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i Befuddled Catholic Theologians 2:

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Methodist Sees Major Confusion

Agony of Staunch Conservatives i ~

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MIDLOTHIAN (NC)-A Methodist theologian rec­ ~ized as one of Protestantism's most intent Catholic­

watchers, feels the ebb tide from Vatican Council II lllas produced a wealth of befUddled Catholic theolo­ ['jians. Dr. Albert Outler, a professor at Perkins School @l Theology at Southern Methodist University' in Dallas, apeaking of several crises in the Church today, also ex­ ~ressed concern "about the authentic agony of an fu.Qnest-to-God conservative" in the Catholic. ranks.Speaking to Catholic and Protestant theologians at

an ecumenical conference here in Texas, Dr. Outler said "the crisis among Roman Catholic theologians has reached a major level of befuddlement." Dt·. Outler, who served as an observer during the Second Vatican Council, supported his "befuddlement" observation with a reference to publication of a Uni'­ versity of Notre Dame symposium on Vatican II, which he said contains "some of the best stuff on the council" but also includes "some very high class junk, some very conservative tut-tutting at the youngsters, some firebrands of ecclesiastical arson and everything

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The ACHOR

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faU Riv@U'o Mass., Thursday, N@v. 9, 1967

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1967 The Anchor

$4.00 per Year PRICE tOe

Bishops of U.S. to Meet Next Week in Washington WASHINGTON (NC)-The bishops of the United States will, as usual, hold their annual meeting in .this ~ty-but at a new site. Formerly the bishops had met ~t the Catholic University of America; this year, however, tollowing the pattern of their April meeting in Chicago, nfty through the Catholic School, be considered 'Qy the bishops they will meet at a large will at' the ~eeting. . . downtown hotel beginning Other committee reports to be

Dext Monday. The general meeting of the S. bishops' will be preceded by meetings of the admini!ltra­ tlve committee of the National CIonference of Catholic Bishops, IlIld the administrative board of the United States Catholic Con­ ierence. The bishops will meet first as the National Conference of Cath­ olic Bishops. After concluding the business which properly eomes before them in that ca­ llNIcity, they will meet as the V. S. Catholic Conference. Among items on the agenda ~ the NCCB are the following: Consideration of a "collective pastoral," 'which has been sub­ mitted to the bishops and which :will be released if it meets gen­ eral approval. The topic of the pastoral has not been announced. Consideration of a statement @Il Catholic education. This had been discussed previously by the 1.1dministrative committee, when it was stated that there is a need !'for a reaffirmation of the com..; mitment - of the bishol?s to Catholic education, the dignity of teachers and the public ser­ :tMcea rendered to the commu-

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WORKSHOP: Horace Tra­ vassos of St. Patrick's parish, Fall River will present a dem­ onstration On leading congre­ gational singing at Music Workshop at Stang High in Dartmouth at 7:30 on Wed­ nesday night, Nov. 16.

Bishop 'Primeau Deplores Closing Catholic Schools

JAFFREY (NC)-Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Man­ presented to the bishops meeting chester, N.H., warned here as the NCCB include: ., that an increasing mimber of 'On Catholic higher educ~tion, Catholic schools will close over

with discussion of a permanfilnt episcopal committee' for, higher education in the NCCB. On pastoral councils, together with sampie constitution for' diocesan pastoral councils. On distribution of clergy in the U.S., with' proposed estab­ Tum to Page Two

in between. Participants at the meeting at a Salvation Army camp and co-sponsored by the Texas Catholic Conference and the Texas Council of Churches, heard Dr. Outler describe the controversial new Dutch cate­ chism as "a strange and wonderful affair." H(' opined that judged as a professional theological enterprise, the catechism "has some astonishing weak­

nesses" but judged as an experiment in new possibili­

ties of Christian education for adults "is one of the

most exciting things I have seen."

Turn to Page Seventeen

NCEA Speaker Explains S·hift of Enrollment WASHINGTON (NC)-An urban sociologist speakin~ here described "two contrasting aspects" of the U. S. Cath,­ olic school system-its rapid growth, and its inability to keep pace with the even more rapid growth in the number of Catholic youths seeking . education. "In spite of an ex-' 35 per cent of the Catholic high penditure of close to $2 bil- school population, and Catholic lion a year for elementary colleges have declined' in the and secondary schools, the CathoUc school system is not keeping up with increasing numbers of Catholic youth," said Dr. Robert J. Havighurst, visiting professor of urban education at Fordham University. Dr. Havighurst spoke at the Washington . Symposium on Catholic Education, a meeting sponsored by the National Catholic Educational Association (NCEA) to discuss the current problems and future goals of Catholic education. Dr. Havighurst said for the past 10 years Catholic elementary schools have managed to enroll a constant 52 per cent of Catholic youngsters of elementary school age, but that Catholic high school enrollment has decrealled to the pre~ent figure of

Wo.rkshop On Music

Dr.

Catholic Hosp:ital' Officials Back Right to: .Organize . WASHiNGTON (NC)-The Oatholic Hospital AssotSa­ tion board of trustees has issued a statement of "basic principles" which affirms the rig~t of hospital employes to form and join unions for collective bargaining with their employers and says that the . employes who exercise this that hospitals should be prepared right should. be free from re- to deal with unions or associa~ tions should the employes elect prisals. The st~tement says to be represented by them, and

the next five years "if no con­ cern is demonstrated for their existence." Bishop Primeau criticized what he termed a failure of state courts and local officials to per­ mit youngsters enrolled in paro­ chial and private schools to share in government funds and other sources of educational income. , He cited particularly the re­ cent decision by the New Hamp­ shire Supreme Court that non­ public school children, unlike public school children, may not benefit' from the New Hampshire The annual Bishops' Thanks­ state lottery's proceed!? The Workshop on Music, fea­ giving Clothing Drive will be ."It's not that this particular . turing a demonstration of folk­ conducted in all parishes of the· hymn singing, is being sponsored. help could 'make or break' a Diocese during the week of Nov. by the Diocesan Commission on school, but it would have been a 5 -12. Music on Wednesday night, Nov. most important encouragement Rev. John J. Hogan, diocesan 15 at 7:30 at Bishop Stang High to all non-public schools in our director of the drive, has an­ state," the bishop said. School, N: o. Dartmouth. nounced that each parish will Bishop Primeau, speaking at specify when and where the Rev. James F. Lyons, commis­ the dedication of an addition to clothing is to be delivered. sion chairman, urges all organ­ On Monday, Nov. 13 all ists, choir directors and leaders St. Patrick school here, asserted: of congregational singing to be "It 1s no great revelation to say' packed cartons from each parish that many people are deeply an- will be collected by trucks dis­ present for this program of dem­ patched by Father Hogan. Turn to Page Seventeen onstrations and panel discussions

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past decade from serving about 29 per cent to only 24 per cent of Catholic college students. This has come about, he said, in spite of a rapid increase in absolute numbers of students. Dr. Havighurst also asserted the greatest growth of Catholic elementary and secondary schools is now .taking place in the suburbs and the outer fringes of the central cities, while en­ rollments in the inner city schools are either stationary or decreasing. He said' Catholic parents with higher social status and higher incomes are tending to support the new and outlying schools, while the capacity of inner city parishes and parents to support schools is decreasing•. In a discussion which followed Havighurst's talk, AuxiliaI7. .. Turn to Page Six

Clothing For Needy

that "hospitals should likewise recognize the right of employes to choose not to be represented by a union." The statement of principles concerning employer-employe rela·tions was passed at a meet­ ing of the board in St. Louis, and later released in Washington by Msgr. Harrold A. Murray, di­ rector of the Bureau of Health and Hospitals, United States Catholic Conference. The statement by the board of trustees carries an introduction which contains a word of cau­ tion. It says: ''This statement $ >10 (I is not to suggest that hospitals should seek unions or.encourage their 'rum to Page Six


Urge' Integration Study in Chicago ·Catholic Schools

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

B@~1fimo[fe

Editor Ptr~di(ets C'@tho~~~ Press 1[0 C@nt~~Me COLLEGE PARK (NC)-Sc3lttered proposals for phas- , mg·out the diOcesan press are premature ~y at l~ast ~ gen­ eration of two journalism students at the UmversIty, of Maryland wer; told here. A. E. P. Wall, 'editor' of the Catholic Review, Baltimore archdiocesan weekly, said to wonder whether Church cov­ erage will continue to grow in Catholic newspapers will be the daily newspapers." necessary and vIgorous as Wall said it is unreasonable to

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long as there are daily news­ suppose that any major metro­ papers. ' politan newspaper .can give as . "Nobody can predict what much space to local religious technology has in store for us," news as is possible. in diocesan 'he said. "EventuaTIly, readers. newspapers. may receive their daily news­ papers by way of home receiving .' "Most diocesan newspapers are capable of publishing the full sets stocked with rolls of sensi­ texts of all papal encyclicals, tized paper. "When that day comes there is pastoral ·letters written in their areas and· other important DO reason not to fill a few feet of tpose rolls each week with the Church documents. Very few 9utput of diocesan journalists." dailies feel they can' give such "Many daily newspapers have space, particularly in vIew, of 'the ,stepped up their coverage ~f demand for equal space that religion," Wall said, "and some would follow from perhaps scores of other religious groups." of them do an outstanding job. There also are times,' Wall Competition Stimulus said, whElll a local Ordinary will "In some' areas there is little be at odds with the local-news­ doubt that better coverage in the paper over signi~icant issues· ranging .from abortion laws to " general press is a competitive re­ equal rights for Catholic school sponse toward the increased pro­ children. , ... fessionalism, and improved' cov­ , "The diocesan newspaper .has erage in the diocesan press. something important '!o do in "If the stimulus of that compe­ . tion is removed. there is reason publishing news," he said, "but it has an additional duty to oHer IDItIlIll1111'111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 sound' editorial 'comment and to k;eep Catholics abreast of devel­ Sen~lte' Meeti.ng opments'in the Church. . \ "The diocesan: newspaper ca.n The Senate of Ptiests of be a vital ingredient in the con­ the Diocese will meet at 1:30 tinuing adult education of Cath­ on Monday afternoon, Nov._ olics, and .in my opinion it ought 13, at the Bishollt Cassidy to be. This role cannot be filled High School Library in ­ by the daily newspaper." Taunton. Wall said the steadily growing Priests of the Diocese are circulation of diocesan .news­ invited to be present at this papers, accompanied by a grow- . and all Senate mlletings. ing influence on community 81­ fairs, illustrates bqth the need Mass Ovdo ' for and the acceptance of the I'RIDAY-St. Andrew Avellino" diocesan newspaper.

CHICAGO (NC)-A com:, mittee of Catholic high school principals has called for a university stu,dy 08

how to increase integration m high schools of the Chicago ~chdiocese. . Recommendations approved by a two-thirds majority of the commission will be forwarded 1;@ the- archdiocesan .school boar411 which has the authority to im­ plement them. Varied Probe The high' school policy come­ mission, made up of 94 principalD · of archdiocesan high schools, · grew out of a request by.. JOM Cardinal Cody that principahl dUlW up a set of uniform policien " for schools. The principalD divided into committees whiclln VOCATION COUNSELORS: Rev. Franklin Major, M.S.; 'held 50 meetings during tho left, and Rev. John ;Berube, M.S. are newly appoin:ted vo­ summer. Being considered by the prilP cation counselors for the LaSalette Fathers. They are av-ail­ cipals are such matters as in~ able for vocational talks and guidance' sessions and may be . creasing cooperation between contacted through the LaSalette Provincial House, Attle­ Catholic elementary and high boro. Both are now in residence at LaSalette Prep Seminary, schools, improving relations wiUil professional organizations and Enfield, N.H. · public schools, a clarification of 'the objectives of C~tholic' see­ ondary education and enrollment . '.~rocedures includIng integration 'patterns. .

lP>li'ocests D~,,@~ved in' H;stoll'n~c:d Events C«»MM~I1iti)@rated by Med«!l~s

"

. 'Jersey' High School leaders. Organize

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill ploration, of the Mississippi River in 1673 by Father Jacques '. CH~R~Y HILL (~C,> - An . authorizing the Treasury :J:)e­ partment to produce meqals Marquette, S.J., explorer and, AssOCIation ·of . C~tholic Second­ missioner among the Indians of' "ary School ~rmcIpals has been commemorating four· anniver­ formed here m N.ew Jersey. The . saries of U.S. historical events, . t'h e M'd· 1 wes t ' . 1 Another ~vent is' the 20otho session attracte~ over 100 de was given final congressional . f th f d' f gates representmg the Catholic approval by the Senate and sent anmve.rsary o. e ou~ mg 0 hi h schools of the 'four New to the White House. San DIego, Calif. The CIty grew .:J g d' · t of' C l'f' ersey 10ceses. ,Two Catholic priest-pioneers f rom th e f lrs nlne a 1 ornla An' htb r board of dA­ ., f 'd d ' 1769 b elg mem e figured in two of the events. mI~sIons. ~un e m y rectors with' two delegates from One event commemorated is Father, Jun~pero. S.erra, O.F.M., each of the four Sees-Newark; the 300th anniversary of the ex­ explorer, and mISS1?ner. In all Trenton Paterson, and Camdell1 Father Serra a?d. hIS success~rs -was appointed. founded 21 ,.mIsslons stret~hI?g. Father Charles' J. Giglio of ,from San DIego to San FrancIs­ Camden Catholic high school, co between 1769 and 1823.. '. association president, said its The other events .b e I n g ,purpose is to serve as the united . Confessor.~ III Cnass. White. 'STUTTGART (NC)-The Holy- marked are the 50th anmve~ary " voice of Catholic secondary ed­ Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; See has again complained that of the founding of the Amenclin ucation 'in New .:Jersey and t. Common Preface. the government of the southern Legion and the. l?Oth ann~vt;J:-., provide information to the Na­ sary of the admISSIon of MiSSIS- tional Catholic Educational As­ 8ATURDAY-St. Martin, Bishop Continued from Page One '. . ! German state of Baden-Wuert­ sippi to the union. soeiation' regarding school prog­ and Confessor. III Class. White. lishment of an office' to Secure .. teJilblirg has violated the provi­ Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; '~olunteer seminarians. ' sions' of the 1933 concordat beress in this state. Common Preface. On the missions;: with discUs';· tween the. Holy See and Ger-' .Necrology SUNDAY-'-XXVI Sunday After sion of unification of polttifical many by eliminating govern­ Annual Retreat Pentecost (Mass' of V Sunday mission aid societies, of. a study ment-supported Catholic schools. NOV. 25 . Members of the Catho~ic after Epiphany). II Class. of equitable distribution' of funds, Last Spring the' government Rev. Philias Jalbert, 1946, Green. Mass Proper; Glory; and of the _role cifthe laity in' of Baden-Wuerttemberg abol­ Pastor, Notre Dame, Fall River. Young Adult Organization of the Attleboro area will hold the!!' Creed; Preface of Trinity. mission activity. ' c, ' 0 ished all Catholic denominationNOV. 26 annual retreat the weekend cd MONDAY-St. Frances Xavier On doctrine, with discussion of al.schools supported by the state Rev. James R. Burns, P.R., Nov. 17. Cabrini, Virgin. III Class. the proposed revision of.' canop. : and .·repla.ced them with non­ 1945, Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall ·White. Mass Proper; Glory; law, and the relationshill be- .. ·denonUlll.ltional schools. River. . tween the teaching oHiceof' ~he At-that time Archbishop Cor.no Creed; Common Preface. Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, . TUESDAY-St. Josophat, Hishop Church' in matters of faith and rado :aa~ile, apostolic nuncio to 1965, Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerand Martyr. III Class. Red. morals and .academic freedom, . Germany, delivered a note pro­ Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; 'among other matters. testing the move to G~rman For- set. NOV. Z7 , Common Preface. On t~e liturgy, Mass in small eign Minister Willy Brandt. . Rt. Rev. Patrick E. McGee, Over 35 Years WEDNESDAY-St. Albert the,·, groups, liturgical experiment" Now a letter of AmletQ Cardi·Of Satisfied Service Great,BIshop, Confessor and women as' lectors, Easter vigil nl!l, .9c.q~n~gl;li,l'ap~~):;ecretary : 1948, Pastor, St. Mary, No;Attle-" , .. Reg. Master Number 7023 . Doctor of the Church. III Class. on Easter Sunday morning, etc. of, St~te!.to Bishop' 'Karl' Joseph boro; NOV. 28 ." .. JOSEPH 'RAPOSA, JR.! , On' canonical' affairs, including Le!Precht of, R?ttenb!1~.g notes ; White. Mass, Proper; Glory; no Rev. Adrian A. Gauthier, 1959" ", . . . i; Creed; Common Preface. privilege of .the .faith cases, solic- the ~imited';p,osS~bi1ities'Qf e~tab- Pastor, S,t. Roeh, Fall River. " , ' , . ,806 NO. MAIN STREET .. THURSDAY - St. Gertrude the itation of fundS. by Religious, . lishiitg: state-suppo~ed",prJvate . Fall River 675-7497 I Great, Virgin: III Class. White. iIIlter-ritual' .marri~ges, a,n'd; :C;th~li~c!!c~~ols.. TheJ.ett~r indi- , :i Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; mixed . marriage" 'according', to ,cat~ !pat the Holy' See approves . Common Preface. Catholic ritual ·iil·.a 'Protestant. the opposition',. of 'Bishop Lei-. 01 a mTEMAni: chu'rch~' " , - ,. -prectIt' and Archbishop Hermann' Inc. • 10 year SAYINGS On the diacohate and" guide- SchaeHfel~: of Freiburg ,to the MONTHLY DEPOSITS lines for a.part-time ministry of la.w', .~bolisliing denominational FUNERAL SERVICE

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Christian· Doctrine. ' n o w of reversing the policy that NOTICE ACCOUNTS Nov. l~ur Lady of the NCCB ,catechetical source book, the government has .. brought 549 COUNTY STREET

Immaculate COncep­ 01 a REGUUS being prepared under the direc- about by changing th~ status of tion, New Bedford. • 10 year SAVINGS .tion of Father Frank Murphy.' the schools. St. John the Baptist, New Bedford. St. Louis, Fall River. SlATEMENl OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION Flied October 9, 1967 by The Anchor, weekly newspaper published' by, Most Reverend Nov. 19--St. Stanislilus, Fan James L. Connolly wit~ the office of publication: 228 Second Street, Fall River 02722, and River. editorial and business office: 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River 02720, Hugh J. Golden, Editor, R!. Rev. Daniel F. Shalioo, Ganeral Manager.. " .• Holy Cross, South Easton. Bank By MaD

Average number of copies each issue during preceding 12 months: 27,500' smgle IS~ue Prescriptions called for. nearest to filing date: 26,459. Paid circulation Mail Subscriptions: average: ,number of COPies WVe Pay The Podage

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each Issue during preceding 12 months 26'950; single Issue nearest flhng date: 26,155. Total Paid Circulation: average number of Copies eacll Issue during .,preceding,12 months: 26 950' sin'gle issue nearest filillg date: 26,155, No free distribution by mail, carner or other means.' Office' use -left·over, unaccounted, spoiled after printing: average number of copies 'eacll Issue' durinB .preceding 12 montlls:200; single Issue nearest to filing date: 290. Total number of copies distlibuted: average Rumber of copies eacll Issue during· precedllll 12 month: 27,150, ainlle Issue nearest tllin& date: 26,355, certified-by

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School Board Officials Chcil~erige New York Textbook Loan l"aw WASHINGTON (NC) - New York State's controversial year­ old textbook loan law has been challenged in the United States Supreme Court. Officials of local school boards in upstate. New York and on Long Island claim that the law violates the religiaus establish­ ment and free exercise clauses of the First Amendment· to the U. S. Constitution. . That challenge - an appeal from a decision by New' York's Court of Appeals - joins two other cases in which school legis­ lation is being questioned on church-state grounds. The New York law, which be­ came effective Sept. 1, 1966, di­ rects local school boards to pur­ chase textbooks and lend them to pupils in non-public schools. The law also provides a $10-per­ pupil state subsidy. It was first challenged by the East Greenbush, N. Y., board of education, and in that suit, the state Supreme Court in Albany County found that it violated both the federal constitution and the Blaine Amendment to the New York Constitution, which contained strict language against aiding church-related institu­ tions. The decision was reversed by the court's appellate division, but only on the grounds that the school board did not have

"standing" to sue. The New York Court of Appeals - the state's highest court-this .June ruled that the boarq did have standing, but also said that the law did not violate either constitutions. The Blaine Amendment to the New York constitution has since been removed by a. state consti­ tutional convention - a move which is nearly certain to be supported by voters in Novem­ ber. Decision Reversed This appeal to the U.S. Su­ preme Court was made two days after the convention took its final vote to strike down the Blaine Amel}dment. In their suit the East Greenbush board and the board in suburban Nassau County, N. Y.; charge that any aid to pupils in church­ related .~C;hools must necessarily benefit the school itself and therefore constitute "establish­ ment of religion" which is barred by the First Amendment. They also charge that members of religious groups which do not maintain schools, are prevented by this aid from freely exercis­ ing their religion. In two related cases, a Penn­ sylvania law which ·provides for busing of pupils in non-public schools, is being challenged on

the grounds that the law's man­

datory provisions encroach on

First Amendment rights.

Pledges $1 Million EMMITSBURG (NC)-John F. Catalane, a 1939 graduate of Mount St. Mary's College here­ in Maryland, has pledged $1 mil­ lion to the school in memory of his late wife, Lillian. The Mil­ waukee industrialist also made a cash gift of $30,000.

Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

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New Vietnam .President Urges Prayers for Peace, Prosperity' SAIGON' (NC) President Nguyen Van Thieu, taking office here in' a televised ceremony attended by representatives of 23 states, ended his address by asking for prayers for Vietnam. "Let all of us pray for our beloved Vietnam to have peace soon and prosperity," he said. His oath, taken with an uplifted hand, was worded thus, as prescribed by the new constitution: "I solemnly swear before ·the nation to protect the fatherland, respect the constitution, serve the interests of the country and the people and to the best of my ability fulfill my duties as president of the Republic of Vietnam." Bonzes Attend Auxiliary Bishop Francis X. Tran Thanh Kham ·of Saigon was among the Vietnamese religious leaders seated in the front row of distinguished guests attending the ceremony. He represented Archbishop Paul Nguyen Van Binh who had not yet returned from Rome where he took part in the Synod of Bishops. Archbishop Angelo Palmas, apostolic delegate to Vietnam, was among the diplomatic rep­ resentatives attending the inau­ guration. Five'Buddhist bonzes (monks), three in Saffron robes, two in brown, and members of the Cao Dai and Hoa Hao religions were also present. The Buddhist bonzes belonging to the Thera­ vada and Mahayana sects hold office in the group recognized by the government as the Uni­ fied Buddhist Church. In his address, President Thieu declared his determination to effect social reform, giving "high priority" to the eradication of corruption. He said "an auster­ ity program will be promoted to reduce the glaring differences between the dangers and priva-

THE ANCHOR-

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tions on the front line and the countryside and the blatant lux­ ury in the cities." Stressing the people's longing for peace, he said, "Once again I confirm that I will make a di­ rect proposal to the North Viet­ namese government" to sit down at the conference table in order that the governments of the South and the North can directly seek together ways and means to end the war. . . "I will open the door of peace ,wide and leave it wide open to the North Vietnamese author­ ities (I (I co "Many times we have made it clear that we want nothing more than the withdrawal of the North Vietnamese aggressive troops and an' end of their subversion and terrorism in South Vietnam~'~

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ROME (NC) - The world! leader of the Jesuit order has challenged his 8,000 U. S. members to move squarely

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~.j A GIFT FOR THE BISHOP: Bishop John B. Cesana of Gulu, Uganda, receives a gift of a live hen on the occasion of a visit to a catechetical station. NC Photo.

