MUCH SELF-I NTERPRETATION
TOO
Says New Morality Is Overlooked
Cause of Lawl.essness, Disorder
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CINCINNATI (NC)-Too often overlooked" as a cause • of lawle~sness and disord.er ,is, the neY\' emphasis 'Olll de cision making· that "minimizes or even completely, eliminates , objective, universal 9tanoords of ..!igltt ,and wrong,~ -, ' , , , , ·F-ather ,:R:obert L.Ha'gedom, protess9r 'of moral theology at ·Mt. st. M~ry seminary, Norwood, Ohio, made this charge in a ser Mc;in' at the ·annual Red Mass for jUdges, lawyerS 'a'nd 'other civic: officials, held on Tuesday, in the ,Fenv,:ick Chapel the Holy Spir:it; Cincinnati:: " , , ~hbishop 'Karl Z. Alter of' Cir;clntlati .ceiebra1ed the Mass, o~e~.~ach 'at. the open ing o~ .the fall term of the courts. , "Father ,Hagedol'l) :said that the neW morality; or "situaWm eth ics," is' "playing ,an: impor,tant role i~ undermining 'the values of the kind of society we, cherish." ! He described the new morality as' "the growing emphasis upon the right of the' indivi~tnal to
make his own moral judgment, independent of any objective, absolute norms of morality," and said it 'was "based upon a phil osophy of subjectivism; pragma tism, positivism and relativism/' Father Hagedorn acknowl-
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edged that the proponents of this moral philosophy are not proposing lawlessness or disor der. "Quite the contrar~" he said. '~hey are proposing love and concern for others . But who is to determine what
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ANCHOR 'If.ol 12, No. 40, 'Il'ice 10c
pet.
3, 1968
$4.00 per Year
© 1968 The
A~hor
CCD Workshop On Saturday In Attleboro The last in a series of five llteligious Education work s,hops will be held Saturday for parents and teachers of
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MOTHER OF MERCY AND OF LOVE: The month' , ~f October'jg' dedi~at~dtOOur' Lady m the Rosary who· reigIls in splenQor, with her son; Jesus Christ, our 80Verign King and Redeemer., NC Photo.
is the loving thing to do in a given situation? Who is to de termine wha't' will bring about the greatest good for the great est number?, How can the indi . Vidual know what is best for aIll the members of society?" "" "It is my:contention," Father , Hagedorn' added, ''that he can-' " not unless be be guided by ob
jeCtive norms or laws."
, ,"It' is : the, {unction' and the
duty of civil authority to deter
mine 'by law what is best foll'
society,'! he.. continued. "It can:'
'not be left to the judgment of
the ind~vidual. Moreover, Al-
mighty God has established IlIl
order to guide -and help us know ,what is right 'and what is beSt
for everyone an~ i'I;" is the duty
of the. i,ndiyidual to ;conform to
tbisorder." , ,',
"The' most. general and inviol
able claims of natural moral!
, law." Father Hagedorn ,said, "are'
,based on the essential nature of man. This human nature was al 80 taken on in the real humanity Turn to Page Two'
College Day at' Stonehill
,Stonehili Coilege in ·No. Easton, in cooperation with' the Diocesan School Depart ment, will host a College Day
Colleges represented are: ,COLLEGES FOR WOMEN
Albertus Magnus, Alvernla, on its can~pus on Columbus Day, Anna Maria, Annhurst, Cardinal Cushing, Mt. St. Vincent, New Saturday, Oct. 12. Junior and senior high school stuaents, whether from diocesan, parochial, privatI,:! or public high schools, who are interested in ill rther college study for, com petitive-world success,' will do themselves, their parents and communities a' great favor by 11 t ten din g the well-planneQ\ event.', ' Rev. Edmund Haughey, C.S.C., Dean of Admissions at Stonehill College, announced that reore sentatives of 98 Catholic colleges from the Mid-west to the Atlan tic seaboard will be present at the No. Easton campus to meet with and answer the quesiions of students and parents. College Day has proved to be an immense success in the past.' An ever increasing number of colleges~25 more this year~ will be represented at the an nual two-hour affair followed by an open house. From 9:30 to 11:30 in the morniIig, parents and students will take part in. four thirty minute sessions, formal discus sion on' college, and a free ex cbange period in classrooms, the lFR. E. J., HAUG.HEY. esc gymnasium and the Haft.
D elementary school chil dren of the Attleboro area. Pre vious sessions in other locations of the Diocese have attracted hundreds. Sponsored by the Fall River Diocesan CCD, the one-day work Ghop is designed to provide a lJummary of the new religious education concepts now employ ed in CCD classes and the home. Seminars will be given on pray er, lformation of conscience, psy ehology and teaching the Trinity. The Attleboro area session is alated for Saturday, Oct. 5 at Bishop Feehan High School. It lls open to all parents and teach 01\'1 in the area. The prqgram will begin with registration at 9:30. lP'rom 10:00 to noon and from 11:00 to 3:00, registrants will par ticipate in seminars. Rev. Joseph Focus of the campaign will be NEWARK (NC)-The Newark Powers, Diocesan CCD Director, wiU celebrate a Mass concluding' arehdlocese, in cooperation with the'distribution of the Paulist Newman Press book, "Genera Paulist Press, will launch a vo t>lle workshop at 3:30.. Instructors for the seminars cation promotion campaign in tion of Opportunity;" to 200,000 mclude members of the Diocesan October as a prelude to similar families. .Each pastor in the CCD staff, the CCD Teaching campaigns in 26 other dioceses. archdiocese has been asked ,-to Sisters and Brothers Committee Details ·of the campaign were take sufficient copies for his Clllld the Diocesan Executive outlined here and at a meeting parishioners. Board of the CCD. of vocation direCtors in New Each parish is to name a Registration fee will be $1.00. York by Father William C. priest-vocation director. During Il1'tJaose attending should brin~ ,Clark, assistant director of; vo ,the week of Oct. 27, when the Tu.rn to Page Five cations for the archdiocese. campaign will be launched, the
Rochelle, Notre Dame of Mal'y land, Our Lady of the Elms. St. Elizabeth, 8t.- Rose, Dun barton,D'Youville, Emmanuel, Fontbonne, Georgian Court, Good Counsel, Gwynedd Mercy, Har riman, Holy Family, Immaculata. Immaculata College of Wash ington, Manha-ttanville, Manor Junior College, Maria Regina, Maryhurst, Marymount of New York, Marywood, Mercyhul.'st, Madonna, Mount Mercy, Mount St. Mary of New Hampshire, Mount St. Mary' of New York. Nazareth of Rochester, New ton College of the Sacred Heart, Notre Dame of Ohio, Notre Dame of Stanten Island, Regis, Rivier, Rosary Hill, Sacred Heart of Alabama. Sacred Heart of North Caro lina, St. ~oseph, St. Joseph's of Maryland, St. Thomas Aquinas, Salve Regina, Seton Hill, Trin ity, Villa Maria. COLLEGES FOR MEN Biscayne, Holy Cross, Fair field University, King's College, LaSalle, Manhattan, Mount St. .Mary, Providence College. St. John Fisher, St., Joseph's of Pennsylcania, St. Michael, St. Vincent, Siena, University of' Scranton, Walsh, Xavier Uni "ersity. Turn to Page Two
Sees' Plan Vocation Promotion Campaign' b()()ks are to be distributed, vo cation ,sermons are to be given and 30 teams of five' members each are to fan out to all schools for vocation discussions. In addition, there will be a pastoral letter from Archbishop Thomas A. Boland, who has pro claimed the week as a "Week of Prayer for Vocations," and the vocation book is to be the focal Turn to Page Twenty
Governor Hughes Vetoes Silent Prayer Bill TRENTON (NC)-There won't be any period of silent meditation in New Jersey public schools this year after all- unless the teacher wants some peace and quiet himself. Gov. Richard J. l;Iughes has vetoed a bill which would have permitted any board of educa tion, or an individual teacher, to order a minute of silent medi tation at the start of the school day. Sponsors of the legislation admitted it was designed to cir cumvent the U. S. Supreme Court decision barring prayer im public scl!ools. Those who were opposed to religious practices could use the time to meditate on their studies, or what is more likely, to daydream, if they so wished, said the legislators who pushed the measure through. But Gov. Hughes will have none of it. "At best," he said in his veto message, "this bill would be a meaningless gesture without sufficient legal effect. At worst, it could be construed as an attempt at legislative u,surpation of the legitimate functions of the judiciary. , "If the brief period of silent prayer or meditation provided for in this bill is, indeed, not a religious service or exercise, there is no need for such legis . lation. No enabling legislation is required to permit individual teachers or local school authori~
ties to adopt the practice o!
holding moments of silence u
the classroom.
"To the extent, however, that
this bill may be designed to cir cumvent court decisions prohib iting religious exercises in the public schools, it represents'" an attempt to' usurp judicial au thority and is' unconstitutional as a violation of the 'Establish ment Clause' of the First Amendment."
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Cardinal Appea'is To' Semin'arians
>'2 "IPo~e
AsJ.<s. MusicianslnJr~d,~~e,: . More .,Music; , nrBtoCEllr®,[fW@~ie~.;.c.
PHILADELPHIA (NC) Oardiml.l, Krol opened the school year at'St: Charles Borromeo Seminary in neaE'b ~ohn
VATIcAN CiTY (NC)':'- Al . undertaking":""which' as you well though some new musical inno know are Gregorian chant, Sa:" vations in Church music leave cred polphony and modern most Catholics perplexed, nev 'music, the organ and other mu ertheless, musicians themselves sical instruments and the texts have the task of working out in the vernacular and,in Latin ways of introducing more and would be, impossible." " . more music into liturgical cere-' Pope Paul hastened to add: monies, Pope Paul VI told Italy's "Let it not be believed that by association of musicians, the. these remarks it is intended to Santa Cecilia Association. impose limitations restricting Pope Paul noted that "in Italy,. ~he creative capaci~y of tht: 'art Il() less than in other countries, 1St, of the composer or the ·no there is now more singing by' the less inspired capacity of the. per... Christian people at the sacred former, or that it :is' intended meetings. New texts and new' to'exclude'musical: or vocal ex...· melodies have been grafted on pr~sssion characteristic .of the the ancient arid venerable trunk, nature and of the customs" !>f' . promising. buds sprouted. up in . 'p~ople . educated. to. civ:iliz;ttions '. the. spritual~pri.ng· whic.h now' '~other than th~t.of the WE;:st;" I floods and. penetrates' the, life of .I ::y7?urch in such a meanin'gf':!l
by Overbrook with an appeal·tlIj the Philadelphia archdiocesal!ll seminary students for sanctit3J" · scholarship and self-discipline.. The cardinal in a recent lett.eIr to priests of the archdiocesa pointed up the current decling in the number of religious voca= tions.
Be told the seminarians at Q concelebrated Mass that, he ha<lll. · come 10 share- with them Q ,"common concern," .the .wortbj,., ness of candidates for the priest.-. : hood. ". Praising St. Charles Borromoo Seminary for 'its l,36-year..ol<lll. trcldition of forming holy ,and learned priests, the cardinal saMll he had nevertheless noted ilm some among certain recently Oll'o dained priests who "had failetll in the priesthood" a lack of io- ·:timacy with Christ, a la~k of ap. preciation for the basic princi ples of philosophy and theology" and a lack, of self-discipline which led them to 'give up' aO the first sign of adversity." Primary Tasks The cardinal told the semi narians their primary tasks were spritual development through personal prayer; serious study oil! philosophy and theology to eval"; uate curre,nt intellectual trends and development of personal re-o sponsibility through directed! discipline. "My prayer," the cardinal saiell;, "is that each one of you may truly become what he is calloo to be, an 'alter Christus' _ another Christ."
'N~w::: Mcrrol~fY'
The Pope noted, however, that' C.ontinued from' Page One there are still problems. "There of Christ. It is ,therefore, in is no lack of resistance and there . cluded in' the Christian image of . are many difficulties in the ren man and' it is only in this that ovation 0 0 Co It is not always it obtains its authentic mean possible to render due' honor, to ing." ., • the ,ancient and most preciowi "In God's plan," he continued, heritage. ,'any person could have discerned New musical expressions do not ·readilY. and clearly' .all the dic TWO 'OF TlHIOUSANDS:Msgr.Anarew P. Landi;' ag..; always harmonize with ·the mag 't'<ltes of this natural moral law. nificent and venerable ecclesias But man sinned, He sins today. sistant executive di~tor of CRS' photographed these two. tical tradition, so valuable from This sinful condition makes the undernourished children of Ikot Ekpene, Biafra, who are thE' ~111tural point of view. discernment of the' dicta~es o:f just two amOng the thousands of undernourished youths in "On the one side, com,posi the natural moral law quite dif-. tiOl,~ ~ ..; ...._••..,. _~ \..:." ,u'e ficult." , . this sufferin,g African area. NC Photo. indeed simple and accessible, .But in moral matters, God but which at times lack inspira has given us the Church as the tion or are deprived of any "authentic interpreter of' these grandeur of expression, while universal norms' of the divine on the other hand, completely positive and the natural moral GelJ'il<elTcaJU (;[h1lQlPll'ell' Vote Fe;DcD(01n~ SnstefS novel and daring experiments law," Father Hagedorn declared. are noted which are bound to "If is not the prerogative of the ,Coril<l:<ell''!,ils Vows of Entering 'Novices leave us-to say the least-per individual Christian to interpret LODI (NC)-New concepts of where possible, urged help for plexed and doubtful." these laws as he pleases." Stresses Function Similarly, in civil matters "it the vows of poverty, chastity convents with low incomes and and obedience have been voted advocated that all nuns be kept Musicians have' the task of is the 'function of the' courts to by the general chapter meeting of aware of the financial situation smoothing out these problems, interpret t!le laws of our land," the Felician Sisters still in prog- in their convents. FUNERAl HOME. INC. but should not "lose sight of the and it is "not the prerogative ress here in New Jersey. Provision is being made for function of sacred music and 01 the individual to interpret R. Marcel Roy - G. Lorraine Roy
Delegates favor formal in- experimentation with a common liturgical singing," the Pope these laws as 'he pleases." Roger laFrance
struction to novices to prepare petty cash fund or a personal said. "If we are to' have a Stable, FUNERAL DIRECTORS. them to "accept celibacy as an budget accoiding to nomis to be Otherwise, "any. attempt at an 'orderly and a peaceful SOciety enrichment of the entire person- approved by provincial superi-, 15 Irvington Ct. renovation would be' in vahi and we must all recognize our need 'ality,~' There will be a change OI'S. New Bedford . the right and appropriate utili for and our" dependence' upon' in the title of the vow' from
zation of the varioUs structural the eternal law of Goa and its chastity ·to virginity. ~ 9.95-5166 . elements of the noble and holy various ·manifestations in the Regarding' obedience, deIe-' et Ultreya nature of man, in revela-tion and Cursillistas. of the Fall River. in human determinations," he ·gates' voted that' the subject be · reevaluated in the light ·of Vat-·· " l l h ld .'0..:.: .s~d. deny this objectiv~,; iean Council II and that mutual area WI 0 an UUr~ya ~eet., D. D. ..Wilfred·'C. . . . ',. ~ivin~ly 'established order is to service be emphasized..This will ing at 7:45 Saturday night, Oct.. Continued from Page'pne ." .' deny the very fopndation of hu": ·eliminate the 'practiceof writing . 5 .at 8acx:ed Hearts . A cademy, ". Sullivan ' .Driscoll '. . ' '. " COEDUCATIONAL; . " .... ,,; ,- ~an. 'dignity, ,9f human fr~edom requests for permissions. . Prospect S~reet. A group reunion'" .' .. ".. and .of a peaceful communIty. To FUNERAL HOM'E On I>Overty, ... ~e delegates ·will· be followed by MaSlk '.'
.. Assumption, Belmoni' 'Abb~y; :-: 'r,~ to live by these objective have suggested optIons for ser-··"" .' . ' . .... . . '..
Boston College, C'<IDisius/' The' . stand'ards is to create a society· 469 LOCUST STREET' . yice to the poor be provided Catholic University of .AJnerica,,, . of': chaos' and eventoally anar FAll RiVER, MAS~. Santa Fe, Steubenville, Domini chy." can of Wisc~)Dsin; Duquesne Un1 672-3381 Receives Funeral Home versity. Mass' Ordo ST. LOUIS (NC)-The St. Fordham University, George 571 Second Street • Louis University School of 'Nur town University John Carroll FRIDAY-St, . Francis of Assist", .sing physiCs) therapy depart-' Fall River, Mass. University, Lc Moyne, Loyoia ,Confessor. III Class. White. . ment has received a teaching and University of Chicago, Marist,' 679-6072 . Mass Proper; .Glory; Common traiheeship grant from the Vo Marquette University," Merri Preface. cational Rehabilitation Adminis- . MICHAEL J.. McMAHON mack, Mount St. Paul, Niagara SAT~DAY-Saturday Mass of tration of the U:S. Public Health . Registered Embalmer University. Blessed Virgin (V). IV Class. Service for $29,764, to support its Licensed Funeral Director St. Anselm's, St. Bonaventure White. Mass ~roper; Glory; physical therapy program. ... University, St. Francis of Maine, ?,. " .,' Preface" of Blessed Virgin. . I_ I • St. Francis of Pennsylvania, St. , OR ~ Louis Universlty, St'. Mary's Uni St. Placid & Companions. Red. ~'!i'<e-<ecaJlJ'il@ <e@IJ'il*@!i'@iril<e@ DOANr;: o 8E.ALoAM!;:S versity, Seton Hall University, SUNDAY-XVIII Sunday After . , A pre-Cana conference for en
INCORPORATEO Stonehill. . Pentecost. . II Class. Green. gaged couples will be held Sun
lF1l1WIUefl"(zaU UllI1IiIJl11Ue, University of Dallas, The Uni-' Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; day night, Oct. 6 at Sacred
550 Locust Street' versity of Dayton, The Univer . Preface of Trinity, Heart School, Fall ·River. Fur
sity of Detriot, 'University of MONDAY-Blessed Virgin Mary ther information is available at
!FaIn River. Mass. Portland, Villanova University, of the Rosary. II Class. White. all rectories.
o HYANNIS ·672-239~ Wheeling. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; <) HARWICH PORT Preface of Blessed Virgin. nto!i.e IE. Sullivan o SOUTH YARMOUTH .TUESDAY-:-St. Bridget, Widow. _N~r&:!i'@U@®W Jeffrey IE. Sullivan III Class. White ' OR 11 OCT. rr(Q)~'iJY 1f(](Q)(lJJ ~~ SS. Sel"gius & Companions, \ Rev. James A. Downey, 1952, . [Q)~V(Q)'iJU(Q)~ Pastor, Holy Ghost, Attleboro. .DAUGHTERS, OF ST.,PAUL~onlbine a lite of Red. WEDNESDAY~t. John Leon ' OCT."14 _;.prC)yer il'1d,act.ipn. Bring~rs. of the qQSp~t Mes· Oct. 6 - Our-Lady of the ;'ard,' Con~essor.:, III Class.'>" Rev. Dennis M:· Lowney, 1918, 'sage to souls everywhere bY·.weans of persoriaI ,,: . ;F!?ly. . Rosary, Fall Whit~: _ ,,:':'.::: :'., ',' ,Assistant, ,Sacred Heart,.Taun,:"" ,contact; P,auline Missionari~s :labor in 30 Nations. ; " River. : '.. . ' ..":,,;'; OR ." ton. C'" 'Members 'witness to"Chfist iii a unique"m~isslo~ S ' " .'. .' 'propagation of'.L the-' printed Wo'rd of I God.' .The' : Our Lady of. the'Holy t. Denni~; e;tc., .Martyrs, Red. -. .",. Sisters·'write. illustrate. ,priflt and bind,. their own ' " Rosary, Tauilton.· . .. ..Glory;. Common Preface. . :..- d · TIlE ANCHOR.' '".. ".' publications 'and .diffuse them, -among.·people of'. Oct. 13-st. "H~d~ig, N e'~ .. ·THURSDAY-St. Francis Borgia;·· Sec9nd" C~ass Postage Paid'. at· fall"Rlver", '. ,all .creeds,. races and cultures,· ,Young ,girls,.; 14-23 Confessor III 'Class Wh·'t .' Mass. Pubhshea every .Thursday .. al 410 Interested I'n th',s v,'tal M,'ss' 't t B e dfQr d " . " . : ' ') .' ~ ..... iv.iasr'Pro~~r; Glory; Co~o~" '~?~~~ndc~{j.v;I~~erre~~'~~tR;~:r£j~~~~~:n~, 0.,. ~EV.1VI0THER s~;E~8~ \Yf! e....11: '. P r e f a c e . , RlveL SUbsC~ipt!9n. price .by m~lI. ,p'ostpald . -' 50 St' 'Paul's' Ave.. Boston. Mass.' 02130 ., ... ,.' .., -,:":00"",' "'. . '$4.00 per"ylllW ," ; .. , lS=..;;:=,'=.======;~ ~ .•==.=.' :~,~."",,;'===-======= _"""",;,;" ...Y
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lasque Prelate Sees Violations Of Concordat MADRID (NC) - The Iharge by a Basque bishop fibat the arrests of priests Mld the search of churches lIUld church files by provincial police were violatioris of the eoncordat between Spain and the Holy See added fuel to the ~ready sizzling conflict, between ~ clergy of the Basque prov-, mees and the government of nen. F,rancisco Franco. Bishop Lorenizo Bereciartua IV Balerdi, the 73-yeaJ;,-0Id Ordi ID8ry of San Sebastian, in a pas toral read at all the 'Saturday" and Sunday Masses in the dio eese in the pel"turbed Guipuzcoa province, said the arrests of the priests on various charges in eonnection '¥ith the Basque ~paratist" activities and police searches of churches, monas teries and church offices '¥ere a violation of the guarantees set fJor.th in the 1953 Spain-Vatican eoncordat. 'Phe Spanish government con «lends that some Basque priests are' active in an illegal Basque Separtist movement called Euz kadi Ta Askatasuma (ETA), '¥hich seeks Basque administra 't'ive and linguistic autonomy from the Spanish central gov ornment. With increasing Basque unrest i\)). the northern provinces and '€he assassination of San Sebas ltian's chief of police, Meliton Matanzas, the Franco govern ment suspended several classes of civil rights guaranteed by the Spanish constiotution in the Gui puzcoa province. Estimates of the number of priests arrested in connection with the Basque disorders bave varied and have n<n been eonfirmed. Government spokes men said only about three <priests have been arrested in San Sebastian and three others detained. The government also insists that there have been no violations of the concordat.. In the adjoining diocese of Bilbao, Bishop Pablo Gurpide, also 70 years old, has been faced with a "revolt" of some 40 of bis diocesan priests who claim the bishop is a puppet of' the Spanish government and staged a "sit-in" in the office of the wear general to draw up de lRands that Bishop Gurpide re IiJign. Bishop Gurpide appointed a deputy, Msgr. Jose Angel Ubieta, to set up a commission to deal with the problems connected with some elements of the e1ergy. When the commission Itself issued unauthorized ~ewspapers" which were called "'subversive," Bishop Gurpide Il'Ushed back from a vacation oUitside his diocese to make elear that he was the only ~urch authority in his area.
Dominican Superior To Attend Rites SOMERSET (NC) - Father Anlceto Fernandez, O.P., master general of the Dominican order, lis expected to participa,te in ceremonies commemorating the !60th anniversary of St. Joseph parish here in Ohio, which '¥ill be observed Oct. 5 and 6. 'l'he parish, conducted by the Dominican Fathers will be 150 fears old on DeC. 6, but due to possible unfavorable weather _nditions during the Winter months here, the observance is ... be held earlier. Father Fernandez, who will be III the United states at the time ... attend the Dominicans' gen et'al chapter meeting in Chicago, As expected to take part in the *»ncelebrated Mass of thanks 8iv~ in St. Joseph church, oct.
