National Conference 0/ Catholic Bishops
• Renews Vitality of Church tn U.S.
The Bishops of the United ~ates have reached momen ~tIlS decisions which actuall.~' will soon-touch the iJ.ves of all AmericanCathol'ics. "he decisions came at the annu !rt meeting of the newly named ~aiional Conference of Catholic Bishops in the nation's capital llast week. 'lI'he more than 200 cardinals, archbishops and bishops-spoke @ecisively on liturgical matters, LPriday abstinence, the race Qiuestion, peace, birth control linnder government auspices, and ~hel' weighty matters. .After voting for their offi ~& fOI' the first time, the new-
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ly established body of bishops elected some 40 archbishops and bishops to serve on their new and enlarged administrative board. The bishops reorganiz~d their own structure and secre tariat. _Henceforth the bishops' body shall be called the National Con ference of Catholic Bishops and shall deal with spiritual matters while the secretariat, the U. S. Catholic Conference, Inc. shall deal with civil matters. Numerous committees WeI' e formed and matters referred to them were '3f such historic im portance that it will be neces sary for the bishops to hold an extraordinary plenary meeting
The ANCHOR
Hierarchy Apply Vatican Council To U. S. Needs a PERMANENT DEACONS • • • • • • •
VERNACULAR MASS COMMON WORSHIP MEATLESS FRIDAYS RE·ORGANiZATION RACIAL EQUALITY VIETNAM PEACE PRIEST 'POOL'
in Chicago the week o.f April 10, '1967. , On abolishing obligatory Fri day abstinence for all the Fri· days in the year except during . Lent, the billhops actually re emphasized· the need for a· real·
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and voluntary penance. The free from the obligation, tradi weekly switch to fish was often tionally binding,. under pain of not a penance for most Ameri sin, in what pertains to Friday cans but more often than not a abstine)1ce, except as noted * '" l) customary thing, an appetizing for Lent." Thus the new legislation states treat or even for many an all-but -voluntary act which effected a that: I'Following the instructjons of real act of obedience but not one necessarily that spoke of the Holy See, we declare that the penance.. . obligation both to fast and to In establishing the new peni abstain fro in meat, an obligation tential legislation, the bishops observed under a more strict for mality by' our fathers in the for U. S. Latin Rite Catholics": established clearly the need for faith, still binds on Ash Wednes penance in the lives of all Cath . day and Good Friday. No Catho olics without· exception. They lic Christian will lightly excuse also spoke of the high esteem himself from so hallowed an Friday has always haC: in the obligation "'. ':' *" eyes of Christians - from the "In keeping with the letter very founding of the Church-as and the spirit of Pope Paul's a day of penance. They even Constitution "Poenitemini", we openly hopeq. that most Catholics preserve for our dioceses the tra would continue on their own dition of abstinence from meat to .follow the ancient tradition of oil each of the Fridays of Lent, confident that no Catholic Chris meatless Fridays. '.Briefly, the bishops decreed tian will lightly hold. himself Turn to Page Six that ':our· people are henceforth·
!F(O]U Riveli'o Mass., Thursday"Nov. 24 g 1966
V@Uo 10, N@o 47 ©
1966 The Anchor
$4.00 per Year PRICE IOc
Generous Laity Assures
Benefits for Diocese Bishop Connolly has appealed for support of the Cath
<>iic Universitv in the nation's capital in a letter read in
~U parishes 0'£ the Diocese last Sunday. Emphasizing its oontl'ibution in the field of Catholic higher education and i1ts service in training bish~ . . . trouble to visit the University \llll>S priests, religious and la- itself. Yet the keystone of our VISITORS WELCOME: A visit from her Cassidy classmates is always welcomed by frty for service to God and whole educational system is the oountry, the Bishop wrote: Catholic University of America. Debbie Cardoza, hospitalized at Canton Children's Hospital. Visitors are Cynthia Terra Beloved People of God: Since the year 1889 thousands left, and -Marie Powers. Debbie is the daughter of Mr ,and Mrs. Manuel Cardoza and a Since the marriage of Presi- of priests have studied there fOl' . member of St. Anthon,y's· parish, Taunton. See StoQ' on Page Ten. dent Johnson's daughter, much higher degrees. Many, many of Catholic interest has centered on our bishops have attended Cath the Shrine to Our Lady. This, olic University. In fact, of Bish as we all know, stands on the ops appointed since last April, (Q:ampus of' Catholic University eleven have been educated at m Washington; D. C. Catholic University, Certainly Most Catholics visiting Wash- this is significant. ., ST. LOUIS (NC) The not, "the patient as an orgal)ic . t~eir right to grow in person-. 611lgton see the Shrine inside But the chief beneficiaries of ' entity may ·well survive and im hood" if there is' no coilabora time has. come for church lMtd out, - few ever take the Turn to Page Two prove, but he will be cheated. Non on policy, he pointed out. related management at a11 as a person." ·Members of the "Unless the hospital is a true levels to sound a "requiem. hospital staff are also robbed hof Turn to Page Twelve for bureaucracy,"· says· Father· Trafford P. Maher, S.J., director
of the education department of
St. Louis University and found
er-director. of the university'.
