prob of the Chicago Archdiocesan , Turner, North Dighton" ~as been' ' included in the current issue of' ably this . will never replace ,the Council of Catholic Women. ,TAUNTON,
antibiotic as a cure, but it makes The speakers were Dr.' Edgar Who's Who iri American Colleges Attleboro - No. Attleboro
and U:iliversities. An honor stu ' • mother feel she's trying her H. S. Chandler; executive direc Taunton
best to nourish the invalid.
tor of the Church Federation of dent at Trinity College,' Wash It has been said that love has Greater Chicago; Rabbi Robert ington, D. C., she was chosen by tts charms, but only' soup so J. Manc, regional director of the faculty-student vote on the basis 7. I tiffIn} g err well nourishes the young, stokes Chicago Federation of the Union of academic and extra-curricular achievements. the fires of manhood and com" of American Hebrew Congrega forts the old. Every ailment that tions; and Father Thomas B. McDonough, ~tholic' chaplain Rt. 6-Between Fall River and lIIew Bedford
at the University of Chicago. One of the Finest Facilities in Southern New England
Halloween Whist The 2,400 women were told by Friends of the Presentation of Father McDonough that theo Available for:
Mary Novitiate will sponsor a logical discussions among stu Est. 1897 dents at the Univoersity of Chi Halloween whist party at 8 Sat BANQUETS • TESTIMONIALS
urday night, Oct. 30 in St. Anne's cago have "gone beyond the Buflders Supplies FASHION SHOWS and SPECIAL PARTIES
Nursing School auditorium, Os stage of being polite, and that 2343 Purchase Street born and Forest Streets, Fall is a good thing. Now we say FOR ~OMPLETE INFORMATION CONTACT:
River. Mrs. Regina St. Pierre, 'what we think; and.in tbat way New Bedford , WYman -,-6984 01' MErcury 6·2744
chairman.' la ,'aided by a lar/le ,'we are discovering our dfffer WY6·S661-' . encea.," committee. 0
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of Fall River-Thurs., . THE,ANCHOR-D.i.ocese '; . : ' : . " ... -. ,"
Oct. 28, 1965 ,
"
·N,ew' ~U ~ - 'Report
.
'Catholic' -,Bi'blicaf Scholar Hails Protestant Edition
,Warns of ,World Food .Crisis NEW YORK (NC)-Ris 'ing. population and falling prices are creating a crisis situation in world agricul
BALTIMORE (NC)":-A top Catholic biblical schol~r has hailed a newly published Protestant edition of the Bible as "the best students' edition of the Bible available in English." Father Raymond E. Brown, S.S., professor of New Testament studies at St. Mary's Seminary here, Turning to the Catholic edi paid this tribute to "The tion of the RSV, Father Brown Oxford Annotated Bible with took issue with many of the
ture according to a new report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).. The food supplies of develop ing nations must increase 400 per cent in the next 35 years if changes in the original text. the Apocrypha (Revised Stand they are to give their people "One is especially disturbed," ard Version)." ' adequate diets, F AO director Father Brown, 'tr'anslator of he added, "that the Catholic general B. R. Sen states in a editors justify their changes as the epistles and Gospel of St. foreword to the study, "The 'absolutely necessary in the light John for the not yet published State of Food and Agriculture of Catholic tradition.' Many Catholic Confraternity New 1965. scholars who know Catholic tra Testament, assessed both the Ox The 273-page report surveys dition will remain convinced ford Annotated Bible and the developments in international that in most instances the RSV new Catholic edition of the Re - agriculture in the past decade. vised Standard Version in, the needed no change." Its distribution in tpis country Baltimore Catholic Review, is being handled by the Colum archdiocesan newspaper, bia University Press., Of the basic text of the RSV '"The report concludes that the itself, Father Brown said it is 'technological means are avail "by far the best revision" of the able for meeting the food, needs King James translation yet pro of a growing world population. A native of Fall River, Rev. duced. But he added that it is But more planning and effort in Edward Paul Doyle', O.P., joins admitbdly -"not a new transla using them will be demanded, it a second native of Fall River, NEW FACULTY: New Holy Cross Sisters on the fac tion in the language of today" Rev. John D. Hickey, O.P., as a ulty of St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, are, says. and that "those who believe that , The document describes the priest at St. Thomas Parish, fr.om left, Sister Cecile" Sister Albini, Sister Ev~ Martyr, the Bible should be translated "population explosion" as "un Charlottesville, Va., the Catholic into the English spoken by its doubtedly the most important Center serving the University of Sister Gerard of Hungary. readers are not satisfied with the Virginia. The two Fall River single factor dominating the RSV." world food and agricultural sit priests assist Rev. William A. Best Available uation" in the postwar period. Stickle, O.P., pastor at St. Population Increase The tone':" of the introductions Thomas. and notes of the Oxford edition In the past 10 years, it noes, In addition to his parish te Educator Says Catholic Schools Are Now reflects about the same approach sponsibilities, Father Doyle will world population has increased taken- by most Catholic Writers by about a fifth and now stands direct the School of Catholic 'Doing Better Job Than Ever Before' on the Bible today, Father Studies, which presents courses at about 3.3 billion. The latest Brown said. He said that while SPRINGFIELD (NC)-Teach teacher," he said. "We know you UN projections indicate a world and seminars on literature, re there is an occasional note "that ligion, theology, and philosophy. ers remaIn the key to Catholic are doing a better job now than population of 6 billion by the causes difficulty in the field of has ever been done before. You year2000-with almost 80 per Father Hickey's duties include education-and, because of them, ,strict dogma," this is "scarely the future is filled with hope are approaching your task with cent of that total in the develop direction of Newman Club ac ing nations. ,an attack on Catholic dogma." more preparation, with more in tivities, teaching courses in the according to a nationally prom ,He added: ' But despite the prospects of inent educator. tellectual honesty, more humil School of Catholic Studies, and Criticism ity, more understanding of the population growth, the F AO assisting in other parish activi Msgr. James C. Donohue, co study says, worId food produc "Thus, (and the reviewer has goals of Catholic education." tion in recent years has barely 'eonsulted a competent 'canon ties. He is also taking courses at director of the Department of ' He expressed confidence that kept up with the increase o' lawyer on this) there seems to the univerity toward a graduate Education of the- National Cath olic Welfare Conference, Wash teachers will meet "the chal degree. .population. In both Latin Amer "be no 'reason why educated Father Doyle received a bach;' ington, speaking at the closing lenge of our changing times by ica and the -Far East per capita Catholics sincerely interested in elor of arts degree from Provi session of the 45th annual meet facing the challenge to yourself food output is less than it wae ,studying the Bible callITot use before World War II. and profit'from this edition in all dence College in 1934. After ing of the Catholic Educational as, a teacher." "Institutional obstacles" are good conscience. It is the best studying philosophy at St. Association of Pennsylvania, / 'among the biggest,roadblocks in 'students' edition of the Bible Thomas, River Forest, 111., and said: Volunteers Clean theology at St. Joseph's Priory, "No matter what the future the way of increased and im available in English." Somerset, he was ordained on holds in store, the key to edu proved agricultural production, Parish Buildings May 17, 1939. He received a cational greatness in any Catho .the study says. Among these' it NEW ORLEANS (NC) - St. lists "outmoded systems of land Master ,of Arts degree from lic school is always going to be Catholic University in 1941. He the teacher. And this is what Louise de Marillac' parish in tenure, inadequate and too cost suburban Arabi has been de was made a professor of theol gives all of us hope for tomor ly credit, and inefficient market Be~e£its ogy luged for the second time within ing systems." at Providence College, and row. two weeks. then served as a U. S. Army Anyone age 65 or over who "We ,know you-the Cafuolie But the second onrush was by has not filed an application for chaplain from 1943-1946, attain Equals Population what Father Thomas J. Wesner, ing the rank of major. Included Social Security or Railroad Re NEW YORK (NC)-The num C.M., describes as angels 'of Volunteer Workers tirement benefits should contact in the decorations he received mercy rather than waters &f ber of pupils who" answered was the Bronze Star. a Social Security office to reg opening bells of Cath'olic schools devastation. To Take Census After the war, he returned to ister' for the hospital benefits, Father Wesner, pastor of the in New, York and Brooklyn BAY CITY (NC)---.8even hun and enroll at the same time in Providence College, and there equals the 1950 population of parish whose buildings were in the voluntary medical insurance after served as counselor and ' dred volunteer workers, operat professor of theology at Emman plan if he wants this extra pro ing out of 30 centers will take undated by waters whipped in the city of Columbus, Ohio. The uel College, Seton Hill College, an interfaith religious census of by Hurricane Betsy, expressed total for the city, served by two tection. dioceses, comes to 375,748. In enthusiastic gratitude to mem A person: who is 65 or over on and Mt. St. Mary's College. In the Bay City, Essexville, Hamp i950 the official census of Co bers of St. FrancesCabrini ton and Bangor area of Michigan. Jan. 1, 1966 has only until March addition, in 1959, was first pres lumbus was -375,901. parish in New Orleans who 31 1966 to enroll if he wants to ident of the Dominican Educa": Th:e interfaith venture, ex tional Association. be covered by the medical in pected to aid church and school swarmed over his place with brooms, mops, soap and cleaning In 1962, Father Doyle received pllmning, will be jointly spon surance plan when its starts in a doctor of philosophy degree sored by the Bay County Council utensils- of every variety. 1uly, 1966. Building Contractor
from the Aquinas Institute of of' Churches, the Evangelical A widow may now elect to re eeive Social Secerity benefits Philosophy and Theology in Ministers Fellowship and area Masonry
at age 60, reduced to't¥e into River Forest, Ill. His doctoral Catholic churches. Rccount the longer time they will dissertation was on "Obligations In addition to specific purposes 'of Modern, Youth." Father for which 'each group wants a be paid. ONE STOP Previously the, widow of an Doyle's assignment prior to St. survey, the cooperative effort is SHOPPING CENTER insured worker had to wait until Thomas was at Siem: Heights e~pected to help uncover -reli she reached the age 62 before College, Adrian, Mich., where he gious trends and show non • Television • Furniture she could get widow's benefits. taught from 1963 to 1965. ~hurched areas and people of the • Appliances • Grocery
A son or daughter of a retired, Father Hickey area. 7 JEANmE STREET ,104 Allen ·St., New Bedford
disabled or deceased 'worker Father Hickey, son of John H. FAIRHAVEN 4-7321 may now receive child's benefits Hickey of Fall River and the late WYman 7-9354
up to the age of 22, if he or she Edna (Mooney) Hickey, gradu Program for Youth %%> .%%'%% %% %%%%%S%% is unmarried and a full time stu ated cum laude from Provi dent. Prior to recent amend dence College with a bachelor of Gets City Grant ~ents benefits stopped when the NEW YORK (NC)-The City arts degree. Mter graduating child reached age 18. from college, he entered the wide Coordinationg Committee, composed of Catholic and Pro Dominican Novitiate at Somer tes~nt clergy from neighbor set, O. He studied at the Domin Vice Rector ican House of Philosophy iii hoods with large numbers of EMMITSBURG (NC),--Father Dover,and at _the 'Dominican Jriiriority group members, has re;' at William J. Bartley of the Brook eeived a $220,000 city grant to Pontifical Faculty in Washing lyn diocese has been :named ton, D. C. In June; 1962, Father continue until April 31 a youth vice, rector of Maryland's Mount Hickey was ordained. From the employment pl'ogram launched Saint Mary's Seminary here. time of oriiination'until his pres last Summer. ' In addition to his administrative ent assignment at St. Thomas, The program, part fYf the duties, he will also teach moral Father Hickey served as Cath-' Neighborhood Youth Corps, wiil ; 115. WI,LLlAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. theology; the" history of phi olic chaplain at Memorial Cancer give jobs to 543 teenagers, most ~osphY, and Greek. , Hospital in New Yo~k: CitY.. ef whom ar~ not ,in schooL
Fall River Clerq,y To Serve South
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ANCHO'R -·rtie~·Expiains-St.·John·~Chrysost~J1i·.,·;titurgyTHE Thurs., Oct. 28,
Offici,alExplains Effect ·of New Education BiU
T o 'H'0-Zy N",ame AZtar, Rosary. Soctety •
BIRMINGHAM '(NC) Parochial schools gained full partnership in American ed ucation and "substantial
.. He's a Catholic priest in the city of Fall River, but he doesn't belong to the Fall River Diocese. His people receive Holy Communion under the appearances of both bread and wine. And as a matter of discipline they refrain from dancing on Fridays, and-ob serve every Friday as a day of fast and abstainence. Current changes' in the liturgy have affected this priest and his' congregation very little; 'in fact, they might adopt as their own the, motto of' one
assistance" for their pupils from the Education Act of 1965, a na. tional Catholic educational offi cial said here. Msgr. A.W. Behrens told over of the famous monastic orders of 4000 parents, teachers and dele gates to a Mobile-Birmingham the Church: "Never reformed diocesan' P-TA council meeting. .because never deformed." The priest is 'Rev. Michael that U. S. educational structure.s' Kurylo of St. John's' Ukrainian "will never be the same" since Congress passed the historic leg . Catholic Church in Fall River. He and his congregation are islation this year. Msgr. Behrens is associate . m~mbers of the Ukrainian Cath secretary of the department of· olic Diocese of Stamford, Conn., superintendents of the National ,which embraces New York State
Educational Ass 0 cia t ion in . and all the New England States.