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No. Dartmouth" Assumptionist to Head
Ca~ada Center After Moscow Stay "There is a tremendous number of Catholics in Moscow-members of the diplo matic corps and the press," says Rev.' Eugene V. LaPlante I of North Dartmouth. At least it seemed that way to the young Dartmouth Assumptionist, who just returned from a three-year period in Moscow as Catholic chaplain of the foreign colony there. Father LaPlante went to Russia °to take over the Mos cow post from aNew Bed ford neighbor, Rev. Joseph F. Richard, who had completed his three-year assi,gnment there. He moved into the same "for eign" apartment house in Mos cow that has served as com bination home and chapel for the city's Cathooic chaplain since the Assumptionist Order first was permitted in 1934 to send one priest at a time to the Rus sian capital to administer to the spiritual needs of the foreign colony. Then Father Richard departed and Father LaPlante was left alone. ' Smile Tenls Story "'i spent most of my time with the foreign colony," he says, ex plaining the only "real" con tacts he had with Russians other than the cleaning woman who came three times a week and small shopkeepers - was at official gatherings. "Fortuna,tely, I knew some Russian before I went, be<:ause I didn't have much time to study there," he recalled while leaning back in a chair on the patio of his parents' home at 42 Spring Street. Mrs. Eugene A. LaPlante, in the way of mothers everywhere, walks across the house carry ing a tray with glasses of lemon ade. Her smile, when asked if it is good to. have her priest son home a:gain answers the question without words. From the classrooms at As sumption College in Worcester, where Father LaPlante was an instructor in theology, to the post of chaplain and apostolic administrator' of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ,was a giant step for the young priest who was ordained in France in 1958 and received a doctrate in Canon Law in 1963 from the Lateran Pontificial University in Rome. Busy Schedule However, the switch from' ac ademic life to pastoral work was one he obviously enjoyed, despite his battles at the kitchen range in his apartment. If nothing else, he did learn to make clam chowder there, "with canned, minced clams I got at the commissary." "Cooking aside, Father's sched ule .in Moscow was a busy one. Each morning he celebrated Mass in the apartment. One evening a week he also cele brated Mass, "usually in the apartment chapel, sometimes in someone else's apartment." He said three Masses each Sunday, at. 9 in the morning and at noon in a chapel at the American Embassy - ''the Prot estant chaplain held services there every other Sunday and Sund·ay School classes on alter nate Sundays"-and an evening Mass at his apartment. "Average attendance was 200 01' 250 on Sundays," he says. Various Nationalities Protestant services were con ducted at the British, Embassy on the Sundays religion classes '¥ere being held at the American, Embassy. The small apartment chapel "could hold 10' or U people. On Sunday, we opened up the fOlding dooni between it and 'the livin'g room could seat about 35." A big part of Father's work ill· Moscow WWJ conducting re-,
lEVER-PRESENT SOUVENIR: Father LaPlante shows his mother a memento of his RUS'8i'an mission. ligion classes for children. With Harrison, a Bapti:rt who came "some 20 nationalities" repre originally from upper New York sented in his congregation, he 'State and now calls Arizona found it necessary to hold In 'home. The visiting Anglican was dividual classes for English Dr. Eric Staples, whom Father speaking, French-speaking, Ital LaPlante stopped in Helsinki to ian-speaking and German-speak visit on his way back to the ingyoungsters. United States via London and The Italian classes he con Rome, where he had a privat~ ducted in his own apartment, Turn to Page Eighteen "because many of the children lived in my building." The other sessions were held at the American Embassy and at the French and West German schools. "A translator, one of the mothers, helped with the Ger man classes." Travel Restricted Despite the sometimes monot ony of his life in Moscow, Fath er says he "never had any prob lems, at least none other than the problems of life anyWhere." Milk, he says, was flown in from Finland. Bacon and eggs and such staples as his minced clams--could be purchased at the American commissary. "And' we could buy some things on the market." Despite his three yea,rs in Rus sia, he had little time to see much outside of Moscow, both because of ~is heavy schedule and because of travel restrictions in effect for foreigners. He did, however, manage to visit the old monastery town of Zagorsk, about 70 kilometers from Moscow, and pay several visits "to the old towns of Vladimir and Souzdal- about a three-hour train ride ~ that '¥ere very interesting because of their old churches and mon asteries." Private Audience From an ecumencial view point, he says he "got along very well with my fellow clergy -a resident Protestant minister who was an American and an Anglican from Helsinki who came to Moscow once a month to conduct services." The American was Bev. Rodger
THE .ANOfO'R
lhurs., Oct., 3, 1968
3
Interracial Plan Pays Dividends In New Jersey NEWARK (NC) - Oper Rition Understanding, an in terracial program launched six months ago at Queen of Angels parish in the ghetto area here for a one-shot effort, ia still paying dividends. One of the latest dividends is the opening of a thrift-type stOre common in the suburbs as a fund-raiser for worthy causes but unknown in the city where need for such stores is evident. The store is being run by Op eration Housewives, a g·roup of black women from Newark and whiote women from tJ1e suburbs, who developed the idea after a panel discussion conducted by Operation Understanding. Operation Understanding was a spontaneous response to an interracial gathering here which was examining ways of ending tendency of the races to drift a.part. Operation Housewives It succeeded and one of its· projects a silent Walk for Under standing through the city's riot torn area, attracted 25,000 par ticipants. Current efforts include a voter registration drive, aid in relocation of families and open ing a permanent office staffed with volunteers-local and sub urban. It also has organized tu toring and leadership programs and interracial panels which go to suburban communities by in vitation. When Mary Smith, a black social worker, one of the panel ists, told her story in suburban Maplewood, concerned women there met with her and some other Newark women, then or ganized Operation Housewives. "On the opening day of the thrift store," she said, "we had over 200 shoppers come in. The need for the store is obvious Our biggest problem is that we do not have enough articles to fill the demand."
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THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Foil Riyer-'-Thurs., Oct. ~, 1968
'.Empasi~es
Needl
.. Of Common Bible
Should Disen,tang Ie Foreigll1' Aid from ·Power Game By Barbara Ward What are we to say of the criticisms levelled at eco :nomic assistance programs from the side of people who, whether they are members of Congress or leading citizens or intellectuals or students would normally call tliemselves "liberals"? The first of these ' criticisms is that aid is used policy is, precisely, because by simply to shore up American'" far the largest part of Ameri ca's wealth and interest lies at interests and that this means home. a sort of uncritical anti-Commu Balance &fPowe.r nism. Any government, however But, say the critics, why is unpopular and the \]nited States nonetheless reaction occupied all round the world ary, gets U. S. with military assist,wcc and - support provid economic aid and even' down ed it can per right military involvement? If suade the State interests are not being defended,. Depart what is? But the answer to this ment that it is question does not lie with any the only alter thing 'as recent as capitalism or native to a Com Communism, or investment in munist. t a k e oil. and copper, or trade in cof o vel'. Her e
fee or cocoa. The reasons go two other cri·ti
right back to the origins of State cisms tend to
power and to the melancholy be made, espe
fact that ever since tribal man cially by the young.
One is the specific criticism ,began peering angrily at other tribes encroaching on his hunt that the decision to give assist inggrounds, humaii. communi ance to the government in South ties have resisted each other's Vietnam sucked America into a sovereignty and even the great full-scale war. The other more general one is that aid is simply est powers have not felt safe unless they felt "the balance uf one more instrument of "aggres \lOwer" was somewhat tilted sive American imperlialism" down on their own si(le. which must control other peo ples' economies and resources if To preserve this balance and it is to survive. Keep it favorable, large States The phrase used by an En have conquered others. They I!lish member of pal"1i,ament on have preserved "spheres of in the extreme lieft-"Amel'ica is fluence" and bands of neutral in Vietnam to Pl'Otect i,ts profits" States to protect their own sov --can be taken as typical of this ereignty. They have bribed and kind of attack. In the' light of .supported smaller governments Russia's behavior in Central to keep out the influence of rival Europe, this line of criticism Great Powers. This has been may lessen. But it can still be going on since the dawn of em pire-probably in the fifth mil argued that.' in the developing ,world, conditions arl} different lennium before Christ right and the danger is still to support down 'to today's Itussian attack, on Czechoslovakia. ' "unpl'ogressive" regimes.
VINCJENTIAN RETREAT: At annual' retreat for Vin c~ntfans Of Diocese, held this year at Our Lady of Round .Hill Retreat :Uouse, South D~rtmouth, are from left stand ing, Edward IKennedy, St. Joseph parish, Taunton;, Manuel Sardinha, Immaculate Conception, New Bedford; H. Frank Reilly, Vincentian president, Sacred Heart, Fall River; seated, Daniel J. Slavin,. St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis.
Anti-Black Bios
What, then, shall we say? Let . ,And if, today America is in us begin with the largest crit Vietnam and Korea and sending icism-of America's whole sys-, military supplies to Brazil or tern of government and econom Peru, maintaining its alliance in ics. Does the Leninist analysis of Europe, and 'supporting ;t lot of Big Business hunting mund the 'small governments with assist world for pmfits and enslaving ance, whatever use or misuse whole peoples to secul'e them, they make of it: the reason is' not fit the facts of America in the imperialism but, the balance of late 1960s? power-and, the, Soviet Union,' ~einstated Bishop
It is true that American over by the same token, is also giving eeas investment is high and aid, sending arms and using Talks With Clergy
gmwing. It is also ,true that pressure all round the world. BONN (NC) -',After being American business, not unnat In this situation of competitive, barred from the exercise of his ur'!l1y, is more kindly disposed world power, it is undoubtedly ministry for more than 20 years, to governments which do not easy for economic assistance to Bishop Stepan Trochta, ,S.D.B., expropriate it. It is also true look mot'e like support for a pli of Litomerice, Czechoslovakia, that'in certain areas-the Carib ant government than a genuine met with the clergy of his dio bean, for instance, or Latin investment in development. But cese, it was reported here. America - the United States it is not the aid that creates the Bishop' Trochta had received watches anxiously for Commu relationship. It is the underlying p.ermission on' Aug. 3 from the nist-Ied disturbances and has, in struggle'for power. And the way Czechosl~vakian government to ,Guatemala and the Dominican to get aid out of the contradiction resume his functions, but be .Republic, .laken ovel:t or cove,:t is not to stop it but disentangle it from the power game-if it cause of the occupation of the IIteps to keep left wing govenl country, Aug. 21, by the Soviet ments out of power. can be done. Union and four other Warsaw Does this, then'- mean that Pact nations, he was reinstated America is an old-fashioned See Spiritual Crisis
on Sept. 1 without solemn cere imperialist and economic aid an monies. , instrument of' lightly disguised I:olonialism - or "neo-CQlonial- ' In Czechoslovakia
At the meeting, Bishop Troch
ism"? ,CHICAGO (NC) - Events in ta reviewed the situation of the
Hardly. For one thing, Ameri Czechoslovakia pose a "grave Church in Czechoslovakia and
~a's overseas interests make up spiritual ct'isis," particularly for the problems of the diocese, He
It very small part of its total the recently liberated Eastern
said that the clergy's principal
wealth and e'conomic activity. rite . Catholic groups there, task was to increase vocations
al-l its foreign tt'ade - imports' Bishop Jaroslav Gabro of the to the priesthood.' .
and exports together - amoun_s diocese of St. Nicholas in Chi
,to no more than a sixth of its 'cago for the Ukrainians has de 'total \1ational income, all its clared. Oblates to Meet overseas Investments to - about Calling for prayers for Czech
Oblates of St. ,Benedict will eight . per cent. The~e invest oslovak Christians in the wake . meet Saturday aft~rnoon, OCt. 5 ments, too, go increa'singly to de of the Soviet invasion, Bishop' at Portsmouth Priory, Rhode 'veloped countries where there is Ga.bro sa,id "the rays of hope Island. Mass will be celebrated no question of "colonialist inter which were awakened by the at 4 o'clock" followed' by a con- vention" - to Western 'Europe, joyOUS news of the liberalization fet'ence and, dinner at 6. Reser te Japan. One reason why isola and' freedon. for our' Eastern vations for the meal should be tion still seems to many people Catholic Church became clouded made with the Priory or with • pos"i-ble option for American bJ' ,the new invasion." ,
Mrs. FI'ank: S. Moriarty, 672-1439.
285 Mercy Flights
To Biafra in Month
NEW YORK
(NC)-A total
f>f. 285 mercy flights, averaginll },O tens of food and medicines II
Cambridge Jesuit Urges Er,adication
Of Discrimination in Employment
. TOLEDO (NC)-FatJ:ler Leo C. Bt'own, S.j" said he has been shocked by evidence of deep prejudice in employment places, where he was confident it did . not exist. He said he has come upon this evidence. almost' daily in recent months. The JesUit from the Cam bridge (Mass.) Center for Social Studies reported his findings at an interfaittl observance here at Ashland Avenue Baptist church where he urged churches, labor and management to work with minority group leaders' in
:BATON ROUGE (NC) - A priest-official of a biblical group, sa.id here making the Seriphire!l available to the world's masses (J(( people can be accomplished only 'with a new translation of the Bible into the langua/Je ' . it is spoken and used. Father Walter M . .A:bbott, 9.3.. the speaker, is Vatican liasion officer with the Catholic Bibli cal Association and assistant to Augustine Cardinal Bea, 5..J.. president of the Vatican Secre t;Hiat for Promoting Christian Unity. Father Abbott has been working on the common Bible J;roject since it developed f,rom discussions of the Second Vati can Council. "The main thing is to put people in contact with the word of qod. This can only be done in modern languages," he told a CathQlic Life Center audience. He explained that the term common ,Bible does not connote ordinary or coarse, but simply' means common in the sense that it is universally understood. The original Hebrew and Greek versions of the Bible did just that, the priest said. They were written to reach and be understood by everybody, but tht old expressions do not have the same meaning today and ~ translated literally are not in telligible to the average person, only to highly educated people, he asserted.
finding solutions to the vast amI complex social problem. More than jobs and job. t.rain ing. will be necessary to solve the black unemployment prob lem, the priest said. He stressed the task of persuasion that, if . given opportunity, qualification will follow. Unlike white children, said, Father Brown, black children'do not believe all avenues are open to them, Father Brown added. He declared that today he can no 'longer h9ld the view he held as recently as two years ago, when he thought serious dis crimination was disappearing, at least in the major industrial centers. Father Brown spoke of racial discrimination as a "high octane explosive that can cause social e(?nflagration." The vast major ity o'f minority' groups, he said are more tired of crimes and riots and disorders in our city streets than are the whites. "The fact that some of the gangs that roam our streets may be'members of minority groups cannot justify racial discrimina tion and should not be permitted to justify callous disregard for conditions of life in our inner cities," . he ·said.
, . W2J
flight, shutUed from Sao Tome , to Biafra from Aug. 15 to Sept. 2., Catholic Relief 5ervjees. headquarters here stated. The overseas relief agency fll! U. S. Catholics stated that '0 airlifts of 700 tons of relief sup plies· were completed in tbe week ending Sept. 24. On one flight, 45 tons of alu minum loading planks and grav ity conveyors were transported, along with five tons of food anell medicines. The planks and con veyors, it, was explained, will increase the flights into 'the blockaded province where thou sands of Biafrans are' starvinl, by cutting down turn-around time and faCilitate loading and unloading the planes makinl nighttime' flights into the prov ince.
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LOUVG in
University French Section To Move at Cost of $340 Million guistic frontier established in LOUVAIN (NC)-Tbe FrenCh ~aking section of the Catholic' 1963 to settle the country's lan University of Louvain, center of guage' issue. The refusal until this year of (1 controversy that clllused the £all of the government of Prime the French section's faculties to leave Louvain, the Flemings ~'Iinister Paul Vanden Boeyants f:n February, will transfer out said, was an attempt to impose
FI'ench culture 'on a' Flemish
of the town over a period of 10 town.
)7'ears at a cost of $340 million. Government Pays The Belgian bishops, trustees The Walloons, however, main,. dJ. the university, approved and tained that it would be impos ~nt to the Belgian government the plan of transfer submitted sible to duplicate elsewhere the to them by the academic council facili'ties, such as the huge li bl'ary, that exist at Louvain, of the French-speaking section. and that the transfer of the The French-speaking faculty French-language section would cr:I. medicine is to be established' , threiliten the continued existence m the' suburbs of Brussels, the of the Catholic University. Belgian capital, and other fac The academic council of the olties will be set up at Ottignies, French-speaking sections, by the some 30 miles from the capital costliness of its plan of transfer, til the French-speaking section is, according to one observer, of the country. saying to the Belgian govern
The faculties of sciences are ment: "You are allowing us to
to leave Louvaln fi,rst because' be chased from' Louvain; this
staying there for a few years is how you must pay the bill."
would require substantial in Louvain is supported by the
vestments. The faculties of law, government. , education, philosophy, literature It was the pressure of repea t ClOd theology will leave later in ed demonstrations and strikes by' order to make use of the library, Flemish-speaking students' and with its' 1.2 million books, as professors, which resulted in in rong as possible. '_'dents of, violence, that caused the government to yield to their' Linguistic Groups Earlier, It had been thought demands for the transfer of the ' Chat the faculties of theology French section. and philosophy would remain at
Louvain. It is not certain what
effect the new 'development will
have on the American College
here, which houses U. S. semi
narians taking theology courses WASHING~rON (NC) The at Louvain. archbishop of Colombo, Ceylon, The· Louvain controversy has said he is "100 per cent" behind been a focal point for 'opposition Patrick' Cardinal, O'Boyle of between Belgium's two linguis Washington in his efforts to de tic gl'OUpS, the Dutch-speaking fend Pope Paul VI's teaching Flemings and the French-speak against artifical contraception.
ing Walloons. The town of Lou
Thomas Cardinal Cooray of vain, where both sections of the Colombo made ~he sta,tement Illlllivel'sity have been located, is at a ,reception given in his honor en the Flemish side of the lin-' by Ambassador and Mrs. Oliver
~'l I
,1
rHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 3, 1968
Archbishop Cousins Asks Generous Response to Pope's CoUection MILWAUKEE (NC) - Arch bishop William E. Cousins of Milwaukee asked all in the arch diocese to show their faith in the Church and their confidence in Pope Paul VI through "re sounding generosity" in the "Peter's Pence" collection, an annual collection taken through out the world toward expenses of the Holy See. The appeal, which appeared in the Catholic Herald Citizen, Mil waukee archdiocesan newspaper, noted that in the past many Catholics saw the Pope as a "symbol rather than a person" and "failed to recognize in him a human being li~e ourselves, with the same feelings, the same sensitivities, and the same capa bility for deep hurt."
place of Pope Paul VI," archbishop asked.
"How would you and I react
MOURNED: Archbishop to such intolerable pressures? How would you and I respond Bryan J. McEntegart, retired to the totally unfounded charge, Bishop of Brooklyn, .who that we were uninterested in and served 11 years as Ordinary unsympathetic tow a r d 0 u r of the New York State See, people? How would you and I sleep at night, if the voice of will be' buried. tomorrow fol bitter criticism; of repudiation, lowing a concelebrat·ed Mass' "Let each of us right now, in and reviling, drowned out the in Our Lady of Perpetual the presence of the Eucharistic all too infrequent expressions of Help Ohurch, Brooklyn. Christ, try to put himself in the acclaim and praise?"
Seeks Of Newspaper
CCD Workshop
the
"Seldom in history have men and nations been so completely at odds; seldom have previously accepted values been so ridi culed; seldom have solid tenets of faith been so challenged; sel dom, if ever, have so many set themselves up as infallible ex perts in all fields, while deny ing the Holy Father the natural authority that comes with his' supreme teaching office.
Visiting l})D'elate Backs Cardinal
Weerasinghe at the Ceylonese Embassy here. Cardinal O'Boyle' Appro~al and Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate in the United states, atteJ;lded the affair. PUEBLO (NC) Bishop Cardinal Cooray said he was eharles' A. Buswell of Pueblo "much relieved" by Pope Paul's has urged participation in a encyclical, Humanea Vitae. "It readership survey conducted by merely stated, the natural law," lDuteline Colorado, diocesan be said. Iltewspaper, in an effort to "ob-, In his own country, all the tain the judgment of all its bishops made a statement reaf lI'eaders concerning the value firming their loyalty to the Pope, @f, the pap~r and its future." Cardinal Cooray said, and there have been only a few, isolated Bishop Buswell, in a column ap fltearing in the paper's Sept. 13 cases of dissent among other Assue ,said it is important that members of the Chur,ch. the readers "let the staff of the Cardinal Cooray said he be Illcwspaper, the bishop, and all lieves dissent has come about ()f us know" what they th~nk in the Chu,rch because "the Church has opened its doors to about the paper. libel'ty in order to change some The bishop requested the read eqos to "say so frankly" if they lStructures that needed to ,be «think the paper does more changed. But liberty means the harm than good." If, however, right to do wh~t is right. It ettey think that ';the paper has does not mean license to do what 'real value" for themselves and, is wrong." for the' diocese, they should "state this honestly," he said. Hon-Denomil1lational , Bishop Buswell urged'readers
to "take some time to study the Rites at O~Yl1J1pics
survey," and to submit their
MEXICO CITY' (NC) - A replies promptly. Catholic priest, Father Ignacio "It is important to know to Diaz de Leon, ,heads the Ecumen what degree it fails to be the ical Commission of Religious type of diocesan newspaper you Services for the Olympic Games would consider too be ideal," he to be held here. There are also Protestant, Ol'thodox and Jew -'d. ish representatives on the com mission. The commission has planned 1II gigantic, non - denominational Coniinlied from Page One "Service for Peace" to be held llwlch, but Qeverages will be OCt. 10, in the Olympic Stadium, Gupplied. Further information on two days before the start of the the workshop may be obtained games.
