The ANCHOR
V ticanOfficialAsks -Women Take Lead
faU River, Mass., .Thursday, Oct. 31, 1968 Vot 12, No. 44 @ ] 968 The Anchor PRICE lOc $4.00 V-,af pot
Discuss Increasin,g Catholic Population, Priest Shortage MILWAUKEE (NC)-What 00 do about an increasing world Catholic population in the face of a definite shortage t!Jf priests was explored illl a meeting of the Vatican Om t:.regation for Clergy held there. The meeting was attended . by Archbishop William E. . " ~8ins of Milwaukee, one of and even diocesan level, in the fJhree Americans on the con- sense that there be some coop- . r:regation, which is com- eration between bishops within @rised predominanttly of Roman i'ardinals. .Tihe other two American mem"; \!)em are Richard Cardinal Cushilig of Boston and John Cardinal fiody of Chicago. . lfnterviewed on his return lltiome Archbishop C<lusins said MAe t'hrust of the meeting was \Woorld-wide and centered on a broad approach of the whole r:mssion of the Church. .littatistics were studied. by a (JpeCial subcommittee of whiCh x Archbishop Cousins was a.memM. The subcommittee has been ~ecially commissioned b7 Pope ~uI VI to prepare some procedures for a better distribution of ~rgy "011 a worldWide, natiOnal,
the same country as to use of personnel." No definite co~clusions w~re .
reached, ArchbIshop. C<luslOS said. The ex·plorato9' two and a half day meeting. of the subco!" mlttee was confmed .to stating the question, discussing means and possibilities, recognizing that episcopal conferences and, more specifically, dioceses would be involved. lInternationally, the statistics showed the "same' b~lc prob lerns we have of a const·antIy rising Catholic population, either by birM! or oonver~ion, and a static vocation situati~n," the llrehbisbop said. '. 'l!'um to Page '~l:a:
NEW ORLEANS (NC)-An archbishop asserted here "the world needs to be rea newed and a renewed womanhood can accomplish that task." Coadjutor Archbishop Leo C. ByrnE( .of Minneapolis and St. Paul, keynote speaker at the 14th congress of the National Laywomen's Retreat Movement, declared: "The term renewal often is used glibly today' and refers to externals. But the heart of role to play in all facets of the the Church as the people ~ renewal refers to the depths Church's work, Miss Goldie said. God, she added. Second Vatican Council "Lay people have roles to play of eternal life." More than The recognized this in its concept of 1,500 women attended the three day congress. " "Women vitally affect the world in which they -live and fQr them to 'renew the world, they as individuals must be re newed," Archbishop Byrne said. Rosemary Goldie, associate secretar~' . of the Rome-based Holy See's Council on. the Laity, discussed the kind of renewal which is necessary. The laity has an important
: ROSEMARY GOLDIE ·Vatican Olfie}al
Turn to Page Seventeen
ChangesT0 Come In Baptism' Rite Father Annibale Bugnini, C.M., secretary of the C01\l~ cilium for the Implementa,tion of Reform in the Lit~rgYD has indicated proposed changes in the baptismal rites for infants. Plenary sessions of the Concilium have recentl7 been cOl:npleted. Father Bu gnini reported that the. re be celebrated in the presence oft formed baptismal rites will the community at the same consist of two parts -'- the time." baptism of infants and the bap tism of adults. "Tile baptism of in-fants is set up in a way to be adapted to
the actual condition of children. It is not' they who aet. And therefore stress was laid not 90 much on their will but' on the aetual action of the grace of God . and the oommitment of parents, godparents and the oommunity." No inform'ation on when the new rites are to /JO into effect . 'was given. ' Father Bugninl added that "it is to be hoped, that the bap tism may be celebrated with the . participation of the parish 'oom m\1nity (the Mass) or at least with it certain number of frie~da and relatives. 'It is preferable .~ .that more than one bapt~s~
.Outlining the new riteDt Father Bugnini said the cere mony- would unfold in foWl' parts. First is to be the presen tation and ac<:eptllnce of the baby, carri~ out in a dialog~ between relatives and priests. Second, the themes of baptism are to be illustrated by the Lit. urgy' of the Word and by a ser mon, ooncluding with the prayer of the faithful. Third, there !B to be the renewal of the baptismall promises and the profession of feith by those present in their own name, which is to be' fol lOwed by administering the bap.. tism. This is to be crowned b,. some concluding rites and a final blessiJig which wlll illl elude the newly baptized infanta, Turn to Page· Sm
Leailing Church· Hi$toriari·· Speak; Out
-On Papal Encyclical .Fon~wing ~. the text of c:'~ artide. by~ fathet: . David Knowles, of England's Cam b~idge University, a well kn~wn historian, in' thIS Tableil of london, Oct,. 5, Pope !Pcnl~!s ~cyclical, lHumoinae Vita~ .•
on
A Briti8h sclwlM
~.
world David
repute, Fo-tMft OtBe~oved priest sons-expound! the Knowle3 -hM taught theolol11l and h.if; (zhurch/s teaching on marriage witholl.llit tory and is GCknowZedgetE . ambiglOity" (lHumanOle Vitae, sectiofl1l 23). 0,8 having unparaU6led . oompetence m the fiel4 lhesa ~ines lOll'S written ili1 Il'esponsel to) of Medieval Church hw tory. He M presently ~ a11'II IUnsolidted invitation from the editor, ClIi'1l academic historian ,.~ old and doss friend of 40 years' standing. dent end teaching ~ (JO/m"bridge lhi1)e'lf8i~rJ<,
lh~y (om~ fll'om «:!J priest
.
who, like others, Ihas d~ Ihis sitill1lt of theological iteOlching, mid who !has $ince !become an academic his bion. Ho speab IT\lOW as g Catholic fro Ms fellow Caithoi(;Cs. I willi /begin. Iby soyong that I f~eB mCll
some, at. least, of an ~ whQ have written and spoken about the encyclical Humanae Vitae-canno1 and re-read it with ' . have read ..." reverent care. For myself; its fuH power was only revealed' after cOnstant' r~~reading. It is, takeh as a whole; a majestic:~ and eloquent· document, a careful exposition iof Cl1 theme in which no consideration of imp~rtance is ·omitted. It is solemn and magi,sterial, yet in tensely personal: and compassionate. It is funy . cognizant of modern condition's of life and modern ways of thought. It is perfectly clear and simp~e-would that an comments upon Of had been so-but it assumes in the reader a Il'ecognition of his complete creaturely depen dence upon God, as ciIIso a living faith in has vocation, aided by God-given powers, to !be a child of God; and ito rise to Christian full ness of life here, and to the fellowship .pf t~e divine nature hereafter. U'niike almost all his commentators, the !Pope allows for: both sin and divine grace os practic91,·lIsituationai," fadors ill1l the human predicami;mt. Turn
to
Page Ten'
2 ' .'
!~ "Fint"Friday . ~'en
THE A~,~HbR:"",I),!9!cese of-Fall River-:Thu~s~i'pcr·:3'h,J,9~8
S~¢S· >Re~igc>ous ,,'Suiting 'Needs
Meet "Tomorrow
Coa:nmuni'ty
Bev. Patrick J. O'Neill, iDio
cesan Superintend'ent of schools,
of' M@n,'
'will address' members' ;of the F'all River First Friday Club at their meeting tomm-row night ill Saerecl Heart School, followinjf Mass in the church.
Robert J. Nagle, Fall River su,perln,tendent of' schools, wiD introduce the speaker. President William B. Norton will preside. MemberShip in the dub • open to all Catholic men in FaD River and viclnlty. The monthl" schedule" includes Mass' witJi 8upperfollowing.' '" '1, " , 'Rt. Rev. Msgr; ,Lester-'HuD, pastor of the church, ls,mooera tor. In addition tc> the president, officers' are Edward ,Berube. vice-president; Frank Feitelberg. secret'ary, and John,Romanovi~ ,:' treasurel'~ I ,,'
STATEN ISLAND (NC)-Dialogue and, exper~menta tion are the keys to the growth and development of religious eonlPIunities in America today, ~or the r~ctor of Wood~t~k,
Md., College-center of theolog'lcal studies for the J eSUlts' ' ' ' New York and M~ryland provinces, told a group of vo- growth emotionally, intellectu eatio,n d ire c tors meeting' ,ally and spiritually is enhanced by co!Jlmunity life, and in some here. Father Felix Cardegna, sense demands community life;" ,S.J., addressed the a~nual meet- he added. , ,,' " ' , mg of the 'Eastern' Association :,', 'FatherCardegha said religic>us of Religious vocation' Directors "Communities today are '''aPostol- ' (EARVD) at Mount Augustine.1c, and are to spring Qut 9f,'t11~m,;. Retreat House here,on the 'value selves and to :be, preoccupied of 'oommmlity;' wi:th ,creating ,¢omnitmlty, out "Human and Clirlstian exis- side, of .themselves in the world/' tence," Father C:ardegna said, Such groups, he said; ,could best , "demaj)d it' of man: ,He is'made be defined as "person-centered for "community: he be~omes communities of service:":" , human, person, Christian only in ' Noting positive future trends
comm,unity." in communi,ties, Father Cardeg-
Service na mentioned the opening of
Stating that he wopld limit communities to those who are his remarks to the "community not members; a greater concern life of religious as I see it de- for building Christian communi~loping," F'a,ther Ca~degna ties rather than staffing il15t1pointed out that he was discuss- tutions, and grea,ter freedom' for ing '''apostolic religious" com- members to pursue their ,intermunities, which he defined as eN in areas where their ,talents "Christian celibate communities lie. of service.': He also pointed tC">ward greater , "A celibate religious, especial- participation in decision-making; !y, I think, needs \ his religious greater cooperation in the exeeommunity 'in a special way, if cution' of the decisions, and a, he is to live humanly and as a more intensified prayer, life, Christian outside the ~mmunity centered on :the Eucharistic 'cel- of married life," the Jesui,t said., ebration, as key elements of a "I take it as clear that his' strong community. '
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"Urges Obedie'nce 'T0 Eneye I-BCa I' CHICAGO (NC) - In a pas letter, Bishop Jaroslav Gabro of the St. Nicholas Ukralnlan Catholic diocese of Chlcago encouraged Catliolics to consider the great privilege Of procreation of new li1e with God as well as their moral and physical capabilities for the up ,bringing of children wheza planning their families. Bishop Gabro asked Catholics always to place themseives UD der the protection ,of Coli's cn-' vine Providence and said: "Al though the Holy Father' 'Pope tom!
CHRISTMAS VILLAGE:PrM'loarations for annual ~Y' Christmas Village bazaar of Friends of the Presentation of M~ Novitiate are made by front, from left, Mrs. Alma McPadden, Notre :Qame parish, Fall River; Mrs. Margaret Quinn, St. James, New Bedford; rear, Mrs. SaTah Hughes, St. Lawrence, New Bedford; Mm. Nellie Kruczek,St.Stanislaus, Fall River. Event woill take place from 9 to 9 Friday and Saturady, Nov. 8 and 9 at St. Anne's Schoo}of Nursing, Forest and Osborn Streets,' F'all River. Featui-ed will be ,8
V'erm~nt OrdinarY Pledges 'See's ~~IIis~:~~~utiqUe and many othe~ booths. A snaCk Contlnu~ '-" " ", :' ,'I SC'h00I S" ystem W-I'I eal ,C', CI, ,mpG.eg',:n BVRLINGTON (~C)-Bisbop, 1hem, directly or', indirectly. Pres. 4t
dent.
bar
~~y~~e~~~inex~~:sU:
the approach to ,the problem of ~tal relations, depending 0Ill
the 'findings of medical science' Robert F. Joyce has pledged the Plans for this subsidy arebe!ni' the encyclical is an impo~ Catholic .school system' will be made. . . . .,'. doeuDient of the Sovereign POD continued, making an "immea::' ."The' people of Yerniont i'eNatioIl1al Conference of Christians, Jews ~ and binds everyone' in ~n surable contribution to the spir- ' 'receive a subsidy of more than SCleDCe." .. itual, and, moral life" in the' $7 million each year, representees ppea ,to rej.u Ice .""~ The prelate: noted that aJ t of ~ucating"'the: ' NEW:; YORK'(NC)'-:'The Na.: ,', ,'rhe"'NCCJ: 'sta'teinent""noted:', : =~~:n en:~~~~ ~~:,~~~nd ;;: , . ,,~tate~ide,' B.ur.lin~, :~i?Cese.., . lng, ~he ,~ "af~~\':~~~:n~~~~;'~f%Z:~ ',"~t~ T~s ,~~Q~; ~~~ ""tio'rial ,'Conference of 'ChristianS ,:that th.e' j,nterfaith,· group came araby,there are some 'v'oic~~ .... , dioeesan"fask foree '(jn"educatioD' "Of 'the C6st 'of 'proVIdink bWld::Y andl,Jew~ has eXpre.~ ,conc~rn ! In~ ,beIng largely, .as;~I'C!!lIJllt :of ' ,dissent 'among ·'the crer~ and !egarding ,the" scho'oI:' 'problemS." "ings; furnishings arid- equlPJDient', ,o~er r!lCI~,~ ,~~ ,rel.lgJ.ous" pr~J':l>-~',i;8Dti,-:C~~~~Ilc,! 'PIje~ud;~~ ,:.; ~- .' laity. ,'"., .' ," "I. ': '"r,,: He said the report, made after a which totals many millions of dIce m~IfestI.ng itself, in the f.ested in the 1928 campllIgn• .'\ :.,: ,Be' continued: "Becau$El"of the " :/ year, ,of .'~lntensive:study," 'is- of, "dollars ,of, capitaL'ill-vestment. ,1968 preSIdentIal ~~pal~~. , . The basic purpose.of NCCJ, complexity of' this 'impOrtant '\ ;pricele~s .yaJue,", ~~" recom-, , ' ~her.e~are a number o:f,;~wa)'S ~ The NcpJ ,statement', said:" the s~ement said, is .. 'to ame- " problem;' I'enootirage 'oat, clergy mendati?ns of how to me~t ,pres- ,'both: :!r:oin" p:Ub~c ,and ilHva~. "blatant .an~ 'subtle a~pelils to ' Ilorate ~d. strive. to ~nate and falthf~l to' a' fi11al obEioience ':' ,e.ot and Juture 'probl~ms., . -'" 8OurC~s, bY'whic;h help maY be such preJUdl~ are bemg made" thepre?~dice. WhICh .. disfigures- and devotIOn -to the' SOvereign ,~,~isll:0p JQyce no~ there are' .'provj,ded~wlth~',due rega~' for ~y'so~e candIdates in conn~e- ,'9~r P01!~.cal, economIC and 80-" Pontiff. Thisls son~eSsa&, ea • ."nu~~J,'"of ,ways the school legal and 'constitutional .provi- tion WIth a numper of caD)palgn CIa! ll.fe. , ' ,'Peelally when ubsound'ideas c2 ;8ystem can be helped, both'from, sions,,<and, we", ~beueve \tbese issues. To continue this Course· subjective oonscleMe'": arc public and)l.rivate,~'ui'c¥,'\' \"', ,,: irhould be usecL'-,' :.:., ,. ,win :result in dissenslo~ which, ,Mass Ordo 'SPreading 'in' the entinr:'worIcll :; The state,ment asserted: ' 'Ad I· 'Ed ' ' tI may well tear the country apart. today. , "The· diocese of Burlington Js "Th' 'li~ ,.' uca on . 'I d "Any candidate winning em: FRIDAY-All saiDts. I Class. d . taiDlng . glOUS an mora ' 0 f such' an appeal Wi 'n eomnu'tted.' , IoU mllIn our, -au e ref th-28 000 hUd e . - th e b aslS White. Mass ProPer; Glory; , - - - - - - - - - - - - Oath o11c Beh 00'I ,sys te' . public' .... on-ohis' e ,Ilk " C ren m . . If sa'ddle d WI·th .......
m. w'e 'bef . fmd himse ..Creed; Preface of Patron D. D. Wilfred C. Ileve it makes an immeasurable' , sc o~ IS ' eWIse 0 pn- forces of bigotry which will Sahits. contribution ~o ,the spiritual and !om,avryes'tm,concetmof'A notably grleatedr make constructive 8OJutions to SATURDAY - COmmemoration Sullivan Driscoll \ l]ife of th personne an . and foreIgn . mora· 'e di ocese, 0 f the finance en has air ad' bee" mad our domestic probof all the faithful departed. I state of Vermont, and of all our and '11 ... e ~_ n e lerns impossible." . Class. Black or Violet. .... ' d' 't' WI con..nue IoU grow. commum....es an CI Izens. "Adult' education is a means The statement eaned on'votem SUNDAY-Twenty-second Sun469 1l.0CUSTSTREET An Benefilt, of 'Pro~ding directly for chil- to support "only those candiday after Pentecost. n Class. Green. Mass Proper; Glory; FALL IlUVR, MASS. • "The diocese as a whole dren in their homes, and daily dates who have clearly repudihas an obligation to support life. Efforts already undertaken ated overt or covert appeals to Creed; Preface of Trinity. 67~-33811 th~ schoqIs, as the state has all In this field are to be expanded. prejudice. We call Upon candi- MONDAY - St. Charles Borro obligation 'to support local "There are categories of adults, dates for political office at meo, Bishop. n~ Class. White. lIChools. All people benefit:&om &Bd children who need special every level to make a pledge of OR educational care, the retarded, no appeal to racial and rell55. Vltalis & Agricola, Red. the blind, the deaf, the crippled. gious prejudice." TUESDAY - Mass of preceding BR©)@~rLA Our programs for these are deSunday. IV Class. Green. Mass veloping along several lines. ' Proper; 'Common Preface. FUNIE~~1l lHlOME, INC.
FORTY HOURS
"These outUDes indicate the IMte~IJ'@logy WEDNESDAY-Mass of preced .. Marcel Roy - G, wmlne Roy DEVOTION
magnitude of the problems in NOV. 11 'ing Sunday. IV Class. Green. ROller IJlFrance '" Christian' education which we Mass Proper; Common Pref FUNfERAIl. DBRECTORS faCe.' ,They 'JUe great, but not Rev. A. Gomez da Silva Neves, 'ace. Nov. ~ Thomas More, beyond ,our ,resources' and 1910, p,astor, St. John Baptist" THURSDAY-Mass of preceding 15 Dlnfing~on Ct. Somerset. Sfren~h." '; " :r-:rew Bedford. Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Sacred Heart; oak i3iUffs.' , New ISedford Notre Dame,; Fall River. ~95-!$1l66 N,(i}V. 12 ProPer; Common PrefaCe. . .: ',' . Domo'niroRa Nov.l0-0ur Lady of the :rm;. ,Rev. JamlJ3' H. ~y, 1924,
To benefit the Domi~ican Sis , Pastor,' Sacred Heartj Taunton.
maculate Conception, O'ROURKE ters' 'elevator fund,' St. Cather
New Bedford. ' . Rev. Bernard B9ylan, 1925, JEFFR~W ~. ~'s. Fundraising.. ',Committee St'. .Tohn the Baptist,' Pastor, $1. Josep~ F~ Rivez. ,Funeral Home will sponsor ,a' Dominiri>la at
New Bed~rd., , Ji'Ullll~f'Sn NOV. IS .
'1:30' Saturday nlght;Nov. 2 at St. LOUis,.Fall ~,ver. ' 571 Second Street . 550 l'Loc1ll8t Street ~minican' Aeademy" 3'1' Park }lev. ~uls J, Deady, 1924" Fall River., Meiss. Street,' F'all, River;, A<biiission Founder, st. Louis, F,all River•.
Fall River, MasL will be free and, refreshmentS
mE ANCHOR 679-6072 672-2391 NOV. 141 Second Class Postage l'ald ,It Fall Rlver1 \ win be· servEl9: Mrs. .John B MICHAEL J. 'McMAAoN Mass, Published every Thursday at 410 Reed, committee president, is Rev. Francis' J. Duffy, 1940, Rose lEo SuWvaa
Highland Avenue... Fall Rilier, Mass. 02722 . 'Registered Embalmer by the catholic rress Of the Diocese of Fall chairman of the event" 'aided Founder St. Mary, So. D~ Jeffrey IZ. S~lUvan
Licensed Funeral Director ,River, Subscription price IIr IIIIlI, postpaid mouth.· ' by her slate Of officers. '4.00 per Jll8I.
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FUN!ERAL HOME
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SULLIVAN Bo,ne
HeQr . Arguments In 'Texas· Farm: Workers' Suit
Tnt: PiNl.-m.:n:~
.3
Thyrs., Oct. 31, 1968
Proposes Salary Scale for Clerg)!
BROWNSVILLE (NC) panel. of three federal ~ges heard final argu ments here in a civil rights
BURLINGTON (NC)-A com mittee of the Burlington dioc esan priests' senate, set up to study clergy pay, has recom mended a salary increase for all members of the diocesan clergy. The recommendations, which attempt to stabilize priests' in come while getting away from a complicated scale of base. pay. stipends and living allowances, were made after nearly a year of study and prep.aration. The propOsed salary scare for pastors is based on the number of years ordained: less than 14 years, $250 a month; 15 to 19 years, $275 a month; 20 to 24 years, $300 a month, and over 25 Years; $325 a month. In all cases, the pastor is given a $5Q a month car allowance, the Christmas collection and $2 out of each Mass stipend. Currently, the pastor is paid on a scale involving a base pay, special collections, Mass stipends and a living allowance that de pends on the number of priests living in the rectory. The report recommends that assistants be paid $200 per month during their first six years as priests, and $225 per month until named pastor, They will 'also be given a $50 a month car allowance and $2 from eacb Mass stipend.
~.
IIdt instituted more than a year on behalf of striking farm IIborers in this area. Instituted by the United Farm :Workers Organizing Committee. .L-CIO, in June, 1967, the -.n.t attacks the constitutionality crf si,x state laws, and also 6arges a conspiracy by law entorcement officers against the lerm-Iaborers' union. r.Phe arguments heard marked • Pesumption of the case. La~t
lune, attorneys representing
parties in the suit offered testi
mony and evidence. The arg~
!Dents concluded the delibera
tions, but Judges John Brown,
.Woodrow Seals and Reynaldo
Garza are not e~pected to ren
der their decision for at least a
month or possibly longer.
~he case is being heard be
eause the union iB asking tha·t
six state statutes - regarding
mass pi~keting, secondary boy
cotts, disturbing ·the peace, un
lawful assembly, use of abusiv.e
language and obstructing a pub
~c road or street-be -declared
aDconstitutional.
Tohe union also is seeking an
injunction to prevent Rangers
and county officials frOm "selec
'!ive arrests and prosecution" of
union members and their' sym
pathizers for the purpose of
""discouraging them in exercise
_ their constitutional rights."
There will be a meeting Priests Al'Il'este~ of the Senate of Priests of Depositions were submitted the Diocese 'on Friday af last June from two Catholic· ternoon, Nov. 8, at 1:30, priests-Father William Killian, In the Catholic Memorial ~:t executive editor, the Alamo Bome, Fall River. Messenger, San Antonio archdi;' <I HOLY SOULS: November is dedicated by the People of God to the Holy Souls. oeesan newspaper, and Father In this modern painting by Virginia Broderick the simple joy of souls. is suggested. Sherrill Smith describing tleatment .they Jeeeived from Irince Christ said, "Be glad and light-hearted for a rich reward awaits you in Heaven." starr CoUnty law enf9rcemen-t The Chi Rho monogram for Christ and the growth forms rising in the background GENEVA (NC) -The social lfDlbol{ze the good sools being lifted jnto a new life in Christ and· a fellowship of ever 8el'vices dicers: . of Caritas, Swiss Catb 'J!he two priests eomplained luting joy. It is promised <Wis. 3:1-3) that the souls of the vir.tuou8 are inGocfs olie charities, include free ses: ~y and five union members hands; in the eyes of the U'Illwise they did appear to die, but they· a.re peawe.- NC Photo. education courses. were arrested in February, 196'1, ~. county officials. The priests said they were .n~Hng - ~n privaieproperty and the union members, using bullhbrns, were urging field bands at the farm where Roches ter is foreman to join the strike. The group had permission to The post has been filled by ase the private property from WORCESTER (NC)-A Prot «be owner, the priests stated. estant minister WIlS selected for the Assumptionist Fathers under They said they were taken .the No. 2 post in the operations the Roosevelt-Litvinov agree ment in 1933 when US-USSR of 64':year-old Assumption Col before Justice of ·the Peace Lo diplomatic relations were estab pez and warned they might be lege conducted by the Augus jailed if arrested again. tinians of the Assumption here. lished. Another clergyman, the Rev. The college board of trustees - Father Bissonnette, 4~, held Bdgar Krueger, a United Church appointed the Rev, Dr. Oscar the Moscow post from early 1953 of Christ minister, and his wife, of Pharr, Tex., who have worked E. Remick, a United Church 'of until March, 1955, when he was m the Rio Grande Valley' since Christ minister, as vice-presi unexpectedly expelled, appar dent after naming Father ently in retaliation for refusal 1967, testified personally. con Georges L. Bissonnette, A.A., as of the U. S. government to ex cerning arrests and rough treat tend the visa of a Russian Or ment on the part of the Rahgert.! president. m May, 1967. The college presidency had thodox archbishop then visiting been vacant since last June in the United States. Father Bis when Father Louis F. Dion, A.A., sonnette has served at the col lege since his return from Mos resigned and returned as Cath 'Ca,h Co,d Shapp;•• cow, the last six years, as aca olic chaplain. to the di·plQmatic demic dean. He is the college's Budg.'-ea,Hy, qukkly, qu;••ly 1 colony in Moscow.. ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) 12th president. '!!he world release of Jim Bish Father Bissonnette earlier had CllP's new book, "The Day Ken Dr. Remick will also be coor held the Moscow post which Dedy Was Shot" will take place carries with i,t the unofficial dinator of academic' aff·airli and at St. Bonaventure University title of "apostolic adniIn.istrator academic dean. Last year he co bere, Nov. 22. founded and is serving as co of-the Soviet Union." Father Reginald. Redlon, director of the Ecumenical Insti Theology Socie~y Member O.F.M,. wi.lversi~ president, tute of Religious Studies at the said Bishop will be present tc college. The institute offers autograph copies and meet with audit and graduate degree pro grams in religious stUdies to faculty members, students and' 'l'lhe aimual Memorial Mass for clergy and laity of lll1! Christian dhe public. 'lIhe book, previewed as the deceased members 'oj( Fall River faiths. Catholic Woman~s Club will be IlmSwer to the William Manches The college described Dr. ter version of the tragedy in biB eelebrated at 9 Saturday morn book, "Death of 11 President," iB ing, Nov. 2 at St. Patrick's Remick as one of the only two Ch\lroh by Msgr. John E. Boyd, non-Catholic clergymen who are • being released on the fHth anni club moderator. Coffee will be members of the College Theol wrsary of the Dall'8S, Tex., as ogy Society, a Catholic profes GIlssination of President John F. served in the school hall follow sional organization. ing Mass. Kennedy.
.-«0
Senate Meeting
New Activity
in
(nNo.2 .Spot.
Assumption College Names' Protestant
Minister Vice-President'
~
THE CHRISTMAS CARD
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Plan Book'i ReRease At St. Bonaventure
Memorial Mass
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.A (chicken ,tbanbecue 'will :lfea Iture :a :ChI'.istmilS,bazaar, ',to 100 :l\Ponsore¢l1Fx.id~Y :and (Sat~dl1Y, INov. ,I 'ana :2 .Qy ltbe :L;adies' (G1:illd :at !the lSdhoOl haIl ',on lRatite [;717.. 'IDhe ibazaar '(W.i1l lbe (open [6 Ito f9 JFmi.day llti'ght :and :fIir.om (6<o!1il0rik <on lSatut:dl1\Y cn:t:gbt. 1Re'lineShmen'ts . '\Will !be :sel'l\fef! ffirom ;an "tqpen llliitdheri" con Erd (dll'Y lBIld :the 'ibmlbecue t1',·m !be 'serw.ed flirom IS :to ',7:90 ;Sa'tundlllY., fItillo:w:ed lQY ;an :auction ;at lB. 1Bod1lhs wID include ~Ohristmas (decora'tions, :handmade ;amole!!; 'wJilte ,elePhailt ,and ia '(cbildren!s ,C'orner. :Barbecue 'tickets 'are ',ava'iHible ..from Mrs. Louise Buckley, ;tele:': ,phone 636-@68. Mrs, Helen Mello is chawmanfor the 'e:vent, aided by Mrs. Buckley; ,and Mis. John Caron, guild president, is treasurer 'wlth Mrs. Napoleon Bussiere,
'Women's ~Gtiild members· w1B meeLin :the :cburch -auditol'ium at :iO Thursda,y mornings ,to.s~ knIt and make other prepara- tions ,for a ,bazaar ~lannea . . eon'junetion 'With :a ,Cbrdsm.e tea. 1l1he :Rose IHaw.tbome :La~ -ewing group tWill ,continue .