Must Face People

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car.: be celebrated 'versus populum' in all parish churches of the dinal Cushing has told all pas­ tors in the Boston archdiocese archdiocese, at least on Sundays who have not made provisions and holy days. "Even though this may mean to have Mass "facing the people" to do so immediately. . that. temporarily some churches In a letter announcing the in­ will have two altars in the sanc­ troduction of English in the tuary, this disadvantage is more Canon of the Mass, Cardinal than offset by the increase in Cushing said: "It is my wish devotion and participation which that, with the introduction of the we hope will result on the part Canon in the vernacular, Mass of the faithful," he said.

into the interracial struggle in America. Father Pedro Arrupe,'S.J., Jes­ uit general, emphasized that "the moral and religious evil of rac­ ism can ,never be solved ade­ quately, by civil laws or civil courts." He said it must also be solved in the consciences of men. "American 'Jesuits cannot, must not, stand aloof," he said. Father Arrupe bluntly 'Criti­ cized the Jesuits for "so little in­ volvement" in past efforts to help the Negro, but noted "heart­ ening signs that the American Jesuits are becoming more aware of their Christian obligations." He laid down a number of concrete directi ves "lest my let­ ter appear to be a mere enuncia­ tion of general principles and adverse criticism." Among these were: Negro Vocations All young Jesuits "should be given the opportunity to gain personal experience" in inner­ city problems; , Negro vocations should be fos­ tered and "special opportunities should be given to Negroes to prepare themselves for entry" in the order; Any trace of racial discrimi­ nation in the Jesuit ministries "should be totally eliminated"; Jesuit institutions should pa­ tronize only companies practic­ ing fair employment of Negroes; Each Jesuit province should found a Jesuit residence in a poor Negro section of at least one large city.

FREE

WITH THE

PURCHASE OF

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Jewish Unit Honors .Cardinal OIBoyie WASHINGTON (NC)-"There is no issue that I know of con­ fronting Christians and Jews to­ day which could not be resolved in mutual respect if both groups approached the problem in a', spirit of humility, fairness and good will,". Patrick Cardinal q'Boyle of Washigfton declared here. . "And that goes for the' sup­ posed impasse over separation of Church and State-which is really no issue at all because, in our American democracy, .we believe in it just as much as you do," the national's capital prel­ ate asserted. The cardinal, addressing the annual meeting of the Washing­ ton Chapter of the American Jewish Committee which pre­ sented him with the Isaiah Award for human relations, noted the presence of Protestant and Jewish leaders at the ses­ sion. . , "If I have been able to make any small contribution toward the betterment of human rela­ tions in our capital city, it is be-· cause you, all of you, have worked there beside me. What­ ever I have done, you have done, and whatever recognition 'may come to me, you also must share," be declared.

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Lay , -Instructors Vent Opposition

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 9, 1967' o

ReligiQus Press Scores Postage Rate' Increase

To Collective Bargaining. '-'nit

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Representatives of almost 100 lay' teachers in the high schools of the Philadelphia archd~ocese are "totally against any teachers' organization being granted the position of collective bargaining' agent for the. lay teachers of the diocesan high schools." .Six representatives of the Professional Society-of Catholic Tea c Ii e r s said that they would not accept .ail extension of an: agreement reached last ·March making the Association of Catholic Teachers the sole negotiator of the terms of the "declaration of principles" governing the professional engage­ ment of teachers in the diocesan high scho'ols.. The teachers' society was formed last Spring after the as­ sociation divided over the ques­ tion of whether to call a strike

•WASHINGTON (NC)

A spokesman for the na­ tion's religious 'press said here that proposed ehanges

in postal rates for newspapers . may put some religious publica­ tions out of business. Dr. Russell T. Hitt of Philadel­ phia, editor and general :p1anager of Eternity Magazine, spo~e be- _ fore the Senate subcommittee on postai rates. The subcommittee A']' .CAN(}NHZATWN: Superior General 'of the Christ:­ ,is hearing testimony on House": ­ fan Brothers, Brother Charles Henry Buttimer, left, attends passed changes in newspaper the cano'Wzation of Brother Beiiilde, with Brother Gabriel, postal? rates, which would in­ volve second class increases for whose cure was among those accepted by th~ Holy See as the religious non-profit press. . miraculous during the process leading to the canonizati<m Dr. Hitt represented the Evan­ of Brother Benilde. NC Photo. ' gelical Press Association and was

also authorized to speak: for the'

Associated Church Press, the

Catholic Press Asso<;iation, and several Jewish publica1;ions, in

all a total of some 900 publica­ .SIP!~dcal~ ,lRite$ S€1Jlll.Ilte C~tJ'!l@!I'lloLZ@tD@n tions. The sUbc6~mittee had requested that. the religious press Of first Christian Brother confine itself to one spokesman. NEW' YORK (NC)-An arch- purpose--teaching the young to Separates Contents bishop comtnented here that al- know, love al,ld serve God The proposed change in mail­ though Brother Benilde is the through all secular subjects - is

ing costs would separate edito­ first Christian Brother formally what gives the lives of Christian

rial content from advertising canonized a saint, "I believe the> Brothers special value:' . ' .

cpntent,.an inno~ation ns far as number ot Brothers in heaven St. BeniIde was Peter Rom~n- . . ,the non-profit religious press is is legion." con, who was' born in Thuret, COncerned. , ' , Archbishop Joseph T. Ryan of France, in 1805. ,When he was 15 Moreover, it seeks to apply a Anchorage, Alaska, preached the he joined the Christian. Brothers. progreSsive increase on the' ad­ sermon at special services in St. He spent 'most of the rest of his vertising content of these papers Patrick's cathedral here' 'cele- life as an elementary school' which would bring them up to brating the canonization of St. teacher. During the last five the rates paid ·by connmercial Benilde. The canonization cer.e- years of his. life h~. suffered; from publications by 1974. It was this monies were held in St Peter's.' from a pamful Illness WIthout feature of the proposed rate basilica, Vatican City.' . ·co.mplaint. He died in 1862. changes to which Dr. Hi1;t specif-. Archbishop Ryan said the ically objected. Christian Brothers should take "I submit that advertising ap­ the canonization as a sign of the pearing in most of the non-profit religious publications is non- . imp9rtance of their work. ''The Church today, is raising competitive with taxed publica­ tions and generally is related to Brother Benilde to sainthood, puts the stamp of approval on the purposes for which the pub­ the worth of religious' life, the lications exist," Dr. 'Hitt stated. WYman He said that advertising in the need of God-saturated teachers 3·6592 • religious press is freqUEmtly for and shows you Brothers that your lives are truly worthwhile," such things as educational mate­ CHARLES F. VARGAS' rials and charitable app(~als, and he said. that whatever income is derived The archbishoI! said while new

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE from this advertising helps to forms of the apostolate are needNEW BIEDFORD, MASS. lower the deficit at which most , ed, "this' does not mean that all' o o~ the religious pr~ss operates. all old forms are no longer of any value." Cites Value "If this source of revenue is Special Value dried up, it essentially means

He said: "Governmental aid that the subsidizing church must programs, excellent as _far 'as increase its contribution to the they go, have oriented the minds support of the publication and of our young men and women literally deplete its resources . to short term commitments in for carrying on various chari­ the service of the materially table works," Dr. Hitt main­ needy. tained. .

"Aimed as the~e programs are

"CongreSs over the years has recognized the public service at raising the living standards of the people whom they serv~ being rendered by religious pub­ and this is the measure oCsuc­ lications in furthering 1he com­ mon cause of good government, Cess-they would be more mean­ ingful if the peoples benefiting and' promoting the war on in­ so materially coula also be justice, fighting poverty, hun­ ger, illiteracy and disease in this helped to an understanding of 'country and abroad," Dr. Hitt the purpose of life on this .earth." Archbishop Ryan said thissaid. "By keeping people informed

of their responsibilities and fre-­

quently unpopular causes they i~= = _'1III11II11II11I11I1illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll,IIII11I11I11I1I11I1IJIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIUIIIIJIJIJIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1II1111~==~===~ eOntribute directly to the strengthening of the moral fiber and character of the American

people," he' asserted.•

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against the archdiocese. A strike was averted. by a last-minute agreement between' the arch­ diocese and the association. The society representatives . said conditions have changed in the past eight months, with at least one other teachers' organl-. zation now in ex!stence. ' "No group of teachers," the society statement noted, "should be relegated by their colleagues to a secondary- position in dis­ cussions concerning their work­ ing conditions - indeed their very future in the Catholie school system." .

fR{@WO$@ CCM Ii'Ii'O<elliJ h:s BOGOTA (NC) -The rectors of 35 major seminaries in Colom­ bia have drafted new curricula and methods for the training of priests.

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-, Eating their meals In the monsoon rains or under

'. 'India's scorching -!un Is not unusual for the

thirty·seven Sisters of the Holy Family Congre­ gation at the Postulant 'House In Thalore, south India•••• "Our Sisters have neither a dining room nor a real chapel In our crowded house here," writes 'Sister Josephine, the Superior. The time-worn porch, which offers little protea­ tlon from the weather Is where the Sisters have their meager meals. Their 'chapel' Is a small .' HELP roo·m.....not large' enough to allow all to' knel;l1 THOSE whim gathered together for Mass.••• "Despite WHO the hardships, there Is abundant spirit among ARE the Sisters and the Sisters-to-be," states Sister HELPING Josephine proudly. The Sisters' thank God each INDIA'S. day for being given the opportunity to serve YOUNG Him. They pray too that someone will help them soon to build a new chapel, large enough for the entire Congrllgatlon., "If we had only $2,950, with the help of our good neighbors, we could

·1 build chapel and use the present one for a dining area," pleads Sister Josephine. "It would .be as you Americans say: 'killing two birds with 'one stone'." ••• Build the chapel yourself ($2,950) In memory of a loved one and the Sisters will pray for you and yours each day In

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Ontario Catholic Educators Seek School Grants

Fall River Si~ter Characterizes Japanese As o'Serious, Polite, Gracious People'

TORONTO (NC)-Ontall­ Io's Roman Catholic educa­ tors have launched a new campaign to get grants for

. By Patricia McGowan

Catholic high school students from the provincial government. The campaign began with a two­ day study congress at St. Jo­ seph's College School here. • At present the government provides grants for students in grades 11, 12 and 13 in public but not in Catholic schools. Many Catholic schools, however, do receive grants in grades nine and 10 by handing their grades over to the local school board for ad­ ministration. This entitles the board to obtain grants for these classes on the same basis as ele­ mentary grades. Charge Discrimination Throughout the public schoQI system, all high school grades from nine to 13 receive provin­ cial contributions. Moreover, they are on a higher scale than those ,given for elementary grades. The Association of Catholic High School Boards claims the present grant system discrimi­ nates against Catholic children and tends to dIsrupt the continu­ Ity of their schooling. Ontario's Catholics have bel;n seeking tax support for their high schools without success for years. Ontario education minis­ ter WilIIiam Davis said earlier this year that his department was not considering extending aid through the top grades at denominational high schools. 'Common Philosophy' However, B. E. Nelligan, su­ perintenden of schools for the Toronto Metropolltan Separate (denominational) School Board, recently told a group of teachers that "the pupils going through our schools have a right to oom-. plete education guided by a common philosophy." Dr. J. J. Andrachuk, chairman of the Metropolitan Separate School Board, said the "tax dol­ lar doesn't' have a Catholic or non-Catholic face on it. All our children deserve the best educa­ tion." Father Patrick Fogarty, exec­ uti ve secretary of the English­ language section of the Catholic Education Association, said mod­ em teaching methods are "de­ veloping in such a way that the common good of the student is best serviced wlren he is edu­ cated in the same system of ed­ ucation from kindergarten to the end of high school."

Young Communists

Storm Chancery

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 9, 1967

5

Plan Publication Of Catechetical Source Book

The importance of Asia in tomorrow's world is daily becoming more apparent, but few of us are. making much effort to understand the countries and people comprising that vast area of the globe. Fifty-eight people at Sacred Hearts Academy are making the effort, however. Fif,ty-seven are academy seniors. The fifty-eighth is Sister Anne Dolores, S.U.S.C., who is conducting a pioneer course' in Asian history at the F~all River school. The blue-eyed Sister

WASHINGTON (NC) ­ Writing and editing of a source book to serve as a guide for catechetical teach­ ers and writers of catechisms in the United States 1s expected to begin here n January. The source book is a project of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. Father Frank Murphy, a catechetical expert from the Washington archdiocese and currently on the staff of the National Center of the Confra­ ternity of Christian Doctrine, is in charge of coordinating the project. Originally envisioned as a new American catechism to replac,e the venerable Baltimore cate­ chism, the project was first dis­ cussed by the U. S. hierarchy at its meeting in Rome in 1963. The bi,shops felt there was need for a new book which would conform to the doctrinal, liturgical and pastoral decrees of the Second Vatican Council. •Doctrinal Teaching Four yt;!ars of preparation have included querying all members of the hierarchy and theological experts on the need for such a work. The consensus which grew out of this was that the project should not be a formal catechism as such, but ratber lil source book and guide eOlltain­ ing solid doctrinal teaching. This was reported to the bish­ ops during the national meeting of the CCD in Pittsburgh in Sep­ tember, 1966, and official per­ mission was granted to move ahead. Father Murphy said the names of members of an advisory board to assist in preparttion of the source book' will be released pending approval by the bishops.

has long been interested in Asian affairs, but. her interest was sharply intensified when' she was chosen as one of 25 history teachers across the nation to participate in a Fulbright semi­ nar held this Summer at Jesuit­ operated Sophia University in Tokyo. For five weeks, said Sister Anile Dolores, the teachers stud­ ied Japanese culture and history, and a choice of other' courses. Her selections were a course hi the history of India and a sur­ vey of contemporary China. ,All courses were in English, which is studied as a secpnd language in most Japanese schools, beginning in first grade. "In Tokyo," said Sister, "fairly good English is spoken, but in other parts of Japan one often finds that people can read Eng­ lish but not speitk it. We learn­ ed to keep pencil and paper handy." The pencil and paper were used following the five weeks of study in Tokyo, when the his­ tory teachers were taken on a three-week cultural tour of oth­ er parts of f;Jle natlon. Felt Christianity ORIE~J'AL DISPLAY: Sister Anne Dolores, To Sister Anne Dolores, Na­ gasaki was the outstanding Jap­ inspeots library display of Oriental treasures at Sacred anese city. "We seemed to feel Hearts Academy, Fall River. Display was 'arranged in con­ its Christianity," she said. The nection with course in Asian history she conducts for SHA most Christian city in the coun­ try, Nagasaki is 40· per cent seniors. Catholic and 20 per cent Chris­ tians of other denominations, States we'd automatically Invite modem Japan and of the "two foreign visitors to our homes; Chinas-Free and Red." One day said -Sister. a week is devoted to· current She was impressed by the but in Japan it's unheard of." events in Asia, including of OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO great stress laid on education in Serious, Polite course the everchanging Viet The Holy Union Sisters char­ Japan. ''There's so much empha­ Nam situation. sis on students to produce, and acterized the Japanese as a "ser­ Sister Anne Dolores will con­ great pressure on homework. ious, polite and gracious people." Students don't take part-time In stores, she said, people "take tinue to specialize in Asian af­ fairs, she said. She hopes this jobs. They're supposed to spend the time to be sure you're satis­ fied." The spirit of the people is Summer to participate in an their whole time on study." Unfortunately, however, said tremendous, she commented, and Asian Institute at an American university-and of course if an­ Sister, the pressure on youth is has lifted them from near noth­ reflected in a' tragically high ingness after World War II to ()ther chance to conduct on the 365 NORTH FRONT STREET the position of the world's third spot studies should come along, suicide rate. Suicide is the lead­ she wouldn't refuse. largest industrial power. ing cause of death among stu­ NEW BEDFORD The religious is the daughter dents in the 15-21 age group, and She' has been conveying' her 992-5534 most suicides follow failure in impressions of the Asian nation of the late Atty. and Mrs. Corne­ examinations. to' her class at Sacred Hearts lius W. Donovan of SS. Peter Education, she noted, is pretty Academy. ' Her two-semester and Paul parish, Fall River. A much by rote. Students are lec­ courses will include a survey of sister, Mrs. James T. Walmsley, is still a member of the parish, tured and are not expected to ELECTRICAL and another sisber is, also a hold discussions with teachers. Contradors member of the Holy Union com­ Cat~olic Colleges She said she noted signs of grow­ munity. She is Sister Therese ing individualism among Jap­ Anna, an associate professor of anese teens, but that "elders are Share Facilities' DETROIT (NC)-Four Catholic ,history at Boston College. Sis­ group-minded. They are very concerned that nothing they do institutions in this area haveo ter Anne Doloroes is a graduate should damage Japan's image as launched a program of sharing of Sacred Hearts Academy and facilities for the benefit of stu­ Villanova University and holds a nation." . a master's aegree from St. John's , Sister Anne Dolores. said that dents. Under the plan students .will University, Jamaica, Long Island. the student guides who accom­ panied the teachers on their tour be able to enroll in any of the She heads Sacred Hearts' hi~tory warned that Japanese homes four 'participating institutions department and is chairman of 944 County St. for any class not offered by the the Diocesan Curriculum Com­ a~e a "close!! circle," and that New Bedfor~ no invitations to visit would be institution the student attends. . mittee on History. The participants are Madonna, forthcoming, "In the United Mercy and Margrove Colleges and the University of Detroit. 0

HONG KONG (NC) - More than 300 young Chinese commu­ nists led by 20 adults stormed into the Macao diocesan chan­ cery office in what observers reported was an effort to force Bishop Paulo Jose Tavares of Macao into allowing communist political activity in the Portu­ guese colony's Catholic schools. Although the mob announced that they were holding the bish­ op prisoner and planned to Religious EdlLlcation starve him into submission, the bishop reached the safety of the Study for Retarded cathedral where he prayed and . COLUMBIA (NC)-The reli­ meditated for two hours before a gious education of the mentally retarded will be explored at a fire brigade showed up to dis­ two-day seminar to be held next perse the students. March at the University of Bishop Tavares has been sin­ gled out by the communists for' Missouri. The .seminar will bring togeth­

his strong stand against commu­ nist activity in the Portuguese er Catholic, Protestant and Jew­

enclave. Repeatedly refusing to ish leaders from Missouri, Iowa,

allow any communist activity in Kansas and Arkansas. It is being

Catholic schools, the bishop has sponsored by the Association for Retarded Children and the Chap­ been one of the few real road­ co~oHon of the American blocks to a communist takeove­ • Mental Detlciency. of the whole colony.

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6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaIl'River.-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

Coming, 10 Grips An academic roll-back has begun with college admin­ istrators finally deciding to administer and to come to

grips with those students whose idea of dialogue has been to demand and whose expressions of freedom have taken

no account of .the rights and freedoms of others.

President Pusey of Harvard got right do~n to busi­

ness last week' in placing students on probation and in ad...,.

monishing, others :for refusing to allow 'those with whom

they disagree to leave a Harvard lab. As he so .well said; the

inCident was "simply unacceptable, not only in a community

devoted to intellectual endeavor, but, I would assume, in

any decent democratic society." . A demand for one's rights automatically spells out

the right of others to d'isagree ~ith the position one has

taken. An insistence that one be heard is, by the very fact,

an insistence that others have the right to be heard as well.

So many matters are not matters of fact 'which are indis­

putable-today is Thursday in this particular area of the

world and no one can make it any other day or argue any

~ other position. No. many matters are. questions of ju8ge­ ment, and there are differing judgements and conclusions on many issue~. . ' When anyone on or, off the ,campus, insists that only

his is the right juggement, then he has ,much to learn about

such basic American 'and human concerns as rights and

responsibilities. .

No one is saying that students have no right to speak

ap on issues and give vent to their judgements, But they

would be well advised to spend their precious college time

in learning as much as they can so that their zeal might be backed with great knowledge' and wisdom, so tfiat when' they do speak it' will ,be from deeply-infor:r;ned minds.

.