{from the CCD priest-director in Archbishop Miguel Dario Mi
Gny area parish or from the'Di randa y Gomez of Mexico will
ocesan CCD Office in Fall River, participa,te in the service; which,
irelephone 6'76-3036. according to the commission,
More than 40,000 students are 'will be "a mass meeting to dem enrolled in C CD programs onstrate the relil~ious cooperation of Mexican people of aIn ehroughout the Fall River Dio cese: They are instructed by over churches and' the desire of aM :'000 lay and religious ca,techista. people for pea<:e."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of' Fall River-J'h\iFs·.; Od. '3,'.1968
Infection
The Power 'of the 'Artist It has_ been deduced that RU8sian action 81g·ainst Czech
oslovakia was taken as a step agains·t the rise of liberalism
not only within that invaded country burt within Russia
itself. -,
This unrest has sprung not only from a desire of the people for a larger share in the good thing·s of ~ife, but
·it has been sparked in a 18ll"ge measure by the artists:
by Wi"iters and poetS and painters, who in their works want
to express8lll the longings of the human g.pirit and who,
in the process, have come f'ace to face with a system tr,at
'tries to control not only the externals of society but the iriner thoughts of men and their ekpre.ssion. This Was foreseen by Lenin who once Wrote, 'Ufhe arts are the most powerful means for influencing the psy- . /. ehology of the masses, and the future of communism de pends upon the battle for the human mind'" : . This is another instanCe where the words, The -pen is . mighter than the 8word. are proved -00 be' not simply a , Blogan of fiction but a statement of faot: - '_ The artistS not only interpret the minds and longingS , of the people but anticipate these. so that what they write and portray is very often the first indication of a mood, __ a climate, a preview of coming things.. In other instances, also, -what the artists reveal is an ,inner longing or instinct of man, som~times good and some- . times bad, which -is waved before the public like a flag. seeking to rally a following and to gain acceptance by the pub)ic. Thus in this country ,som~artis·ts, short on' talent Gift @f ltaBoan Crippled Children and long on technique, have sought, to substitute shock for substance. A casual review of the latest in fiction novels -1r@ -BB«ll~rlt!l Needy Touches p'ope aJnd in plays is proof enough of this. Male and female nudity, TORRE DI POLIDORO ,(NC) !zed precisely for you," he said. themes of perversion in its most biZiarre aspects, ridicule -Pope Paul VI was visibly "Love surrounds you and wants of the sacred these have all become part of the Amer touched during his visit here to console your unhappy condi - ican scene not only on and off Broadway but even as family with 300 crippled or suffering tion and give to your life a little , happiness and a lif!;tle hope. television f·are. Parents are hard pressed to ,know what children, The Pope's visit to the Casa "You are tempted to believe movies to send tl:1eir children to. Play critics aTe growing l.etizia home for polio children that in this' world, in this life increasingly concerned over the effect -that -some stage occurred as he returned to the and for" you at least everything presentations are having not only on their sensibilities but Vatican from his Summer resi is evil and everything is ugly • because you suffer. -Well then, on their stomachs. The ray of hope is that most people dence -at Castelgandolfo. Assembled crowds at Casa now you see that there is some , will be properly disgusted 31t technique and shock masquer were enthusiastic in thing good in the world for;you ading as art. But it is to be hoped that enough of these Letizia their welcome. After blessing a too. You have proof of it pre people will raise thei·f voices in prate'art at the insult to their foundation stone and praying in cisely in the house which wel tastes and the pandering to the unworthy. ' the institution's chapel, the comes you, looks 8fter and ad . The role of the artist must be seen in all its importance. Pope sat -down amid the chi1-' ueates you." dren. The artists of Russia and the Iron Curtain countries are An ll-year-old girl ap working a revolution that may well overthrow the com proached the Pope on crutches, Council of P'riests
munist system. The artists, in this country muSt be en and presented him with a small Sponsors p'rogram
couraged to work a revolution for good in America. But collection of funds gathered by PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The :it must be remembered that a few must not be allowed the children and offered it for second annual Pastoral Study the starving children of Biafra. to tear down moraldty and civilization just because the Program sponsored by the The Pope was visibly moved many would not speak up. Council of Priests of the archdi by the gift. and by the children
,Y-isibly -Moved
Called Into Question It is interesting to learn that some of the people who walked out on Oardinal O'Boyle in Washington's St. Mat thew's Oathedral as he spOke in -support of Pope Paul's encyclical On the Transmission of Human Ufe were not the bona fide parishioners that they may have been pre sumed to be but were some priests and nuns for Oatholic University dressed in lay clothes for the occasion. This - is not to say that all or even a majority of the few hundred were priests and nuns. But some definitely were, and in this age when the emphasis is on sincerity and away from phoniness it is too bad that they resort to this kind of a masquera,de to make their point. -It -is not enough to talk about facing- issues squarely. It i'8 not enough 'to talk about honesty. Those who talk this way must also do. And when they disguise what they are in order to mislead the public, then their position - its honesty and weakness - may quite legitimately be called into question. .
@rhe ANCHOR
nCICI("II.\L
NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll PiVER
Pllblished weekly by The Catholic Press ~f the Dioces~ of Fall River _ 410 ,Highland Avenue Fail River, Mass. 02722 675-715] PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. CQnnolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER It. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo,.M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden, LL.B.
themselves 'and told them they were surrounded by many pe0 ple who wanted to hel,p them and who were concerned 'with their unhappiness. "This loving care has been thought out, set up and organ-
University Receives $1 Million Bequest NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loy ola University here, conqucted by the J esuits, has been named beneficiary of a bequest of some $1 million from the estates of the late Misses Mary Ann and Elizabeth McLaughlin, Father Homer R. Jolley, S.J., president has announced. _~ Father Jolley said the exact amount of the bequest is $1,063;561, with 90 per cent in stocks and bonds, and lesser amounts in real estate and cash. The' funds will be -added to Loyola's endowment, and will be used in the university's pro gram of expansion and advance ment, he added. The McLaughlin sisters were life-long residents of New Or leans and parishioners of Holy Name of Jesus church on the Loyola_ campus. They became interested in the university through their friendship with several· of the Jesuit priests on the faculty. Miss Mary Ann McLaughlin died in September, 1964, at the age of 92, - and Miss Elizabeth McLaughlin died in April, 1968, at the age of 94.
.":Catholit Schoo.s ,Enroflment Slide' Seems Halted WASHINGTON (NC) _ Currervt enrollment in U.s. eat h 0 r i'c elemen~ary anell -high schools may berevef-l sing the patterns od'recent yearlft with elementa-ry school totaJlll leveling off afterth-ree years of decline and high sc-hool enroll ment starting back up after • . period of little change. These, trends emerge from II study by the National Catholie Educational Association, which _estimates elementary enrollment for the new school year at 4,129,681, down only '35,823, _ . less than one per cent, from laSt year. A year ago the compai - able sh,rinkage was ~.68 per ce.a On the secondlll'Y school level. estimated enrollment .is at an all-time high of 1,116,395, u1J , 27,123 or 2. 5 per cent from the_ previous year. Previous totals had been relatively constaJJ4 - sin~ the 1964-65 school year. ' NCEA officials stressed that 1968-69 enrollment figures are tentative. Actual enrollment will not be known for several months. The figures are based on a survey of Catholic elemen- _ tary and secondary school pria cipals conducted last May by the NCEA Research Office. Turn Away StUdents, ~he
The principals were asked to estimate what their schools' en rollment would be in Septem ber._ More than half of the prin cipals (7,110 out of 12,615) re sponded, 'and the NCEA Re search Office made estimates for all Catholic schools' based on their replies. Commenting on the signifi cance of the projeded enroll ment figures, Mrs. Winifred R. Long, Director of the Research Office, said Catholic schools have been turning away students in great numbers, particularly at the - elementary level, as a result of "self-imposed adher> ence to smaller and smalle1l' pupil-teacher ratios each yea~ the shortage of teachers, inahi1 ity to finance the buildings o.fl schools -in the new parishes 0111! - the developing suburbs, and the ocese of Philadelphia will open financial squeeze of supporting the pyramiding costs of quality at St. Charles Borromeo Semi nary on Tuesday, Oct. 8, it was education in both the public and announced by Msgr. Thomas J. Catholic school systems." Welsh, seminary rector. With eight studies centering on the theme, "The Church in , the Modern World," the study program will open with an ex PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Dia - amination of "The Theological and Philosophical Climate in logue is a "two-way street"_ and the flow of "traffic" be America Today" by Father An thony T. Massimini, professor at tween seminarians' parents anGl 1heir professors is improving. the seminary. The lecture and discussion according to a survey made bJ7 fonnat for ~ach study will- be st. Charles Borromeo Semincui ' presented' twice each _day in in nearby Overbrook. _ order to make the study ~ro Concerned with the a-djun gram available to as many ment of new students in the pries>ts as possible. seminary, St. Charles Borromecl last year instituted an orienta tionprogram for new semina rians and their parents - an~ later, in the year, they sought II "feedback" on the effectiveneSIJ WINNIPEG (NC) - A three day discussion of what has been of the program from the semi na-I1ans' families. tenned unrest among the Can The answer to the question adian clergy got under way here naire was almost unanimous at the conclusion of the Can adian Catholic bishops regular "A.O.K." meeting. The orientation program, The bishops last April ap which began with an address oi proved a, study ,of the role of \yelcome by the rector of the the priest and his problems. In seminary, Msgr. Thomas A June, the bishops appointed a Welsh, also included talks • four-member committee of two spiritual fonnation, academic bishops arid two priests to c0 life, discipline and psychological ordinate the study. adjustment. The students w~ A group of 29 priests, elected informed of what would be e» b~ priests senates, met here to pecled of them-and -the paren. set up gUidelines for conduct -were told about the prog~
of the study. Representatives of ~ir son would follow aDlI
22 of the 28 English.Lspeaking about tpe help and encouraee
Sees In Canada were _at the ment they could offer b _
8essiona. home.
Parents 'Talk Back'
After Orientation
Discuss Unrest
Of Canada Priests
Says Racial Bia" Overriding Issue, In Labor Unions CHICAGO (NC)-A Cath me 'labor chaplain warned'"
7
THE ANCHOR Th,uR., Oct. 3, 1968
Urge Firmer
U~N. Action
WINNIPEG (NC)-The Cana dian bishops in a letter to the United Nations stressed' "ther1l is no 'surer way to promote vio dlenounced the absence of mi nor1ty groups as high-mnking lence"·than to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the charter of o:Wcers in the unions. human rights for "the masses "The overriding issue in the of the people" by resolving the Iabor movement is' still the issue "day-to-day violation of such of race," Father Robert A. ReI rights by cynical power struggle cher told the Catholic Council' or by accommodation among on Working Life. , giant powers." ., HUildreds of labor and man-' , , . At 'their 'general 'meeting here, , ogement leaders attended a M~sS ' , 'the Canadian bishops, in a letter celebrated 1:)y" F'a'ther ReiCher,,""; , to,:', EmiUo" Arenales Catalar,' chapiain: df' the Catholic' COun"'" ; Gllat!,!~,ala~s foreign minister and,,~ ell 'on" Working Life." ,',., ',,',' , pr~sident Qf the UN'» 23rd Gep- ' "This 'year i"he' said cia . ilew I, ~ral¥serribly'; 'asserted: f , • pro'61em hah '~riseil' 0 ¢' which ':". "In 'rec~nt months' t~o tragic <oom~S'''out "of, lliscouragement,) 'events have cast a shadoW- o~ weariness, and perhaps even, bi¢;., ;, , terness. ,',' I • ' ..: ,'" ' 'gloom over the hopes men " by adding, their suffering and "There are some who have misery to the cr.ushing burden euggested a division of the labor that fate has thrust on the people movement along racial lines. of Vietnam. "iI.'he history of American labor "In Nigeria-Biafra we are wit-' is filled with attempts to divide nessing the starvation and per workers along racial, or ethnic, haps even the annihiliation of u or cultural lines to the .deteri- >. , men~ of the' condition of work·, <' FOUNDER OF 'FRONTIER APOSTlLES': Bishop Fergus OGrady of Prince Rupe~ people; in Czechoslovakia we are witnessing the violation o~ ers"~, I i i ' ,British Columbia, chats with some of the students outside the only OaJtholic high school the sovereign integrity of 0 R s ng Consc OUSllles9 , • , • Fathe'r Reicher said that i:t between Vancouver and the North Pole. The school was made pOSSIble .through a lay member of the UN against ita clearly expressed will." would be a "sad commentary" ~Ill volunteer program, NO Photo. , The bishops asked the..UN
the condition of the American "to leave no way unexplore4, nc
labor, if the cremueratic process l possible action untried to remedy
hinders the assumption efl po AT the plight of the peoples caught
sition of responsibility by mem in this present ugly situation.·
bers of minority' groups. .' " ,
o.gainst black separatism m in the labor movement and
°
of
Seek's Apos,tles for Canadian Vicariate Offers Room, BOGrd, $25 a Month
"Labor unions," he empha-. sized, "facing the· realization of PHJl,.ADELPHIA (NC) marriages. Perhaps we ought to a frontier, to III developing re III rising consciousness among SAO PAULO (NC)-8ales of gion, to make big money." advertise, 'Come on out to Brit black and Spanish - speaking "Needed -Frontier Apostles." birth control pills in drugstores That's the appeal that was ish Columbia and we'll get yo~ Sacrifice Hits Home people, should encourage their here in Brazil have dropped 20 participation to the fullest in made here by Irish-born Father a husband.''' "That's why our young volun per cent after the publication of Gerard Clenaghan, O.M.I., on a iY'eulllg People union affairs, not only in meet teers are so important," Father Pope Paul vrs encyclical, tour seeking lay volunteers to The volunteers-80 per cent of ings arid the paying of dues, but Clenaghan said. "When a lay JIumanae Vitae, banning artifi in runl}ing for election for the work in the Canadian vicariate whom have been women-get person comes here who has cial contraception, the news apostolic of Prince Rupert. room, board and $25 a month given up the race for material paper Estado de Sao Paulo re highest offices." , The lay volunteer F.rontier for their professional services as success for a year or two of the ported. Most of the pills are He also pointed out that the teachers, nurses or secretaries. most important years of life, made by German or U. S. drug time has come for "management Apostle program, Father Clena "We do get men as volunteers," then this sacrifice really hits companies. to make a conscious effort to ghan explained, was begun by bring into the highest levels of Bishop Fergus O'Grady, O.M.I. 'Father Clenaghan said. "As a home.''' corporate management, blacks, also an Irish Oblate of Mary matter of fact, one of our wom "A ,young migrant to the Spanish-speaking, American In-, ,Immaculate, in 1956, and at that en volunteers described. the Prince Rupert area told me," Where A dians and to take the means time few thought it would be needs of our mission territory so· Father Clenaghan said, "'This is vividly to her pastor in Leeds, the' ,best sermon that has' ever necessary to' make this possible." successful. GOOD NAME "We told him he was crazy," England, that he got permission been ·preached in this country. A, ~.JI .... 1lE ...,IJ1o:...."" Father Clenaghan recalled, "The from his 'Bishop to serve in , It's. the doing of it, not the talk , ~"~"" [I..., -wllovn bishop wanted to start a high Prince Rupert himself for a year ingabout it that is really im Means A Of B~@d{Conel'ile 'schpol-.-the only Catholic, sec 's6 that the parish would have its , pressive.''' ~ onda:ry ,school between Van 'own priest in the mission for at "If there was ever a need. for GREA DEAf!.. i)ETROIT (NC)-The DetroIt, couver and the North Pole-and least three' years." 'Christian witness," the priest Archdiocesan De vel 0 pm e n t he ne~ded 'volunteers to staff it.' "Although' our diocese is, as 'said, "it exists in our area. It's Fund announced that a grant of He neve'r seemed' to have' any . large in territory as all of Great a region with 1I1 fabulous future $33,956 is being given' to the doubts. 'We'il get the teachers '," Britain," Father Clenaghan ..said,. , -and we need people whose ex AssoCiation ,of Black Students at ' he said. ' , ... "it has a. Catholic population of ample: will be 1Il reminder to at .W~yne S~a~e. l!niversity to The' b'isho did get his teach- only 35,000 out of a total popu- ' others 'of what life' is all about." p d 'ts lation of '180,000. One third of assist In the lmtlatlon of a Col lege of Black Studies within the er~ih Fathe.~ Clenaghan a nu the people are Indians _ but. uni versity. .. WI a ~ml e. most of those in the area are The university Is located In; "We've ~ad 607 volunteers in , young people who have come to Detroit's inner city. ' 12 years, and more than 500 of ~AIRHA The proposed College of Black them have been teachers,'.:,. tlie StUdies . will specialize in the priest noted. "¥d an unexpected Comtniss~on tn4dY,of community problems, ,by-product of the Frontier . COMPANY ST.' LOUIS '(NC)-Archbishop cultural studies" the ,relatiolllihip : ApoStle program has been' 110 JOM J. Carberry 'of St. Louis of American insUtutioiis to A f r o - ' " , 'has established a special board, Complete Line Americans and the history of p' I P the' Archdiocesan'" ·Commission NEW, BEDFORD Afro':'American movements and' for the Ministry and Life of ,Building Materials political philosophies. ' Priests, to give him special 1001 Kings Hwy. counsel on procedures ~oncern ~athe;l' Norman Thomas, exec- , VIENNA (NC)-Exiled Czech 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN 1ltlve director to the board ad- . '.. . .. ing the appoinment and com ministering the fund's one mU- 'oslovaklan Bishop Paul Hmbca, pensatiolll '" '" '" of priests. Five Open Evenings 993-26.11 lion dollars for use in the inner. 5.1., pro~sed that the Nobel priests were named to the new city, said: "The board thought Peace Prize should be ~warded board - three members were this college of study of b~ack to Alexander Dubcek, first sec elected by fellow priests, and eulture Is essential not only for reta.ry of the whole Czechoslo two were appointed by the arch the black community but the vaklan people. bishop. white community as' well' If In an interview carried on there Is to be a long-range s~lv- Austrian Television, Bishop IDg of problems In education." Hnilica said that such a step would honor "the peaceful solu tion of difficult problems," by which he meant the period of INHAMBANE (NC) - Pope liberalization in Czechoslovakia Paul VI has sent a contribution as well as the period of occupa tion by Warsaw Pactforces. the construction' of a 'cathe • BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • PARTIES Dubcek came to power last· ' oral here in Mozambique and 273 CENTRAl AVE. 8lso sent a special apostolic JanuarY and inaugurated a lib • COMMUNION BREAKfASTS blessing to the clergy, Religious eralization movement· in Czech- ' 992-6216 and faithful of the Inhambane oslovakia that included greater' FAll. RIVER 1343, PLEASANT STREET diocese. Formed' six years ago," freedom of the press, a political , " 993·7780 the diocese is governed by' Por- ',' voice 'fo'r' nori-communist groups. "NEW ' ~EDFORD tugtl'ese-oorri Bishop Ernesto and" relaxing 'of restrh:tions on ::!..III ':. T-H<. flN._.......... III" Goncalves da Costa, O.F oM. -,' " zreligious freedom.
Pill Sales Drop
Se'e
r
GEO. O'HARA
':
New
VEN LUMBER
CHEVROLET
re ate, ropOSe! Prize for Czechs
Pope Sends,Gift
for
BLUE RIBBON
LAUNDRY
·WHITE SPA
CATERER.S
8',
THE ANCHOR~Di~c~eof Fall River-Thurs., Oct. ~j
Ask .Ar<;hcr~ese:'
For HoUStrlg Aid,
.,.,68
rM,o"ie Stars Have Always .Bee~n Influ,enceon Style '.
I
.~.
NEW:A:lRK ~C) - The New 8pk archdiocese has been asked to help provide money for Q program to replace substandard .ghetto dwellings' with coopera tive housing on a 45-acre tmct Jill the heal1t of the iriner-cit~ Four members of the New: Community Conp. asked for a loan- of up to $200,000 in a meet. ing with Archbishop Thomas A;. Boland of Newark. Board mem bers who met with the archbish op included Willie Wright, eoJ"o poration president who is head of ,the Afro;.American Associa tion here, and Arthur Bray, ~ sex County officer. New Community Corp. is eJ:l oHshot of inner-city. programs conducted at Queen of Angels Catholic parish here. It plans . town houses and related housing of about 2,000 units, along with a cooperative shopping centecP» other housing for senior citizen8l and religious and recreational faciUties. It is designed as a self-con tained community which would keep black money in the black community. The program has a}... ready received some mon~ through the New J:ersey Depart ment for Community Affairs. . Explaining the call on Arc~ br'shop Boland, Wright said: "I want the 'Catholic Church to show its major concern for black people forced to live in sub':' standard housing." He said the arehbis,hop :was "most respon sive."
By Marilyn Roderick
W-
:A fascinating subject for a research paper (intraCluced into my thoughts by a cours~ I'm taking this semest er) could very w~n be just what it is, that inspires designers 1;l() create a certain fashion at a certain time. Is it a sudden Inspiriation from above, like a bolt out of the blue, or is and the beautiflul Faye was the main reason. it' a contrived creation th~~' From the wild mania of the bas been in the workings fo~ Beatles to the calm sophisticated
months? PersonaUy I would be' inclined to think it a bit of bot~, Many happen ings seem to in sPire a trend in clothes. Movies have always had a great influ-' ence on whllt the public,would like'to buy; from the days of Shirley Temple dresses to the present influence of the Dr. Zhi vago look. Two new movies that are 'already having an impact 'upon the designers' collections ere "Funny Girl" and "Star;" , Franklin Simon has already presented a fashion show of a group of clothes inspired by the Fanny Brice story and .one can eVen buy a "Funny Girl" watch: The la·te ,Gertrude Lawrenee was the inspiration for the mm "Star" and Donald Brooks, who designed all the' costumes for the film, bas styled a collection, of stunning outfits· for the ready to-wear consumer inspired by the film. Elegant is. the word for Mr. Brooks' designs, each one rem iniscent of the glamorous world of the theatre during Miss Law lI'ence's peak-the Thirties. One of his most breath-catching fashions is an evening dress cut along the lines' of a shi'rtwaist but completely covered' with sparkly, spangled paillettes. , T,hese stars of the 'evening that Donald Brooks has dreamed .up for his' "star" line are made for earth angels but I'm af·raid for most of us hardworking gals his prices are a bit out-olf-this world. The price range for this collection is from $435 to $1095, a fair bit of change to settle on. one dress. Beautiful Faye Thirty-ish clothes, a-la Jean Harlow and the great Lombard, got a real boost from the movie "Bonnie and Ciyde." Faye Dun away wears clothes like a mil lion dollar model and not since the days of, the lady-like look of Grace Kelly has there been an actress who wears clothes as 'well as Miss Dunaway. The slanted tams an,d pantsuit look of the era of the in'famous out ,law couple may not· be every ,~oman's sO!l'ght-after. look but. we can't deny th4a' it caught on,
'Infant Refugees in Care Of Missionary Nuns, PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 1;000 ba,bies, members the Ibo tribe have' been saved from starva,tion in the Biafra Nigeria civil war " by being ·transported to the island of Sao Tome off the African coast, it was learned here. . Letters to the Missionary Sis ters of the Holy Rosary hel'e indicate, that six of the Sisters are now caring tor the infant refugees in Sao Tome. Eight Sisters were sent to Bi:': a£ra earlier this Summer to aid . in relief efforts there. About 30 ,Missionary Sisters of the Holy Rosary are currently working in .BiafI:a.
o{
way Katie Hepburn wore her wraparound, camel hair' coat; the world of the silver screen has influenced designers. Dark days of the Great Depression' were made li·ghter for a few hours in a darkened movie house by dreaming over the sables, satins and lacetrimmed velvets hanging in the sump 'tuous . closets of the draWing room dramas of the day. War seemed very ·far away during the Forties when movie audiences ;watched. Turner, Grable and Hayworth top their way across the screen in glori ous technicolor costumes. And many ration-frustrated woman of that era went home to dream of owning a slinky black satin creation like ,the one Princess Rita wore when as "Gilda" she belted out "Put The Blame On Mame." . The tinsel world of Hollywood has made itself felt many; many miles beyond the hills of Bur bank but never more so than in the world of fashion. Now that the sOund9tage of the films is the whole world, not" only Holly wood designers but Italian, French, and, English needle artists are influencing tbe vast buying public. ~ealism Is Bywonll Now titat .realism is the by.. word of the movies of the Six ties, the heroine spends most of her time on screen under 'il. blanket, in a.-slip, or (in ones that are trying too hard) plays her big scene "au naturel." This leaves little more than a few slatternly housedresses to be whipped up by the stud~o de signer. Now both the designers -and the public will have to rely on period dramas to bring out the flair and showmanship in clothes that filmland was famous for. Thank. goodness .there are Still a few of those a year 10 enjoy..
Send Vietnam Children To North for 'Training' , SAIGON (NC)-For several months there have' been reports of the Viet Cong sending South Vietnamese . children to North Vietnam for "training." A cently captured Viet Cong di rective on -the subject is marked "Subject: Selection of ChUdren for training in North Vietnam;" The evidence supplied by tlie doCument is substantiated by :prison~rs of war (Viet Cong and Nona. .Vietnamese Army) who 'have seen' groups of' child ren .walking through Kontum province' toward Cambodia. Once there they were to' be flown to North Vietnamese. Newsmen who have met observers here say that for months before the Geneva set tlement was reached in July; 1954, the Viet Minh of that time had. already started their "re grouping" of selected groups to North Vietnam. They suspect that the same pattern is now being employed. After 1954, the ":regroupees" who had gone North for "training" were infil':' trated back to the I South to: evolve eventually into the pres ent Viet Congo
re:
FIRST AT UN: Sr. Ghislaine Roquet, the first ,nQn 'ro ,serve a's ~elegBlte to the UN ge~eral Assembly, ia:a mem':' .Get, Salary Increase's, her 'of the Oanadian delegation to the 23m UN assembly Auto Allowance in session. NG Photo.
. .