P.HILADELPMIA ,;(.N.c,)-4john and ,wj[l] il\ggna~(ltte \fihe Isihua'tion.. :lli,j8'!l&::'~~j:t:;-;; Carclinal Krol has .issued an a,p "The isuper-v.iiilon ,df !hwrdLnedls peal ,to all Philadelphians for of It!housands ,df lIlegiana'l tlii:gh "reasoned calm" .in the wake lof schOOl !snnillen'ts ;at cdiiBmisslilltiinne racial distur:bances in :and is mit;a IDew lPr.dbilem 1l!l0l' iis tift araund ,this city:s ,public' restriidtOO lto :aI\\Y' IpllJrttiiaullllll" 'schools.' schoOl (or :all'lflB. 'Ulliis iis :a IcammOIil , In:his :statement ,Car.dinal K:r.ol 'problem 'lWJaiidh ccan Ibe :sd1\\1oo weeJIily meetings. ,$Bid: ' only 1Q'y lIle&POnsrbile ,effaIits <£if , "~Duri~ ,the ,past w,eek, .distur studenit:j,' ,tfacuJ:tw :and ',S<ib061, 'S'E. 1MA:BiY:S CAll'IIEDR~ FA:1lL BlWrER' ' ,bances 'with ,threats or .incidents traru;pOlitlltion :a'nd IllCalfffiic :au of violence took ,place in ,or thoriLfties. The Women's (Guild !Will ~ arouna eight of .the 22 ,public "\llliis \PEoOlem miilll <ol:l!\;y !be at is :Monday.nigb:t, 'Nov. 14 in ;:the secondary .scbools in various aggna.v.a'teCl u;atiher itihan 'sol,v.ed ShmnrocK lRoom <of the :Corky 'sectors of p'hilade~phia, These by lro;ge :and ,angw lITldbs :and 'Iry' Row Club. disorders ar.e ,a ,source of . gra;v~ those m,110 ,lI!l1e ,ae:tenm1ned 'ito 'a.t concern not on.1y to, the students tribtit~ racial ,and r.eI:igious . sore. !lllO{A;ClLN'lI'llIT• and their ,parents .but to all .re overtones to~ver~: ,student (dis NJEW.B!E:!DIFO]t1) sPOJasible ,citizens. turbance. A :ham 'ahd' bean supper .wi!i. DJETRGJlT U:FJl~CThL: Di "Our Archdiacesan Oommis-. Black ,a.nd:vl'Hfti! be 'sponsored by members oftml· sfon on Human ,Relations ,and Holy ~ameSooiety ,and 'St. "We 'must ,bear ,in 'mi,od that xee:tOT ,of ':Ar&ministratrive Ser our ,pr.iests are cOQper.a.ting 'by Anne's '8<lClallty 'from 'S:30 to D school ,dlifi:cilils, the (faculty :and '~ices :01 m11~ '~cbajocese of word ,and ac.tion .wi th .theefforts Saturday nigbt, .Nov. 9 in ~ the ,students ,are black and ',white, Detr.oit 'isiLeo :Sch uJte, w bose of all lawful authorities ,to re church hall.. CathOlic ,students in 'diocesan :apJl0rn:1Jment \wil] tl'.J1ee A.r.cb :ST. Jtl&lR.GAlRJEiIr, stoue ,peace and order. ' 1 schodls-mran;y 'of \V\".ho, 11lhll1ough ,bish0pifo1tnF. [JJ)eamclen ,and :IlUIPlE:.t[J&IDSJalllilY "Gity•.school ,and ,police au OUR lLAm>'lY tiG1F' ~GlElLS, shared4tiime jpl'QgJ'ams, :aFe ,also I Members 'of -SS. Mal7garet , Ii' A\:UL JRJrWJER :o:1fuer 10filliCli:alls lof tihe anchthor.ities ,ha,v.e /gi.v.en ,both ,assur students lin '1lhe 'vocllftional )Mary (Guild 'will ,sponsor .a !.fash ance' ande:v.idence ,of their ,sin ul!ii0ceseffi0T !mOlle diu;}J a:>er,ti -;The annual mystery ride 'foil' schoo1£ cdf tthe IPtib'1ic 'schoo'} 'sYB ;ion ,Bhow ;SItturday, :No:\'. .23 :at lK. cer.e ,desire ,and ,their .ability ,to lCiiJI;lattiic:m Rill rtfue j]}a'St0r.~1 min :df (C ffiIan. !Buzzards B~\y, 11\11:1:s. pll'risllioners will itlikeplace 'Sat tern :a;;e 'blaCk .and w.~h1te. insure the s~~ty of all ci.tizens; INC ,(p.h0:tJO. )Hqi}':dan COQggeshlill. lis Idhiu:nman. urclay nigh't, Nov. !I!, -With ClUW '''W:.e ;are iaU IlDtIDrl!>eJ$ <Of COIle -to neu tr.alize .those mho mali meeting 'in 1the 'cburell ''Parking (G,tiila JI:tlPl!eseritEttiwes twill :a1 commuri1ty..\We llDust IlIa-ve icon ciously ,01' ,tilOUghtlessi;y incite ,to fidence :ana ltnust un Wbe :sinoere 1ftla_ft~ ~, ,_, ,~_.-!Ao itena:an (f!v:eriiT\g <of rreodlledmon !lot :at '5 'o'cloCk. violence ,or disonder,; .and to 'ex , "'.llheHdl;y lName Soeiety . . . inteU1frons ;ana .Eiiliiartts 'Of 'our 1fto.~lIItMii\'f,V'" "'.IlJ.IlI"IRII~11 :at (flfll5 'W;eClnesda;y lIIiglrt, lNov. pose thOBe whoroQploit the ,dis JlOunces '8 'Oommonion Ibretiidast laW!firil (dlifiiriials., 1l!Jnalitihorib:eB. ·W~ ,JI .....:em ~t :ilmnBmar il:6tt.ea! lbouse, turbances ,to .foment ,tension ;and lIi1lD eCI(ij1 ta~ J!>uXbw;w.. iMrs. .D:ames IDdbeIltV and meeting to follow '8 'ri"ClodI: ,persilDS :shoUla ,lbe tba1l11ed(filtom hostility .in .our ,cammunity. Mass ~Sunday morning, 'Nov. 'It. schodl JPllElJriises, :and lunder fIlJO a tiODS . ':s~ «(NC) _ A -;Bead lis iin cCha~ge, <<if ,CoQ)lel:llIte ~¥it.h .QUioiaJs 'CIiiltlren cdf 'Ma13' Will 'meet 'ill , , ' . 'mbe tamt 'has tcotitJiibuted 1lo ciroumstances lshoUld (fi~ !be '''As a religious leude!;. J,add :stant 'COdtmact JDad~ !fJ{)ssible\Bia£ran tnilie'f. ' the 'dlurch hall 'following .J pemIii'tite8 lto :assume Whe :autlhol' my voice to that of other lead :m1eJdt'!tug", db d '} d 1f.or o'clock "Mass 'this Sunday 'mOrD ity (df JPFoper lSdhadl <o:llliidia1J.s <or iti1U1ough i1ihe lU. S. (G(flf1ce <£If !Eloo . ers ,of .aur ,cemmunit;y ,in ,an IUT- llWml, "c <Ci>.P-P,'oriturii'!'y ·has lbeen, >T~ ... \W' ,,_~e n ",::'t'SlN e ,U,.,6 ' il\'g. to (ffimect ,·studen'ts 'OIl lschodl 'S "ttl \0 ,eULI=u1!N lJUs", o~ . 'U. gent appeal for reasoned calm d lher.e Ib "t JIlBWe "C ~veen ed e Sr lKa!tib .. 'JNI "TMSBT arid 'fior tfull 'ovQpm;a:tiion wiith preniiBes. 's,Chool :d£ ',eauca'tion ,.:"" .. ,..:. ;,~__~~iJ(,O ~'l;.' "'iP.liilladeJ,phia, lthe ,(Oii!'y , ,(If tmnJ.\\IexSiJt<Y!s, " ....:In..' !1' ,.s_.....emor .......""t ..... u,lWIC"'.S ena""" ST. ,.lJOSEPH,
lawful officials in a concerted :ana , 1E..UCi<laVn ,"u.QJects, "IlC., \vv'ar:":'_::" i'- ...'" ........;:.
FALL 'RIVER
,must chll\'\le ffa£th BrduherlW 11I0ve, u 'lWastii gt 'lID C ' ,ouam, 'W<l>ll ""e II, . . e 16 ..... effozit tto Testore peace in 'our ; n ' , on, . l . , " . ~eaker ilit (the (G,tilld1s lDleetm'g New CYO dfficers 'are'Karlene neigHborhoods 'and 'order :in our in ttibe'measouuce~ltif iUs lIiidh ltma-' (ene-~ear <coIllirr.adt <ca;]]s !for 'g' d ". 'Wt IN"o:v, (6 :.. ...t Mroz, ;president; 'Denise \Bela~ dition an ,lJneeting :ana :sdlwlin'g ;its I lIJhe ". 'o'f = ' , . con '1nT WY,e nes a;Y JIl.l'gu, schools. Icen.'tinuan<Jec .",,~aa :Stm,t 1SlQ) is <olClock iin ithe (COD Oenter 'on 'gel', \ViC6-'Pr-esiden't; \DavidVen "Such o'fJlicia'ls 'have the i:ltity prol)lems. 1Plemeiliaw iIlCamln.g Ito 'educate c , • , anciio, 'secretary; 'Thomas \Me d 'St..... 't "'" "'h 'h u" deh .south 1Bl;v:a., ,<Dnset. ,"ll1hose who l!Joti'n-Sel .ollhernMise mr and ffihe '!lonity '1:0 'rnsure the =eR ' a·•.• !s aJ:J. '" 'Fong 0 .,~, e JQenna, treasurer. peace and security 'which -Will and ..foment .discord and \dolence :state, S:J:. ,P.All1RIOK, ·<(!)C1;ol>er iis 'membel'sl1ip monti.l pro,v.ide ,egual Jpnotection ,of .the are 'Ildt 'true' 'friends lif the 'peo "Father "William J. Codd, S.'3'., ,,SOMERSET for (the \Women's (Guild '8nd rights and safety of all. The best ple .lif 1,P.nHadelpnia, \We 'beg 'aiT-ector 'df Heaa 'Sta'it su,pple 2\, .turkey whiSt 'for The ,benefit God!s Jhelp :and we :~ppea'llto 'our 'meni:ar;y ltra'iriin:g 'in' 'lWash'ington 'of 'the parish 'Will' be tMld :a1 18 memoers :are Tequested to 1"eJJlit intentioned efforts of .self-ap pointed :and v'i'giJante groups fellow lcitllzens to Jive .as :a <com-' Sbtte and lprofessor <of ,educa , Sliturdlly might, 'lNo:v. :2',at !F.isher annUlil ,aues lto ''Mrs. John ~ Fftzgerlild. wfH 'be 'partisan, 'self-'defeltting munity.. w'e ,can ,and lJDust." rtJion :a't :Seattle <Univer.sIty, :saia JHouse, JIlm iSouth rStTeet; 180m'; Beginning this Sunday, ,867 '. .the (contracl!s total cOll\Ponimt ,is 'erset. Scouts ~i1l 'seI'Ve odou.ghnutlll, ,ft :$63,906, including $5:600 ,in .kind :I:he 'Women~s ,Guild w.ill ,meet ana (ooffee fin {the lS<!h061 han ~te:r' ent I iJ1'CMtlISe contributed 'by (the university at's 'Tuesaay nigl1t,'Nov. 'S, ,also fdllO'Wing /the U\lIIIBSeS. 'Proceeds .r"':" itself. at ,Fisher House. A hat 'style will 'be used lto 'send 19iftS (• ..[ The university contribution, show ,.,v,ill ibe featured; plllfultiiooers semn:g-in ,SOUtA 'WAS:llIi.1NGID@N ,(NC') - 1001- !II/6S9 ',to J..2294 Jin ru975. W-ash he said, is manifested Jin 'faoulty., ST. ~roSEPH, Vli8tnam ,and 'U'.hlilland. leges :anll .uni\\lCII:Sities in the 'i~g'tonT.echriica'llInstituteis ex 'facility , ~ducati?J~aland other F AIRBAU-EN , capital ;a1le 'eJQpected ,to 'haMe 'en- ,peated to 'goow f1iFam ian original resour,(J~, ~ :aGl~1~on 40 -$201000 'n'he ~socia'tion Ielf 'the 'Saor-ed 811'. MA.R~S. roRlment-s ItdtliJlling .'9'11000 '9tu- 'enlJ)o1llmen,t (of [/000 ttllis ,year to ~ ,wor~.h of sc~~;~rshrps: Beans \will JDeet ,at 7.30 Sunday NOKrroN ,dents by T975, an 'increase of ~O, 'S'OOO in 1 ' 9 7 5 . " A teach-m mv:d];v<tQ:g:some:SO fA "tuikey wl1ist 5is JPlannea 'b n1ght, 'Nov. 3 in the school hall. per cent over the total 'for 1967. 'It was no'ted 'in .oonrrection 'sta'ff mem.bers of Head 'Start Mrs. L.ucille ..RElPin ;will <ooml,uct ,FTidl!Y, 'Nov. 22 'by 'NortOll 'll:he mew FedeEal 'City 'Conege,\Wi'th 'theistudy that census:statis~ agencies liS ccanducted. e\l~ a !plastics aemonstr:ation Ito CathOlic: 'Women's 'Club at sL show (that 'na'tiibmll'''' ',the 'WednesW\y.on tics < ",uich ,opened Jits doors <onl;y J1ast ' \ y 'Ilh" ,the h ' .um,veJ:Slty " wliiCh an women 0'£ ;the ,pa11iSh ·MarTs 'J)8iiSh (Center. . ~mrlber of NegJ'O ,colilege IStUcampus. e ' ,teac -uD " .a :spa . 'I t hIS t SQIltembeJ;, with .anenrollment " ar-e iinviteCl. 'Piizes ~;m !be (den:ts, '''goo )J6 Ito ~2il, iincreased eraIlk! )pr.~gnam of 2,0'00, iis (e'X!pedtea tto ! h a v e'" . 'O!t e tp iJiIead . : tall awarded ,ana ,refreshments ,201000 iStulleJits Iby lli9175. 'tirom 1881000 'in 1960 ito :.241,,000 in wo. e1$ ~<lnsta e .' ~achJn'g 'C~ se~eo. 'Tr.ansportafion tWill be , 'll.'hirlteen iinstil.tutions .of .Iltgher W966. ::Negnoes are .e'lQpected to ,den.hals, IS an ad~lho~al contr:i educa1iion :SFe iincludeain !the !be:a rconsideraJj}e IPIU't' -of 'the bU~JOn of the unIversrty ItO the available lIpon request. 'The number Ito <call Ua '6-111.89. lhwe iin ithe 'nex,t state!s .:liIead 5taIrt: :supplemen pEediction. 'mheI!e \Were .dlso n'B ''''uaeritfrncne8SC """ ,
'S'I'. 'P.ATRTCK, institutions 'in, 'uhe m9M lphase (elf 'se,veII ~ea:rs. taT;y 11;:caini'ng ;progr.llm.
F:NLMOUTII the study, but the 'ID. <C. 'meadhers lFlinllllloial JlmpaOt -New.officers of the 'Womeri~ COllege is merging wfuh Whe :new A niioeJiglit (of lthe IstUqy cdr:aws ~WlCe ~:t.ery' , GUlla .a:r.e Mrs. Armand'Ol1tinl!, Feal.ral City, College. . .attention to the eJl;pectation that, pre5i6ent;Mrs. "Lore'tta Douoot'te, Woive Catholic ,urii'versities :and Ji'f lIihe JPlleflent poli~' .of ,drafting c:dIleges ,are 'among those sur -stuaents 'for mili.ta~a';ser:vice be . ,.DES ..PLAtNES .(NC,)· - IDhe. vice-president; Mrs. 'Richal'd PJ!att 'and .'M:rs. ,;}'ohn -:'~.~, ve:Yed, 'and all are ,ex,pected Ito 1foFe 1tbey (enter '~raduate school ,president "Orille ,National <Callb. hlllVe'substantial incl'oases lin ,1lhe <Don'tinues, \veterans will ,make up' ·olic .CeJneteI:y 'Conference,\\lbioh secretari~;'M!rs.(Gero;ge lBeMeI- . ' 'period involved. <a :growing percentage 'of 'students is .aIfiliateo :with ,the :United. lo., ttI!easurer. J1Iherguild lIhas ;eontnibuted 41CSO ; '.ll'he 'CathOlic ,Uniwersiw iof !hEme land Itfis~hene lin !the Icoun~ , States ,Catholic ConfeEenoo, has America, 'which ,enrolled 6,591 ,try.. -' arlllounced .that 'the 1Uh .annual -., ttbe JBiSbap!B mall ,fund. students in the Fall 'of lli967, .'is 'Not the least important of the Cemetery'Sunoay "".ill·be .0b 'eJGPected,to .ennoll ;8,1~0 ,in ,the ls~ucb'!smeminderslis,the financial served Nov. 3. , , I : F81l dfll!lJI7.5'; (GteOllgdto.wn rcr.rii i~pa'dt 1tbe 'llhullP ,increase in ,( .Mflgr. (Rebert A. iF.anmer "fif versity" '17,;7JlOiin )l!967, 'is,eJilpected :aroea (enrollments 1Yi.111 have ,on PJatisbungh, N. ¥" ,said ,that'''Jn i to Ihav.e m;800 ,enr01lees 'in )1:97S; ',the !institutions. !Local schools ,these lpost-,conciIiar, 4da.'Ys ,we Triinity (Oollege, :lllJ60 'in Ji967 ;ln1e (e)@ecteo 1to !!lpeoo $'L1S mil should ,rel\pond ,to :the ,oppor.tu and 1;575 'in 1'975; Dunbarton J1ion ,on mewbtiildings ,in !the next l1i!'y ito make ,our (ceme~eEies 'Cdllege, 482 in 1967 .anC! ',no 'in !fouri}':ears, with (G.eol)getown e:\ler mlore ,eloquently Catholic ,I 19115, :and' Immaculata 'CoUege, 'expenaing $31.S' million ;and in (the .moue :eloguent (expression ROUTE 6-between Fall River (and [New Bedford 2311 in 196:7 ,and ~40 ,in ,19:~S. ,Geonge Washington $'47:S .million. of .our 'eOll'\dction 'that bur-ial IOf : ! 'll.'hestudy" made .for Distcict The ,study ,sees ,the expanaing the dead lis a ,cor,peral \Wonk tof One 'of (Sou'them [New Englan~s {finest iFacilitiesi of Cdlun1'Dia ro'ffiiCirils 'under 'lI 'cdJ!leges .and un'i\Versities facing men~. lI'he ',Catholic (cem'eteI:1Y $40,000 /gnarlt born '~he lU.S. {())f :a ,posSiOle £finanCial (crisis, 'par should proclaim our truly Chris fice of lEaucliuian, ,sees ;growing t£icularlY ;if ,availliBle 'funds·are ,tian hope to all who enter to Negro' (enro'1!lmen'ts !here, 'due \to mdt iincreasea under 'the JHigher visit and tpnay 1£01' their (deceaseo the presence cdf lpredominaIllUliY- :Education 'F.aCilities /Act, :ard if relatives ;and :friends." Negro Howar8 Mn'i;v,ersi'tiY ,and (Oonguess (enacts .a jproposa'l to ll'iIsgr.. lFammer unged "~aill ,cler 'the tuition public :cdHeges. linC1'ease ~the iin'teFest mates on gymen ito (encourage their :fliith JE:oward University'is (6'Xipectell Jl0ans ~from, \three )per 'certt to ful tto wisit !the ,ceme~r;y (on ,ihial ,. ;,,: to U!O ,j]r.om ;a 119617 <ell'uollment (df '4:5 !per (cent lor JDlorf> day, of pational :obser<v.ance:"; .
rlStlJrr..
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C • ' Expect '50 .11 - , " •'"., Ga~_f '-'. .liege ~!I'lO' :ment
, '.- r_....
Sunday.Obse:D'V<tmce '
famous for
:QUALITY' ,ani
SRvtm
:l~IN{OLIPA;R,K Bll~;R:O:DM j N.ow ;A'y-oi/a'ble l.or :BA'NQU ETS, . rFAS,N ION ,SHOWS; fTC._ .
Urges: StClte Aid, Timothy Keating, Retired Dr,uggist, Still Active
To Nen,·Public;
School Pupils CHICAGO- (NC) -
.-.rbe'
lIlftling Illinois- General As-
Mmbly should', provide tuitioD grants fol" those' eIe-
A!$ ,Memb-eTsltip Chairman of Nati@nal Guild ,Tim~h?" P: Keatiiilg' oft New Bedford has retired as secreta'1'y! 0'1i the' Catholic Phar. maelSt8 Gul1d, of Stt, .famesl of. the- Fin: Rive.uDioeese<-a guild he- helped organize. H-ow ever, the ~year-oltl: phamnacis:t, i!'lu't read.y to retire' to leisure. "AU I'm al1iXious- to) do. now;' he said' tlie: .othen d'a~, !fitting. in a', chair in: the comfontable living IlOOInJ 0:£ his, apartment at 41;5 € o uniW ---~'~'----~
.-.amy and> secondarJr atudents 1IIItIo, througJ:t, religjou. eon- Street, with Mrs. Keating, eeience, dlssenf from' the puJ:)lie' ..-.oo·lsj'" Dr: Franciif J. Brown;. si,tting on a sofa acrosS".\ JjII(J£essor G! economics lit ~ room, "is do as much as; Pal Uni~. and Chairman. can for as many as I cean for. as, til the National Association; fatt long as I can." Personal Riglits in- Edl.tcatlon' As It result he is remaining' ill' (IfAPRE~, said.! here~ his post as membership chair Speaking. on: behalf of N.APRE' man of the National Catholic • me- Illinois: School Prolilems: Pharamacists Guild, an organ Commission af the Chica'/f-)\ ization he founded in. 1962 and BOard of Ed'ucation Building, which> he served as first presi~ Brown recommended' that such dent. . ~nts be equitably: commensur;. Family, Rrovider ate with the average state ex-· A native of New Bedford; J!)enditul'e for public school stu- where- he was born on April 6. dents. 1891, Mr. Kea~ing was gradlJ.~ "Since 1llinois, has in its pub>- ated fi'om St. Mary's School. l!ie schools traditionally favored Then because of: an invalid Ml.e private: nonsectarianism of mother, who reqtlired constant an1y some citizens, we-as pal:;' care' from her husband, he ents who seek the fullness of our sumed the' role of family pro values in the' total education of videl'; our children - maintain that. A neighborhood druggist put tiiase schools. dOJlott constitute' a Timothy Keating's feet on the "wid offer of tax-supported, edi- path' he' w{)uld follow: tlirough ucational opportunity W man}!' life: ~bers of,the' public, includin-g "He asked if I would run erOU,?' families. , rands for him, because his de,Bill c~ Rig'lts livery clerk had resigned," he "Therefore, by placing publiC' recalls today. At' the end of three educaW.onal, benefits beyond: the' hours wOI'k" younl~ Timothy re reacq of the conscience of manY,1 ceived his first pay-a 50 cenf the; state violates two sections of. piece'. tbc Illinois Bin of Rights, Sec.. Because hc was reliable, he ~ which guarantees that, 'tro\ soon was asked to' take on a person shall be' deprived .'.·.. 0£·. regular j,ob at the drug' store liberty: or property, without'. the' at': the magnificent salary- of ciOO process; o£ law/ and Sec; 31 $'3',5J)' for a· 70:"10-80' hour week; W"hich guarantees; tl\at. 'no perTwo years later, another phar~ 101II shall be denied: any civil CJ'r' macist" o-ffered him a 50: per' political riglit;, privilege 011 c'll" cent increase in salary- and' pa:city' on account of; his religiauSl Timothy Keating moved to' the GPinions." " new' j.OD'. "Some will object that Sec: 31 "In' those days;" lie says, fill: .A:rt VIII ot the' minois COw- "there- w~re no pliarmacy lltitution,_ which' denies tax aid- schoois, You got tnl'ee ,-ears er ~ an)'l schooL 'oontrolled byl anY' pel'ience' under the direction of' 6n'ch of denomination wfiat- at registered,pharmacisf and' then MlM',' also) outla.ws, tUition grant9JR)U: could taKe' tlie s~ate exams. . ' pa'1"ents, antt. studentS w!i& He- continued .lUs studies in -llh"t bi'1ng tliem todElnomina>- pba'l'IDacy. at" the', same time tomll schoolSj, hut we' db' noll holCi! stmi1inft business law and com' eilIr claiins, to> public educationall m~relal ma1\agement. (!)h "!vlarcl1\, iielmfits. through' any' ehurcli' 0'Il' 12; 1912, he became a 1"e'gisteredi. _001. pbannacist and a, partner in the 'Personal Denial' fii'll\\ in' which be' hadG &len' eJmo "'We' pa)'l OUll' own.: taxesl, We ployed' for'seven years. JI"OOOst IDe- pellStlnal' deniall 19 Nine' years later, he' and Mary children of. ll' 12;'YOOll ta:z.. Elazabeth' O'e;:lmnor-'-B1 former .-ooorted' edUcation because Wi!! classmate· at St M~IlW's: Sc11001" _roll' them in1 schools.- -of' 0UJ1 were' married. Slle' "t\."3S1 II': S(lhool ~cienee~~' Brown said. teacher at' the' time; but( "having He' continued: "We note that t\v{),doct{)'l"brothers, slie'decidM Wide- areas: of nonstatEr schoolin'g>. 1;'0\ stUdY' pharmacy,'" Mhl. !'Coot which has.»een· edueat1ng' some- in~ was- registered- in 1'9281 • per cent o£ me pUblic, 8$' in Goer sen&.'· Gila, danger o! eClbnomie colla'PSe~, c'n' was, ~ God' sent glfti;"'; me;" 'l'1\UB, wliile enrollments, h'llve l\f.l'. Keating·says. "She' provided IOIW" up 100,OllO~in public scfu>ols: me spiritual, physieaP and com" Iil l'~cent ye'ars, they have' d~.. ~oro sense' guidance' nl!cessary .ained' rapidly in nonstate dunnlf' the- days of' the' depres teh:ools, with a· drop· of' 32;OOO~ in sitm' and' later.1t_ Cflicago and' its sUhurbs aloneTl\e' Kea~ings o~rated: a lliDce' 1965. p!\armaeYJ on' County. Street:The- economic' implications, of' ooroos from Sl. Lawrence 'Church thia: growing; 'pattern have al': -for many years. At first" there
llli8a'dy produced. worried. reac:., was..lIollunehl counter in, the- store tIOIr· among; responsible: public where' HoIYI FamilY. High SCliool lleliool officials. Thus. Dr: J-atnelJ studentOl- congregated; Later At Reamond', Cl1icago~ superintend.. was· removed!; Still later, ilia • . has, warned that: an)!!' great • Keatlngs closed the pharmacy MOvement' of. this type eould.. be a'll- such' but operated a carlL and' !in3ncially, catastrnphief to: many gifli; sl\op· Qn the premiSes•. lD.1nios schOOl boardS' and ad.. TheY' closed me snopl fina111 .wustrators.~ in 19M, Th:rough the years, Mr. K'-eat:' inEt was· active in pharmace\ll tilea~ circles in New'Bedford and SAN ANTONIO (NC) - Tlie throughout the state: FIe served lI'8I'~de and rally which- Holy as, president of the State Phar Name men of' the San Antonio, maceutical Association, ih· 1941~ • archdiocese held' each year for 4-2l', three decadell hail been can JFOI" Whiw Si!storsJ celled permanently. Charles. one' of his pet projects: during. Burkholder, chairman for the me' srears, was· the oollection Clf ..-ent, said a d~cUne in the dwg,'l. and surgicaL supplies, fOr IDwnber of those participating me- White Sisters, wfrio cared."for· _er- the last few yeallll 1nflu !lead}:' patients, thllDughout the 4IDCed the decision. eM.\r. He organized· _annual
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Discontilule Parade
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Pt:ies:t Admits· Tax C'harges LOS' ANGJilLES (NC)-Father Robert Daniel Niklibroc, 37, a priest of the San Diego diocese, pleaded' guiltY' in Federal Court here' to' two charges off failUre' to: flJ~ U .. S. income' ta;,a returns. on more'than $100,000. Judge W;i1li~ P. Gnay, set NoV>.. 18 as the' date, for a proba tion report on. Father Niklibroc and for sentencing. Tl\e priest faces a maximum sentence of t'w,o years. in prison and i:l $201000 finc; Before the guilty plea was accepted\ Father Niklibroc was. taken before three other judges offering to plead innocent t~ charges concerning taxes owed and to plead" guilty to lesser charges involved' in failure to file' returns in 1963 on income of $34,447.87 and in 1965 on $77,679.50, The other charges against .him were dropped.
as
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THE A"'C/-"J~Thurs., Oct. 3'1, 1'968
Besides filling his office as a priest, Father Niklibroc ad mitted he was known as Robert Rand, president and financial director of' the Basil Brewer Boys Town of the Desert in Banning, Calif., an orphanage for Boys and had purchased a $75,000 residence. The income tax charges. grew out of his fund raising and operation of the or phanage..
'Pnroll'HY
More Dioceses, Join In; G1'ap-e' Boycott
P. K'EA'lJING
"MaY' Basket'" collection fbl'" the-" nursing nuns- to" which practi.. caHy' everY' pharmacist, in the cit~' cont'ril)uted: Wl\i1e' ser\'ing as president. ot the- S'fllie' A'ssociation; Timoth)'l Keating. evolved the' idea that was; to> result! some 20' _years; latel"iri tl\e'formation' of'the'flrst N~tionall Catholic' PhannacistS G-Wld. First he l'equested pel1!\ission frnm: the' then I)i&'fiop) to, or.ganize a.; Diocesan Phannacists G'uild1 The- request' was· not. complie'd wit~, at! that time; bu1t Utter:' it was appl'Oved by Bishop' COn~ no'll)" andl me' <1:atliolic PhannQ;o eists, C}"uililt of S~; James< was or ganized; Uie' second' such guild in the' nal!iom "Tae first; was, in <1:hvington\ Ky.;,'" lie' explainB'. , Wi th thatl as; an' op-eninlfwedgt!; he' request'ed per.ffi'ission, from the ol'dinary to, begin organizing. a national guild!. "BIsl\op· <1:onnoB;r' was most khld\" Ile' recalls, and ill', 1962. permission was giVen by the N'lltional <1:atholiC' Bishops· Com:,. mittel! to' orgatlize' tile Nation'8l Catholic Phal'm'8cist5 Gulla. "It started with '21 members," he says, "Gur' first meeting was. in Newl York:, Now we have more' than 500: members spread through all but. nine: of, the 50 states," During: these years, Mr. and Mrs, K'eating; - Who ha~ n~, childl'en-began most, daYs, at Mass. "We'Ye" been! alinost; daUy. communicants. ever' since: we were' married,~' Mrs. Keating says. "It has helped in. every, tiling: we've done;'" In' 1961',. Timothy Keating was named "Man of' the YeaI''' by the New Bedford Druggists, As sociation' for' his, "outstanding, career in, phal'macy, and his con tributions, t;ol IUs church nnd communityr." The 'plaque presented to him at; thnt Cime iSI arrayed wlth ~e others on the' wall ofC the entry' haJJ in::' the Keatingil'
ap3rtmenti.