Washington, D. C. Their Mass, known as the Di-. Become Partners vine Liturgy, follows the Eastern He said the special signifi . rite of St. John Chrystostom. It.
cance of the new legislation "is is divided into three parts, 'cor the recognition by the federal. responding, Father Kurylo noted government that all schools are. at a recent meeting of the Altar an integral part of American ed and Rosary Society of Holy ucation. We now become part Name parish, Fall River, to the ners in caring for the educa hidden'life of Christ, his public tion needs of the children of life and, finally, his passion,
school age in our great nation." death, resurrection and ascen-' He noted that the U. S. Office sion. of Education is spending $3.3 At the beginning of the ser- . billion this fiscal year, "some 20 vice, the bread and wine are pre times what it was a decade ago." pared; then comes the liturgy of This has resulted, he said, from the catechumens and finally the liturgy of the faithful.
the emergence of modern prob lems "completely insoluble with Faith Unchanging
i? the framework of our educa Father Kurylo emphasized tlOnal agreement up to the pres that the differences between ent." .. Eastern and Western rites of the De~cnbIng the church-state Catholic Church are merely solutIon reached by the law-· those of external forms of wor makers as "a delicate balance," ship. "Our faith is the same, and he added: unchanging as yours" he noted. "!he un.derlying church-state. The priest told th~ Altar and ratIOnale IS that fe?eral fu.nds Rosary Society members that can be used to prOVIde serVIces th re are 21 rites in the Church for all children * * * Nothing ·in OfeWhich 18 are various Easter~ this legislation is intended as a rites and three are Western. benept ~o ~he private ~cho.ol as There are four major divisions ~n InstItutIOn. The aId IS to within the Eastern Church: By children." zantine, Alexandrian, Aramaic and Chaldean. Of these the Hollywood May Try largest is Byzantine, numbering 'some 200,000,060 members. St. New Movie Code
John's belongs to this rite. NEW YORK (NC) - Holly The vernacular is used by wood may scrap its detailed code many Eastern rites, and other of production standards in favor features only now being restored of a brief statement stressing to the Western liturgy have treatment rather than choice of never departed from the East, subjects for motion pictures. said Father Kurylo. He noted This is reported in Variety, that a free-standing altar and weekly show business tabloid, the practice of concelebration, which said presidents of com both new to Roman Catholics, panies allied in the Motion Pic have always been characteristic ture Association of America are of the Eastern Church. examining the new code in draft Many Visitors form. ' There are 80 members in his Major U.S. film producers-now parish, said Father Kurylo, but subscribe to a 3,000-word 'self , attendance at his two Sunday regulatory.code which spells out Masses is frequently swelled by prohibited subjects and methods visitors. Often on weekdays, too, of treating certain episodes. classes of schoolchildren are , " Variety said, however,' the present for 'Mass., code is often ignored and movie For ROl}lan Catholics the feel producers believe it fails to meet ing of unity between priest and "changing standards of public people at an Eastern Mass is acceptability." noteworthy. As one authority writes: "The Western Church is Ask Implementation' striving .for a revival of the lit urgy, to bring its people in closer Of Jewish Sfatement touch with the services of the Church, especially during Mass. NEW YORK (NC)-The pres ident of the American Jewish The Eastern Rite churches do not Committee said here that the need such a revival." There is much singing during way in which the positive prin ' Mass at St. John's, said Father ciples of the ecumenical coun cil's declaration on the Jews are Kurylo, all a capella. Also strik ing to the visitor is the use of carrie( out will be of great im colorful banners and images portance. Describing the council's vote within the Church, and the fact that the Mass is notably longer in favor of the document con demning anti-Semitism as an than the Roman rite. "The ser-
"act of justice long overdue," Morris B. Abram said he was Civil. Lawyers "heartened" by the existence of a special subcommission on , NEW YORK (NC)-The Hch Catholic-Jewish' relations of the . diocese of JJelV ~~rk sponsored
a day-long meeting at Fordham U. S. bishops commissions' CIft ecumenism. University Saturday to encour Abram said '''we keenly l'e age civil lawyers to take pari «ret" some statements ill the ill Catholic Church eourt pro council ~eclaration, "especially eeedings where most .cases con those that might give rise to eem annulment • dissolutiOD, misunderstandin&s." . _ ., marriaae. Z!1 .,~--
..
1965
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Priests DisC!~ree on New Garb LONDON (NC)-Members of religious orders around London have mixed feelings about an ecumenical council suggestioll that they consider updating their religious clothing. ,A Dominican priest was quoted by the Catholic Herald as saying: "Our habit is terribly impractical, especially in the wind. It's so large and floppy• It's not at all the kind of thing St. Dominic wore. He walked around in the normal dress of his times." The provincial of a Fitmscican friary in East London saw .no need for the Franciscans to
change. "We have as simple a
habit as you can get-a cord and a cowl," he said. "The only al· ternative would be lay dress,
and we wouldn't want to sur· render the habit completely." ~ A Capuchin priest agreed.· "The whole point of the habit is to be different," he said. "We don't want to hide our light under a bushel."
A Passionist and a Discalced Carmelite pointed out that they wear clerical suits on the streets and don't face the same problems as priests in some European countries where habiv are still worn in public.
Elect Fr. Nevins '~To Press Board EXPLAINS EASTERN RITE: Rev. Michael Kurylo, pastor of St. John's Ukrainian Church, Fall River, explains vestments and altar vessels of Byzantine Rite to, from left, Rev. Donald A. Couza, moderator, Miss Mary E. Hart, co president, and Mrs. George E. Nugent, treasurer of Altar and Rosary Society of Holy Name Church, Fall River. vices answer the Eastern man's· needs," explained Father Kurylo. "He likes to think, contemplate, and delve into his religion." "The West is noted for organi-, %ation and order," says one writer. "It is exact -:lnd precise
Catholic Parishes Back Boycott Plan MILWAUKEE (NC) - Five Catholic parishes here endorsed , a public school boycott to protest alleged ' segregation and. said their facilities and teachers would be available for "Freedom Schools" during the boycott. . The five parishes, all in the iOller-city area of Milwaukee and all predominantly Negro, said they "deplore the means of a school boycott" but feel that "all other means of communica-' tions have been closed." Spokesmen for the 'five par ishes said they consider the pub , lic school boycott the only means "to force the schoo} board and the people of the city of Milwau kee to look at the children whose right to be treated as human beings are daily being deni"ed."
Family Care CHICAGO (NC)-A "Medical Care of the Family" conference
will be conducted here Nov. 5
and 6 by the National Federation
01. Catholic physicians' Guilds.
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Bar Tenders VATICAN CITY (NC)-In tbe council coffee bars they noW have selfservice Coca Cola m:;t chines which prove to be quite popular with the bishops, espe-' cially these days when the Rome weather still is' uncomfor~bly sultry. "Bishops as' bar-tenders!" re- .. marked an observer. "Isn't that a novelty?"
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in expression. The people of the East consider more the inner life of the soul; they are contem plative, rich in feeling and 'emotion." . , Holy Communion is in' the form of small squares of leaven ed bread, said Kather Kurylo. These are soaked in the Precious Blood for reception by the faithful. The priest's host is a large square, called "the Lamb." May Marry Priests of his rite may marry, said Father Kurylo,. but in the United States the celibate life is' usually. c heo sen. Byzantine Ukrainian Catholics in this COWl try include those. who immi grated to the United States from Galicia, Bukovina and other Ukrainian provinces; those de scended from such persons; women married to men falling in the above categories; and con ve~ts to the rite.