Christian Unity, based Human Relations Center
NEW YORK (NC) - The Promoting spoke 'at a meeting of the Amer for Training and Research, iEuture of Christian unity ican Bible Society's advisory stressed the need for more per- • ROME (NC)-The 31st general congregation of. the' ])tinges on production of a board. He requested cooperation sonal hospital management. common bible for all Chris of the society in the common Father Maher urged at the Society of Jesus ended Noy. 17 after drawing up plans and tian faiths, a Jesuit authorit~· on Bible venture. decrees that will guide the Jesuits' future throughout 'the Sisters Of Mercy Hospital Insti The society, which' is sup Scripture declared here. tute, that each ,hospital become world. The congregation which met oyer a ,two-year· period Fathel' Walter M, Abbott, S.J., ported by some 65 Protestant de "a real community." If it does -the first time this has hap 413, assigned by Pope Paul VI to nominations, was censured by pened in the Society's 400The major work of the Soci ~oordinate efforts towl:\rd com Pope Leo XII in the 1820s on a
\. year hisory- is important ety's delegates was to reneW"
!llIIon Catholic-Protestant Bibles .chal'ge of perverting the S"Crip · Ii)nS!?<ensiI1Its@/Jil for it is the order's law-mak- and adapt ~he spirit and ~cti:,ity fun all languages, asserted: "Witti. tUI'es. Three subsequent 19th ing body. The first session open- of. the Society to the gUldel~nE9S (!)ut agreement on the Bible there century Pepes-Pius VIII, Greg , The Most Reverend Bishop ed on May 7, 1965 and lasted laid d~w.n by the Se?ond Vab?a.m .u.s no hope for the Chr.istian ory XVI and Pius IX-I'eiterated dispenses the faithful of the ·until July. The second opened CounCil 111 accor~ With the ong.t \lAnity movement." the censure. Diocese of· Fall River from Sept. 8, 1966 and closed with anal c.oncept of ItS founder, St. The Jesuit, a personal assistant Officials of the society, now abstinence on Friday, Nov. concelebrated Mass with the Ignabu~ of Loyola. ~ Augustin Cardinal Bea. head celebrating its 150th anniversary, 25, the day follow i n g Thanksgiving... a; Ulc Vatican Secretariat for Turn to Page Twelve Pope on No~. 17. Turn to page Eighteen
Reform Hospital Management
father Abbott Asserts Basis for Unity is Common Bible'
Jesuit Guidelines Ready Post-Conciliar Growth·
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.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Npv. ~4" 1966 ,
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Catholic, Presbyterian lea~ers
DisCM$$ Theology i~ 'Chicago
fairs, commented after the meet ing that agreement on certain questions seemed" to be ap proaching. "We are optimistic as to the future,'" Msgr. Baum said, "and our discussions are laying down the' basis for agreement ill theology and worship." CConcelebrated Mass The meeting opened with a service led by Dr. Willia~ ~. Ward, pastor of the Eastminster Presbyterian (U. S.) Church in C01umbia, S. C. On the secpnd day a concelebrated Mass was of fered 'with Bishop.Ernest L. Un terkoefler, of Charleston, S. C., chairman of the Catholic dele- , gation as principal concelebrant. As at previous sessions, the gl70up met in subcommittees and reported findings to a general plenary session on the final day. Holy Communion was con~ ducted the third day by the Rev. Frederic~ .Trout, . minister of c Bethlehem United Church of ~hrist, Chicago., Catholics par n..utheran Churches
, ' , ,', ' " ticipated in all aspects· of .the EXCHANGE VIEWS AT HIERARCHY M.EETllNG:)\;1'Qst ;Rev. Huniberto S. Me~eiro8p Form Cooperative
Protestant-led services, up to Bishop of Brownsville, Texas and forPler chancellor of the Fa)) River Diocese, disclIssef> '.CLEVELAND (NC)~Four·de. receiving the sacraments; mem nominations representing some bers of the'· .Presbyterhln 'arid agenda- of the Nationa1Conference Catholic Bishops with Auxiliary ·Bishop James 'J., 95 per"cent of all 'LutHerans in Reformed churches participated Gerrard of the Fall River Diocese, another former dioces~,chancellor. fully in the concelebrated Mass, , the U, S. have formed, the Luth ,',.' ! ' eran Council in the'" United but did not receive Holy Com munion. 'States of America.