Legion CJf" ~'
lin addition to his guild inter-
ests-to- which he has devoted more than could' be expecfed in time' and energy-Mr. Keating h'aS> also' been an active member of th-eo NeW' Bedford Legion of Mal'y:' f-ol' many' years. "Every:' Saturday afternoon he goes, to the Bristol County ffouse of Correction,'" Mrs. Keating says, "00' give' i~structions-in the :faith.'~
Today" aftel\
pharmaceuticaL than. half a, cen~ tury, Timothy Keating' feels sorry f{)r his modern compatri;. ots; ,"Pha'l'lUoo.Y' today is &\ very< muCh' abused' profession;'· he sa'YS. '''A\' person' goes into a. drug, store with'm' prescription" has it filled in' mfnutes and it costs ClH'ee1'
ofl
If.
~ore-
$1'0,
"so. he' goes, out- of ilie' store' say.ing;. 'Wl\at: a' highway robber.' He" doesn't. realize that, the net pr~t to- a pharmacist on that $10 wouldn't ,be any more than 70' cents," During' his lifetime, Mr. Keat ing. bas been awarded many honors. One of Which he is most pl'Oud; is> the' BmaU green and gold; lapel pin which he switches from jackctto~ jacket: a pin signifying. life' membership, in 'the Natronal Catholic Pharma~ cists Guild: that he founded. NoW' he' is> busy building up I!l\embel'ship in~ the organiZatlon.
Be!ore' he' is thl'Oughl he: ex-~' pects, to, have' "more than a handful'" of members in all 50 states· of the union. Perhaps, then he will be satis fieet
PORTL~ND (NC)~The So;. cial A'ctionl Commission of the Portland Archdiocese has en" dorsed a nationwide boycott of California table grapes in sup~ port ot strllting, California grape workers, The Oregon action was taken with the approval of' Archbishop; Robert J. Dwyer. In Baltin'u,re, meanwhile; LawI'encc Cardinal Shehan has urged the people of the Mary land, archdiocese tl)' "join with the people, of many other diO' cases!' in' supportiug thE!' boycott called for bY' the' United Farm Workers under the direction of Cesar Chavez. Tne' Portland archdiocesan S'eeial Action' Commission cited the right of tlie' st:rtklng- workers to; gain union- recognition' and 10: bargain with their emplo:v~ ers, their exclusion from the protection of' the National Labor Relations Act and the grape growers' use, of' strJkebreakers as its reasons for rallying to the cause CJf the stHkers;
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6
LEGIO~'
Self-Regulatiof!: -or' Else
OF, 'MARY
,:
There' are conflicting ,rep'orts on the. effects of tele vision violence on the viewing public. Most of the experts feel that there is some sort of unwholesome stimulus pro . vided by the. detailed and prolonged episodes __of violence that are so much a part of the viewing screen. At the same time, there is understanda~le reluctance to suggest anything like censorship which could correct the problem but could also give rise to other ~rQble,ms, the control of a medium that in turn can exerCIse large eontrol over 'the people of the nation. A sensible sugge,stion has come from a student of the social effects of 'mass communications, Professor Otto N. Larsen of the University of Washington.. .' He has suggested to the National CommISSIOn on the Causes and Prevention of Violence that there should be not direct government censorship but an institu~e ~, ";lain tain a stimulus to self-regulation. Purpose a.f the mstitute would be to stir up a greater degree of public account ability on the part. of those whose bus~ess is mas~ com munications. While it may not be poSSIble to abolIsh all violence from television it is possible, the professor points out to treat violence in different ways and in many dif fe~nt value contexts. The violence can be suggeste.d in ways' that give a realistic and artistic present~t~o.n. of actual life without the pandering to lower senSIbIlItIes or the blunting of se~sitivities or: .the awakening of undesirable emotions' in less balanced viewers. . The ingenuity a.f prOducers and directors and script writers and actors can certainly measure up to this chal lenge. And, considering the alternatives ro self-regulating, tlhould. '
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By
Rev. Edward A. Oliveira
At a time when so mucll is being sa.id about the im portant place of the laity in Ithe life and work of the, Chureh, the Legion of Mary Ie proving itself to be one of the . best examples of real service ~ suffering mankind. From its modest beginnings at' Dublin. Ireland, almost a half-century, ago, its influence is being felt in every part of the world and tt has become the largest active lay organization in the Churcli today. Misunderstood 8't times be eause of its quiet, constant work for the 'forgotten', its system and spirituality formed much or the basis for Vatican II's Decree on the Apostolate of the LaitJl, Far from being outmoded ~ old-fashioned, it is regarded, by those Who really see it wo~'" as being one of the most' rele vant groups in the Church, be cause of its massive programs of social action, inner-city work and its reaching out to tJJe neediest and most rejected 'c. the world's suHering people. I
~ Catholics .Rising, ,Priest' Shortage (:()~tinued from Page One He added,however, that not all countries have the 9llJIle sit uation as,the United States of,
priests seeking laicization. Leav l_ .. the prie5thood was seldom _......... in strictly ionary
....wu eounti-ies. . .
c , DeodieatioD. to Souls ' ,
who wants to serve'. There was
,aD. insistence on academic prep:
aration,Yes, but this is ,to rest on· this keen sense of coJDJDtt,. ment to save souls."' . , There is' a rising fear~amongsOme peOple, especialTty Askedhow"this differed' from . ~ h t' bo t th ~ .,appear . ' , V.L: t e na lon, au·' seminary training in ,the past, he ,Meeting weekly in small 10Clll those .I' n the large cities • , units (Praesidia). for praye~ B8.id it waS il question of reem-, a' nee' in ever-increasing' ,volu:ine of anti-Semitie literatuN phasiziiig Something' that" JDay discussion and planning" thea and 'feeling. 'c·' ' . • aending its members out in paiN
''It seems that' some disadvantaged groups,' hi their, ", ,·~.rhis veeri;ngto,laicizatih:on,1a . have been lost· in ·the acad~ on' a weekly'iask, its tremendoua
. , ..' 1 ., 'bta'··· rty' 'the largely .restncted to the ~avy focus. "A man with many aea- pOwer for good influence is fe~
~audabl~ and :~S8ary S~u~g e to' 0 '. ~~ ~ua 1. , ,m '. population centers," the arch,; demic' degrees but' without ' fields, of·edu,~tIon and. housmg,and econoImcoppoI1u!iity, bishop said, where' there' are strong spiritu'al motivation 'doe. "~d~OS~e~~~~~~~el~ have made the ser-ious, mistake of, trying to, assess,.' blame. large social, rights problems not make a good prie~t." .- ':llerred to, as Mary's Legion, ~ And some ,·in' looking for' a handy: whipping-boy, )lav.e turned, posed by ind~~alization, auto .Mor:e CODcre~IY/thiS empha- Power comes' from its. love and upon 'the Jewish-People-"manyofcwhom',have pulled them- J:l\atlon, race .conflicts, defialcl~ ~ds,will.give theprle,s~ ~andidate 'deperidence on God, "the Ho~' ielves"up:by 'the'prov.e'rbia},'OOo,WJtraps· by dint:,Ofintelli- .ofauth9r ity, unresto~,c;e~PU~ljl:. i ~ '!:l,~~er ~ew .~,}lls",d\l~~', Spirit. Believing that ':Ma~ . . 'n 't' " ~~. ,~e .smaller'~~~l1., In ,~~ ,.' "that ,o~de ~l~~~n ~!.e ~" power and greatness dependS G!i ·l'eI)ce.,im(l.dnIgenCeand,tlH:·~~zing. ~.~po. um lea.' . ". nusslon Ilre~s, ~e pn~ ,ReID . ~~ ~hOl~,:c.:hl;lrch ~..1~h ~w.s,~ her union with God the: H~ ;. ' ,'It would be truly' tragu:, however" If,. one group , tried .to be "less of the w~r~d," have ~ be saved, ~d th~t .the P~ Spirit," the . LegiOn 'tries • . ·to 'attain 3' full, measure Of. 'dignity and, prdmi~nee and . -stronger' J!eIlse of ~ed~ca.tio,~· ,and ~ndition, of .hi,s s~rvi~ ~ ..aChieve 'this' Ilecessary' unicd fUll equality, a.t~ckini th~~', in ',Others. ~~ce~s is not and are.·,~·' distracted, ~roJJ,l, not~,: i~ ~ thl~cause. through Mary's example 'and D , a limited ,pief;l'OJll which only· a -limited' number ~ pe1'7' tbe~rspiritu.!ll, ~uties.. ", ," " . '. ~,.C9~gre~ti0!1'al~, m~,~ ~ ,tercesSion. In feet, the Legi. . 'OIU'ns, can ea'rve' a·, limited .number of.. . pieces.' It is' ,limitless, ,"Thisl~ us ba,C~~the.i,qe~"fe~veiltJ)~ea, ~th~ bishops," ary' promise, made by Acti~ "'" of why 'am I a pr~~ really, 'rh~ '~world.. m the hOpe,t~at th,eir members after a suitable period and there is, success ertou~h for' all;' ' .. ' . . : . aiuJweroos to be a dedication to .generositY. , in pers~nne1/' of trial, is addresseci, ,not .to. disadvailtagedinustlOOk to,the:past cmly -00 COIl'- '~ca~,of so~ls," be'add~. help fellow ~~.ops, '.. Lady but directq to the B~ JleCf, Causes. They , m\lfJt'nOt . th~ blame on As the. problem. of better di~· , 'Spirit. . . ' ,partkuiar group, but; rather: should ,rally all" men -00 the tribution of priests was attacked, ,formidable work of re9trUclunng the clima~ ·in eduCation· the .subcOmmittee still k~pt in D' ' , ' S' d 'Not an exclusive organizatlO!i, " ',. , . , '. , , miDd, ArchbishOp COusinS said, ' laCOIUlte' tu y : as many ,believe, it offers memo;. and training, skills and oppOrtunities, 80 that ther~ too, tbat'a'p'ri.est. in,\1St.'· .be aiIo.'.wed. ,to ':SAN' A'U,~vI'0" (N.C)-':"Ar',_..,' . . d '1' .~ ttJa' to .tU'OI ~.. ....... ,bership,.' actiye or auxi~iar.y, ~ may U$ t~irriative abili:ties an ' Qllgenee. "', a ,I'D: , choose to work in bie Own diG:' bishop:Roberi E. Lucey of San any sincere Catholic wno'wishee
-the better-life that America'mlJe?t m~ke'available .:t9 all., ceSe and alSO that nOb1lidship Antonio and the nine other bisb . to engage in its program at
Anti-Semitism ',ie,no w~y ~ doing this.' People should 'be caused. in. the, &ocese,Jrom ,ops of tbe..TeJtas Catholic Con-' prayer and' action. 'Only thoae
.have ,learned by -now' that when one man or' one group 'whfcJ1.. a ~riest mightmoye.. -ference have approved imple excluded from .. receiving. 'tbe
Foll'llDatiOlll . mentation of • study and PI'ElP 88craments, are' barred" fl'Ollia
.uffers, all men l!uffer~ .. ,. ,'... .' , ,Tpe geneJ,"al~. oongreg~~on mtion of a proposal for a state membership. Because of its twO m~tilclgs.in the ~ two ~nd !l.: wide program. for formation aDCl pronged program of prayer' and , , , a l f days were concerned.with training of ,pennanent deacoD& .mon, as well 88 its system .In'dI·catI·Ons &r'e th'st', seve'nty-five rriiilion,' ·.·.AmericaJllS. :prie~tly fol'J:l\ation. ,"G~eat: em: '. The·,decisioll ,by the T~88 'learning as you so', it has helPtl4 :phasis ~8S ,plac~d aga.l~ oil th~ bishops' came shortly after the countless thousands throughout will vote in next' week;s ,electiOn., 'fbisis ' ali .impre86~:ve. ~iritual dedication of a man announcement that Pope Paul the world to lift themselves frolla figure. BUt it is. also. estimated that ~another fOrty-eeven VI had' approved a request made ordinary, even sinful lives'' million people will fail to .exercise their rig,htto vote. :And &A last April by 1he National COIl vibr:ant, meaningful lives of 101Jl!o this ,is an impressive example' of apathy and neglect in 11'ference of Catholic Bishops for ing service to others. ~ 'one of the fundamental duties Of a citizen; Continued from Page One the establishment o~ the perma The time and effort taken' to study the ballot and the parents and all present. nSentattes·.diaconate in ,the unt,ted , Established in' our diocese ill .. I Father Bugnini also noted that the early fifties, the Legion ilia . .to, 'cast a vote are little. Th~, impli~tion8 of voting--.«' "the draft takes into account the Although each bishop in the this area hag involved itself ia of ne~lecting' to do so-are immeasurable. variety of situations possible and nation will decide whether the a varied apostolate with reward.. , therefore, after having described permanent diaconate 'is to be ing results. Busy parish, pries" the rite for the baptism of more established in his diocese, 1be have been able to reach out. than one infant, considers tl1e bishops of Tex.as responded as a through personal contacts at eases ofa single child, of a veiy body to a recommendation GIl" Legionaries, to the Jl)any fo»oo large number of children to be the pennanent diaconate which gotten people of the parish ,baptized, of baptism adminis had been 8Ubmitt~ by the the lapsed, the confused, tbe tered by catechists or even by newly-created vocations depart sick and aged and,' in general laymen, or baptism given in the ment of the Texas Catholic Con those who feel rejected by s0 danger of death. ference during the annual meet OFFICIAL NEWS~APER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER ciety as a who,le. All this, and Among other matters consid ing of the conference in HoU8 more, is in store for priest ~ Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall llivCll' ered in the 11th plenary sessions' ton in September. people who really take an honest, . ,410 Highland Avenue' of the Concilium were reports , unprejudiced look at the Legioa Fail River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 on further alterations in the as it shows itself to be one at Mass, specifically dealing with PUBLISHER " DALLAS iNC) - Mother the greatest lay organizations at . hymns, prayel1l and prefaces Georgianne Segner, provincial of the Church that is found 'wheN Most Rev.; James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. and with votive Masses; benedic the U.S. South Central Province the action. is'. GENERAL MANAGER' . ASST. GENERAL MANAGER tions of abbots; the Divine Of of the School Sisters of Notre Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A., Rev. John P. Driscoll Rev. Edward A. Oliveba fice; the profession of Religious Dame, bas been elected Mother MANAGING EDITOR men and women, Holy' Week ckneral Of the community by Diocesan Directol' Hugh J. Golden. LLB. rites and funerals. tbe General Chapter in Rome.
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~I_"_L..._~-l1 CCD PROGRAM FOR ADULTS: Hundreds arrive every Tuesday night at Stang High School, North Dartmouth, to ,attend one of six courses be ing offered in a lO-week program. Left, Miss: Jean Sullivan, Sagamore
Beach, and Sister Martha Nordeman of the Diocesan CCD Center work
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with Janet Zajac and Joseph Botelho in class on special education tech niques;, Center, Sister Theresa MarY Sparrow, R.S.M. conducts demon stration class in elementary CCD methods; right, Rev. Lucio Phillipino moderates discussion of modern morality.
Education Laws· N~,Bedford Area Adult CCD Prograrrf, Draws Serra Launches Fund Campaign Benefit Private. " ·Hun41·e~ We~kly ' : to "S~ang lfig~ School CHICAGO (NC) - The Serra School Pupils' ,;, '~" TuesooyliightS are "flood'''m'' 'nights at 'Stang Hitih ~09I,N~rth DartmQ~th,,·~ , International Foundation has be
, 'w ASIDNGTON (NCr:'
$tudents ',in, Catholic ,~ o.thernollPublic 'schools stan~ ,~, gain additional' benefits from .the higher education. and vocational education .bills signed Into law by President 'Lyndon B. Jobnson. , , Both' laws 'ate omnibus mea 'sures, providing for extension' of programs and creation of some new ones~' ,At a' White House 'caremony, ,Mr. JQh~on n0te4 'p'roudly 'theY' were the 59tliand '60th' 'education bills si~ned 'dur~ mg the present Adininistratio~
, 'the
v?C~ti?n.~1 educ~ti6n
iai '
extends grantS to states to SUR: "~rt' vocatibn81, :prograptS iIlth~
_p~~lic,. ~c~~ls. ~ 'anwri~~~t
bY 'Rep: Lloyd Meeds of Wasli
ington called for authorization of a $40 million special program ~'''iJpgrade the"education of de Prived students·· in eoonoDrlCa!ly depressed areas. .' ';"'The lankuageof the-law ~ "Cific'allyprovides 'for tlie' - ~cipation of' noripublic school ehildren on an equitable basiS, WI in the 'Elementary' aild'SeC•andary ~ucatiqn Act of 1965: : That act 'a, major bre~ ~through in' s~liring, fe'qerlil aid -:fbi' rtonpublic sChool children. 'The new 'law hIs<> 'peimitstlle S. Commissioner of Educil twri 'to make grants, for innO t:ative vOCational 'education pro Brams directly to "nonprofit pri vate agencies, organizations or 'mstiiutions'- 'lis' well as' to' the If)Ublic schools. ' " , An amendment to the Nationtll Defense Education Act (NDEA) calls for grants to local educa tional agencies for the purchase of equipment and materials to meet the "special educational needs" of deprived children from gbettos and other low
iDcome areas. Thanks to the efforts of Rep. BughL. Carey of New York, RPPorted by 'Rep. Frank Thompson of New Jersey, the . agencies administering the 'grants must make equal proVi mon for children enrolled m IJODpublie elementary and SeC ondary schools in the district. The practical effect will to , to' make such Services more readily,available to young sters in private schools.
par
was
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sOme' '200 adul~tan~i~g''from 'late 'teen-age to40-~I~s)Y~,l'$)~e.Y~:ndthat stag.~~ur intb' th'eschool .forasi~-program course sponsored by' the New lkdford Confratern,}ty ¥.'CN,istialll, ~ri~e. Th~'ar~p~gfaJ:D,' W'h~~ !a:aa ,drawn \.at;l_unprecendented .number ~, adl,tltstudents this year" , " ,In addition to the classroom ,is co-ordinated by the Rev. with us the next week," one at sessioIis, the'CCD program also John Smith of St. James the students explains. Church and the Rev. AgogAnother popular session is, the includes several workshops duttiiilio' Pacheco of St. John :the one on Special Education, train ing teachers to .WQrk with "ex,.. Baptist; both Ne~ Bedford par- .eeptional children," getting them
ishes: , " The StUdents. high school and C9llege students, housewives, ~~~~siQnal,._~~D. ",ll!ldcvv.omen, ~.r.e,: c;~rqlled, in. ,one ,of si!, pr,~-
ready, for First Communion ,and ,Confirmation. InstructorJs Miss Jean, Sullivan . 'of Sagamore -Beach.; ;_' I ':'; :: ...: "" TeachIng ,Methods,anotOOr .'1i'r~,offered'~wo::,~urs,,:a,.week sell-out class,' b; ,conducted' by "fpr"t!te ,10-Vi!'ee~ ~mestE;r ,that Sister",'Theresa _,Mary' of :Holy ,b~g~nJn ~eptembert" ,:, '" Family SchooL: ~ . " " _" ;::;;Approximately 50 per, 'eent·-of " Father: ;Pacheco:' conducts ,0 the student ,body, ' says" Fatber class' in ,'-DOctrine 'and: F.athell' Paoheco, is made up of Christian Smith's specialty is ·,Old~,Testa Do<;t~n,e, teachers :who, c:onductment. A class inchttr~h:Doctrine religious programs in parish ,is conducted by' Rev. 'Richat'd units throughout' too ,Greater 'Chretien. ,of St.. ;Geotge ' Ch.uroo, ~ew." Bedfprd-"area.;, ',,-: ' -: "/: "Westport.;' ",:, , :, . ' , " . ,"J,The. Temaining: .. ~ ,_peJ: ce~t ,C" \ '., ';,' \' I
A"cceptance
:-:~t'::d;::~~~<;:~~:"~;~'Ha'lt: ~ijgion..
The ,more they learn, jU,dging, from appearances, the mo!'e enthusiastic they are." , Coffee lJIret:>h: ,": .... , 'At the end of tlie first 'hour, , there, is a student-faculty "cof -'fee break", . 'thlllt ,- temporarUy 'halts formal' classrooin discus sion. "The discussion,' 'however, 'cOntinues' unabated;' perliaps even more uninhtJjited~if that ',is 'Possible ~ than during tQe classes themselves. . , '"Morality in' Modem Times," moderilted by the Rev.L~cio , Phillipino of Holy Name Church, pel'ha,pS is the most popular of the six eourses offered this year. Each week 'since the semester started, more students have set:. tled down in the seats in the large 'classl"OOlJi where Father Phillipioo presides. '"We' aU, gO home and ten our friends abou¢ !t imdthe7
eome
. D~velo,ingNations
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Of
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-I~ovices
ASBURY PARK (NC) _ The Holy Name' provjnce of the 'Franciscan Oider" wiU accept no ~'ovices for two years beginniIig 'next ,Summe~. This was one of more than 100 proposals, a40pted at t!le first session of a special province chapter, here in,New ,J'ersey. The province is 'represented in 10 , states and has pel's()nrtel set Vi,ng in 'foui~foreign countries., The': decision to postP9Jle 00-vitiate work for tWo years was part of a ,'general examination of the future direction of minor seminary life 'and, the program ,and 'location of the novi~iate, currenUy situated in an'isolated
Campaign proceeds will enable the association to foster and pro mote extensive programs and tesearch on attracting more YOung ,ing the year. ' 'people to religious life and will "We had one'on a Saturday a help pr,esent religious to rein feW weeks ago," Father Pacheco fOree their dedication to tbeir says, "and 140 people showed vocatiOn. ' up. Saturday is a bad day-they Co~chairman of the one-year were all family people-but they . effort are William J. QuinA, 'caiheand 'they' stayed, all day;" president of the Burlingtonwd "AlSO scheduied for the' stu- 'QuincY Rallroad,Chicago, and dents 'are F<»1k MaSses, "at least, 'Thomas P.' C<>iJghlan," president ,twiCe during ,the'.. oourse.:· Y'ou'd"l-qf the National' Bank' of Com, be amazed at the participaUon,~ ,meree, Ma~ato, Minn, , '_ \' The CCDprogram, in ~<fdltion : : l'he; c~mp'aign, known' as the tp _,~q~nding ill ~ubjectmatter, ,Vo~atI?n,.Challenge F~nd Cam al&o includes instructions in qse paIgn, WIll be managed by tho of filfus, visual' aids, slides and ., Havey F~ Raising Manage .hEiw-"texts 'and' demonstration me.nt. InC., of Milwaukee. c!asses :utilizing, ~ 'help Of " "'l7.Oung students., , ,{ ." \, " :: . Semindry,Tea,ch~r ;"Overwlilelming Response' "LORETTO (NC) _ 'Rabbi Last, year,the New .Bedford Leonard Winograd of Beth Zion program began with two eourses. Temple, Johnstown, Pa" ap -The response was so overwhelm- pointed. to a resident lectureship ing, Father Pacheco and Father on the st. Francis Seminary fac Smith say, that the four new ulty here, will teach two courses classes were ad,ded this year to on "The American Jewish Com accommodate those who want to munity" and "An Introduction know about their religion and to Rabbinic Litera.ture." the chiUlges in i t . · , . , ''The - current' semester ' will ,"e!ese;atthe end of January. ,After ,ab~ak ,of a week or two, ll' second seriez of 10-week •~urs~ w~R beiin. . ' , . : , Excavating 'Weather seems to have ilo ef fect on attendance. ' Contract~lfs "We had people here all last year, in all kinds of weather," 9 CROSS ST., FA~RHAVEN Father Pacheco says. "We had WYman 2-4862 to cancel classes just once heavy snow. ,
rural area. ' The province had been ac
, eepting novices after 'two years
of college. eitpe~ at the order's
own minor seminarY in. Calli
'eoo~ 'N.V., or at another inStitu-
'lion.
"
,
gun a formal' campaign to raise million for use in. stemming the vocation crisis in the Cath~ olic Church. "
,$~
,.. As· part of' its look at forma -tion'polici'es, - the'· FranciScan ~legates ·authori~ establishing
"PARIS (Me) - France's re sponsibility to aid - developing a 'comrnitteeto superVise pro
-nations was stresseiC1 in a sPe~h grams for :the spiritual, apostolic, , to members of the French par 'academic and ~rsonal develop Hament' by' ArcllI:bi5hOp Friui~1s ment of. members in tPe' process
~ formation. "
Marty of Paris. '
GRACmA BROS"
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BISAILLON'S GARAGE 24··Hour Wrecker Service 653 Washington Street, Fairhaven 994-5058
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!'NCHOR-Diocese of Foil RIYer...;.Thurs., Od.,3l, 1968,;'
Sisters "'Conduct 'Prison Retreat
~':'Harder'to',""Pl'cin,:Wardrobe
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" For, Weekend Than Year ~. ~I~
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, By Marilyn R04erick
They publish books' on
ho~ to
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LEWISBURG (NC)-Iot waS • new experience for everyone . :Cetholic nun joined the cho"" line at the Lekisburg Pennsyl vania Penitentiary. The nun W89 Sister Mary Sullivan, who e:lk plained sbe just C<!uldn't s~ "No," wihen invited 'to direct al prisoners' retreat at thefederd prison.' ~ '".I was excl,ted and uncertain, thrilled et the challenge, an Q(j the same time," Sister Mary eXtoo plained. ' Each morning Sister Mary wae' passed from guard to· guarci!' 'through five locked gates, had; her hand stamped with invisiblEl ink and was met, as she entered;. by Charlie, her prisoner body.. guard ,who accompanied h~ throughout the prison as a guide. The idea of having a nun, d:itw recta prisoners' retreat came from Father'Michael Sullivan ml Pi,ttsburgh, last year's retreatJ master. He and Father Andrew: P. Marinak, chaplain at the fedloo eral penitentiary, wanted to &:li! periment with this year's retreat in keerping with the spirit at Vatican' llj bence, Sister MaQ was called on to help. Father Michael Sullivan, plat Father, Patrick Jones also cit Pittsburgh, Sister. Mary anc1 Fether ,Marinak comprised _ Jetreat ' ' team. Together planned a 'general outline fait the retreat and then decided to "keep loose and play it by eaP.· "It was, an mformal retreat discussions, ?!sual aids, moviet and music. During the Litur. freshly, baked bread was ,passed along the aisles, and the retr~ ants '~brokeit with one anoth~· It was 8 full schedu-le. Wheil the prisoners ,returned to t.he.ii> cells for "head count", the re treat team poJished off thellt 'plans for the next happening. Three bundred prisoners... madl! 'the retreat'w'ith the theme, "De
a
'
build a family room,'
.h, plant bulbs, sail boats and just about everything under
Ihe sun, but when oh when are they going to write some thing about haw to pack for a f'amily? Once in a while Glamour or one of the other ',. ~en's magazines will have that YO,u'll need 'when you reach an illustrated article on how your destination. Who wants to to pack a suitcase. Their di- waste a beautiful Fall day look
JileCtions may be fine for one ing for a pair of navy blue knee oingle girl, bilt what about three socks or a particular color of <l:hildren and . 'eyebrow pencil. Not only will you find this !ill annoyance to 'two aduIts. If ~veryone takes you but you'll also find that..it wears your husband's nerves lhis own suit ~ase, that adds down a bit, too. I1JP to five suit Somehow, though, no matter eases rplus all how much forethought I give a Ithe extras that family trip th'e last minute rush lllave to' b? of packing the car overwhelms' taken a Ion g. me, and I end up in the big city \,Jason wants his of New York with 'the perfect ,bat and ball, knit suit for shopping; only minus the suit skirt that I· left and, Melissa, Daturally, wants banging on my ,closet door. ' FAMILY AFFAIR: When LeoJ. Shet,idanhas some • buge' pile. books. By the ' Weekend lVardrobes thing to celebrate, it really becomes ~Cfamily affair. Here time ,you load the car,yoU.don't Weekends seem to eell for as S' S Ieellike ~ttirig into it yourself.. meny dothes as an, lU'Qund-the- after being sworn in as U.. Ambassador to Ireland, her ,'ir,.ou~ Iomgsomewhere: ~~~CI.tt~. T~ is ,e;8peclllllY':idan'is surrounded. by some of'his'36'grandchildren'and' ~tery it iaal~ays advisable 10 ~~, If ~ ~lIt ~w'. wb~ Beat-grandchildren; The ChiCagO Kriig,ht of St. Gregory , toke at leaSt two paini of shoes tYpe of aclivi:ti~ 11ft JO!D1 to . 8ucceeds' Raymond R. 'Guest, who ~signe.d 'after ,serving llPiece-&Oineone is 'bound 'to ' take place. -Jilore than three years in thepos1;.; in-that adds up to '10 pairs Cburcl1 of ~ emote~ lInto ' " IIllf shoes., This" is a .tidy amount tbe weekend picture .and this eo put into a suitcase; particu- adds a ~ew ~ outfits to the Jarl shoes are 80 oddlY ear, ~d the addItions 10 on and 1Iba~ 011 until pretty soon there are' ',j " , • . more clothes packed then there One ~ found me, putting are in your closets. ' , '-$isters cri JoseplrVolunteer Teache'rs ' them ,in the bottom ,of a lerge ,' 'ibe thought doesn~,OC!CUr to A1t Charles Street Jail I pnnent· bag that we were u.sm~ ,you when you're embarking to tran9~rt ~ we dldn t upon your weekend (ithank Godl) .Joseph nun for 35 years, but tbe BOSTON (NC)-Every morn wanf wnnkled.Thls worked o~t but everything that You've "big 30 Catholic nuns walk into majority of them are young. T-be fairly well except th?t for s?me packed bas to return home and Boston's city prison and the big :nUllS said sinCe the rprogr~ be unknown reasc:>n, whIle un~ac~- be unpacked. Wi,th that parling ~steel doors clang shut behind gan under the 'direction of Sher ing them I mIsplaced Mehs~a S thought-enjoy )'Our weekend them. iff ,John Sears, they have been lIhoes and she_ ended up weapng and if you learn bow to pack The 30 Sisters of St. Joseph ,treated with th~ gre~test respect aneakers to school for a week. ecOnomically let me know. ' are volunteers who teach inmates by the prisoners. ' The emphasis actually is upon ~cent men pl'ay. to n' Decd of the prison, officially known, UDP~ecJietabJe, "\lVeath0~,,
':God." ' ,as CharlesStreetJeil, ij). assorted, ,~ching English because 36' per ',: New En'gland in' the Autumn: Cardin lP'O, D lBleq" ues~s'"
." : . .... 1 r\: U 'aesdemicsubjects. cent of the constantly chan'ging Is an extremely' difficult place .