NOVEMBER 5 .. 12

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-Find Good Mixed ,Marriag~ Force For Unity LANCASTER (NC) - :A: good marriage between a Catholie and a Protestant ean be a positive force

toward the broaded union of ,Christianity, Catholic and Pres­ , byterian-Reformed 1 e a d e rs ag.reed here after three days of conversations. "If two people of differing faiths can live together in deep love and understanding, then we o have something pointing to the great church of the future," ex­ plained Msgr. Henry G. J. Beck , of Lyndhurst, N. J., in a' press conference following the discus­ sion. ' The talks, sixth in a series of conversations conducted under the auspices of the Catholic Bishops' Committee for Ecumen­ ical and Interreligious Affairs and the North American Area of , the World Alliance of Reformed and Presbyterian Churches, were held at Lancaster Theological Seminary here in, Pennsylvania',. The consensus on "mixed mar­ riage" was reached by( the 'group's worship and mission dis­ ,cussion section, one of two working groups that have been a continuing part of the talks o­ which -be,gan in 1965. Joint Counseling At the same time, section pal'­ ticipants agreed upon the .need NOTRE DAlVIE(NC)-Further ,The sociological implications, for joint pre-marital pastoral study of the traditional Catholic of a, mature and' highly stable counseling, joint solemnization doctrine on the indissolubility of society which can afford to be of the wedding, and joint avail­ It is never much, good treating symptoms. Causes marriage was recommend~d by less anxiously protective of its ability of the clergy of both tra­ must be searched out and examined and treated 'as well. ditions after the marriage vows 'participants in a symposium here institutions. • are taken to foster the continued ,The heightened sense of com­ There has been much fuss about youth in revolt, about sponsored by the Canon Law spiritual growth of the family. ' passion in the Christian commu­ young people disappearing into the jungle-areas of large Society of America. 30 experts' representing nity for the human suffering of., "We would'like to see that the cities to lose themBelves from apparently good homes and' theSome fields of theology, philoso- those involved in destructive parents and any children become parents, about wholesale defiance of law and authority, , phy; sociology, psychology, an- marital relationships. familiar with both traditions," about break-down In discipline that is affecting home and thropology at;ld history partici" 'Rtlquire Investigation

said Msgr. Beck, co-chairman of pated in the sessions at Notre ' .

the worship' and mission section. city. Dame University's Center for - ..j\ccordmg to Father Thomas J. ~'For example, if a child becomes All these are serious. All these are symptomatic of Continuing Education Lynch, a canon law expert from a Presbyterian, he o'r she should something else. . . '. the.archdiocese of Hartord and a WhIle the. workmg seSSIOns of member of the symposium com- be honestly reared as a Presby­ It is, no good decrying what is going on unless the the Symp~slUm were closed to mittee, participants agreed that terian but also sh,Ould be given reasons underlying are found out. a real reverence for the Catho­ the press" It was announced at a, these topics "will r~quire inten­ Dr. Benjamin Wolman, a professor of psychology at ~ress c~nference that t~e follow- sive and prolonged' investigation lic faith." Long Island Univ/~rsity, has said, "I'm tired, of wealthy 109 tOPICS had been dIscussed. Msgr. Beck and the Rev. Wil­ if the Church is to achieve' a ' Human Suffering clearer grasp of the nature and liam B. Ward of Columbia, S. C.. people who give their children cars, but no moral values, The precise nature of what has extent of the indissolubility of the other section co-chairman, coming to me an,d saying they don't know what's wrong announced that the topic of with their children. What's wrong is that the parents are traditionally been considered the marriage." categorical proscription of diThe symposiun;I, Father Lynch mixed marriage will be further leading hollow, empty, shallow lives and not giving their vorce and remarriage as record- added, saw a clear need· for im­ discussed at future 0 meetings, children anything to hold onto." ed in the New Testament. mediate action on the part of the with a view toward pubUcation Methodist Bishop Hazen G. Werner of New York put The significance of institutes Church to widen'the grounds for of a "practical manual" for use by Catholic' and Protestant it this way: "The parental vocation of moral discipline is in RQman law permitting divorce annulment of marriage to in­ clergy. ' during a Christian era. . 'clude cases of sociopathy, homo­ in the decline. We accept into our way of life wrong-doing A fuller appreciation of the "sexuality, drug audition and as all right, that 10 years ago was to us all wrong." Protestant, Anglican and Ortho- other such factors "when it is The question mow is to face this ·wrong-doing. For a dox attitudes toward indissolu- shown that they render a person [H]@~~B{[@ ~$ radically incapable of fulfilling start, what about divorce? )'wo people pledge themselves bility. 'Continued from Page One the essential' demands of mar­ employes to form' a union. The to each other for life; and in a matter of months or years riage." . unionization or non-unionization break the pledge. Who then can tell youngsters and young "It was suggested further-­ is the decision of the employes adults that it is good to have integrity and to keep one's more," he said, "that· a drastic themselves." Continued from Page One word? , streamlining of the 'present pro­ But, it adds, "Catholic hospi­ Much talk is devoted to the sacredness of human life. Bisltop William McManus of cedure in Church marriage talsare to be guided by the so­ Chicago, superintendent of courts is in order if the right to A baby must be protected from all harm and danger..-! scqools in the archdiocese, said cial teachings of the Church." expeditious justice is.to be guar-, after birth. But he is fair game for abortion, before. How the Catholic schools there aver-' anteed.' And the symposium Recognize", Responsibility then to tell people that all human is truly holy' when age 25,000 transfers of pupils stressed the need for the Church each year. Bishop McManus as­ "They should, 'in a spirit of a panel Qf professionals' can make a decision for death ? to promote the sanctity of mar­ serted, however, that a study of justice, and respect for human riage by a clear, vigorous and The list could continue. And·It is a list of causes, not '-the situa~ion has 'found no evi­ dignity, recognize their respon­ merely of symptoms. When someone going to start dence of a wholesale trend comprehensive educational and sibility to provide an opportu­ , counseling program." talking about these? ' among white Catholics to flee to

nity for happiness, personal the suburbs. "Parochial schools'

achievement and ,security' for are anchoring people in the ,city Priest Transferred

those who participate in this * * * giving us at least an outside After Draft Protest of Christian service," it hope of achieving an integrated school system and an integrated BUFFALQ (NC) -: A priest The statement asserts: city," Bishop McManus stated. who taught in a Buffalo diocesan Hospitals have an obligation to Father Pierre Du Maine, assist­ high school has been transferred, furnish equit~ble terms and con­ ant superintendent of schools in by his religious superiors the ditions of employment for their San Francisco, said elementary week, after he took part in an employes. f'I::F'ClAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL PiVER school enrollment is not declin- anti-draft protest at the city's 'Hospital employe practices should conform to all standards Published weekly by The Catholic Press of th'e Diocese of Fall River '-ing in that archdiocese, and Selective Service headquarters. there is no significant shift of Father Gian F. Pietra, C.R.S.P" established by competent publie 410 Highland. Avenue white pupils to suburbs. a Barnabite who has Jaught authority. , Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 Dr. Havighurst had also noted mathematics at Bishop Gibbons" Remuneration and benefits' PUBLISHER that parochial schools in disad­ - High School for five years, was furnished employes should com­ vantaged or semi-segregated transferred to a parish near pare favorably with those that Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. residential areas tend to hold Toronto, Canada. His superior, prevail for the community for GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER certain people in the area who Father Steven Grancini, C.R.S.P., cqmparable occupations. Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John, P. Driscoll would otherwise move out, "and North American provincial of, Hospitals,should adopt and'ob­ , 'MANAGING EDITOR thus tend to encourage residen­ the Barnabite Fathers, refused serve standards of enlightened Hugh J. Golden tial integration." to comment on the transfer. personnel, practicea.

See Need for further Study

Of Marriage' Indissolubiloty

Cquses-Not Symptoms

life

is

=:

ANCHOR

D


Oft: ANCHOR-

Connolly High School Plans Mixer Saturday Night; Stang Students Will Sing at Music Workshop

Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

Ohio City Plans New Community. Affairs Board

Singers from. Stang High School will be featured in a demonstration of folk-hymn singing at 8 Wednesday night, Nov. 15 at the North Dartmouth school. I,t'll be part of a program presented by the Diocesan Music Commission for organists, choir directors Folk Masses and leaders of congregation­ Folk Masses are being heavily al singing. Also on the mus­ attended at area churches when ical scene is the 100.,.voice they're on Sunday schedules and

Feehan choir, which is currently they're also very popular at readying a Christmas concert Diocesan highs. Jesus-Mary had under direction of Sistl;!I: Mary one last week, sponsored by the Evangela, R.S.M. The choir re­ Catholic Students Mission Cru­ hearses three times weekiy and sade of Notre Dame School but has a varied repertoire, reports 'well attended - by Prevost' and the Feehan Flash, school paper. Jesus-Mary students as well, and Here's our second mini-contest there was one at Sacred Hearts winner. He's Charles' Ozug, Academy, Fall River, sponsored Coyle High School junior. by the sodality and celebrated by Once upon a time, writes Rev. Harold Wilson of St. Wil­ Charles, in the city of Galilee, liam's Church. Ind., a group of smut-seeking . Also at SHA Fall River was an reporters tried trapping the All Saints Day observance which mayor of that peace-loving city took the form of a scripture ser­ into making an offbeat state­ vice and folk hymn singing. ment. At Dominican Academy, Fall Upon meeting the mayor in River, Nationall~dtication Week his office the first reporter asked will be marked by an address "Sir, we hear that you plan t~ from Mrs. Lydia Kemyokhina; run for re-election. Now we who will speak on education in have also heard that your cam­ the USSR. Mrs. Kemyokhina is paign is based on the theory that currently lecturing at Boston you have saved the citizens hun­ College. dreds of dollars in tax money," The Prevost Memory Book The mayor, proud of his ac­ will have Roland Lambalot and eomplishments, replied, "Yes, John Poisson as co-editors and that's true." an up-coming penny sale will The young reporter then con­ help defray costs of publication. tinued, "well sir, you being such And at Fall River's Mt. St. Mary a human piggy bank for saving Academy, the yearbook will be money, what are your opinions dedicated to the late Msgr. John on all the money we spend on Hackett and will have as its religious organizations?" • theme the quality of mercy,· es­ Obviously puzzled, the mayor pecially as evid~mced in extra­ asked, "What Jlo. you mean by curricular activitres of students. 'religious organizations'?" The' Sister Marie Elizabeth is the new second reporter replied, "He yearbook moderator for the means the money we spend on Mount. seat offerings and monthly offer­ Mock Town Meeting ings and the money we habitual­ A mock town meeting was ly toss into that collection basket that mechanically makes its way held at Feehan by Brian Wallin, speech teacher. Students argued through the pews." The first added, "And the for the erection of a new junior high school in town as opposed money we spend filling envel­ opes. Envelopes from everything to construction of factory facili­ from Peter's Pence to African ties. Also at Feehan, Future Nurse Missions. What about all this money, sir? How can it too be Club officers include Ann Nolan, president; Kathleen Pietrowski, slashed?" But the mayor, wise to these vice-president; Maureen Nolan, characters and aware of their secretary; Patric:ia Palanza, trea­ questions, thought momentarily, surer. Future Teachers Club officers are Jean Kapolchok, then answered: "Take out a dol­ Nancy Cusson. vice-president· lar bill, will you?" Patricia Don Carlos, secretary; So the reporters did so 'obedi­ Susan Servant, treasurer. ently. "Now read to me the in­ Lots of conferences and meet­ scription on the reverse side of ings going on for both students the bill." Simultaneously the reporters and faculty members. Among them: Massachusetts Art Educa­ replied, "In God we trust." "Well then, boys," replied the tors Assn. meeting in Worcester, mayor, "render therefore to the attended by, among others, Sis­ state the things that belong to ter Mary Adrienne of SHA Fall the state and to God the things River; Franco-American Profes­ sors Association, joined by Sister that belong to God." Albina Marie, also of the SHA School Rings faculty; Southeastern Mass. Assn. Holy Family juniors have re­ of Student Councils, meeting in ceived their school rings with East Bridgewat~~r and attended appropriate formality. Presiding by Feehan and SHAFall River at a blessing ceremony and Mass representatives; a High School was Bishop Gerrard and at a· Safety Conference at UMass, buffet follrowing the solemn rites also attended by Feehanites. faculty and juniors were guests A Theatre Arts Festival at of the student bodY: . Boston College attracted 30­ At Attleboro's Feehan High a Drama Club members from SHA chapter of Sociedad Honoraria Fall River with their moderator· Hispanica (Spanish Honor Soci­ Sister John Alicia. New Dram~ ety to us gringos) 'has been Club officers, incidentally, are­ formed under the direction of Anne McGuire, president; Glen­ Sister Barbara Marie. Members da Medeiros, secretary-treasurer. must maintain a 90 per cent av­ Other meetings to which SHA erage in Spanish. Chapter's name faculty or students lent their is "El 21 de septiembre," don't presence: Mas s . Secondary ask us por que. School Principals' Assn.; New Prevost High in Fall River re­ England Regional Meeting of cently completed its slate of NCEA. National Honor Society officers At Dominican Academy stu­ with election of Wilfrid Michaud dents heard talks from represen­ as treasurer. The Science Club tatives of Bristol County Com­ directed by Brother Daniei munity College ;1nd several girls Caron has Robert Martel as visited the new junior college's president; Paul St. Laurent as facili ties. vice-president; James Reid as Plan Mixer secretary; Ronald Thiboutot as Connolly High students have treasurer and Leo Thiboutot as invited girls from SHA Fall' student council representative. River to a mixer Saturday night

7

COLUMBUS(NC~Anew

organization-the Metropol­ itan Area Church Board-is expected to replace both the

STUDENT COUNCILLORS: Vice-presidents in charge of student council committees at Coyle High School, Taunton, are, seated from left, Emile Davidzuk, school spirit; David Lamb, executive vice-president; standing, Thomas Coulombe, public relations; Ronald Rusconi, social activities; Wayne Sjolund, school service. Monday Prevost juniors and at the new school. SHA girls will follow up with a di\nce on their seniors viewed "Blue Denim," a home grounds Saturday night, movie depicting the problems of Nov. 25. And at Ii practice math. a teenager, and juniors are plan­ tournament at SHA winners ning a "Battle of the Bands" to­ were Jan Torres, Beverly Moniz, morrow at St. William's Center. Prep School Rhonda Shaker, Victoria Alves Girls at St. Joseph's Prep

and Michele Paquet. School, Fall River, viewed Oedi­

'Blue Denim' Five young novices from the pus Rex recently, and another highlight was entertaining visi­ Brothers of Christian Instruc­ tion's novitiate at Alfred, Maine tors from Blessed Sacrament visited Prevost High School last School. A Bible Vigil marked All Saints' Day for the Prepers. week. They were Brothers Nor­ mand Berger, formerly of Pre­ vost, Gary LaGrandeur, James Maloney, Leo St. Pierre . and BALTIMORE (NC) - Father Rejean Laforge of Grand Falls, New Brunswick. On the eve of Philip Berrigan, S.S.J., a curate their departure the Christian at St. Peter Claver church, and Endeavor Club entertained them ·Thomas. Lewis, a Baltimore art­ ist, were released from jail here and in return the Brothers enter­ tained the youths with their after signing honds promising payment of $1,000 if they fail to musical talents. appear at hearings in connection with charges of splashing blood on files in the Maryland Selec­ tive Service oHices.

Inter-Church Board for Metro­ politan Affairs and the Colum­ bus Area Council of Churches here in Ohio. Final decision as to the future of ecumenical cooperation in cen­ tral Ohio will be made at the November Council meeting. The Columbus Catholic diocese be­ longs to the inter-Church board. Common Nature Projects Rev. N. H. VanderWerf, Pres­ byterian minister who serves as director of both interfaith groups, has described the new ~rea board plan as "unique in ecumenical circles." The joint committee of the two organizations is planning "a common strategy organization and program, opening the possi­ bility of a merger and a greatly enlarged program." The major aim of the new or­ ganization is "to act coopera­ tively in projects of common nature when the needs of the . community demand and our Christian conscience approves." _External Ministry It will also "speak in a united voice to the community when a clear consensus perceives a truth that must be spoken" and "serve . and support the various area church councils throughout the metropolitan area as they seek to develop and effect common ministries among the particular churches in the local area." The new organization's by­ laws noted that "this cooperation would apply to the external ~inistry to the community, but m no way to the internal min­ istry to the members of each denomination, and it would leave completely intact the freedom and responsibility of each church to distinguish between the two."

Released From Jail

Catholics Take Bus To Mass in Latin

. WILMINGTON (NC)-A bus

has be.en chartered by a group of _

Wilmington Catholics to trans­ ~ port people to Philadelphia each Sunday to attend a Mass cele­ brated in Latin at the Cathedral CYf Sts. Pet~r and Paul. Liturgical rules established in Wilmington -over a year ago re­ quire the use of English at all Masses in which two or more people participate; Robert R. Walsh, one of the

laymen who chartered the bus,

said the move was made to help a

large number of Wilmington

Catholics wllo "appreciate the:

opportunity to enjoy the Mass'

in Latin."

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8

.,i

Slate Cha,~ity Ban

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs;, Nov. 9, ,1967

Tomorrow Night .

Grandma Discovers New Ways of Diverting Tots

..,

Robert A. Benjamin will head the usher corps for the 20th an-' nual charity ball of New Bed­ ford Catholic Woman's Club, to be held from 9 to 2 tomorrow night in the New Bedford Hotel Ballroom. He will be assisted by Emile Camire, Louis Costa Jr.. L. Roger Giard, Richard H. Par­ sons, Raymond Robichaud, Hen­ rique Roge'rs and Leo M. Sul­ livan. Many pre-ball parties are planned by members of the club's usher committee, spon­ soring group for the event. Mrs. Benjamin, committee chairman, will entertain honorary patron­ esses, ushers and their partners at her home prior to the dance.

By Mary Tinley Daly Toy box at, our l1ouse~ usually immediate mecca for J1'3ndchildren, hit a new low in its popularity poll. "A bunch of junk," five-year-old Tim dubbed it. 'Look at it, , Grandma. Just look at it.!" We looked,' and liked not what we 8'aw:' immobile toy cars, children learn by doing, under jig-saw puzzles minus pivot­ the guidance of an understand­ al pieces; dump truck no ing teacher; be that teacher in longer dumping; splintered the schoolroom or I a parent at

crayons spilling loosely all over home. (Grandparent, in this case.) the box; coloring books com­ Increasing skills and expand­ pleted by some- , ing the imagination in the cur­ body else; paint riculum are explained in the set with colors fields of art, native crafts, The ball is a highlight of the lriissing, brushes science, math, social studies and New Bedford club's golden an­ limp and wispy; dramatics. niversary year. spring toy, Making Learning Fun sprung. The Being particularly' interested whole sorry in communication and the lan­ mess wouldn't guage arts, we were especially FOLK MASS: Responsible for arrangements fo.r a folk appeal to any­ delighted with the chapter by Mass celebrated 'at Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, under body, certainly Lucy Hale, Sixth Grade Teacher DOt to Tim and in the' DuPont Elementary auspices of the Catholic Students Mission Crusade of Notre SAN FRANCISCO (NC) three-year old School, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Dame School were, seated from left, Roxanna Young, Sharon sister Tara. We looked through Church ,neglect of the elderly and her use of simple, child­ Gray; standing, Elaine Yokell, chairman; Jeanne Cadrin, games reserved for older chil­ _and overemphasis on the young publicity chairman; Paulette Picard. ' dren: Monoply, Scrabble, an made puppets. were scored at an interfaith "Children receive much_ enjoy­ intricate golf game as far be,:, forum on the aging here. Theme yond small children as these ment from language experi­ ,of the forum, attended by Cath­ ences," she writes. "Through ebildren were beyond the baoy olic, Protestant and Jewish cler­ 'toys, rattles ahd jangling plastic puppets the child becomes alive gymen, was "Enrichment of Life and active. The withdrawal into keys, now amusing six-month­ During the Later Years." himself caused by a feeling of old Maureen. Father Philip Conway, direc­ inadequacy, when his perform­ Evoking Imaginatiolll tor of Catholic Social Service in ance is inferior to his own stand­ Santa Clara County, said the The backyard? Long since, ards, is eliminated when the churches have failed "to condi­ 'ungle gym, rope swing, sandbox puppet becomes the intermedi­ tion the elderly to the beauties have disappeared from our now ator. The. following poem was given to the model's own hair. With of growing old." 'sedate backyard. HowevElr, we "By the use of puppets, the to my hairdresser by Miss Rose the addition of these little thought we'd test our small power to think and react quick­ "A fundamental task of Furgiuele who had come across "boosters," even the gal with the churches," he continued, "is to guests' ingenuity as WI) had ly, to judge results of the reac­ read in a recent booklet, "Bits tion and to express thought and it in a teachers' magazine and very finest, most unmanageable develop a theology of death. Ap­ 'and Pieces-Imaginative Uses for feeling, is developed. When the thought it described beautifully hair will find herself able to proaching death should not be . Children's Learning." child learns to communicate the importance of a hairpiece in wear coiffures she never before morbid but a joyous anticipation the busy routine of the modern 'dreamed of and she'll receive of life hereafter. We clergymen Sure enough. A peek out the with others effectively, his per­ women window revealed Tim atop the sonality blossoms. Critical listen­ compliments she's missed for have also failed the aged in not years. BOOSTER .old oak stump, making ~m im­ providing ,dignified. housing for ing skills develop as he listens My hair was done for the show the retired within the parish, or passioned plea for "all you guys to himself and otl}ers speak I bought a pretty wiglet to vote for me and telI your through puppets. When the pup­ That goes everywhere with me, by my hairdresser, Mr. Fred, in at least in a familiar neighbor­ a dressy style, complete with hood, instead of shipping them fathers and mothers to vote for pet makes a mistake, the pres­ And what can be the use of it, me too. You'll be glad you did!" sure is taken from the child. He pearls and marabou feathers. miles away." Is very pl;:lin to see. Meanwhile, Tara was oligging has not failed-only the' puppet It covers up my balding pate; He used a small wiglet and my Father Conway also said that away happily with an old trowel. has; nevertheless, the child has It wreathes my face in curls; fall in creating the style and churches should open their so­ 'Twas only later that the Head· recognized the mistake."

The wrinkles seem to fade away; by removing the jewelry and the cial halls and educational facili­ of the House discovered her

For greater in-depth study in My teeth look white as pearls. fall I was able to wear what ties to the elderly. project had been filling in the teaching children, lists of refer- ' So God bless you, wigs and wig­ remained of the style to work Rabbi Bernard Ducoff of the holes he had carefully dug for ences are given. This booklet, for more than a week. And never lets both, Jewish Education Bureau said the Spring bulbs; If only we had to our way Qf thinking, is an 'have I received so many compli-' You're a truly priceless hair-do the churches have "done a great had the foresight to show her invaluable tool for teachers, par­ For us "gals" of declinlng years ments on what was really half a disservice to those over 65 by hairdo. ' how to plant those bulbs! ents and plain old baby-sitting Who have the nerve to wear assuming they are not capable of The holidays are the perfect The newly revised ."Bits and gI,'andparents.

you. Alberta C. Pollard study." time for any woman to tryout Pieces" became our te>;tbook,

Miss or Mrs. Pollard, as the Dot only for that day but will s o · '

case inay be, couldn't have found . a new hairdo and maybe even invest in a booster.

any subject to serve for many a year to come. emote on near­

As its name implies, the book-

er and dearer

let tells how to convert ordinary Name Sister Mary Luke to a woman's

LARGE GREEN MOUNTAIN

discards around the home into

WASHIN~TON (NC) A heart than her

usable, decorative or entertain­ To Research Committee POTATOES

Marykoll nun has been named hairdo. A wom­ ing objects. A laundry bag WASHINGTON, (NC) - Sister an accredited observer to the an's morale can $3 per Bushel

stuffed with crumpled news­ Mary Luke Tobin of the Sisters papers becomes a punching bag; United Nations Children's Fund rise or fall on of Loretto, former national chair­ 36 Barrows Road

wire hangers make decorative (UNICEF) at the United Nations how her hair man of the Conference of Major East Falmouth

Ifor Car ita s Internationalis, behaves and not stabiles or, 'delicately blllianced Superiors of Women in the Armando Costa

even a Dior cre­ with cut-outs, feathers and the worldwide Catholic charities or­ United, States, has been appoint-' gimization. ation can hold like move with every air cur­ ed a permanent member of the The appointment of Sister, its own against rent; there is an illustrated boat conference's research committee. made of a flat box, smoke Kathleen Kelly has been made a messy, unset The appointment came through a by Msgr. Lawrence Corcoran, head of hair. The latest holiday resolution adopted by the con­ stacks from the core of paper towels, a pill bottle capstan and vice president for North Amer~ coiffures were. shown to an ference's recent Chicago conven­ an elaborate yarn and pushpin ica of Caritas Internationalis area audience the other evening tion. and executive secretary of the at a styling show hosted by Lil­ railing around the deck. Home­ The research committee was made musical instruments of the National Conference of Catholic' lian Raymond, a hair expert. established during Sister Mary I 'was amazed at the return Luke's chairmanship to provide three basic categories-percus­ Charities.