Present separatIons' a.m·on g The council, church officials
stressed, is not a union of the Christians at the. communion . four groups but a .cooperat~ve table "make for the yea.r~iQ-g of unity to come;" said Msgr. Henry , agency to act in matters of com . ". " .
Beck, Lyndhurst, N, J., chairman mon interest that are not at vari Most ~ev. Humberto 5: Mede,. to-laity of any, diocese.)n tlle' ·one priest for' each 900' Catheo
ance with separate doctrine or' of the section' group' on' worship iros has a greater need for priestS country. ' lies. and mission. The group, he in his Brownsville, Texas; Dio~ practice. The above ratios include all Bishop Medeiros, close to the · added, has discusSed the problem
Joining the new council at a cese than any 'other Ordinary in hearts of all the religious and diocesan and religious priestt!l eonstitutional meeting here were · of inter-communion. No conclu a United States See. laity in the Diocese of Fall River ,serving 'in any capacity what the Lutheran Church-Missouri sions have been reached but
This observation was pointed which' 'he served as a chancellor ever .in the particular di\lceSC& Synod, the Lutheran Church in · "we' are willing to face· up to up during the Washington meet and Ii pastc>r, has one.'priest for America, the American Lutheran .this thorny problem."
ing of the National Conference Church and the Synod of the The Section group on theology of Bishops when it was noted every 3,000 Catholics.' The Eyangelical Lutheran Church. chaired by the Rev. Dr; 'James that the southern U.S. diocese Archdiocese' of New Orleans, the neediest Archdiocese, has .DOLAN-SAXON , H. Nichols of Princeton Theolog has the' lowest ratio of priests one priest .for eaeh 1,400 Catho Mass Ordlo ical Seminary, addressed itself . lies;. FRIDAY-St. Catherine, Virgin. to "The Development 'of Doc 0' The :Fall River DiOCese has " "Fune~al , and Martyr. III Class. Red. trine.'" . ~ ,;,t, , ' Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Representatives', of the two, ,"Common' Preface: Continu.ed frOID Page One"· ,C'ity.Landma'rks ",i '" traditions made note of the fact SATURDAy-St. Sylvester, Ab-. that since the beginning'of the Catholic University are the N;E,W tpRK (NC);,~t~. p~t~"" bot. 'III. Class'. White.' Mass ] 9th' century, each· has been "in priests, sisters,. brothers arid' rick's .cath~d,rl.\l apd St. Thomas VA 4.5000 . Proper; Glory; 2nd Pra:yer St.. , creasingly ,influenced' by the thousands upon thousands of Episcopal cb,ur,ch" alm(;s,t,oppo Peter of' Aiexandiia, Bishop modern awareness of historical laymen and women~ho have. site each other.:on Fifth"Avenue, and Martyr; no. Creed; Com change, ev.en in the teaching of been educated ,there..Together have been desigpat~~ :q#icially mon Preface. the' faith."
they have established a leader a,s city landmarks by the New SUNDAY-I Sunday of Advent. . Both; a concluding report said, sbip on all levels among the York Laridni'ark'sPreseJ:vatiOil ' "!' '~~iiliam$,': I';Class. Viole,t. Mass Proper; "insist upon ihe'fliit~fulness,to multi-iingual population of the, CoJDm'ission here. . "" ..' Home' ", N~ Glory; Creed; Preface of the life and teaching of the \: " United States. Many 'gr~uates EST. 1870 Trinity. '. , Apostles, and ,feel li'tesponsibil-: . from there have trained .to be Reg;'Funeral Director 'and MONDAY ---'- Mass of previous' ity to give an explan'ation of come missionaries' in distant Embalmer . Sunday. III Class. Violet. Mass that teaching as part of their· lands. All have brought the ....,~ACIA n Washinglon Square
Proper; No .Glory or Creed; mission. In recent years both light of faith and,Christian .char E, •
Co'mmon .Preface. NEW BEDFORD
have become sharply aware of ity to th~ir ministry ~t all levels
: Excavating : TUESDAY - Mass of previous how much their' understanding on this contine·nt. ,el. 996-8098
Sunday. III Class. Violet. Mass and· .expositionS 'of revealed "RIVATE PARKING AREA
Catholic University has no en I . 'ontractors ! r Proper; No Glory OJ: ,Creed; truth' has' varied in relation to dowment. It has not been a 'ben~ 2nd Prayer St. Saturninus, cultural change." eficiary, to any great degree, of : 9 CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEN ~: Martyr; Common Preface. the.. various scholarships,' subsi WYman 2-4862;;: ': WEDNESDAY - St. Andrew, dies~ or foundations Jh"t help : Fall River GuUd' Apostle. II Class. Red. Mass most non-sectarian colleges. Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer of " FaIr River Catholic Guild for Since its foundation the en-' previous Sunday; Creed;'Pref the Blind. will meet Sunday dowment of Catholic Universfty ace of Apostles. · afternoon in St. Joseph's School has been the free-wi'll contribu J THURSDAY - Mass of previous hall, following Rosary and Bene tions of our Catholic people. We ' . Miclioel Sunday. III Class. Violet. Mass diction in the Church starting' at in. this Diocese will renew our Proper; NQ Glory of Creed; 2:15. Inc.