1:Ihe nuns, ~me much younger . prison. Population of 249 men, Schedufe Dedication in which·to travel with children, Prayers ,for Biafrcins' than the, prISoners they ,teacb functionally is illiterate. the weath& is so very unpre ~S ANGELES (NC)~chool' have brought a new spirit and Ecwrienieal Aspect At Notre Dame dictable. Just 'the weekend you chIldren of the Los, Angeles . even a sense of humor into the Sister Padriac,., one 'of the feel that Indi1Ul Summer is here archdiocese were' asked bw grim Bastille. NOTRE .DAME (NO) - 'Diet leaders of' the program, said it, to stay, and you' avoid packing J'lIlDes Francis Cardinal Mcln To make small talk, one nun is important because of the large ,Notre Dame Athletic and CoDot everyone's heavy, jacket,' a , ~re to pray 1M' the pepole of esked an inmate if he "had come percen~ge of oonV'icts who are vocation Center will be forma~ freeze settles in. With the motto dedicated on Friday, Dec. 8 wiiIti Blatfnl. .... ......di al..-..Jpe ..... _I ',n'fo r math" . "It'sa little worse young. ,She said 40 per cent of, a. pontifical Mass concelebrated "'Be Prepared" topmost in my .......e car n "'JI"ID..." Ill .... s ....... that" H "ti tr'al
-'- ceI'e b r""wo.n _... in Los' A_ .. I OlSon. " . . e was awal ng I the inmates they are teaching by Bish~ Leo A. Pursl~ ClI$l mind, I generally try to prepare IlR}n ~e es h 011 a serIous cnme c arge. are under 24 years of age. The Fort Wayne-South Bend and III for mll possible changes in the Sports, Arena at -W'bicb the na youngest Is HI, facing a murder priests representing the diocese The' nims, who come from va weather. This means that our tional director of1:be Holy Child . hood Aseociatioo said Los An mollS parochial sci:lools in the charge. euitcases generally end up bulg and the university. ' ling, 'and someone OOs to sit em ge1eB school ebildren led the Boston area and Re~is College in . Since the program began II The dedication Mass, to lie; world .in aid to ebildren in milt nearby Weston, are conducting library With' 2,000 books was set held in an arena seating mOfti :them to close them. a bumanitarian program without uP in 32 days. than 12,000 persons, also wBI lideally, One should begin sion ereas oveJ'BeaS.. Fether Augustus BeftaD, ,e.a. ,funds and _ DO oost to Boston The social endeavor took on mark the 25th anniversary packing a 'week ahead and make en ecunienical. aspect when the the Euchatistic Hour spOnsored • list of every item put in the Sp., told the children: ~ou've ta~payers. Some of the nuns are vetemlll Rev. Richard Black, a M~thod each Fall by the South Bend suitcase, The theory. behind this made a greater comributlon tben and the National b fine, only jU8t when you' feel any other archdiocese in 1Ibe teachers. One bas been a 8L W mipister, and Sister Mary Deanery Christine of an Episcopal Com that this system is working well, world to mission work,:for chil Council of catholic Men. ! munity of nuns volunteered to one of the children announces dren in unfortunate areas of the 20,000 Wait lin Vain help. . in the middle of the week that world. In 1lheit' name I 1lhank she doesn't OOve any more clean you and ask you to keep, it up.... For Apparotl'ioJll of Th~ Cardinal McInty,re, in .asking
Blacks and half the packing has ST. BRUNO .(Ne) Some Names Vice-Postufator prayers for children of Biafra,
to be unpacked. People who said "relief is available to them. 20,000 crowded a field In this for Seton Canonization write packing articles for mag small ,French-Canadian. settle ,but for buman' obstinacy."
azines must be either childless ment and ;Waited in the -rain for ., PHILADELPHIA (NC)--.Fa-' or have children with extensive more than two hours to see a filer Sylvester A, Taggart, C.M., wardrobes. Nun Resigns Hospital'promised vision of the Blessed has been named vice-postulator Also, never, ever plan toot of tbe cause for canonization Olf Administrator Post Mother,which ~ailed to appear.. ;rou're going to buy the items Blessed Elizabeth Seton. The vision bad been promised Elizabeth Ann Seton, founder ST. PAUL (NC)-Sister Mary by six girls ran,ging in age from For cfthe American Sisters of Ohal' Stamschror bas reSigned as ad College Students Vote ministrator of St. Joseph's Hos18, wbo claimed that Mary lty, is the first native-born appeared to them in the field' on ,Un4ted States ci,tizen to be offi T10 Dissolve Association pital here, a post she bas held July 22 .and said she would 1'4! . _~=_i!lIIHllllllllllllllntrnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll"n" Wrn Oct. "I. 'I'he gi,rls led the cially 'declared Blessed by the DENVER (NC)-T'he Student for 1he past three years. . Roman' Catholic Church. The , (;()vernment AsSociation of L0 Building Contractor She has taken a leave of alb- crowd; in pmyer befo1'4! a wood retto Heights College here has sence from the Sisters' of st. cross stuck in the mud and sur- beatification was held on March 1'1, 1963, and inarked the final == been dissolved by the eleCted Joseph, of Carondelet, !It was rounded by flowers. .After two step S Masonry prior to ber canonization. officers who compose' the asso eonfirmed here. A spokesman hours the girls left but thous - Father Taggart will direct the dation, following a 3-00-1 vote :lor Northern Pacific' Benefit sands, including many cripples by the student body. ' Association bcspital said, Sister hOping :fo1' mi,racles, waited :Mother Seton Guild of Emmits:' Purg, Md., which was established , Spokesmen for the assocla,tlon Stamscbror was expected ~ as- longer; said the 'step was not taken in sume the duties of administer1DSThere 'has been no comment in 1939 ,to introduce the cause of !her cBnonization in Rome in opposition to administrative,pol that ins1litution OIl, Oct. 28. on the .matter by, Ohurch officials 1940. Father Taggal1t will work icies, but as a move -fuward Lawrence Suess, who bas been of the diocese of St., Jean-de the United States diirectly un 7 JEANmE STREET greater solidarity among the assistant admini9tr~r at at. ,Quebec in which St. Bruna is der Father Luigi G. Lapalo,cla, § various groups which make up ,, Josepl;l's, has been named acting 'located. The town is some la pM., postulator' general of the . 4:'7321 , 1lhe ca~pus communi·ty. ' admiJiiSt.I'a~' ,"":liJiles southeast of MontreaL cause in Rome. ' _WIUlIIIIWlliIUIllIIIllIIllIlIlUWIUIIIIIIIIIIUJIIij....
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THE ANCHOR Th·urs., 'Oct. 31, 1'968
Just "One' Lily·,·Adds "t\uch To Be'auty of.Garden .
M,aryknoij~
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9
Nuns
BegHn ChopteU"
By Joseph and Mall'iiHYIl1l RooeYilClk
M.ARYKNOLL (NC) - From For the l'ast couple of yea'rs I have been having a South American junglelands, \bve affair with lilies. I suppose we all go through stages African veldts, teeming cities in Asia and isolated Pacific Islands, when this or that flower or plant is the center of aur delegates to the Maryknoll Sis lIttention, but it is rare when a single pI-ant remains a ters chapter of affairs are meet favorite over a long period beautiful Lake Winnipesaukee, ing at the community mother af time. I have long felt this Mr. Barney set up a bean and frankfurter buffet and tossed house here. The sessions are ex way about roses, but now salad, topped off with a large peeted to. last several months. ltave to add lilies to my list variety of tasty pies and all the Of the 49 delegates, 35 were _ favorite flowers. coffee one could drink. . elected by members of the We now have about 10 wri That evening we were treated worldwide congregation. The llties of lilies, most of which are to a sumptuous dinher of roast 1,200 Maryknoll Sisters are the mid-season trumpets which turkey, out-of-this world dress largest group of Catholic Amer IIloom in early July. This yoor ing, heaps of snowy white whip ican foreign mission nuns. ~ invested $10 in three vari Like the Sisterhood at large, Mles which are new to us and ped potatoes, candied carrots and green peas. Five molded the delegates are a cross section which bloom later 10 the season. salads lined the handsome an of professions-teachers, doctors, Most of our earlier purchases nurses, social service workers, bnve already begun reproducing tique hutch in the dining room to complete this feast for the catechetical experts, administra IlDd as a result we now hGve tors. • veral good-sized groupings of hungry weekenders. Everyone pitched in to pre Some work in large clties in lilies. Even One pare his own breakfast, but still Asia and Latin America; others Compared to the average there was Mr. Barney, fry pan come from community develop Bower or bulb, lilies are rather in hand, asking how our chil ment projects in isolated bush _pensive. As a result we have dren liked their morning eggs. missions, among primitive peo _ually limited our purchases Quite obviously the beauty of pIe. 6D one of 'a kind, which really the setting waS .only rivaled by Mother General Mary Cole doesn't have much of an impact. the cooking of the .host and he NCC' man isex-officio president of on the 'garden, but the beauty.' truly outdid ,himself when he ~ I'W PRESIDENT: Mrs. John "Shields of Mount., the chapter.. . . '. of lilies is'such that even one prepar~ .9ur. final meal. '-"Arme, Pa., left,' retiring president of the National ,Council Bishop· Mark G.. McGrath, .. sufficient to enjoy, . Thic~ •slices of· juicy ham '~f Cath.oli~ Women,' pands the' gavel to the incommg pres- c .s .c ., :~f~anti8;go de Veraguas, We 'began:growing lilies' with •. floated: 'ina. pineapple sau~e,'~d~nt, Mrs. Nonna!l Folda of Omaha~Neb.·NC Photo: '" Panama, executive secretary of the feeling that'theY:'were dJHi..... lIOutherri'sw-i:iet pOtatoes' add~ . . , . , . . . '. '" . .,.,:' .' . ,. CELAM.r ~rdinating body for euJ.t to" grow and .accordingly"" ·th~ir Autumn color'tO'the 'J(tK>d:', '\ ',1 ,.•. "" "'.. .:.:, , tbe Latin' American hierarchy,' .tuck to the· safe 'varieties, that ' and the crowning touch of this ·\'t, " , , ••., ·conducted ·the first· chapter ... the 'newer more hardy hy_ ·gastronomical display was a wqrkshop. stressing renewal it kids 'which 'have been devel-: casserole of P~nnsylvania Dutch affects SOuth and Middle Amer- . . IF' t!Ped reeently. 'Such hybrids OS" potatoes made from a recipe '. h ;'" .. J ' • . lea, plus the' special bn'Pact Of Ihe Aurelian, Bellingham, Fiesta· banded down from Mm. Rhea ast Cargo S ip to Carry Christmas, Parcels American Sistersiri thOse'ateas. , '., . I end others of the same ilk were .. Barney's grandmother.. ., . For Delivery. in Vietna'mPorts .irly inex.pensive and relatively Everyone had such • marvel Asks Government Aid lIouble-free, so we began taking ous time that even .Jason hated WASHINGTON (NC) - The mailed by Nov. 9, but preferably .-eat pains with these, rather to come home. We packed him 1968 Santa Claus Special, a fast earlier, and be endorsed on tbe Private Education tban taking the giant step into into the car sUll screaming United States cargo shi.p" will outside with "Santa Claus Spe . SAN roAN (NC)-The En ~ more dWlcult varieties. lustily that he wanted. to stay; sail from Oakland, Calif., on cial" above the 'address and be glish language daily newspaper rt didn't take long for our oon and the next morning when he Thursday, Nov. 21, carrying par low the space where the stampa here has called for "heavy new edence to build, however, 10 we awoke, the :first words he utter eels to Vietnam porta in suffi are placed. support to private higher educa IMlve now ventured farther afield. eel were, "When are we going dent time for delivery to Amer The armed forces, in coordl tion in Puerto Rico" and a great Our latest addiUons are Golden back to New Hampshire, I liked lean military personnel before nation with thePoot Office De .. recognition of iU importance flplendour, Corsage and LIme it there.· Christmas. to the island. light: all trumpets and all Ugbt , In .this .respect he was a
Stanley. P. Hebert, USO vice partment, developed the plan to The San Juan Star commen.ted eolored. H these fare as well as spokesman for all of 1IlS.
president and executive commit transport parcel post packages editorially on • statement ~ ~ others we have purehued Like all creative cooks, Mr. tee chairman of the National to U.s. sevicemen and women Inter-American University pres ~ will have no Complain1&. E. Martin Barney, director of • Catholic COmmunity Service, a St8tIoned in Vietnam at a sub ident Raymond Hoxeng, who III the Kitchen Federal Programs for the Fall USO member agency, said stantial savings to the general told the local Rotary Club be Our wbole family was de River School Department, de fourth class parcels must be public as well as the government. fear... for the fu·ture of college lighted to spend last weekend at scribes ~ recipes as a pinch of The ship will have ports of education here if government • lodge in NeW Hampshire. Joe'. .this and a bit of that with a lot ~ll at Da Nang, Cam Ranh Bay, aid Is not for1lhcoming. elJWOrkers and their families' of instinct. The' following recipe QI1d Saigon. . 'l'lhe Star termed Boxenp statement "a sobering reminder 'Were 'also Part of the entourage for the. potato casserole may '''0 I' II' Hebert said Chri9tIn.as pack and the grand total added up to take a little thought on the part· I I N ages for servicemen mailed dur of the plight of private higher over 50 people in all, with a of the' ~k whipping it up, but " NEW YORK (NC)' _ Msgr. ing the. surfaCe mailing period education." IBrge percentage being children. the delightfUl results are' wen Andrew P. Landi of Brooklyn, (Oct. 14-Nov. 9) will be deliv "One of tlhe first goals of the 'ruthfully, after the first worth"While, plus what an ele assistant executive director Of ered before Christmas. Use of new government which' takes ClasS Choughts of a weekend in oolor gant way to use up leftover' Catholic Relief Servi<:es, left :U:d. mall saves money, ·oUice in January should be to devise ways to grant heavy new .1 New Hampshire wore off, I mashed potatoes. here for Sao Tome where he will ~as a bit apprehensive about . Pennsylvania Dutelil Potaooes survey relief operations there Properly endorsed with the support flo private higher educa tion in Puel'lto Rico," the edito lOch a quantity of people' to T.h~ proportiops used in this for the starving population in' "Santa Claus Special," the pack lether for twO and n half days. pecipe are 4 to 1, so we will blockaded Biafra. ages are assured delivery by lI'dal said. Bow would we possibly man assume that you have 4 cups of He left here for the Portu Dee. 25, he added. age with meals, would we have mashed potatoes left over. guese West Africa Island aboard to spend the better part of the 4 cups leftover mashed potG a chartered CRS plane carrying Gets New Grant .-eekend searching for decent -toes' 40 tons of high protein food and CLEV~LAND (NC) - Project ~urants? Such thoughts ran 1 small onion chopped fine . medicines for ,the Biaftans. Bridge,wbich during the past Ihro~h my mind as we packed cup chopped green pepper Over 35 Years
ilnd Ii kept telling myself at least I! cup bread crumbs made from Relief supplies for Biafrans year. worked to bridge the gap are sent to Sao Tome where in between Negro and white here, of ,Satisfied Service
. e c~ildren would have .a good . bread a few days old ternational Catholic and Protes has received a renewed and in Reg. Master Plumber 7023
Orne, even If I had to spend my b~con fat
JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.
,.-eekend over a hot stove. milk or water to soften
tant relief agencies base their creased grant from the Ford Pe~ usual, all my worries 1 egg
ail'lplanes used in .nighttime Foundation. The new grant • . 806 NO. MAIN STREET
$225,000-$25,000 more than last ~re. in vain. 0Ulr host for the salt and pepper to taste
shuttles to fly food and medi Fan River 675-7497
year's original funding. :treek¢nd, Mr. E. Martin Barney, 1) Saute in the bacon fat the cines to the thousands of men, .. a' chef extraordinary who onions and green pepper until women and children suffering lil)ent his egerY waking hour ill the are soft. When they are soft from malnutrition because of ~1II1111""I11HHIIIIIHlIIIIIIIIII"Hlllllln""IflIllIllHmIllHIIIUIIIIIIIIIII""IIIIII11"""I11"111111H11II11111111111111!! the kitchen whipping up delt saute them with the bread the bockade around the former § .ous meals for the wbole kit crumbs until they tum a golden eartern region of Nigeria. end kaboodle of visitors. What I color. Msgr. Landi will study the did get from the weekend was a Z) Beat the egg emergency operations on the INC. thorough lesson on bow m feed 3) Add a bit of the water or island flo determine if further • small anDY without losing milk to the sauted bread crumbs steps can be taken b7 the U. S. jpOUr temper or your cooL so that they blend easily with Catholics' overseas relief agency Cooking with this man ,. a the leftover cooked potatoes. to increase the tonnage of relief ~y and one he not only rel Blend together the sauted onion supplies flown into the stricken lIIhes indulging in, but one that and peppers, the potatoes, the area each nigh~. be carries· off ex·perUy. Many softened bread crumbs and the At present, the Sao Tome JlVomen (myself included) could beaten egg. Add salt lIlnd pepper . operation averages about 10 take a leaf from his book on how 1» taste and beat everything to flights nightly, each carrying to cook with care but not eon gether. lOIk tons of relief supplies. But fusion. 4) .Ill • easserole d!sh place it is estimated that up to 1,000 S1llJlPtuoas Dbm_ &he beaten mixture and bake ID tons of food and medicine a day For lunch, the first _ we • 350" oven lUlw' broWJil aDd are needed to stop the 8tarva ~ t at tbiII »veq Iodee _ lMIf:f7 1ioD. iilIllUIUWlWUIIWW1l\IIIIIUlllllUlllWUlUIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIWIUUIIUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE
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FRIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERATION
,APPLIANCES
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.THE ANCHo.R-DiQ.ces~C?f Fa.l.! Rive(-Th~rs., Oct:\31~ '1968' .'
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i.Teaching- °of -Church
Guides,oConscien~e
an exact parallel,' but it shows' Our' Lovell dealing with a cognate' problem, familiar in our time also, the indissolubility of marriage, and the some elements are present: the prim eval !'natural" law of the Creator'li design; the failure in its observ~nce through human "hardness of h~,art;'i the reas.sertion by Christ of the ,principle both natural. a"dspi~ituali the objection.s. of the, discipie.s .to the, conse que~t ,harqshipi and'. the calm maintenance of the,,~~a~hi,ng with on, invitatJonto chastity "d db' , 01 e , .y grace. , :.,. ""C0NSCIENCE AND AUTHC>RITY"
. Continued from Page One'
THE p,ROPER USE OF, SEX ~ His declaration, if I may try to summarhe it, is this. Our body, as we know it. here and now-however it may have evolved to what it is-is a wonderful and most d.elicate organism, each port with us~s and functions and relations and' effe~ts that we knowl;>y ~vjng with theni., A~on.g· th'e~, ~one is Il'!~re 'wonderful thanth~' o~gons for, the tr~ri~~"mi'ssion ·oflife,'~.' nd ' ~~ ;'merel.y 'n, atural' anCl,' . . 'h~mon conditi.o'n' is' more" marv~lou~ !.han.t~~ , , ...th~se ,.",physiFol .' ." , powers , ""h' 'h ~~binatio~ of ~It t",~, I most ; inti~'ate C:nd f~.jfilli~g exp~riences ·of Much has been written about the indi ma~riage' and pare!'l~h9~d. 'O'!'he physical providual conscience both, as regards .contracep-· cess and the human love, which in the case 'tion ;and the acceptance of the' encyclical it: of baptized ~nd ma~ried ch~istians is also at self. The word conS"cie"ce has a terrible am least potEmtially spirit.ual~ C!r~in God's desi~!, biguity, 'which' cannot be by-pass~d by' G indissolubly' link~d,' ~nd' ~o.put one of t,h~se kind of 'bland 'assumptiori that w~/ are all 'always acting with 'c1eci~' minds' arid pure me .'(either the' lov~~~. the' phxsi.cal pi~~es·~r ~~t. ~f ~ction, '~'r t6' pr·eye;"t the p'os~ibility .~.r~~ .:' ·LiTURGy' MEETANG:PopePau} VI greets ,'tives.-'Those· who haVEr hod 'oeqlings with' the' physical C?~~i~~h~v~~~)?e,::~o~:seq~e,n~e /~r .i"obn·C~inalCQ<l.Y·Qf.Ohicago.and other' m~rn-' C1a'ims ,,~ ~nsdentio~s' ;'bbjedio~: ,d,'military ..: 'service'j a~d tho;e Who.consid~r for; d:morilent. ~ .which it existsthrougho,ut the .anlmor creaho~,her8 ofothe,Con8il~uI:ll for I~plemeJltingthe Con'ittitutioll<on :;th~' Sacre<i' Liturgy, following, meet- - . . is·t~ thwatt:thefdesign:.:oJ-·t.he Creotol',' ,·,)ng~·~t tne'Vatie~n.. At..right.is.:R~ld Cardinal. those two"great 'cJlamM6ns'of the';nClfviduol:'
. :. This ioririe~tiori 6f sexu61 love an? sex- !;~.ilva,H~nr.jq~ez.of,.Sanbago, ~h1.1e;, N.C. P:hoto._· ~onscience;: King 'Henr'y' Vllr"antl St~' .Thomas
~~I: proCesi~a~··jbe:o~~li~:,~~~ri:i~~~i~~i,y.~J.~· ':~" ," :'01' '.... 1 , " 0 ; ;.. ' .'. >: d,;: .' : ". i"·:. ·Mor~,. Will':'h(iv~' "~:"di~ferent~,Ja 'tt:ue'r; and c' .'~
;arid'i",tuit(6ncilly;and ·~s.·i~ nc(s~n~e a c~t!~~io?, . '::', ..... :) ':': .:""":.' " .,.'" ' .mor,~ truly i'situationaf"'appreciation of mcin's ~ft~;~' ~hoich'();: ~(jhe.P~I:'~'~' Th.e.:pro,:,~~u~~ "of ··piesent-day.' thought reie~t, the 'trpcJitional... 'conditio.n~." ,.:.' '. .~ 'the s~xua'.-'or~~n~i.~~)~~C!n i~_t~~ti:v.~, ~~ati-,., :,~onceptio~ of.nDtufal..law,. They ~ls9,'in many ,', w~ 'on a9r~.e'~t i~' the' UltjrilC~t~· reso;'1 ': f rt i ..'·%ot 9;' of ;.no~al tr~t~.'~'1d, i! is, a. f)a, 9 ,c:~as~ ';different·:WaYsi.",r~je~t myel; :els~)~a.L C:~ri$t..·· '~e~u'st' .~(;) good ~5' we' iee',t'cit"tl)e . moment', " '. ~ty in' .its Wi~e'st ,sen.s~ c1s ,0 h~m9ni "~n~ '~~II ' :.~;ionsA;~id·Cll~alwciYs·; have 'heid~ ',~xpIiCit{y (;)f , .()f ':~ction~ Vaticdnn. .in'ci welcom'e(b,ut' not ' .. : Mo!e as C,hristi.~~; virt:u~. ~ut "it.~~!'.be..'C?~-, ': implicitly, ~ be' reasonable o'nd, rig~t: :As the ' ,'infciliible?) pronouncementdeclaredthat i" all ' ; .cured, like' many ~f7!~e ,si~p'Ie~t truths"by .. Pope himself said,·in·his··recfmt·,dedaration of. matters of belief' the sincere consch~nceof th, original and personal. sin,. by: the '. c,!Ij)ClI:?~e the Catholic 'faith;a: reflectirig Christian must individual' must be respeded, and 'that free.' 'DOss of sen'sitivitY;"by"'~ont':o,y'instructio;,,~~. needs make basic "assumptions 'wh!ch some ,dom is of ,the essence' of' morcil adi~nand CJ mis~nderstandin9, by s?p~isti.cated·arg~me'n,t~· systems ~f thought, both ancient and modern, fortiori of aeredol ossimt.' But 'the' counCil was or 'by mere ·.h'umbn c·ohfusion. For that re~son have refused to a.ccept. Thus we hold ,that also very careful to define the concUtions of Jt'can be' a'rid need~ t~ be.re~sserte~ by ~h~ the intell~ct which God hasgi:-,~n us reac~es an objective'Y" g09d 'conscience;' though in Church. The Church has'also the right and reality, that 'whictiis', in the uni~e~se ~utside words wMch' yield their" full meariing only d.u~y of reminding u,s that Christian marriaQeo'ur minas, and that it conCllso ascertain that when closely regarded. As Ctlristians we is ; not solely a. natural union;, th~t 'in: .the ~hich is ~ight 'in human cOlJduct~'BI,I~ indeedl, 'know that we must always with what . ~r~ator's design for,;theJ~uP:Jlanrcice'the ph~.. +he' flightfr:~ni natural low,s. farfro;~f uni- . ,,'resent light we ,may :h~ve, but' we" 'knew; •.ica'.instiri.dsond:impulses are:,tcf' be 'su~of~ . verso!, even :thepres~nt day. M~reo.~!!r~ 'also' t~at th,ere is' for Ys,':in.ev'ery:e,ve~t'ofour. . dinated·ti:> the'rea~on, ~nd t~e reason ~ the'many ·~f'th9.s~ who..experit'fro~ th~ir~ys-:' . lives,-a course of action entirely In.-harmony' light of faith. and th~ G~s~I_: .t~~ch,in(l.:.·:':lf_ t~~sverbally, ",~keuse of'somethi!;'g. ~e~y..I)~e. ,~i.~~.,~~~~: y.o.ilJ,:for Yf ~s .individuals "(/'Thy, : WdS ,for this, as. a'pC2r t "of;,otlr ·~ed~~F?!'o"~!.', 'Ittra;\Slated 'into their.own·techniq.JrJong,uage. "will be ,done"Ori,earthos' if is"in heaven"); :. "'aHhe SOn c;f'God ~caine"ma;,: an.~ died.!O :' .;:,~ ." -:A' . ,'.~'Ug ~ t·':"~hotj't~e",~a~uroB '::<,!hi~: ..r~ ,rY)';.y.. f~il·.tQ ~ .her~ ancl "o~, throu9~' .. r ·rrepaifirf us'.'whOl.· 'iFf·had.'. 'br.o.~en·CI~'to.;!!,ake. ·'Ia'·.: '.'..,;:5...od .,:sbe. ,g~s I~n. . , ':d' :, ~~. :... 'mu'sf ignorance, cor.elessne.ssi ...ed.v.,c.ation;!.emo.tio,,* '.; • . . , . . , fJ.. h'r' w on or er .. JV' '-recognize .as·'o ·', "'-.;<"'" ,'." :. -. . Po~sible, n~y ~y!ul, ':~~o~~ony:~f ~ w. ~e, ,",be,' ~mething. that', each indi~idual':asc~ritdiris.~ ,p'!,ese.n!. ,or: ,pq~t )'O()rolfoilin,~'.,8.~t. .~,~d~tia.n~ " · .~~.,. ,und~~. ~he' law, that:,it .s:,~he .fte~do~,. ~ '; f' r'hi.:ns~tf '. on·e'.coh· onl ""sathat'-'he,.:terM. :: .:~n~ ,.~~or.~. ~.II. Ca't~oh~s" k~ow th~t Jhe.y ·have .' "'~sons .of,. GOdl It ':i~; therefore. '~ :;te.Clc~,~~ ,: . 't:w' 'even I whe~:' us~d. ~"h~e 'on;)'" 'by.. aft-' .. f.rl, g.r~.Y,e ,~,a.t.ters. 9f·t;»eli~f .and mQrC;JI~'~w hoI '.' ~ ,the Chu!c"ri~t',tlll~t. of :!~aul' VI. opClrt~~om ." .~I· , .. im'lies..indeed: that.a'general, ability My. -,"el,i9ble;. y.ar:~sti~k; --,.~~r~eme.n.t. ..:w~!h th:e
., t~e .C.,urd;~'~t~~.t~. ~a~h".~nd',~~er,~ ~a~rta~t~;:~nl~eClln obligation' exists, but this,dOes.f~ac~itlg..of '!h~ .Chu:r.ch..\ ("1 ,,~lle,~~ ,,~hat~o:-.
act must w:emam ope.,. to the trans"'ls~lon".¢ .'. I . I ... . ever else the Church proposes to·be believed ').