Social Worker

of the curl as style after style U. S. Religious communities with sion, stringed and wind-are de­

Sister Kathleen, known as Sis­ was shown that could be de­ .scribed: maracas' from dried ~ informational basis for their gourds, for example, a' flowerpot ter Rose Maureen before-resum­ ,scribed.with no better adjectives. renewal planning. drum, a cigarbox fiddle, a soda ing her baptisimal name, suceeds, than romantic and feminine. Father Thomas Walsh, M.M., Tendrils, little wispy curls are straw oboe. Far from a textbook or mere who has been named to head definitely in and the Sasson' gadgetry, "Bits and Pieces" is a the Maryknoll house in Rome. severity is out. Girls 'are going The new UN observer is a to look like girls once again, and thoughtful presentation by high­ J,y skilled teachers of the way social worker, has been active in who knows what such a trend Aluminum or Steel civil rights activities. She is a could leadto--chivalry may 944 County Street board member of the National even return. NIEW BEDFORID, MASS. College President Catholic Conference for Inter­

Wiglets, Falls

TAUNTON, MASS. WY 2·6618 DUBUQUE (NC)-Msgr. Jus­ racial traveling workshops on Even the most conservative

tin A. Driscoll was inaugurated racial justice. member of the audience couldn't THE BANK ON

as the 19th president of Loras For 11 years she worked with help but be impressed by the TAUNTON GREEN

College in campus ceremonies Catholic Social Services in San stunning hairdos, especially the here in Iowa. Archbishop James Francisco and for the past year elaborate evening ones. Most of Member of Federal Deposit J. Byrne of Dubuque, chancellor and a half has been on the staff the more complicated StYles had lDsurance Corporation of Loras, led the dignitaries par- of the Sister Formation Program been created with the help of ticipating , at Maryknoll, N.Y. wiglets and falls to give body

Charge Churches Neglect Elderly

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New' Plastic'Markers Make Plant': l'denfifH:~;ation, Easy

Student Nurses Set ,Auction

By Joseph and, Ma,n,1yn Roderick

Student unrses at St. Anne'. Hospital School of Nursing, Fall River, will hold an auction at ., Wednesday night, Dec. 6 at the school of nursing auditorium on Forest Street. Proceeds will ben-· efit the 'school's Dlission and re­ treat fund. Miss Madeleine Brodeur, Stu­ dent-Faculty OrganIzation pres­ ident, is chairman, aided by Miss Karen Lopes, vice-president, and a large committee. Those wishing to contribute to the auction, which will become an annual event, may contact the school at 674-5741.

Within the last few months several of our friends have moved to new homes and have come to us asking for a few perennials to get thek gardens started. Weare more than happy to oblige, but these requests have made us aware of the need to label column. Christmas, however, is a our plants more diligently ~ time of giving and if we're going that we really know what we to give with meaning we have have. For instance several l?irst to give a great deal of fore­ people have asked for mums. Ilow, mums may be moved any, time but I hate to break up a good display now in the bloom­ ing season when they can be moved Just as easily in the Spring. We usually divide OUI!' mums In the Spring and begin fresh clumps from divisions, so I would rather wait until then to give them to our friends. The trouble is that by Spring I will have forgotten which mum is which. Labelling is the solution to this problem but I have al­ ways been too lazy to bother. Actually I don't know the name of a single mum in the garden but it would be very helpful at least to label them by coloI!'. , Plastic Markers The same is true' of iris, many of the bulbs, lilies and other per­ ennials. If you are color con'­

scious it is aggravating to have clashin'g color combinations side by side in the garden. Weohave tried several types of labels without success. Popsicle l3ticks and tongue depressors have a way of disappearing two or three weelts after they are put in the ground. The metal markers are both too expensive nnd too alluring to children, thus 1ll1s0 have a way of disappearing. Accordingly we are going to try IIOmething new this year; the lit­ tle plastic markers that are looped around the stem of a plant. These are five or six inches long and taper to a narrow head which inserts in the base of the marker so that they can be' firmly attached to a stem with out doing any damage to the plant., They are white and can be written on with indelible ink or a marking pencil. They, are l'elatively inexpensive and are :wea ther-proof. This sounds good in the col­ amn, but when it comes to ac­ tually going through the trouble of marking each plant, laziness :will show its ugly head and come Dext Spring I will be digging up mums for division hoping that this one is white and that one is yellow, etc. At any rate, the I8rden always holds num~rous . .rprises! III the Kitchen

Now that All Saints and An Bouls' Days are over we can eettIe down for a bit of planning. The Halloween costumes have been put away for another year M' relegated to the attic or cellar from where they'll reappear on rainy days, the pumpkins have disappeared Into pies and the irick or treat goodies have been gobbled up, with the resulting stomach aches. One holiday llIasses by but two others appear l!lm the horizon and the prepara­ ~ons for these, in many cases, must begin now. The first of the two on'coming holidays is Thanksgiving, a day fuat demands more meal plan­ ming than anything else; ,this )::Je'U go into in next week's

Sucoli"d1ulUJm

C~IUJ~

The Sucordium Club of Sacred JSIearts Academy, EaU River, will meet at 7:30 Tuesday night, Nov. 14. The program will be high­ lighted by a lecture.

thought and time; especially if th~ gift is to be handmade. ,Such gifts always seem to have love worked into them, but if ,that love is to be delivered to the reCeiver by the 25th of De,cember, now is the time to start your ideas perking and your fingers flying. Ideas should be the least of your worries, how­ ever, as November issues of home magazines arrive on the (lla,nds just bulging wi~h ideas from the creative minds of their handicraft editors, and it is more of a problem to pick and choose than it is to search for some­ thing original. Carpentry Project , "H your husband is handy with tools he too can Join in the Christmas gift making. One par­ ticularly exciting looking proj­ ect for the home carpenter isa, teak' makeup mirror complete 'with attached cosmetic box. The plans for this can be found in a ctlrrent home magazine, and al­ though they look complicated to me I'm sure that the do-it-your­ , selfer in your family would have , no difficulty with them. If sewing is your forte" think of making something unusual for that special person, some­ thing she'd never think to. buy for herself. A long hostess skirt, smashing culottes or a floaty at home robe are just a few of ·the items most wo;nen would love to own, but they fall Into the category of luxuries rather than necessities. This type of gift says "I care" when you give it. Most pattern' companies 'put out Christmas editions that can be found, in the same department as the usual pattern books and ,these should also offer boundless suggestions for your Christmas ' Jfst. November is the time at least to begin your holiday projects, so write up your gift list, declc.e who would appreciate a little something special, and ,get those fingers moving. ' This Is, a delightful bread pudding recipe from the kitchen of Mrs. Lillian T. Lavoie of St. Anne's parish, Fall River. It's a perfect dessert for this busy time of year when you want to satisfy your family's sweet 1;Qoth,yet don't want to ,spend a great deal of time making a fancy dessert. Double Boiler Bread Puddinc ,4 slices of bread buttered and' cut into cubes 3 eggs 1 cup of brown sugar (not firmly packed) 2 cups milk 1 teaspoon vanilla dash of nutmeg pinch, of salt lh can of coconut lh cup raisins (optional) 1) Place the buttered cubes of bread in the top of a double ,boiler. 2) Beat the eggs well in a mixing bowl and Stil' in the brown sugar, the milk, vanilla and salt, and raisins,:if you're using them. Pour this mixture over the breall cubes but do not stir. _ 4) Sprinkle all with the coco­ nut and the dash of nutmeg. 5) Cover and cook over hot water for one hour without re­ moving the cover. 6) Raisin bread can be used in place of white, E:asy and delicious.

9

THE ANCHOR~

Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

Priests to Represent St. Paul Presbytery

o

HOPE OF THE FUTURE: Strong family tradition characterizes 'life in many African countries, Pope Paul points out in his recent message to the peoples of that continent, with specia,l emphasis on the dignity of women and great hope for the youth, "The hope of the future." This .mother and son in Bukavu, The Congo, live in a rapidly changing environment, whose development the Holy Father seeks to assist. NC Photo.

Housing Effort Mic~igan Diocese'to Help Raise Funds

For Pre-Fob Homes jn Ghetto 'Area

GRAND RAPIDS (NC) -The Catholic Grand Rapids Diocese and the' Grand' Rapids Area Council of Churches have under..; iaken to· raise $15,000 for' the Greater Grand Rapids Housing Corporati,on. The goal Is half the amount needed to begin construction, by Jan. I, ona pre-fabricated proj­ ect in the ghetto area. , The three-bedroom units wIn rent for approximately $100 a month. Construction costs will be met, according to Francis X. Fallo!), corporation chairman, through a conventional FHA mortgage, partly subsidized by contributions.

The corporation was formed last June as an outgrowth of the Kent County Committee on Open Housing. There are 17 board members, recommended by the Diocese, the Council of Churches and the Open Housing executive committee. the corporation is ~utonomoU8•.

LaCrosse Teaching Nuns Receive Pay Incrase

ST. PAUL (NC) - SevelS

priests of the St. Paul and Min­

neaoplis archdiocese have been

appointed by the archdiocesan

presbytery on ciVic and private

social action committees in the

Twin Cities.

The priests appointed will, serve as representatives and liaison men with such gronps as ' the Minnesota Conference on Religion and Race, Project Equality, and the Twin City Housing Corporation. The senate took action, accord­ ing to Father James Moudry, St. Paul Seminary professor and sen ate spokesman, "because these areas of the Church's social apostolate need the representa­ tion of priests of the archdiocese. At present only a few priests are representing the Church in thev· areas of social concern."

Former Nun Continues Work for Handicapped JERSEY CITY (NC)-A for­ mer nun who has married will continue in work of aiding blind, brain-injured and handicapped children. Mary Ardath Gilpatrick, a na­ tive of this city and a former member of the Sisters of St. Jo­ seph, was married in S1. Mi­ chael's church, Union City, N.J.. to William Hein, vocational counselor for the New Jersey Commission for the Blind. The marriage was witnessed by Father Matthew Martin, C.P. Mrs. Hein, who received pel"­ mission from the Holy See to leave the Sisterhood and return to secular life, had been Sister Rose Imelda and principal of'St. JOseph's School for the Blind here.

LA CROSSE (NC) - Sisters teacbJng in the diocese of La Crosse have received a $600 raise in salary for the academic year 1967-68. The nuns wlll' be paid $1,500 Saturday Mass Privilege on a 10-month basis and wlll also receive hospital and medical For College Students Insurance. The change came as a result of two diocesan com­ BATON ROUGE (NC)-Cath­ olic students attending Louisiana mission' studies on the renewal State University here' 'have been of Religious life and Christian South • Sea Streets granted permission to fulfill the \ education. It has been approved by the diocesan board of con­ Sunday Mass obligation by as­ Tel. 49-81 HyaUlni~ sisting at Saturday afternoon sultors at a meeting with Bishop , Masses in Christ the King Chapel' Frederick W. Freking. on the college campus. ,Overcrowded conditions at ~IIJIIJIfIllIfIlIllIfIllIfIllIllIllIllIfIlIlJIllIfIlIllIfIllIfIfIfIfIllIllIllIfIlIllIllIfIfIfIllIllIfIfIllIfIlIllIllUIIJIfIllIllIllIf1I111:~ Sunday Masses led Baton Rouge diocesan officials to seek permis­ sion, which also" applies to ful­ i6H@$e<iJ IillOly$OlfrM,<iJOljf filling Mass attendance on holy days on the afternoon before the [Q)©lW holy day. Chancery officials emphasized that the campus chapel is the

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10

Cardinal O'Boyle

THE ANCHOR- , Thurs., No~, 9, 1967

Asks' Coolition To Help' Poor

Family Plarrnnnng .JI L • l «:Ie k l eGgerSln1mp Hit by Senators

• '

WASHINGTON (NC) Creation of an "Urban Coa-

WASHINGTON '(NC) - ' The United StateH Depavt­ ment of Health, J8lducation and Welfare has been sharp­ ly criticized by Congressional leaders !for lack of leadership in' providing' family planning services to the poor. Leading the attack on the fed~ eral agency before the U.S. Sen­ ate Government Operations SUb­ committee on Foreign Aid Ex­ penditures were Senators Ernest Gruening of Alaska, sub-com­ mittee chairman and Joseph D. Tydings of Maryland!.: ' "-:' l!Iarkavy Report "The fede'rill government has 0 done shockingly little to pro­ vide voluntary family services , to low-income familieB," Tydings HAVE YOU REMEMBERJEDTHE POOR: Next time you jet across. the .continent, said as he charged that the "top" or ~ friend returns' from a vacation abroad, think of this couple and ~heIr chIld, travel­ leaders of HEW fail to grasp ing 'at a rate of perhaps 10 miles a day,-t,heir en~ire hO,usehold p.o~sesslOns ~oaded on ~he the importance of birth contro!." two burros. Can you sp'are something for the 'BIShops Thanksglvmg Clothm,g CollectIOn Critizing failure of HEW, Sec­ retary JohnW. Gardiner to ap­ , noW in progress in the Fall River Diocese? NC Photo. . , ~ar, Gruening said: "That's

/

Htion" to marshall all the religious, civic, government-' al and economic forces of the city in a cooperative attack on:, poverty problems in the capital , city was recommended lately here by Patrick Car din a Jl O'Boyle of Washington. The cardinal also endorsed II proposal fur a $2 millip~ re­ volving housing development fund to invest in low-income housing projects and outlined an expanded archdiocesan pro­ gram to combat urban ills, Maintaining thatforced "manytoof live' our, citizens are still in a manner unworthy of chil­ dren of God," Cardinal O'Boyle declared that "the time has come, indeed, has long past, to, act rather than to debate. Our goals are clear enough, what re- ' mains now is to put ourselves on the line, in the forum, and in the market place." Pledges Support , He also warned that in doing so no one should act as a "Lady' Bountiful." No one, the cal~dinarll

Pr'elate Ce'r'tal-n' of T,hree' Eventuo'I'I-tl-es "

what'sItwrong withnothis depart­ said" can on ,be­ the ment. has shown leadership back" ~or "pat aidinghimself the poor, to date."

... , cause "'We owe it to ourselves, to ' Prompting ,the attack, on HEW

9 ur souls, and to our eternall was a report on its pc~rformance destiny." J'n ' the ,birth control field, m,ade I . N t· g th 11 f th Nt" al ' As a matter of fact, he pre- Urban ' 0 111 Coall·tl·on e ca 0for eestabll'sb­ a Ion B':'STON (NC) - Holding an off" ' when he reaches 75 - an d by, Dr, Osc,ar Harkav,", chiC'! of " \ ! J dictedunderway the 75th jubilee , " effective local coalitions ' popula-' informal press conference in a that will be Aug. 24, 197 0 . 'now "will gocampaign, well be- ,me o.f, , tile ' Ford Foundation's nt ti6n office. Boston harbor-side restaurant But before he reaches that yond the $50 million." throughout tbenation, the cardi­ , The report said that 'fnone, Richard Cardinal' Cushing said milestone, the cardinal said he nal appealed to local leaders to Celiba.cy"to stay of the HEW regional offices or ' lie 'felt positive of threeeventu;' feels "very certain" that Boston-" organize to meet "the challenges Operating agencies presently a l i t i e s . a r e a Catholics will provide him Switching to another subject, of urban life" in Washington places h,igh priority on family', '1)' He' will' never, live, to see: with tJ:le $50 'million he needs to Car!iin,al,Cushing predicted he community and pledged his'sup­ ptanning 9 r is certain what pre- : :th~ _day when pries~ in ~he 'wipe out the debts he has in-' "will never live to see the day port to such. an effort. eise functions it is' expected' to· Western-Church will b;e permit- curred.' ~hen pdests in'the West will be ' He expreSsed hope that Wash­ earry out." t~d to' Ji}arry:', " "I 'have h~d individuals COll-· married." , ington's neWly' appointed Com­ CI;itici~e ~geilley ' , 2 , ) lIe ' ~s. op~~misti~t~,at' his tributemol'ethan $~OO,OOO pay­ :i-Ie remi~ded that celibacy in' missioner Walter 'Washington The federal agency' the report - persopal campaign 'U? raIse $~O" 'abi~ over the next three 'years. -, the priesthood is not universal,' wilf Hcall an, urban coalition into ,. eontinu'ed,"must'grea'Uyincrease, .mill~on,towi?e_out the debt he I am very optimistic about its b~temphasized~'tltewholestruc'; being'" and'said he was ',tex_ the funds and profes<.ional staff has 111curred m the Boston arcb,­ (the financial c,ampaign) suc­ t\!re of the Church would have, tremely, optimistic'" tbat such ' , d evo t e d t 0~ thOIS fi e Id .'' diocese will . be . oversubscribed cess," ,the cardinal said. tq ,be changed to J;lermit priests'community action will be forth­ manpower » , HEW' 'should ,set its principal' before' he retIres 111 1970. in the Western world to marry.,' , coming." ," ,'" , , , : . . ' , 3) "It:! a couple, of weeks, he ". "You'll see no change in that' goal as domg what ]s necessary won't have one tooth he can call hpvin this part of th~ ~orld,"" f'#'~"##""'''''~ close the. gap be~,,:een approx- his own. .' , , , he declared. was asked abQut'thefuture . Jmat7ly, fIVe. mlll~on wom.en ' Th~frank-~pe~kingarchbish-. 'G' U' I·,'I~ " needl~t pUbh~l: a~ls~e~ famIly: OIl of BostQrl, sea'tedby, a picture U of the Church. He 'replied,~ "the ',' s plannll1" me~lIcal ~J yce and,' window overlooking Boston har­ NEW ORLEANS .. (NC)-The day of the ,big city church is 700,000 ' recelvmg SUCh. b' , ti one d tl1 e,. off~beat ,busor, men , ' "executive secreta.ry ,Qf the, Na-, over," arid the future inter-Cit"", J' " abcut, .d " .1 . , .. ..' ',i' ' iness ' about. his, teeth w4en he', tional Cat h 0 Ii c . Pharmjcists" churches will be small' in.stead , It,als0Jnamtamed' thllt . _radlcal­ ~asasked' ii bout tile. ,generaL, Guild has recounted the group's' of some cathedral-'like struCtures. ' < , , , , 'Hyannis , ~, linproved ~ontrac:eHtIye.tech-, conditiori of his he;jlth. ' , , rapid 'gto,,:,tli and expansion in""Religious services 'will be" , 279 'Barnstable 'Road, , , n~lquesmll.st. ?e, ~eveloped:]!f un-: Iri'recent years he ,has ,beep, five .years. Principal aim of the" held even: in high-rise, apart-'" ~anted ferhh~r IS to be. b,rough,! beset'by!i numb~r ~fa~lments" guild is to promote spi,rituality,;' ments in the big cities," he pre~ 5P'5-OO79 , ,under control. ' ,,', has undergone, se"teral opera­ among its members,' well aSdicted." " " #~~~~##• •"#I·'•• ~#~#" ,tions and been hospitalized fre,." to .improve professional ability;,' .Award FederaD Funds quently for, check-ups. But he 'Timothy P. Keating of New', shrugged off the queries al?out, Bedford, Mass., addressing the T~, ,Je'rsey Hospitals his general health and disclosed: guild's fifth annual convention ; :NEWARK (NC )-'1'hree' New, here, 'recalled' he founded the ExpectS ,$50 Million " Jersey , Catholic hospitals will· "I" .' 't' 'h" ·t I to first' chapter in ,New' York in: m,o.,a OSPl a '6 ·t,h 21 b' Th' receive more than' $2 million in h ' ,m', IIgomg, ' . t tli tak, t" 19 2 WI mem ers. ere fecteral funds under the Hill­ , ,aTve a ,m! ,~e, . 7~n o~ti Ii ' are-about -lOO members through:" , h d e t car Ina, now , ,sa] e th ' t·, h said ' ~urton Act 'to help in construc-' e na IOn now, e, '" tion ~ of facilities to replace is still; determined "to' call it 0\1 Keating said the ,convelltion-, and/or add 265 beds to hospItal the tirst held in the deep south e~pacities. Tor,nadoes- Destroy

-"planted real root,,' fOr,a larg'e The'largest grant of $1,194,101' and successful organization in PER Church 'Property

will go to St. Michael's Hospital, this area," The New Orleans Newark, to' replace 115 beds and ­ POINTE A LA HACHE (NC) archdiocesan, unit, founded in,' supportiIlg services in 'buildings -A tornado has 'caused property, 1964, has 31 members. PAID QUARTE'RL.Y PAID-UP constructed before 1890; , damage to' St. Thomas church Of<ficers elected at the con­ St, Mary's Hospital, Passaic,' and rectory here estimated at SHARE CERTIFICATES vention we're: William J. Habig will get $850,350, to help meet more th31~ $100,000. Deposits Welcomed ,in Multiples of 10fBethel, Ohio, president; John the costs of constructing a six­ Father Peter Boerding, S,V.D., P .. Winkelmann of St. Louis, story addition to add 76 beds to pastor, was offering Mass when $200.00 up to $30,000":"'on Single and Joint Accounts the' hospital's capacity. Another the tornado struck. He said, "we ­ first vice-president; Miss Ro­ Up to $60,OOO-for Corporations berta Freeman of New Hartford, $190,890 is earmarked for Alex­ got almost no' warning. The DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR ian, Brothers Hospital, Elizabeth, lights went out, and I heard a N. Y" second vice president; for replacement of 74 beds now sound like low-flying jet planes. Lloyd A. Gravois of New Or-" February, May, A'ugust and November in a building constructed in 1892. ' "Debris started falling all leans, secretary; and Miss 'Ur­ , The local institutionl, will have aroJ.lnd; but the sacris~y seemed sula C. Heyer. of Baltimore, All ,Deposits Insured in Full to raise 65 per cent of the cost of '.gafe, 'so we rushed there to hide," treasurer. Father' Albert, F. 6he proposed. facilitiell. he went on, (Because of the Shovelton of New Bedford con­ storm only the housekeeper and tinues as spiritual director. one woman parishioner were ":JQins Office S,taff , present,) , "It was a good thing ut ' ec Ine In 'PITTSB,URGH (NC) - Father we did, because'pl:u't of the' roof" Vernon F. 'Gallagher, G,S.sp., ' caved :in nght on 'the altar near' "WASHINGTON '(NC)''- Con- . fOl'mer provincial, of the Holy the sPQt where I was standing," gl'essional pressure, 'and a SU-' Ghost Fathers and,past president Father' Boerding said. '. preme Court ruling have caused 4I>f Duqllesne, University,is join­ , Nine persons.Were reported, a'l;harp de<:line in the mail-order ,jng the, na:tionaloffiee staff of injured,'two seriously, 'and 'six' 'pornography business, the' gov- ' ,Main Office: '4 'Winthrop Street. Taunton , ,the,Pontifical Association of the' homes "were" dall,1aged by ,tbeernment1s' chief postaHnvestiga': , ' Bra'nch Offite: f400'Fall River ·A~e._ Seekonk , HQly Childhood ,here.' , t o m a t ! o : " ,:, , tor said here.' ~~~ ~~

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. . THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs."Nev. 9,1967

.. '.