. SAN DIEGO (NC) - Father " Albert J. Nevins; M.M., editor of Maryknoll magazine, has been elected to a three-year term on the board of directors of the Inter-American Press Associa tion at its 21st genera{ assembly here in California. Father Nevins; 50, is one, of four new board members named to the 45-member board. Jack Howard, president of Scripps Howard Newspapers, was elected to a one-year term as president of the IAPA. Father Nevins, a native of Yonkers, N. Y., isa former pres ident of the Catholic Press As~o ciation of the United States and Canada.
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THE ANCHOR....Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
,
Meaning of 'Mission'
'Outsider .in the Vatican' Gives New View of Counc~1
God Love You By Most .Rev• Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. AD of a sudden, the most Important word In the vocabulalT· of the jet-age Is"mlsslon". It once was used almost excluslveIi by religion to signify the carrying of the Gospel torch "to the darkness of paganism." The government and politics took It over, alid we had "Mission to Moscow," "MIssion to Brazo," "The Peace Corps," "The Economic MIssion to Tanzanla." Pope Paul VI,by his visit to the United States, has brought the wordbaek· to the sense'in which Christ Himself used It, nameb' "to make disciples amoll&' all nations."
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy A different sort of book about Vatican 'Council II could that be possible? Yes, it could be, as Frederick Franck's Outsider in the Vatican (Macmillan. $7.50) proves. Dutch by origin and long resident of the United States, Mr. Franck is an artist. His book he is,· an all too mortal thing." contains 82 drawings he Hence It Is that we have set made during the first thre~ before us a series of extremely sessions of the Council, and penetrating drawings, which, In
_._
. Mission was meant to be a yeast In the dough, not just the taking of a little dough from the mass, sugar-coating and serving it to a chosen few. Mission was to reach individuals through the nation. The Holy Father's success in restoring this idea was revealed In the comment· of a Jewish taxi driver in New York who said, ''When I heard the Pope speak, it brought back to me all the deep ideals I had as a child and which I knew I needed again." . It was revealed again in the Moscow radio announcement praising the Holy Father's work for peace, as well as .in the state meilt of Gromyko that the Holy Father delivered· one of the best speeches -ever . heard'at the United Nations.
these are brilliant. Their quality a relatively few strokes, gives is matched by the text, for Mr. us the man. Franck writes In addition, Mr. Franck quite as skillcatches, with, a kind of preter full y ash e natural precision, many aspects draws. He is of Rome. His descriptions give. not a Catholic. the reader a shiver of recogn!In his early tion and of delight. years in Holland Thus, the Palatine guard is HANDY WITH TOOLS: he was familiar disposed of as "short stocky men with Catholics, like streetcar conductors In gala 71-year old Columban priest, '-,with a Catholic attire." The Irish College is "a Fr. John McFadden of Cleve atmosphere and humorless nineteenth - century Catholic pracbuilding in the rear of a good land spends his spare time 'tices.The Church front yard with crisscross paths. making necessities for his attracted him; How the special atmosphere was Lima, Peru, church. N C he confesses to an old love of transplanted I don't know, but Photo. ,St. Paul said that he had a mission to the Gentiles; Paul. her. here in the middle of Rome I VI said exactly the same thing, namely nations must be 'sacra But a bitter experience when was reminded of boarding houses lIzed.' This mission may be eompared to the nuclear bomb. There ,he- was 12 soured tllat love: a in. Edinburgh and Dublin." Is a central point of ·exploslon, then a fallout of radioactive priest advised. the parent;! ,of There is the Mass at Ara Coe~ particles throughout the World. Paul's spiritual bombshell had young Frederick's closest friend where a few people went to Its point of contact tlrst In the Holy Land. then In India and not to allow their Catholic son Communion. "Nobody had count now In the United States. Us spiritual fallout has been felt by LONDON (NC) Canon to. continue associating with .an ed on this; hurriedly, resentq.ll1Y, au, evel7 heart and souL unbeliever. COmmunion was given." There George Brigstocke, member· of Stirred by Pontiff are the "stereotyped ceremonial the headquarters staff of the . . For 15 years this column: has been affirming the necessity But then occurred the emer~ gestures· of- head and arm that Anglican Archbishop of Canter of "mission" In the Church of the United States. Now, thanks to gence of Pope John XXIII" symbolize efficient organization." bury, and Mrs. Brigstocke have "Human sounds seemed to be Mr. Franck·fo.und that each of been received into the Catholic· the Vicar of Ghrist, It will. be grappled to each soUl with hoops· of'steel. Mission first means bringing Christ to nations, to whole.· COming: from Rome." And when; the first three sessions of the Church, it was announced here. at the opening 'of the first sea- Council had its distinctive char- The announcement did not peoples, to societies everywhere; secondly, mission in the· con sion .of the Council, at a time acter. That of the first session·· come from the Catholic authori
crete, as the, Holy Father said, means "correcting the imbalance wh~r;. the world seemed to be . was one of discovery. The dis ties but through the national between natioIlJl." The rich nations must help the poor. on the brink of destruction, Pope covery was on the· part of the press. The Westminster Catholic
John made his ·magnificeilt, af-', participating bishops. The y BecaUse the Vicar of ChriSt has restored "mIssion"··tO the archdiocese, anxious not to upset
firmative· address, Mr: Franck - learned, to their astonishment, the present friendly relations Church, may we ask that Catholics begin to make more sacrifices was'· profoUndly stirred, enor- that what they had severally and between the two Churches and to correct this imbalance. 'Last year we Catholics .each gave the mously excited. ' . , . unacknowledgedly been hoping to avoid any embarrassment for Holy. Father 31 cents fo.r Africa, Asia, Oceania, Latin America. Mr. Franck immediately and for-a new .openness and pas Archbishop Michael Ramsey of for all the world's disinheri,ted peoples. Oh yes, there was !D0re unexpectedly took off for Rome. toral attitude in the Church- Canterbury, had kept· quiet given, but not· to the Holy Father's own mission society, not for He had to be where his great was longed for by almost every all parts of the world. The Holy Father. has one arm for that about the conversion.
hero was, where the Church was one else. But with Canon Brigstocke work, and that is the· SPOF. I am bac~ at the Council again ""i,til . sha~ng off the slumber and se- .' Pope's Viewpoint the poor bishops of the world and I am In your midst with this. holding a senior official post at elusion of the past and reaching· In the second session Mr. Lambeth. Palace, Archbishop appeal. In the nmne of the Lord who erected·. His cross on, the out to twentieth century man in" Franck detected no euphoria at Ramsey's London headquarters, . ,cross-roads of the nations and civilizations, offer to the Holy . his existential situation. .. all, but rather a·plodding air al- the news was bound to come Father one. splinter of self-sacrifice. He wanted to see the Pope, ob- . though he does not share the out with his resignation. serve the Council, .draw anyone opinion that hopelessness pre GOD LOVE YOU to J. M. for $20.50 "I've been saving pennies
Canon Brigstocke, who is in or anything which. int~rested vailed as this session came to a for more than a year and was going to wail until Christmas to
his seventie!l, had been !!ince him. He never did get to mee~ close. send them but I decided that a piece of bread for an empty
the Pope: at the very lasfminute,. his view, the third session 1961 an examining chaplain at stomach could turn any day Into Christmas." .• ~ to 10 employees
Lambeth Palace where his spe a private audience, obtained was marked by a growing un In a· large New York advertising company "Here is $45 which we
only with difficUlty, was can- derstanding of the viewpoint of cial function was to test the collected 'in memory of a recently deceased employee for the
celled because the Pope, soon to Pope Paul, previously something suitability of candidates for the· poor of the world." .
Anglican priesthood. Mrs. Brig die, was indisposed. But he did of an enigma, and a realization stocke was warden at the pal get into the Council, after being that, although the tide set in long on its fringes, and he came motion in the first session woUld ace's hotel for clergymen. Cut out this column. pin your sacrifice to It and mall It to to know, and to draw, scores and not run at full tilt, neither woUld ,Most Rev. Fulton J Sheen. National Director of The Society for scores of the leading figures-- it be stayed or reversed. the Propagation ot the Faith,.366 Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y. ·~cardinals, archbishops and bishMr. Franck judges the. present Golden Jubilee Fund
10001. or to your Diol>esan Director. Bt. Rev. Raymond T. Con - ops, experts, observers, etC. Holy Father tQ be one who does Co':'tinues to ,Climb
sidine. 368 North Main Street, FaD River, Massachusetts. Story of Progress . riot· act decisiveiy because he NEW YORK (NC) - T he
The story of his 'progresS from: sees all sides of every question, unknown outsider to something thoroughly appreciating the case Golden Jubilee .Tribute fund
of an insider at the Council is. for a position or a choice, differ.,. commemorating the 50th anni
very amusingly told. Mr. Franck ent from what his own would be. versary of the ordination of
Francis Cardfual Spellman of
is uncommonly shrewd and witImportant Opinions ty, a keen appraiser of churchThe Pope, Mr. Franck tllinKs, New York to the priesthood has
men. refrains from intervention in be:' passed the $5-million mark.
The fund will enable the Car Many of these seem to have ·half of the so-called pragressive 7 Perry considered him a harmless sort iJi,de precisely because' he does dinal to continue several impor .Avenue ' of sketcher, but, as he himself not want to Interfere with the tant projects - an educational· Botes, ''while being drawn or Council. He always bears in television netwQrk, two high painted, the smile soon vanishes mind that the Church must go schools, a home for 'retired Taunton, Mass. or· hardens into a grimace, the on in unity, lifter the Coui1cil, prieSts, a convent for cloistered· . nuns and expansion of the Con energetically closed lips relax, hence he does not want to alien VA .2-2282 fraternity of' Christian Doctrine the hands fall limp on the table, ate 'anyone. . program. and the ~an soon becomes what Mr. Franck's opinions andcrit icisms are especililly' important because he speaks for many peo PC)P~ John pie. in the contemporary world Capuchins Vote Aid
who are not Catholic, not even VATICAN CITY (NC) - Nu To Latin America
merous council Fathers can be formally Christian, thinking BURLINGAME (NC)-A year
people, cultivated people, who seen almost every day visiting • Savhigs Bank life Insuran. ly subsidy to .promote the work
the tomb of Pope John XXIU in feel a spiritual hunger, are dis • Jleal Estate· Laans the grottos of St.. Peter's hasilica. illusioned as to merely human of the Church in Latin America
Many of the faithfUl also make wisdom and progress, and more was voted at the annual meeting
• Christmas and Vacation Clubs it the goal of their pilgrimage and more willing to look to the of U.S. Capuchin major superi
ors here in California.
when the council is not in ses Church for leadership. • . Savings AceOu!,ts sion. Along with fresh flowers This, then, is a deadly serious Plans were also formUlated • 5 Convenient Locations book, although lighted through- . for further adaptation of the re
they often leave written peti tions on thE!' altar built over ,the out with laughter. Even as the ligious community to meet the
burial place. MoSt of these' ask reader enjoys what he sees here needs of the apostolate in' the
for the late pontiff's intercession in print or in graphic lines, he is United Sta~s, .where approxi thl,lt' p~ce may be preserved in . prompted to think and, Indeed, I . mately.. 1,300. Capuchin priest8.