"."" 'not ,Imply a· unlversa ·per.sona . recognition! ," " . , . " life. .;,: ; .' ":' .,': ,:'.: '11 I . tho ·t· .' .t b': 'b' , ed v'e N ' To follow that IS never to renounce true. r.easonq .ttl ess one a' canno ' e 0 scur i ., . .' -. • ." . d'" . , THE NATURAL LAW " '. . ," widle'ly and:·c~rrtmonly,· by ··the conseque:nc.e~ .~o~.~~ I! ',~~y ,S9~et,~es Imply t~anscen ~ng, . "fhe P~p~' i~ 'weli b~are Of . the extrinsic .f' .. I" d' b y . persona'1' 51On ," 'contrary' the. conclUSion . .to ' wh!chour , --, . -- . " ' 0 'orlgma . Sin an , '.~ ... :'., h' . own reasoning a,gument~ against ·th.i 5 teaching, which. have .. ,' .. ,. d h has apparentlybroug t us teaching, contrary habit~ insens,itivity ~n t e ~", .' . ' " " d h I of . pullulated s'i~ce the p~rfectingof. the Oral. iike.. 1t1S predsely' for ,this reason, as the Pope ,T~~o.'ogl~n~. w!:~ ~xten : t e re~ m . " · c·ontra·ceptive. Pa.rt.i~ular.· attention' h.as been . . th '·th·· . t....h· . f' t'he' C·h'u··r"'n.. Mfree responslb.lhty . to so.'emn. pronounce- _- at ,e. eac 109 organs, 0 . . ...UlI • . ; ., " '.. ' • ." • g iv'en in. the' p'res~ to' his appeal- to natUral.:says, '- . ". ';.. 'I I' ments of the maglsterlum must weigh their . . . . .' . . ". can reassert and mterpretnatura ow. ,: '.' '" .' " .', . . . . . ...." d "'f"h ' low, as if thls'·of·ltself,mvalldated both .hls- .' . . . ... ' . . " , . . .... ,. . words. Do they suggest. that the attltu eo t e argum~nt~nd,his ',teaching. ,The·existence·of··.', ..,lwo,!ld ,earnestly ~ any ·of ·my ',eo&~ 'fGith'f~1 to G" do{jniat'c 'papalprono(,iice'men. ' : ~'atu~al ,I~';;., i~'·.de~ied, . or::.,alter.nati~ely ,:·;t·Ms " .~rs,who" ar~.- t~oub'ed by' the, refefences" to .- ',:.hou·ld:'l)e:"Clj"'!'u'Spens'ion 'Of :,uagn,e',;'f"'o ild". .. ';~id' that '.th~"::~at~'-al,'aw·Js.-what,is di$cove,"·' , '" l'loturallaw:.in ..thepapol ,,'encyct~ca.i',:~o· .,~a~::''ci-iticol·eitomi·ncltion(jf··onytking."tno'f·~eems' .: ~d',by '~o~is ,ow~ ;rea~on. and ,cann'otbe· .iM!- ' '" a,:,dpo~r,' a ·,fo~Uio~ passCI!;J~.in..,tl:le.: Go~p~I' ": ·.'iO,' shock' 'th~r-presuppo;itions?~ Dc)' "th'ey"'reol- . : .. ,.' PQsei on·:,him:....... ",.. :' .....;,.:",.. ",' . .-::.,.:-.>, ':""." . ".~f:::St~,:~tt~",~(>c,h~pter' t9,·.-v~~~~. ;1:-1:2.,: IL: bewhith'er-they-a~e'ten~ing?()ot~~r'reme~'", ", ,,:",: "" .;:~., :,~,It. 'is'" t~.ue,;th'qt :~~r'ly~schools 'and,·.cli~ote~::: ,:.,.:,.,not"lar/~pr:oof·tflx,W"of ,HWtKinae;.Vitaei"ncw· .... -:', ... "'",.,.. '---, .' ",." '7uril't"'·Paie·"J:1ev. '-'.'.",,--,~"'" .~ r
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Tttf ANCHOR-Dioe,ese of Foil River-Thurs., Oct. 31,1968
1'1
Pope Speaks Wit4 Mandate From Chris't
of the Church, Is" not tiiis "t~e global teach.. ing of the bishops of the Church with the
Pope at their head," to which Bishop Butler's
ophesion is identical with his adhesion to the
Church itself (The' loblet, 21 September, 'to.
935)?
Con.tlnued from Page Ten
ber that the Second Vatican Cound~ itself is exactly of the same status as they daim for Humanae Vitae? None of tts decrees or utter ances enjoy infallibility save those (and are there any?) which formally claim it, or those
which are reassertions of existing (ath~lic belief. And with regard ·to Humonae Vitae, even if we grant that an:indlviduai may su~pend his assent, would 'these 'theologians e->t·' tend his freedom to' expre'sslng it in public, to writing about it, to persuading others to' gang up against it and to ,form a pressure-group of \. -', opinion?
Attempts have been made to draw POIi I aUers between declarotio~s of Pop~s that have
'~ '~~%'; either been reversed by their successors Oli
\ passed ' into" des~etude as ,spcial habits
changed. ~n~ who has for;' the post t~ro
:yea~s bee,,) ~ng~ged 'in ~eading and writ , -1"in'g -'the; 'hist~~y' ~f the thous'~nd ~ediev'~~
"'ij years of the Church's life would have nell . But wIlebaI reO reminded that thehencyc!ical , .~ dOfifftichUe'Ity if'\> a~ddingd t~, their numtber· ISOtr: e :.c IS not in f a i e. Here again some t eo 1og,ons 14 m are In ee mo tes t 0 rou b e ne Ets~ape from reality intQ a world of logical mind's .eye," and there were sore eye!! ,~ategor.ies which they assume that others are 'enough befor~ the decrees of Vatican I w~~~ ,inhabiting. The infallib~l,ty, defined portion's possed. But " have not seen either in tM!) of Chr.istian truth Qre or)ly the, tip of the g r e a t p a p e ' r or' else-Nh'ere ~ singl~ example' o~iceberg. o.fChristian, dp<;trin~, and. the pro" :' RETURNS' TO ROME: ,·Father: Lionel ~ 'Ieged th~t 'i~ with'i~ hoili~g distance of be n,o. uncem,~nt~ of' a.,u,thQ!i,ty. 'n. preaching the May, M.S:;' former superiorof!'La Salette Sem'ing "0' pa'r~"lel' 'to Humanae Vitae~ ina.i'Y', 'Attleboro, and now general' Secretary' f d r ' .'" :' ".. ",.;, '.'" . i~~ole,~f,th~t doctri.n~ Cir~tof. vqri9us degr~es the"worldwide order, has'rehlrned W' 'RJirhe ·THE TANGLE WE ARE IN " ,~f we,ig~t..,y.'e.;ca"!"~t,,~row,,~ny, of them :after spendiftg·the 'Summer at the c('nlmlimity' l s >,;' ., •.• :; : ; " , 1 ' , .. " • . :~!rai~.ht~(1y'i.,to a ibin.la~,eled~'not ~nf<JlHble.~ ,pJ:'()vinciaJ house' in Attleboro: There' he: he:i(l~d ,'l'~ "'" ~~r~I,,; tb.~~!,!5 :the ~c;»tter, as . ~,t sh7lnetJ.~ ,W, h,~,,! he.,p,r.,op,oses•.sqrn"hing,from:the pulpit air international commission on renewal d,rafting .W" .... e"" ,h9~~. a.,",,~.rov~ ,'Jl~, rai .proble~. ~ffe,ctiry~ ·it new "rule for the .congregation. The,c-commfs as Christian doctrine:we ac~ept what our Par:sioTI' wilhnee't'again in Rome in Deeember. Other, in one way .or another almost every Catk ish priest says,. unless or until a higher author-. area t:nembers-are Father Armand Proulx, ,olic. Christian ,.(and many other. 'Christian~ , ity,or',ourown. instruct~d r.e~earch, proves'c,ilor,foi' the· Attlebo1'()La· Salette province ~ and ' and, men of good will). Nor does it affm him, to hove been mistaken. When 0- i?ishop' 'father Andre Lefram:~Qi's; professC!f at the; ,'I41 our · generation alon~, for papal pronounCESalet~ .scholasticate·, ' Ipswich. . , ' speaks from his chair,. ther~ .is an' extrem'ely: . , ments do not die whtm the 'writer is no more
grove obligation to. hear· J,im .for he is one witb the· Church militant. Two succe$sivf)
of the great college commis~ioned byClhlTist Popes, one being the dearly loved Pope John"
t~, prec;:Jch His word. When, the, Pope. speaks ,: , . ',. ~ithd~e.w ,a consideration of the ·matter fr~r;vu
.(;n a gra,ve '~atterof fc;lith ,and morals, evelll judgments on fai,th and, morals which. he the. ag~n?a ()~ Vatican II. rhe. present Po~
'if not e~<;athedra, w~Q ,cal'J measure h.is has delivered, complying with, hi~, obvious engaged . hi~self to. give Qn answer morre
authority.? .Or rather, whp can straightway meaning .and intention." than' four year.s ogo, as to w~et~er thtJ
,'n a .'plea ',n b~"r.. .of, his, claim? We must .. ' , ' ' " ' , . Church her teaching
'ut' P · N o candid 'reade'r can mistake, the "ob'.', ' could , :',' modify " , ' ' •
remind ourselves tha,t there, is no intrinsic ;. " " . ' . .
.' . .' , ,, vious meaning and intention" of Paul VI in "T.he Pop~ has, os we have been told ill
.~.ifference ~f truth between, Q. prenouncement ;Humanae Vitae. But is it the "a'uthe~tic t~ach~ sincere and moving words,' read much', spokefll
:~>eforean~ after it hc;:i.s become infallible by lrig i , 'of P~ul VI al'~'n~ that ';'e ar~ .,·e~ring? much, thought. much and, what is more;
io ~~~ form, of, .its 'pr()!,!,ulgqt '1" The very con"' A 'supe;'fici~'1 reader' {thepresen't wdter~ ~;'s prayed and suffer,ed much, and 'devout souV!
~ep.ti~n of. t,he requir.emf)nt!': of qn '~in.faUible~ ' one' ~~ch )may faii at first 'to notice 'h~;""1thr~ughout, the: Church have prayed with -him
often the P"ope puts' forward what' he .says 'ond ,'offered the Holy Sacrifice 'for .his in definition is modern. It is a purely externat seal, so to say,' it -~Q~s' not necessarily reHect not as his, teaching (it. .is noteworthy that 'in fe·ntion.· We k~~w; and he knew betfer~ whaD
any difference of the quality .of th~ truth d~- ... the docfrin~l.par.t:of the .text the, first. person, . 'IIlitr~me~dous 'bod ;ago~izing responsibility
. e1ared." I do not' for a. moment .deny the juri-' is., ,nev.r.. 'used) .buf as, the •t~achj'ng of the': . was" his; 'indeec:i;' 0 greate~res~nsibility Carll ~' dicol and confessional dif,f~rence, "w.'ish e>nly' , ,..' , . ,' '"Ch...,rcb; And',:hpw, is' he.·speaking?(:o'nsider. rdrely, if 'ever, hove'confronted a Pope; anCl tp deplor~ ,~e. ~h;isipn·pL~e~rta.inty , ~nd a~/- .the .Iqst,,· words of. :'pdrdgraph . '6:-. '~'W~; how" he' knew:' ihat:;'he: would be; 'lik~ Ms :'Mastet; . ih~r!ty '~'~Y'~~'; s~~~p'Ii,":e .;'c;»,ther. t~~nTJbi".Cl" .intend, .'by':virtue;·of'.the mandate entru$ted to . '.~.'tI· sign' .of. controdittion/' We. ar~· told that gracW~~ :~av..~, of., su.n~h.i~e~, ',' '.' ...'. ).,' \1$ .by :Christ .... '~' .~' 'Note also" hoy/, he 'insi$ts· . gtadually,·, he' sow more and .more' c1eor'l, .up~n ,the declarat,ions:,as·those ofithe"Chu~r(;n: .. what· he most say.' Heanswere'd onthe'spiri- '. "'.'. \V,ha.t th~n,' 'sha'lI w~~ay ,,,f t,he~ degreq fim.anifested by: the constant >teachings df'·the' itual.level; r transcending' all debates 'on no o{, .a,~thori,ty in,her'e.~t, ',In." ,H.'u~anae Vita.e? It . Church~' (para....10; 'end); "this 'teaching of 'tur~1 ·Iaw 'and reasserting, though in ampler agreed that' itl~~ks the external ticket, the Church - on conjugal ,morals" (para.. 16);· term~i' the c'anstantteaching of the Churcill lithe Church teaches" (ibid.); "the teaching ~f which he' is head: is any .Cotholic, beliey..· so to soy, of, ~'!1fallibility. But it cannot be agreed that it is, in the wprds of some comof th~ Churchi~ this field'" (ibid~, 17); and" lng in Ch;1st's'. promise t~ Peter and· in the mentators, even of theological note, that it most important' of all, the operativ~ decloguiddnce of the Holy Spirit, prepared to Oll is only the private opinion, or·the personal ration: "the' Church tea.ches . . .' that 'ea'ch serf that he a~swered ~ot o.nly inopportuneBv ' view of Pope .Paul VI. He is. expressly teach~ ' and every mar:riage oct. must rema,n open or unwisely, but faultily and wrongly?
ing 'us as Pope, and the ~condl VatOcolTl ' l' '1 ,' ·enQ. -I) ' . 't
to t h' e transmission 0 f" 'I if e " (.para. W' .'. tid __ J! Council's Consti.t~ri~!" on tJ:te ~hurch reaffirms . " ' . e are to 0 ang e, an argumen, goou
~hat;Cot~olics ~lr~9:E;ly.. ~~i~ve~, that 'W, '. "It,is the teochingof·the-Chu·rch,:·notthe ot bCid,· will not restore peace 'andunity tel
owe,·the 9ffering :of.. th~. r~ligiou~ e:tt,legia~c:;~ naturatlaw,· to which'we are" oskedto·give·· us·; ·Silenceond -prayer ;ondquiet thought
~f .~ind ~~d .~ill,i~ 'a :~ni9u~-·'N.ay to the, e;;t':D7' 'our' ~ssent. Do we, simple Christians,· knoW: _. afC?ne' Cdn restore ,peace: -And, peace :can ~niY
thentic "·teochingof.~. RomQ,r P.ontiff, e:ve~ . ~tter 'tho'n .the 'Pope' what ·the ;Churc;h teache~? .. co~e. ·through union"in ·faith' and· filial· o~
.when:.he is ~' s~oking . ,~,Ca_thedr.G .• :• • • . And if, as' .the Pope ·truly an'd- histor-ic~ny: ien(:e·and.,!n~erstonding}with .the,ViCar.. eI This'shovldl result .n·a,~nc:er.e,adherence to:the ~ , asserts; "thi~,··ha$;been,i·olways,,;the:;·teaGhing '; ,,(;;hrist.·: '~-''l', ~':" : : : " , ... ; ; ... ' . " : ~.,•. , ; ... , , I
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lBy lRt. Rev. MIsgr. Jr ohn S. Kennedy
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In Set in a Shyer Sea (Doubleday, 501 Franklin :Avenue, Garden City, N.Y. 11531. $5.95), Sir Arthur Bryant. adds another to his shelf of volumes dealing with Engish history; This time he addresses himself to the period be tween fhe reign of Charles . . lJ[ in the seventeenth een airless. Their work, day was in tory and that of Victoria in tolerably long, their working the nineteenth. He eoneen conditions ahominable, their pay
ANOTHER WORLD
ttrates on s~cial change and de skimpY,and their employment __ :velopment. This means that the always uncertain. Each moment of our liv~ istbe time for expressing our creat events on Nevertheless, improvement love. All too often, however, our love is reserved for our own ~hich history . slowly eventuated. There were parliamentary inquiries into 'in little world. But there is another world in which our missionaries C e n era 11 y dustrial conditions. The voting 'live and work and serve. And what a vast difference betw~ the focuses are here two! We have so very much and this other world has so 'very but dimly per .•franchise was gradually extend little. One billion of i¢s citizens are fully occupied with the.daily eeived in the
ed. Working class men appeared struggle to stay alive. ltackground. For
in the House of Commons. Social example, the
legislation began to be enacted. ~urse of the
An English type of Socialism What has the Church to do with ait of this? Of' and by itseU • Is never going to be able. to solve the economic and social tl a pol eon i c
evolved."> . DIs of the world. yet. the Church has a mysterious and unique _ars, lasting al-
Education improved, and the IDOst a quarter
innovation of the penny press role as mankind struggles to solve tbe problem of sooial Justice .
Was ).~. ~tself a popular education 1IIlCI. development.· -.f a century,' is f rts Th . 1 t 1'· iIlOt traced out; 0 ~., : , ,e ~o ~n . reyo :uti~ns d,.t' l t i eel.' WhICh .. ~ept occurnng on the HEADS CONJFERENCE': ,,': I • ':', , : • Indee ;.1 ·1S·scarce Y men on". ':Continent h~ no: ounte rt···· BI'lJ'ho'p Ale ander Ca-"'~r"" . The '.. Church carries out t1rl8 mission princlpa"- thro"- • In t nel": Sir Arthur examines' .. c ' rpa m on"" VL . . . . . ti .. ," .~ "'0" S e';. ;~'~' ..' . ' . . ,. :.. the little lSlahd. Erigland'''Diud'1 'M' . no ' , . "l"~I> ~, Dl1SSlonary ~ask. force; meri and' women' like yoUrSelvei t the ~L-.::":~' .of the confl1ct o~.Jhe. : dled through. . ," ;, . ~ t.Ste. a':le, , 59, I WhO ~ so filled WIth the love of' ChriSt m tllEiir rieighbOr, 'that Bpghsh. ~con~my. . , . ,,_. ";:. ". : Portra 8 Basic TrutbS '" " ~ pa,tive of Mon~rea.l, 18 pteS-' they hav7 gone to :every P~lIt of'the ·globe to be, GOd's inlitl'1lJlWnts Eng~and was drastically al '. y ident of theOanadlan ,Cath-" of salvat10n and 8lgnsof ·His love to all! m~.· j: " tered 111 the two and a half cenBut 1t certainly was· not the olie COnfere''nee:" ·:the 'i:t.ai>r""- j) :'.' ,',,: . ;'1'," . '.. , .< ... , ••.•,'. \·.··.·.,·,i·.I .· I ' ;",: Curies to which the author ad.- ~e ,as it had' been under . . ., . ~~......
.", ... , ' ; i , ..... ','",' .. ". " el'resses"himself. In the late. sev- ,~~arles II. However Sir Arthur . tariate of the panadlan Hler These missionaries are teaeblnr, the,. are heaUnr, the,. are anteenth century, it was still an' di'Scern~,tlie perSist~nCe of' eer- ~arohy,. with offiCes in Ot- eomIoning, they are instructing iD .developing ,AfriCa, In teemIBLandkingdbm; by the, late, . tain basic traits throughout the tawa.: NC PhOto.
In&' Asia, in the city slums and the jungles of Latin America. aineteenth century, it posse~ed centuries' wliich he portrays.. '
. 1'beyare Indeed tuminA' 80metbinc loose, in. the world; somethin&" • wor:ldwide empire... In " the. ,,: One ofth~e'is a ~assion f~ IIlJ'ster~ . aucl powerfUI---&he love ., God for 'man. These earlier century, most of its P:DP- liberty. Another is a ellnging to lIlissionaries are living, breathlnr prool ef that love. for the,. tIlation lived in the countrySIde; roots however remote in rural lIN WUllesseS ie, It With deeds . ' well • wonJ& lID the" later o~, most of the Erigl-~nd, even by the most Bow can 10U help them! ODe of the mOBt effeettve of population was in the ciue1. wretchedly cil'CWDStanced cit1'Wealth Increases dweller. Still another is salvaAUGUSTA (NC) - Bishops of ..... is assisting The Society iIbr ~ Propagation of the Faith. . the U. S . ..Episcopal Church and Genuine concern is DOt eonfined, It • univenal. SO is the Society I . The biggest difference, of ( tionism sort or another, the Anglican Church of ~ . . concern b' the Church .ad the whole of humanity makes it wheth of M one thodi eourse, was caused by industri er .e SIll in the eighendorsed -plans for a consultative 7OUl' ready vehicle for Jessenfng the gap between the two worlds. alization, a thing unknown in . teenth century or Socialism, m agency to develop joint policy '1'brough it your love and awareness are universall2led. Your eon .Gle days of the stuarta, but the nineteenth. Jor three major Anglican bodies. Unued sacrifices will prove yoUI' concern for tbose' wlao suffer ~minant, indeed so:vereiga, ill The author has amassed and those who serve ill that other world.. the Victorian era. .' Ift()uotainous detail. For examThe •North Ameraican :Re England was, thoroughly Prot . gional ~uncil will pl~ common p_e, he gives much attention • . , 8~LVATlO~ AND 8BRne.: Me tile work 01 ft:e 8eeletF estant.when Charles U came to eating and drinking habits in the 8U'ategy in ~elds ranging- from: . . the ~pa.gation eI the FaUI.. "lease out out tbis column and Ibe throne. The Reformation bad various ens which he treats. lU'ban renewal to church unity. seDdJ:our olferinl' to RiI'ht ~erencl BcIwanl T. O'Meara. iOCCurred ,a century earlier, and . Sample meals and sample drink.;. Although 5.4 million members NaU~al . Director. 366 I'1Itb A.venue. New York. N.Y. 10001 as effect appeared now to.. be ing bouts are laid out for us. affected profess a coonmon doc or ~e~tIy ~ your local Dioeesan Director, .lU. Rev. Msgr. permanent. The number Of And so it is with particulars'Gf trinal tradition, they are scat Catholics 'Was small indeed, and' .many other kinds. tered in ·three independently . aaymo~d T. Considine. 168 NOrth Main street. J"lIIl JUv-. .Massachusetts OIUo. . I8dherenu,' of the old faith were Uter Years governed cburehes, the U. S. and anderdisab~lity and barroo.· It is ~eciallY interesting 10 Canadian bodies and the ,Church .' Irompublic life. go from his book to The .Later of the Province of the West The <:ountry's wealth began'!:IoYears: 1945-1962 .(Atheneum. 'Indies. TheOanadian and Amer '0 ilhcrease mar~edlY, this because 162 E. 38th St.; New York" N.> Y.', ican bisooPB are meeting' here
of trade, WhICh of course, was 10016 1$8 50) the tbiI'li d last' tor ·the 'film time in joint se.
.Groshire . . facilitat:d by the growth of the voh~e of the diaries an:nlettel'B 'BiOn.
shapes the answer lIlercanble fleet. of Sir Harold Nicolson, who died Bishop Stephen F. Bayne Jr..
f~~"yOur . Flagrant E~ earlier this year at the age of of New York, one of the archI. Fall weekends. The eighteenth century saw 82. ~t;s of the North American Be~e tJeginning of the shift froin. Born during Victoria'u relgn. gional Coimcil, told the 230 pre1 ~untry to to~ and city. Man of an aristocratic family, Sir atell assembled here the plall afacture . shot r.apidly ahead, Harold lived to see the dissolu- will provide 'Anglicans "n f1ex ehiefly of cotton goods for ex tion of the empire and Britain's Ible ex-pression of wlity in ao port. iThe coal and iron indus reduction to almost island statll£ tion." vies grew great. . onke again. I ." . ., 'lbe regional plan is similar to 'ftIs IpOit eoat is for the mall By 'the eat;'ly ninenteenth ceo ~Jnsta1lment of his diary, ,·two other Anglican. bodies Ill who know INld knoW. 'he wry, .although the wealth of the ed'ltedby his"sonNigel, Ja per ready in existence, the South ~o. . For &be IndiYidualia& eountry bad spectacularly m vaded 'by sadJiess. Polltieally . east Asia Council organized m: who lIBdentandS lidw creased and an empire of '10 ambitious but· inept, Sir Haroid 1946 and the South Pacific aracing lines and full chest ex million people was ruled from made a final botch of hils publie . Council begun in 1960. It is pari .. p..os.ioD can improve hll London, the evils attendant career by joining the LabcM' of a growing administrative ~iOR Impact." Hanclo .pon 'industrialism linked with Party in 194'7, in quest of peer~' Wlif.ication of -the worldwide ShapecP at every tunl lor the economic laissez faire began to age which he never did gel Anglican . ~mmunion. a trend nItjmeM in fit aDd be not. only manifest but· fla To ft?ad of his thwarted 'lOng ibat is nmning parallel to iD 8l"ant. htgs and his invariably wnme creasing Anglican ,participatiOD .Comio.... SubeJued 01' "lIniDhibhed The rich grew richer, and moves is Il1l uncomfortable e&-' Ja 'interchurch endeavora. pWdaunnrmeartbo 'Were insatiable in their quest of perience. .IOIHL' luxury. A hearUessex.trava . Self-Portr'aa Unanimous pnce prevailed, and along with -.~ , GR~SHIRIt SAIGON (NC)-Nguyen VlUl
U came something which, Be- . ~~ there 111. the sadness. of IIOrding to Sir Arthur was pre his agmg. He detested grow1ng Buyen, nationally known Callb
J':rom $41L to $130. 'riously UJlkn()wn:. 'snobbery old. aDd the thought of this olie lawyer, haS been electecl
ilieree.class feeling, a detest&h shrinking and fading was never president of the Vietnamese ~
of the poor. Now there lNae a far from ~ mind. He was ever ate for the second year in III row.
....tl.mena CIolfi'.... 53 votell·
~h in the nation. a~re?eDS1ve abou~ ibe health of He received i2 of . Palhlona for Womea ..;Cites 1m emeat his wife, V. SackV'llle-West, and cast. prov . . with her death in 1962, his diary PM Open o.n, 11 Df~y pages are gIven to de abruptly stopped'and his decline , t -"",."'110 PM IICrip~ion of conditions in the in was precipitated. . groes, against anything Catbodustrial . cities. The poor Were His: diary is a eompilation of Be) in <me .who thoughtbim very .:. numerous.. They .were marginalia on the great even¥ ~ to be (and in. many w8lll ......... Dtirtanoul' mercl,lessly .explolted. They lived and personalities of the times. was) fair-minded. It is the self DutaaoutII Ihopplna Pau.. m ramshackle and filthy tene It is- 11 recoI'li of prejudica pOrtrait .of . a man with excep 1Iaen~ crowded together aDd (Jll£ainst AmericaDB, aI&mat He tklDal advantages. .
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C'·h'urc '., h to Form Policy Agency
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.... YOUTH SUNDAY: Manin Medal Ad Ahare Dei Cross and Pius
xn PJaque are awarded to members of Diooesan youth groups at· annual
Youth Sunday ceremony, held at St. Anthony's Church, Taunton. Left, Marian Medal JleCipients include Patricia GoleiMlki, Junior Daughters fXf Isabella, :New Bedford; Mary Ann Victorino and Mary Jane Julio, Girl Scout Troop 441, Taunton; Debra Stevens· and Jo-Ann Gosselin, Gamp Fire Girls, Fall River. Tbir-ty-thFee Marian Meools were awarded. CeJlltel',
Catholic B.ishops FormConference Of Clergy, Laity MADISON (NC) - The Catholic bie'hops of Wi8C~n sin have formed a state Catholic conference to form ulate and express the official policy of the Church on state wide ecclesiastical QlJld socio moral matters.· Laymen, clergy and Religious attended the fi·rst meeting of the Wisconsin Catholic Conference held at Immaculate Heart of Mary parish .hall here. The new organization replaces the struc ture which bad been known as the Catholic Provincial Council of Wisconsin. Among the eonference'lS dutie>ll wijl be: To extend a united opInIon on legislation as enacted, proposed or Interpreted, which might af fect the lives of Catholics and those with similar interests throughout the state. To carry on :research and study of current sOcio-ethical issues and to share the findi~gs with all intere9ted pereons and Jnstitutions. To formulate and ex,press publicly, under supervision of the board cd directors, the only official policy of the Catholic Church In Wisconsin on socio moral' matters. Members of the conference· win include Archbishop William E. Cousins of Milwaukee, BishOp FrederickW. F.rekirig cd La Crosse, Bishop George A. Hammes of Superior,' Bdshop Aloysius 'J. Wycislo of Green Bay, and Bishop, C1etus F~ O'Donnell of Madison. Other members will be repre sentatives of Catholic social rervices, departments of educa tion, Christian formation, Cath olic hospitals and Ca:tholic cem eteries, and the communications media of each diocese. A large represelll!;ation win eome from the chairmen of the priests' and Sistel1S' senate in each diocese, GIong with three laymen and three laywomen. Archbishop· Cousins &nd the other bishops will as the board <d directors nncll wJ11 es tablish or approve ~"eran pollq.
serve
only two recipients O'f Pius XII plaque rorExplorer Scouts, Donald Blanch ard, left, atn.d Peter Ostiguy,. with Joseph F. Murphy, Diocesan Lay·' Ohairman :for ScoU'ting~ Right, five of 101 FeCipients of Ad Altare Dei Cross, from left, Stephen Motyl, wewt Mansfiled; Gilbert Canuel, FaD River; .Steven· Cameron, Attleboro.; James Creeden, Mans-field; Thomas . Gregoire, New Bedford. Bishcp Connolly presided and conferred the vari ous awards. '.