12

Daughters' of St~Paul Ban Display Of Dutch Catechism' in Bookstores

New Catechism Shows Way,

BOSTON (NC)-The Daugh":' the order's home office had de­ .• ters of St. Paul, whose publish- veloped its own policy: don't dis­

To Effective ,Christianity .. '

ing house operates a d02en book-

play the book and sell' only

~

stores throughout the country, priests and nuns. She said the have banned the controversial- central purchasing office' &Iso - By Rt.lRev. Msgr. Johll1l S. Kennedy_ and best-sellin~~ nutch Cate- had instructioQS not to forward chism from their display cases. the Dutch CatechIsm to indivldThe package was not labeled "Dynamite," but it might Instead, said a spokesman foll' ual stores until it is requested. 'Well have been. I-t contained the reviewer's copy of the the order, they are stocking a PIa.n hbUcntioD oo-called Dutch Catechism. The proper title is A New Cate­ small number of copIes for sale Despite the ban on display of tthism: Catpolic Faith for Adults. The English translation on request by priests and nuns. the Herder book, shoppers at But she indicated that even this st. Paul Book Centers won't be by Kevin Smyth (Herder get expert, summary treatment was being done reluctantly. without an adult catechism to and Herder, 232 Madison here, ,and come up for furt~er HAt. first," said Sister Paula, buy for very long. Ave., New York, N.Y. 10016. comment later on. who handles the order's general "We are coming out with our Then, the unique way of Israel $6). It has no imprimatur. book sales program, "we told own, titled 'Catechism for the <One was granted but it was is considered. The treatment is the stores not to keep them at Modem Man • in about a month," concise and comprehensive. It withdrawn pe~ding some unspec­ all. But when a number said they said Sister P~ula. "We are work­ goes directly at what As essential. ified changes were getting requests from lng very hard at this, preparing The covenant between God 'and IJ&id to have priests and n~s, we ,told them posters for window displays and Israel is explained. The mode of \been suggested to keep the copies in the back. translating Vatican Council doc­ communication of God's word by some unSpec­ We, also'told them to check with uments." and law is described. Hied quarters in the local chancery office to get ''This book win show that we The development of the Old Rome. The orig­ the bishop's permission to keep are up to date and with the DR. C. J. NlUESSE Testament is,outlined, with some " , mal Dutch edi­ the book. Pope and the Church," she said. extraordinarily clear !Considera­ ~on bears the Approval Wit~dra? The book, edited by a group of tion of the problem of literary bnprimatur of Th.e Dutc~ Cat:chism IS bemg priests, will comment on 614 genres in the Scriptures. This is Bernard Cardi­ published m thIS country by topics by quoting appropriate an in:;;tance of successful avoid­ !:lal Alfrink, of He;~er & H.erder of New York. passages from the documents of ance of technical language in the the Netherlands, Ongmally, It was ,to carry the V tican n explanation of a technical matter. WASHINGTON '(NC)-Dr. C. imprimatur of Bishop Robert F. and the fore­ a • In part three, the Incarnation Joseph Nuessse, head of the so­ word is signed Joyce of Burlington, Vt. But the ciology department, has been bishop withdrew his approval "'The Bishops of the Nether-, and the mission of Jesus are ex­ plained. The principal eyents named acting executive viee-' when he~ learned that a special Offers Scholarship llands." and the key themE~s of the Gos­ Why the assertion that a warn­ rector of the Catholic University Vatican commission was studyIIi library Science llng of the presence of explosives pel are' set out. This is accom­ of America. ing the possibility of rewriting HAVERFORD (NC) The might have been affixed to the piished with an air of simplicity, The announcement was made' parts of the book. . Catholic Library Association has but actually the substance, if not ~rton in which the boola; was by Father John P. Whalen, the "We' are trying to stick with ohipped? Not because the work, the presentation, is' quite com-. university's new acting rector. Rome, with the Pope and with inaugurated the Rev,' Andrew L. Brouwhuls Scholarship in LI­ plex. ~ controversial and has run irito He said Dr. Nuesse's appoint­ the chancery office," said Sister brary Science, to be awarded foll' Wonderfully Logncal' 'oome vague trouble (true il1 both ment followed consultation with Paula. "We want to give the , For woven into the adroit out­ instances). Not because it is the academic senate' and had truth of the Catholic faith, and graduate study toward a mas­ ter's degree. llwoby-trapped with heresy or is lining of the Gospel are apt ref­ been approved by Francis Car­ if there is doubt (about a book) The scholarship Is named for erences to the observance of its dinal Spellman of New York, we should not keep, it." 11 threat to the traditional faith the late Father Andrew L. and the Church (false, In both mysteries in liturgical life today, chairman of the board of trus­ "We tell our book stores to ask Brouwhuis, ·S.J., former librar­ as well as quick recapitulations tees, and by the survey and ob­ instances). the chancery and do what they ian of Canisius College, Buffalo, of developments in the Christian But because it is perilous to say." . jectives committee and the ex­ N.Y. • era. An example of the latter is ecutive committee of the board. mental sloth, sectarian compla­ Nevertheless, Sister Paula said Religious, as well as lay eency, a habit of indifference or the clarification, in the early ,The appointment will be for people, are eligible for the schol­ ecumenical councils, of the iden­ l1.rresponsibility where the obli­ one year, concurrent with Father which !Consists of an tity of Jesus. ' gations of the Christian in the Urban League Head arship Whalen's own appointment and, award of $1,000 to, the person The third,and much the long­ <i:ontemporary world are con­ it was stated, does not set a To Rece5ye Award chosen by the CLA scholarship eerned. And because it will fire est part, is styled ''The Way of . precedent for future appoint­ Christ." It reviews and evaluates CHICAGO (NC) - Edwin C. committee. all but the utterly impervious­ ments to the same office. the history of the Church up to (Bill) Berry, executive director

\With a new dynamism. It was authorized under a the present, then goes into the' temporary vacation of, the uni­ of the Chicago Urban League has

Aim Achieved! been named recipient of the 1967

"The aim of this catechism is Christian life, its source and versity statutes during the peri­ an serve the reader by showing growth. od. in which will be conducted John F. Kenned:y Award ofathe

It is here. that the wonted mat­ Catholic Interracial CounCil. The lllim the Christian message as a ONE STOP a reassessment of the univer­ award 'will be presented at CIC's Il:onnected whole," we are told ter of catechisms is handled, but sity's function and place in mod­ SHOPPING CENTER annual award dinner Thursday,

JIn an introductory section on not in the wonted matter, of em Catholic education on a na­ Dec. 7 here;

catechisms. The order, for ex~ "How to' use this- book!' It goes • Television • Grrocery tional scale. The' award is presented annu­ (§ln, "The themes treated were ample, is different, yet wonder­ • Appliances • Furniture Father Whalen said Dr. Nu­ fully logical and effective.. ally to an individual who has

<chosen to provide matter of re­ esse was selected 6ecalise of biB given outstanding leadership in

104 Allen St~, New Bedford The fourth part deals with trlection for mature believers. "unique qualifications of experi­ the cause of interracial justice As far as possible all technical what we customarily !Call the 997-9354 and brotherhood. "last things." Again, the mode is ence in various Catholic Univell'­ llanguage has been avoided." sity faculty and administrative The aim is unquestionably unconventional, but in what is . Cilchieved. The mature believer said of death and its aftermath posts for over 20 years and broad. who deliberately and reflectively (the accent is on resurrection), academic outlook. goes through this remarkable and in the uplifting final obser­ !book will indeed see the Chris­ vations about God, there is a Social Action Rost Ilian message as a conneCted surge of triumph. , Whole. Spirit of Love For Texas Priest ' The whole catechism is instinct And he will see it as bearing WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop lIm his own life. Not only has all with the authentic spirit of love, John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, technical language been avoided, and inculcates this in the reader. episcopal chairman of the Sociall but the explanation of doctrine Talk of Christian love is likely Action department, Un~ted states is shot through with examples to be more hortatory or' senti­ Catholic Conference has an­ drawn from ordinary experience, mental than. explicit and prac­ nounced the appointment of i/JIvite to visit homely examples to which any­ tical. The authors of this book Father John E: McCarthy, chair­ @ne can relate. get down to brass tacks, both in man of the Community RelationAl Way to Christ definition and in exemplification. Council of the. Galveston­ The catechism does not begin The reader is enabled to' see Houston Diocese as assistant di­ what he must do in specific rector of the department. The fn the familiar way. At the out­ instances. !.Jet, it asks the meaning of hu­ appointment is effective Dec. 1. man existence, just as each of As for the orthodoxy of this Father McCarthy, a board ll1S has agonizingly done from work, there is, of course, the wit­ member of the Houston Council time to time. It considers a num­ ness of the entire Dutch episco­ .on Human Relations. and chair.,. A lovely Colonial 6 room ranch with garage ber of possible answers, and con­ pate. On particular matters man of the Diocesan Mission­ and breezeway located in Walnut Hiils on Die­ (papal authority" the Real Pres­ ,Council of Galveston":Houston, is cludes that none which is_satis­ factory can be found in this ence, family' planning), there is also a field representative of the mondlHlm Road, Woonsocket, just below Wal­ world. In us there -is an insistent nothing lexceptionable if what is U. S. Bishops' Committee for the , nut P~azOl. for ~lUs~ $1.00, it could be yours ~1I for the infinite, for God. said is carefully examined and Spanish Speaking. But God is met and known correctly understood. Valid dis­ 'He is also' a member of the C)JrQ November] 8. lB\lUi~~ by A~IPIhOl9Je fer~al'1ld omd (l)nly in Jesus, and so the book tinctions are made and must be Latin american Affairs Commit­ Sons. becomes, in effect, an invitation precisely apreciated. tee, Texas AFL-CIO. Father Mc­ to come and see God in and The style is superb. It is plain Carthy was ordained in 1956. through Jesus. Because this rev­ and' direct, yet every so. often <alation took (and takes) p~ace in there occurs a figure or a paral­ HOUSE BEAUTIFUL is open daily from 1 P.M. @U~\f \f@ OJ) [j1J h 1@[f'!50\f)j human history, the Order of the lel which is as lovely as a flower until dus~ rainy days excepted. book is historical. and as illuminating as a sudden JAMAICA (NC) - Frank In the second part of the cate­ shaft of light. We are not told Aiken, Deputy Prim~ Minister DIRECTIONS

chism, the way. to Cheist, who wrought this masterpiece of and Minister for External Af­ through history, is traced. First, popular exposition, but we owe fairs of Ireland, has presented DrivQ Nort~ from Pawtucket w ProvidencG on Diamond

lliere is what is called the way them a debt of admiration and 250 volumes' on Irish history to Hill Road. 114, continuo to' Woonsocket, a.t, just beforG

of the nations, comprising prim­ gratitude. St. John's University here in WCIIlnlpfr Hill Shopping Plaza

itive religions, the great. cultures Their book shows us the way New York in the name of the of the past Hinduism, Buddhism, to being genuinely, integrally, Irish government. The Univer­ Chinese Univ('rs~1ism. Human­ actively, effectively Christian in sity instituted a course in Irish wm and Marxism. All of these our own day. ' history this semester. \

ns

Named Acting Vice-Rector

CORREIA & SONS

The SISTERS OF MERCY

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House Beautiful

HIm


o

THE ANCHOR-

Married Deoe,ons To Fill Places. In Missions '

'Thurs.,

which make up "no priest land, their youthful su­ perior general envisions more. help on the way in the form of married deacons. _ Fathe'r Robert C. Berson, 43" GI~nmary's third superior gen­ eral believes married deacons are' one of the answers to the challenge of taking the Church to "no priest land's" 40,000,000 citizens. Sees Acceptance "What I'm thinking of is one priest circuit-riding over' about an eight-country area. In each of the local parishes there would be a resident married deacon ~s administrator. He would stay in the community, live there, earn his living there, raise his family there and be the official Catho­ lic churchman in that town," he . ,;

"Married dea~ons would be' well' accepted o all churchmen in the South," the Glenmary super­ ior opines, "becaus~f the'strong Protestant· tradition' that: pre­ vails. As a matter, of fact', the community at large' would' find a mauied deacon much easier to accept than 'a'celibate 'priest."

. 1967

11

PffiLADELPHIA (NC)-· Philadelphia's elected Coun~ cil of Priests has suggested establishment of .forums of

U.S.A."~but

said.

9,

PriestsD (C@MIl'B~ iI Urges T@~~di~g City Prroil»~®uns

DALLAS' (N-C) , The: Glenmary Home Missioners have taken on a big jo~. populating 1?he 700 counties' ,

Nov.

priests ,among parishes, espe­ cially in 'the inner city, which face similar problems. At a council meeting in St. Charles Seminary a special com­ mittee suggested th'at area priests' forums be coordinated · through the council and that rep­ resentatives of such groups be invited to open meetil)gs of the council to explain their special needs. I . Other suggestions included a recommendation that inner cit~ . clergy become familiar with and involved· in services of~ered through government and volun­ tary agencies for the benefit of" area residents. Retirement Policies The council also suggested greater involvement' of high PLANNING BISHOP'S CHARITY BALL: Preparing plans for the Jan. 10th· social school, college and seminary stu­ affair benefiting N£dareth Hall are: Sr. Maureen, RSM, principal at .Nazareth Hall, Fall dentsj11 helping inner city youth, . Rt . R ev. A n th o~'y. 'commUl1ity and Pl!~ised service presentbyprograms River; l\1'rs. James A. O'Brien, chairman of the Presei1~ee Commlt-\ee; students.of

M. Gomes,. PJ9Pesan . Coordinator .of th~,.,}~ishop'sCharIty, Bal.l; Mis* If'.hoI?as H.. CahIll, A council committee conduct-· Presentee Committee-member; .MISS Margaret M. Lahey, DIOcesan ChaIrman of the·, ing an in-depth study of priests' Catholic Charities of DCCW. retirement policies has' sug­

A'n': n''uol B.·sho,pJls' C''h' a,'~'.I·t· y", "Bo'il

"'On'the other the" hand,'Catholic: Father. Berson' believes' community would' have' a 'littie .

,

prOblem.·~-'"

'

'

Commit'tee Prep'arino IComm·ernoll'ative Booklet

,gested that all .priests of tile Philadelphia archdiocese be re­ · quired to retire at 75. The"com­ mittee also suggested that any' , ·priest be permitted to retire at 7~

1 ",' more ofa ' "No Priest Lan'd" ;d.I C~ases .Publication "But I believe," h~ added, ~ 'The, 13th annual Bishop Con-' p'atrons, donorsl of. $25. All the~e. terested in the Booklet contact , DAYTON (NC)-The Society ..that these people could' be nolly's Charity Bail to. be held categories recei1ve tickets' to the members of the Conference of of. Mary devotional magazine, brought ·to realiZation of' the January, 10, at the ~incolI1 Park Ball. Tickets ~or ~he Ball are. the St. Vincent de Paul Society Mary Today, will cease publica- , advantages Of a married d'eac6n .Ballroom, North. Dartmouth will ten dollars, admittmg two per- or affiliates of the, Council of ' tion with its November-Decem­ as pastor and could be 'oriented :feature the solemn ceremony of' sons. . C,atholic. Women co-sponsors of · ber issue due to falling ci1ltula­ tion. Circulation has dropped . to\vard the idea." . ,the presentatfon 'of o y6ung .ladies ·It is urged' that persons .1n- ; the, Ball. . Father Berson, foresees ap­ by their fathers to His Excel-., ., Sister Mary Maureen, R:S.M: · from 23,000 to less than 1.4,000 proval of the p~r!Diment diacon­ lency', Most Reverend James L.. ft. ' . . "reported that exceptional pro- jn the last, decade. ate by the U.S. bishops. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River. gress has been made at the'~az''The Southern. ,!>ishops. ttlat I ' .Mrs. James A: O'B'rien, Chair-. ' • areth Hall School;'Fall Rl ver.;' have· talked to have. gi':"ElIJ. me lady 'Of thePre~ente-e Committee,' one of the benefic,iaries of the reason ·to believe that the pro~, reports··that' young iadie!! Will~ARC~LON~ (NC)-Six mo~e' Charity Ball. , .' " , Chewing Eflicienc:y . gram.,w ill be adopted and: will be' presented 'from iiws'~: five pnests have been arrested In Rt. Rev. Msgr.· Anthony M. Incre'c:ised upto·3$% have particular application in areas of the Fall River Diocese­ Spain :for theirl9pen, support of Gomes, pastOr of 'Our, Lady of ' Clinical tedts prove you can ,n01ll the South," he observed. F:allRiver, Ne·w.B·edfo,rd,· :r.aun-' labor strikes, I . ,'" the 'Angels Church, Fall River, chew better'- make dentures aver­ IIge up to 35% more elfectiv~lf,you There are many questions still . t6n, Attleb'oro and Cape Cod. " 'Those ~rres~~ at nearby Tar": Dioc~s.m· 'Co-Ordhlator of ~e'" sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on ,YOUl'· to be answered' about the per.. " Gi-eat 'emphasis' be. placed' rasa anmdustnal' center, wer.e Chanty Ball, urges all commlt­ plates. FASTEETH Is the 'alkaline manent," diaconate: concerning j he' Charity ,Ba\l.'So\lvenir Fathers'Augustiln Dauda,Damian: tees '6f the five . areas ,of the' " (non-acid) ,powder that holdS false teeth more firmly so they fe,el \Dare traii-ling, the ~ypes of work dea­ Booklet: . '.there 'are' five, cate­ Sanchez Bustarente and. Juan' I)iocese tl;> mak.e a' dettiiWined' comfor1;able. No gUmmy. pasty taste. cons 'm-lght perform to earn :their' gories.in this -bookl'et:'They are ,Reces. They' were attendmg a effort to procure names, for' the" ,Doesn't sour. Checks denture'odor. Dentures that tit are essential to livelihood"and. ;whether there Special Fdends,contributors of. pi'otest rally 4gainst 'minimum .B()okl~~. 'The de~d'i?efoI: the.' health. 'See your dentist regularly. wouidbe stable, well-formed $125 or .m6re;'Guara'nto-,:s, and wage laws recently enacted by' 'printing 'of names. IS December Get FASTEETH at all clrug·counteJW. laymen' who wO'ttd be willing to" . Be'nefilctors,' 'donors ,qf ~100; the government: . ' . . 27th oI' this :rear. make .the sacrifices necessary to Sponsors, donors of $50; and. Reports :from Bilbao, another' ' 'function as a deacon in "no industrial~ center in northern priest land," Father Berson ad­ Criticizes'Anarchy' Spain: said that three unidenti:' mitted. . fie,d, priests w+re also arrested "We're Ready In riests ,tt.re there While pal1ticipating in sim- . Glenmary, which staffs four MADRID (NE). - Ecclesia, a ilar protest demonstrations. parishes' in . the Dallas-Fort Catholic weekly claims ttJat an­ Last 'week'i Father Carlos Worth diocese,· is a young'soci­ archy prevails' in priestly attire Jimenez Parga, who also. works, ety; The aver,age of its. priests' since the SpanIsh .bishops gave as a Madrid taxi driver, was ar-' is about 40. The enthusiasm' of ~ th~' green' light to the wearing of .rested there ahd .charged with their superior general.over the suits. instead of cassocks. 'attending a Iseci-et workers" prospects of adding a new di­ "They are qmning. 'the whole .meetirig: . I ' . mension' to 'the' home mission gamut of shapes, colors and . 'Police made a wave of arrests ·work is typical of his society. styles," the, magazine complained a'mid growing Jnl'est among stu-' "We'd ll'ke to try wOI'kl'ng wI·th e d·t· "s orne t·1m es . you dellts and workersiri an effort 1 OTIa 11 y. I married deacons," Father Ber­ wonder if there is really a priest to forestall nationwide demon-" son said. "Ii we can find a bish­ under the attire." strations that had been planned op wI'III'ng to ,go along,' we're' ' E ccleSla ' sal' d Such, extremes, , ' against workiI\,g conditions· iJ:!. , ready. " were unexpected in a Catholic Spain by the <r:athQlic Workers' Committees. I . t t d't" h coun t ry were pnes s ra 1 IOn­ The arrest and an impressive . S· ally professed devotion to their I Franc.scan Isters display Of, sec~llrity forces ~orecassocks; .yet there is more 01'­ stalled the demonstrations, but derly attire in countries where ~ T o M ee t Nov . 23 the· "clerical suit" has been in the com,mittees did produce seri­ INDIANAPOLIS '(NC)-"Fran­ ous disturbanc s in Madrid and. use for decades. ciscans in the Modern World" "We cannot return, to the Taf1'as~, as w 1ll. as minor ??es will be the theme of the 16th cassock-only rules, but please, in Se.V.llle, Barcl,elona and GlJon. annual Franciscan Sisters Educa­ there is a thing called good tional Conference to be he1d at order and ,taste," ," :!.11I1I11I11I1I1I1I11I1II111I1II1I1II1I1I1II11I1II1II1II11II1II1IIl\; Marian. College here s t a r t i n g ,

~ DRY CLEANING ~ • HEARING AIDS • ZENITH • ACOUSTICON •. UNEX Thursday, Noy.. 23. '. . Election' Set

~. . I ~ Speakers will' includ~ Mothel' == I .c:m == .. "~SMETICS • BIOLOGICAl! • YITAMIII$ M. Viola of Millville,' Pa., who· .. ~V4TROBE (NC) - A ne.w. ~', FUR SiTORAGE. ~' will discuss new .wa~'s of carry':' c~adjutor. archabbot,. who. Will I.. iilg"0Ut 'the'2traditt0r1aI". work of. :have jurisdiction ..over ,some .200· .~. ~ .,

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of Washington, D. C., who will Vincent archabbey her.e III Penn-'

.' speak ot:J; Franciscan response to sylvaf\.ia ..will., be el,~ted, by the.;

world needs. Informal dialogue~ Bene dIC t me communi t y M on day "

....ill also be part of the program. . Nov. 20•. " . '. ......,... ,.. ," '.