IIIld Brotherll workiDa. .. . . 'tIle world. to pr~.
AnoUcan Official Is Now Catholic
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. 'mE AN'GHOR Thurs., Oct. 28, T96'
DiQCesan _SchoOls Hold. Elections For Freshman Class Officers; Students to Teach Reading
Prefontaine, Rose :Marie '!'GD dreault, Denise Williams. Club news from Holy FamIly includes word that the Chess Club will meet the ditto from New 'Bedford High; and that the Serra Club will hear Atty. Wil liam Carey on ''The Problems of a Catholic Lawyer." Some 200 Feehanltes are par ticipating in book discussion clubs this year, with titles and discussion leaders to be decided upon this' week. And yesterday Brian Frost, Louis Gazzola, Christopher Servant and Carol Miller attended the annual Stu· dent Council Convention, held this year .. ,Sandwich High SchooL .
Freshman elass officers have been elected. at Domin ican Academy, Fall River. For 9A, they are Gail Ferreira, president; Gail, Furtado, treasurer; Leslie Ball, student councillor. For 9B: Paula Labonte, president: Theresa Costa, vice-president: Debo- canisters are reported to have rah Lay,. secretary: Denise _ struck an aesthetic nerve - in Raymond, treasurer: Dani- Brother Roger. So if you happen elle Desmarais, student coun- to have any empty ones after cillor. the drive is over, you. might And at Jesus-Mary Academy~ place them, lined up neatly of also Fall River, sophs are in the course, on the principal's desk." election spotlight along with the Debating News frosh. Heading soph class 15 are Very appropriately named for Zen aid a lturvide, president: the Angelic Doctor, the St. Judith, Vieira, . vice-president: Thomas Aquinas' Society at lu).ieLa Perche, secretary: Con- Bishop Stang is readying itself stance _ Dufault, treasurer. For for debate on this year's Narra soph class 13: Christine Picard, gansett League topic, "Compul president: Michelle D ufo u r " .. sory Arbitration." Sister Francis vice-president; Deborah ·Mar- Veronica, S.N.D., society mod ehand, secretary; Mariette Cae- erator,' is aided by Mr. Joseph tonguay, treasurer. _ R: Daley, coach. At Coyle High, Freshman officers are Paulett. too.. students are planning a Berube, president: Elaine Du- practice debate on the arbitra fault, Vlce-pre~ident; Charlotte - tion subject. . Levesque, secretary; Monique Mr. DanielF. Grace Jr., a 1946 Goyette, treasurer. Prevost graduate, - has assumed . More Freshmell ' the position of debate coach at Also at Coyle High in '.faun- the Fall River boys' school. He · ton freshmen have chosen their was formerly debate coach at · leaderS. - They' are Charles Ber- Dominican Academy. narchio, president; Willi a m More EleetioJItIJ Bradshaw, vice-president; James Still more elections. At SHA, Ventura, secretarY; Christopher . Fall River, student counciloffi Reid, treasurer. Sfudent" council cers are Susan Bochenek, vice representatives are Jeffrey Rose, president; Kathleen Koss, secre Michael Wiley, Robert Murray tary; Pauline Corriveau, treasu and Greg Wilson. rer. Freshman student councilAt Prevost High in Fall. River, . lors at Feehan are David Dow several Nf:ltional Honor Soc~ety narowicz,' Sharon Gagne, Patri and Sodality· members have vol- cia Harrington; James Perkoskl, · unteered to help coach under- Timothy Robinson. . privileged children in reading. Glee Club president at Mt. The city-wide project I'. span- st. Mary Academy, Fall River, i' Bored by the NAACP. ' . Claudette Demers, aided by Juniors at Sacred Hean. Mary .Forest, vice-president; Academy, Fall River, will throw Jane Doran; secretary; Margaret their annual Halloween party Ruggeiro. Heading the orchestra · tomorrow, with Linda Pomfr!'!t Is Jean Martineau, and with her · and Joan Kelly in ch.arge of ar-' Berve Marilyn Strojny, vice rangements. The juniors also president; Kathleen Langfield, voted overwhelmingly to retain secretary; Carolyn "Robillard, - the traditional SHA class ringe, . treasurer; Elsie Pelton, concert instead of switching to a new mistress. And National Honor · design. . . Society officers at the Mount Rings are the thing at HoI)' are Marlene Shea, president: Family High in New Bedford, Susan Jenckison, vice-president; too, where juniors received them Denita Grygiel, secretary: Car last week. olyn Walas, treasurer. Students at Sacred Hearle Sophomore officers at DominAcademy, Fairhaven, are in a lean Academy for lOA, lOB and romantic mood after a~ending a . 10C, respectively are Sharon National' Theatre Players' pre- Andrade,' Diane Cloutier and sentation of Romeo and Juliet at Elaine Senechal, .presidents; Sue Bridgewater State College. "Ju· Gamache (lOB) and Peggy Cote liet was a real teenager," was the (10C), vice-presidents; Linda reaction of one-playgoer. Ward, Diane Beaudoin and MalSodalists and Future Nurse wina Dzialo, secretaries; Pat Club members at Bishop Feehan Maurano, Gail Todd and Sheila in Attleboro are. volunteering Cote, treasurers; Jeannine Le to work Saturdays at Paul A. vesque, Joan Darcy and Beverly Dever State School. Applause .Banville, student councillors. to them.. Loo.klDg to Future Sweet Stutt Looking to the future, seniorll ,Odds are excellent that nearly at Diocesan high schools are tak. everyone in the Diocese has, i8 Ing employment aptitude tests, · or will be munching on a chaco-. along with various college en late bar sold to him or her by a trance exams. At SHA Fall representative of one of the Di- .River, business. department stu ocesan highs_ At Bishop Stang dents learned the function of an in North Dartmouth, SIX TONS employment agency as a repre of ch<>colatearrived, breaking ,sentative explained the work of down into 48,000 bars to be sold her firm; and 'at Holy Family a by 1,000 Spartans. North Dart- representative of the Massachu. mouth and New Bedfordites, be -settS Employment Agency will warned. administer it special test' to sen. At Jesus-Mary, girls sold 8,500 .Iors. Also at Jesus-Mary, seniors bars, surpassing their goal. A h~ve taken a job ~laceinent·test. $100 first prize went to Suzanne Mt. St. Mary cheerleaders Morrissette, 'Jeanne Lavoie, and have been named. They 'are Cyn. € l audetteLeBlanc, who sold thia Bishop, head cheerleader, nearly $500 worth of bars. Sec- Marjorie Lowney, Carole' La. ond prize of $50 went to Janet roche, Nancy Sayward, Vivianne Ml\rtinville; Cathy Frank and ,Prevost, Jackie Moura and Judy Diane McNerney. Freshman Joc- Rapoza. They're already prepar elyn Brier won third prize of Ing for the CYO cheering tour $25. Sweater certificates went to ney in the.Spring. . five other students. At JMA, girls are proud of • Assorted candies instead of Latin trophy awarded by a'Da bars will be offered by Prevost tional organization and of 8Jl students in their annual drive, All-American rating earned by extending from Monday, Nov. the school paper. 15 through Thanksgiving. The The two highest teams of the eandies come in' boxes and can- American .ection of the Prevost laters and, says the ever-spright- . Bowling League are Ohio, 7-1, J,r. Pr.ev~st M:8I)1e Leaf, and Notre Dame. 1-3. In the ~a-
"T.-.
'13
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HEADLINING COUNCIL: M1ilrie Malone, standing, and Kathleen Medeiros .keep special Ecumenical Council bulletin board up to da~ at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton. .
'-I,
FIre! Every student dreams of a fire alarm that'll ConvenientlY dis rupt classes, but when it really happens .it's not so much fun. That was the experience of Mt. St. Mary students this week as fire broke out in the convent at tached to the school. ''1 was the first one out!" claimed one girL Actually, however, police offi cials commended .Sisters and --students· for their "efficient and orderly evacuation." _ At Bishop Cassidy, Scienee Club members had as guest at their first open meeting Randall Lewis, 19 year old' summa cUDl , laUde, Phi Beta Kappa graduate · of. Yale, who is at present a st. . dent at Harvard Medical Schoo1. His topic was. the ~en. And also at the.Taunton girl, school, students are looking for · ward _ to attendance Monday, Nov. 1 at a performance of ''The · Sound of Music", at the Durfee Theatre in Fall Riv~r. Michael Glenn, president Gf 1be Junipero Serra Club,-extenth an invitation to attend the planned meetings of the Spartaa chapter of the organization. Questions to be discussed ~ membel'll during ·the· year are: Ecumenism, .''The Beat Genera tion", the function of the United _NatiQnll, and the racial question. Co-editors Janice McKay and Myles Tillotson are' preparing the year's first issue of "The Stangscript". The clock is noW the feared item in these you'ng lives as they struggle to meet the deadline.
tional section, Mew York, te be held by moonlight In the
and Green Bay, 6:1h-1:lh, lead the . schoolyard. Folk singers' will
pack. . accompany the hayriders and
Seniors at DA have had their will . provide entertainment."