Plans New. Projects on 25th AnniYersary Marian Library Stcirts New Era of Expansion· DAYTON (NC)-In the post Fo8'Uler Maloy said the library ·books and thousands of pamph eonciliar era, Catholics are seek- will :revive the publication, lets about the Mother of God, Jng a deeper understanding of "M a ria n Library - Studies,· written in all major languages. the relevance of· Mary in their .founded in .1949 by the firs! di In addition, lIhere are thou lives and are less interested in :rector cd the library, Father sands of' clippings, an extensive the superficial aspects of ,Marian Lawrence Monheim, S.M. Form collection of Mari·an·· art,· music, devotion, an authority sald here. erly a reprint service, the pub .microfilms and photographs and At the Marian library. at the llcation, to be issued annually, even a 'Marian stamp collection. University of Dayton, few per will now .contain olciginal ma ·The work at the Ubrary is done sons now ask such questions as, terial." · by l'l permanent staff, and III "What color· dress' did the . One of the most 'signitficant group of lay volunteers donating Blessed V:irgin wear at ~~tima?" new projects of the Marian' li ~me on a· regullU' basis. That type of question· was not brary will be publication of a unusual eight o'r 10 years ago, catalog liMing all of the oold according to hther Rober:tM. "ings of··the library. ','This Js en Rem~val . Maloy, S.M. ,director of the li area of major emphasis now,· brary. "Now the type of refer;" the director said. "It will take ence questions are fJar more seri from five to 10 years." SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A ous." ." The catalog will· help attract fn>up of 51 priests here bas T'he Z5th annIversary of the scholars throughout the world to made public a request to Pope founding of the lil'brary, one of the vast resources of the library, Paul VI for the re.mov.al of world's largest eollc.."Ction of which contains nearly ~O,OOO ·Arcbbishop Robert E. Lucey of books and other materials deal San AntOnio' because of "an at ing exclusiVely with· Mary, was mosphere of fear, alienation and observed :recently. dissatisfaction on the part of Publish Catalogue many priests m this archdio There is no eVlidence here of a oose." dimirlishing i1l'terest' in ' the COTONOU ( NC) - Complete Tbe priests said they bad sent Blessed Virgin. On the eon acceptance of Pope Paul's coun the letter 30 days before with tt'ary, the Marian library is at sel againsttbe use of arlificial e pledge to keep it secret if the thresh-old of a Dew en of contraceptives will "open the some action occurred ill that expansion. way to true development" of time~ They announCed filat they . marital life, CllItholic couples in had received DO reply. this West African nation have Archbishop Luce3r, who Wti been told by Archbishop Ber sent a copy of the letter, declined nardin Gantin of Cotonou, Da comment, but Auxili-ary Bishop homey, Africa. BUENOS AIRES (NC)-There The 46-year-old prelate, born Stephen A. Leven said that is disagreement on the need for "in this former French colony, "making grievances public can have no practical effect except population limitation in Latin put his comments on the en America by Argentine President cyclical Humanae Vitae in fil to embarrass furlh(.'l' the many Juan Carlos Ongania and Robert .. eontext of condiotions in flhe equally good priests and people who are only· asking to work out S. McNamara, president of the .emerging African nations. their salvation· in peace and World B a n k . ' " Africa is far from being over In a sPeeCh at the 23td annual .populated, he said, nevertheless tranquility." . mee~ing . of . the boards·.cd the 'many of the developed nations Mcording to the 511 priests, World Bank and the Interne believe that the most practical the letter to the Pope detailed tional Monetary Fund McNamara "help they can give the continent the "deteriorating situation of recommended financing family is advice to restrain the numbers the Catholic Ohurch in the arch planning programs in underde of her people.· · diocese." veloped OOWlItries that are mem "In their. aid to the unnder hers of the World Bank. developed countries," he ex Ongania's rebuttal, which ddd plained, "they prefer to invest TRI CITY not mention McNama·ra ·by name, capital for the spreading of con came in a speech before a meet traceptive . methods rather fh9n ing of health ministers from 28 for enabling us to make c start SLAB BRIDGE ROAD
nations here. in industrialization." ASSONET, MASS. 02702
Tel. 1544·5556 Ongania described· the Idea of Archbishop Cotonou 8aid fl1-M deliberate Hmittation of popula Pope Paul "does not bar the BOILERS RETUBED
tion as "decadent" and said that road to anything that might help TUBES REPLACED
Argentina and other nations to control nature, but reminds Wi 24 HOUR SERVICE
need larger, NAher t.b.an, smaYer, that we can master nature onJov FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE
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Request . Of Arclhbishop
To Speak Sunday For Catholic Club Rev. Charles J. Dunn, S.".. will Open the annual literature lecture series of Fall River Catholic Woman's Club at a Sunday at the organization!aJ clubhouse, 742 Rock Street. Father Dunn, rector of Bishop ConnoHy High School, FaD River, is a native of Milton. :Mass. Before coming to this Dio cese, he was dean of studen1lJ and vice-president of studenIJ affail1S at' Holy Cross College.; He holds B.A. and M.A. degrea from 'Boston College and a Licentiate in Sacred Theologv, fPOm Weston College. Miss fViargaret M. Lahey, pasiJ president of the Catholic Wom an's Club, ill this year's chaic> man of the literature depart,.. ment.
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figure. 'DtaIie. Ethier heeds the 'vai'Si~y,:cheerl~aders'.:"numberiDg 1'1 girls. ' First in a series of hootnannies was held at Cassidy' last' week;' with music supplied by student guitarists, and extra .enthusiasm by guests from area schools. Happy haunting to everyone. At Sacred Hearts Judaism was the topic of a J\cademy, Fall River, the hallowed halls and walls are lib.;. lecture by Mrs. Charles Sofor .erally bedecked with posters adv.ertising a Hallo~Hoedown enko of the faculty of SHA Fall River to senior religion stud~nts to take place tomorrow night. "Come Prepared for Any of Sister Kenneth Agnes. Int'er thing" shudders one poster, est was so great that SHAers are while another ghoulishly de- "at Cassidy, but due to the Sum following up the lecture with a picts a graveyard as the set mer enrichment program she at visit to a city synagogue. ting ,for spooky antics.' The ·tended at Bridgewater .State And opening of the Summer assembly hall will be trans College, she's in the sophomore Olympics in Mexico City coin formed into' a hall of horrors honors math class. And thanks cided with inauguration of a <tomorrow night, warn Anchor to the. same program Ann Marie new gym program at SHA. After reporters Diane deVillers and McGUire' and Ellen Finnegan introductory sessions, practice Marjorie Rainville. Juniors will' have been given. credit for of free e.xercises, tumbling and be 'hostesses (ghostesses?) ,for geometry. balan,ce team routines will be the event, with Martha BOche~ Next President gin in November. A school team nek, Joye Holen and Bernadette If you can go by results of a will be chosen to represent SHA Bilrgmeyer as chairmen. A ghoSt· mock election held at St. AIi in competition with other town will materialize as part ' thon'y High School·in New Bed schools introducing similar pro of the program, there'll be hor ford, Hubert Humphrey will be grams, based on Olympic re rer booths and a few non-fright our next president. SAH stu quirem'ents. ening diversions such as apple dents were chosen to represent Mt. St. Ma.ry Academy bobbing and patronizing a gen the three candidates and their ~T.. IG~ATIUS GUILD: At 'membership tea for St. , RecenUy Mount Sodality spon eral store The thoughtful juniors vice-presidential choices. Each IgnatIUS GUild, newly organized group for ,:women inter will also entertain with • spoke in two homerooms then . ested in development of Bishop Connolly High School Fall I!lOred a Mass in commemoration oI.l!.N: Day. The Mass was cel 8PQOky, spine-tingling skit. the .presidential candidate~ gave River, are from ,left standing, ·Mrs.Robert Nedde~man ebrated by Rev. Maurice Jeffrey "Fellowship of the·· Ring'" a 15 minute' ~ .at a general 'ld . ' where'd. you hear that before? assembly, followed, bya ques gU.I • president;. Rev. John G. 'Cornellier, S.J., Oonnoily and guests were invited. Father -a.ig~t,"it's the title of .T.R.R. Tol- ,tion 'period, then by voting.'· ppnclpal; 'Rev., Char~es, J. Dunn, rector; Mrs. Joseph R. supplemented biB" homily with Irlens .popular trilogy, and it ",Humphrey" was . .John Bouch-' M:cC~rthy;Mrs.. Step~en' Yates. Pouring ·Mrs: Ralph posters and the girls received Communion under both species. wes borrowed by erudite jun ani, supported by Louise Bshara, Martm. Other g.ulld ~ff'lOOrsare Mrs. Pa'ul,Dunn, vice-piesi tol'6 at Stang High in North· as , "MLWd~." ~ ·.Humphrey dent; Mrs. Frederick Sullivan, t!'easurer ;' ~i's. Frank Plichta After Mass -there was a get tQgetherwhere pizza'" ,and eoke Dar~~outh as. a theme for the too ~t a' similar Poll -at Holy , . and Mrs. Thomas Dolan,' secretaries.' ' were ,served. . tradItional' Rmg Dance which Famdy.. .' ~e 1'!'l}tional. H.ono~ . Society capped the October Day -Oil; Student -eouncii."· officeni:. , .
"" working on: \ ,for Christmas sea-· at, MO,unt .bas beg~, its annual' which. . ,se.niorsreceiy.ed, tbe#'.. JesUS:-Mary Ai:ademy; FiUl Riv- ' cl~$ nngs." " _,' ' , . , ' s,;areElalne::!.Dufault,'presi- ,de;s.undertheduectiOnof.Slster son. and ~ill pr~~ntsongs .~! ~rv.i~ of':,tutoring . students , in .',It was.. ri~gs .for, the j#!ors. ~ d~J;l~?'; 'G~rud~" ~askQ,. "yice:-" i :M~e Dpn.~~."~rtU:t~" sessiO~s 'VarIOUS convalescent homes' vl.';rio~, ,subjl'!Cts~ The girls dO fIlew.: .. are held the ,casSIdy ·(:ivie·and·churchgroups. The' lit::· ~q~s: a{l, a. ~nstructi:ve contribu ~d.Rmg Daybe~an: 'with ~e: surer; MUriel'D'umas, secreiarY. . Wedne!?day' ~fter~~ and:'are • ,tennis ·tetlm·has"been 'lK:Cepted: t~~.. to,. part~~ipation' iin, school· readIng 'of the historyarid're Susan Colirnoyer represents the open to. any. student. SiSter· Mary . ona one.' year, probationary life. me~b7r when's' of the ~res~ N~tional Honor ~iety; Made Teresita ma~es ~erself avana~le basis to membership .in the A representative of the Chan rand sophomore years," 'followed leme· Lajoie the" glee club; ~ 'all ~t this time for SPecIal Southeastern Mass. Interscholas dler School of Business came to by Mass andpl~ssing 01.. the Yvette 'Berthiaume the FrenCh .,mstruchons. .'. . tic Tennis League. Members are spe.ak to Mounties about appli rings by BishoP Gerrard and ';li elub·and Jonee' 'Chouinard the Carol Costa has been elected .praCtiCing every ,possible Satui' catiOn procedureS' and reqliire buffet ~eal:,,' '..,. C.hristian .Youth Movement. The. general ch~irrn-an of tbe Mt. S~. day ·at Buttonwood Park. Also ments. ." ..And. JUnIors . ~ "st.' .Tosepli"o ~l"ls were amon~ representa ~ary semor, prom.' The Fall' .:busy at the New.:Be3ford·school Saturday, Nov. 2 the Connolly Blghm Fall RIver have been. tiv~ from Diocesan highs at River academy has chosen Mon- are the drama and debate sophomores' and" juniors are ~ea~ured f<lr their.. rings, to' 00, tending a student,council confer day, 'Dec:30 as the date and the grouPs. Thespians 'are' planning hosting a mixer with Mount of black ony,x, and.,g<Ild;. " ~~ at.stang High last week . Sheraton-Biltmore as the,'place a Christrnasproduction, while sophomores' and juniors. ,The,hon<lr$' Program for Sen ""<Garnet and gOld·are"the'riftgs ..Also:at JMA,tbedr8n:Ia club,,w, ~r :the.. b.~g eVeIi~',' '. " . d,ebaters will· participate ina
m:Cassidy' High Hi Taunton, ~ I>feparlng a ~rogr1am:Qf Thanks.,., .¥~~.~l1,~.e-<Irris,s~ni~r.at.~~;' program .Tuesday; , Nov~ 26' at ior English was recently intro duced at 'Mount:. Eal;h girl will eelved o~Mo~~a~ .by'''juni'onl' gJ.~.I!g m~tenal tQ:~ pre&ented F,l;\:ll" R1.v,e~,~as . bee~ .. ,~l~t~;, Melt,ase High' SCliool~~' .; "; .,r
from theIr senIOr siSters. at· a 3!, !l, .~pec~al llSl!em1?Iy-., CQachd~, tre~l,lr~r pf. the Fall Rive~ c::iti,"'Sacrifice isn'r-old~fashi6ned''i'''' study an author of her choiqe, arranged. by: l\Ifichael C::hampagne. .. ",' ': ".' zens Scholarship' students at St. Hi'gh for the rest of the school year Lucey, junior','CIass 'president,' ",A fa.tlier-dal.lghtEmsu:pper was. ':':Pd al$p at ,the f,all, Ri;v'er'·~Cad';" told "by African inissiOrtel""Rev'" Stie"may use :·aiiY,.tii~dia· to'get works:' for exam ~ . and: representativeU' ,sponSQred', by'" t1w e'D1r, Rpbert $e'vighy, 0.1\1:.1. He .... " .' ',.. . .. p r:' e" bO···..· " oks,T.V., Janet Eagan., Ruth: " Gr~: F~thers Club:,at,. SHA" ",Fall t,l? ,,;8<Ist?D y'~sterday, .,to ,a~~J:l~. dressed'tile gfrls'·bneflyrecent.. , mOVIes, or. taPes." The rohount ~Jjenda.Orsi and. Brenda\Ri.vL lqv,er., New.:, club:, ,officers. are I>r:o$r~, ~t',the ~useum of.SC:i.'- ly;'proinising' ',to ''f~turnwith t;f 'W:0r,k' d~:me. wiU'(be:'up' t6 tile : '. "J'" " ," "Speaking"" at 'the" cereiIiony' Le(mard E.~urgmy~;,pres~dent;: ~c~:",,:' . .. .' ',:: "", ',,:,: f~on misSion WOrk ·:iil':A.frica. individ'ilat' .'. HOPe~uiIy; th.is project ~ii were Rev;···Gerald Shovelton," Rene. Beauheu,.Vlee-Pl'esldent;, ""' . . MaliW,lEllee~ol!3.,,' "w, , , ' student: CouDciiiofs .' ,
',' Still, do'we "have'·electioris. At :.;F~ii~t~'~,~~9.ng 4Etl~,' ~l?plern:e~t ',every. girl's ItpoWl';' sel'iool chaplairi·'. '" Rev: \ ".ToM ,~~ard" Shea,. treasurer; . Aim~ ~ge ,aM. lbPP~ratiOJf 'of Iiter-' . ,~u~t" . ~retary. ,·Mr. ,She&;" Stang the NHS officers a~ 'An- egll~ to.:the ~u~eastern Mass:, ature; Moore," and' .J'ane ,Masi, , senior 'J • • ,.' .... '. ' elMs' president.. Sister' MarY ~~~nce; eounselor at Diman" thony' Smith ,. president· 'Ed ,~ S~ud¢nt , ,Co,nventio,n," to'
't , . ' Regional Voca""--al" Hi h" ' , ' n . , . seve~rai'.KQl.e~i~~n -iJi~U;:Q. ~ ,T ereSI a superVIsed special: dee- Schoo dis ' . w v . u .. g" Black;' .secretary; ; 'and, 'Paul be hel~ .Friday, Nov.. 8 afSciiu-. IDrations for the event and t~ able 1, , ~ courses .avail Przybyla, treasurer.· . ~t~ .. Hi.gh. SChool.' . Feehmite dents are also do~ng' additional g.lee club offered three selee , ~ POS~-.hlgh school stu Cassidy Science Club officers ~~therine Bolinge,r is treas4rer w?rk, Rreparlng for it 'United ti?ns: Ther~ !sa ,S~ip; Eternal den~,. ~cl~~,g .vari~u:' ,he~t4 are· San~y Lticey, president; o~ ,.~ stl,ldeot council: associa:' ~at~()ns. test' .next 'semes~r by ~ces, bu~mess machines and Madeline Silva, vice-president· tio~ anq Berpaz:d,MeKay, ,PXWi :' ~elJ!.ln~~, panels, ~l~ss discuS :LIfe; and Aima Mater. Fine Arts an electr~IllC ,~ata processing Debbie Robe"'~ ~~~ Gl' den,t .of. .the" Feehan. councl'l', .':" a si<lDS arid outside reading. eourse He noted .... '.. secre~.... ee m For,.the'f,irst time, a 'fine 'arts dUcto~'Co "'~ ~qu.e Intro Clu~ officers a~ Karen Brown. :p8!leU!!t, for one of tl}e conv~ ,eou:se is being offered' at SHA vice& offe~rsZt :Dun:nal~r Ser p~dent; ~rendaRiV9, vice- ~onsl;'!ssions. " ',' raIl River, with students attend- pu~pose'·of hlp" tUd .. ~h.1! president;,~lanneFlannery,secJ?~litiC8 -<lre in the forefront Where A classes of .. ,choose' a ents retary; , . - ' ' .....' at the -and art weekly. Empl\iisis is laid' .." ,'. '. llt .,,:',' And at .Holy;Family" '. t!he. 1t debate YJiIi I?e, presented' with ~n the many correlations possi-: . ' . ellll!me, ~@dlllIUV. " Junipero Club has named Steven ~e pur:po~ of,;urgh~g students to . .' .' '. ! q betweeiotlie, two' Holy sodal Furtado' 'as' president;'- James D,. ooo,ning DWck election: for, renamed the Hayden,' vice-president; " J a m e s !!IpArlt. Week· . .': . ",' Means ,A·. Jog technique, Sister 'Stell8' tl~ !\.ctIOn. ;M:Qv~ent , and ,is ·Berry, treasUrer; 'Edward"· Me~g ':cheerleaders. have. been ,~arit;! .and ,Sister Mary Adrienne. rnodera~ed, by,.. Sistei' Pa'tri~ IDtire; secretary;··' ..' responsible for, a successful sPir ,~eads respectively of the musiC Jr,~~. It ~~~ve as ,~ special , Holy Familjr's' Glee' ClUb:' W it Week, .climaxed by a' bonfire and ,'art ~epartments, are ~ ~~~ect ,the, a.ld!-Ilg Of th,e needy ~ed :by' ':'Wehael" 'Meioedi.th. amLevening nilly. Also ,part: of ~ndmg, -a methods- course at ill. ~ppalac~ . in,. eoope;ratiQ!1 8lded by Melissa Marr, secre the week were contests to de Boston :Up.i:v~rsity._ tary; and Theresa Sirois, trea termine which homeroom has With other DIocesan Highs., Mo'dular scheduling is what's Girls from St.. ~seph'.s' High surer. ,. ., . most Sl)irit and to.design a.foot Jlappening at Stang~ "It was al :;eDt1Y..atten~ed aDd eJlJo,ed..a Back, at Stang, tbeoodalit¥ bag. t;eam mascot.. Too junior ~ost as to Incorporate to:-t show at St. '~e's .AUdi bas named ,Arthur Buckley ult mto' the curriculum as 'some um, in Fall, River, Pilrtid prefect; Terry Downey, vice students .believe it is to foll<lw" in, by· two'St.J~phites. prefect; ,Bonnie Smith, secre GaYS a staff writer for Stang th e ~udents are working OIl ta~; Kenneth Charpentier school paper. In prac .Toe fust iSS\le of their, surer. ,.' , '. ' , , ' CliSsidy students win bear • tice, thiS type of scheduling al pa~ ~d ~ also busy ~reberm ~s .for small and la!gegroup g . ~ mUSIcal pt'OgraJ?3- bY.m.eJn oI..ttae U.L ,', ,~~tructi~n. in the fieid of ED-' ~r:.~!' ~e StingJ.~-~an in ,A~e EneJ:lgy. ~011.'" glish, rehgIo~ and ~ial. stUdies" Christmas on Dicke~ F€!bry-a.ry;.~ also at:.: ~~ ,,:i3':~ AVE. '; ~xt.ra fr~e timefQr Jumors and Art" ." L " . t h e . gl~ cl':llb ~ . ,preparing .a .... '. senIOrs IS, a ,decidedlY popular, Attlebo18 bIg lit F~an Hig~ in ~st~ ~ncert tor "~ay" 9,92~621~.· ~Pect of the program, and it's At the ~t::~at BIShop CassIdy. Dee: lS·andsenior.members Will l·~i reany free, even availab~e to Ele Whi ,ro t;amPus. reports present a folk program . for 'the ~ for chats in the cllfeteria. ' be ~nor te, Art Club. mem- Fathers' Club Wednesdat ~' BEDFORD B rs meet every Monday after No " 13 ,,' '. ' '~ Evenings' renda Rusconi is a freshman noon 'after' Bch001' and ,ngbt . v . .glee , ..ClUb ' . at, ' !iF:.' "fJa , ~ __ . .. . nowThe
T~o':~ Dioce~alro: '. High'\Sch~ls . . ~ick' Hubert H(lJJm~~rey for' Presiden:{" In Straw V@U'@ Polls"
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THE ANCP0~. Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968
The Parish Parade
Priest$ Nomi~ate Choece for Bishop'
ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER The annual memorial Mass for deceased members of the Coun ell of Catholic Women will be celebrated at 10.30 Sunday morn ing, Nov. 3. Mrs. Raymond Mel anson, council president, re quests members to meet in the church vestibule at 10:15. Parishioners and friends will stage l\ variety show at 8 Satur day and Sunday nights, Nov. 2 and 3. Tickets wHI be available at the door. , Girl Scouts of Troops 1113 and 1-116 will hold a candleliglitin vestiture ceremony following 7 o'clock Mass tomorrow night. Parents and parishioners are urged to attend.
ST. PAUL (NC) - Priests of the St. Paul diocese here in Al berta nominated the priest they believe best qualified to become their new bishop. Their suggestions were pre sented in sealed envelopes to Archbishop Emanuele Clarizio, Apostolic Delegate in Canada, when he visited here, as part of a growing practice of wider con sultation before the appointment of a new bishop is made. Archbishop Clarizio consulted with priests, laymen and Reli gious about a choice of a suc cessor to Bishop L. P. Lussier, C.SS.R., who resigned in August for reasons of health after serv ing the diocese for 16 years. The archbishop will, in turn, make a recommendation to the Vatican, and the appointment will be made by Pope Paul VI. Some 50 priests, 75 laymen and 45 Religious participated in meetings with the Apostolic del .egate during his visit. Represen tatives were chosen from each of the 45 parishes of the diocese on the basis of one delegate for each 100 people. All religious commu~ nities serving in the diocese were represented. .
SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night, Nov. 3 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rodolphe Morel. CYO advisors will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Paquin.. HOLY CROSS, SOUTH EASTON The Women's Club wHl open its Fall fundralsing efforts for the parish with a Holly Fair from 10 to 10 Saturday, Nov. lIS in the parish hall. Refreshments will be served and assorted. ChristJDas gifts for all ages and tastes will be available.· The public is invited••
15
NEW DEPARTMENT: Opening the Campus Ministries: Department of, the center for AppHed Resea·rch in the Aposolate (CARA) at,a press conference in Washington, D.C.. were, from left; FatherJ.ames M. Darby, S.M., CARAexecutive director; John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia,president ofCARA; andJohn McDevitt, Supreme Grand Knight·of the Knights of Columbus. The K. of C. provided a $260,000 Founders' Fund . for the Campus Ministr~es' ~partment•. NC Photo. ,'" .
Report 9,655 Serve'. Overseas Missions
WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mission Secretariat with head,. quarters here has issued the 1968 edition of U. S. Catholics Over seas-A StatisticSI Directory, re--·
porting a total of 9,655 U.S. per
8ACRED HEART, sonnel in the overseasapostolate .. ' . .. . . NEW BEDFORD as of Jail. I, 1968;
The Home and School .As8o- '.
AcCording ·to the' directory; p/~oyle .tion will sponsor a Penny, sale these include 4,009 priests, 4,150
at 7:30 Saturdl:'Y night, Nov.·2 WASHINGTON-('NC)-Patrick that way may be one or another :lace of mjUStice instead ·0£ reaI- Sisters and 419 lay 'volunteers.'
in the parish hall on the corner
.. '. The di~ry ~ports that 10 of Summer and Robeson Streets. Cardinal O'Boyle' of Washington method of getting rid of poverty ~ fighting, it." declared, here "the .Churchbas by' getting· rid of ,poor people. Referring to the teachings of U. S. Sees supply 41 per cent of Proceeds will benefifthe aebooL . ~ take poverty morese,riously," . "We· should not ·slmply look· the Wipal sociSlI encyclical, .the oversea's. ,personnel. "These 3,941
painlesS eardinal stated "only certain priests, ReligiouS lUid lay volun
, ·but added "somes<>rt of govern:' for the way that is ft'. FRANCIS XAVIER, ment program·of family allow- ·for ourselves, for that way may teachiil.gs"·hold' without excep-·· teers . come from· Boston, in:;;
ances" is required 'to help: solve be very inadequate ·for the poor," tion. He ·said" the Church HYANNIS ~rooklyn, ~. Y., 1)47; New :York,
be added. . always taught, and 'still teaches; 542; Chicago, 372; Philadelphia,
The Women's Guild is maldq the nation's poverty problem. "We ought to aSk. ourselves that one may never deprive 325; St,. Louis, 253;. Pittsburgh; The Prelate, in. an address preliminary plans for a Spring wQrkers~ the.r .fllir wage 235; D~roit, 231; Newark, 225, fashion show and· on this on "The Christian in T09ay's whether a proposal will over eome .hijustice," the cardinal enough to live on. and Providence, 203. ' month's agenda is a Ghmt Food World" to tbeJohn Carroll S0 "That is one of the sins that Sale to be held· f·rom 10 to 4 ciety, said' the' Church in the oontinued, . ".and we should Six states alone account for has turn it ·down unless there ·118 8 'cries to heaven for vengeance'," nearly 53 per cept of U. S. per Saturday,Nov: '2, at StOp and' Washington· . archdiocese he added. Sonnel abroad, aecording to the Shop market, Hyannis: Pastries; made some .efforts to aid' the better way to overcOme' injus tice. We should· ask whether a poor, "but the. task before 11& Cardinal O'Boyle spoke out directory: New' York, 1,782; candy, casseroles and salads win agai~st. . racial discrimination "'assachusetts, 1,171; Pennsyl be available, and' members are is enormous; To a large' extent proposal relllly rese~cts the dig we shall have to' acComplish· it nity CIff People, whether it Will which, be said, .~ so deeply vanai .824; TIlinois, 522; Ohio, requested to bring donations' to help peOple who have 'been push by government programs. , . tied up 'with tne injustices· of 460, and Califonila, 439. Ute market from 9 oielock on'. . , "To' say this illin't 110· Jlayor eel down to get on their own . poverty iii our. own land."' Also on sal~ will be "Old Hyan';' . feet. nis Port," eo-authored by I...ai17 80vernment programs," the ear "We should look very closely Newman and llutograpbed bt dinal'eontinued; "it is· to .state at any program to see whether one of the facts of life. When bim. Proceeds boom the book we look at the poverty through it is a mere sop to our eon lale will. benefit the· 8illld oUt our nation, we must ask science and a matter of good IICholarship fund. .KANSAS CITY, (NC) -...: A
ourselves whether DOme sort CIff publicity, or whether it is real
,overnment program of family ly serious and big enough to do board of review has been chosen
to study· creative and useful
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION. the job," Cardinal O'Boy!e allowances is not needed." means of cooperation between
WYman FALL RIVER All major tndustri81 'nations ilerted. Avila College and Rockburst Baee PreJudiee . except the United States have 3-6592 The 8 o'clock.Mass on Sund87 some sort of family lll110wance "I am beginning more and 'College here, and to make rec DlOrJ)ing, Nov. 3 will be a eon ommendations for the imple qstem, Cardinal O'Boyle otated. more to appreciate the import . CHARLES F. VARGAS temporary folk music :Mass. . mentation of such means. Both "I am not insisting that such ance of public relations, but we 254· ROCKDALE AVENUE • system is the only slo1lltion," need more than a gOod image, eolleges will become co-educa tional in September, 1969. and we have to be careful that
he added, "but we do have to NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Rockhurst is'conducted py the
eonsider 80mething wong these we are Dot just putting n good Jesuits, and Avila by the Sisten lines." of St. Joseph of Carondelet. Overeome IInJustice LANSING (NC)-Mich1gan's The cardinal said, in consider
nearly 1,000 DOIlpublic 8CboOls will participate in a statewide ing ways that might help over judge racial census of schools being come poverty ,"we MUNICH (NC) - Julius Car
conducted by the state Boatd of them by the right standards. We cl1nal Doepfner of. Munich .oould DOt Simply look for tale Education. lauded the ecumenical efforts of Compilation of racial data Is way that is most efficielll't, for Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras required by the U.S. Office ClIf I of listanbul upon his retum Education to assure that all fJrom a four-day vi9i.t to Turkey. school ~ lI'eCeiving fedeJ8l The cardinal headed a delega UTRECHT (HC) - Conserva funds meet the DOndiscrimina tory requirements of federal law. the Dutd1 CMbollca, members tllon that visited the Orthodox In addition, the iDformation 01. the so-called ConfrontatiOlil prelate and Armenian Patriarch PRINTED AND MAILED win be used by the Micl6gaa JIIovement, haVie :rejected an m Snork Kallustian of. Istanbul. Deparimezri CIff Education to __ viJtlation :from Bernaiu Cardinal cardinal Doepfner amd the
.A:Hrink 01. utreobt _ ClDDtinue Patriarch Athenagoras agreed to Write or IPhone 672-1322
.ellS progress made in ~ GOntinue oontacts for improving
dialogue about wthat Confronta- iDg equaltty af educal:lonal 0p 234 Second Street - Fall River tlon calls the almming slltuatloA Orthodox - Catholic relations,
portunity IIInee the tiNt ~ In tbe Sprinc <!If 196'l. . ~ the Dutcb Cbmrdll. il8rliculad,y m GeJillDan;v.