generous giving. on November' Common Preface. One Votive 27th ·this yeai'. In the past we . Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, FUNERAL SERVICE
have been geperous to the point' , the Eternal High Priest, Per Necrolcgy of heartening University author mitted. Glory; 2nd Prayer of NEW BEDFORD,. MASS.
ities. It. has encouraged. them, DEC. 2 previous Sunday; no Creed; over many years, to, pay realistic Rev. Arthur' Savoie, 1917, Pas 549 COUNTY STREET Common Preface. salaries to teachers and scien · tor, St. Hyacinth, New Bedford. tists. Thus we are assured a very Rev. Dennis W. HarriJ:}gton, high caliber of teaching' and ded 1958, Assistant, St. Mary, Taun icated work fro~ those that help FORTY HOURS
ton. :prepare clergy, ,religious and es DEC. 3 DEVOTION
ltev. John JR. McCarthy, P.R., peciallyyoung Catholic men and Nov. ~--8t. Anthony, Matta 1926, Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall women for places of importance and service in the community in poisett. River. .which they live. st. Anne, New Bedford. . DEC. 4 So I urge one and all to con Dec. 4-St. Margaret., Buz: tit Rev. Charles Quellette, 1945, zards Bay. · Assistant, St. Jacques, Taunton. tinue their ,support of. Catholie University, confident .that all St. ~ernard, Assonet DEC.6' Rev. Joseph L. Cabral, 1959, realize .that in helping this in Pastor, Our Lady. of Angels, Fall stitution we help the church in" , ' "till AllCH,OII River. . . '. ' our own area. secOIIII Class POSUlllf paiD i1 Fill IlIwet l,: 1lIlas$.'· PUbllshe, even Thursdn, at 410 'Uee;'8 Devotedly yours in Christ, Hlllhlano IIvenue Fall Rive, Mass. 02722 . I 115' WILLIAM ST. BEDFORD. MASS. by tho Catholle freu 01. the Dloclese of fllD JAMES L, CONNOLLY, Rev. Jolyl F. Broderick, 1~, , IiV8' SubscrlptlOll prlee bJllIIll;' JIOStpak.1 Pastor; St. Mary, So. Dartnieutb~' . . :Bislwp" ~f .Fa~l";Rivel'•. $4.00 II8f JtIf• CHICAGO (NC) - Catholic. and Presbyterian religious' lead ers met at the Presbyterian Mc Cormick Theological. Seminary here for three days of t~eological discussion. . The meeting was the fourth in a series of conversations being held under the auspices of the Catholic Bishops' Commission on Ecumenical Affairs and the North American Area of toe World Alliance of RHformed and. Presbyterian Churches. Members of .the latter group involved in the conversations in duded the .PresbyteI·ian Church . U. S. (Sou.thern), the Cumber land Presbyterian Church, the Hungarian Reformed Church in America, the Reformed· Church in America, the United Church of Christ, and the United Pres byterian Church U.S,A. . Msgr. William W. Baum, exec utive director of the Bishop's Commission on Ecumenical AJ.