ST. LOUIS (NC)-Al'chbishoJ) John J. Carberry of St. Louis has ,granted most priests of the archdiocese a 50 per cent sal ary increase and a car aliow ance of, $75 per month. ' The archbishop's action was til British Diplomat Says Christianity agreement with recommend~ ,Non-Existent in. China' 1io~smade sOJllC wee}{s ago ... the St.' Louis archdiocesap .. .. LON-DON (NC) - Christianity bass;' compound. They sang council of priests. Under the new "salary sch~ is ·now almost non-existent in hymnS and had scripture read ule, effective immediately, China; Sir Donald lIopson, form <ings. \. of all pastors is increased from er British charge d'affaires in "Any worship that did go $150 a' month to $225- a m,onth. Peking, said. in a special inter on went on in private. So long Full-time associate pastors a~ view with the Catholic Herald, as we kept our practice to our increased from the present $100 national British weekly. selves, it was all nght, "he said. per month to $150 per month, He said ,that, since the cl~ng as are full-time priest-teachers. He has little hope of a re of the only convent in Peking in 1966, the Chinese authorities surgence of Christianity in Ohina , 'rhe. ~hbishop said the ra~ have pursued a policy of active if Missionaries are barred and ~s gi"en because, of the "in ",the odds seem very long in :c!ease'in the cost of living and suppression of all religious wO!' deed," be said. ' , 1.be need for uniformity." ship. Sir Donald, a Catholic, return ed to England recently, after be ing detained in Peking follow ing the sacking of the British mission in Peking by Red Guards almost: a .year ago. "Religious' practice has cer tainly stopped in public," he . ' said. "Only the last vestiges ,of .DOMESTIC & HEAVY ,DUTY' OIL BURNERS religious' life still ex,iat, certain- . ly in Peking and one assumes in the re&t of China too." Since 1966, British diploma~ MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURF.EE STREET~ FALL RIVER .in Peking had to lIDprovise pn;. ,vate D9n,.denominational prayer serwces of their own,. he said. These were usually held in Sir Donald's ~use on feast days, and theyu.sed decorations and ,altar ~lot~s that h8d belonged to CIVIL AIR' PAT~OL the Ohristian church in U!eemDOW
Pat.
WEBB OIL" 'COMPANY
TEXACO FUEL OILS
.Sales - Service "':"nstallation.
'Pho'ne 67:5.7484
Presents'
Women to Meet New Bedford District Council the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women will meet at 8 tonight in St. Hyacinth church hall, County and Rivet Streets, New Bedford. All New Bedford affiliates are asked to have rep resentatives at' this meeting and committee chairmen are also asked to attend. Hostesses for the evening will be members of the Ladies of St. Anne of St. Hyacinth's parish, headed by '·Mrs.W. Rousseau, president.
National Air Show
of
,SUNDAY, OCT. 6, 1968 New Bedford Airport
Free Color TV
-1-0 Be Awarded
Contribution $1.00
For advance tickets call 'Mr. Noian at 676-10n
to
THE ANCHOR,,3;'
Now's Time' Plant Crocus f,or Enjoyme,nt ~'n Spring 'I
•
I
'Thurs.; 'oct.
J~ph :and' Marilyn
Roderick
BALTIMORE (NC)-The fo cusing of popular attention on only one part of Pope Paul VI's recent encyclical on birth con trol, Humanae Vitae, tends to obscure papal concern with broad human and social issues, in the opinion of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Urban Commis sion. "In broad SCOPe and outlook," the Urban Commission said in a. formal statement, "the encyclical is part of that consistent papal program to assure the sanctity and dignity of human life, in all its facets, which reaches back to Leo XIII." The statement said that con cern over one part of, the ' doc ument-presumably the reaffim ed' prohibition of artificial birth control-shouid not overshadow the value of the rest of the en cyclical. It said also that if Americans had shown equal concern over previous encyclicals ,"the Amer- ' ican Catholic contribution to the cause of social justice, at, home and abroad, would have been mqre loyal to the popes." It called for support of the United Nations and renewed ef forts towards peace. "As, citizens of a nation cursed from its very beginnings' with the cancer of racism,'" i~ said, Americans must, examine their ~ttitudes abo~t the ~'solidarity 'of the human family" in the light of teachings by Pius XII,Job,ila XXIII and Paul VL
Our shipment of crocus bulbs, has arrived for Fan planting and we expect to get ~hem into the ground any time now. Crocuses are SO common in gardens that they are easily overlooked when we make out our orders, yet they are one of the loveliest of the Spring blooming else. The only difficulty with plants. Here we have an ex- this is that for more years than 1 care to recall I have plaC>2d an ample of' a very common order with this nationwide con flower which may Illot have much appeal to those gardeneem who search 'out the 'exotic and different, but without which 11, Spring wouldn't be complete. , We usually plant our bulbs in groups of one color, about, 10 , bulbs in a grouping. As, with most bulbs, crocus look best in n, grouping of one color. These particular crocus which arrived this year are headed for tile rock garden and the Mary garIllen. We 'ordered 100 in all, in Geveral colors, the whites and blues for the Mary garden and the rest for the rock garden., Need. Little Care,'
9,
Cifu Encyc~ical's'" Neglected Values
'.1 1.:
By
19'613
eern only to be told about a .week before Christmas that it can't be filled. GOod Semee Needed 'Any compainy that has been fu the mail-order business as
tong as' this one should be better equipped to handle orders! Real ly good stores that only use ciit calogues during the holiday sea son are in general more reliable. A store iIi New York is one that sends the customer a little card the minute they receive his order, and another when it has been Plls'ted so that he can keep .•,', A-. an eye out for the postman. This /' .... , , ' is the type of service the custom~.~ The marvelous thing about er' appreciates and one that these little bulbs is' that they' Jte,eps him coming back for more. PLAN BISHOP'S BAI,L: Initial plans fur annual Bishreproduce so quickly I;Ind need.; very little care. Unlike tuHps, ,So if you do want to do some op's Ball, mid-Winter social highlight, are made at Kennedy for instance, which have, a ten- shopping oy mail and beat the Center, New Bedford. Seated, Miss Kathleen C. Roche, Dio:. dency to peter out after'several holiday rush, take heed of what years, crocuses maintain' their the post office always urges the cesan Council of Catholic Women'president; standing, Msgr. size while reproducing tiie'ni:. public to do, only instead of just Anthony M. Gomes, ball coordiJi.~tor;Miss Margaret Lahey, selves without any special "at- mailing early-shop early, too. chairman of DCCW Catholic Ch,arities committee; Antone tentiori from the gardener:' tt is 'This is an absolutely delicious f St V· Ii; d P I f f0 this capacity to maintain them':' recipe for cheesecake. 'l'he direc Michaels, president 0 ,', mcen. e au con erence.'o Ul' selves that endears these little tions may sound as if there is a Lady, of Angels Ch.~rch, Fall RIver, plants, to most gardene.-s. lot' of work to the preparation:" The children love crocus. In but (spread it over a couple of our garden they are really the days and ,the outcome was well.,
first 'plant the children are worth the effort.
Establishes Department aware of and they usually make MUNICH CHlEIESECAKE
Quite a thing out of drawinlr President of Catholic Women's conege Says Of Jewish Studies everyone's attention to ,them. Bottom La7er This is fhe one time of 'yeai' 1 cup flour CHICAGO (NC) - DePaul Academic freedom Necessary 1lIben we have trouble with 3 Tablespoons sugar University here, conducted b7 the Vincentian Fathers, has es fteighborhood children bothei'- ~ teaspoon salt CINCINNATI (NC)-A nun without fear of prejudiced or tablished a complete depart !ng the garden. For some rea- ~ cup butter capri~ous academic evaluations college head he're described aca oon, little children are attracted . 1 egg yolk ment. of Jewish studies, througb demic freedom as an "essential and '!"ith protection against im ~perativ~, academic' agree ~ these flowers an4 try to plant Second Layell' ,proper disclosures." element" of the climate in which ment with the ,College of Jewish fJhetri .in their yards. Of course, 12 ounces of soft cream cheese : Sister Mary Honora said there Studies, also located in this city. the bulbs cannot be transplanted (one and one half of the the college community' flour should be mutual cooperation ishes. ' In bloom and a sure sign that :"large size) 'Sister Mary Honora, president ,'!to foster a climate, within "Under the reciprocal agree Some of' our neighbors have ill1 teaspoon vanilla ment, students enrolled at De of Our Lady of Cincinnati ,Col which students can pursue their Paul can take an entire program berited our crocuses is the faded ¥a teaspoon salt lege conducted by the Sisters of highest realization, can maxi blosSoms which we see"iIi their ,2 eggs of, Judaic studies at the College Mercy told a college faculty mize, the opportunities for ex eardens. . ' ~ cup sugar of Jewish Studies - an under confer~nce "respect structures" ploration and choice and, the , In the Kitchen " , Third ]LayeIl' graduate institution specializing should emanate from formal. freedom these entail. in four-year degree programs of Has anyone informe~ you of 1 cup poppy seeds whirled in a faculty" students -, administra,. , "StudentS today want an 'edu Judaic and 'Hebraic studies. Itt the frightening fact that there blender until they, are a tion channels. cational experience 'more rele addition to a major or minor ia are only 13 more weeks un-til fine powder. (I didn't whirl Sister Honora definedaca v'iihi to the modern world, more studies at DePaul, students may ' Christmas;' and 1£ you're paid on mine too fine) , demic freedom as: authentic an'd personalized re attend individual classes at CJS a bimonthly basis, that' adds' up % cup plump golden raisins, "The freedom of profession lationships between students to fulfill elective requirements. to just a,bout six or at the most %. cup sugar ally qualified persons respon and faculty, and the revision of Similarl~', students seeking an seven pay checks before St. ~ cup milk sibly to inquire into, discover, the campus community from a Undergraduate degree from CJS Nicholas takes flight. A bank grated peel of,one large lemon interpret, publish and teach the nest of adversaries into a viable car, fulfill genp.r,,1 pducational ad threw this fact into my path 1 teaspoon vanilla truth as they see it within the group of colla'borators." requirements at DePauL of vision and already I'm getting Fourtln Layer fields of their competence, and the last minute shoppers' blues. 6 Tablespoons flour the freedom to do these things U you happened to miss the 6 without being pressured, penal bank ad, the influx of Xmas catTablespoons broWlll sugar ¥4 cup butter. 'ized or otherwise molested by alogues should make you aware 1) In a mixing bowl sift to' authorities or other persOnS :that the Indian Summer dayts 'gether the 1 cup flour,' the 3 within or without their institu:-'
that we're experiencing as I Tablespoons sugar, and the ¥4 tions of learning: ',' .
write this column are but the INDUSTRIAL an'd DOMESTIC "The right o,f students ,to be
ealm before the rage of Winter teaspoon salt and with a pastry taught by thus unconstrlilined aets in and with it our' Christmas, , blender cut in the ~ cup' of but:" shopping. " " ter to make a mealy' dough. With teachers ,and to have acce~ to Catalogues are always fun to a fork mix in the egg yolk, that all the available data pertinent to, their subjects of study; , ~ive and look through. Mar';' ,has been lightly beaten. Press " ,Mutual Co.operation
velous to dream over, a bit like dough over bottom, of 9" inch window shopping in the comfort spring-form' pan and bake in a "The freedom of students to
of your own home. Many have 350° oven 25 to 30 minutes. Let take reasoned exception to the ~12 Hinman Street 997-9162 New Bedford • wide selection often impossi- cool.
data or views offered in any ble to find in area stores, but 2) In a mixing bowl beat the course of study, to reserve'judg ~.
"ali that glitters is not gold" cream cheese until fluffy. Add ment about matters of opinion, ' ond some of them also have the vanilla and the ¥4 teaspoon their drawbacks. salt to the cheese. Beat the two , One particular mail-order de- eggs with the ~ cup sugar until and,when coof spread over cool
partment store has caused me thick and lemon colored and stir ed cheesecake.
many grey hairs during pr.eholi- into cream cheese mixture beat 4) Mix together the brown
Gay shQpping and 0 I vow each iog until smooth. Spread over sugar and the 6 Tablespoons
year that I will never use their pastry in the pan and bake the flour, cut in the ¥4 cup 'butter
service again. chE;esecake in a 350' oven for 20 until coarse. Sprinkle over
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATTLBBOBO However, when their bright, minutes. Let coolon wire rack. , poppy-seed layer and place cake'. <oolorful catalogue arrive3 the 3) In a saucepan stir the pop under broiler about 6 inches 4V2% on all Savings Accounts ~hildren pounce on it. begin py seeds, raisins and the %. cup from source of heaJ for aboM 3
methodically to check wh'at they sugar, along with the milk, one minutes until topping is
want under the tree on Cbrist- teaspoon vanilla and grated browned and crisp.
4%% on Time Certificates mas morning, and' get their lemon peel. Cook over low heat, 5) Cool cheesecake but let re Attleboro - New Bedford /hearts set on some item that stirrina frequently, 'about 20 turn to room temperature before
serving.
<can'~ be purchased aJ.1Y DlaQe minutes or until thick. Let cool
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NEW YORK (NC)-Arch- ordinator for the DIocese. He was <hscllssmg the new CCD adult educa,bon program, bishop Terence J. Cooke of which will move into high gear next week When 13 courses for adults will begin at seven / - , . d locations in the Diocese w i t h ' New York has' appomte . .' . ' as an answer to the "God Is g Old from . Msgr. Joseph T.V. Snee, as t OPlCS rangm Dead" movement. sociate vicar for Religious of the 'Testament times to concerns All courses will begin 'at 7:30
the truth 'abOut the' cathoiie Church continues to be highly' successful. . In the seven years the CE4;: has spent $29,689.42 on adver. tising. In 1968, advertising has' New' York archdiocese, as ad of the "now moment." on nights designated' and will taken the form of full-page ads ministrator of the Catholic cen Bishop Connolly, who calls conclude at 9:30. Most will run. in The. Sunday New~, The Sun in CO-?P Cit~ here: .. . . the adult program "very imporfor eight. weeks, with a. few day .TI~es, The. Lls~ener an.d C,o~oP, C~ty, ~hlC~ WillI, p;, t~e ,. tant," said he hoped participants' scheduled for 10 weeks'. C'lasses Women s ~e.eklY. GEC took thIS largest.~oopera,tIv«; el?~~rprI~~ In. ,will carry o~er new insights will~end'iii Dece~beI;', and many ,step to. Intro,d~ce ~he new w'?rld , IS ,loc!l~ed ~.~ a 300 ~cre ., into thei.r home and work lives. wm.berepeated during a secon~ pr;lyer book de!il~ed for today :tr~(t of land ,m: th~ ~a~c~este~ , "If we don't have Christian eil semester, commencing' Jan. 27. and a.lso the cent~r s.new course ".rea of the Bronx, ~n the fo~m~r. 'vironments' in homes,", added At that. time. there wili be'a few' , of 10 bookleU!. '.' .I~e of. F.re~dom;larq·. It .I~ "~ . McDonagh, !'we're'asking for '3' changes and additions, noted '.: Two.. ins~rti?n~ of the., Prayer ml~,dl«;!:-, l.nC?Ill': ,deyel.?pm en :. 'wholesale interven~~on .of. the' '" McDona~h. . ." ... ' book ,~dvertlsement .. In , ~he... , whl,c~ wl~l~ontaJn 1?,37,2 a~ar,t.. Spirit when it com~.s t4) mold-:' . The . program is a' .•ifirst for . Wf)men S . Weekly. l;>ro~ght .. il;1 : ~~'1ts, and ,,3 P'?~en:tIal,pop~la- ',ingour children." He stressed southeastern New Eriglia'nd,;~ h~ . o",er 570 cO\JPons !l,'0m .·whlch tiOI), of. 60,00~., ; ' , ..... ·that home atmosphere, day after said, and rePorted that. there ,there were sub$CquentJy 70 en ',l'he Catholic center, whIch IS . da' is a much more potent h b . . '. b t rolments for the full c~urse. Two ~xpected to' be ready' in' the . Sh;P'er of chal'3cter in children 'tavfe een m ?dny tlhnqwDr.l~s .a oU insertions in .tl1e Sunday New~ t A " '. f 1969 '11 ,e..a b ' · '. n~w ., . than is attendance . I rom .ou Sl e . . e lOcese. IOpnn~ 0 .. . ,W.I for an hour an d ·the S un d ay T'lIl~e!i pro d uce.d expenment In commul1lty lIv-, ' . Rhode ~sland parIsh plans, for 853 enrollments WIth 'barely a '. . . . ' or so weekly at a CCD class. instance, ·to send 35 people t o . '.. . . . . Jl~~' 1t w~ll h a vet. faclhtlf~s flord~e"The importance of an adult the basic doctrine course thIrd .of the new advel'lrtJsmts~ IglOus InS t ruc IOn -: InC U In~ understanding of religious truth . campaign gone, enro men modern audio-visual techniques' t b t' t d" . Other aspects of CCD work from all sources total ·1113 with , . .. ..;' canno e overes Ima e . 'II t bit d f th' . ' for gl'oup ,meetmgs and SOCIals, WI no e neg ec e or. e 868 requests for the prayer boo ..
and for daily. and Sunday wor Needn t Teach new program, however. The
ship. ~nyone may take the ,courses? semi-annual workshops for cate Vital Program saId McDonagh. There IS. abso chists held in all parts of the. '{utican ~tennstQtes'
Msgr. Snee said the parish lutely no obligation to teach Diocese will continue and there' SUlspell1lde~ !j)rDest will be a viable one, providing CCD classes afterwards. To are tentative plans for' an ecu. PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A for divine WOrship, religious ed-. make this crystal clear, the menical program in January. ucation and for the social needs cours~ of~eri~gs are di~i~ed into The main reason for the adult priest suspended by the Holy of .the parishioners. Assisting a se~tJ~~ of adult religIOUS eq. courses was dictated by Vatic.an See last Nov. 30 has been rein him will be two Sisters. of. the uc~b?n a!1d one of teache~ EDWARD P. McDONAGH II:, tha't now is the age of the stated with Va.tican authoriza Cenacle, who will attempt to de-' tramlng. . Even the te.ache.rs layman, that adults in .the new 'tion to "the exercise of all velop a "vital, meaningful ,pro'" cour~es, . although pnmar~IY Church must be educated for priestly faculties and privileges" d I g th th d d h Id Rev. Lucio Phillipino; and "ram 'of catechetical' and adult ea Ihn WI ,tmeh 0 .. s 'a,n ,cd' I "t ' . " . their own sakes as well as for. and assigned by John, Cardinal' Of , "Group DynamlCs,' .' to 'be han Krol as., assistant pastor of 5t; . education,'~ he. said. psyc .0 l ogy ec mques, ... o~ those' of their children. The monsignor said he plans 1ea d urevocabl y t 0 a POSI t Ion In dIed in Fall River, by . Robert John Chrysostom church, Wal . f t _I. t h' I ' .' , Wessman, Harry Onoyan and Al II meeting of all future parish . ron v~ a ca ec Ism c ass.----.. . lingford. ioners, to organize the planning . Cos¥ ,are low, too. A reg[str~~ Vaselet, Jlll of the Attleboro area Senates Schedule Father Willam K., r..eahy's su :and, openition of the 'Clltliolic - bon fee of $3 for each course IS and all' veterans of Christian spension was ordered last year.. eenter. The first. of them will . charged, plus a small cha,rge for Family Movement activities. "If Regional Meeting foi· "officiating at a sacred cere:", .. .. t ts th t' I . d d you 'have the feast bit 'of diffi 'enter Co-op' City'. in January, . ex ,or o· er ma ena s nee e.. culty' in particip'ating in a dis ,NEWARK (NC) - Workshops m9ny, ·including the sacrifice of . fO,r class,. work.. There's no tUl on due process' for prl'ests the' the Mass," which, according to 1969. . ' cussio.n or. keeping .one going in working of. pastoral' councils, ."Working:'together in a true' tion or oth e.r f ee. the 'Holy 'See, "effectively gave .J the classroom, this is the' course education, the use of personnfi!l, A 8pirit of community,", Msgr. Snee comp Ie t e .sch e d u Ie VL . , public recognition and sanction said, "We can all make this en-' courses appeared 10 last week's . f(lr you/, notes ,the schedule. the role of the priest, and soc~al . to" a canonically. invalid mar. .terprise 'an exciting and dynamic Anchor. and :was distributed' Four 'Jesuits from Connolly action will feature the first' re- . riage" of his priest-brother, experience." Sunday In parIshes throu~hout High School will handle a gional meeting .of the four 'sen- John W. Leaqy. . ' the. Diocese. Offerings include a . course titled "There Is a God," , , ates of priests in New Jersey. The ceremony took place in' i . basic course in Christian dOc- described .as a theism' for a The meeting will be held the Church of the Immaculate Sees'Laity Council... trine, to be given in Attleboro, world that has come of age and Oct. 28 in New Brunswick, N,·J., Conception, San Diego, Calif., ,E,ncyclical Study': East Falmouth, Fall :River, New according to Msgr. John·J. Kiley,· Aug. 12, 1967.
Bedford and Taunton; and a AI b . A h provincial representative to the
I WASHINGTON (NC) _ The CCD. methods course, scheduled a ama rCn IS 0p National Federation of Priests' executive director of the na for Fall River, West Harwich, Stands on Record Councils, which suggested the
tjon's largest organization of and New Bedford. regional meetings.
a year laymen anticipates "intense dis McDonagh will give a discus_BIRMINGHAM tNC)-Father. Msgr. Kiley said priest-sena ~ussion" of, Pope Paul's encycli- sion course limited to 15 partici- Charles S. Sullivan,. 27-year-old . tors from throughout the state .. I a t' t' he fourt ' h . . of Vatican II.
. Alabama priest, has left the Dio ' TERM DEPOSIT CERTIFICATES cr:a I on b ll"th contro pants on the spirIt will attend the' workshops, and
meeting of: the Council of the It will take place at the Dioc-, cese of Mobile-Birmingham that summaries will be prepared
Daily Interest rlaitY. in' Rome,.; , '. esan CCD Center, 446 Highland charging that Ar.chbishop Thomas for an evening session' open to Units of $1000: : Martin H. Work, 'ex~cutive di Avenue, Fall River, as will 11 J., Toolen is "incompetent." , any priest serving in New JerOne Year Maturity rector' of the National C'ouncil oth'er offerings. Comp'lete in The high school religious sey. of Catholic Men, opined: formation is available from' the teacher said he left as ~'a sym "This meeting of the' Council' center. bolic protest" to the "contradic of the Laity undoubtedly will be .. Up to Minute· tions". in the. work of the Church M~ntle, the most irriP'oliant one to ·date.'! Other courses geared to the there. . . "These contradictions'· stem . t'I an Mora l't The only. me'mber from the momen t are "Ch flS Iy . . '.In from a'.HICk of correct leader-· Unl'ted States'on the l5-member f or a N ew A ge, "t0 b e slvefl Bank, by Mail eouncil added: . Fall River by Rev. Peter. F. sh)p,". he asserted. "They in . Over' 35 Years we !,ay the postage . , ~ ',~Un·doubtedl~ there will be Mune~ and hi, New,'Benford by clude such ·areas asadministra ~f Satisfied" Service i~ tEms~ .cl'iscussi rins ,of ',the 'qil\~y _ tiol1,· .human . rights,. ed ucatioil. Reg; .Master Plumber' 7-023 •. SOUTH YARMOUTH' .• HYANNIS' ~lical Humanae, Vitae, 'an'd an.' . and irr~leval1cy, of the,. Church ' .. JOSEPH' RAPOSA; JR. assessment'of the'worldwide re Louisville to Start especially to the young." • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA 806' NO. MAIN STREET sponse an:long the', bity to the D· f $'725 000 Speaking of . the' ·criticism • DENNIS PORT,' • OSTERVILLE encyclical. Also on' -'the agenda rive or,., . , . ,made of him by Father Sullivan, Fall Ri~er 675-7497 _.--~. are important issue's relating to ·LOUISVILLE (NC)_An arch Archbishop Toolen, a priest for peac~, human rights, violence,. 'diocesan development fund drive 58 years and a Bishop for 41 will be launched here in October years, said that "for the past I soc,ial justice and dialogue with in' the Church." to raise $725,000 for programs am happy to stand on my record Work noted there also will be ranging from aid to Schools to a as bishop. For the present and sessions -oil, the ·relationship· of new' marriage counseling' ser the future I am as concerned as. the Council of the Laity to na vice., any other that the true progress ·tional lay . organizations and The drive, announced by Arch called for by Vatican II be a INCORPORATED 1937 pl'Oblems faced in "presenting bish'op Thomas J. McDonough of reality in this. diocese," noting, the Chtistian message in a sec Louisville, will be conducted by however, that such progress be ularized world. a door-to-door canvas of Cath made ~'in keeping With the true. olic homes in the' archdiocese. .teaching of the Church.'~ Money collected will be chan Plans. Dormitory neled into nine areas: PITTSBURGH (NC) - Du Subsidies for teachers in Cath WEAR
tltiesne,University has announced. olic high, 'schools; .grants to JAMES H. COLLlNS,C.E., Pres.. , Shoes' That Fit
i!lims for construction of a 17 Catholic girl's high schools; Con Registered Ci~il and S~ru~tural. Engineer story, triple-towered dormitory fraternity of Christian 'Doctrine '!THE FAMILY SHOE STORE" , i,or 1,200 students. The'$lO million" (CCD); RoncaHi Center; New,: Member National' Society Professional Engineers '. .' bUilding, which will' contain a ,man· Apostolate, ,Cente'r; .pro: .FRAN(:IS ~. COLLINS, JR.,. TreGs•. ';afeteria' and swimming pool, grams for,. thepoor;.'c'reation ~f . will. double. the university's stu a family ..relations cepter; ,reno. .. ·THOMAS K. COLLINS, Secy• . ~~n~ '., .ho,,,,sillg '. capacity.': Site: vatiQI} .of, the. Cathedra~of toe, 43 FOURTH STREET
. ACADEMY BUiLPING' FALL JtVE~,·MAS$ ..~ ~learing· has.. b~gl1n and: comple,: Assumption; .and an emergenc!. Fall 'River ". '. OS '-5111
.fund•..... :'., . ~: Uon is .e~pected: next .Fall.