Cites M.ecins· to Ii'elp' Alleviate Poverty eCi rdina m·
$oys. Goyernment .'Aiel Needed most
bas
not
Missouri Colleges' Plan. Cooperatio'n
~AVE.MONEY
ON
YOUR OILHEAT!
as
.. ·etdt
Nonpublic Schools In Racial Census
must
Reject Dialogue
Praises Patriarch's Ecumenical· Efforts
MONTHLY CHURCH
BUDGET ENVELOPES
ItJIf'lltk """-~.
E~
HEATeNG OIL
-
16
-·--~·e of Fall Ri .. er-Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968
THE /
Resen{~ Uniust Attack On 'La~~~ ':»r- Arbitrators
New Director of Round Hill Retreat 'House Treats Youth 'Like Ladies and Men'
The Rev. Arthur Joseph :McCarthy, S.J~ :new Bet1re~t Director at Our' Lad~' of Round Hill netreat House in South DartnPuth,. is oonvincedi "'the best. ~ for B\ Msgr. George G. Higgins , nmning ;l good hotel isa good 8tHff." He thinks hfs lriaf.f at Bound B1iNl-wl'reJe' up to> Several weeks ago in this column I casually referred 130 retreatants at a time can be housed and f ~ that bill to a T~ '"Fatfrs' .rack to a certain Catholic publication as being "conservative" 'Tucker, superior. who does '
:t:a:::nl;;::~:~;CIU;~~:~;'::~YW~:"P=~
old-fashioned, dating all the way /p ression with at least a few ,Of my readers that there is back to the'18th· century. . . It I starts th 10m.et,hing necessarily wrong',' f,.rom mth e b 3SlC pnn.clp e at about being conservative-or if \You will that "conservative': is , , • dirty word. 1 am sorry about that. The fact is that there are.,good and bad conserva tive publica tions. Ditto, of course, for so ealled "liberal" \Periodicals. 1 wouldn't care ,to identify the bad ones in efther category, but if 1 were asked to draw up a list of the' ~d ,ones in the con.servativ~' P , .1 would start, for e~aln-; p'~e, ~lt~: Modern .Age, ~ qlJa~:-, ~r1r {evlew published In Chi;': cage' by _ the Foundation.' fo~ Fore'ign' Affairs, Inc.. ' ': Th!s, is a very literate a,nd' highly' sophisticated jou~al 'of. eanservative o~inion ?~ cu'rren~ developments In politics. ec»DOmics: literature and. th~ arts.' , Labor ECOnl\lmlS~ . Tho~gh I frequently find my ~lf disagree.ing witb its point of Vlew-espeClallyon matters eeoGomic and political-I have al m.ost ah~ay,S found i~ to be free of doctrmaue rhetOrIC an~ rea 1I011ably fair in its treabnent or Gibe opposition. . Unfortunately, however, the .... rren~ issue (F~Il, 1~68), is, 'ltOffie~hmg of a dlsappomtment ~ thiS' regard. It features ~ ar." tiel; :.b~ W. H. Hutt. entitl~ ~s",v~ng ~nd CasuIStry on, Stflkes, w~ch, b~ne~th a sur;-, bee,. ve?~er ,of ob~ectJve ~h~:-, HShlp, IS almost libelous m Its, ~~e'pj"ng.criticism of "th~,labor: eeooomists .who have written .earll"-all tbe'textbooks of laoor economics in current use and 'it'bodominate the teacbi~g ot 8te subject m the major uolver"-'
c.am
eities," '" ' . 'Have Vested Interest"'.
"
These men' are identifed by Mr, Hutt-who is himself,a pro fe6sor of economics at the Uni yersity of Virginia-as "labol!' eonsultants, arbitrators, concili .tors, and mediators." They cannot be described, he lIQys, as "disinterested." On the' eontra'ty;"they are said to bave' ... vested interest the survival oif the strike-threat system. . "InduStrial'warfare is. directly' 4W. 'iJidirectly, the, source of' a 118i"g~ ,pltrt of' their income. Their ability to playa useful role' in moderating union demands wiD vanish if; in their writings and teacbingB> they are known 1lG have questioned the right to use the strike-threat.'" Labor Mere CGmmod,ft,. I am afraid that this is one ease in which a highly conserva tive economist has permitted his conservative ideology to neu'" valize if not to undermine his oense of fairness. , Mr~ Huff's economic conserVlll- Q:ism, by the way, is extremely
in
Expects
C~adjutotr
~h:'~~~j=~
aE
"Father Paul Power, a fonner member of the Jesuit mission b an d , IS . ",nown "all over tb e country. Father .Ronald Cola
~~.~~~-""·~~~~>~~L~;L~~.,-,-~;---",·-,·-'ft-, -t"-.~-·r" :-,-'-:c:<." ~i" ',,'>.",.,Ir. ' ..
"f
t~,·
f'~'.~.'.~'."."""~,.,,. ,",
;.<.' th ,e ark e t mecb amsm sh ould ~f' be allowe.d to determine all vecchio, just ordained, is with ' th f i b ' I ded" us OIl his way to the missions in prices, ose 0 a or Inc u . Brazil. Lay Brother Larry MonIn other words, labor is to be ahan, who takes care of the ath considered as a mere commoo- letic side, is' general manager ity, subject, like - industrial of the plant and assistant direc prices, to the immutable law tor of retreats." of free competition. The women in the, kitchen Logically, then, from his point' 'who prepare, meals for the of view, ¥r. Hutt concludes that large-size Round Hill! family "the real cause of the continu- get more than a, warm share of ous ,economic_ warfare of today praise for thew wOEk., So does would dis::fppear 'if wage-rates, everyone ebe who' helps keep like other prices, were deter the big ret~at house running. mined under free market pres.Sittilng in his, office, "I've sures and not under the influ been here since Labor Day," the. ence of private coercion." Round Hill Retreat director Outlaw Strike Threat! : leans back and l!e~axes; temp-oWhat this means -in' non-techrarily, 'after' we-J'earning "a horne" nical language' is that labor of young teen-age gildS' from a 'unions should not be permitted' Boston high school! to a week to resort to- the strike or even ,end retreat. to the threat of a strike to influ,Suddenly the 6-foot, 220-pound ence the determination of wage . Je5tlrt Hfts' himself from- his rates.,' ' cnar1' and makes it ,to the 'door Mr. HuH is entitled to this in sp1i!t seconds 'as' the' clatter of archaic opinion. but I assume 'radtlg: footsteps hits him., that he would be willing to- COil-' ' ','Walk-walk!" he bellows. "i...' cede that there are not very, lady walks,. she doesn't run." REN'•. AR'I1lIDR. J. ~feC.£RTlFY~ S~J. many economists in the United The footsteps sTow to a walk. States who would take such an For 38 Years facets of Father-'s life. He likes "Neither did my sisters." extreme POSitiillll in favo'r of Two of then'll now;' ~ Sisters young p-eople'. and hEr. fee1k: they unlimited free competition in A native of' Ro~J)ury.., Fathelr' of Charity of Halifax" Sister the wage market McCarthy has been a, Jesuit for need help that too many of tli'eDl Mary. Arthur serving i~ Brook do not get at home.. In any even~ Mr. Hatt's nO&- "38 years and never had an un-' "Kid's- today' c:an\ grow' up Iy,n and' Sist'er' Peter Craver' in talgic attachment to 18th c "" happy day since 1 entered." completely amoral," he says. m'e' Boston: area'. A:nother sister, tUL'y laissez-faJire economics e~ H~ ljkes his new assignment """Elteyre being' brafuwasli-ed' by Mrs'. '.Tohn BUsh, a. f'onner teach 'for pI'esent purposes, beside ~e at the former CoPenel. Green the ceHuIai'd'. screen, andl boolts>~' er; lives in' West: MeMord; and 'point. ' estate Fp South, Dartmou1il'r, '''es;-, To addl to' tile' p-robl'em;. be Mrs: Ch'est'er Martell;, a, nurse. The real thrust of my como. peciaUy because it's iDJ tile' Fool liVes' ill' Bass River; ~, "there!SI If, waID UP) bet'weelll' plaint about his: artiele' in, .the ! Ri'ver' DioceSe', wfrere' Bishop.' The two nuns, he reports with too many kids: and1 theiir pare~ ~urrent issue 00: Model'Di Age has C-onnO'l~!y fl.'as such' an int'ere8'f teaelie-rlV and\ cop&, YOUl ~ glee, "bothl t'augh~ d8ncing be" to. do with hill, grossly umail' fa yaung peopIe"-a1:1' YOU' nave ~ through: 10> tfumn!" fore ,they entered." . ,attack on the mo~ves of. those to d'o, is 1001: af tl'te munberot 'llhat. probably is. Father, M RoUnd! HUll, CommoUl sensa' woo disagree with him and, Catholic high 'schools in .tl'Jl$ fFequently etChCS' If, bole in; that MeClUlthY"-1Uuf£. and; sentim'en,. m()!'e specific~. of "labor con,. Diocese- to KtlOW that~". tali with. a- streak ot. Imsh, humor sultants arbiilrato~ eoocir~ . A grad'uate f?f Weston C'o~, WllPlli. a. mile: wid.e.-w·as> so- delighted "Wef!t!eat them UIte-lildies..and flor&, an'd mediators." 1 w~tIt a masfer's c:fe~ fir philO!> " : ophy from B'oston College. and' • men" JM)t eni l'drenj and! the,,- l"el. one: day recentlY! when be- sent a. high, schooL retreatant- up' to Admirable Groupl doctorate in theology' ft'om Gre-' spond. We-- dowt\.by. tb &ain 'Dudng the, past 25' yeaN' I gorian UniVersity in Rome, Ft. wa-sB tl\em, we' JUst: giVe ilkm the liw.ng, quarters. to; ten, a\ nUS' " she. had, a. phone, calL, h3ve been privile~' to meet I'IcCarttry retains- a sense' of fa'Cf&'. ,No:> NIUb " "I t'ell( i1\'em, 'W'e'Ef j'asti offer;., ~"d.. ~. work..witl'r many of these' rea:Jity-c-:ancf a youthful spirit-.:.
l'ng: yOU! id~, you; }lave" 1'0> maIte '1!he: girl! camel back;: perprexetil IDdtvrduals In and oat of gov . frequently unique m the intef ernment serviCe~ and' I must say l'ectuat worfd. ' up your' 0Wl1I mindS' wl\etli-er o? "There!iJ> It IBd~ up> there;. Fa'th-er, tha~ I have fo~nd' them to be an "Some of my best friends. are not' you'lli. aecepf thenl\' 'Ilhey but. n'O' Ilun," tli'el gbll: told: hfm. get: tft'e" wOTd~ ", Father' McCarthy Iroofedl. '11M entJrel~ admIrable group of eJl-convicts,~' he repollt3 factu stweral1 weelbr a'gO~ Fattier "tad}i''' was, II> nun wearlng; civil;' men, ~ncerel\y elevoted to, the alIy.. As. a member of, the Jesuit cause ~f industrial, peace. Mission ~ Band fOl' 1~ years" be McCarthy receiVed a lett'e!' iam clotJies; 83 ~ traveled l ObvIDUSI!y the~ bve tlie OOI!' "visited, 19' countries and 2-7. mat pereased linn u mucll as' amund, the countzy fbr lier anythin'g' h:as: ill' ~ long' ,tim~' order. mal hu~at; desi,'l'e' to eUD! a states,- and. every state, pmson It was' from tlie' flrtl1er' of' II She was speaking to the high decent ~IVIng '.f?J: themhselves on the East Coast" l and their famIlies" but: to- ~. Be-for.e his miSS;iolli"asstgnment. fe'err-age- girl' wh~' hod complefed . scQooL 'retreatan~, t!iat, night ~ha~ they have- a, vested, ~nom>- he had taught at Holy Cross a retreat' af Round Hilfthe' weett Ilnd the retreat master couldn~t wait until Sister was iDtroduced lC. mterest in. the SUlVIval! of College and, for' "a. good 1ft befOre: to:> her' audience.. "r d'on''t know what, yOIl did strLke~th~eat.beca~e "ind~~~l years"" was affiliated with Bas- ' He' has: only' been.: at, Round warfale IS" directly or tniUrect ton ColIege. HIgh. School. dlll',ing. to my daughter,~" t1ie, fette1: sai~: 1'1, :~~ source;, of a large put of the planning, and the'removal of, "but thank you for whatever it Hill .. short. time: and'. already the!!: ~n~om~" is to' do, them, a the school froln &.xbw,y to- its was: For tfte' first, tiine in her' the big old mansion is picking life;. 'my' d'augllter tOld' me the liP a head of spiritual steam" great Hl~,ustice, new quarters on. Monnssey Bou> Group" retrea~ booifugllJ are otlter' night' that' slie lOves; me;" . 1 would ~' ~,. in. conclu levard: in Dorcliester:~ " ' T1ie- bi·g: Irishman; w!io, lOoks coming from aBJfar away, as New SI~ni- that thl~;' kind, of doctJrit Moving the school there was as th0l;lgh he'd. be ri~ at home Hamplltiiioe' and! tRe' scliedtde' is' na~e. rhetonct: is extremel'y a "return home" for Father Mc .I)eginning~ to) get; crowded. GIl a Pl'O' fOotball' squad; grins. ~armfuI to t~e cause of ~uthen- Carthy. To) Fath$' Mb<l:arfti)", tfur. cal:;. tiC conservatism in the United "My mother likect the Jesuits~" . "Forced~ lOve &. worse man States:. he says; "~ every Sunday ~ ltoffiing,'" he' says. "Love to: be emia-e'~:~, worth anything, has to be free. waikedl fl1om- Roxbury' fD> Iinmac Sisters of: ulate Conception:. ~liurch1 in Tliat's why GOd' gave human Dorchester fo~' Simday' SChoor.~ ,beings- free wiIt Ke could'liave Sponsor Supper
Immaculate d:.Ol1ception, lSI the made people love him but tliat Sistet's, of Mel!cy of Mt.. Ma-ry's coll'egiate chUllCh' that; serves isn't worth anything. People &0., Academy, Fall River will spon Boston College High\ now' and ,havel to' choose. to lovei~' 'sor a turkey pie supper fJ:om Fahher. McCa:cthy delights' in 0JIbr," 8071 5 to 7:30' alii 'l'hursd'ay evening, announcing: Brought; up, iii.:. al st'rongl CatJil. Nov. 7 at the Academy cafeteria "E. went to. Sunday School clie: fainilY'-hisl parental c:ell!* on Mfd'dJe Sb;, there;. high\ school there;, said brated their: 50th; ~ annil-, Tickets are listed at $2.00 my first Mass there and BerVed' versaIW jUst n; fewi y.eQ1'3l l)efOre 365 NORTH) FRONT STREET and may be' obtaIned. from any IllS pastor there.~ , theil!!' cfeatlia-Fatber: ~ Sister of. Mercy or at the door I.ikes: 'You~, NEW! BEDFORD, was; tIie! onl;,; 1)07' !ilLa) ~ OIl on the niglie of' the supper~ Working: with "yoUll'ill.' men fiw:. 9ft4St4: Cakes- and cand7 wiU. also, 1M and women;-fliey're: not: ebil\ "X aevet Jmetr" a, D1Ift 1Intl1: I on sale. . , ,dren here"HJ,'one',of tbe joyfUl" . . . . . . . . GOlleae," ... . , . .
wh,,-
Merey'
Il)'EBROSS: 01L. Me'Clting) Oils:
.
COLOGNE ~NC) Joseplll lIl:ardinal Frings of Cologne, who As 81, said that he expects a co eldjutor archbishop for the eologne See will soon be named.
anll Bu",:ers:
!
\
THE ANCHO~Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968
Women in Lead Continued from Page One
outside the CJ'llrrcll, too, nnd
perhnJ)Sthe Church ,can :fuld
new Wl:lY3 rouse .iStmle forms and
stmctures that :are p1'esentcut
side'c! presen1 Churcl1 struc ture," the Vatican <lH!cial .said. There isa ~ '\for mOTe iliac logiml fducb' cl J1h1'!=n-w.oIDall relntioIl3hi'p. and fur more stutly on ;the oontz:ibutionthat 'WOmen can make to the CbUl'Ch, ll~ said. Study Issue "Personally. 1 don't favor the
idea <If women priests," Miss
Goldie .stnted, "but .r think many
of the arguments brought up
will force theologians to do more
study {lD the issue.
"There is ;a needw study more closely the nature of the
priesthood and what tasks are
necessarilY the prlests'and what
tasks could be taken over by
others, such as married deacons,"
she declared,
"Ii the concept of women priests evolves from this re
thinking, fine," she said. "But it at least will force theologians
to 'give a conclusive answer,
other than that ·w~'ve never had
women ;priests before';' "You 'know, the c idea 0'1' lay men us wellm; lay women working in 'Currol positions in Rome <ill :new -.to € V eryone. n's just :as IUnusual ¢o f·ind men in the;e ptlSi'tions us it is >to find / wom-en,'"she llaid. 'SpeCIal!
"'The'1alty bas 'SOmething spe cial 10 -eOntribute," 'She said. "The Church needs ihe style am'l thinking of women, especially since women have not had roles as clergy ,in jfue pnst." One of the roles of the Coun cil on the Lnity, Miss ,Gddie ~ plained, is to 'serve .as ~ linison between ,the Holy See .und the laity. MeT <own lif~ revolves mostly around her job. "There isa lot of writing and traveling .in volved In JnY position," she said. But when the laity .gets too much lor ller, she buries her self in :n m,yste.tw nov.el. Her v.iews 1ln wome.."l jn .the Churcl1 nre .thnt thEW hnvc :an important and menningful <con tribution <to make. ,"Women have .alw.ay.s been workin.g ,in ,the Ohur~h," Miss G-oldie .said, but th~ haven't been :given .an ~p'portunity .for responsible participation in the past. "''Now that opportunities have 'beencreated, It Is up to women tota'ke adv.antage of them. 'T-oo often, women have taken the easier way ,Of doing what they are told ro do 'instead of taking the initiative;' she said. "Of course,'" she ;added, "a lot of educa'tionls necessary for clergy -and laity to nssure full participation of women :and men in the Ilfe of the Church."' IMiss 'GOldie said s"heis enthu siostic :about 'the cecumenicn1 rpnr ticipatiun 'oT women in commu nity lprOjedts 'SUdh 'Us lfhose ,umla- taken Qy Church Women United. ~'Morerff 'this 'type Of colla-b ·oration riJ; noo:essar:v '1m .all le:vels," she said, pointing out that 'the (Council on the Laity has participa't-ed 'in 'Projects on the international level.
Cal],olic Con'ference Names Secretal'y HARRISBURG (NC)-W.ilbert F. Singleton (Lt. Col. U. S. Army, ret.) has been appointed administrative seeretary :10 the Community Action section of the Pennsylvania Catholic 'Confer ence. The post was ·created in the recent expansion of PCC to in ~nsify the Ohurch/s involv.ement in the area of human relations and community ac;:tion.
SaY$
(gC::G'lro@~ical
MCv®UL~::nfi)fr
CHAPLAINSCONCELEBRATE: More than 70 priests concelebrated the Eucharist as t!hey ~ n ,two-week orientation institure for general hospital chaplains, held in Wns~n, D.C. 'Pnuci!J)al' celebrant, right, was BishQp Joseph L. Bernardin, General S~ of the U.S. Catholic Conference. The institute is sponsored by the National As sociatitm of Catho~nc Chaplains, affiliated with tbe Depart~ntof Health Affairs, usee.
Says Black Separatism Defeatist, Stupid ,
I
'Sort of Sema-Insanity," Rowan Asserts SANANroNIO (NC}~Black Americans who call for a sepa rate Negro society are courting a strategy that "is defeatist and stupid." There 'is no future for the Negr.() in "this CDUllltry iif :he can not succeed In the mainstream of American life. Carl Rowan, nationally syndi cated columnist ilnd news com mentator, expressed this view during a press ~onfereDce here. Rowan,wbo was appoillted by President John F. Kennedy as a member of the U.S. dele gation to the United Nations, came bere to deliver an a'ddr-ess at Our Lad,y of tbe Lake Col lege. He formerly was director
of the U.S. Information Agency and ambllSSRtltrr to Finiand.· "'I'm Ml 'in~tionist from ~ ginning 10 -end, whether black Ameli-cans Qr White Americans like it or ntJt,"'R()wan declared. Within the 'btack community tod'ay there i5 -darned near eveory type of 'opinion one 'C3ll ima gine cn Ure racial .situation, in cluding ttlhe Ib'lnck sepuratist adea. .iilBut [ think the ~den of tl~acks stayiing lin their own CI1lJJllfin:es is 'a defentlst nnd :stmrpicil :strntegy. There iis no fEutJure 10r 1l;heN~ro in itihisco:untry :if m d~esm't get ·odt nnd snOl:letld :in the main stremn df Amerit'mlsociety." Black Ameci=ns, .~ S31d, should claim • !iWe bit <)f
Motional Conference Reelects Chairman . -CmCAGO (NC) - Rawson L. Wood, cha1nnan oi 1Jle National Catholic 'Conference 'for inter racial Justice and former chair
man of the Nassau(N. Y,) Ooun'ty Commission on Human Righ.ts, has been reelected chair 'man cof 'the lOhiCllgO 'basOO organ ization. R. S~.gent Shriver, U,S. Am bassador to Fr.nnce, was re elected as -one of NCCIJ':s three VIce-chairmen. 'The others' are Walter T. lFJ:.ubbard, Sr. of Seat tle,executivedirectorof Project .cnritas, and Jchn P. :Nelson of New Orleans, attorJlE:Y :active in school desegregation in Lou isiana.
17
lags
SAGINAW (NC)-Methodi~ theologian Dr. Albert C. Outlell' depicted the ecumenical move ment in a period of danger in II pair of addresses at St. Paull seminary here in Michigan. And it's a time of danger be- cause ecumenism is in a perioci of a slump, he explaIned. Dr. Outler, a theology profes-
SOl' at Southern Methodist Uni-o
versity's Perkins School of The
ology, Dallas, Tex., observed
that the ecumenical advance in': the first half of this century had
been relatively symmetric. He
contrasted to:.':'y's "ecumenical
traffic jam" of renewal forces
with the ld,:;urely paCe of ~
earlier day. '
"The same peOple went to conference aft;:!r confereI'lce tell
ing each other that we must get to the grass roots," he recalled.
"Now we're at the grass roots
and seem uncertain as to what
to do now."
In an address to area cler/Dl'o
men Dr. Outler said the ecu
menical slump has developed
betwe,en the Roman Catbolie
and non-Roman Catholic world
as the. excitement generated by
Vatican Council II has died
down. Dr. Outler was an obser\lloo er at the council. All the easy things, like "get.. ting acquainted," are done bEl l18id, "and the hard work J'Ooo mains."
Dr. Outler contended the plaet>
for ecumenical action now is ~ the regional level. "We have to begin now W take some ecum:mical risks," be
asserted, lest the ecumenical movement be r-::::Iuced to placid hopes. He added: "It is a time for building."
order is also the phoniest is sue of them all and the candi dates are playing the American voters for fools w~n they ex
ploit their fears." "'The President of the United States," he said, "is about as re sponsible for controlling mug gings and riots as he is for pre venting a snowfall. But the pub lie is in a mood to be lied to." College Acquires Rowan believes there is a conservative trend in the U,S. . omputer ystem today. "A large segment of ATCHISON (NC) -':5t. BeneAmericans want to turn back Giet's College has expanded " njties.~ educational and research capa~ Rowan said programs to aid the clock," he stated, "and many tile hardl~re unemployed ~re white Americans think' the biliUes with the acquisition elf American Negro is going too a time-sharing co~puter syg.. "onD.y .pl:uiial so~utions" to prob tem; according to Father Alculii lems of bladk: Americans. "We far too fast';This belief, be said. "is n 1al- , . Hemmen, O.S.B,,· presIdent. also lII~to make lit possible for
.United Computer Systems hM' a Negro with. a master's degree laeious and absurd, notion. to, ge~ promoted ilnbis job," the Black men are still three times installed a computer terminal. columnist said. ' as likely to be unemployed 8s the· eollege's science hall. Tbfl Turning tiOl the presidential white men, but the erroneous telephone-teletype console is OIl notion of the blacks' big pr1>a direct line to a General I:lee-. election, Rowan said Jaw and or tric master computer In KanSM der .is the biggest .issue of the gress is obviously making a J'everse political impact.'~ City 'that is capable of bandlina 1968 campaign-"bigger even than Vietnam." no time-sharing tenninals .., 'Phoniest Issue' multaneously. Youth Rally However, he stated ."Jaw and The computer wiD provide • , \ CARmOU (NC)-Father John teaching and research tool ee McCall, S ..J., sociolog~y professor p~ially for persons in ~e busi Gives Fund Raisers at Weston College, Weston, ,m!SS administration, economl~ Mass., tbeologate for the Jesuits' matOOmatics, physics, dlemlstl'J9 Advice I New England province, will ad NEW YORK (NC) -There dress the opening session of'the biology, sociob~ and psycho}., ogy departments. It wm' Toe sh1)uld be a "soose of mission, Ecuffi1'!nical Youth Rally here in available to students ancl 1aeu}c.
dedi:c11ltion ,and strengths" in Maine Sunday, Nov. 3, on the ties :~f St. Benedict's and Deigb..
Christian fund Jra!ising, a Salva subject "'GettillJg the Teenager boring Mount Scholastiea C4lim ti'01il Army leader has told t~ Where the Action is.leite. ' N;:\taona! CathoDic .lkvelopment Conference here. B!l'igadier Andrew S. Miller, nntional information director of tht'! Saavation Almy. said that members of religious groups WITHOUT TRAffIC & PARKING PROBLEMS should see fund raising as a chance to increase their minis at the h·y.
"To take money from people without giying them back the SOMERSET, MASS. best spiritual! values Is to cheat them," he stJressed.' "And it makes a mocllrery out of what rhe most friendly, cIIemoaatie BANK offering , we believe. We DlllllSt give more - than we receiv.e~" ' BQ~t;'!O'Ng The assomtion of religious Cfub Accounts Auto loans orders nod mstitutions is en guged in rniising funtls for activ Checking Acecounts Business l('01mJ ities they supJ)Qlrt. It fonnaUy Savings Accounts . ~eal Es~ate lcuns org.mized early Ibis year after At Somerset Shopping Area-Bri~htmal'1 S~. !aridg. existing inll'armaily since '1962 as the CathoHc Fumn Raising Con-' Member federal Deposit I~surance Corporation ference. fl'1<1dison Avenue as well as Har lem. "I'm not taking second best to anybody," he emphasized. Partial S~lutions Rowan said the Kerner Com mission's allegation of America moVing toward separate black' and white societies may be an accurate conclusion. "Tillis idea of Separatism is a S{)rt of semi-insanity," he de clared, "and it is now infeCting b~aclr American .communities as well as white American commu
C
..