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Pope Paul S!'ys Scouting Follows COB.ilI1'ftC~S6$ Goals
fHE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 24, 1966
Rochesti'e~ WO~~ D~spu\t@ S®t?fr~~d
VATICAN CITY (NC) The whole Boy Scout move ment is in line with goals of the Second Vatican CouncHp
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Pope Paul VI told scouting leadl= <ars of Italy. Receiving leaders of the Cath @lic Scouts of Italy and the adult group of the association, the Pope stressed the closeness of the scouts with the goal of the council. "The council addressed itself 00 the integral shaping of man," he said, "It did not exalt man, man' unreal or a utopian vision (j)f his own greatness, but it framed him within a concrete positive realistic vision, that of the order of sin and grace ac cording to the unchanging prin ciples of the theological and Christian concept of the world and of man himself." The Pope cited the teachings of the constitutIons on the ehurch and the modern world. and the lay apostolate which de mand of all adherence, Initiative, responsibility, generosity a n'd work. Basic Virtues . "Beloved sons," the Pope asked, "are not these the virtues on which scouting Is based witl1 SO much Insistence and with sucll andeniable results? Are not perhaps its supreme means the well-trained personality, the sense of responsIbility and of personal involvement and sociall and community training? "And does not the Catholl.: scout movement here 10gicaIny align itself (with the scout move ment in general) with its pro gram for a supernatural and churchly education, with the training of a truly perfect man within the limits of our poor hUJIlan capacity which has been wounded by sin, with the desire to produce the new man ,of Whom St. Paul speaks, 'who has been created according to God in justice and holiness of truth' {Eph. 4:24)1""
~enture
to Serve' PAVLA Challenge CHICAGO ,(NC) -,- Thel96'l promotion, recruitment and sup port drive for Papal Volunteers for Latin America. (PAVLA) opened with a pointed challenge to the laity-"Venture to Sel'Ve." Father Raymond A. Kevane, national director, inaugurating the program asserted: "This is an intensified call to Catholic lay people, to share their time, skills and support to help meet the issues facing the Church nn Latin America." , "Inier-American Days" will be the specfal channel for launching ~he drive at the diocesan, level, Father Kevane said. Diocesan di rectors of the' program are scheduling information rallies to reach the public in parishes, 'or ganizations ,and colleges, he added. '
Interfaith Meetings Mark Thanksgiying NEWARK (NC)-A series of mterfaith observances marked Thanksgiving in this area. Catholics, Jews and Protes ~nts took part in programs in East Orange, Newark, North Ar lington, Westfield, Fair Lawn, Allendale, Hackensack, Franklin Lakes, and Jersey City. ' Largest program, in East Or ange High School sponsored by the Interfaith Clergy Conference, involved members of 25 congre gations and featured a homily by Bishop John J. Dougherty, of Newark, president of Seton Hall 'lIniversit)', South Orange.
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BOOKLOVING FAMILY: Here's family of Ben and Ruth Muse of St. Pius X parish, South Yarmouth. Ben Muse is owner of famous Parnassus Book Shop in Yarmouth Port. In front, little Rebecca' Muse; next row, left to right, Joanne, Bill, Charles, Eben; behind them, Mary, Sarah, 'Mrs. Muse, Ben Muse; rear~ Ben Jr.
. Biblio,phile Ben Muse of St., Pius X Parish Chooses Cape ..Cod for V,nique Bookstore By Eva Maria/ Dane Ben Muse, now of St. Pius X parish, So uth Yarmouth, was born in Paris, son of a Foreign Service official. His educational bac kground includes schools in France, Uruguay, Colombia, Panama, and the United States. His many_ interests find outlet serving biblio philes in search of a missing link to a collect ion; facili~'ating research; and supplying the best of new books to come One interesting feature of Par Olll the market. He ran his "Cape Cod Ballads and Verse" first book service ~n an are still considered highlights in nassus is the open section brim ming with books that flanks the apartment 0 n Riverside American regional literature. building. Here you can browse
What is out of print is being Drive with his young bride Ruth, while both were still in college. re-issued thanks to Ben Muse's He was studying Far Eastern enterprising spirit. .Last Christ mas he issued a 650 copies edi History and the Russian Lan guage at Columbia. She attended tion of Freeman's "History of the Teacher's College Library Cape Cod." Already two-thirds of the four volume set have been School of the l!niversity. sold. Other reprints of books on Nine years ago they came to Cape Cod and Southeastern Mas Cape Cod, -where Ben Muse's sachusetts are planned. Parl,lassus Book Shop made its Parnassus likes to stock books debut in a small building on on every conceivable subject, Sherman Square in Hyannis. 'though heavy emphl;lsis is on SoOn the rapidly growing con marine lore, whaling, cook cern sank its roots in an impres books, ontology and local. his sive old New England house tories. opposite the Yarmouth Port Higher Standards post office. What about Catholic books? Once a meeting center. of "As yet not enough curiosity Grangers, later a general, st'ore, has beefi generated in this area," today the tall spacious town he replied: house is sheltering "the largest "I do carry Gilson's philos bookstore south of Boston and ophy; 'Maritain's art criticism; east of Providence" as well as Teilhard de Chardin's theo-cos~ ..ne of the most comprehensive mology. But scarce demand has' collections of rare and unusual curtailed expansion in this books ili New England. field,"