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Urge~Cru~ade:":"l'" Nell? kay~,e", ,~s Organ,iz~tion ~ays, C!turch Th",r,s._: O(t. 3,' 1968 11 F;, Liber.atlo~: ,,;: ' "" I,,: l)angerof Schism, (tp(Jstasy' " Expla ins I E~$ence F,~'" ,M.sery " .. THE ANCHOR
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MEDELLIN (Ne)-'-l.i&tm, ' ·WASHINGTON (NC)-The presIdent of CatholIcs Umted for the FaIth (CUF) has ,Americans mU8't eoininit' sent a letter to :American ,bishops saying that the Church is under a threat "so, huge themselves 1x> a crusade for that we have to face, it and call it by its name, The Church is in immediate danger of their liberation from hunger. wides~read apostasy .and. of schism." H. Lyman Stebbins and other officers of CUFf misery, sickness, oppression and . a natIonal lay .orgamzatIon ignorance, Bishop Eduardo Pir- formed to defend and pro onio, apostolic administrator of mote Cat hoI i c teaching' Avellaneda, Argentina, told the . .' general assembly of the Latin 'made the letter pubIc dunpg
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NEW YORK (NC) One hundred seventeen diocesan v0 cation directors from through out the United States met here to discuss problems in the field of vocations. • Msgr. Miles M. Bourke, pastor of Corpus Christi church here and former dean of St.' Joseph's Seminary in Dunwoodie, N. Y.. in the keynote address, stressed the fact that although God's in tervention'in the call to a reli gious is not as dramatic as that .. of 'Abraham, Mary or Paul, i¢ does not mean that it is not' present. He rejected the concept that II vocation is to be thought of only in lerms of one's personal selec- . t.ion and stated that the essence' of vocation is the ca'll toa life . of prayer and a ministry of the Word, and that this ministry must always be thought of as the gift of the Lord, a gift which manifests itself in the natural PQtentiality given to the candi date by God.
American biShops here. their first press conference here. The bishop, who is secretary CU~ s~okesm?n s~id the new general of the Latin American' , organ,l~atlOn, whIch aIms to ma~e Bishops' Council (CELAM) 'as ' the. v.0!,ce ~f. ~ssent to, Catholic well' as of this bishops' assembly," ,tea,chm,g .; m~g ,,~hr~,ugh t~e said that the sinful 'situation' in I Chp~c~ and the worlcl, has been Latin America "must be oorreci... ' , recelvmg from. to. 2,0 letter~ ed by justice and sanctit .'" " :,; of $UPP?rt a ~a~ at, Its" I?en~er ", y", : post offIce box. The orgamzatIon ~:~en a .man bec~~es aw~r~, i wasincorporated'in AJgusC ' of hIS ph)'slc~,l and sp1~ltual ~I~";'" Stebbins, a' retired business: ery, and, of ~:~ hu~ger iln~thlrs,t ; man from New'! RocliellEi," N.Y:, for .i.~stlce, m. hIS soul a deep,: said' CUF was' formed "to 'de- ' capacIty for salvation by the fend and' advance the efforts of L~rd begins to be b~rn," fue the teaching Church in Amer bishop declared. ica," and to combat the tendency The Latin American man of some Catholics "who wish to although suppressed, ignorant, break the doctrinal bonds that anguished, sick and a sinner- unite Rome 'and America." can, wi.th his intelligence and' Declaration' of PtirlJose creative will, "provide change', Stebbins released' his 'letter to while he is undergoing change," the bishops and 'read a prepared Bishop Pironio said. statement, including a lengthy Gift l'rllllcks Rot Inhuman Conditions "Declaration of Purpose," for Om! Vnld!o's Docks This man, he told the bishops, the o~ganization. ' BOMBAY (NC)-Sixty trucks challenges the Church "to give The 'declaration expressed donated by Pope Paul VI in an answer to I.'he meaning of support for the Credo of the July, 1966, to help rush food life sorrow and death." People of God, a rest.atement of grains from t.he docks to the t' B' h p' . traditional Catholic belief which ' IS op IronlO . Sorne Imes, interior are rotting on the docks 'd ·t· d'ff' It f to Pope Paul VI Issued last June, sal ,1 IS I ICU '01' many f P' . from the effects of the Indian ', th 11 f Ch . t ' and or the ope s encychcal, nd t 0' respo ' monsoons. "b f e tca ' 1 0 . h rIS, H' umanae V't 1 ne, b annmg con t ra ec~~se ?' ex erna murnan', ception. The 60 heaVY'duty Italian SECRETARY MORRIS, PRE$.DENT STEBBINS c~ndlbons. ~herefore, ,he' con'Stebbins' letter to 'the bishops made trucks show signs of tmued, there IS a need to create . heavy damage, supposedly due " It r 1 . 1 . d on the danger of apostasy and tionwide petition campaign are and Philip Burnham, a former cu u a, socIa, eoonomlc an ' h' . th Ch h 'd "0 to' accidents. Dock workers political oonditions that make it sc Ism 10. e, ur~ sal :.' n al~o envisioned, CUF currently editor of Commonweal magazine, claim that the "accidents" ai"e 'bl f . t . 'h' the one Side there IS a mlscel vice-president. possI e or man 0 gIve IS h~s ,8 membership of from 200 . d' deliberate in order to facilitate sinCere fidelit to the divine lan.eous an .cl,a~oro,us group to 300 in cities across the nation, Among members of CUF's Na the disposal of the trucks all call" y whIch unhapPIly mcludes some including Washington. tional C,ouncil are: Dr; Dietrich ' scrap in the near future. , "M'a n must do mIn, . at e tlIe ear, th anti-Catholic von Hildebrand, author and 'ed . . Catholics P who , , United tor Faith exploit its riches and place them 'Crt .out agamst. Pope '" aoul ~ Stebbins' denied that the or ,former professor of philosophy at,the service not of a privileged encych~al on cel.1bacy. ' ganization was initiated by Pa , at- 'Fordham University; Dr. . f 11" h who crIed out agamst hIS Credo Frank J. Ayd, publisher of the few but at ·t'he servIce 0 a, e f th e P eopI e 0 f G said , 0 0 de", '" an d trick Cardinal O'Boyle of Wash Medical-Moral Newsletter; Wil
ington ,who has recently been ...ihe Ch 'ch l'k Ch' t t who are still crYing out against, UI ,1 e rts , mus h' l' 1 H V·t" occupied with a defense of the lia'm Fitzpatrick, teacher of En
take up her cross from' which IS encyc I~a , umanae . I ae. Pope's, encycli<;alon birth con-, glish 'at Rutgers Urtiversity.
.' "', Ask BIshops' Approval Also Paul H. Hallett, columnist the resurJ'ecbon comes, ' the "0 th t1' . d . th . trol against a group of dissident, bishop went on. e m n e 0 ler ,Sl e IS and associate editor of the Na numerable throng of Roman priests. ~ _ .- AIJ WYman Stebbins stressed that his tio'nal Regist-er; Rus~ell Kirk,
Catholics in eVl;1ry land ,WhO, author and syndicated COlumnist;
~'" 3·6592 want more ,than anything else to group sees the current conflict Honor NCCS Staff Gen, Thomas A. Lane of Virgin
be faithful to, God and to 'his within the Catholic Church as CHARLES F. VARGAS Michael Lawrence of Tri-'
Member in Vietnam Church," the letter continued. bigger than birth control, and ia; umph magazine; Dr. lames Lu- ' going to the heart of the 254 ROCKDALE AVEt.-IUE "These Catholics, know with the WASHINGTON (NC) - Mrs. cier of 'Leesburg; Va,; Dr. Wi i
certitude of faith-even i;f they" Church's ability to teach with liam Marra, professor of philos
~atricia K. Krause, USO dit.:ec NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
can't bring it to expression~the authority. "We are Catholics ophy at Fordham; Dr. William
tor of public 'information-Viet united for the faith, not, Cath-, nam for the past three years" truths so especially nec~ssary at Olivel' Martin, a'uthor and chair
olics Uliited against birth con has received the Outstanding at this hour." man-emeritus of the philosophy,
The letter said CUF intends to trol," he said. Civilian Service, m'edal from department, University of Rhode
Stebbins further outlined the give "unswerving suppqrt" to Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, Island.
Commanding General, United the teaching authority of the purposes of CUF and the senti Also Alphones J. Matt, Sr.,
ments which motivated -its ;for Church. "We '" C *' are uniting States Military Assistance Com executive editor of The Wander
to offer it to Holy Church in the mation: mand, Vietnam, for her dedi "W,e exist in order to be a er newspaper; Charles E. Rice,
cated service,S to members of the persons of· the Pope and all rallying point, a point of unity, author and professor 6>f law at
com armed forces in Vietnam, the bi~hops' who, teaching Fordham; Dr. Thomas Schaefer,
National Catholic Community , munion' with th'e Roman Pontiff, fo'r the multitude of Catholics former professor of philosophy
Service, a'member ,agency of deserve respect froni.all' as wit-, who have felt bewildered and at the University of San Fran-,
blown about by" the 'thousand' USO, anounced here. ' ' hesses of div.ine, ,Catholic 'h·uth." cisco;"Geo'. Ahhur Tru'deau,
I ~t~bbiris.. silid' that thu's, far Winds of' false doctrine' being' USA (Ret.); Paul Weyrich of
'Mrs. Krause' received ,,' the constimtlY'Il'i.Jffed out'bY a thoU'.... tw,o' AmeJ;~can, ~ishops, "have award on the eve o.f her, depal--; Washington.
ture to the United States, where given ,SOlne wqrds, of. encourage-' ' sand counterfeit: teachers. ' ' CU.,F is now, forming a group,
One Teacher' ' /nent to him. Hc 'saie;t he" hopes she will join the USO' public' in , of advisors' from the clergy,
formation department nationai other' bishops will' rally , r~und ,"For us: th~I'~' is only one, headquarters staff in New York. the cause once they realize' the teacher: ,Christ; an.d only, ,one whose names; along with the
names of additional members of,
Mrs. Krause joined NCCS in purpose of the organization and teaching: ,whil,t we, al'e, taught • the national council "will be an the orthodoxy of its members. with 'authority' by the voice of nOlll1ced later. 1958 as assistant director of the Permanent' Office which Christ said, 'They that' San Diego, Calif. USO club. She Frank - Morriss, a Catholic hear you hear me.' And that has served as an NCCS staff' member with USO in San Fran columnist who is temporary sec teaching, for our purpose, is to cisco; in Tur~ey, alld in Saigon, retary of CUF, said the organi be found in the gift which Pope Vietnam, before her appoint zation has received a financial Paul ,gave us last June in his ment ,as USO director of public contl"ibution to assist its work Credo of the People of God. infol'mation-Vietnam. from one American bishop. But Our purpose is, to believe, de . he said this gift and donations fend; bear witness' to, and try New Director from laymen have provided to live that Creed." iG ROUTE 6-between Fall River and New Bedford CUF with less than $1,000. Stebbins, a Yale graduate, was FATIMA (NC) -Msgr. John Michael Lawrence, an editor convel'ted to Catholicism in 1946. J. Mowatt of Boston 'has' arl'ived of Triumph magazine and a' He is the found,er of Mt. Saviour One of Southern New-England's Finest Facilities ,Monastery in Elmira, N,Y. here as the new director of the member of CUF's National Coun 'Other officerS of CUF, in ad international' 'headqual·ters of cll, said the' gro'up'plans to es Ava;/~ble the Blue Army 'of ',Our,'Lady of ,tablish a ,permanent,'inationa'l dition to Stebbi;ls and Morriss,' Fatima, an' international organ-' office, to serve as a clearinghouse 'are Walter F. McArdle, Chair man of the Metropolitan 'Wash ization whose inembe'rs have of information; and to help' co BANQUETS, FASH ION SHOWS, ETC. in'gton U.rban Coalition 'and pledged to fulfill,:the ,requests ordinate the 'efforts of local af tor pl'8yer and, penance believed 'filiates now forming, throughout Cl:Jairman ,of the, Board. of the ,FOR DETAILS, CALL MANAGER-636-2744 or, 999·6984 to, have been made 'by Our Lady the, coliniry.' , " Wasl:Jington.,Area Conference of.. 0 ef ~ati~a, , ' " : : .... ; , ','" '~ A speakers biJrea~ and a -na- - Christians; a,n<i 'Jews" ',treasurer: [iJOO:ll:llEElIlIlIlIlIlrnlrnmmrnrnmmrn!lJ!lJ!IJDDIIII:li
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Parish publicity chairmen '. Me asked ·,torej)on news of .their organizations to this column. Items shoulcU be 11'0 ceived II>t The Anch&lI', P. O. Box 7, Fall River 02722 by Monday of the week of
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ST.: EIlIZABETJl, EDGARTOWN The· Women's' Guild "is con d!-\<;ting a, me~berl!hip:4rive UD der chairmanship of Mrs. Albert " Prada. Mrs. ManuelN. Gouiart By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy of the guild requests donations issue. of old eyeglasses and jewelry Peter Thomas Rohrback; a Carmelite, priest has writ
jfor the missions. OUR LADY OF ANGELS. ten a :novel, The Disillusioned (Doubleday, 501 Franklin
Proceeds of a successful Sum FALL RIVER mer sale have been presented to A,ve.• Garden City, N.Y. 11531, $5.95),-about a priest who .
The Holy Name Society plans the parish and members have quits three or four, years after ordination. He is presented
a turkey supper and dance Sat also purchased a slide projector urda~ night, Oct; 5. AU! a victim of the conflict
for use, of catechetical classes Grammar school girls, aU' and Summer school programs. J,etween progressive and con familiar with clerical life, and'
women's organizations and' all book abounds 'in accurately
"fe,rvative for c e s in, tile his . other women of the parish will ST. ,JOSEPH. observed detaH. He is aware of'
receive Holy C()mmunion at FALL RIVER Church. The principal, char the many problems now beset-
Masses ,this ,Sunday. ,. acter is Father David',Keale)". ting the Church and the priest
, The ,CCD executive bOard wm .29 years old, personable, assign,. hood, and lie sets out a teeming
meet ,in .the reetory Sunday HOLY ROSARY. ed to a suburban ~ catalogue of these. Almost every·
morning, Oct. 6; followlng 9:30 FALL RIVER sort of perplexity and contro
parish ,following
Re-elected 'president . of the Mass. The parish council will meet at 7:30 tonight.' . . verted question is touched on.
two years' ser- •
Women's Guild, is ·Mrs. MarY vice elsewhere.
,Parishione~ willing to paint Gloomy ~ctare MazzonI. She will be aid,ed b)" He dislikes the' and ,repair sta\ues for the annu", Miss Bal'bara Conforti;' - -vice The picture he draws is parish, ' feels. al' ,outdoor Christmas erib are' president; Mrs. Kay Sicilia, seC gloomy in the extreme, and that there is requested to contact the rectory. retary; ~rs. Anne Pieroni, treas there is hardly a hint of comfort NAMED. AnthQny M. Ra urer. nothing for him to be had. One would gather to do there, dis chal, J,r., Special Assistant . A coffee hour for new and HOLY NAME, that the effort to update the FALL RIVER approves the regular members will be held at Church is hopeless, with every ·for Equal Employment Op Missalettes will be introduced parochial school. fresh idea promptly squelched. portunity for the U.S. Civil '1 Monday night, Oct. ., in the in' the parish at all Masses Sun In a series of church hall, with Miss Rose All is futility and stupidity, ac flashbacks, we Service Commissioo in Was'lf Saulina and Mrs. Barbara Toili day, Oct. 6. Also on Sunday, the cording to his book Women's Guild will hold' its an get a review o f . ." acting as hostesse~ The author _is by no means' ington, has been named ex nual tea and reception for new the . years which' have, brou~h~ an inept writer, but his novel ecutive . vice - president· of ST. pros X, memberS at 3 o'clock in the David to the present point. sChool hall. His parents were good .simple does not come off. The reason Xavier University, New Or SOUTH YARMOUTH. people. He attended, City Col-' is that his characters have no leans. NC Photo. New office.rs of the Women's lege, imd during his' college complexity or depth.. Each is a ' Guild are Mrs. Philip A. Mack, ST. STANISLAUS, ;years had' an affair with a' girl ty,Pe, and the animation, such president; Mrs. George H. Smith, FLL RIVER ··A ball commemorating the brmet at a beach party. This as it is, is all artificial. The truth vice-president; Mrs.' Eugene .c. '70th' 'anniversary of the parish he broke off when, observing'il of argumentation is present .in. Cremins and Mrs. Shifley John will take place from 8 to mid~ yo'urig priest offering MaSs' and 'the book, up to a point, but ij}e son, secretaries; Mrs. John night Saturday· night, Oct. 12 then 'helping a family dispos:" more· subtle, and variegate4 Houst, :treasurer. in the parish center. Music will sessed by a fire, 'he ,considered trut~ o~ !ife is ,lacking: . . Guild activities, for' the, past Pearson's Sen~tor Presentation of young ladies the priesthood for himself., year earned, a total of '$3,500, be by the Billy Belin'a orchestra ., .'... '. ",~' to His Excellency James·L. Con , 'He,' rriade inq~itie~, ','~nd "w~ ,Despite its. deficiencies,. The, " nolly, Bishop of Fall River, has presented to the church building and a buffet will be served. The public 'is i~vited. lit charg~. of ll'Ushed off to an isolat~ semi Disiilusioned is superior" to 8Iways been a highlight of the fund. nary, where intellectual stagna Drew Pearson's novel T~e Seri-' annual' Bishop's Charity Ball. Next regular,meeting is slated a'rrangements are Stephen Kul tino and a stifling discipline ator (Doubleday,' 501, Franklin For the 14th annual Charity Ball, for Tuesday, Oct; 8, "at which pa and Walter Deda, co-chair prevailed. He somehow stayed' Ave., Garden City,. N. Y. 11531, to' be held Friday evening, ~n. time committee chairmen will . men; Miss Mary Zmuda, secre tary; and Miss Genevieve Pa the course, was ordained, and $6.95), a length)" . verbose, 10, 1969, a new plan fOr the assume their duties.. churek, treasurer. at first rather enjoyed getting a clumsily carpentered attempt to presEmtation will be inaugurated. ST~ MARY'S CATHEDRAL. clerical discount. portray the. Washington scene SACRED HEART, in .fictional terms.. . 'Since the social event is a FALL RIVER ' Voice Discontent The title character is Benja- Diocesan-wide affair, each of The Women's.Guild announee. NORTH ATl'LEBORO But now when he and his min Bow Hannaford, represent- the III parishes of the Diocese High school students inter elassmates get together, it is to ing an. unnamed. ,souttt""estern should participate. This coming a potluck supper for 6:30 Mon ested in forming a teenage' folk da)" night, Oct. ., in the Cath voice their discontent and frus'" state., Hannaford is, the most Charity Ball' will have one pres ~lic. 'CQmniunitr ~nter, ,Frank~ grou'p will meet in the' scboOi tration. The official Church is to powerful man. in the. Senate, entee from one third of the' par lin Street. Co-chairmen are ,Mrs. cafeteria at 7:30 tomorrow them inapposite to the times and night. . ., wheeling and, dea,~ng ,wH4, , iihes. For' the' following year, ~a:rold,,Sayward, and Mrs.: An its needs..... ' .. ' " 'The 7:30 morning' ~8ss ' will traordinary aplomb ,and unfail- another 'one' third of the parishes tone·v. Machado. . . One' of David's claSsmates is .' .. oot be held on weekdays ,., statibned in the inner city where, ing su~cess. A1r~adi' phenom~ will have ·the' honor of present,;, ST. ,JOSEPH, enally wealthy, he ~ 'aSpires to ing young ladies,' through F'ridays. Instead there behind his racist pastor's back, FAIRHAVEN' will' be an evening Mass'at ., he is trying to do something for yet',greater fortune,:'and h e ' With ithisplari,ea~h parish', , . , The Association of the Sacred o'dock. . the poor, eSpecially the Negroes. means to use his senatorial' ill':' every third year, will' have one J::Iearts will meet at 7:30 Sunda)" · 'The artnuai ChriStmas sale '" David becomes interested in f.h"ence to th'at end., '" ,.' , . presentee at the ball. will be sponsored by St. Aline He i~ sponsorin~ legis~ation . The parishes sele~ted for the J!ight, ~. 6 in theteclory.;Re these endeavors, and on his days freshments· will . be . served' 'and Sodality Wednesday and Thurs off, which seem to be four out which will let him. exploit the 19.69 Charity Ball will be an-. day, Nov. 6 and 7. All parishion pubiic lands and bring an 'Arab nounced. soo~ and regul~tions cake decOrating' will be' demon ,.of every seven, he joins in. oil kingdom into his 'eco~om:ie ~garding .the. ceremo~y ~ill be strated.. Prospective 'members ers are UTged" to cooperate in : ThiS brings Wm' in t~uch with are irivited to attend as .well' as . ;the modest neighborhood office cOntrol. These 'schem~.· nUgllt announced. Presentees must be past mem.bers wishing to rejoin preparations. Helpers are needed for the of a city social agency, and there ;:~n:~~;~" ~::n~:n;ota~~ daughters of parents who are the unit. " CCD elementary school of reli he meets the very attractive taking a bribe of no less than a active in parish or Diocesan Members are urged to attend gion and for the senior choir. Beth Redmond, who has a hahit quarter of a million dollars. activities. First Friday Mass tomorrow and of kicking .her shoes off, and reminded that there will be' an Fatal MIstake' . makes a neat martini'. They are evening Mass at 7 o'e!ock in ·ad:.. A girl oischarged from his soon on unusually friendly office purloins some of his LOS ANGELES (NC)-Ma)"or dition to morning MasSes. terms. Leaves Priesthood papers and gives copieS to a Sam Yorty proclaimed Released 88. PETER AND PAUL. . Touching base in the suburban newspaper columnist, who pub_ Time Week hereto emphasize FALL, RIVER, -;parish, David enlists a few of '~ishes~..series of articles disclos,:, ' the. "real, public servi.ce .,to ,the The .Women's Club will wel Ithe parishioners. who have s~i~l mg. theIr cont~nts. The Senate wh~le c9mIDunity" perfo.rmed by come new, members at 'a :meeting ~URQI ,consciences, and induces them to .EthICS CO~lt~ee.' . relu~tantly this interdenominational pro_ at· 8 on Monday night, Oct.·7 ,.,' ',' . . ;d.o something for the inner city . :holds a hea~?g . WhIch 19nor~ gram. Released time" be said,' in the church hall. The club will :d.well~rs. They are to get' u~ ~ ,the more: senous charges and "is, dedi~ated ,.,to :spiritual , el1:-: .sponsor. its annual harvest sup.. . .. . ,petition to City Hall protesting concen~ratlOn on the matter of lightenment ,and, ;moral training per Tuesc1ay.'night,.Oct. '15. " ..PRINTED the w.retched housingc;onditions; the bnbe. . ' ot. q~r public school. child,~en." , Tickets.are available from, mein,;,; . ,. '" , . AND MAILED' . .
and to persuade the tenants of Hanaford seems sl,lre. o( ~mg . ,, . " " ',. ,
bers. 'c' , .. ". ,. one slumlord··to hand :over a cleared. His boldness' 'will
· Writ.· or' Phone 672~ 1322
Prospective choir members are ,month's re'nt money which the ness will probabiy carry the the Senate with the sordid self
urged to' attend rehearsals at group will hold in, escrow until day. 234 Second Stre~f - Fan Ii". serving of its prineipal members,
6:30 Thursday nights in the or the landlord takes, action to, But then he makes the fatal as here alleged.
gan loft. meet building code regula~ions; mistake of challenging the inThe reader will recognize,
. The petition and the escrow tegrity of the Senate itself. This under a thin veneer of disguise, . is the ultimate, unpardonable many events of recent years project come to the notice of' crime, and Hannaford' is cen J:IVECONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU and many Washington, figures. the bishop, a man who is an ef- ficient administrative machine sured. He promptly resigns, and Perhaps the one thing that' will and no more. He cracks down unabashed, announces even more keep him reading is the expec brutaliy on David, and orders grandiose plans. ' tation of more scandal obliquely
him permanently out of the in,. Illogical Developments di!?hed out.
ner city. ' We are asked believe that . Certainly Mr. Pearson's story
.. But David returns, is seen and . Hannaford ~s simuitaneouslY te1.ling skill· will enthrall no one. reported, and again is blasted crooked and, in. some sense at Most of the key developments by the bishop's ire. He now de'- least, a great . American, be are illogical and virtually inex OF' TAUNTON q:ides that the priesthood is no cause a hardheaded pragmatist plicable. The romantic touches Norton, W. Main ,St.-Raynham~ Rte. 44:....T~untolll, Matn St. longer for him, gets a job as a and a skillful manipulator. He are ridiculous, and the constant social worker and begins' at,.. strikes this reader, anyhow as a repetition of the same phrases ·to North Dighton, Spring St.-North Easton, Main SL tending' evening classes. monster.. And it is hard to identify many of the. characters Member Federal Deposit InsuranC4:' Corpo~tion Father Rohrback is obvio,usl)".'. oncile, the . sacred .~stique ~ exasperating...... " . . . .. . of .