.

,

DEIR'''r'"O'D-Y '.

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!:.: CllEANERS .!

'

IRENE R. SHEA, ..ROP.

~ .. 34-44 coJan~etStreet.· .~:

"rom,;t, Fr~e 'De/irery

_:;_- .. -Taunton

202 ROCK ST~

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fALL RIVER, SOMERSET, JlVERTOR & YIQNlll

(CORN~ 'OF, PtNE ST.).

'ALL RIVII


THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fa" River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1'167

Says Sisterhoods Must Recoglnize Different Breed of Candidates HARTFORD (NC) - Young He declared that young people women interested in religious today are genuinely concerned life today are a different· breed, about helping the poor, "and and religious communities must they are somewhat ashamed recognize this to attract and hold -that they come from an affluent new candidates, a psychologist society. advised here. "They want to cooperate with Father John R. McCall, S.J., of people of other faiths, to work Weston College told some 800 with anyone of good will who nuns and laywomen attending will help men. They will come the Theresian National Confer­ into the religious life only if we ence that "unlike the religious show them that we have real aspirant of 25 years ago, today's poverty," he asserted. young women don't come from a The Jesuit prIest said religious safe, secure, immigrant, work­ aspirants of the future will not ing class structure. lack challenges "because I think "They come from a family on people in the religious life are the move which has traveled moving into a period of: increased higher and faster culturally and tribulation and suffering." socially than its predecessors. Increased Involvement They are more widely traveled, During the crisis and upheaval they are used to handling large in the Church, there is a great sums of money, and they don't deal of suffering within the reli­ know what it is to use public gious communities, "but the next transportation." stage means suffering on the "Today's young women," he outside as we encounter in­ said, "come from homes which creased hostility in giving wit­ are no longer dominated by the ness to Christ," he said. Another convention speaker father and where the children are used to being consulted was Bishop Charles A. Buswell about things that affect them. It of Pueblo, Colo., who praised the manner in which religious Sis­ is not realistic to think this at­ mosphere will not influence the terhoods have entered into the religious candidate's attitude spirit of renewa'l mandated by the Second Vatican Council. toward the authority and consul­ He conceded that this has tation in the religious commu­ brought tension but said that nity." Genuinely Concerned "where there is no tension there is no life, where there is no life Father McCall said while reli­ gious communities should not there is death, and where there is death people get buried." be ·expected to conform them­ Bishop Buswell said the in­ selves completely to the wishes and the ideas of the young peo­ creased involvement of religious ple they hope to attract, "they women in the world "brings to Christianity a dynamism and should get rid of cultural encrus­ enthusiasm which will make tations which had some signifi­ cance in the past but are no more effective the work of Christ ,through the Church." longer justifiable."

13

Holy Father Establishes Two Dioceses

FRESNO (NC)-The division of the 45-year-old Monterey­ Fresno diocese into the dioceses of Monterey and Fresno will be accomplished Dec. 14 and 15 when the new bishops of the separate Sees· will be installed. The division was directed by Pope Paul VI when he accepted the resignation of Bishop Aloy­ sius J. Willinger, C.SS.R., 81, of Monterey'-Fresno.

The Pope named' Bishop Tim­ othy Manning, 58, to head the Fresno diocese, and Bishop Harry A. Clinch, 59, to the Mon­ terey diocese. Bishop Clinch, who has served since 1957 as auxiliary bishop of Monterey-Fresno, will be in­ stalled Dec. 14. It is expected, that the ceremony will take place in the basilica of the Cat-

mel Mission since MontereY­ designated cathedral, the church of San Carlos, is too small to accommodate the expected large congregation. The church's DOr­ mal seating capacity is only 300­ Irish-born Bishop Manning. who has served since 1946 all auxiliary bishop o! Los Angeles, will be installed Dec. 15 in at. John's cathedral in Fresno.

Newman Chaplains Survey Shows Interfaith Activities hM:re@se WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Apostolate through a survey among Newman chap­ lains reported 56 universities or colleges have a common chapel or center and 72 have united ministeries. Although there is no uniform pattern of either buildings or personnel, there is a similar and singular element-more campus chaplains are collaborating, the report stated. This is evidenced in three ways: common ministry, Ifacilities and theological educa­ tion. Newman Hall, Cleveland, holds interreligious work shops in the light of Vatican II. The Interreligious Center dedicated this year at Salem State College, is the first of its kind on a state campus in Massachusetts. At Wisconsin State Univers­ ity-Oshkosh, Catholics work

with nine denominations on campus under the title of the

University Christian Movement, the report said. They jointly sponsor seminars, "Movie Feed­ back," a coffee house, retreats, and dialogue groups. Variety of Ways Father Benedict Kleiber, Newman chaplain, said a new Newman Center will open this Fall with a strong possibility of renting offices and use of educa­ tional area to other denomina­ tional ministers. The University Christian

Enrollments Drop ST. PAUL (NC) - Statistics eompiled by the St. Paul and Minneapolis archdiocese show enrollments down in all levels, from grade schools through sem­ inaries. Grade and high school enrollments are 78,316 compared with 83,430 a year ago; college enrollments fell from 4,155 8 year ago to 4,142, while semi­ naries show a drop from 254 to 230.

Movement includes the Disciples of Christ, Episcopal, Evangelical, United Brethren, Lutheran, Methodist, Moravian, Roman Catholic, United Church of Christ, and United Presbyterian denominations. Interreligious cooperation Is flourishing under different names and in a variety of ways, the survey disclosed. At the University 'of Wisconsin, She­ boygan County Center, the Uni­ versity Student Council, in co­ operation with the Protestant, Catholic and Jewish groups, has sponsored interfaith forums on religion and modern life, and at the Milwaukee campus, the Committee on Religious studies, a student organization presented a request for a department of' religious studies in the college. Separate Department At Temple University, Phila­

delphia, a department of re­ ligion, now six years old; is a distinct and separate department and includes professors from the major western Ifaiths, it was reported. Northern Michigan University at Marquette has a cooperative Christian Campus ministry which seeks to "answer ques­ tions; provoke people into ac­ tion, counsel and study." The six chapters involved Jrepresent Baptist, Lutheran, Catholic and Methodist groups. Included in the Cooperative

C h r i s t 1 an Foundation and

Christian Center at Kearney

(Neb.) State College are 10 dif­

ferent denominations, each re­

taining i.ts own organization but

reinforcing the cooperative ven­

ture with skills and resources"

the report said. Koinonia House, permanent Campus Christian Center at Portland (Ore.) State College, was dedicated last Spring, representing close cooperation of eight Christian churches.

r

THE SOCIETY FQR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAIT",

SEND YOUR GIFI' TO The Right Reverend Edward T•.O'Meara National Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York, New York lOOO?

MAMIE

The Right Reverend Raymond T. ConsitlhlJe

OR Diocesan Director

ADDRESS

368 North Main Street Fall River. Massachusetts 02720

ZIP


14

Thefts of Government Property Increase, FBI Report - Shows

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fail River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

,Trials of Latin Families Must ·Be Understood From "Social Revolution in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. Discussing the Christian -Family Movement in' 'Latin America at the second annual national conference of the Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program, Rev. Pedro Richards, C.P. said: I would like to begin by an acknowledge­ ment of the help which the Latin America is affecting the Christian Family Movement family. For instance, when the in Latin America received petroleum fields were given out from the Christian Family to international companies under

Movement in the U.S.A. In 1952 Frondizi's government in Argen­ tina, no provision was made ~for when we made our start, I re­ the families of the workers. ceived inspira­ Hence workers were attracted tion from the by high wages from different Unit e d States parts of the country but they which supple­ were forced to leave their fami­ mented what I lies behind. Similarly in the case picked up in' of the braceros who came over France. You will the border from Mexico into see that among California as cheap labor to pick our literature, fruit, cotton and vegetables. one of the book­ Their family life was we¥ened lets is a Spanish because .the technical stru,cture translation which enticed the bracero did of what CFM not take his family into consid­ people in the U. S. call the yellow book. Hence eration. Industrial Revolution I give you only your due when I express our gratitude. Family life likewise is affected It is in Pacem in Terris that through the industrial revolution J'ohn XXIII, who used to like sweeping over our continent. to recall the happy family life People leave the land in order to he 'led (there were 30 family settle in major cities such as members under his roof), stated Buenos Aires" Sao Paulo and that the family is the natural Mexico City and the structure, and essential basis of society. of the family itself is influenced As Bishop Prata of La Paz said profoundly. ,in the Council, we must change Urban society is bringing our idea that the parish should down birth rates, making the be considered the ecclesiastical family less stable, making those bottom organization. The parish who were peasants yesterday the is the basic ecclesiastical organ­ victims of many ideological cur­ ization but the supernaturalized rents of thought found in the cell of the Church, which is the city and not on the land. family is the bedrock of the In order to understand '!Vhat is i\[ystical Body. happening to the fainily we must make a diagnosis. We must know ideologies Influence The family, in Latin America what therapeutics are to be ap­ has been sorely tried. The key to plied; unless we know the ail­ understanding Latin America as ment it will be dificult to apply regards the family is the impact the remedy. Those who go down to Latin which ideologies have made America must realize that unless upon it. If this is not understood, it will the condition of the family is be dificult for those who come straightened out it is useless to among us to apply the proper propose economic. structures or remedies that fit our particular to erect parishes or to seek vo­ family. Remember, it is not a cations for the' religious or , family of Africa ,or a family ~ priestly life. , Key SolutioDS Asia. Ours is a family which was Christian and was assailed by What are the solutions! I Ideologies in the last century would point out several aspects which have deprived it of its here-First of all, there is the supernatural heritage. need of education for love. I'm , Individualistic ideologies have not saying education for mar­ introduced inside our family dis­ riage; I speak of the need to ed­ sociation and atomizing elements, ucate for love, I refer to that destroying the family which difficult age that begins at times should be a community. in our tropical countries not at Collective ideologies; then, 12' but at 11 or 10, an attraction have often made our family a toward the other sex; We need pauper of society, a real Cinder­ parents who will create a cli­ ella. Our constitutions based on mate of integrity inside their the French Revolution and ,homes and deliberately form ' hence individualistic in philoso­ their children. The school must phy do not consider the family cooperate as well as the parish as, do modern constitutions in and youth movements, so that Europe. they'll make a proper use of love. For example, we have ,already One of the remedies for our high 11 ministries of family affairs in birth rate is to put back to a governments of Europe. There's normal age the formation of one in Canada too, which means homes' and not have such early marriages very often we have to say that alongside of minis­ tries, of finance and ministries on our continent. This is part of formation. This for food and social ,affairs at is part of a campaign to make last the family is finding its par­ ticular niche too. .'' them realize that they cannot play at love; they cannot choose The family is likewise suffer­ ing from the current .of social a partner for life at such an change which is sweeping: over early age as 15, 16 or 17. The members of our Movimi­ Latin America. It has been said that the family is a sounding ento Familiar Cristiano go to the board; undoubtedly if we 'have high schools and give two short courses in the first years of high ears to hear and sufficient sensi­ bility, we experience within a school. We call this a vocational' family what is going on in the course. , Vocation mustn't be identified street, what's goin'g on in Par­ liament, what's being written in only with vocations to the reli­ the newspapers, what is seen on gious or the priestly life because every human being has' a voca­ TV or at the cinema. tion just ,as every human being Hence the technological re­ . form which is happening in has sex. 'There is a .vocation to'

as

WASHINGTON (NC)-A side effect of the Vietnam war which probably hasn't come to the at­ tention of many people was un­ veiied here in recent days. Because of this country's com­ mitment in Vietnam, with a 'corresponding huge increase iD the procurement of materials, there has been a "substantial rise" in the number of thefts of Government property. In, a single case, the Federal Bureau of Investigation recov­ ered property worth $573,000 stolen from' a military supply depot. FBI investigations in this category alone led to 565 convic­ tions last year. This is just one item in the FBI report for the last fiscal year. The report as a whole · shows that, as far as crime is concerned, ,things are bad all over. The report for the full 12 · months reinforces the gloomy · pictures painted in several ear­ lier reports covering shorter , periods. A brief look at the major cate­ gories of crime shows that the · situation is worsening in virtu­ , ally all of them. Phony Identification From another source here it was learned that· warnings have · gon~out' from investigators at federal and local levels against the use of fraudulent identifica­ tion materials to cash 'stolen checks. Reports say it has become "big business" to produce phony driver's licenses, credit cards, military I.D. cards, etc. Some of 'the output is rather simple, but other'products are somewhat im­

pressive with color pictures and all. The checks, very often, are stolen from apartment house mail boxes. The whole "bit" is said to be a product of our "cashless ,society." . At the same time, the .FBI says attempted frauds agamst the Government occupy some of its time. These, it reports, can range from multi-million do~ar p~curement contracts. mvolvmg purchases and supplies to the truthfulness of information fur­ nished by an applicant for Gov­ ernment employment.

·School Aid Hits Mevi Delay

HARRISBURG (NC)-The al­ ready slim chanc~ for passage of a law permitting Pennsylvania GLlENMARY SUPERIOR: state .aid to pupils in non-public The Very Rev. Robert C. schools were narrowed even further when Gov. Raymond P. Berson, 43, is the third su­ Shafer told' representatives of perior general of the Glen­ ,'Jewish groups that he would de­ maryHome Missioners, Cin­ · mand public hearings on any cinnati, whose aim is to serve such legislation. in the 700 counties in the Gov. Shafer's decision prac­ U.S. which make up "no tically wiped out any chance that , school aid legislation could be . priest land." NC Photo. passed this year. The school aid drive received 'its first setback when the Legis­ Ohio Congregation

'lature went into its election-day 'recess a week early without · bringing to the floor a bill TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop John A. Donovan of Toledo predicted · which would enable the state to an end to the reciprocal isolation "purchase" secular instruction in of Chistians and Jews, calling it - non-public schools. an unfortunate situation which Sponsors of that measure then has been a barrier to mutual announced they would defer a confidence, an essential to the fight on that bill and prepare a future of relations. compromise bill designed for quick passage. A vital factor has been the scholarly research projects in­ 1rIl...l Then Gov. Shafer told repre­ volving Biblical, liturgical and lCi:!ry rr li'eS6oent sentatives of the Pennsylvania Jewish Community Relations theological- themes, the bishop SEATTLE (NC)-The Jesuit­ said. ' , operated Seattle University here Conference that he would insist The Collingwood Temple Con-' in Oregon will have two laymen on public hearings before any gregation feted Bishop Donovan servjng as vice presidents on aid bill is considered. at a dinner and the membership Dec': 1. Shafer, however, has refused to side with opponents of all presented him with a testimonial Elliott A. Paulson, 51, long­ document, expressing "warm time Seattle resident and Pacific state aid. Early in October he greetings of friendship and fel­ Northwest regional manager of announced that he planned a lowship" and dedication of ef';' , an employers' group of insurance three-point attack on the prob­ forts to the principles,of brother­ companies, will takeover Dec. lem: 'immediate aid in clearly hood and peace. The bishop was 1 as vice president of the univer­ mentof a long-~erm solution, and installed six months ago as spir- sity for resource development, constitutional areas; development Itual head of the Toledo diocese. Father 'John A. Fitterer, 8.J., of a long-term solution, and a Bishop Donovan asked for re- - president, has announced. constitutional amendment which alization of "the importance of William C. Adkisson last May he feels is necessary before any what we do have in common"- . became vice president for fi-' long-term solution can be en­ a shared belief and loyalty in· nance and business. The 76-year­ acted. God the Father ¢ all; His trea­ ,old university isa co-education­ sured Word; indebtedness to al institution. Moses and to Abraham, "our, Father in faith," and to the pa- ' triarchs and prophets. Maintenance Supplies

WASHINGTON (NC) - New SWEEPERS - SOAPS

York State has asked the U.8. the married life as there is a 'SUpreme Court to dismiss a DISINFECTANTS

vocation to virginity consecrated challenge to the state's 1965 law' FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

to Christ in the world. requiring the loan of textbooks' This course is given so that to students in parochial schools. boys and girls will realize that The challenge, was filed with each is called to love in one or the Court in late July by two' 1886 PURCHASE STREET other of a three-fold manner: public school boards which said­ NEW BEDFORD either 'collaborating with God' the law violated the constitu-' the Father in matrimony, or col-­ tional' prihciplc of 'separat~on, of ' 993-3786 laborating with God the Son. in church and state." the priesthOod, or collaborating with God the Holy Ghost by con­ secrating their virginity either', iil an official manner in religious­ IN THE GREATER TAUNTON AREA

life or as so many people, vol­ IT'S

unteers and others, like the Papal Volunteers do by going to Latin America. They, consecrate themselves privately to extend FOR God's kingdom through social aetion, through a career Ol!' otherwise. A second course is given in SALES AND SERVICE THE WAY YOU LIKE IT­ high school which prepares our youth for family life. Our men go to the schools for boys and women go to' girls' high schools 1De1. with factory-installed equip. as low as and in eight talks delivered suc­ cessively treat of the problem of Open Nites 'til 9-Saturday 'til 5 822-7195 a choice of a partner. Sacramental, sexual, physio­ logical, economic and legal 88-' AUTHORIZO peets of marriage are covered as RT; 44 NEAR TAUNTON DOG VRACK, TAUNTON well as liturgical and cultural behavior. -. .

Honers PIl'eI(lIJte

Se6'Jltt.;e Adds Second Voce

Textbook Loan

SCHOOL

DAHILL CO.

o

ROSE MOTOR SALES, INC.

VOLKSWAGEN

1968, VWSEDAN ROSE MOTOR .SALES

$1740.

In~.

.......


THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

15

. t·

Loolc In rour Closets

Examine rour Bureaus

Can You Spare •••

BLANKETS?

MEN'S CLOTHING?

WORK SHOES?

INfANTS "and CHILDREN'S WEAR

ENDING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12

................................. ,

This Message Sponsored by the Following Individuals -and Business Concetns In The Diocese of "Fall River

~

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

Jesuits Postpone Decision, on .New Location of Woodstock ,College

Cath'olic Ch'urch Committed To World Justice, Peace By Msgr. Marvin Bordelon

Director;Secretariat for World Justice and Peace, N.C.C.B.

(Msgr. Bordelon is serving as guest columnist of The Yard­ stick during the ,absence of Msgr. Higgins, who is in Rome.) , ,

Earlier this year an appointed seven-man committee of U.S. Bishops established a Secretariat for World Justice '.and Peace, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. To understand the purpose of the Bishops' Committee'and the Secretariat, U is important energized by a force greater to acknowledge that the than natural instincts. Catholic Church' is urgently A man who believes, at least committed to the desperate confessionally, in the power of issues of world justice, develop­ ment and international peace which face' manki,nd. ' Pope Paul VI, in establishing a similar Commission at the Vat­ ican level, said he was compelled into such action by the "shud­

dering 'cry of anguish from the people in hunger" throughout the world. The U. S. Catholic Bishops heard the same cry.

However, both the cry and ,the purpose of the Bishops' sec­ retariat for World Justice and Peace might be lost if we failed to - notice the extraordinary changes )\Thich have taken place in our world. It is precisely to the issue of "arousing the People of God to their present-day mission" that the Secretariat addresses itself. World Is Sick In his Easter 1967 encyclical, On the Development {)f Peoples, our Holy Father, says the world is sick (n. 66). Can anyone deny this? Nearly half of the world's p<>p­ ulation is starving. More than half of the people are in desper­ ate poverty. The others are spending billions of 'dollars on armaments. The world, troly, is running a fever. To this highly volatile human condition, the Catholic Church of the United States must respond. "How Catholic are, the mem­ bers of the Roman Catholic Church ,in the U. S.?" This provocative' question was recently raised at an ecumenical meeting in the Midwest. Obvi­ ously, the fact remains that only the" individual Catholic can an­ swer the question. But what is profoundly in­ volved in the inquiry is a deeper question: "What does it take to be a Catholic?" What is the pos­ ture of the American Catholic regarding the issues which Pope Paul calls "so urgent that the future of civilization is at stake"? Modem Myths Perhaps the state of Catholic life can be better focused by examining three modem myths. First myth: parochialism. The tightly-train~d, excessively pro­ vincial mind-set, when con­ fronted with problems of 'world ' hunger and international injus-_ tice, often back-lashes with the bromide, "Charity begins at home." , Even ihe author of this. pat slogan, Sir Thomas Browne, ad­ mitted its original was in the .natural order. But we're not concerned here with "natural man";' we're examining the Catholic man - baptized, con­ firmed, Eucharist-partaking man, who is a person professing to be

Vincento«rlrrtis

to Meet

Fall River Particular Council, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, will meet Tuesday night, Nov. 14 following Benediction in Our Lady of Health Church at 7:45. The annual Corporate Commun­ ion Sunday will be held on Sun­ day, Dec. 10 at Holy Rosary Church.

WOODSTOCK (NC) - -The voted in favor of the move to Jesuits at Woodstock College Yale, but shortly afterwards they ,will announce where they plan were. asked by Jesuit General to move the school-whether to Father Pedro Arrupe to under­ New Haven or 'to New York take a fuller investigation of -sometime early 'in '1968. both locations. Father Felix Cardegna, S.J., Father Cardegna stressed that president of Woodstock, an- Taylor, Lieberfeld and Heldman nounced . that the college had would be concerned only with hired the New York consulting "quantifiable" matters-p<>ssible firm' of Taylor, Lieberfeld and sites, temporary and permanent Heldman Inc., to prepare a re- facilities,' housing and other port on the physical facilities physical needs, and the costs of available and the costs involved, making each:move.' , in moving to each city. "The array of academic and Their preliminary report is ecumenical values, apostolic op­ due b€ f ore Christmas, and a de- - portunities and the like which cision by the college will be 'cannot readily be quantified made after the first of the year, would not fall within the scope . said Father Cardegna. of Taylor, Lieberfeld and HeldBoth the faculty and adminis- man's work," said Father Car­ tration at Woodstock-the Jes- degna. uits' major seminary' and theoThe consulting firm has logical school on the East Coast ",orked with a flumber of U. S. -have been studying a possible universities-among them Syra­ , move for more than a year. and Fordham-in planning In ,New Haven, Woodstock physical expansion. would affiliate with the Yale Woodstock will become the University Theological School. second major Jesuit· institution In' New York it would be asso- to announce a move to the city. ciated with Union Theological In Oc~ober, Alma College in Los Seminary,. CQlumbia University, Gatos, Calif., the order's West Fordh8Jll University and 'other Coast theological. school, an­ colleges in the ,city. nounced that it was moving to Physical Needs Cosis the Gradua.te Theological Union Woodstock's faculty, menibers in Berkley.

the grace of God, and his actions consequent to that power com­ pel him to resPQnd to any man (all men) who is in need; wheth­ BOB CHOlUlINAlRD er he be Jew or Gentile, Moslem or Hindu, Precisely because all men are his brofhers. • ' The Catholic is a man humbly

pursuing fulfillment by becom­

Ch(!Jm~ion~ ing a one-holy-uIiiversal man.