pictures taken for the memory Now, if 'only the moon cooper . book and also at the Fall River ates. school, orchestra members are In progress now at JMA Is the practicing "A Solemn Prelude," annual spiritual retreat, which composed especially for them by will close tomorrow. Underclass.. EdwIn Gardner; their cond~ctor. men are making their retreat at Can any other school orchestra school, while seniors are at La boast its own private composer? -Salette Retreat House In Attle A decent literature drive ., boro.. More Cheerleac1en' ander way at SHA Fall· River, with students soliciting maga .Cheerleaders at DA are Diane zine subscriptions from rela Blais, . Diane Glasson, Judith tives and friends. Also at SHA, FurtadO; Judith Raymond, Eliz an interschool sodality meeting abeth Sampson and. Pauline was held last week, with repre Plante: ""While at Feehan Donna sentatives attending from Cas Forget is head cheerleader,. sup. sidy, Prevost, JMA, Mount and ported vocally by Anne Cauley, DA. In charge was Mary Ann. .Martha Doldt, Janet Fitzpatrick, Demetrius, SHA prefect. Lorna MacDonald, Deborah Pis tona, Donna Pombriant, Carol Open Bouse Holy Family students were hosts at an open house for St. Lawrence parishioners recently. National Honor Society members were ushers for the occasion. Your nearest mail ~x is a First New Bedford Whaling Muse um was visited by Problems of federal "branch office" that's Democracy class members from open %~ hours .. day to make Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. The saving easy 'for you. No traffic, no 18 girls were accompanied by .-Mr. Herve de Prato, their teach· parking, no ....eather problem~. er. Object of the field trip ~as a Withdra.... al. $re just ,imple study of New Bedford'lI part In as ,avings payMents. . history. A junior-senior social Is Oft . '. . • • • • • • • • - ,all love.by·' tap for' Feehan High next month, with refreshment, ticket, band, ••••••• .. UI ttlh coupo" for Itortl'" 0". lid ...tollt 0" decorations and clean-up com. ,. .FREE ",cill forrM • .' '. • -mittees· already alerted. Also at ,• ... _••c,v"!' • Feehan, the memory book; Fee . .han Flash, has won a first-class '. rating from 'the Columbia Na ~ Signed, _...... tional' Scholastic Press Associa tion·. . St. & . No.--' • Jesus-Mary Sodalists arespon . '. .. :soring a Hallow:een· hayride. ·' .•.•.••••••• C .I~ . . ••••••. ,"After riding'around in .the dark .and gloomy woods for two • ••iiii••••• WE PAYPOSTAGII
hours,". says our reporter, "all 4 "'''''~ . po.t.pald addr••,eCi ."••Iop••, ".ody to mal'
. will participate in a weiner roast
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Paint and Wallpaper
OF FALL / RIVER
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THE ANCHOR"";:DioceSe of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
·fhe . Pari§h .Parade
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Basic Education'Movement Teaches Me,n's Real Value Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. From "The Church .~ the New Latin America" Brazil's Basic Education Movement offers its radio school students, as a minimum two periods of four months each, during which are given the rudiments of Basic Ed-' ucation. After the second cyCle the pupil should be able to read short texts, write a The total number of systems small composition using his 53. own words and be able to Number of radio-schools 7,353. add, subtract, multiply and Present number of pupils 180,
· divide, besides having awakened 000. · to his'" role of man within the' Average cost for each pupil 'society. E a c h . US $10.00. d ail y lesson The constant evaluations of lasts about· an the work have shown the Brazil hour. for each ian sponsors of MEBthat the · different class, principles followed and tech · as there are sys niques applied are' valid. But the , terns that have greatest encouragement comes · reached '0 the r from the direct results of the , grades. For the work which, through the efforts basic eight of the state and local teams and · m 0 nth period monitors reaches the pupils and the sub j e c ts sees them marching forward. 'provided are Eloquent are the words of a , the following: typical peasant pupil who cried,
a) Teaching to read and write, "I could not sleep last night be
cause I had discovered that I
, elementary, arithmetic was a man!" Many pupils have Health and nourishment Living' habits (house, family, become monitors, others have beome leaders' of local uniops, · ~mmunity) Relations with his fellowmen , all have gained in the humanity. Their Own .Judgment ftypes of association: union, In these dlays of difficulty, · dubs) which easily breed demagogues Work (professional informa from the extreme right and the' tion) . , extreme left, people are learning Spiritual deveIopmept they must depend OL their , . b) "Conscientization" of the that own good judgment and strive ",people, leading the pupils to: Discover the value of men as for justice. The true meaning of the word eons of God Awaken to their own problems love must regain its proper place Look for solutions themselves · in history. The law of "a tooth Assume their responsj.bility in for a tooth, an eye for an eye" · the raising, of the standard of must at last give way to the law of "love thy neighbor and be Hving of their community just as unto thyself." This lan c) Stimulate the organ.i%ati.on guage of justice brings out con 6f groups destined to represent tradictions in the face of current the community: unions, eooper ,teachings. It. means dislodging ·.tives, mothers' clubs, etc. and altering structures, it means Dedicated Personnel renewal of ways of ,thInking and Brazil cannot as yet count OIl way-.s of action. In our work we feel the need • large number of highly spe efalized experts..MEB, the Basic for a new 'spirituality, • spiritu Education Movement, bas to look ality that could be called the for people with initiative and spirituality of underdevelop Imagination, with some type of men~ ·which should come as the result of the study of technology previous studies and a great ca pacity for dedication. .Time in connection with the soclolog cannot be lost on new .courses leal facts of our underdeveloped that would take many years. countries, which refuse to re main underdeveloped any longer. MEB has to depend an. "semi MEB is .quite aware of the fact specialized experts" and when ever possible, give opportunity that it must live in a state of for further studies for those who ·con s tan t revision, correcting have proved capable and can be faults, discovering new tech spared at a gi~~e. Tp.e.~a~ niques to l be applied in entirely jority of the people who work new fields. that demand perma nent efforts, constant study and with MEB come from the Catho capacity to' adapt. But 'we feel lic Action· Movements;··· 'Dhe selection of new people that we are doing much more is made by the National; Team ' th,an just teaching how to read and write, because MEB is, con which includes teachers, anthro pologists; .sociologists, psychol ,·tributing to show the value of ogists, philosophers, ~conomists, the human being,. the dignity of experts in audio-visual tech;'; the sons of God, the right to niques, etc. The members of this equal opportunity for the human life we, defend.
team travel const,antly, to organ ize new' state and local' level
teams and supervise the work.
When a new state or local team Begin Beatification is organized, the new group must Cause of Priest
go through an inteI!sive training
MADRID (NC)-The calise for session prepared by the national beatification of Father Benito team. '" Menni of the Brothers Hospi The number of people who talers of St. John of God has ' constitute the national, state and 'begun here. local level teams is 471. In the 1870's, Father Menni The total number of radio sta worked in Spain, Portugal and toions operating with MEB is 25. Mexico to revive the order which St. John of God founded to care for the sick of Granada Deputy Grand Knight in 1537. William C. Stafford, son of In 1881, FaUter Menni estab Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Stafford, lished the Sisters Hospitalers of Fall RiVer, has been named dep~ · the Sacred Heart of Jesus, who uty grand knight of ;F.r. John . work with me'htally ill and re Verret Council, Knights of Co tarded women; Currently 3,000 lumbus, at St. Mic;lhael's College, members of this congregation Winooski Park, Vt. A graduate serving some' 60 sanitariums. of Bishop Stang Hig" ~'''ool, he They are active in the United is active in many coh~o:': organ States in the' archdlocesea of Izations. Boston and Loa Ancelea. •. .. ... q-",-
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ELEVATED: Bishop Elect Paul E. Tanner, has been named titular bishop of Lamasba by Pope Paul VI, and will continue his work as General Secretary of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, Washington. NC Photo.
Urges Catholics
'Expand Interest
SHAMOKIN (NC)-Cathollcs ,should not be afraid to venture outside their own little circle, to go where there are people who , disagree with their ideas," Carl A. Balcerak, managing editor of the Catholic Witness said here in Pennsylvania. Balcerak, founding editor of the first newspaper of the Har risburg diocese, expected to ap pear within the next three' months, was principal speaker at a Knights of Columbus tes timonial din n 'e r forMsgr. George A. Lavelle, pastor of St. Edward Catholic church here. "Let's learn a lesson ,fromtbe example of Pope Paul VI," Balcerak told his audience, "who at an age at which many men are content to sit on their social security, did not hesitate to leave the relative comfort of the Vatican to make three gruel Hng journeys-1o the Holy Land, to India and to our own country." Balcerak said the Harrisburg paper will not fail to make known the views of the Church on controviersial issues. "If it newspaper--Catholic or secular -softpedais news pertaining to such thorny areas as'raCl8I dis crimination or interfaith rela tions, I beleive it is failing to do its job as an organ of truth and is also doing a disservice to its readers,'; he said.
. Dining Hall Inferno PALOS VERDES ESTATES (NC)-The Marymount College ·campus will be divided into Par adise, Purgatory and Inferno when students will' mark the 700th anniversary of the birth 'of Dante Wednesday, Oct. 27. The locales are taken from the Italian poet's "DiVine ·.comedy," and special celebrations keyed to the literary work will be held in each spot.