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Prelate Asserts Papal Infallibility Bar to Reunion SAN ANTONIO (NC)-An Episcopal biBlhop said here Angl,icans some day may be prepared to accept the pope
Diocese Welcome Archbishop Khoury, Leader oj Maronites in Lebanon By Patricia Framlcis An internationally known member of the Maronite hierarchy visited New Bedford and Fall River this week and made friends of everyone he met. The Most Rev. Joseph Khoury, 48, Maronite archbishop of Tyre, Lebanon, and the Holy Land, was a house guest of the Rev. George Saad, pastor of Our Lady of P~rgatory Church in New Bedford. He also was honored at a ban quet at the New Bedford Hotel at which he received the greetings of the Fall Riv
THE ANCHORThurs." Oct. 3, 1968
13
'Prelate St'resses Sense of History NEW YORK (NC)-Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston said here that, in the Church as' in other institutions of society "we forget the .past only at our own perii." "Even those of us who are not scholars must have a sense of history, a kinship ,with those who have gone before us, an un derstanding of their strivings and a knowledge of their accom plishments," he said. ' The cardinal spoke at an in.. vestiture ceremony in St. Pat rick's cathedral for members of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem, an ecclesiastical order of knight' hood" which traces its origins to the Crusades. He is grand prior of .the "eastern lieutenancy" of the order. : Following the investiture cer- ._ emony, ,Mass was offered by Archbishop Terence J. Cooke of New York, Coadjutor Grand Prior of the order. ' Recalling that many of the Crusaders had given their lives in their cause, Cardinal Cushing said: "Our times do not call for sacrifices of this kind, but the faith that then made possible those sacrifices must endure ,through our generation and be passed on to those yet un-born.~
as head of a reunited Christen dom, bilt not in the immediate future. He characterized as the chief bar to Anglican-Catholic unity the Catholic doctrine of papal infallibility. Bishop John E. Hines, pre e, Diocese from the Most Rev. siding bishop of the Episcopal James J. Gerrard, D.D.,· auxil Church in the United States, ex iary bishop, and the key to the pressed his views at a news City of New Bedford from conference when he came here Mayor Edward F. Harrington. to officiate at the consecration " Despite his impressive title, of Coadjutor Bishop Harold . Archbishop Khoury is a man of Gosnel of the Episcopal diocese humility and wisdom an.d of West Texas. warmth, all of which he requires . Bishop Hines based his spec in the administration of his ulation on decisions made by the duties in the troubled Mid-East. Anglican church's Lambeth Con As spiritual leader of 25,000 ference in London this year. Maronites who live in Lebanon The conference's unity section and the Holy Land, Archbishop originally drafted a statement Khoury is the only one' f·rom an to the effect that Anglicans .Arab state allowed to travel would be prepared to accept the freely between the Arab states pope as having a "primacy of love" in a reunited church. This and Israel. With his travel, be e?Cplains, was later changed to state that he would be able to "do nothing, the presidenJt of a united Chris since there is absolutely no tian ohqrch "might most fitting communication between the ly be tlie occupant of the his two.'" torical See of Rome." He is "well received" in Is It Is feasible that, in the fu ture, Anglicans might accept an rael where he is responsible 'for integrating head of a universal eight Maronite parishes, one "a-bout 300 feet -from the Holy church, and that head could pos sibly be the pope, Bishop Hines Sepulchre. That is a,bout 75 years old, it needs much work. sta,ted. <. "Once we had many places in Sees Merger Possible the Holy Land, now they are ARCHBISHOP'S RECEPTION: Most Rev. James J. ST. PAUL (NC) -CoadjutO!' But in discussions of the plen taken over by the Franciscans. Ckrrard, left. Auxiliary Bishop Of the Diocese, apd Rev. Archbishop Leo C. Byrne of S1. ary body of the Lambeth Con We had two other churches, but Goorge Saad, right, pastor of Our Lady of Purgatory, New Paul-Minneapolis will serve on ference it was apparent Angli they were in villages destroyed a six-member cOmmittee to eans are not at this time pre in the 1948 war and were aban~ 'Bedford, welcome Archbishop Khoury.. center. -study the civil disorders which pared to accept "even the 'pri;'" doned." . occurred in St. Paul's Selby macy of love' as far as the pope During his £1m United States fore the Council, but It is not Games. Dale district over the Labor DlI07 is concerned," he added. ' visit, he admits, "I visit many compulsory." Archbishop . Khoury has bad weekend this year. churches that aTe ~autiful-but Concerning Pope Paul VI's en As far as the outspoken oppo-. an opportunity to relax during, my heart aches when I realize s1tion to Pope Paul VI's bi-rth his American visit. There is little eyclical on birth control, Hu manae Vitae, Bishop Hines said: how many millions of dollars control encyclical is concerned, relaxation at home where }iis "r believe it may have slowed were spent for them when if Archbishop Khoury shakes bis "divided dioceses" are plagued by uncertainty and conflict. were simpler, other head. down the ecumeniCal movemen~ they ONE STOP
'During his New Bedford and but I do not believe, it is a fatal churches could 'be built in other "The teaching of the Papal SHOPPING CENTER
blow to ecumenism. I believe places." Encyclical. brought to us only Fall River stay, he renewed non-Catholic churches will con One of just 12 Maronite the traditional staiemeJ:lt of the Ifriendships, among others, with • T~levision • Grocery tinue to work toward Christian bishops in the world, Archbish Church. It did not create the Father Saad, "a native of my • Appliances • Furniture unity." op Khoury was the youngest same amazement or discussion vill-age, a friend and a cousin," 104 Allen St., New Bedford Bishop Hines said he believes prelate in 1lhe Mid-East when or opposition among my people Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid, pastor more ecumenical progress will he was consecrated at the age of that it encountered in other of St. Anthony of the Desert 991-9354 be made during the next seven 35. He 'celebrated his silver ju countries. It even was accepted Church in Fall River, and a fel-: low seminarian and long time years than was experienced bilee as a priest Dec. 20. by the Orthodox Patriarch." during the past 50 years. And He recalls with affection his The soft-spoken prelate says it fdend, the Rev. Peter Hobeicka, this, he added, may include the last visit with Pope John XXIII. is his "personal opfnion" that pastor of S1. George's Church, Providence. . merger of churcheS; "He asked me how long I am bishops and priests with diver He alSo urged those of Leb II bilihop and I say six years. He gent views "should avoid creat patted me on the shoulder and ing public commotion through anese ancestry to pass on to their said, 'Bambino-you are just e newspapers, radio and television. children their faith and their baby!" "If those who dissent from the traditions so they will "keep A graduate of St. Joseph UnI point of view of the Pope will them as you have kept them." PHILADELPHIA ,(NC)-Ad ver:sity--one of four universities go through. proper channels, I ministrators from more than 120 in Beirut - Archbishop Khoury am sure, the Pope would take ELECTRICAL seminaries in the eastern United holds doctorates from there and their viewpoint into considera Contradors Sta-tes will meet next Tuesday from Institute Catholique and the tion," he says. . at near:by St. Charles Borromeo 8E' During his first visit to the Seminary to hear reports from So~bonne in Paris. , 'ICK", He alsO studied in Rome, m _United States, Arc h b ish 0 P representatives of the U. S, Khoury has decided life in Leb-' BIS'hops' Committee on Priestly :Belgium and in Germany. A noted linguist, he speaks anon is qUite different from life ... lIth¥try.CaU J " Formation. Father T. William Coyle, Arabic, Syriac, French, Latin in this country. . At home, he feels, ''1ife IS C.SS.R., executive secretary of and Italian and "a little bit" En quieter, people know how to re the committee, said in a letter glish, Spanish and German. , His Syrlac, be' reports, be lax. 'Life in the United states to seminary offjcials their views .373 New Boston Road is easier, but life in Lebanon learned from Father Saad dUll' would be solicited by the com is happier-I think." , County St., mittee, representatives lIB drafts ing seminarian days. Fall ,River 678-5677 The arcbbishop's trip began ,New Bedford of seminary guidelines currently ~urrently, ihere are ~bt ,August 15, when he left Tyre being readied for the approval Maronite dioceses rm Lebanon, aboUt 60 miles south of Beirut of . the American bishops 8ft one in 1he Urilied States (es reviewed. tablished two' yeani ago) One 'in -for Bogata, Columbia, and his Participating in the program Bra~il (established six years ago) :first Eucharistic Congress. In will be John Cardinal Krol of one in Syria and Ollle in Egypt. Venezuela, where he stopped to Year Books Color Process Philadelphia; Auxiliary Bishop ''The one in Europe has 100 visit countrymen on his way to the United States, he eele James A. Hickey of Saginaw. bishop now." Brochures Booklets bmted his first radio Mass. Sun Mich., aoting chairman of the HOwever, he feels that there day, he celebl'8ted his first tele cronmlttee; Father Coyle, and should be more. "We need one wsion Mass on WTEV. Channel Father William Philbin, of Chicago, a special assistant tc in Argentina, in Mexico and In 6. Australia." On hls way back to bis sees, the committee. Changes in' the church since where two v1ca-r generals are Discussion of d,raft proposals for guidelines for seminaries the Ecumenical Council baWl administering diocesan ad'fairs lIEnERPRESS OPFSET ~ PRDNTERS will be followed by sectional not been as noticeable in the during. his absence, Archbishop Maronite Rite as in the Latin Khoul'y will visit a Maronite J: eetings on cur-nculum guide Phone 997-9421 )",17 COFfiN AVENUE Rite, he says, "because we used mission in Mexico City and just lines, spiritual formation, com the language «llf1 the people well incidentally, he announces with New Bedford; Mass. munity life and disciJ.)line, pa& toral formation, and ceminllJlY before the Council. Mass facing a broad smile, have an opportu administration. the people ~a$ pe-rm,issipJe beo mil ~ vieJlr .bis, tirst Oly'mpit
Civil Disorders
CORREIA &SONS
Meeting to Discuss Seminary GuidelinEfs
You.~
IDEAL LAUNDRY
'''4
American Press, Inc.
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TJiE ANCHORThu~" .Oct. 3, 1?68
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Archbishop Asks Diocese • Based' . PAVlA Aid 'i WASHINGTON (NC) ~
Il\:rchbishop Avelar Brandao
Vilela, president of the Con
ference of Latin American
lBishops (CELAM), has. asked.' ~he dioceses of the United State!J
00 promote the Papal Volunteer
(PA:VLA) program, which sends
U. S. Catholic lay men and
women to work in Latin ':Am'en:" .
~n develo~ment. programs.' .......: "
Th'e: 'archi:'Jishop of Terezirili;":'"
Braiii,·addressed.hisplea 'i'il.·"li " t·
letter 'to 'the'·Bishops:cii"·ttie .;"
United" ·States.,JHe 'n'oted'thd( \
PAVLA program has ·developed :;'
greatly. shlce ····1961, when '.the':·)
fkst\volunteers arrive<!' in Lathi ,. .'
Am~rica. .' .~.:. .':', . . "We write to' you in supPort of· r(fue effort being made by. the·, ."" ilrogram, Papal Volunteers for Latin America, which we' con Gider to be 'of great value!' . .Archbishop Brandao wrote. "In -its early years, the pro-. gram. was _in need of .better planning but at the present time . :we feel that its work is being oonducted with ·greater under-. standing of Latin America," hel iIl9ntinued. "It is quite clear that there is DO in'tention simply to send large numbers of. lay personnel, nor especially to send them with lInadequate preparation.· Awaits Response "The 'precise intention of the ~rogram, in its operation in the )United States just as in many @Ountries in which it assists, is ~ perform a very carefully se mected task· in such a way as to fulfi!l the necessary prerequi gites;-that is, knowledge oftbe :required language, understand nng not only of general Latin American. culture but particu larly of each country to which the program relates, the ability 00 identify' with the problems of <each country; and coordination <with the Joint Pastoral plans of $he countries of Latin America.;' "Within this spirit, we co~" llIider very useful' the coopera:.· ~ionof the persOnnel that North' America is able to offer to our' oontinent and to the Churchilll which we are all vitally in volVed," he said. "We hope that· the dioceses of North America .'. :will .respond affirmatively to this program, and we eagerly await that response." . .
Delegate Dedic.cdes -;,- School forl:etar~t;d
DELMONt· ,'(NC) . '::..... A~ch:'
lbishop Luigi Raimondi; 'Apostol
ic Delegate in the Unjted Stlitea
blessed and dedicated' the Dew
$1.5 million :Cieiian -. Heights
School for Exceptional Children"
here in Pennsylvania. He'was"
also chief concelebrant of an
outdoor MaSS. climaxing the
eeremonies. ." .
Bishop William G. Connare of
Greensburg said the occasion
lI"lls a time for expressing loyal
ty and alle~iance to Pope Paul
VI through the Apostolic Dele
gate.
F'ive of the retarded children
.t the institution made their first .
Communion during the Mass.
Names' Coordinator NEW YORK. (NC)-Archbis~
ClIP Terence J. Cooke of New
York appointed Brother Patrick
Duffy, F.S.C., as coordinator' for Qdult religious education in the arc,:hdiocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. The Chris tian. Brother, from Providence,
R.I., has' served as teacher and
principal 'i" ~-"-:-~1. 'Catholic
IChools ill New York.
(
THE ~OCIETY lFqa THEPl\OPA~nON·op THE PAITlt SEND yOuR
GIFT TO
:r'M Right Reverend EdwfiU(! T•.O'Meara ~. The Right R'everetul RDymDn4 T. COlllldlRt.
:. .. Natlonoi Director'OR DioceSQn Direct(N J66ii/thAve;iue . J68North Main street
NiIW f~r/f, New fork 10001
. NAME
ADDR~SS
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Fail RlV4f, ~~"Uset" Q11~
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Sister Mary Francesca C~unts Navy Memories Among. Souvenirs
National Move To Classify Pictures WASHINGTON (NC) Jack ¥alenti, president of the Motion Picture Associ ation of America, disclosed here that a program (GMRX) for the "voluntary" nationwide elassification of films virtually has been finalized and that full details will be announced Oct. 7. Valenti also emphasized the film industry's determination to continue opposition to "govern ment censorship or classifica'tion by law." In some cities, notably here in Washingtori, exhibitors al ready have instituted rating programs which recommend in movie ads t,he type of audience that should view the picture. Approved Valenti has'held a series of re gional meetings with exhibitors throughout the country in re cent months, whipping the clas sification program into shape. The program has been approved by the MPAA board of directors. The program will entail four ratings. They are: G-for general audiences. M-for adults and mature young people. R-restricted for those over 16, unless those younger are ac companied by an adult. X-which will bar those un der 16, whether or not accom panied by an aduH. The X rating also will be given to pictures which are not sub ,mitted to the code and rating administration for classification. Appeal The program carries a provi sion for an appeal by a producer against a particular rating. An appeal board of 25 members will be established to hear both code and rating appeals. It is anticipated that the pro gram, accompanied by an edu cational campaign to acquaint movie-goers with it, will be put into effect in November.
THE At:-::-: :-:;~Thurs., Oct. 3,
By Patricia Francis To look at diminu,tive Sister Mary Francesca; RS.M. of Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fan River, you wouldn't think she was a Navy veteran, entitled to such perquisites as a pen sion and a naval funeral, but anchors aweigh, she has a salty background. Her naval service dates back to World War I days whelB she wa3 a Yeomanette, the 'forerunner of today's W'aves. "We were . ~~:i~~;:~~,;s~~:~:l~~~:: ~_ ~"".""""""-.,,
- - : : _. _-.
. ". '·1
The future Sister served in the General Court Martial Office of the Charlestown Navy. Yard, and shifted to a civil ser vice position when peacetime came. Actually, she doesn't re eeive a pension, because she elected to receive a bonus when she left the Navy, but she could still have that naval funeral! . Motherly Concern More than such memories, however, Sister FranceSca is in": terested in the s:tudents she served during the 20 years at Holy Family High School in New Bedford and another 20 years at SS. Peter and Paul and St. Mary's Schools in Fall River., She topped her teaching career last year with a bookkeeping class at Mt. St. Mary Academy and she counts among her. hap' piest memories an adult class in bookkeeping she conducted some years ago at the academy,. "It was so rewarding," she said. "The students really wanted to learn and they.were so grate ful for what they received." She notes wryly that while cbildren in general try to get out of as much schoolwork a's possible, grown-ups are really "there to learn." She is very interested, how ever, in the out-of-class lives of her students and former stu dents and says that through the years she's tried to encourage . youngsters to live up to their potentials. "I tell the girls that the noblest career is that of be- . ing good women and good mothers," she says. "I try not to preach-just slip in a little thought now and then." From Rockiand
Community Leaders
To Aid in Drive
A native of Rockland, Mass., Sister Francesca attended Rock WASHINGTON (NC)-Fifteen land High School and entered leaders in the educational and religion in 1924. "I made my business world, including both novitiate where the new acad Catholic and non-Catholics, have emy is now. In those days we agreed to help the National stayed right in Fall River." Before entering the Sisters of Catholic Educational Association
raise $2 million for new projects, Mercy, she graduated from Bur among them a' $750,000 educa dett Business College in Boston, tional service center in Washing and after becoming a Sister she earned bachelor's ,and master's tori. degrees in religious education Father C. Albert Koob, execu tive secretary of NCEA, said the from Providence College, in ad drive is "the first such fund dition to a bachelor of secreta raising effort in the .65-year rial science from Bryant Col history of NCEA. The times lege, also in Providence. Now officially retired, Sister themselves make it essential times of rapid change and vast Francesca is far from inactive. ehallenge to education. We see She's frequently on doorbell and this effort as the cornerstone telephone duty, she does book of a dynamic new' NCEA better keeping for the community and able to meet the needs of these she's an assiduous visitor to the Mount infirmary. There's a lot times. "In seeking support NCEA has on the credit side in her heav enly ledgerl no 'alumni' to whom it can ap peal. The association is a service organization. As such, it can only cite its outstanding record Catholics Protestants of service in the past and its Social Work plans for the future. We are TOLEDO (NC)-An urban af fully dependent on the generos f,airs unit of the Toledo Area ity of friends-in and out of Catholic educaUon, business Council of Churches will bring Catholics and Prote9tants to foundations, institutions and in dividuals-who believe with us gether in inner-city social work. Father Thomas A. Reding, di that NCEA bas an important role to play in tbe future of i'ector of the Toledo Diocese Office of Community Relations, American education.II is one of' two Catholics who will be on the board of the unit, Papal Donation ealled the Toledo Metropolitan VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope 'Mission. A Catholic lay member Paul VI bas given a eheek for is to be named. Catholic support of the group
$50,000 lo.r the foundation of E1hlopiQll Hospital Services in includes a $2,000 contribution
A~isA~oo.P~ofthem~~ for the first year, and part-time
will go for construction of a new service by Father Bernard ~. hospital and pari for a mobile Hoff, assistant at a eentral e;tIe d.inic. Toledo· p~ish.
In
.• .
1·
1968
15
Stress Nonpublic SChOO~$6 Value INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - The financial crisis facing Indiana's public schools cannot be solved unless there is a solution to the problems of the state's nonpub lie schools, which need some tax support "within strict constitu tional limitations," a newly formed Committee on Nonpublie Schools has declared here. Chairman of the new group is Arthur L. Amt, Fort Wayne, superintendent of Lutheran schools in Indiana. Secretary is Father George W. Elford, assist ant superintendent of schools of the Indianapolis archdiocese. Citing figures made available . by the Indiana Legislative Council, the committee pointed out that public school operating costs, already sketching local tax limits, would rise 13.1 per cent in the absence of nonpublic schools. The added cost to tax payers would be upwards of $87 million a year. Hardest hit of all Indiana school systems would be Fort Wayne which has a heavy paro chial 'school populatiQn, it is asserted. Projected increased costs in Fort Wayne are esti mated at over $10 million a year if nonpublic schools closed. Asking for public understand ing of the nonpublic school con tribution the committee called for maximum educational op portunities for all Indiana school children, "regardless of the school of their choice."
Mi!rtlisters, WomQ.'lln Teach at Seminary BUSY AS EVER: Sister Mary Francesca, R.S.M. left a Navy typewriter to join Sisters of Mercy almost 45 years ago, and is still busy typing away. '
Defends Soviet Invasion Russian Orthodox Patriarch Deplores Council of ChUlll'ch.es Statement MOSCOW (NC)-Russian Or thodox Patriarch Alexei of Mos cow and All Russia has defend ed the occupation of Czechoslo vakia by troops of the Sovist. Union and other Warsaw Pact
nations. The letter to WCC was an an
swer to their own letter of Aug.
30 protesting "Soviet Army in terventio:l" in Czechoslovakia. The Patriarch contended there are no grounds for calling the 'Soviet troops "occupants" be-' cause RUSSia is tied by bilateral treaties of cooperation and friendship with Czechoslovakia that include all problems, both political and ideological. The Patriarch repeated a sec tion of a Moscow communique issued after the Soviet-Czech
talks stating that "Soviet leaders
realize and support the demo
cratization line in Czechoslovakia
and activi,ty of the Czechosolvak Communist Party to continue the post-January course of lib eralization." The Soviets "saved the world from a serious conflict and pre vented bloodshed," contended
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the Patriarch, while the wcc statement "will increase tension in international politics, irre spective of the personal attitude of WCC leaders.