Notre Dame,' Fall River, pa­ World Fund rishioners will honor their Dioc­ Second myth: church-sponsored esan CYO champion baseball charities.The seething conditions team at a banquet Sunday night, of mankind in many parts of Nov. 19, at White's. the world are, in the words of Wilfred (Lefty) Lefebvre, Red Pope Paul, "certainly situations Sox scout and former pitcher, where injustice cries to heaven. Whole populations are destitute will be the principal speaker. General chairman is Bob Choui­ of necessi!ies 'I< 'I< *" (n. 30) The magnitude of the pr9blem nard, a member of the 1947 .is so great, however, that the Notre'Dame team which won Pope 'warns the faithful of the the city CYO championship. Coached by Bernie Comeau, folly of expecting local and in­ NEW YOR.K (NC)-The vahle dividual undertakings to do the this year's parish team was the ' of dialogue' between Christians first ever to win the Diocesan and non-believers was discussed job. (n. 13) We are at a turning point in title. at a symposium on "Can Theists human history when solidarity Committees planning the testi­ Talk to Atheists" here. in action is essential. Pope Paul monial are headed by Mr. and Erick von Keuhnelt-Leddihn, calls for a program of worldwide Mrs. Camille Tremblay, tickets; lay Catholic ,author, warned cooperation among all men of Ray Chouinard, publicity; Mrs. against "exaggerated hopes" good will in the formulation of Bernie Comeau, hall; Mr. and concerning the value of such a World Fund. Mrs. Romeo' Parent, decorations. dialogue. They are useful, he said, in helping Christians to lVorld CJovernmoeni "understand the mind of the Third myth: foreign entangle­ non-theist," but added that be­ ments. George Washington, warn­ yond this there is "no genuine ing this country about the evils of international relations, was an / cOmmon denominator between .LEMONT (NC) -A request them." ' isolationisti but he could afford Father Avery Dulles, S.J., dis­ to be. He didn't live where we has ·been sent to Rome for a com­ plete reorganization of the gov­ are liying. agreed, stating "My theology is The riots in Detroit are front ernmimt of the Third ~Order of constantly being influenced by page news in Johannesburg. Franciscans. The change would well thought out positions with Closing the Suez backs up the give control of the order to lay which I disagree." He added: members. The order is currently "It's time for religio\1S people to water in the Pan~a Canal. Sub­ urban .Americans live in the under the jurisdiction of First .disabuse themselves of the no­ outskirts of Kinshana, Quito, Order Franciscans, made up of tion that they have the full idea

of what God means."

Hanoi, and Warsaw. This planet Religious. Recommendation t hat the The symposium was sp<>nsored is a tiny space~hip, and whether we, like it or not, we are all in Third Order be given "juridic' by the Jesuit-ron John LaFarge autonomy" so that it can assume Institute here. A dozen Catholic, it together. However, are we willing to its own "proper personality" as a Protestant and Jewish theolo­ share the controls of the ship lay organization was made by gians and clergymen attendect with our fellow passengers from .. lay 'and clerical leaders of the the meeting. organization at the annual meet­ Von Keuhnelt-Leddihn said

other compartments in the space­ ing of the North American Fed­ craft? that he did not oppose dialogue'

eration of the Third Order here With Marxists, such as the La­ Are we willing to join Pope Paul in his vision of seeing' the ,in Illinois. It was, approved by Farge Institute's 1966 symposium need of "establishing progres-, a unanimous vote. ~th Roger Garaudy, French

The federation represents Marxist theoretican.

sively a world authority capable

some 90,000 members of the He did, qualify his approval

of acting effe,ctively in the ju­

ridical and political sectors"? In Third Order in the United States and Canalia. The order has three a word: a world government? million members throughout the CJlobal Vision world. The Se'cretariat for World Federation chairman James Justice and Peace is commis­ Lynch of Philadelphia said that sioned precisely to promote the, the move for lay control did not Est. 1897 stUdy which these complex is­ represent any desire for separa­ sues require and stimulate the tion between the First and Third Supp'~es emergence of a "conscience Orders. The goal, he said, is 2343 Purchase Street lobby',' for the people of the rather to create a new· relation­ "Third World." And in all of ship between clergy and laity New Bedford

this, the member of the Church as co-workers in the service of 996-5661

must ask himself, ."How Catho­ the Church. lic am I?" The Pope believes the unique contribution which the Catholic Church can make toward allevi­ ating the destitute conditions of

men is its "global Vision of man

NEW YORK (NC)-The pec­ and of the human race." (n. 13) toral cross and ring which Pope Catholics must decide whether Paul gave to the United Nations they share this vision and as a gift' to raise funds in its whether they can make the fight against hunger and disease Church present by the way in has been sold for $64,000. which they love ,their brothers The Holy Father made the gift in the developing countries of when he visited .tlie UN in Octo­ Africa, Asia and Latin America. ber 1965. Harry Levinson, head This is the "new message for of a Chicago jewelry firm, made our times" from the eternal the $64,000 purchase at an auc­ tion. . Church of Jesus Christ.

Parish to Honor 'CYO

cuse

TheologBC2ttn$' Discuss' Value

Of Dialogue With., Atheists

Ask Reorganization Of Third Order

Sturtevant 6­ Hook'

by saying: "While we might be willing to learn from the theo­ ries of experiences with the other side regarding problems of a social, p<>Iitical or economic nature, we are not ready to ac­ cept any part of their antl­ theology." Father Dulles later told NC News Service that the exchange was more a question of emphasis than disagreement. He also said. that all the symposium partici';' pants felt that, in the United' States, theists should be speak­ ing with agnostics and atheists more than with Marxists. . It would be more important for Eastern European theist!!, to dialogue with Marxists, Father Dulles said, because Marxism is more . prevalent in Eastem Europe.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

The .Parish Parade

ST. MARY, ST. JOAN OF ARCa FAIRHAVEN ORLEANS The Associtation of the Sacred The Parent Teacher's' Gund will sPonsor a Holiday Dinner Hearts will sponsor a Manhattan Holiday penny sale at- 7:30 Sat­ Dance at ·the Nauset Inn on Sat­ urday night, Nov. 11 in the urday evening, Nov. 18. A con­ tinuous buffet will be served church hall. Proceeds will bene­ starting at 7:30 and dancing to fit the church building fund and the music of Mel Von Bnd his • admission wiIl be free. Mrs. Irene Wojcik and Mrs. Adeline oX'chestra will continue to mid­ Grenon are co-chairmen, with night. Mrs. Alice Torres and Mrs. Dress is semi-formal· and tick­ Ilene Rego in charge of a raffle, ets are $7 per couple. Tickets may be obtained from which will .feature a three day Mrs. Henry Chambers, chairman, trip to New York City for two or committee women Mrs. Lucy with an award of $50 mad Carey, .Mrs. Robert Clark, Mrs. money. Second prize wiIl be a portable stereo with records. Re­ John Donahue, Mrs. George Duf­ freshments will be handled by fy, Jr., Mrs. Donald Walwer, and Mrs. Mary' Morris and there they are also available at the will be prizes in addition to rectory. penny sal~ awards. S'F. .1JiOSIEIPIIIl, IFAlLlL lRJI VlEllt

The Women's Guild wiIl' meet at 7:30 tonight. Tickets for III meat pie supper and turkey raffle will be available and candy orders will be handled.

M@D@Q' ce@01l~MS)O@[)1)

Stresses Non.. Public Schools'

Right to Receive 'State Help

"

lltlEV. IEIDWAlltID MIl'FClliIlElLl["

~@u\)@0ll

[L@'W2,7®Q'

Continued from Pabe One ~~llilrw· ~~®@~®Q' Dr. Outler charaeterized the Rev. Edward Mitchell of Holy Dutch catechism as typical of the times, which present "one of the Name parish, Fall River, will open the annual literature series most exciting, hopeful, despair­ ing, distressing situations in oi Fall River Catholic Woman's ROLY NAME, which a young man could begin Club at 3 Sunday afternoon in F'ALL RiVER Holy Name school hall on Read D to be a theologian." Street. The meeting place has Deceased members of the Moving from the befuddlement been changed due to' a recent Women's Guild wiIl be remem­ among theologians to the crisis . bered at a memorial Mass at 8:30 in authority, Dr. Outler referred fire in the organization's club­ house on Rock Stret. Saturday morning, Nov. 11. to the recent third World Con­ Contemporary music will be gress of the Lay Apostolate in Canon Law Doctor sung at the 10 o'clock Mass Sun­ Father Mitchell, who holds a Rome as "laymen playing fun day morning, Nov. 12. and games." • - Doctor of Canon Law degree A parish bazaar is slated for from the Pontifical Lateran Uni­ He expressed "complete aston­ Saturday, Nov. 18 and returns ishment" over Roman Catholic. versity in Rome has been at Holy on ticket booklets may be made laymen ~t one end of the Via Name parish since 1964, upon his at all Masses Sunday, Nov. 11. Della Conciliazione - the street return from Rome. Previously he Boy Scouts will serve a pan­ was an assistant at Sacred Heart which leads to the Vatican­ cake breakfast in the school making as if the other end of Church, Taunton, and taught re­ next Sunday after all Masses ex­ the Via Della Conciliazione ligion at Coyle High School. cept the 6 o'clock. Proceeds will wasn't up there." He is the son of William E. purchase Scout equipment. and Ann C. Mitchell of Immac­ Right Wing ulate Conception parish, Fall Referring to Pope Paul VI's River, and w:1s ordained in 1956 ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, allocution to congress partici­ by Most Rev. Martin J. O'Con­ NEW BEDFORD, pants, Dr. Outler observed that The parish bazaar will be held after the Pope "told them to shut nor in the North American Col­ lege chapel ilbRome. A gradu­ two consecutiv'e weekends, up 01< co co they marched back down namely, Friday and Saturday, the Via DelIa Conciliazione and ate of Msgr. Prevost High' School and St. Charles College, Catons­ Nov. 10 and 11, and Nov. 17 and kept talking." ville, Md., he studied philosophy 18. This he described as "a crisis at St. Mary's Seminary, Balti­ of authority that has all sorts of more, before going to Rome to' possibilities of hope ~nd danger." complete his semin"ry course. Discussing the "crisis of the Continued from Page One Catholic right wing," Dr. Outler xious and concerned about the described it as "something that future' of schools like this in our has not been sufficiently noticed American society." 01< 01< $oor received the kind of fun­ Vicious Circle damental attention that I think it Noting that since 1965, three requires and deserves." MILWAUKEE (NC)-;-Brother Catholic elementary and· two Leo V. Ryan, C.S.V., .!l former Authentic AgolllY Catholic high schools have closed Peace Corps member and one­ He expressed concern over time director of continuing edu­ in the Manchest diocese, Bish­ op Primeau predicted that the "the lack of compassion of Cath­ cation and professor of manage­ trend would continue here and olic progressives for the pro­ ment at Marquette University found disturbance going on for here, will go to Rome on Dec. 1 elsewhere. One reason for this, he said, Catholic immobilists." to become assistant superior is that Catholic parents are find­ Dr. Outler posed the question general of his order-the Clerics ing it increasingly difficult to to the Catholic progressive: of St. Viator. . pay tuition costs for their chil­ "What do the rest of you intend In his new post Brother Ryan dren attending parochial schools, to do about the authentic agony will coordinate the order's edu­ while they are fully taxed for of an honest-to-God conserva­ cational work in 14 countries. . the upkeep o~ public schools. . tive?" Brother Ryan left Marquette Catholic parents are caught in in 1965 to become chairman of n vicious circle, he maintained, the department of management because as parochial schools at Loyola University of Chicago. close and students are transfer­ - In 1966, with perinission of his ~rand red to public shools, the more superiors, he took a leave of BURGENSTOCK (NC) - A absence from Loyola and became the public school taxes increase. council of Orthodox churches "Our financial burden is becom­ the first member of a Religious similar to the .Second Vatican Order to serve in the' Peace ing intolerable," he said. A solution to the problem Council is being called for by Corps. might be forthcoming, Bishop Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarch When elected to his new Rome Primeau maintained, if some Athenagoras I of Constantinople post, he was serving as deputy (Istanbul), the prelate disclosed form of public subsidy for paro­ director of the Peace Corps pro­ chial and private education in an interview here in Switzer­ gra,m in Nigeria. Earlier, from land. were aIlowed. He noted that sev­ 1961 to 1965, Brother Ryan had eral groups have recenUy rec­ The council will have a strong ·been a coordinator of Peace emphasis on determining points Corps activities and director of ommended such III measure. of agreement with other Chris­ training projects in Brazil. tian bodies, Patriarch Athen­ agoras declared. He said that DALLAS (NC) - Archbishop after he gets approval from other Luigi Raimondi, apostolic dele­ Orthodox leaders for the meet­ ing, which he called a "grand gate in the United States dedi­ America's Economy King

cated Holy Trinity Seminary synod," it would probably need F"r the Best Deal Come To

on the University of Dallas at least two years of planning. campus' yesterday. Ar:chbishop The Patriarch expressed his Robert ;T. Dwyer of PorUand, satisfaction in the interview .with INC. the spirit of brotherliness shown preached the sermon at the ded­ 768 BROADWAY ication Mass, concelebrated q~ by Pope Paul VI during their RAYNHAM, MASS on Rt. 138 Archbishop Raimondi and me meeting last month at the CHARLES J. DUMAIS. Pres.

on

Deplores Closings

. Named Assistant Superior General

Orthodox Patriarch Asks Synod'

New Seminary

RAMBLER

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17

PITTSBURG (NC)-The abo- . lition of non-public schools "is just around the corner" if the American people do not recog­ nize the right of these schools tc receive state support, warned Auxiliary Bishop John B. Mc­ Dowell, Pittsburgh diocesan su­ perintendent of ~chools. "With all government funds at every level going' almost exclu­ sively into the state schools, th'e economic pressure is building, and the possibility of competing is graduaIly being eliminated," he said at the annual Red Mass held at St. Paul's cathedral here. The Red Mass is sponsored each year by Catholic attorneys in the lliocese. Bishop McDowell cited the· historic Pierce Case of 1925 as the foundation in law for the right of non-public schools to exist. Right to lEducate "The real thrust of the Pierce Case was to hold that the state cannot monopolize education and that parents have the right to send their children to schools of their choice," he explained, ."if those· schools met the secu­ lar educational requirements which the state has the con­ stitutional power to impose." But the courts have not given a clear answer, the bishop in­ dicated, to "what precisely the right to educate, Which parents have, really means." He questionted whether a right really exists when "the sheer economics of the situation"

threaten to force non-public schools out of business. Citing various court cases, Bishop McDowelL listed two emergingcconcepts. The first is that "support of a parent's re­ ligion is completely outlawed by our government, and well it must be. Government cannot and must not support religion.'" New Principle . Regarding the second, he add­ ed: "But over the years a new principle has been evolving whlch speaks to the unanswered parts of this question. Is there any part of education in even the religiously oriented school which clearly serves the pur­ poses of the state? Is there a public purpose element in the religiously oriented school's pro­ gram? "If there is, are parents en­ titled to aid in the pursuit 01 that phase of total education which serves the public pur­ pose? And unless there is some aid for parents for at least that part of education, will their 'right' to educate be meaningless and will they be denied that freedom of choice, religion and tho ugh t guaranteed them?" Bishop McDowell asked. He dismissed various argu­ ments against state support foX' non-public schools ~s "decoys," including the contention that such aid would destroy public e.d u cat ion, that non-public schools are "devisive," and that government controls over non­ public education are lacking.

o

Wants Catholic Education Free

From Narrow Denominationalism

INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Cath­ olic education in the future must free itself from narrow denomi­ nationalism, according to Msgr. Alfred Horrigan, president of BeIlarmine (Ky.) CoIlege.

community is well-served by the over-crowded cJassropm and the under-prepared teacher, he warned, adding that a child's faith is not protected but is a~ tually threatened by "educatioJll mediocrity." . A«lult Education Catholic education must be D life-long process for all membenr of the Church of whatever age and state, Msgr. Horrigan em­ phasized. "We must firmly dismiss the temptation to make the parochiai school and .Catholic education synonymous." He predicted that the main agencies of religious educatioD in the future will include the home, the liturgy, Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, informa­ tion centers, adult education pro­ grams, catechetical centers, re­ leased and shared-time pro­ grams, and schools - fewer iI:\ number but higher in quality.

The Louisville' educator told 1,100 persons attending the Indi­ anapolis Archdiocesan Teachets Institute here that Catholic edu­ cation "must be concerned with what is best for the whole neighborhood, the whole com­ munity, the whole country. It must reflect the free, open, ecu­ menical and cooperative spirit of Vatican II." Msgr. Horrigan asked less at­ tention to the number of Cath­ olic schools in favor of a small "number of high quality reli­ gious schools offering creative and experimental approaches, particularly in relation to the overwhelming social problems of our times." Neither the Church nor the

CENTER

Represents p'ope

Paint and Wallpaper

ST. AUGUSTINE (NC) Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, apostolic delegate in the United States, attended the funeral here of Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, bishop of St. Augustin~. Archbishop Raimondi represent­ ed Pope Paul VI at the funeral at the Pope's request.

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18

SMperior Against

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9,'1967

Teo~her",Priests

A~S[ffr$ S@tUlmld~efo[(m g[j'j) (6 tl1l M [f~ ~ .St~®g:u@f/'h~IT1l~

J@h1cng) UJe1ion

lUftllo@(fjJ Wofr\}u <6[lurrO$t

DENVER (NC)-In the wake of the Second' Vatican Council, the Church is deliberately try­ ing to ,"slough off" many anti­ quated vestiges of, human cul­ ture, Auxiliary Bishop James P. Shannon of St. Paul and Min,ne­ apolis said here. .The bishop said these undesir­ able cultural accretions include outmoded liturgical rites,' anti­ Protestant grudges, and "an ex­ cessively suspicious at tit u d e toward the world at large." Bishop Shannon gave the seJ;­ mon at a Year of Faith rally for the Denver archdiocese il1 Bears Stadium here. Some 40,000 per­ sons assembled in the stands and on the field to join in the con­

eelebr~ted Mass at which Arch­ bishop James Y. Casey of Denver was the principal celebrant. One hundred and fifty priests dis­ tributed Holy Communion at sta~, tions around the stadium and on the infield. Historical Context "The unwary or the ill-in­ structed may err by assuming that these cultural traits acquir­ ed historically are essential com­ ponents of our faith in Christ and His word," Bishop Shannon said. "Not so. The historical context or cultural milieu in which the good news of the gospel is pro­ , claimed' shotild never be con­ fused with that good news it­ self." , Bishop Shannon added that structure, practices, qevotions, traditions and laws in the Church must change with changes in human society. "For example, we no longer need religious orders dedicated to ransoming Christian slaves captured by the Moors in Spain or North Africa," he explained. . "But we do need religious men and womed of deep Christian

PHILADELPHIA (NC)­ The provincial, superior of the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales, who staft two high

faith to protest the modern slav­ ery of Negroes in this country and in South Africa. "The social conditions of the day dictate our mode of Chris­ tian resI20nse but the teachings of Christ on the dignity of the human person remain valid in every age because God is God and His word is our reliable guide for all time." Radical Opinions

schools in the Philadelphia arch­ "diocese, said he could not in con­ science allow members of his community to join a teachers' union. Father John' Conmy, O.S.F.S., said, however, that he has formed a committee of five prl~ts to study the I]1atter in' greater The bishop acknowledged that depth. He acted after the .Asso­ persons who cannot distinguish cia'tion of Catholic Teachers ' between "custom in the Church here opened membership in the and faith in Christ" are suffering previously all-lay union to considerable anguish in the wake priests and Religious. of Churc'h renewal.