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Members of the Catholic WomA Holiday Fashion Show is en's Club will receive Commu-: announced for 8 Wednesday nion at 8 o'Clock Mass, Sunday night, Nov. 3 at Venus de Milo morning" Oct. 31 at the parish restaurant by the Women's center. Following the Mass the Guild. Chairmen are Mrs. Ches women will serve breakfast to ter Gosciminski and Mrs. Doug first communicants, with Mrs. las Chapman. Tickets will be Leonard Silvia in Charge of ar- available at the door. rangements. ST. JOSEPH, The annual turkey whist is set FALL RIVER for Friday, Nov.. 12, also at the The junior. CYO. will hold a parish ~enter.. Mrs. Michael .. Halloween dance' from 7:15 to Murphy, 18 chaIrman. .' . tomorrow night in the parish A ham an d b ean supper WI'11 . 10 h 11 P i ill b' be sponsor d b th H 1 N a. r zes w e awarded . e y e 0 y arne for costumes. S?Clety from 5 to 7 Saturday Missals are available to pa mght, Nov. 6 at the center. rishioners for ease in following the new liturgy. They are for SS. PETER AND PAUL, sale in the rear of the church FALL RIVER following Sunday Masses. Cub Scout. Pack 17 plans a The Women's Guild is spon meeting' and Halloween party soring a whist at 8 tonight in Friday, Oct. 29. the parish hall, and is also ar An open meeting of the Wom ranging a rummage sale for an's Club at 8 Monday night, Thursday and Friday, Nov. 4 Nov. I, will feature a fashion and 5. Donations may be left at demonstration. Mrs. Raymond tho parish hall Wednesday, Nov. Dooley, chairman,' will be aided 3, in the afternoon or evening. by Mrs. Walter Cabucio, chairman. ' ST. ANNE, ,FALL RIVER HOLY NAME, Holy Name Society members FALL RIVER will hear Dr. Irving Fradkin,
The fifth annual parish bazaar · president of the' Citizens Sshol
is slated from noon .to 8' Satur- arship Foundation' of America
· day, Nov. 20 in the school audi- at a Communion breakfast to fol
· torium. low 8 o'clock Mass Sunday
morning, Oct. 31. The meal will · be served in the school hall. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, ,FALL RIVER ,NOTRE DAME, Members of the Council of Catholic Women will receive FALL RIVER The Holy Name Society will ,corporate Communion at 8 o'clock Mass Sunda~ morning, meet Wednesday; Nov. 3 at St. · Oct. 31 and will then attend Vincent de Paul Store, Pleasant breakfast at the parish hall. A , Street. Plans for a turkey whist cake sale will follow Masses will be made. · Sunday, Nov. 7 and the unit's , ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL. Christmas party is slated for FALL RIVER Sunday, Dec. 19 at the Coachmen Sister Maureen, R.S.M. of Naz restaurant. areth Hall, Fall River, will speak at th~ monthly meeting of' the SACRED HEARTS, Women~s Guild, announced for NORTH FAIRHAVEN 8 Monday night, Nov. 1 at Amer Ladies of St. Anne will receIve ican Legion Hall, 384 Third corporate Communion at 8 Street. Mrs. Dennis Lynch wiU o~clock MassSurtday morning, be hostess for the evening. -oct. 31. The unit's monthly meetlnl wlU be heIdat '7:45 ST. ,.JEAN- BAPTIS'l'E, FALL RIVER Monday night, Nov. ,I. An at The monthly meeting of the tendance prize will be .awarded Council of Catholic Women has · and refresments. -served. Masses -for the feast of All been changed from Nov. 1 to 7:30 Saints, Monday, Nov. 1 will be Wednesday night, Nov. 3,. due to at 8.in the morning and .T at the ,holy day. Mrs. Paul Pelo 'night. Two Masses ,will.be said · quin,hostess, will demonstrate on the morning of the feast Of · the' making of Christmas deco-. All S~uls, Nov. 2, .beginning at rations. ~emb~r!l are. ~quested to pay 'dues by' this' time. 7:30; An evening Mass is sched uled for 7. SANTO CHRISTO, The annual Fall chicken sup -per of the parish IS planned for FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic'Women · Sunday, Nov. 14. ' . will hold a special meeting at 7:30 ;Tuesday night, Nov. 9, In ouit LA:DY OF' ANGELs: the parish hall. A public turkey FALL RIVER. A parish' mystery"rlde Is' an · whist is scbeduled for 7:30 Wed nesday night, Nov. 10, also in ·nounced for 6:30 Saturday night, the hall. In charge are MrS. Mary Nov. 6 by chairmen Raul FerAlmeida and Mrs. Helen Oliveira. · nandes and Antone Mfchaels. 'Dancing will follow arrival at the destination.
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IMMACULATE' CONCEPTION,
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The Women's Guild will meet
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tHE ANCijOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Oct. 28, 1965
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16
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Od. 28,1965
Ie
c
Tells Harassed Husband Se'ek Competent A'dvice. By John J. Kane, Ph.D.
"For 23 years I have been trying to make our marriage work. She runs up bills, works against· my wishes, and carries oil an affair with her··boss. She says she will make things as mean as possible for me and she does. I went to a marriage counselor, but she wouldn't come. She saw· riage more difficult than usual. For example, you say that your a priest who sent for her wife works, contrary to your after I had first seen him, wishes. ' but when she returned she told me. 'No one will stop me'." No' one will
stop her either,
Ed. If what you
h a v e written
me' is a reason
ably objective
account of what
has been occur
r i n g between
-if:9U and your wife for a num ber of years, I am compelIed to wonder a b ou t her mental health. I am also forced to wonder just why you have tolerated such a situation?
Generally speaking, u n 1 e s s economic necessity demands it, I would not approve of wives working outside the home, par ticularly when there are small children. But there are certain cases where for the wife's ow~ psychological good, this may be a necessary type of adjutsment. This is something that you perhaps did not realize. But you will have to take into account. Since she is determined to work outside the home, and nothing you say or do has prevented it, you will have to accept the situ ation.
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But let me begin by honestly The extravagant spending with asking you. if you have written· which you charge her may be an accurate account of the sit another indication of her mental uation? In.most cases of domestic condition. There is no· question problems, there are usually two that your wife feels greatly inse sides to the story. Perhaps you cure. The spending of money, ought to sit down quietly and the acquiring of clothing, auto try to analyze what your wife's . mobiles, and luxuries is an effort explanation of her behavior to combat these feelings of inse would be. Have you given her curity by surroul).ding herself anv cause for some of the things with material possessions. Within th~t she' has done? How positive limits this is not necessarily bad. and sincere have you been in For example, sometimes when your efforts to g~t alo.ng with women are blue or depressed, her? the purchase of a new hat or a new dress may help cheer them Intelligent Step up. For women particularly such Please understand me. I make matters seem to be morale build no claim that what you wrote is ers. If it works this way and is inaccurate. But I feel I must not carried to e.xcess, the price raise that issue for' your sake. You certainly took an intelligent you pay is extraordinarily cheap. On 'the other hand, when it is step when you went to se~ a carried to excess; it ultimately marriage counselor, and when makes matters worse than they you consulted your parish priest. were in the beginning. She The most serious accusation plunges you into debt, makes it you make about your wife is the difficult for you to provide ade . charge' of adultery. Are you ab quately for her, yourself, and solutely certain that this. is the the children, and is a constant case? If you are, then you should source of friction within the return to the priest with some home. kind of objective proof of your Suggests Steps claim and ·ask for his advice. Separations are unfortunate However, you shouldn't .feel matters. But sometimes a sepa that such disputes over financial ration may be the only answe,I' matters are very unusual in to the kind of problem you pre marriage. Studies reveal that sent. I am not telling you to seek such quarrels are among the a separation, but am urging you most common that husband and to get competent advice from a wives experience. Fortunately, ~'~riest regarding the entire they are also among the least problem. . important quarrels. Mental Condition In the last analysis, I would But even more important than recommend .that you take the a separation is the issue of your following steps. First, try. to wife's mental condition. If she think this entire matter through is really mentally ill, and I am as honestly as you can. If nec using this term most cautiously, essary, seek help by explaining then she should have profes the entire affair again to a mar sional help. But mental illness is riage counselor or a priest 'and no simple matter. From what get their opinion. If you can you write I rather doubt that then truly conclude that you your wife is really psychotic. I have not undUly contributed to am more inclined to think of it the present situation, the matter as a rather severe neurosis. But of your wife's mental health this, too, demands help. ought to .be examined. It seems clear that your wife Consult your family ph·ysician means what she says when she and see whether or not he be states that she intends to make lieves your wife .should be re things as mean as possible for ferred to a psychiatrist. If he you. While I hate to write this, does believe this is necessary, . it seems clear that she apparent perhaps he can persuade her to ly hates you. But this could not obtain such attention. I do not always have been the case. At recommend that you urge her some point in your lives some to do so because it will only be thing occurred that changed her a further source of irrirtation. entire attitude toward you. What And if finally it becomes clear was it? she she is not mentally ill at all, , Working Wives although I am inclineq to doubt Any number of possibilities this, and that there is no possi exist to explain this change. in ble hope of changing the situa your wife and mental illness "is tion, then you must frankly face not the only one. The fact that the 'possibilities of separation you come from different ethnic .after you have discussed it with . ..pac~rC1urrds may ma,ke, a mar a...~ri~s~.~ • . • ,"
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Recalls Jesuit Missionary Chose
Death Rather Than Abandon Faith
Continued from Page One In a mQment I found myself surrounded also by a large group of Romans, rather poorly dressed and with anguish in their faces, complaining that they had not been able to pre sent their urgent request to the Holy Father. They live in the outskirts of the city, wallowing in water and mud, as they put it, and were certain that the Holy Father would attend to them if he knew their plight. I told them that I was an Amer ican priest, that they should go to the office of the Vicar General of Rome, and present their peti tion to him. One woman said to me very emphatically, "Padre, rna siamo tutti fratelli." We are all brothers! I assured her and them that they were all my dearest brothers and that the Holy Father would attend to them if they followed my directive. Another woman said, "We are the pupil of his eye; we know he will attend to us, once he has the chance to hear us." A gen tleman who was listening to this very animated exchange sug gested that one of them' should be chosen to represent them at Wednesday's audience with the Pope. They allowed me to leave but I did so with a very heavy heart. Experiences Instructive I believe that these three sim ple occurrences of Sunday morn ing reduce to concrete terms the Council's debate on religious freedom. The beatification of Blessed Jacques Berthieu brings to mind the fact that he was shot to death because the Men alamba would not allow him to' practice his religious belief nor preach it to others. The Holy Father, speaks of the Church's loving attitude to all non-Christians but insists that the Church is in possession of the one, true religion willed by God. The poor Romjlns who sur rounded me and the many thou sands who received the Holy Father's blessing that morning were people of simple, trusting, and unsophisticated faith, but also an easy prey to the facile tongues and specious arguments of proselytizers., Looking at these thousands of his children, like so many millions around the world, the Holy Father had to assure them that whatever the Council may say about our love for all men and our appreciation of the good and true to be found in their religious beliefs and about man's natural right to re ligious freedom, stili the only true religion willed by God is the Christian religion. By this time next week, the Conciliar Fathers will be voting on the re-re-re-elaborated Dec laration on religious freedom, CO use the expression of Bishop' De Smedt. This Declaration has seen more than twenty revisions, two of which have been pre sented to the Fathers in Council. AU this rethinking and revis ing are sufficient evidence that the subject treated is most grave and complex. It is said that without this Declaration the di alogue between the Church and the rest of the world cannot continue and that the Church will fail to remove the greatest obstacle to the ,fulfilment of her mission in the world toC@y. Attentive to Declaration Since all the Fathers in Coun cil have nothing closer to their hearts than the fruitful carrying out of their mission within and outside the Church, it is n;;ltural to expect them to give to this Declaration on I;eligious freedom .a maximum of attention. The Bishops of the United States generally have little or no diffi euIty in subscribing to the Dec larauQIl u it 5iaDWi.