NEW ORLEANS (NS)-Three Protestant ministers and' a wom an are members of the faculty of Notre Dame Seminary here, beginning with the new term. Two courses in. Protestant the ology, one historical and one contemporary, will be taught by the Rev. William A. Muel ler, of the New Orleans Baptist
Theological seminary.
Two other members of the Baptist seminary faculty, the Rev. Wilbur W. Swartz and the Rev. James C. Taylor, will teach speech and homilectics at Notre Dame. Miss Paddy Ann Doll will be a part-time member of the faculty ,teaching psychology.
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16
Says Hoene Masses Build Community
THE N '''! :OR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs., Oct. 3, 1968
DominDC(jIlI'D Academy Gi r~s Choose
,CINCINNATI (NC) - Litur gical experiences in the parish chu·rch are made .more mean ingful when people have experi eneed the Mass with a smalll group of their neighbors in the home of one of them. This is the belief of Father Joseph V. Urbain, pastor of St. Ant<>ninus church, Cincinnati, who has been bringing the MasS into the home of parishioners on a regular schedule "with the purpose of building up better units of the parish Mystical Body and at the same time de-. ·veloping a tru~ Christian com munity." Taking the streets in alpha betic order~'Father Urbain earl,. this year launehed a program to visit every home in the 1, 300-family parish, concluding each g·roup of visits with MaSli in the home of one of the famil 'Mls visited.
'Truth S~t@U .-Make You [Fr<ee' for '1969 Yearbook Th~tITrne
At Dominican Academy, Fall River, "The Ti:uth 'Sh~ll Make You Free" is the theme that's been chosen for Domm- " ilog the year book. It was introduced to the stuclent body @n the first day of school with a skit, The staff was chosen by the faculty in June and Viens, ·freshmen. those comprising it·a~e, ~~ .Christine School president is Denise Beau deleine Delisle and Vn·g.mla doin. Rivard, Co-Editors; Dam.elle The school paper at st: Jo
]Desmarais, Photography ~dl"tor;, seph's, Josetta, has Janel Lafond Eiaine, DesrQsiers and Garl Fer as editor, aided by Louise Dion. reira, Business Managers; De!Jra Circulation managers are Mar i!..ay, Copy Editor. . guerite Hall, Michelle Paiva al1d .Denise Dore, Diane Lamon Denise CarmI'. eagne,' Denise _ Michaud and PREVOST I""RJESHMEN: Among new ~aces in the halls Also Jlew at the Prep school Stephanie Pineault, Reporters; is 'the Mistress, Sister Marie of Prevost High School, Fall River, are, from left, Ronald Diane Charest and Michel~e Fideli~, S.S.',1.· Gendreau, John Paul Frazier, R.oger Guimond and Robert Turcotte, Typists. Sister LoUIS The fi·rst assembly for the year
"Oharest. Bel'trand is moderator.
at Mt. St. Mary featured prep Fashion Show. arations for the se.niors' closed iness manager; Sara Lou Gra l\1ount St. Mary Academy, Fall retreat at La Salette. Rev. ham, layout editor; Claire Souza, ]River, announCes a f.!!S!tion show Arthur Bourgeois, M.S. cele art; Elizabeth Dubois, photog ()o be sponsored Wednesday, Oct. brated Mass, then spoke. to the raphy. Z3 in the audito.rium by the Dominican Newsette editor is_
seniors on the meaning of a
MothE:r McAuley Guild. '". retreat. In two groups the sen Sheila Coroa. Artists are Rose
Models will include Launan iors made their retreat this mary Reed, Sharon Motta and 0avanaugh, Kathy McCann, week, with the first ·section go Denise Raymond, while typist~ Jean Flanagan, Jane McDonald, ing to LaSalette from Monday will be Christine F:ournier,
llIIari1Y'~ Bentley, Donna Cas to Wednesday and the second Colette Gagne, CYl}thia Tavares
bnho, Joyce Andrews, and finishing tomorrow. Theme of . and Kathleen Wholey. Modera Rosemary Frain.
the retreat was Risk. tor is Sister Mary Daniel.
Also Sharon Guifond, Diane Dominican Academy sodalist6 Congratulations to Anne Hef
Bernier, Denise Vezina, Susan have for their October theme 'HI HOLY IPATHIIlR'S IMIBBION AID TO THS ORIENTAL DHUACH
ko of Mt. 81. Mary, a National Morin; Carol Misek, Gail Raposa, "People Who Need People." It'll 'Merit Semi-finalist, the only
Denise Levasseur, Mary Tyrrell, serve too as a motto f(lr the an Have you over wished your fsmlly had a nunr lPatricia Janes, Madeline ·Rego, nual Acquaintance Week during Mountie to achieve this honor; Now you can have a 'nun of your own'-and congratulations too to Charlene . share forever In all the good ahe does, • , , Who and Denise Berube.
which freshmen get to know George, elected senioJ; clas~ M<xIeling w~men's fashions Is she? A healthy wholesome, penniless girl In their "fellow students. Sodality president. Holding office 'is will be Mrs. Grace. B!'onhard, officers are Madeleine Delisle, her teens or early twenties, she-dreams of tha Mrs. Grace Foley, Mrs. Jeai\ prefect; Danielle Desmarais, nothing new for Charlene. She's YOlll day she can bring God's love to Illpers, or' been a class officer every year Bentley, Mrs. Alice Francoeur, vice-prefect; Lucille Gauvin, CAN'T phans, the aging. , , , Help her become a Sis." she's been at the academy. Mrs. F'rances. Galvin, Mrs. secretary; Jeanne Goyette, trea GO . ter? To pay all her expenses this year and next At JMA the student council Marita Harnett, Mrs. Rita Ro YOURSELF; she needs only $12.50 II. month ($150 a year, surer. 'president is Elaine .Dufault and l!Ila~a'wicz, Mrs. Kathleen Dou Newspaper Staffs 80 TRAIN $300 altogether). She'll write you to expreslJ vice-president is Gertrude -Nos cette, Mrs. Terry Chabot, and At Jesus-Mary Academy staf A her thanks, and she'll pray for you at dally ko. Student representatives are Mrs. Eleanor Levesque. fers for Jem, the school paper,
SISTER Mass. In just two years YOU'll have II 'Sister of Claire Souza, seniors; Claire Hair Styles are Diane Froment, editor';
your own', , , , We'll send you her name on Fashions at Mount and hair Jeanne Roussel, co-editor; Mo Robillard, juniors; Dianne Du receipt of your flrat gift. As long as she IIvel four, sophomores, otyles at St. Joseph Prep in Fall nique Goyette, business man
you'll know you are helping the pitiabl.e people
River where girls held a show ager; Susan Cournoyer, Joan
she cares for•••• Please write us today so she
oonsi~ting' of "never-before-: Emond, Magdelaine Lajoie and
can begin her training. She prays someone will
seen" coiffures. "With pains Muriel Lapoint, page ,editors.
help. ' / Caking' energy," writes Anchor"_ Memory book staffers are Janice
repOrter Anne Braga, "we work Deschenes, editor;' Maureen
''WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT INDIA'" 0d to make ourselves as ori~inal Hayes and Charlotte Levesque,
MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop Jo
riB poSsib1e-an~ we were ori~i co-editors; Donna Lacerda, bus- seph A. Durick of Nashville
The parishioners Bather the atones .nd dG Ral.! -With pony tails covering
called on members of the legal the construction freo·of·charge, under their p.... the entire head or braids cover
profession here to commit th~m IHOW lah priest's direction. That', how In Indl• • ~g the faCe or two 10~g pigtails Prelate Asks 'Elite' selves more fully to the fIght 1"0 church, school, rectory and convent can be reselnbling horns protruding To Aid Development for human rights whether or 'not HELP built for only $10,000. , , , Name the parish from the top of our head" we that . fight involves the law. SANTO DOMINGO (NC) THEM for your favorite saint, we'" erect a permanent -Pr6c~<l.ed to show off our new "I submit," the diocese's ap? Archbishop Hugo Polanco, apos HELP plaque asking prayers for your loved ones, If oreations." " stolic administrator said, "that In you build a parish In '68 as your once·in·a· .'At Jesus-Mary Academy - in tolic administrator ot' Santo our day and -time the great fight THIMSELVES Domingo, said that the direc Fall River students are getting, Iiretime mission' gift•• , • Write Monsignor tives draf,ted by the Latin of the men of the bar and the to know their _new principal, Nolan for details, American bishops at the recent men of the bench is not only to Mother Marie Irene, formerly assembly" at Medellin, Colombia, enforce or protect the legal rights o Archbishop ,Mar Gregorlos will write person, pri'nclpal at st. Clare's Academy, ally to say where he'll locate it if you enable will .guide his efforts toward \. of our people-but also to wage Woonsocket. Other new faculty converting the wealthy to 'work 'the fight with every other sec him to buy ($975) two acrea of land as a model faces are' Mother Patricia in the for this country's development. tor of society for the human farm for a parish priest. Reising his own food, business department; Mother the priest can teach his parishioners hoW to In· Any change of structures, he rights of every in?ividual:' George, guidance counselor; said on returning from Colom crease their crop .production. (A hoe costs only
Bishop Durick spoke at the Mother Denise,glee c1ub-!iirec $1.25, a shovel $2.35,) , ,
bia, has to start with the educa annual Red Mass at St.Peter's tor; Mother Shirley Ann; libra tion of the "elite". in . order. to church here. Q In the hands of a thrlftynaUve Sister your
rian; and 'Davjd, Bradford, sci make' these leaders aware of the He also called upon ,those gift in amount ($1,000, $750, $500, $250,
enc'e and math department. socia} and economic needs of the present to encourage more re $100, $75,. $50, $25, $15, $10, $5, $2) will
Nl:!w-.nameS. abouild in student people and of their politiCal as spect for the U.S. Supreme fill 'empty'stomache with milk. rice, fish and
l3S well 'as faculty' offices. In the pirations. . , :. Court, to work for a better un vegetables" ' , • If you feel 'nobody needs yOu,
new World Cultures Club at "Those who hold tI:1e power of derstanding of the proper rela h~lp fSlId these hungry ,bOYII and ,glrlsl Dominican, Ann Fennessey has decision must open their minds tionship between police power been elected president. and Denise and hearts to 'a change that will and individual rights, ane! to ----~ Do're, secretary-reporter. Main liberate the Dominicans now .provide more legal career ~ • cd _ . . . . IIHOLOIU PLllA8I PlHD $ purpose of the club is to give living in subhuman conditions," portunities for members of man
.""'Mollna I'CM - DA juniors and seniors a better Archbishop PolanCo added. _
. ority groups. knowledge of the people and Bishop Durick warned the
cultures of Latin America and Discontinue Annual _ . lawyers and judges that "it will 'Plea• . East Asia.
not always' be very popular or II'ttImt coupon =~_ Still at DA, the Folk Music Holy Name Parade
with your ftRll'......_ ....._-=financially attractive to defend .otf8rIn; Club is still going strong with
DAYTON" (NC)-The annual the human rights of the ·disad Oft'Y~=~_=_ITAft_..."..I9P COD&. Elaine Karcher, an alumna Holy Name parade and rally, vantaged."
who's now a senior at Bridge long a tradition in this a,rea, is r THI DATHaLl .. _1A1l I"IT WIL.ARI "IIDDIATIO.
water State· College, as moder being discontinued.
Congrat~late Judge ator and Paula Labounty as Celebration of Holy Name
president; Denise Raymond, PHILADELPHIA (NC) -The Sunday will be left to individ
vice-president; and Susan Costa, ual parishes. A parish may plan faculty of LutlJ~ritn.1;'_heolo~ical
oocretary- treasurer. its own program alone, or may' Seminary here\llas'sent "congrat
Class Presidents elect to arrange an ,observance ulations and l.best wishes"· 1.9 Senior class president at St. with 'other parishes: Msgr. Thom'as.oM; Mundy, who MBGR. JOHN G. NOLAN,.Natlonal8eoretary Joseph's Prep is Deborah Lemire has left Philade1phi;1 ~or Rome, Action to discontinue the area Write: CATHOLIO NIAR EAST WSLFARE AS800•.. and heading ~he other classes wide parade and rl;llly was taken where he will serve as' an audi 830 Madison Avenue-New York,N.Y, 1001' are Darlene Lemois, _ juniors; at a meeting of Dayton deanery tor (judge) of ~e·. Sacred' Telephon.. 112/YUkon 8-1S84O Anne Rapecis; sophomores; and clergy. The vote· was unanimous. Roman Rota.',.
GIVE YDU.RSELF
ANUN
.Ask Commitment To Human Rights
o
any
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Prelate Stresses Private Colleges Need Assistance CINCINNATI (NC) -
THE ANCHOR
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here that a number of pri vate colleges will cease to
Msgr, Murphy said aid should be given private institutions be cause of their 'wol'th, not just because they need help, He raised the question wheth er additional state and federal aid to private institutions wouldn't make it cheaper for. taxpayers to 'assure educational opportunities for more students,
3,
1968
17
Plan to !Evaluate 'School System
eollege president speculated exist unless lawmakers and the general public offer them more substantial aid. Msgr. John F. Murphy, bead of Thomas More College, Cov ilngton, Ky., also issued a chal lenge to all higher education to "open itseslf to radical change" Dnd to "break some of the molds of the past that no longer have relevance in the present." Speaking at the 3'lst academic convocation of the Institutum Divi Thomae (Also known a,s the St. Thomas Institute for Ad vanced Studies) Msgr. Murphy acknowledged "the national' mood seems to.be moving toward acceptance of tax support for the secular function of private ly sponsored education." He cited the "categol'ical sup-. port of research grants, physical facilities gl'ants and loans, and student aid programs," At the same time he indicated many private colleges would face ex tinction "if the public and the lawmakers do not assert their choice to maintain and strenth en the private sector by more substantial assistance," Worthy of Help
Oct.
,MARK 225th ANNIVERSARY: First Parochial school in the 13 original colonies is believed to have been sponsored by the Church of the Most Blessed Sacrament, Bally, Pa. Its six-classroom "descendant" marks the 225th anniversary of parochial educati~n this ~'ear, as the original one-room log school was opened in 1743. NC Photo.
Observe Anniversary of Catholic Schools Educators Convene at Pennsylvania Site
PHILADELPHIA (NC)-When Catholics had "bad design" be more than 12,000 Catholic school cause they had been holding educators meet here today for large pmcessions in which the the convention of the Pennsyl Blessed Sacrament was carded vania Catholic Educational As through the fields. Change Name "If the average student in n sociation, they will be marking The influence of the church private school pays 75 per cent the 225th anniversary of Cath on the small town became so of 'his educational cost, with the olic schools in Pennsylvania and in the United States. strong, however, that the name school providing the other, 25 It was in 1743 that the first of the borough was changed to per cent, and the average stu parochial school is believed to honor another Jesuit missionary, dent in the public institution Father Augustine Bally, who bears 25 per cent, of the cost have opened in Pennsylvania with the taxpayer bearing the ·in the small Berks County towns served as pastor from 1837 until other 75 per cent, citizens could of Bally, known until the last 1882. ' cerytury as Goshenhoppen. For almost a half century, choose to spread tax dollars fur Father Theodore Schneider, Bally's Catholic school was also ther by cl'eating incentives to the town's public school. keep a healthy p..-tion of the S.J" a Jesuit missionary travel Father Bally erected a brick enrollments in private schools," ing from Old S1. .Joseph's church on Philadelphia's Willing's Al school building in 1850 - and he said, township school officials agreed One possible' good result of ley, founded the Goshenhoppen to pay the salary of an "upper parish in 1741. He opened a one rising costs, Msgr, Murphy said, room school two years later in grade" teacher (grades 5 through may be to force some schools "to which he personally taught 8) acceptable to Father Bally. sacrifice their splendid isola if the pastor would provide the tion" and "take cooperative' reading, writing and religion. building and pay the salary of . The Berks County parish and steps which will improve rather the "lower grade" teacher. than lessen academic ciuality, school al'e unique. Professor S. A, Baer, superin which will strengthen rather The name of the parish--origi tendent of the Berks County' weaken them," nally St. Paul's--was changed to Most Blessed Sacrament in 1827 because of the parish's de votion to the. Eucharist. The devotion had prompted objections to Pennsylvania's GIFFORD (NC)-Bishop Wil MILWAU](EE (NC) - Father governor as early as 1755, when liam D. BOl'ders of Orlando said Nicholas Riddell, O,C.D., a Car several justices of the peace pro ,here "we can only have a free melite priest stationed here, has 'tested, that Goshenhoppen's society, we can only have a hap been disciplined by his religious py society, when the majority of superior for his part in an anti the people are malting a positive war demonstration during Sun contribution," ~:;'e~ass at S1. John's Cathedral The Floddr prelate, speaking at the dedication of St. Helen's Father Guy Lofy, O,C.D., pasWASHNGTON (NC) - After Community Service Center here, WI' of St. FIOI'ian's church here, 38 years in the field, the Na sponsored by th~ Orlando dio and superior of the Carmelite tional Council of Catholic Men cease, said "the primary objec F thel's' community which staffs will end its'responsibility as the tive of this center is to provide the .:hurch, has forbidden Father producer' of Catholic religious an atmosphere and an oppor Riddell to celebrate Mass pub programming for the radio and tunity for moral, educational. licly at the church. television networks on Jan. 1, and social' growth." Father Riddell, who was one next. This included the produc-. el eight persons al'l'csted fol tion of the Catholic Hour. lowing the demonstration, in The National Catholic Office which some 40 people partici of Radio and Television will' pated, said he believed the dis replace NCCM as the Catholics OISPENSING eiplinal'y action was "tempo representative in.' network OPTICIAN pary." The demonstrators enter broadcasting, The new sponsor ed the sanctuai'y and took over ing agency was tlstablished by Prescription. fo, Eyeqla....· the pulpit to read a statement the Bishops of the United States Filled ul'ging the Church to actively in 1965. Among its purposes is Office Hours Fesist war and racism. the assumption of ·this represen 9:00 5:00 Msgr. James E. Kelly, 73, rec tative function with the mass excel>' Wed . . of the cathedl'al, was pushed media, in keepin/: with rccom Frt. Eve. cy Appl. to the floor as the demonstra mendations of Vatican Council saturday-9·3 11' IANIl SI., COR. PURCHASE S I • tors entered the sanctuary, but II's Decree on Social Communi Off F. II, TItUST PARY-INC LOT '7.,0412 was not injUI'ed. it :was reported. cation.
Diocese Sponsors Community Center
. Superior Disciplines Carmelite Priest
Men's Council lends Mass Medaa Work'
ANTONE S. FEND, JR.
schools from 1875 until 1881, said of the cooperative school plan, "Both parties acted in good faith and there was never the least friction, at least as long as Father Bally lived." Steady Growth The Bally parish is still not lal'ge, although it has expel'i enced a slow, steady growth. Fl'Om a log-ca,bin classroom to a two-l'oom frame school to a three-classroom brick building erected in 1893, the oldest paro chial school in the al'ea of America's 13 original c~lonies has developed into a modern six-classroom school with audi torium and cafeteria which was opened in 1954. . The first women Religious W staff the school were the Sisters of St. Francis, who have taught in America's 'oldest parish school since 1889. The original school bell and the original chapel bell (with the date, "1703," inscribed in the metal) are still to be seen in Bally's small historical museum. The church's Krauss organ, however, is no museum piece; it still provides, music for Sun day Masses for Bally's Catholics.
SAN JUAN (NC)-"Why pa... ents send their children to Catholic schools" is .one of the chief questions in a plannecll evaluation of the Catholic school system in the San Juan archdJo.. cese. The evaluation will be eon- ducted by the Pastoral Office illl two slages as part :of a plan foIl' pastoral work. The first stage 'Will consist of gathering caUl and the second will focus on II st.udyof the data witb reference ~ pastoral and academic im peratives. The preparatory work for the evaluation was done by the Jesuit Fathers in collaboration with the superintendent cil Catholic Schools Office and the Department of Education. There are several reasons ire quent.ly cited why Puerto Rican parents sen<:. their childen to Catholic schools: greater oppor tunity to learn English; highell' quality of education than Ute public schools; a Christian en vironment in which prindples are taught; and a more profound education in the principles o!l t,he Catholic faith through yell gion classes. The surve~' also asks if the-Fe is obligatory Mass for the stu dents, what percentage of teach ers of religion have attended theology, catechetics or b,ibHeal courses in the last three yeaFII and whether there is ChTistiall formation of the parents under tne sponsorship of the school:
Tucson Church Rite To Have Pageantry TUCSON (NC) - Southwest U. S. pageantry will be woves into the celebraiion of the een tennial of Tucson as a Churell jurisdiction and the dedication of restored St. Augustine's Ca thedral here Thursday, Oct. ~. Ci vic groups are erecting booths around 'the cathedral, and performances by Indian dancers and others will greet ali expected 25,000 persons before the religious ceremonies begin. Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, Ap ostolic Delegate in the Unii~ States, and about 40 cardinals, aJ'chbishops and bishops frOll! the U. S. and Mexico are e2. pected to attend. Tucson was made a Vicariate Apostolic in 1868, and a dioeese in 1897. The plaza adjoining ~ cathedral here was the site oft the original Arizona state eaJ»o toL
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Former Catholic High Teammates Together Again' at Olympics·
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··'Sees New York' Teach'ers' Strike Issues Complicate,d
NEWARK (NC) -Martin LiMurro completed a year at quori and Mark MurrG, class- Mesa· Community College in mates at Essex Catholic High Aorizona before trying out for School here less than a year ·the Olympics. On his return, he ago, are teammates again, repre- will enter Arizona State College By Msgr. George G. Higgins senting the United States at the at Tempe. 1968 Olympics Games in Mexico Though they were members of . Life would be so much simpler if we' could neatly City. the same high school team, the 8ep~rate the "good guys" from the "bad' guys" .on the Marty and Mark, both 19, were two boys had separate coaches. among the more than 60 AmElrEssex CatholIc, which is per major issues confronting us in these troubled times. We, the· ican athletes who qualified for haps the leading high school in good guys, could hold them, the bad guys, responsible for the· U. S. track and field team producin·g track and field stars what's wrong with the world, at the Olympic trials held at in the northeast section of the (and what isn't wrong with democratic legislative process. South Lake Tahoe, Calif. Mur- country, has as its head track ? d ld "The real issue now is job se ro won -the Javelin event at the coach Fred Dwyer, a Villanova it these days.) an cou curity. It is the right not to be trials; Marty placed second to graduate who just missed mak · then concentrate on ways'· fired arbitrarily by your employ Jim Ryun in the 1,500 meters ing the 1952 and 1956 Olympic and means of either converting er because he doesn't like the run. . . . '. teams in the 1,500 meters. Field Mlem to our way' of thinking or, color of your skin, or the way The boys received their diplo- event athletes are coached by short of that, you wear your hair, or the mas at Essex Catholic in June, Brother Naclerio, C.F.C.