, Eight Children The 'development of higher
Ben Muse takes frequent stanaards remains a challenge
, to be met. Muse is alarmed over ~arching sprees up and down f:he eastern coast from Vermont the negative rather than positive to Virginia. In the beginning· influence that so often predomi Ruth used to mind the shop nates. "Literature of dubious taste
while he was away. As their family grew to four boys and will al~ays be produced. Plac
four girls she is being kept more ing too much emphasis ~n these
trends draws attention thereto
and more engaged in their inter ests and upbringing in the home and will not encourage a widen ing of-the reader's horizon," they have in South Dennis. He feels very strongly that But one institution remains from the very early days: their . good judgment and consequently
loyal and devoted friend, Lillian the boycotting of what is not up
Dykstra of South Yarmouth. to par is only evolved from being , Quite often it w)ll be this widow exposed to everything, especially of two college presidents and that which is best in books. one-time Carrie Nation suffra There is an author in the Muse
gette who will assist you in your family. Ben's father, Benjamin,
purchases at Parnassus. is now working on his third
book, a projection on what the
Here you will find an unfailing South will be like by the end of source of Cape Cod literature. the century. A former senator in Ben Muse thinks there is no the Virginia legislature, the other area so small in size that elder Muse. was a director of the has been written about as such Southern Leadership Council. He can make available voi He has been an active partici~
urnes of Timothy Dwight;s pant il\ th~ National Conference
"Travels in New England a\:ld on Interractial Justice. Some
New, York", or his "Journey 'to times 'he visits his children and Provincetown"; works of Henry grandchildren on Cape Cod, Kittredge; books. by Charles F. staying at the historic Yarmouth Swift. Joseph Lincoln's novels Inn right. opposite ParnassUs uve continuous appeal. His Book Shop.
to your heart's content any time of day or night, including holi days, and simply leave the money for your 'purchases in a box. Very few hooks, are stolen,' notes Ben. In February Ben and Ruth plan a trip to Mexico. They will
be accompanied by their four
oldest children, who hlwe saved
earnings from their paper routes
to defray expenses of the trip. They have been multi-lingual
sinc~ childhood. All children
ROCHESTER (NC) -An out of-court settlement was reached with relatives who contested the will of a spinster which left nearly all of her $19-million es tate to two Catholic colleges. A 1933' will of Florence M, Dailey, spinster who retired from her bank secretary job 47 years ago and died last Feb. 9 at the age of 87, left $1 million to each of three' relati ves and lawyers, a~d the balance to the University of Notre Dame and Georgetown University, Wash ington, D. C., for scholarships. An undated and mutilated will, reputed to have been a later one which left most, of the estate to two nephews and a niece, was found and submittec' for probate. Before the case was adjudi cated, the 'contestants agreed to a settlement outside of court. Surrogate Judge Michel L. Rog ers did not disclose the specifil' amounts agreed upon, but law yers for the relatives 'said the terms were "very satisfactory." Those contesting the will were John Boyle Dailey of Belling ham, Mass., Char-Ies Norton Dailey, Statesboro, Ga., ant: Mary Feeney Dailey of Woon socket, R.1. attend the Dennis Yarmouth school system and CCD' cIassez at St. Pius X parish. The parents hope a Catholic high school will soon become ;J reality on Cape Cod. "It is al this level that youth needs most leadership and guidance."
THE MUSIC SHOP Baldwi,n & Hammond Pianos .& Organs' ·Lew Dalbec. Proprietor
Sales and Service
269 Union St., New Bedford Tel. 992-7064 138-140 North Ma in st.
Fall River, Mass. I.el. 675-7721
Let us give thanks to the Almighty for the countless gifts he has deemed wise to bless America with!
Let us also express gratitude for the sacrifices and nobie deeds today of our gallant Minute Men in Viet Nam. In your prayers, kindly remember the
prayers and safety of our courageous freedom fighters
who can't be home for this Thanksgiving.
HAPPY THANKSGIVING
itizens
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Parents Take' Actiwce lRart in Retreat Activities Two Protestant
Churches Merge
Prela,te ' S t r e $ s e s ' At Dwceoon..High Schoo"u's " «l 4
THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 24, 1966
I', M·Q..n 's Sn,'iritua_ Ir." ~I d
CmCAGO (NC)-Leaders Methodist and. Evangelical!