The "interventions" of Cardi nals Cushing, Ritter and Sheehan are well known in America. Most bishops from other parts of the world have accepted the Decla ration also, some with many and serious reservations, but a few have rejected it altogether~ without, however disapp,roving the principle of religious free dom. The Archbishop of Madrid, for instance, said in Council that he is definitely in favor of reli gious freedom but will fight with all his strength against the present Declaration. Bishop John Velasco of Hsiamen, China, (in exile), rejects the schema be cause, in his. view, it is too legal istic, it is against the traditional teaching of the Church. It can lead to pragmatism, indifferent ism, and religious naturalism. As it stands, the schema will give rise to doubt and anxiety in' the minds and hearts of the faithful. He himself is unable to understand it in any other way, even after consulting many ex perts. If he cannot, how can anyone expect the faithful to understand it correctly! Bishop Luigi Carli of Segni, Italy, says that the present schema is unacceptable because it is based on the assertion that man has a natural, true and.ob jective right to propagandize religious and moral ideas, even if they are false, unopposed by anyone, provided he is in good faith and remains within the limits fixed by civil authority. So far as he is concerned the Scripture texts quoted prove only psychological freedom. It would be just as easy to collect other Scripture texts which are rather severe against those who spread error and do not want to listen to the Church. It canm~t be said that' all who spread error in the time of Our Lord were all in bad faith and therefore condemned by Christ Himself, by St. John, St. Paul and St. James. Holy Ghost Superior Bishop Marcel Lefebvre, Su perior General of the Holy Ghost Fathers, does not favor the text because it tends to grant equal" rights to all cults and sanctions the neutrality of the State,~ which may intervene in reli gious matters .only for the com mon good. The text maintains that thiS new attitude is the re suIt of a slow development through a long process of evolu tion. He maintains that at the source of this evolution we do not find the Scriptures or Tradition, but , the philosophers of the 18th cen tury: Hobbes, RQusseau, Loche and others. He even sees some significance in the fact that nonCatholics approve the text as it is! He believes that the argu mentation of the Declaration ,will not stand a careful defini tion of the concepts of liberty, conscience, and the dignity of the human person. These con c~pts cannot be defined, he inSists, except in relation to Divine Law. According io him, therefore, only the Catholic Church has the right, properly speaking, to lib erty. For other religious com muniti~s, each case must be ex amined in the light of particular circumstances. Alleviates Fears Cardinal Sheehan of Baltimore contended that the schema sqould be accepted because its ideas, its strducture, its style an swer the desire of the Conciliar Fathers. Hoyvever, it is very im portant that a correct interpre tation be ,given to it. He sug gests, therefore, that it would be wi~~_ to accompany the Dec laration with an .official expla nation. Cardinal Lefebvre of Bourges, France, tried to allay the fean
THE ANCHOR Thurs.: Oct. 28, 1965
17
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Americans P~ay· Important Ro~~ must proclaim in clear term! and without any reservation the vrinciple of religious freedom and of freedom of conscience. The Church will in that way make an act of reparation far the faults of the past;. Her moral authority will grow in the eyes of the nations. Those who op press liberty will place them selves in the pillory before the eyes of all men of good wiJI, 'and this embarrassment may be for them the beginning of a sal utary conversion." Necessity of Proclam"tl')n ,I remember Father John Courtney Murray, S.J., insisting again and again 'at a conference given here in Rome two or three years ago that it was 'vital' for the Church to proclaim at least the principle of religious fl~ dom. He expressed as a theolo gian what a martyr to the faith eloquently pleaded for in the 131st General Congregation of the Second Vatican Coundl. I think it is necessary to re member that the endless discus sions and even the maneuverings on the pari of those who fear for the faith of the People of God, if the Declaration is proclaimed as it stands, are motivated by love for the truth, for the Church and for all men. Only the truth can make us free. The Fathers want to present
CARDINAL BERAN OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA
of the Fathers who showed much concern for the problems raised by the present schema. For him 'the text does not favor subjectiv ism or indifferentism because it states precisely that the point in questiOn is civil' liberty in 'the juridic~l order, and disapproves expressly all forms of indiffer entism. It also asserts the obli gation of searching for the truth. Moreover the Declaration makes it clear that there is only one true religion and one true Church. It in no way ,opens the door to the spread of error because it is in itself a barrier against all dishonest propaganda among the simple and the poor. It will not weaken the missionary effort of the Church because it is pre cisely the lack of religious free dom wl)ich prevents the preach ing of the Gospel in vast regions of the globe. Nor does'it foster a false humanism because it points out the duty to allow man to seek God. It is in no way contrary to earlier teachings of the Church because we must always keep in mind the development -of cir cumstances which call for new applications of the constant doc trine of the Church. C~rdinal Beran When Cardinal Beran,-Arch bishop of Prague, spoke early during the Council, he was re ceived by a warm applause from the Council Fathers. His last words in 1949, before his voice was silenced behind· prison walls, were a profession of loy alty to the See of Peter. When his vorice was heard this time ' befor~ the whole Church assem bled in Council, it was an im passioned plea for religious freedom.
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"This question of religious freedom," he said} "is excep tionally serious. Scripture says, 'Whatever does not come from fai~h is sin.' Therefore, anyone who coerces another by physical or moral force to act against his conscience leads him to sin against God. These truths are confirmed by experience," he said, "and here I dare to invoke my own witness. Since freedom of conscience was radically limited in my country, I have been witness to many violent temptations brought by this sit uation to large numbe.rs of peo ple. Among my flock, even among the priests, I was able to observe not only grave danger to their faith, but also strong temptations to lying, to hypoc risy and to other moral vices which corrupt a people deprived of true freedom of conscience."
day in this complex and thorny problem of religious freedom. 'Their service of truth is diffi cult, but their love' for men in spires them to take up th~ crOss each day, and in prayer and study find the answer which the Spirit of the Lord sees fit in His wisdom to give them at this point in the life of the Church of God.
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"Always and everywhere, the violation of freedom of con science generates hypocrisy in large numbers of people, and one might say that hypocrisy in professing the faith is more ha,rmful to the Church than hy pocrisy in hiding the faith which is the evil more wide: spread today. Thus in my coun try, the Catholic Church seems to be expiating the faults and sins against freedom of con' science, such as the burning of John Huss in the 15th century, and th~ forced return to the faith of a large part of the Bohemian people in the 17th century.; "History tells us," continued the Cardinal, "that this Cauncil
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THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Oe1. 28, '1965
Fall River eyO Aw()~d Banquet Fall Youth
River Area Catholic Organization members will hold their' first- annual awards banquet at 7 Sunday night, Nov. 7 at White's restau rant, North Westport. The, Sam uel Priestly Memorial Award to a youth outstanding in all phases of CYO activity will be pre Sented, in addition to numerous parish and individual sports trophies, and an award to the r- 0 s t outstanding all-around parish CYO unit. Several adults who have contributed to the eyO program will also be hon ored. In announcing the banquet, Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Dioc esan CYO Director and newly appointed head of Cathedral Camp, declared that the CYO's "mqjlt outstanding and blessed asset is perhaps the unselfish anit. dedicated contribution of time and effort by men and women interested in serving God through the service of youth."
Plan Referendum On Pennants
Peace Instrument
I
,
Humphrey Commends Aims and Objectives
Of National Catholic Youth Week
RINGWOOD (NC) For what is believed to be the first time in New Jersey, where the controversy over "One Nation Under God" pennants started, the public will have a chance to voice its opinion of them. One of the questions to appear on the Nov. 2'ballot in this rural Passaic County community will ask whether or not a banner with that slogan should fly over Borough Hall. The controversy: started more than a year ago when Knights of Columbus in Hasbrouck Heights presented such a pen nant to that community and town officials displayed it under the American flag.
WASHINGTON (NC) - Vice President Hubert Humphrey has lauded National Catholic Youth Week-Oct. 31 to Nov. 7-for reminding of youth's obligations and opportunities for service to God and man. Noting that the week's theme is "Youth, as an 'Instrument for Peace," Humphrey said this will
Vocations Drive LONDON (NG) - The Serra International movement to en-, courage'vocations to the priest hood is shifting emphasis in Britain from efforts among ele mentary and high schools to work in universities. A series of talks at London University and Manchester University will sig nal the change in tactics.
Thereafter the Knights launched a ·concerted drive to have the pen'nants displayed elsewhere and they, became an issue in more than 50 commu nities in this state alone.
remind youth that "it must hold aloft the torch of knowledge and liberty against our foes of dark ness and slavery, of peace against aggression, of spiritual values against atheism and ma terialism." ,Humphrey's comments are contained in a statement sent to Msgr. Frederick Stevenson, di ~ector of the Youth Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. ,The Vice President said: "I am proud-as you are proud -of our young people. At home and abroad, in parish or' in Peace Corps, in Catholic Youth Organization and in other com munity action, in countless ways, they have shown thai they will indeed keep the faith and ad vance our m 0 s t cherished values."
Extend Progrtlln For Deacons
DETROIT (NC)-A Summer training program that sent, dea cons into parishes f<Jr pastoral work will be continued through out the year. - Father Edward J. Hogan, di rector. of St. John Provincial Seminary in nearby Plymouth, Mich., said the deacons leave the seminary on Saturday morn ing and return Monday evening. The 38 deacons participating represent all five Michigan dio ceses and all are expected to be ordained to the priesthood next June. During the extended pro grams, they have been assigned to parishes other than those in which they served during the Suummer. Surveyed at the end of their Summer assignments, the dea cons said they profited most from preaching, giving instruc tions to converts and living in the rectory with the pastor, and his assistants.
U r9~s Reception For ~ ~fugees , MIAMI (N-C)-As public offi cials and others, here reacted with alarm to prospects of a new influx of Cuban refugees, Miami Catholics were urged by their bishop to receive the newcom ers generously. Bishop Coleman F. Carroll, in a letter' from Rome, -called on Catholics to show "the whole hearted spirit of fraternal char ity which has characterized their attitude" since south Florida be ,came a haven for refugees, five years ago. Widespread expressions of alarm that a new inundation of refugees would swamp area schools and other public facili ties and hurt the economy fol lowed Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's announcement that any body could leave Cuba who wanted to. Florida Gov. Haydon Burns said he had asked the federal government to make resettle ment outside Florida, mandatory for the new arrivals.