S
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Won. of
CONVENIENT BANKING
',SLADE/S FERRY TRUST COMPANY
'Complete One-Stop
-
(~
18 '
'New 'Office 'A'ids
THE ANCHIJ~'-!)l~c:·e'of,Fa" River-Thurs., Ocf.t31, 1968 :
Miami. DistriCt
Interrngtw@frnol' Aid Agenci.es Social J u!)tice Instruments
MIAMI (NC)-A branch office oI.tbe Miami archdiocese's Cath olic Welfare Bureau baS been es
By Barbara Ward
What are the positive arguments, ~of channelling a proportion of funds· for economic development Ulrough such institutions as the World Bank and its sub ~4iary, the International Dev~lopment Association (IDA1, through. the International Monetary Fund (IMF), or $720 millions from other wealthy the United Nations Develop- governments, a fact which ment Program UNDP) ? makes Congress's .delay 'incom ~eater'
prehensible and' inexcusable. . , The first argument is the variety of approaches to the l[]NDP Grants p i" 0 vis ion The advantage of UNDP Of ' development funds is two fold. They are funds' w h i c h given as grants. And as a condi these agencies tion of receiving them, govern inake' possible. ments have to put ,up matching :With the guid funds. The program has tried to ance of lin ex concentrate much of its efforts ee'edingly ex on creating the pre-conditions ~ pert staff, the of development- surveys ,for '!N' 0 rid Bank undiscov~red mineral reserves makes loans at 'or water, supplies, training in 1Il0 m m. ere i a I public admini'stration, pilot proj mtes for basic ects in new crops and so forth. lDe"eds lj'ke roads and power and In terms of the, need ,for its f,s: increasingly intereste'd in', ~rvices, it, too, could quadruple agriculture. ' Its programs if more funds were ;Although it has been in the made available by governments. 1endiI1g business for more than The IMF is sometimes forgot 20', years and ~lias a volume of ten in this context of develop loans of about $1 billion a year, ment funds. But i·t already has a ~ere have been no defaults on useful progralll: for offsetting its lending and its financial' any short-term losses made by arating is held to be first class. ,developing countries when their This fact shows' the care with ' ex.~rt earnings, for no fault of which cases are chosen Other- theIrs, fall, away. In a sane W~ . commercial 'inter~st 'rates world, an~ addition to the IMF's ON ROAD BACK: Biafran boys being nursed back to eould not have been afforded. It ' rel?e~t:s 'lI~ the way of~fresh h Ith t h 't I th' ' alSo offers a remarkable contrast for mstance the proposed . ea OSPI as, on e 18l'and 0 f Sao Tome, Portuguese "SpecIal Dr . 'g R' ht" Africa, received blood transfusions, as well as inJ' ections with ~Will. s, of vitamins, iron 'and protein. These, together with nourish in, themuch 19th development century when,lending again would be made aV~lllable19. flrs·t
Credlt~
~
tablished by Archbishop Cole man F. Carroll in the Model Cities section, a federally funded renewal project whieb' enCom passes 'a nine-mile area in the heart of the Negro diStrict here. Sister Miriam, of the :DOmini can Sisters of S,t. Catherine de Ric:c:i ~ Media, Pa., who attract ed nationwide attention as supe rior of. M,iami's Catholic Spanisb center at the height of. the Cu ban refugee influex in the early 196OS, is coordinator of the bu reau, which will devOte the first year lo research and interviews. Dr. Ben Sheppard, bureau ex ecutive director, emplWlsized im mediate help will be Offered to those who need it. . Archbishop 'Carroll called opening of the new office an other example of the Church's ,concern for the people of the "inner city." "This will not be a project where people have to come to us'," Sister Miriam declared. "We will reach ollot to the people." The same services offered at the bureau headquarters will be availabie at the, branch office. In addition a staff of four gradu ate social science students will (xmduct interviews and surveys to assist in plans for iniplemen:' t~tion of the rene:wal project aImed at establishing self-help and self-government in the ,community. '
Urge 'Mass Media Upgrade Morality
end :ai£ain loans for "internal .to the ,poorer co~tnes.who des- ,ing food and the resilience of youth, make a great dif NEW YORK (N:C) - Clergy ~prove~~lltS'" 'in the Unit'eli pe~tel~. n~., more ,~o.rking, ference in the' children, who arrive, on Sao Tome usu'ally men of four major faiths have 8~tes or loans for Latin Amer- ' ca!t~tal ill theIr conduct of illter- in a listless and apathetic state from undernourishment. joined an appeal to mass media to"OOcept responsibility in devel L,.;:, ' D' ' t ended" In' natIonal trade. ......n eveI opmen NC Photo.. ' oping the moral' fibre of the bimkruptcy. In the 1840's,' for in: The international community , nation. ~nce, 9'out:ofthe'25 state gOY':' th~ includes a whole·'spectrum The appeal was, signed by emments in the United States of ,lively" e~pe~ienced" ,in~~ Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort ..ere in default on. their 'loans io'.9' effi~ientorganization. Wayne-South Bend, chllinnan of (largely, for, 'development) and ~!r,~ not,ha~~ ~',beiDvenied. ~ ,'BiafrQlI1l Children Dedicated Care
the National OffiCe for Decent ,British banfteMl, y,rho had, 'in the ' ~ ~ere set up in the creative' Li:terature; Archbishop lakovos ~aib; lent' the mOrley; talkoo" W 9: v e of, iliiJtituti~ri"building OnPortu9ue~el~land
of ,the Greek OrtbodQx diocese '~bou.t,Americansthe way Amer wbleb followed'· the Second of North, and South America; ~s now' talk abOut ·,lwasteful World War, When,' for, m'time, SAO' TOME {NC)~.Aftertwo'" firSt taKen" for intensive treat-' Unreliable, developing peOples.': ' ~ n~tions reali~'. that they or three days, the chiidren can': ment, ~nd Sao Antonio Clinic, a Methodist "Bishop Lloyd C. Wicke of New York State, and coUl~ no~ create a peacceful soci ,
,walk again-not too much, put a reC\lperati~n center operated by Rabbi Julius G. Neumann, Con ely, unless they went beyond the , Low ,Interest Loans
little. Their age, which makes Irisl!-'nuns. " gregation Zichron MOshe and . ,The same staff and the same total claims 'to total 9Overeignty' them so helpless, is an asset., Two" Biafran spebd chairman of Morality in Media, _pertise are used by the World of ~ separate sta~. But alone, it~would kill them. their days shuttling between' the Ioe; , ~nk 'to assess ~redits made Twenty-three yearS after that These are the Biafran chiIaren two hospitals, helping to keep '.r.he statement was directed at available' to developing coun vast disaster, the nations 'are re who have been brought to 'this records, talking 'to the children tr!es t.hrough the IDA. Govern- covering their' oM, 'illusions of Portuguese -island from their' serving as a major link betwee~ ~vies, television, radio, mag azines and books. It said their meI!J;s contribute the funds to grandeur. They are returning to homeland near-dead from mal what is left of their families in "daily influence " on the Amer ID.A as grants; their' IDA lends their old idiotic belief that over nutrition and its 'side effects. Biafra-many children are or ican people is ''incalculable.'' lit ti!.IS money to developing coun a bundred nations can live on The doctors and nurses who phang.....:..and the children. continued: "That influence can tries for 50 years at only three this' small planet without rules help, them - some POrtuguese, W'hen they"arrive on one of be uplifting and ennobling, or , q,!a.rters of one per cent a year or fonns of association and still some Irish, some Biafran-have the night flights, the child'ren it can undennine the character m mterest. not cannon into each other. But ~un~, h~ever, that they' can are often helpless. Others are of our nation by wrongly influ :The loans are thus very "soft" the folly of such views ,has not surVIve. :.' listless. Some have reddish hair e?cing citizens of all ages, espe but examination of projects and changed. So the reasons for But 'in addition to the',~esi1- and s:"ollen feet and ankles of CIally the young." proposals for' loans is very using the' international agencies ~ence of youth, they need blood kwaspiorkor - severe protein "'~ard" - in other words, very today are the same as the rea transfusions, shots of 'vitamins, deficiency-and nearly ,all show lUlorough. Developing lands car- sons for creating them in the iron and protein - and a long some of the, obvious effects of Jry ano increasing load of debt finrt place. rest. There are about I~OBiafran ,hunger: the running sores and ~ese days. They pay back about Distributive .Justice children' now on the island. The swollen stomachs. ~ bil~ion:s a year to: the :ich They repres~nt' mankind's last group arrived at the beginINSURANCE AGENCY, INC, The sickest receive blood countnes (-a. sum WhIC~ IDlght fumbling effort ,to build a plan ~ng of October. More will come _ transfusions. "All receive shots, '96 WILLIAM STREET well be put ill a revol:-lDg fund etary 'society in which men can m a week or so. , of vitamins and protein. And, of: and lent to them ag~n). , live without destroying each' NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Meanwhile those who are al- course, they are fed regularly So IDA's easy terms are very other. They ,take the taint of read~ here' are treated in two meat, fish, milk, among other 998,5153 997-'9167 necessary and, very welcome-, patronage and dependence away h~sPltals: ~he Sao Tome muni- things, and a sticky mixture of PERSONAL SERVICE ' ~ welcome that IDA's funds are from efforts at economic coop Clpal ,hOSPItal, where they are malt, fish oil and vitamin con Vlr~ually exhausted and still eration between rich and poor. centrates which they clamor for. ~alt on. a Congressional decision They begin to typify objective iOO proVld~ $~O millions of fresh rules of distributive justice. Holy Honors fun~s. Th~s fl~re is small, in it-They get the 'w:orld away from, aelf, yet lt will spark a fUr,ther tile unpredictable generosity of B"rlingtolJ'ilPriest' the rich. ;' BURLINGTON (NC) - Fa ~F 'd G ~.ty Instead they initiate a ste~dy ther Edward C. Foster, a Burl Yo~ , OU" U IW accepted transfer of resources ington di:ocesan priest' on loan BALTIMORE (NC)-The nine 'wbicll resembleS, if you like' a to the Catholic Near East Wel Hill anti-war protesters who burned world, ,tax system. "It is for tins fare Association, has been named Selective Service files in May reason that in Populorwn Pro a papal chaplain with the title ' as a protest against the Vietnam gressio, Pope Paul gives 90 high of very reverend monsignor.. FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 998-5691 war hav ~en found guilty of a priorty to Strengthening and Ac~rding to the Burli'ngton, willful 7 mJury government developing the mternational chancery office, it is customary property and WIllful interfer- agencies. They are our first in for priests who serve as secre ence with the admi~istration of ~ strwnents of planetary justice. ,1iaries in'the Near East Welfare the Selective SerVIce Act of e fore-showing of ,the global ob Association to have the title of DARTMOUTH, MASS. 1967. ligations of an orderly world. monsignor.
Helple'ss, :Lis'tless :Get.
nurses'
D@NAT BOiSVERt
Follmer
"You Can Whip Our Cream, but
Can't, Beat Our' Milk rtf
Your Gulf RouteMan is
Always at' Your Service t
1?
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GU'LFso. HilL DAIRY
I ~
SCHoOLBOY SPORTS' IN TilE DIOCESE By Pm1I J. BmDl llertlln Higb CoacII
...
~
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968
\
• '-"
I
19
Qn Bridge~ater' Star.tieS ~Dirt Elementary Majors at State College
Coyle Out to Play Spoiler Role in BeL-Durfee Tilt All-winning DUri~.· High, with six straight vdctories tucked ,away, hopes to 'salt away' the· Bristol County foot ball league championship next Saturday at Taunton when it clashes with Coach' Jim Lanagan's stubborn Msgr. Coyle, High club in what is a make or-break encounter for the league recoJd is 1-2-1 for the latter. The Fall River' Hill~ season which is a far cry from toppers, representing the Durfee's 6-0 mark.
Cha~ce
I
leFoyor of Wareli:am,Doy;s 01 No. Dartmouth
BY LUKE SIMS
second largest Southeastern Massachusetts second'clry school, bas had a eouple of close ones in 'chalking-up its undefeated and untied record. But, Coach Don MontIe's boys had no trou ble whatsoever as it romped to a one-sided 26-0 triumph over' Coach Carlin Lynch's Dartmouth High club in its last outing. Coyle's scoreless tie with' un beaten New Bedford High last Saturd'cly has sounded the warn ing that Durfee will h'clve to be at Its best If it is to retain undis puted possession of first place in the' county clrcuit. The Crimson Whalers, playing an independent schedule this lesson h'clve bested several for midable opponents in winning all their previous contests until last weekend when the Taunton diocesans held them to the dead lock. Coyle, with a one-and-one
'.~
•
Coach Bob Gauthrie's North Attleboro gridders, who moved into a one-half game first place lead in the Hockomock cirCuit last weekend by besting Canton, take on an 'old-foe' in its re gional rivalry lilt 7 tomorrow night under the lights at Com munity Field when it entertains Bishop Feehan High cf Attle boro. The diocesan Shamrocks squeezed into second place in the Bristol County loop last weekend when they easily tipped Attle boro High, 22-12, last Saturday. The latter was a pre-season county pennant contender. The Hockomock representatives h'clve not done too well in their games with non-league opponents this season, indiC'cltive of the fact that the calibre of the Ieague's all over play is a little below that of the recent .past.
to Wrap",:Up League Championship
Coach Jim Cassidy'a Attleboro hwelers face another strong foe this comln~ Satuni9y when they trovel to 'New Bedford to meet Coach JOe :&ttencourt'Ii' Crim- ~n Whalers. " TetJnton High, lltill looking for its first league ?idort: after , having 'e8ptured 'the eOunty pen.. nant 'last Fall; hoPeS to: re~ its second straight' of the DOW balf-completed season when tt tacldes Coach Charley Connell's Bishop Stang High team of North Dartmouth at TauntoD. The third place Dartmouth dioc
esans, with a 2-1 league' record, still have a mMhematleal ch~ in the county race. Taunton, with Its G-3 mnrk, Is out of the title run. A 26-0 lo3er to Stang last Saturday, New Bedfold Voea tioool with· a 1-5 over-alI sea son's record will be kIle tbis eoming weekend. Old Rochester, which has not only made Itself felt but is lead ing the Narragansett League to which it returned this season after an absence of several years, ean wrap-up the Narry title on Saturday next when it dashes with Seekonk at the
, - - - - - - - - -...- - - - ' "-' j
Phil LeFavor of Wareham is the starting center ancl place-kicker on the Bridge water State varsity football team. A former gridiron stand out at Bishop Stang High St;hool, LeFavor is the son of. Mr._ and Mrs. William C. LeFavor of 18 Morse Ave. and a member of St. Patrick's Parish. Prior to the season the ',5-11, 195-pounder impressed head Coach Pete .Mazzaferro to the' extent that he was the only , Freshman to win a berth on the Bears' starting lineup. Making the jump from a starter in high school to a first string slot in college is no easy task but Phil has filled the job more than adequately, Coach Mazza ferro rates the Wareham product with the best in the bloCking department 'and describes him as "a grea.t competitor." . Prior to his college days, I.e Favor had never kicked extra points but in the Bears' first three games he has looked like a seasoned veteran. In 10 attempts, Phil has booted seven successfUlly with the·other three being blocked. Wnen the hall leaves his toe and gets by
the defensive' rush, it invaribly
has a chance. · Because of his size, LeFavor often finds himself pitted against a larger man on defense but a strong determination more thaD
I
I
PHIL LeF'AVOR
MILLS DAVIS
makes .up for what he loses in
No. Dighton Sets =.~~. solid football • foundation which began in his ucahon' I!IChool.· home' and extended throitgh high Parent Ed , . S· S erles on hexD B ". '.-' ..hi'g"h' HiS 'father, BiD,' J:S' a 16rmer"':':"-.-I 'st'ar ';f;""tba'U"'\,P'I'ayer' Y
Ph : : : :
The former Dartmouth High
=nddoe~~:i:es~nr;;n;,,~~::t~s0: new position inherited this, sea son.
latter's field. The MaUapoisett combine secured Q firmer first ...... hold ._,;." S ,. rd h While at Dartmouth, Davis p.'""e .''''''''' a.uay w. en" was a' standout; running' threat it eked out a 113-12 come-from· So t ~Prof J ~ "" ' for' Coach Kevin' Cadieux',s Ind wm hehi n' ~er ..me~:_ , ., essor osep . ur" . 'haVing ~orin~ iii' "the. late diansand Was expected to' add . maintain its unbeaten - league 'roughs of the University of, "19"308" .. l.~·".H'.:':'.'ly'. 'F'anu'-.:·ly" H'"I''."h ..··. . .' rd The B Ud finish on v ,g Bome "zip' to tlie 'Bridgewater ofrecoworse . '""-_\!in-o~tiC8ffirst.' [,Massachusetts will give ~, .. ·:At'stfm·g;'Phil'ie. :"fensive attack. ' .1 I
no ........ a e ..or .,. ,. ,".., ~yea'-addi., .. Somerset High will .seek 10, iJl~strated lectures ~ seX, }i~na,I,~t?~~n~ 'Iri"tJle ~d:.~ -'" When Coach'MazzaferT(i was - te' th' '~t· f' ""T' rth' At-' educa.tion - fur "parents· iil the ," by. Cha.t:~~, COnnell, ,the present eorifronted with a surplus supply d upli ell , e ..",a (1). .,,0 . .' " .eoach at S...~r.tan Villa e ' , tleboro when it meets Canton of parish hall of St. Joseph Church, ~'. \ g;, . of offensive talent' he looked for th HockOJllOcli' titIon' t North Dighton. TlN'ly will be held '. ,As , j1:JDlor, he ~~,r.a ~ckup help on defense. Davis was quick e compe ... a·.·· 8 Th d' ni ht, N 7 d man for starting center Shay A& t the latter's field cn Saturday. !l. "urs ay g . av. an"... " ." ' '. . " . _ .,' _,. . . to answer the call.
CantOn's IOsS'l'clSt week dropped Nov. 14 under sponsorship of the sad butwo:n the ,s¥irti~g be~. ID the Bears' first ~ree'games,
b b" ....... ,parish Christian· F.amily Move- a year later when AsSad was Da
" 't' 'Be 'to . ' r' . . ,moVed: to the' taelde pOst. vis has done. a creditaple job
. th,e.Gre~ ~r _s n .su ur. ~I~, inent: . . out of a four-way first"place tie. All adults in the greater TaUD' In the classroom; :LeP'livo'r was' ~~~ :~~e:o:e B~~: Somerset. willall take) a i~O-andthl- -ton area are welcome to atteDdtbe senior' class treasurer' and a' two over- . mart mO I -th leet' hi h '11 be fo1- member of the National .Honor (College Division) defensively. weekend's encounter. ,e ures, w. c WI... Society' Davis is big at 6-foot, 175 An easy 30-12 winner lowed by question periods. At B~water he Is an Ele- . pounds and possesses the nece& over Westwood last Saturday, Human Development mentary Major and hopes to aary speed to defend against Dighton-Rehoboth hopes to 000Professor Burro~ghs ,is a pro- teach m the grammar school' awift receivers. t1nue its winning way this com- ~essor and extensIon specialist level upon graduation. Like LeFavor, Davis Is an" 1ng Saturd·ay when it hosts Case m human developmeot at the Another member of the start- Element'clry Ma~or and hopes to High of Swanse'cl in a Nerry University of Massachusetts, ing unit is Mills Davis of North teach, and possibly coach, upon encounter. Case was a 14-0 vie- where h«: has been III faculty Darbnouth. Mills is a sophomore graduation. tor over Mansfield, also of the member SInce 1957. H~ hol~ de- and the son of Mrs. Herdis Davis Hockomock in its last encounter" ~ees from the Umvers~ty of of 48 Sable Avenue. Third place Seekonk bested VIrginia and from Cornell. last place King Philip Regional A member of several-national Priests Committee of the Hockomock, Jl4-9, last family - oriertted organizations,
PLUMBING C. ~U.1l'ING, INC. ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)
Saturday as it warmed-up for the speaker is also n governor .._., Sales and Service The Rockville Centre diocesan
its cruci-al tilt with Old Roches- appointed member of the Mass ,. :':',:: tor tJomestic Priests'Advisory Council has
ter this coming weekend. achusetts Commission on cbil<'''\,J '-:.?E and Industrial dren and Youth and a charter recommended the establishment Oil Burners member and vice-chairman of of 11 grievance committee to 995-1631 Dwindling All-Winners Now l)@wn t@ Two ·the Massachusetts Council of mediate . possible' disputes be 2283 AClJ::iHNET AVE~UE Family Life. tween priest and priest and NEW BEDFORD Bourne High, which kept at the latter's field, in another priest/ and bishop. Two northern county clubs abreast of Durfee in the unbeat Cape loop tussle next Saturday. en and untied rahks by wallop It wasn't the result as much lIS have Hockomock league contests ing Ponagansett of Rhode Island, it was 1ihe 'manner in which on tap this coming weekend. 42-0; meets a more formidable Dennis-Yannouth disposed of Mansfield will entertain Stough opponent this e:Om1ng Saturday Lawrence High of Falmouth last. ton while. Oliver Ames will be when it travels to Fairhaven to week that has many Cape Cod · at home in North Easton to meet Ccx1ch Dick Arleta's Blue den talking. Wareh'clID is well Franklin. Both Mansfield and Devils in a Cape way Confer aware of the RegionaIs' 30-14 · Oliver Ames, with 2-1 leggue HEAT~'MG ence encounter. Coach Russ triumph over Falmouth it. records,. are, in a second place Bums' C4malmen are riding gilds for the invasion of the D-Y . tie in the Hockomock, one-half f:~raetors sfnee 11.91£ along in first place in the Cape combine this weekend. Ware game behind front running clrcult. ham, itself, showed to adwntage North Attleboro. Norton, buoyed as III result at IllS it nosed out Oliver Ames 0If The fourth-plaee F·airhaven 699 ee~lwme Avenue the Hockomock, 12-8 lut Satur !ts 28-0 win over Martha's Vine ttes . were held to a 6-6 tie in day, indicating th'clt the D-Y yard, plays 'Dover-8hel'burne In New Bedford thelr last outing by Barnstahle Wareham tilt Booms as one of the a TrJ-Valley Conference contest which clashes with Dartmouth better Cape games this aea.son. next Saturday at Norton. j'
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JEREMIAH _CO~OUN
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PLUMBING &
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Druggist's Group Affirms Loyalty To Pop'e Paui
THE ANCHOR
Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968
~01l{[(eHI'~@oU'!m ~@QnG'$e f@1t'
~~~ ~U'(illde~frs
At the sixth annual meet ing of the National Catholic Pharmacists Guild, held in Boston, Rev. Albert J. Shov
At QJ [fUOW(~G'~O~Y AKRON (NC)-The New man Apostolate at Akron University this Fall dropped its religious courses for
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elton, dire<:tor of st. Mary's Home, New Bedford, was named national spiritual director and Timothy P. Keaiing, also of New Bedford, was ele<:ted member ship chairman. Members voted to send a reso lution supporting the encyclical Humanae Vitae to Pope Paul VI. Copies Qf, the resolution were sent to the Natipnal Conference of Bishops and the National Council of Catholic Men. Frank M. Bollig, Las Vegas, Nev.. was named Catholic Phar macist of the Year.
Catholics in favor of interfaith oessions which will be taught by nuns, ·priests and ministers, Classes are being held in the 1lIniversity student center, which also' is a break with the past. Previously, 'sessions were held An the Newman Center, and, while open to 'all, were attend ed mostly by Catholics. The course will be held three Urnes a week until late Novem ber, Besides the Newman Ce~l ter, \ it is aiso being sponsored .Vocations P'rograms by the (Protestant) Christian Campus Fellowship. For Minorities -.; Leaders of each of' the thl'ee LEMONT (NC)-Plans to ex weekly sessions are Dominican plain the challenge and rele Sister lVI, .Frederick, administra vance of the priesthood to high tive assistant at the Newman school and university students, <Center; Father Thomas R. Dun spe<:ial emphasis on' reaching the phy, director of the Newman Negro and other minority Center, and Rev. Barrie F. Bod groups, were completed at a den, of the. Christian Campus meeting of the Vincentian Fellowship. All sessions will il\~ F'athers vocational dire<:tOrs here dude discussions. '.' in Illinois. Theme of the course will be, Vincentian .priests engaged in "What does it take to be hu 'young men for the man 7" Sister Frederick's sub STUDIES'. MOSQUITO: Sister Mary Gerald Leahy, a biologist from Mt. St. Mary's . recruiting priesthood came from all parts title will'be "Human Sexuality." College, Los Angeles, studies. the genetics of the mosquitO:-knowledge' that' couJd lead. of the nation to study the prob 'Future Oriented' . to 'a new me'thOd()~ iilsect con.trol. Sister Gerald is currently, engaged for nine months lem. They also noted 'increased
She ,explaitied that the ,dialog . in research' at the ~srael Institute for Bioiogical Research,' Jerusalem. NC Photo. demands on' their community,
IICSsions' are designed for those . resulting from the" growth of, the
who want to cOnsider questions .,misSions, parishes, universities,
that confront our' age in the , . and charity programs. ~alm of love and sexuality , . . . . . . .. . . F-ather Joseph Haley, C.M., elf rio that a path to .walk can be DeAndreis. Seminary, here, discovered." . where the meeting was held, was In explaining the course,.ll elected chairman of the Vincen llbatement issued »y the sponWASHING'i:ON (NC)-:A' top land nor the money. raised by tel'S 1llade a ,bad investment'in tian Nationai Vocational Office. - : oors pointed. out that the ses- official of the Salvatorian nuns, the sale of public bonds in the real estate and it was not .the .Father Barry Moriarty, of St. -§ions "may seem dramatic" 'to cam~ here fJ;orn Rome, and filled name of the religious community firSt time it llad" happened. .: Vincent's Minor seminary, here those .who think of religious the role of chief prosecut~on wi~,:" at Orsinger's suggestion. '!fas ele<:ted secret,ary. O~ croSs exa:minatio~ bY'Don She' said Orsinger advised her · 00ncerns wiihin the 'narrow ~!!.: ness in the U.S. DistriCt Court 'fines of, a. parti"ular group, It ,: trial of' fraud and larceny after on, financi.al matters .from 1963 · ohoe~ , Mother.·, ':Acquin said, she " . ~iildded that the. e<:umenical Illfi1- . trust' cliarges agai,nst,Viclor J. .- to 1965 when, o1lhe headed the knew' at the time Orsiriger ope't-·· · ~ry: '!*. ~ attempts to' embody .Odi:nger, .the Sisterooocl'fi form- Siste~hood iii the' United 'States: ·a ted ,'a . real 'estate speculating, .-. style which is dialogical, no~- .. er. ·atto,..ney and ~nanci1l1 coun-.·· She ,testified ,she told Orsinger ·company known. as ParkwoOd'. oNE STOP 8lUthoritari-an'and future ori- 'selor. " " .the community wanted to .build " ·Shea~ !IIlld she knew Orsing SHOPPING CEN1a ·$I1ted." " . " : " 'Mother,Aequin Gilles,·first·as:., : the MUwa~k~ novitiate on.·a -1-'1' planned·tO, use' bi8compa~' _ l!t ,does not attempt, the state- si'stant to' the 'superior ,general site .tha~wou~d take up a tl\ird · to, . as.semple,. .t~. ~lwaukee .• Television:'.' 'Grocery . prop~l'~y~ l , . · ~nt emphasized; to discard tr~- f1f the Sisters' of' the Divine of a' city bl~k. , , , , • 'Applia~~ e" ~rnitu'" Mother. Acquin· testified
~ition~, and" point.ed out that .Sav.io~ in Rome, testifi~ (<;>ct.' , ~het~stified Orsinger advised 104 Aile!,' .It., New.Bedford , that·the cOmmunity's money'was
~ss IS offered dally for .Cath~ 21). We 'reli~ o?e ~. legal her it would be better to bUy · ~bc students and faculty In t~e counsel. and fmanclal ~vlce oL . the ,entire block which he could 'not supposed 'to be used by Park 997-9354 Newma? C~nter,. vvhere a, resl- Mr. Orsl~ger;, He .was 0"1' lawyer acquire f0t:' $1.5 million. She : wood for real e8ta~ speculatiQrl. dent PrIest, IS ava.Ilable for coun- and ad~lser. .said he explained it would tilke · tiel and diSCUSSion rooms are The indiCtment against Orsing- two years to acquire the properIr;:: · ~n. ,'.' er charges ~ 15 counts of fraud ty, then he would give the cOm .. The statement ~.~tinue;d that· and larceny after trust. Tbepro- munity a thirq of the land free
· ~e Protestant mlDl!ltry is pro- secutioncharged he took $1.5 mil- of mortgages. '
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· Vlded for students through lIhe lion from the SIsterhood in 1963 Campus Proctor's Office, where to buy land in Milwaukee 'for 'a Bad Investment '~oounseling al,so is .available, and oo~itiateof,the community; then Mother .Acqui~ "also testified ·eoncluded: ' ,used the money for his own Orsinger said the community "The ul)iversity is the place to 'purposes.' . would get back its .$1.5 million
(tK~min~ ideas. ,Why not let re- ,Asst. U.S. Atty. SeymourGlan- . and that lie' offered to pay 'the
:. BANQUEiS- • WEDDINGS • PARTIES, !iglon 'be part of the exam?" , ,zer, the' prosecutOr, in his 'operi- -int~rest on the bond issue. ~he
ing .statement at ·the trial, said said Orsinge~ was to get the . gove;rnment would. prove .. , other :t,wo-thlrds of the block :' ... COMMUNiON BREAKFASTS !Feels Czech ChllJrch the Orsinger induced the nuns to of 'property to be put to ,a, use ; , FALII. lIVER, entrust the money· to him, then eompatiblewith the proposed 1343 PLEASANT STRER Gains Continuing . GENEVA (NC) - The August used the funds i,n 'a' real estate novitiate. ,993.7780 speculation 'company which he F. Joseph Donohue, Orsinger's <tivents in Cze<:hoslovakia have operated. :. attorney, told the jury the situa not affected the progress of reli The prosecutor, who dell,Cribed tion ~esulted fro~ a misund«:r gious reforms initiated in the the comapny as "sinking," said . standmg. He claImed the SIS earlier takeover of political COl)
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trol by liberal' elements of the he would prove Orsinger bought, <Czechoslovak Communist party, a block of land near Marquette University Honors
according to a Lutheran leader University iIi Milwaukee with
funds from another source, then Flight Director
here in Switzerland. '
Dr. Paul Hansen, se<:retary for mortgaged it" to. the hilt.PO ST. LOl,JIS (NC) '-Eugene F.
Planned Novitiate minority churches of the Luth Kranz, flight dire<:tor of the
eran World Fedel'ation, Depart 'Mother Acquin testified the successf~l Apollo 7 outer space
ment of World service, said he Sisterhood never received the mission, was one of 12 graduates
found the churches in Cze<:ho of St. Louis University honored
movakia working freely under with the Alumni Merit Award'
NCEA Official the changed condUions in their at the university's sesquicenten- . oountry. WASHINGTON (NC) - The nial Founders Week academic
Among other things, he ob National' Catholic Educational convocation here. •• aerved "lively and interesting" Association has appointed Wayne , The awards were initiated in
parish work, "increased partic Stetson of Ventnor, N. J., its con 1955 to hOnor graduates who
!paJtion of the faithful" and vention and exposition manager. exemplify in their da.ily Ii ves Offices in:
oonsiderable num~rs of young Joseph O'Donnell,. who held the "the credo of· St. Louis Univer- ..
,MANSFIElD AmHORO \FAllS
NORTH AlJUBORO people taldng religious instrue post previously,ls now NCEA sUy," . operated by th~ Jesuit CIon. . Fathers. '
b~.ness manager. IOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIUIIU.
SalvatorianNu·n Testifies in Fraud Trial .
Relied on Defendar1lt's FinanciaD Advice
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CORREIA & SONS
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