Il e·U: t r a Ii z i n g political opinion you hold.'" 1967. Marty wasn't even on hand
their influence The second advertisment, which for 'graduation, as he was in
@ver' the rest of was signed by James Baldwin, Dr. Blake to Speak
California for a series of track COACH BURNS '. oflhe: community. Father Henry Browne, LeRoi ,meets, at one of which he be For' better or Jones, Max Bond,' Fr. Kevin came the third U.S. schoolboy- At Sesquicente"nial ST. LOUIS (NC)-Dr. Eugene Ryurt was the' first~tO run the' lor worse; howKelly, Jackie Robinson and 20 · ever, 1 i f e is or more equally dedicated cham mile in under fou.r minutes time. Carson Blake, secretary general World Council of much more compions of social justice came out He did this again this year at of the plic,ated than all against the teachers' union. Eugene, Ore., just before the Churches, and Bishop Jan Wille brands, secretary of the Vatican final trials. that and .pre_It said, in effect, that decen . Coach James Biirns, the' leg lilumably always traIization of the New York end'ary sports mentor. at Mon Murro, whose fa,ther isa cus- Secretariat for Christi-an Unity, will be. Many, school system is definitely. the signor James Coyle High School, . todian at St. Francis Xavier are among several prominent :if itot mo'st, of central issue' involved in' the Taunton since 1933, will be hon church; Newark, set" a national Catholic, Protestant and Jew tile' burning issues of the day teachers' strike. ored by his former players, high school record of 252 feet ish speakers at the first event are so complicated that they Solomon Would Hesitate . many friends and innumerable, 8 inehes while at Essex Catholic. of the 150th anniversary observ simply cannot be discussed in"Teachers," it pointed out, admirers at the Lincoln Park He also holds the world's marks ance of St. Louis University. telligently in terms of black or "havealways exercised their Ballroom on Sunday evening, of 252-8 for a 17-year-old and The speakers will be partici white or in terms of what is ab- own right to transfer out of Oct. 20 at 7 o'clock. 273-4 for an 18-year-old. pants in a ·theological symposi solutely right ,or absolutely' mi,nority group schools" even um, "Theology in the City of Villanova Athletes Mr. Burns, one of the area's w,rong. . though this acc~ted practice is most respected moulders of men Liquori was due to enter his Man," Oct. 15-17. Dr. Blake will . This being the case, even the of questionable legality. in the field of interscholastic sophomore year at Villanoya this .discuss "The Horizons of Knowl Archangel Gabriel, when faced "Now that the ghetto commu sports, retired this past Spring Fall, but that wiU have to be edge and Religious Faith." Bish with a given controversial issue, nity seeks to fonow the common after a lifetime of devotion to postponed until he completes op Jan Willebrands will speak · would finei it difficult to separate practice of. privileged commu the youth of the Fall River his trip to Mexico. Marty is just on the symposium theme. the good guys from the bad nities in transferring unaccept one of several. past or present Diocese. \ Other participants in the con
· guys with any degree of cer- able ,teachers, the UFT is seek The committee is particularly Villanova athletes on the U.S. ference are Father Bernard
~inty. ing to deny that essential right." ,interested in contacting former or Irish Olympics teams this Lonergan, professor of dogma,
Liberals Disagree Even Solomon in all his glory Coyle athletes and athletes from ;fall. Others include Larry James at St. Regis College, Toronto;
This point hit me very force- and with aU his wisdom would other schools Who competed of White Plains, Erv Hall of Rabbi Abraham J. Heschel of
fully in recent days as I r~ad hesitate, I suspect, to choose against Burns-coached teams. Philadelphia and Frank Murphy the Jewish Theological Semi
the texts of two full-p,ege' ad- aides in this dispute. Tn any nary of America; Father Charles
Tickets for the affair may be and Noel Carroll of Ireland. vertisements in the very same event, I am certainly not quali Curran of Gatholic University
obtained from Jack McCann, issue of The New York Times fied to do so.. of America; Dr. Franklin H.
Fall River area, at 672-7932; on the pros and cons of the The issues involved in the LiMel, Methodist historian and Charlie Connell, New Bedford' PC Athletic Berth teachers' strike in New York' dispute are so complicated and president of Iowa Wesleyan Col area, 996-5602; Paul O'Boy" At MullCIIB'ley City. so laden with emotion that they tleboro section, 222-7950; and lege; and Father Walter J. Ong, Each of these two ads which simply cannot be resolved in Joe Mullaney, Providence S.J., communications and cul appeared check by jowl' in' the terms of what is absolutely right ,Ham Lane, Taunton area, 822 College basketball coach, has ture theorist at st.' Louis Uni 6532. 1,' Times, was signed by authentic' or a'bso'iutely 'wrong'. " been named A~istan-t to the versity. "liberals" and. yet the ads flatly' No Absolutes Director of Athletics by the
Very . ~ev. William Paul Haas;
,and unequivocally contradicted Morever, given the status of . O.P., president.
one another on the issues in- the men and women who have Continued from Page Three TRI CITY volved in the teachers' s"trike. lined up against one another in' audience with Pope-Paul VI. He will assist Rev. Aloysius 'The-first of the two ads, which the dispute, it cannot be dis "I visited England first and B. Begley,. O.P., director. and was signed py Michael Harring-' .cussed intelligently, as a conflict then went to Rome. It was there Rev. Joseph B. Taylor, O.P., as SLAB BRIDGE ROAD ron, Reinhold Niebuhr, Arthu,r between good guys and 'bad I learned my grandmother had sociate director of· athletics, ASSONET, MASS. 02702 Schlesinger, Jr., Leon H. Key- guys. while continUing to coach the Tel. 644,5556
died, so I came home immediate serling and a dozen other proOn, many other controversial ly." school's basketball team.
BOILERS RETUBED gressivesof national prominence issues,. all of the signers of the He arrived in time to sing the Mullaney is contracted to TUBES REPLACED sided .with the teachers' union. two advertisements referred to Requiem Mass for Mrs. Marie eoach the Friars though 1974 un 24 HOUR SERVICE It took the position that decen- above would undoubtedly find Deniers, who had made her der terms of a seven-year FUJi INSURANCE COVERAGE traiizatiori 'of the New York themselves hi complete agree home with her daughter and agreement signed in 1967. school system is not the centrlil ment with one another. ' son-in-law at the Spring Street issue. ' In this particular case the fact home. Real Issue! that they are on ,opposite sides, New Assignment "Decentralization of the city of the fence' should serve as a Now, with Moscow behind schools," the ad pointed out,' warning' that the all too com. him and while enjoying the _. -is under "\vay: The United Fed- mon tendency in this period of, peace and quiet of his,Dartmouth eration of Teachers has pledged political upheaval to argue in home, 'Father LaPlante is look its full cooperation to make the terms of absolutes leaves much . ing forwa·rd to his next assign I"eorganization succeed and to 'to be desired. ment as superior of the Assump make whatever modification it tionist Residence at an Iriter deems necessary through the 'Community Center in Cap .Prelate to Observe Rouge, near Quebec City. "Various religious communi Ordination Jubilee President Proposes. 653 Washington Street, Fairhaven ALEXANDRIA (NC)-Bishop ties got together to establish the center," he explains. "Each has, Budge~ Committee Charles P. Greco of Alexandria 994-5058 its separate house and aU furn NEW .YORK (NC) -Father' will offer a Mass of thanksgiv ~ I• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Leo L. McLaughlin, S.J., presi ing in St. Francis Xavier cathe · ish teachers for the joint educa dent of Fordham University, has dral here Tuesday, Oct. 8 in ob : tional center. It' is an opportu proposed a new university-wide servance of his 50 years hi the nity to exchange ideas and learn ~tllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIII1II111111111111111111!! about each other." _ budget .committee, composed of priesthood. Is, Catholicism in danger of faculty members, students and Richard Cardinal Cushing of administrators. Boston will deliver the homily being ,"watered down" because Father McLaughlin, in letters during the Mass, and Arc~bishop of the current emphasis on ec umenical 'blendings? to Dr. Nicholas Falcone, presi Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Dele Father' LaPlante laughs. dent of the faculty, senate, and gate 'in the United States, will Teaching the Truth !PaUl, Topogna, president of speak at a dinner following. "Not at all," hesays. "This is Fordham's united student" gov The Louisiana prE:late was or ernment, asked for suggestions dained July 25, 1918, and served the true· church. It has faced on how to set up the committee. in pastoral and administrative ·crises before. It will face them As proposed, the single, uni capacities' until his appointment again. And it will keep teaching versity-wide committee' would as bishop of Alexandria by Pope. the truth." . consist of five administrators; Pius XII, Jan. 15; 1946. He was He is so emphatic-after three five faculty members,' selected consecrated Feb. 25, 1946 by. the' years' close look at Communis by the faculty senate; and five -late Archbishop Joseph F. Rum tic atheism-that suddenly the students, selected by their fel., mel of New Orleans, and in world seems brighter and less low-students as representative stalled as' bishop of Alexandria, confused. He knows first hand' .{'the .~ntire .!ltudent bod,v~ . March 19, 1946. that some things never change• illllilllllllllllllllllllllUlIlIlIIllIIlIIlIHllllllUlIIlIIlIIlIlIIlIlIIlIIllIIllIIlIIlIIlIIlIllIIllIIlIIlIllUlIlIIlIIllII1IIIlIIIIIIIIIIia
·Former Players To· Honor Coach
for Joe
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LaP~ante,
BOILER REPAIR CO.
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.SCHOOLBOY IN THE DIOCESE By pmll 1. DARTEK tt:lrtOD Higb Coaw
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Crucial BeL Grid Contest Saturday in Fall River Durfee High of Fall River, considered one of several possibilities before the season's opening kickoff, today looms as the club 'most likely to succeed' in the Bristol County football league championship race. The' now reckoned No.1. v. the probable No.2 contest is listed at Alumni Field on .Satui-day Is the one most likely Saturday next when Coach , to grab the pennant" is the con of the scribes who follow Jim Cassidy leads his At sensus closely the activities of the
tleboro Jewelers into the see City for their first pennant en oounter. While Coach Don Montle's Fall River Hilltoppers were pasting Taunton, last year's titl ists, 24-0, . t o corral their second triumph in as many outings this season, Attleboro warmed up for the crucial up-coming early campaign conflict by sweeping to an easy 21-8 victory 'over Foxboro High of the Hockomock League .Durfee bested Mount Pleasant of Providence in the . curtain raiser. "The club that wins next
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Msgr. Coyle High of Taunton and Bishop Stang High of North Dar,tmouth had been e~pected to participate in a hair-raising first place battle. Momentarily, and unless there is a, decided change, this now appears un~ likely.
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River game is based on the fact that othes, who were being .dub bed to give Durfee a battle to' the wire, fell before less potent opponents.
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LARRY. FERREIRA
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Ferreira is a political science and is looking .forward to grad major in the College of Arts' and uate school and a career in tho The two diocesan clubs were try his hand in collegiate eoachSciences and is a B average diplomatic field. ' victims of Capeway Conference Ing at Holy Cross in Worcester. student. While at Feehan, Hormam opponents in their first games. Lynch's return to high school footabll and Boston College ~eehan Graduate captained the Shamrocks' lOOt Failure to convert a two-point football was blurred by Somer Coach Joe Yukica couldn't; When not playing football,. ball squad in his junior anell aiter - touchdown - attempt per set of the Narragansett League, be happier. he enjoys all sports with empha senior years earning berths Oill mUted Bourne High to eke out a club the former Holy Cross The 20-year-old former Law sis on golf, baseball and swim several post-season All-Bristol! an 8-6 win over Coach' Jim Lan end tutored before he took over renoo High School star is a kick mingo This past Summer he was County League teams. agan's Taunton Warriors. Barn the reins at Stang. Somerset, ing specialist on this year's employed as a life guard at Horman displayed his all stable High, the other Cape cir which Lynch had. directed to the Eagle varsity squad which ranks Silver Beach in Falmouth' and around athletic prowess as 1Il cuit power, up-ended the Dari-' .State Class B championship, with N~w England's best as it plans to resume his duties next third baseman on the basebaJll mouth Spartans, 14-6. . topped his Dartmouth high grid' points for its Hub engagement June. team, a forward on the basket Another Falmouth' resident, ball squad and a shot-put man Coyle should have an easier' outfit, 26-14, in the. seas.on's .next Saturday with Buffalo af time this coming Saturday when first outing for both on Saturday ter having walloped Navy 49-15, Kerry Albert Horman, is also a in track. International Traveler it vies with twice-beaten New lest. in the season's curtain raiser last member of Boston College var-, sity. . Boating and water skiing are Bedford Vocational on its home Bishop Feehan High of Attle weekend. The senior defensive tackle is . tWo favorite hobbies of the Fal field in Taunton. boro, buoY~d by its opening A sophomore, Ferreira is the. 22-0 victory over the New Bed only son of Mr. and Mrs. John' the son of Mr. and Mrs: Albert. mouth resident who. move'd 1@ Tomorrow night it's a case of ford Artisans last week, will be L: Ferr'eira of 65 Raymond, Horman, 36 Foster Road, and a,' the Cape last year 'from North student v, teacher when Coach home this weekend to tapgle Street and is a member of St. 1965 graduate of Bishop Feehan 'A.ttleboro. '. Charley Connell's Bishop Stang with Coach. Charley Benoit's . Barna-bas Church. He has High School in Attleboro where One of Horman's biggest off combine tackles Coach Carlin TaUnton' Tigers who. will be' younger sisters Ka'ren 16' and he was a four-sport letterman. field' thrills came this past SumLynch's Dartmouth Indians of mooting to get back into the' win Kathy 11. " He entered B.C. on a full mer when he spent his vacatioIil . the Capeway Conference. Con _column. Coach' Pa\ll 'O'BoY, who Ferreira began 'his kicking stl.ldent-athleticscholarship ..nd months touring Europe. nell ascended to the top coach . liked what he saw last weekend, career during his senior' year has been a member of the Eagle" , . During the Summer months, 'ing berth at the Dartmouth dioc-' thinks he can keep the Attleboro at Lawrence, after a sholilder varsity 'for the past three 'sea-' llcirinlm 'keeps his athletic mus . . cIes in tune working in the 'conesan school when Lynch quit to Shamrocks on the winning path. separation ended his contact sons. Re is a political science major struction field with his father. days. . t • Realizing he would not be' ape Ie ors In mportoll1lt I.IJSS e able to play at his familiar full 1i===========================iI Certain that they have es tains . Dennis-Yarmouth which . back spot, Larry approached HIGH! SCHOOL AND COLLEGE MEN, in your YO tablished themselves as the grid waltzed to a 20-0 triumph over Coach Bob· Yates and asked to ca~ion plans consider' the teaching Brotherhood.
iron equal of many of the more Dighton-Rehoboth of the Narra be giyen a kicking tryout. Yates heralded bigger schools, Boume gangett ·League in its opener. agreed and, in a matter of For information write:' XAVERIAN BRO'lfIXlIE~$
and Barnstable meet head-on weeks; Ferreira was'bootin'g the' , c/o Brother Guy. C.F.X.
Saturday in a Capeway Confer Old ;Rochester of Mattapoi ball with amazing accuracy from 601 WINCHESTER STREET NEWTON HIGHLANDS, MASS. 02161 sett .is paired against Coach Ed f 3 ' d 'as ar as 5-yar .'I away. . ence fray. Elated because of Teixeira's Dighton - Rehoboth "" h their opening-game ....., '~uccesses eleven in its initial game : s i n c e ' Impresses ",oae es . over Bristol County loop oppon In a 52-0 victory over Denms returning to the Narry circuit. .Yarmou, th F ' d ents, both are 'up' for the all erreIra converte This confrontation is scheduled . important conference. tilt. at five' extra points and booted The Mat Barnstable which should' attract at regional D-R field. home a f'IeId goal f or a C apeway rted the Nar C· on ference recor. d H'IS k'ICk'Ing one of the largest crowds of tapoisett team deP1i ry league a few years back jn 1ed ' L d f t d the season in the Cape area. awrencet 0 an un e' ea e favor of the Capeway Confer . season and Conferen<;e title' that Wareham will have its hands ence only to decide to return to year. full on Saturday when it meets its 'first love: "Larry could make any college Lawrence High of Fqlmouth in Somerset, after defeating Dart team on his kicking alone," another Capeway Conference. mouth of the Capeway circuit, boasts his former high school tussle. The latter was auspicioul! will engage a Hockomock coach. In its initial .outing, walloping League representative when it Yukica, w,bo is most impressed Canton of the Hockomock com opposes Mansfield at the latter's .with Ferreira, is convinced that petition, 45-6.. It was· a most, fi~ldon Saturday next. his rapid, development and pleasant, debut for Coach Don' Coach Bob Williston's Case hustle will play vital roles in the Ruggeri. Coach Bill Maxwell's High Cardinals, who are the cie",. . success of the new-look Eagles Wareham team was not ·as.)m . ferl!iirig !'larry champions, . also, .. this seaSon. pressive in its ·fITst gaII!e as it faee a Hockomock opponent on-.' ' bowed 24-22 to ~airhaven, ill .a .: .SaturdaY when they entertain Seekonk, the area's· highest conference-countIng game... ,.. , . Foxboro which fell before: At... " scoring comJ)ine after its 54-6-' Coach Dick Arleta's Fairhaven . Ueboro of. tpe BCL in its last, ,triumph over' Apponagansett in Blue Devils, with two victQfie.s· .. · engagement. Case edged out a!, . its 'season's . get-away, turns•.
already chalked up on the board, 12-6 victor~' over Franklin,:: an,,:,;> again 'to. Rhode·.. Island for its,:
will~e at h.ome f~l' a C~'p'eway other:Hi>ck()~oe!t- club, last: Sat.. . next·· opponent, BurrillvilIe, at·· .. Confel\en,c~. gallle When it eI?-~er- .urday,." 'I ....,' '. . .' . ' :,r,',.. "::: the, latter's field.' '. .;\
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Young Larry Ferreira of Falmouth gets a kick out of
two
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na~~ona~' bank'
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20 ~ 1'HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 3, 1~68 • ,',
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Catholic Age.tlcie.s" Af:firm Biafra Relief Program
SaY~· P·rivate, SC.hool Aid Political Issue -,Louisiana Educator Cites Fiscal' ·Problems
LAFAYETTE (NC)-Support- ally several avenues which have appeal to religious eohvictioJl5 ers of Catholic schools in the not' yet been fully explored. One on this matter is to offend Lafayette Diocese have been is the endowment concept: do- against lthe very principle he ROME (NC)-U.S. Catholic Relief Service,s and Cari urged to renew their determina- nations, grants, contributions says he maintains. If it is UDCon tis Internationalis, the intemational Oatholic charities or tion to solve the financial prob- from alumni, from business and stitutional to provide such aid, lerns facing the independent interested persons outside the let the Supreme Court give the ganization, have announced a $500,000 joint emergency Christian schools of the Louisi- school, the other is state aid. decision." program for war-iorn ~iafl'a, where they estimate "hun ana Diocese. This public source of income "What is needed now is deter.. dreds of thousands may die" In a letter to school board must not be ruled out." mi.nation to, weather this crisis," the superintendent continued. iin the critical months ahead. need at least a thousand tons of chairmen, pastors and principals, He commended the work of "All is not dark and bleak." Biafra, Nigeria's former relief, assistance a day to prevent Msgr. Richard Mouton, diocesan school superintendent, said: Citizens for Educational FreeA' great source of strength for Eastern Reg ion, seceded widespread starvation. ''The diocesan school board, dom whos~ ~ui.siall;a. chapi~r the Catholic school .is the school from the federal republic in May Msgr. Landi said ihat at pres the Bishop and the parents want ' s~cceeded m gettmg bll~s rela- board foWld "in practical of 1967 and triggered a civil war ent the Catholic agencies and the schoolS' to stay open, to in- .. tIVel~, ,close to pas~~ge In ~o~b . .ly every school of ,the diocese," in which Nigeria, with consider- the Red Cross are averaging '10 crease in: size and to maintain . houses" of the Lo!-nslan legl,sl!i- . Msgr. Mouton 'pointed' out. able military aid from Britain' airlifts a day from the islands of, .' ,ture: " , . . . ' , '''TheSe are made up of per 'and the Soviet Union, is'reported' Fernando Po' an~ Sa? ,Tome, the their high standards." . d nearing' victory. Biafra's domi- ' f~r~er ,a ,base for Red Cro~ op-' , , ''This can be done only if fi-, " '~Be not <;OJ;lflJ!le . This matter. /tOns' who, are' interested. nancial problems can be re-· "o,f !'tate a~d to non-public .schools . willing to work for. their inde ~ant ethnic' group, the Ibos',' fear ' erabons 'and. the latter J.sl~nd 'extermination if they"lose' the' lUSed by. .Cantas.. '11h,ese alrlif~s' solved,'~ ,the educator pointed:, is ,~ot, a 'religio~ maHer;" Msgr•. pendent Christian schoois. Thia '. ' . ; '., MoutgD, ~~p~a~iz~. . , •. ',' : is' a ,reat of strength,' ·w.ar. .. '. . . bring ~ a total,of'l00 tons;. ,?ne- out. ' , ~'Other revenuea. than tuition·' r'!.Jt. is. political and· uitimately, bOth academically and financial Th'e money" is to be ·used. foe . t~~th 01 the. amount, BISho~ must ,be foun,d. There are actu-.', !'6nstitutional. '-For, .~YOne.:M:· ly;'!. : ,. <ildditional food; medical' su'p- .Swanstrom said was needed.
plies and 'clothing and also for ,Bishop Swanstrom said that
about 20 small trucks which the the situation 'lately has become
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groups said are urgently needed . s~ urgent that he held. two , . , 00 deliver goOds in some areas lengthy' discussions .with~ ,the recently captured by Nigeriah U. S. Secretary of State Dean '. ~eral troops. Rusk. Rusk told him that' the ,The announcement of the pro- U. S.. could not take an unilat~' .., ' gram was made'here by Auxil-' ." eral action on ,the. matter: BU~ ituy Bishop .Edward P:. Swan~ "Bishop \' Swans'trom' added' that ) , litrom of New York, executive the U. S. has ;been suppiying .', :. di1'ector of CRS. With him at a some food and paying for' itS .. .. news conference was Msgl'.,All-, transportation from New York
ckew Landi' of CRS in New Y~I'~," ';to Sao; Tome.') ,.' ',1. ' \ "~ I:'
assistant executive director. who' .: ; .'. '"\' .",-
and
'source
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FaU River Natiooal.' : '~the bank where ' "
".'Your.~~ig~b~\v~rk~ -.::";.: '.~.,~:. :,·,L':,,·· '; '.\ I
Just retu'rned from a tour of.
R'e 'I ieves, Priest' ' . '. '" ,-:.' ..' ,
Biafra in:which he visited many. ~ areas in most critical' need of ~ , . : , ' .'~' '.' - . '. '. lJUpplies.· '. ,. Of,:.As.~_9~·~~,'nt 3;000' a Da~ , '. : LANSING' (NC)-Bishop AI Bishop Swanstrom said that, . evander M. Zaleski of Lansing
despite added efforts in the past
few weeks by all agencies-CRS,
Caritas, Protestant groups and
the Red Cross~the death rate
among Biafrans continued at
3,000 a day, m~inly due to star vation.
"Hundreds of thousands may
die b~fore the end of the year,"
Bishop Swanstrom said. "They
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'Warren·Parmenter·:·'''':'' would lik~ .tQ liClp"you benefit from" ' "
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ourtrust services.
Vocation Pia n '
Associations Hold First Convention
Bisho~
Resigns
ST. JOHN - (NC)-Pope Paul VI has a'ccepted the. resignation of Bishop Alfred Bertram Lever man of St. John on account of ill health, and has assigned him' to ,the titular diocese of Altava. Ordained in 1932 in Halifax, N, Soo the New Brunswick prelate was consecrated auxiliary bish ep of Halifax in 1948.
PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The first convention of the Home and School Associations of' the archdiocese of Philadelphia will be held today in Convention Hall, Civic Center, here. The three-hour convention, which will consist of a general session addressed by top school officials and of 11 workshop ses sions aimed at aiding local as sociations, has been scheduled
to coincide with the annual con vention of the Pennsylvania Catholic Educational Associa tion, which wUl be held at tJae Civic Center today and tomor row.
Warren has the knack of putting trust terms into language people can understand. He knows how important trust services are to the ..average person, and he wants to make sure you know. He eml help you plan a complete financial program to protect and enrich your family. . Warren puts in a full day as trust officer. But his work for the community doesn't end there. He's on the Board of Directors and 'Treasurer of the Fali River Y.M.C.A. And, he . still finds time to do volunteer -work for the United Fund. To Warren, it's all part o£being a good neighbor.
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fall·RiVer
National Bank
55 North Main Street ~0 153 South Main Street .. StaffonH;quare Mcmb~r l'~dtrll1 DllIIat Iuueo.Gc ColJoralloa