Stud~nts
May Enter Politico I Activity
MILWAUKEE (NC) - Mar quette University has told stu dents they are free to take part in "political and social action o~ campus" if they feel they sljould. The dean of students said "You are free as students to decide for yourselves within the limits of your academic ob ligations and other requirements outlined in the student hand book to partj.cipate in political and social action off campus ac eording to your best insights and responsible consciences. "In doing so, you should make clear that you do not represent Marquette University as such, and that as free and responsible individuals you will take the ClOnsequences of your action."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,:Oct. 28, 1965
Old Rochester Tops Tri-Counfy
Attleboro and Feehan Share 'Bristol County League Lead . By Fred Bartek
~id
given day any team could' peat any other team. The BCL power 1s located in the northern section of the county. Attle boro High and Bishop Feehan High, its city rival, are cur rently tied for the- top spot wit h t h r e e league victories. Both the Bom bardiers and the S ham r o'c k s have lost non-league encounters. City Rivals Skirmish Coach Jim Cassidy will send hie Jewelry City combine against Bishop stang High on Saturday at Hayward Field in Attleboro. The Attleboro Club has been picking up momentum as the season has progressed Last week it romped over CoYl~ 36-0. B 0 mba r die r half-back Dave Thombill Is the top scorer' in the area with 40 points. Team wise, Attleboro far out distances its closes rival in scoring, having amassed a total of 132 points in five games. The Stang Spartans have a 3-2 record. Stang ill still smarting from its 14-12 setback at the hands of New Bedford Voca tional last Saturday. It was the first Voke victory over Stang which will rely upon Dave Broughton and Joe Bartek to bounce back into the -win column against the first place Attleboro. Souza Top R1IIlDer - . Feehan High will leave the leagu~ ranks for a game at Mansfield Saturday. The Sham rocks turned in the biggest win in their short history with • 32-8 romp over Durfee last week, enabling the Feehanites to re main in a first place BCL dead lock. Mansfield sp~rts 8'-4-1 mark after taking Milford last week The Hornets have climbed ~ the top of the Hockomock League via a fine passing attack 'and the running of setback Joe Souza. This game, which com mands much local interest in the northern comer of the -diOcese will be the start of a keen non~ league rivalry for both schools. . . ~o teams still not out of the runmng, Durfee (3-2) and North
Nuns to Run H"ome
For Cancer Victims
HONG KONG (NC) - The Chinese Sisters of the Precious Blood - a Hong Kong diocesan congregation -"have agreed to manage an -Anti-Cancer Home sponsored by Hong Kong's Anti Cancer Society, a voluntary or ganization. The site for the 100-bed home to be completed in 1966, h~ been provided free by the gov ernment. Major surgical opera tions and chemotherapy will be carried out at the government's Queen Mary and Queen Eliza beth Hospitals but administra tion of general medicine will be done at the home. In addition to two schools and an orphanage, the Sisters also eonduct 8 general hospital and two medical clinics for the poor.
county teams this year, having lost to Attleboro and Feehan," and naturally, they would like to salvage this game against North. Yoke Turns Corner The Rocketeers have had definite scoring problems. Their defense is hard to beat, but, it -has learned that a team can't win if it can't score. North dropped an 8-6 decision' to ~toughton last· week. Surprising New Bedford Vo cational Will-be at Taunton Sat urday. The Vokesters and Her ringtowners both have two wins and two losses. Vocational played its best game in recent history last week upsetting Stang.. I~ may be the start of somethmg new for Coach Harry Kummer and his boy!!. - Taunton also got back on- the victory road last week. The Her ringtowners downed a strong' Oliver Ames club 6-0 in a non league encounter. Oliver Ames ret?rns to Ho~omock action by viSIting Franklin Saturday~ Crimson at Home Coyle High of Taunton, which has an open date Saturday, will spend the extra ~me trying to realign its forces, hoping to change its 0-5 record. New Bedford High hosts Brockton High Saturday. The Crimson, tied by Revere last week (6-6), now have .....a season mark of 3-1-1. In other inde pendent games Fairhaven hosts Plymouth-Carver and Dart mouth is at Dighton-Rehoboth.Dartmouth came up with ttl! initial victory by downing Case of Swansea, 7-0, last week. The loss gives Case a 1-4 season . mark.
~
Diclc Krzyzelc 01 Seelconlc:
Middle Li~ Backer (ltHoly' Cros~ .
It has been that oothing is a sure thing. This seems to be definitely ~he case in local high school foot bal~ for 1965. In the Tri-County League only Old Rochest er 18 undefeated (5-0) ,and, in fact, the Bulldogs are the only team of such status i n . the Diocese of Fall R' I Attleboro (1-2-2), clash at . _ Iver. n Alumni Field Fall River Satur the BrIstol County .League, day. The Hilltoppers haven't had there is turmoil. On, any much luck against northern
'~-CODDty Le~el'll
Tn-County. action paee settmg Old Rochester will be at Wareham. '!he Bulldogs gained sole possession-of first place last Saturday by'downing previously unbeaten Falmouth, (24-8). Coach Paul McGuire's Clippel'll had won 11 straight before the skein broke. ' Bille~ as the game that would .determme the championship, Falmouth now has to count on ,somebody else· to stop the Old Rochester sweep if it is to get back into conten~ion. Wareham, which has been coming strong after a slow start, last week easily downed Barn stable, 26-6. A 3-1 league rec ord keeps it in the title running A victory by Wareham over Rochester would knot things uP' _again. Falmouth will be at Case in Swansea. The latter combine is winless in conference compe tition.' Brit\«» Ace Scorer Barnstable (2-3) will be at Bourne (3-2) in one other TriCounty game. The Bourne Canalmen who dumped Dennis- ' Yarmouth last wee~, 35-14, have the top scorer in the league in Manny Britto, the only player in this area in the past few years to have scored four TDs in one game.- That was against Dartmouth three weeks ago. Somerset, after losing to Dighton-Rehoboth last week, has an· open date. The Dighton club has a 3-2 record. In other games come Saturday, Apponequet U at Dennis-Yarmouth and Prov incetown at Nantucket.
Old
151
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19-Year Sophomore Is Pre-Med Student By Phil Perreira The spelling of Richard Krzyzek's name is unusual, in fact, it is so unusual that the telephone directory and' the sportswriters who often use his name--very seldom agree on it. Richard is rather unusual himself for it is no mean feat to be both an outstanding foot ball player and an outstanding student. Nor is it so usual to be modest to the point of not want ing these qualities known and the 210-pound middle linebacker for the Holy Cross eleven,'would rather not have them known. This makes him not only un usually athletic and studi9us, but and, perhaps nicest of all, unusually modest. Athlete--Scholar ~e ;,19-year-old sophomore Crusader is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Krzyzek of 55 William Avenue in 'Seekonk. Richard's father is a postal worker in Pawtucket and his mother is an English teacher at the Seekonk Junior High School. Their only son did not become a good student and gridder only upon reaching the college on the hill in Worcester. He was both these things all the way through his high school career at St. Raphael's in Pawtucket. And that is why Holy Cross gave him the four year scholar ship he is now on. Let's take a college football scout and say to him, I know of a boy in high school who is an all conference and all county offensive and defensive tackle and one of the top ten members of his class scholastically,' be sides being a member of both the diocesan and state honor societies, the winner of a trophy for being his schools outstanding football player and another for being the be"St athlete-scholar i hi 1 n s c ass. Suffers Wrist Sprain Just what do you think that scout might say? He'd probably lIBy, "We want that boy right now," in much the same way as those at Holy Cross reacted when they found out that those were Richard Krzyzek's qualifications. Despite the fact that there were other colleges interested in this six-foot 2 inch Seekonk resident, Holy Cross haa him in the bag. "Richard alwaY'll wanted to go the,re," his mother said. Pre-Med Student He's surely there now as Holy . Cross's opponents 'can sorely testify to, but 11; was touch and go for a time this Fall as to wheth.er coach Mel Massusco had lost him for most of the season•. "It was first thought that Richard had broken a wrist in an early season game against Dartmouth, but the injury proved to be only a severe sprain. Now he is back playing with
RICHARD A. KRZYZEK,
• heavy protective bandage around the injury and has seen considerable' action against BU and Syracuse University, the Cross's. last two opponents. Playing football and carrying a tough schedule in pre-med as Richard ill now doing neces sitates _a lot of hard work, in .. fact, so much that he has had to· ask for permission to study for an extra hour past curfew time. And how well has' this extra studying worked? Shot Putter "Very well," Mrs. K~zek said, "but if I told you just how high his grades are my son would" be very angry with me because he just dosen't want any publicity." H~rd study is necessary if
Richard's goals of becoming either a doctor or a research biologist are to be attained But with the pigskin' seaso~ drawing to a close, this bo,ty from St. Mary's parish area in Seekonk will have plenty of time for the books. That is, until track-season starts, and Richard Krzyzek starts putting the shot for the Purple Knights.
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THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., .Oct. 28, .1965
Fiv'e Decrees
Continued from Page One detailed votings on the,Religious Liberty document and, the Di vine Revelation' Schema. TG give more time to thecomm~s sions, it was also c;lecided to take another temporary recess from after ,the d~li~erations of. Oct. 29 to Nov.' 8. As by-products of the Council deliberations' and decisions. the U. S. had further use of English in the Mass and the French BLhops vindicated thecontro versial "priest-workers". Final Decrees Approved in today's solemn ,proclamation were the docu ments concerning: The Pastoral Duties of Bishops, The Renewal of Religious Life, Catholic's At titude Toward Non-Christian Religions, Priestly Formation' (Seminaries), and Christian ~ Education. The first decree will bring the theoretical change~ of the Church Schema, earlier ap proved, into the practical sphere. Collegiality will take its first modern steps, national. confer ences will more practically work out problems that plague' a great region. The Bishops' relations· with the Roman Curia will be ,more clearly defined. The world's many men and women religious will also have clear directives concerning their needed and indispensable coop.. eration in the Church's pastoral ministry, a respectful veneration for their chosen vows, and an impetus to modern adaptation of dress and methods to make the Church as a whole more efficient in today's demanding world. All sincere religions are guar anteed respect by the Church and the great world-wide reli gions as Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism are praised for the loftiness of their faith in the One God, Who is the Father of us all. The Church's foundation in the Jews is recognized and cherished and any breath of ,anti-semitism on the part of the world is deplored; on the part of Catholics is repulsive. In the field of education, a good Christian education for all is not only the ideal but the in dispensable. An education sec ond to no other secular prepara tion should be the priest's with th~ Church pastoral anxiety and zeal as the core to the making of a true Other Christ. Divine Revelation Tomorrow will also be a busy '-" day because of the voting to be done on the Divine Revelation Schema. All of the voting on th i s ecumenically important schema are to be accomplished in one day, it is hoped. French Priests ' The hierarchy of France has also received papal approval for the resumption of the "Priest':' Worker" experiment w h i c h , after much controversy, Wa.l suspended in 1959. J_ small number of priests will be authorized to work full-time in factories and workshops, after appropriate preparations. It was pointed out that their mission "is essentially priestly; like all priests they ~ill dedicate them selves to announcing, the Gos pel." U. S. Liturgy A suggestion on the part of thE Bishops of the United States for greater use of English in the Mass was approved by the Holy See. In English will be the Collect, Prayer over Offerings (Secret), Preface, Prayer for peace (conclusion of Lord's Prayer) and the Postcommunion. A supplementary missal will soon be read~' for publication.
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