Cites Conflict . "But conversely," he asserted, "I do not think it could be "if our faith is strong we shall justified morally for members of be. secure in the knowledge that the Oblates to join a union, sound reform in the Church can since they would then be under only deepen our union with a double obligation," Father Christ and H;is teaching by free­ Connl.y stated. ' .ing us-from any practices or "As long as they are members habits which have come between of a moral unit as Oblates of St. us and Him in the, course of Francis de Sales," the Provincial human history.'" continued, "they cannot draw up Bishop Shannon had hard their own contracts with the NEW CONNOLLY HIGH COACH: Welcoming Jack oArchdiocese of Philadelphia. words for some modern theolo­ gians whose attempts to answer Curry, center, the newly appointed basketball coach at Since the congregation has an the modern need for new formu­ ' Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River, are Bob Fortin, agreement with the Archdiocese lations of the faith have led them of Philadelphia, there could be ' to question the resurrection of left, and Tom Kroger, right. conflicts between obligations as Christ, the real presence in the an Oblate and as a union mem­ Eucharist, and the virginity of ber for anyone who joined the Mary. union." , The Association of Catholic "Clearly such speculation un­ Teachers, which represents a dermines the :very foundation of Dr. Blake Urges Increasing' 'Dynamic' substantial.number of lay teach­

our Christian faith," he said. ers in archdiocesan high schools,

"And when such radical and Cooperation A~ong Churc'hes was involved in a prolonged dls-

dangerous opinions are accepted LONDON (NC) - Dr. Eugene Dr. Blake's address was folpute with .the archdiocese last uncritically by teachers and preachers, the resulting dangers Carson Blake, general secretary lowed by one by Father John year over recognition, w.orking of the World Council of Churches Coventry, S.J., of London, secre- conditions and salaries. to the faith of the people are in'­ (WCC), said that the means of tary of the new Ecumenical Father Conmy said the com­ calculable. Commission for England and mittee to study the union ques­ "Aware of these dangers, Pope increasing "dynamic" coopera­ Paul VI has summond all of us tion with the Catholic Church is Wales, who reported on the tion is expected to prepare pro­ one of the WCC's four major commission's first meeting ear- posals for consideration at a to renewed study of our' Chris­ lier this month. 0 provincial chapter meeting to, tian faith and more fervent issues. Dr. Blake, a U. S. Presbyterian prayer for its preservation and Both were specially invited to morrow. Its, members include addressed a meeti~g here of the address the BCC, whose presi- moral theologians and canon extension." British Council of Churches dent- is Archbishop Michael lawyers. . (BCC) that included all major Ramsey of Canterbury, Anglican' Study Problems Protestant Churches in this na­ primate. ' , "I am no expert in moral the­ - tion. It was also attended by ology," Father Co':!my said, "and Catholic observers; I have asked the committee to ,I On relations with Rome, Dr. Russi~n' Edycation '" '" • make recommendations to MIDLOTHIAN (NC)-Nearly , ican Council II. discussed the Blake said that both Catholic modify, change or amplify my 60 Catholic and Protestant problem of people who talk authorities and the WCC this Undergoes Changes stat"ement.'" . clergymen an~ laymen met at_I like Christians but do' no't act Summer had approved the term CHESTNUT' HILL (NC) _ . He' noted that the committee a' Salvation Army camp here to like them. He suggested that "dynamic" cooperation. "Radical changes" are taking may also consider such matters discuss "worshfp, evangelism much of the commitment in the' "The change on all sides from place in Russian education due as the policy of the congregation and modern man." world might 'be fundamentally , polemical authority to dynamism .to scientific. and technological toward picket lines set up by

The gathering at camp Hob- inauthentic because it has not gives promise 'of new under-" advances in the So~iet Union,' teachers' unions at schools

litzelle, 40 miles south of Dallas, been preceded by a genuine standing, new unity, ripening as " a member of the U. S. S. R. Acad­ staffed by the Oblates.' '

was the third .Faith and Order hearing of the' word of God. the warmth of the new atmo- emy of Pedagogical Sciences One committee member de­

meeting. in Texas in as many f. ' , spere makes it grow each day," said here. scribed the scope of the study

"I 0.0 not believe that 'in Scrip­ ,group as covering "the moral years. ture of historical Christianity he added. I He described the difference . Dr. Zoya Malkova spoke on implications for members of re­ The first was sponsored by the you have had authentic Chris:" Texas Council of Churches, but tian commitment that did not that ·still existed as "abrasive." new trends in Russian education ligious communities of involve­ as a cooperative project with come out of a prior involvement "I take it fO,r granted that our at Boston College Which is hold­ ment or support of union or the Texas Catholic Conference. with the preaching and the hear­ ,responsible leadership will con- ing an exhibition on Russian professional society activities." ',.. The second and third 'confer- ing and. the participation in the tinue to work on such issues as education through Nov. 12. The exhibit, the first such in the ences have been co-sponso~ed by, communication of the Gospel," religious liberty, mixed mar­ riages and so on," he said. l.!nited' States, is part of the the two organizations and are Dr. Outler said.

Enjoy Dining' Soviet-American Cultural Ex­ believed to be the first such

change Pt;0gram. Other leading theologians par­

statewide Faith and Order 'con­ IN THE­ Protes'tants Object ferences jointly sponsored by ticipating in the program includ­

. Major trend cited by Dr. MalCatholic and Protestant organ­ ed Dr. George,C. Baker, Jr., pro­

To MadonnOl Stamp kova was the raising of the age JOLLY WHALER izations. fessor of eVangelism at South­

- level fot education. Sh~said that ,-"';'AND­ LONDON (NC)-A new post- thesystem's current 'compulsory The .delegates, about evenly ern Methodist University's Per­ kins School of Theology, and' age stamp. bearing a, reproduc- eight years will ,be exteridedto divided among Catholic and Pro­ SPOUTER INN testant, lay and clerical, held Father D,aniel J. O'Hanlon, S.j.; 'tion of the Madonna and Child ,10 by 1970. She also noted trends issued in the United Kingdom professor of fundamental theo­ RESTAURANTS ' an open dialogue in which such has' dra'Y~ a letter of objection to modernize all school facilities, lo~y, Alma College, Los Gatos, problems as differences in term­ expand pre-school education, in­ Always Free Parking from,the E;vangelicalProtestant troduce "new curriculum" in all Calif. •

inology were discussed. Society in Belfast, Northern subjects, and improve teacher There was common agreement

Ireland. t~aining Programs. that the term "evangelism" 'is

Ne~ The letter; from Norman Por­ often used as a synonym for Council to Grant ter, the society's director, to the "proselytizing," rather than More Lay Voice postmaster general here said: meaning merely to spread the "We believe this to be a di­ LOUISVILLE (NC)-Laymen word of God. are going to' get a bigger voice rect insult to 'British Protestants, ON· CAPE Inauthentic Commitment as the stamp is a purely Roman in the Louisville archdiocese. Dr. Albert Outler, Methodist Catholic reproduction of the They will be named to"several Madonna and Child, which forms theologian and observer at Vat­ comlI}issions, including an arch­ part of the religious beliefs of .diocesan council, which will Roman, Catholics, who worship BU~LDmt"G MATERIALS Plan Consecr~tion function for the' archdiocese the Virgin Mary * * * ' SPring much like a parish council does TRENTON (NC) - Bishop­ "We also feel that to h'ave such elect John C. Reiss will be con­ in. an individual parish. a stamp bearing the head of Her secrated tituler bishop of Simi­ These steps were outlined by Majesty the Queen, who is 1II dicca and auxiliary bishop of Archbishop Thomas J. McDon­ confessed faithful Protestant, is HYAN~US Trenton in a ceremony Tuesday, ough of Louisville in an inter­ most provocative to those loyal AMPLE PARKING Dec. 12 in St. Mary's cathedral view: with The Record, Louisville subjects of the Crown who are here. archdiocesan newspaper.

also faithful Protestants."

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Catholics, Protestants Attend Texas Faith, Order Meeting

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.. Falmouth Is Cape Powerhouse:

• THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1967

Stan,s High in Spo~~~r Role Joe BQrte~ ~, S~me,set In Bristol County League

Sophomore Tailback at

By PETER BARTEK "

Norton High Coach Ooach Charley Connell's Bishop Stang Higlll griddel'l apparently are not going to win the Bristol County school­ boy league but they are having plenty to, say about who . will covet the trophy emblematic of the championship, nevertheless. All eyes wilL be ence competition this coming focused on the Dartmouth weekend when they host Med­ Spartans on Saturday next way. Norton ,notched its fourth when they invade Taunton victory in its last outing when for the second weekend in a row to meet coach George Hemond's pac e - setting proteges in an encounter that may well de­ cide the ulti­ mate victor in the flag race. Stang, aiming for a second pia c e finish, threw a "mon­ key wrench" into the Msgr. Peter, Coyle High asBartek pirations last weekend when it tallied two touchowns in the last , minute of play to squeeze by the Taunton Warriors and topple them from a first place deadlock in the standing. Going Gets Tight The O'Connellmen will be out to repea,t that d\lzzling triumph when they tangle with ·front­ running Taunton High in a con­ U:st that should attract one of the largest regular season crowds of the present campaign. After three and one-half scoreless periods, Coyle edged into the lead 'with a little less than four minutes remaining, and seemed headed for a banner Thanksgiv­ , ing Day playoff with its cross­ city rival, only to see its lead overcome by two Stang touch­ downs s«;ored with less than one minute to play. And, while Stang was furnish­ ing the county loop surprise, Lawrence High of Falmouth romped to a' 36-0 win over Bourne High in the Capeway Conference to firmly entrench itself in first place in that competition. While the victory was not in itself surprising, the final tally astounded most fans who have been watching the for­ tunes of the strong array of tal­ ent in the Cape Cod circuit tbil

Fall Norton Wins Again At the other end of the dioc­ esan territorial limit, Oliver Ames High of North Easton was dumped from first place in the strong Hockomock League by Canton, 15-8. Coach Val Masca­ to's Orange and Black must win on Saturday next if they hope to stay in contention in the Hock­ omock fight. Its opponent will be Foxboro, unbeaten in league play. Meanwhile, Case of Swansea has moved into a one-half game lead in the Narragansett compe­ tition as a result of its 30-8 win o over Seekonk last weekend. Somerset has won its only Narry tilt. Coach ,Ed Cunningham's Mans­ field club, believing it is still very much in the Hockomock title race, hopes to better its po­ sition when it takes on King Philip regional of Wrentham in ra league tilt this coming week­ end. The Big Green of Mansfield believes it ironed-out a 'lot of wrinkles in its hard hitting of­ fense when it trounced Somerset of the Narry loop, 22-0, last weekend. Defeating Dighton-Rehoboth of the Narry league, 12-8, last weekend, Norton's Lnncers re­ tum tlO Clover Vallq Comu­

19

Bridg~IPOlt

Former Stang Captain on Scholarship

9

BY JOE MIRANDA

Joe :Bartek of Somerset is 11 tailback with the University of Bridgeport's football team as a sophomore and one of the top grid-track athletes to come out of the F~ll River Diocese. Bartek, a political science its defensive club stopped D-R major, is a good student and is on four tries within its five-yard attendlng Bridgeport on scholar­ ,.. . '~ line in late gamc~ play. ship b6Cause of his football \ IEIllIlll ILosillllg S tll'ea~ , "I .. prowess. """~·l .~ Nudged 8-0 by Newton in its Joe has not decided on a life:' last outing, New Bedford High , long career, but if tradition has will be idle this weekend, rest­ , a part in his decision, Joe Bar­ I ing for its next-to-the-last game tek will be a teacher, however of the season on the following as of this writing his interests weekend with, Stang of Dart­ are in government and law. mouth. Then the Crimson will AtllBnetic Family mark time !before their tradi­ The son· of Mr. and Mrs. Fred­ tional holiday fracas with Durfee eric Bartek of 167 Buffington of Fall River which was an Street, Somerset, Joe comes from easy 34-6' victor over Lawrence an athletic family. His oldest Central last Saturday. The Hill­ brother Fred is the athletic di­ toppers clash with Coyle at Fall rector at Bishop Feehan High River this weekend. School and another brother Pete ' Taunton maintained sole pos­ is the head football coach at Nor­ session of first place in the BCL ton High. and state Class C standings last Joe's brothers both played Saturday when it romped to a football and track at Coyle High, 20-6 win over Attleboro High both have been head track as Bishop Feehan High ·of Attle­ coaches and, 'again, if the Bridge­ boro'ro\Jted New Bedford Voca­ port gridder follows tradition, he tional, 32-8. Taunton has its work will some day write' the column cut out this· coming weekend on the left, explaining and re­ when it engages Bishop- Stang porting the scholastic athletic High. Feehan will be at home scene for The Anchor readers. this coming Slllturday when it Fred formerly wrote the column engages its cross-city rival, At­ and Pete is now giving his views. tleboro. North Attleboro, which Presently Joe Bartek is con­ edged by King Philip of Wren­ cerned mainly with keeping his tham last Saturday to snap a academic standing high and five-game losing streak, vies helping Bridgeport University with Vocational at New Bedford win football games. Tradition. this Saturday. if it is to be, will come later. P-toWJllers llIappy Position Switeh Bridgeport Coach Nick Nicolan, Provincetown, at the ti~ of the Cape, is experiencing its best who has used the Somerset and 'season in III decade. The P-town fopner Bishop Stang High cap­ tads have twice defeated both tain, as a starter and in reserve,. JOE BARTEK OF SOMERSET

has been very pleased by the Marthafs Vineyard and Nan­ tucket in the Cape & Vineyard running ability Bartek has eaptained Connell's fi~ football baseball player. , team as the Stang head coach. Said Joe's father, • he WMt league. , shown to date. more interested in football and In track, Bartek .was unbeat­ Bartek played as a wingback Coach 'Steve Gouveia's P­ towners take on Dover-Sherborn on the Bridgeport freshman team able, setting a New England track because his older brothel'll Catholic record in the 440-yard cultivated Joe's enthusism fo!' last season and gained consid­ of the Clover Valley (Tri­ County) circuit at the 'latter's erable praise for his blocking run and was the Bristol County those sports.", League's 100-yard dash and field on Saturday. Martha's and ground gaining perform­ Bartek also made his mark in f40-yard champion. Vineyard, which' lost 24-0 to ances. Because of Joe's outstand­ the classroom at Stang where The recipient of many awards ing speed, he was switched to It Provincetown in its last engage­ he was president of his class ment will be at Nantucket in tailback on the varsity squad for football and track, Joe re­ . for three years and a member of its season finale. Nantucket tied and i~ a- target for many or eeived the New Bedford Quart­ the Student Council in his final erback Club's outstanding scho­ St. Mary's High of Cambridge, quarterback Joe Santos' (Swan­ year. r; lastic football trophy while at sea) passes. ' 12-12, last Saturday. , The tradition of the Bartek Bartek learned his football Stang. League leading Lawrence of family is athletics and whether Falmouth, thrilled over its rout under Carlin Lynch and Charley St. Thomas...More Parish Connell at Stang after playing of Bourne, will be at Dartmouth A member of St. Thomas More JOe Bartek becomes a teache~ this Saturday. The Falmouth with the Somerset High fresh­ Parish illl Somerset; Bartek rep- , preacher or candlestick maker. b£ has upheld that traditio~ iJIl club should, have little trouble man ,under Charley Carpenter as resented Illis church OIl the bas­ with the home clUb which went' an eighth grader when in the ketball court and also enjoyed a, the finest manner. ' down to a 50-0 defeat at the Somerset school system. ,stint. as a Babe Ruth League Outsta.nding Trackster hands of Dennis-Yarmouth last week'end. .. Bartek had an extraordinary , Interfaith Meeting track career in scholastic com­ Nany I..eague Tilt petition, earning his first varsity NEW YORK (NC)-Partici­ Bourne plays Saturday at letter as ,an eighth grade mem­ pants in the Methodist-Catholic Fairhaven, which was a 12-6 ber of, ·the Somerset varsity team, dialogue group carrying on ecu­ winner over Wllq!ham in a Cape­ under Bob Simpson, then going menical discussions since mid­ 245 MAIN STREET, way Conference tilt last week-, on to a brilliant career on ,the 1966 have announced that the end. Wareham will host Old cinders at Stang. 'FAlMOUTH-S48-1I918 'next conversation in the. 18­ Rochester of Mattapoisett which In' football, Bartek was an month-old series will take place ARMAND ORTINS, Prop. , scored with 15 seconds remain­ All-State halfback as a senior at New York's Fordham Univer­ ing last Saturday to wind-up in ,and also named to several' All­ sity Dee. 17-19. a 15-15 tie wUh Barnstable. The Bristol County League teams in latter 'plays Case at Swansea this the Diocese. weekend. In LynCh's final season, Joe Bellingham of the Clover was an important cog in the Valley loop will host Seekonk Spartans' Massachusetts Class t grid championship and Bartek this coming Saturday. Belling­ . ham, playing its first season of 'varsity competition, has yet to Open Housing Law at win. It managed to score its first, points of the campaign last FLINT (NC) - The city ot. weekend, when it went down at Flint has become the lOth muni­ the hands of Medway 31-6. cipality in Michigan to pass an Dighton'-Rehoboth has a Narry open housing ordinance. Defeat tilt on tap this weekend when it of a similar ordinance in August had led to a threat by Negro clashes with Somerset at the lat­ NEW BEDFORD. ~,. rc: 115 WILLIAM ST. ter's field. Both were losers last Mayor Floyd J. McCree te resign. time out.

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/HE ANCHOR­ ,Thurs., Nov. 9,

Drr

M@~o[k lL@M(~:h'

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Illinois Prelate Uphold$ Catholic Schools' Value

1967

Ho~r [f'@U'[k)te[j'J1§

BELLEVILLE (NC) Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of Belleville upheld the value of Catholic schools in an ad­

Peac® ~~~(Q)fl'ts' PORTLAND (NC)-Pope Paul VI's efforts for world peace are not in vain, Dr. Charles Malik, former presi­

dress to 'some 800 secondary and elementary school teachers attending a diocesan institute on education. "I wish to make it clear," the bishop said, ':that I subscribe to the proposal that ~e keep our school ,system open across the board and handle as large a pro­ portion of pupils as possible at every level. "The Catholic school like the Catholic Church has been under severe attack both from within and without," he said. "A move­ ment to abandon our Catholic system of education has received much publicity from all the media of communication. "Parents have been confused. Some have taken their children out of Catholic schools. And, sad to say, som'e Religious and cler­ gy. have subscribed to. the false doctrine that they cannot find commitment in the classroom." Noting that in a classroom a teacher is reaching some 30 to 40 homes, some 180 days per year, Bishop Zuroweste said, "This is commitment, this is challenge, this is fulfillment." , Authentic Vocation The vocation of a teacher, he stressed, is "hlghly respected by the Church. ' , It is an authentic vocation" an essential apostolate in the living Church. You represent"'and imi­ tate Our Lord Himself, for He was 'a teacher." Catholic schools in the United States, the bishop saiq., helped bring about the '''switt rise of an unlettered poverty-stricken im­ migrant community raised in the course of a few generations to full equality of citizenship." Looking toward the future, Bishop Zuroweste said, "it is the Catholic school that can fonn men and women to deep concern about the injustices rampant among our people.

dent of the United Nations Gen­ " <!ral Assembly, said here. "They produce' a climate in ate world and they're important. ;'3l'hey turn people's hearts toward peace," he said. "They place ate Church on the side of recon­ dliation." Dr. Malik, now a professor of philosophy at the University of Beirut, Lebanon, who came here ~ Oregon to speak on "Is Peace lPosslble?" at Marylhurst Col­ lege, asserted: "Peace is not a matter 'of wishing or even of acting as individuals. It's a mat­ ter between governments." . He is not in favor of peace demonstrations. "They're sentimental, super­ ficial and they get out of hand. The wrong elements usually in­ filtrate them-people who are. not really for peace," he said. "Peace is not a trick or a gim­ mick. It's most complex. It has to do with what the world will be, like in 20 years from now." ~ Many people who "talk about peace don't know what they're ~lking about," he said. Military Question

At a press conference, he an­

awered a question about the U. S.

bombing of North Viet Nam by

saying the bombing is "a purely

military question.

, "It is up to the people respon­

sible for the lives of half a mil­

lion of your peopde there. How

other people feel about it is not

important-since this is war, the

bombing 'will continue," he said.

Peace, 'Dr. Malik said, "is ~

keeping people from killing each

other-yes. But that's not real

peace. Real peace is where peo­

ple trust each other."

CENTURY l'fARK: Mr~. Ellen Kane of Washington, observed her lOOth birthday Concerning the Middle E<lst, at a, Mass offered by Patrick Cardinal 'O'Boyle, afterwards receiving fr~m the, Cardinal Dr. Malik said he saw no imme­ a Rosary blessed by, Pope Paul VI. At rear is berson, Francis J. Kane, prominent Wasp.­ diate negotiated settlement of

" 0 the situation "alihough people ingtori' layman. NC Photo. \ are working from ,all over (for

peace)."

Of the 'positiop of his own

'eountry, Lebanon, Dr. Malik

said,:' "We stand with 'our sister

Arab, states, and we also are for

the bringing al!out of harmony." , ROME (NC) - The Marian 1959 and preliminary draft had . Dr. Malik was elected presi­ Congregations, generally known been Issued in 1962.' dent of the UN General Assem­ : as Sodalities of Mary, have , The final drllft; however, was bly in 1955?while he was foreign changed the organization's inte'r­ ~ postponed to permit the incor­ minister of Lebanon. He also was nati~nal name ,to the World Fed­ <ehairman for two years of the eration of Christian, Life Com-, poration,of directives of the Sec­ ond Vatican Council. Y\uN Cornmisslon on Human munities. ' Rights. ,(5% Investment 9O-Dar Notice' Accou"ts The new version consists of a . ,- The name change .was only one nucleus of general norms which .' and 4Y.!,%' Rel1!lar Savings Accounts) facet of a complete reorganiza­ , must be included in all versions' .lies Iii ts Wear Lay, tion of the more than 400-year­ , and of second part dealing with - Qld movement. Delegations from ,the concrete implementation of Clothes on Campus' 38 nations met.in Rome to adopt ,the general norms, which can be ST. LOUIS (NC) ......:. Some 10 an intense program of renewal , retouched in various nations but (Citizens' Dividends Are..,Exempt

of the 120, Jesuits on the faculty .. 'for the sodalities, to betteF order -, without ITlOdifying t~e c0!lten~. and admipistration 'of St. Louis 'and direct their aims and activ­

From Mass. Personal Income Taxi

University have aSked for and , ities in line with goals setby the Oldest Document

received permission to substi­ Second Vatican Council.

The new name of the organiza­ tute' business suits and ties for In addition ,to the change of tion is taken from a circular' clerical clothes on campus, the international name there Permission for the change in were also 't?oted new common letter, the oldest existing ,doc~­ ment on the sodalities, which IAIl Deposits Insured IN FULL'

garb was given by Father Wil­ rules, new statutes for the world was writtein a few months after Under Mass. Law)

lIiam V. Stauder, S.J., rector of federation, a new juridical struc­ the,first congregation was found- .. Mle Jesuit university 'commun:' ture and a new apostolic orien­ ed in Rome in 1563. ity, who said all",priests who tation. Savings Is Our Middle Na..ae! ....' ,The 'new name applies only to wish may join the experiment. the general council of the world The change, according to Common Rules • federation. National federations Father Stauder, is "to provide "GIlEATER FAU RIVER'S HELPFUL FAMILY BANKA The meeting of delegatio!).! are free to adopf the new name some sort of garb intermediate was the first time since the , or retain their old one. between a very formal attire­ movement's foundation that a Among be delegations attend­ 4:lerical suit - and a very infor­ vote of the members was taken ing the special session of the mal attire - sport shirt --,... espe­ general councll were representa­ cially when dealing with others on general rules. Previous addi­ on a professional basis, whether . tions of the "common rules" were tives of nine Asian 'nations, 14 within or outside the univer- issued in 1587, 1855 and 1910 by American and 13 European ones. the general o~ the Society of sity." , At another meeting~ Asian and Latin American delegates voted He said that the experiment Jesus. SO. MAIN U. ~ 1 ~ "presupposes that there will reNew rules had been requested to hold another meeting in Au­ ALL DlPOIltl INJURiD IIL...fYY.. UHDD LAW main times and occasions when" at the congress of the World gust; 1968, in Bogota, Colombia, traditional cleriCal garb is Federation of Marian Congrega- in connection with the 39th In­ :proDer." tions held in Newark. N. J. in, ternational Eucharistic Congress.

Marian Congregations Complete Reorganization With Name Change a

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