~~e
Something new ·in Hiocesan high school ,retreats is ,parent participation. It's part of
United Brethren churches have voted to ~erge their denomina tions into the largest Protestanti I~ee S· teen-age sons .and ·daughters. At ,Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton and at Sacred Hearts church in America. NEW ORLEANS (NC) Academy in~F-all ·River, :wr ·instance, parents have been askedro off~r special prayers for The "United Met hod j 94 ~The .Jewish people ·are the the sucCess of 'school' -r.e---... ' I Church" would include 14>'3 mil 'were ~L..~, .in lioo. Methodist and 7~009 EUB ftalllnle, ,par exce11enee, 0 f treats. They -unN " '" 1:' vited -.to view..a cootroversial members 'and outnumber t he Iv... .the -validity .(5f .~ city eul millien-member Southern Bapoo tis! Church, currently the na twe." ArcllbishopPhilip ·M. Han- film, on teen.;age· ·mO'r.als, eanof"New Orleans told .mem- '''Nobody Waved Goodbye," tien's largest Protestant body. beJ:s' -of the Touro synagogue . which w.as shown to;tbeir-daugh-. At the meeting here, Method here. ters ..as "part of the reheat 1>l'Oist representatives voted 749 t& The .archbishop spoke ·on gram. '.w for the merger but the EUEl ~hTistian and Jew face' the' Dis~ussion among ·parents .at vote was closer: 325 to 88. With modern World" atiJ the congreSacred Harts Academywas'spir a three-fourths majority re':' gation's 138th annual meeting. . . ited. They saw' the film..at .a quired, eight more negative EUB As the center of early Jewish 'joint' meeting of the Fathers' ballots could have etefeated the . life he noted, Jerusalem "was Club and the mother~' 'Sucor proposal. not' only the center of communidhim Club. It depicts .a .high . The higher proportion of EUB cations and commerce and culschool boy's love affair with a negative' votes was attributed ture. It was primarily the reclassmate, leading to the 'girl's to Methodist refusal to' give up ,ligious center and the other purp'regnancy. The boy is defiant the policies of life tenure for poses were ancillary to this parof all authority, especially par bishops and the appointment o~ amount purpose. ental, and proceeds from such . dis t ric t superintendents' by Jerusalem Inspiration misde~eanors as taking a . joy bishops. "Jerusalem wa~ an .inspiration ride in a "borrowed" car to Of the 40 negative votes as well as a capital for the land actual theft of 'another car and among Mehodists, 15 'were cast of Israel," he said. "The spirita considerable sum' of money. by Negro delegates. Many of the ual and cultural needs of man At the film's end he is fl.eeil1:g Negroes wanted to see a, definite in Israel were satisfied by Jeruin the stolen car from the con date set in' the plan of' union for salem." sequences of his actions. the merger of the Negro annual , 1 h t· d ". conferences with. the white an Its examp e, e con mue, IS The film anwers -Eluestions nual conferences. valuable. today for our guidance. b't' ~HA t u raIses many. '" paren s The plan of union now goes tc> Although .we do ·not have a thewere of the gener-al,opinion that ocracy 'and .are a r e l i g i o u s l y , the 89 Methodist annual (re parental strictness was the mlss .. <tional) conferences and the 3-Z
. . d'len t 'III the .upb' PARENTS 'MEET P al", ""nts ""f' ..." tudents "t. <'~c"e;J ..EUB annual conferences which
Pluralistic society, we need.a b mg mgre rIQg'm .., ,,' . , ' : ' v: '.. «ua.l. ~ better understanding of the pur f th t t ed"W . . • t t () e eenagers 'POl' I:ay . -e Hearts' Academy, Fall River, meetpnests, gIvmg re rea . will vote on the merger ne~'
pese of 'a city." are strict." was their 'comment is Spring. 'fWe have forgotten that ·the about. their own hand-Hili ef to their daughters. From left, Rev. John Berube, 'Nfl .; .eity is supposed to serve all the their children. The priests and }\I[rs. James B. de Melo, Sueordium Club president; William needs of man, especially the cul Sisters present agreed that they J'. O'Brien, Fathers' Club vice-pr~sident; Rev. Richard Del ;BEFORE YOU isle, M.S. . tural and spiritual," the arch probably were. One Sister noted, bishop said. "You showed your interest in BUY -TRY "Man has spiritual and cultu 'your children by coming to this In .general'. the reaction -of par ·ng. Many parents .dl·d 'n~t· anything else, and this for her meetl ral needs which must be served v ents to the program wa~ "Let's whether or 'not there is unity' come." ~wn prestige.'" have mor.e of this sort of dis _ of religious belief. These needs Discussing the film parents The religious said that it was cussion."· The Sisters at Sacred ' may be. more difficult to serve further, one participant noted an unfortunate fact that grades Hearts Academy and Cassidy in OLDSMOBILE where there is religious plural that the picture showed a lack count. a great deal in getting into tend to answer the request. . Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault ism, but they must be served as of a sense of values in the par college and that even good par , 67 Middle Street. f3lrhaveD long as man exists. AnCient Rome ents of the boy, "So they couldn't ents and teachers may ·over experienced the 'cruel necessity give i" to their - son." Intel'est pressure youngstel's academic 'for a solution to this need. ingly, though, most .particiP?ting "ally. "Too much competition 'Mechanical Monsters' parents agreed that their -own leads to cheating, and then~ is "Look at our situation today. ideals fell short ·of· what they .a great deal of cheating going 'Many of our cities were 'buHt ,hoped tl1eir children woule have., on," she warnl~d. Ifar the 'service and convenience As for teen-age viewers of J. TESER, P"cp. Priests Comment . of man Ibut now, they are me "Nobody Wavt~d GoOdbye," they WYman ,RESIDENTIAL chanical monsters that tend to Priests responsible for the stu tend, said' the priests, t-o vi-cw 3-6592 INDUSTRIAl: 'dehumanize man. Instead of dent re"trea't at Sacl'ed' ffear-ts the film 'as ,showing teen-agers COMMERCIAL serving man, man is often serv Acade.my.also c9fD l'!ltmted bt'iefly and parents almost equally to ,CHARLES .,. VARGAS ,ing the city monster. We! must -on the film. "There was lW Ileve blame for the problems depieted. 253 Cedar St., New Bedford, sa:ve man from the city. We must in the picture," said· -ene. "Leve Some boys, pointed out that it .254. 'liOCKIDALE AVENUE 993-3222 '1 make 'man and society -serve the of ·one person foy .alWther was was also shown tha't mothers :NIEW "OlD, MASS. ,,,person." lacking in' every ,char.a~~er.""· make most family decisions in The archbishop pointed eut Sister Jane' Raymond,prillci- tOOaY's world and that, boys ':that roads and' highways divide Pal of' the' .academy, added the 'especially miss a male influence cities into a "succession of dif:. 'obser.vation that the ,film showed in their lives. ierent sections or areas;'" which the pressures -on tod..'ly~s, teen ,EARN differ physically and 'socially agers. "The boy's ,.mother," -she A Yew .' S8' that the total community said, "was l"eally more iute,rested largi!ly ceases t6 exist. in getting him into ,college than MONTREAL (NC) -Members HIt is about as difficult to be -of the Catholic hierarchy are -of No Withdrawal NOtice Required friendly and folksy in a super fici.<\ting at Sunday Masses here Inquire For Further Details ': market or in a shopping center' which: are being televised week 'as it is to' be sociable in the ly over the French-language tel:" I middle of an intersection,'" he 'evision network of the Canadian WASHINGTON (NC) - The said. "Thus the city is making us Broadcasting Corporation. The U. S. Census Bureau disclosed it strangers. It is serving our 'corr -programs will continue through has decided against including' 'venience' but destroying our so the 1966-67 season. ' any questions pertaining to reli cial life. gion in compiling the 197{) ceo...: ?ii nd lo'1Af~!f,r.s,;sl)fc'IA'tl 0 N "It is time for us to re-think sus. the function of a city," Arch ... _. A. Ross Eckler, bureau direc bishop Hannan said. NO JOB TOO BIG ,,[ Noii'j, Oi' 'all Ri~er. and tor, said a "substantial number -i49 G.A:~~ ,.' 9,~~t~: 6. 'solne~ser NONE TOO SMALL of persons" strongly -opposed II'
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Eight P rei a tes Plan Assistance ,To,New Nations OTTAWA (NC)-A committee of eight archbishops and bishops has been named by the Canadian Catholic
ANCHORHoly Cross Father/rom Uganda Stationedf THE Thurs., Nov. 24, Temporarily at St. Joseph's Hall Auxiliary
If you think Africa is a completely dark and pagan continent, you haven't talked to Rev. James T. Donohue, C.S.C. of New YOl~k currently stationed at St. Joseph Hall, Tucker Road, South Dartmouth. Father Donohue, a native of Manhattan and a 1957 graduate of Stonehill College, hHS just returned to this country after a five-year tour as a parish priest in Uganda. He says "parish priest," not "missionary," because, he points out, he and hi,S fellow
1966
s
Bi$hop
Education Vicar CLEVELAND (NC) - Auxil iary Bishop Clarence E. Elwell, for 20 years superintendent of Catholic schools here, has been named episcopal vicar of Cath olic education in the diocese by Bishop Clarence G. Issenmann. Succeeding Bishop Elwell as superintendent will' be Msgr. Richard E. McHale, who has served as assistant superintend ent in charge of elementary schools since 1950. Bishop Elwell's new post has its foundation in the Second Vatican Council's decree on the bishops' pastoral office in the Church. In a letter of appointment to Bishop Elwell, Bishop Issenmann said the new post will be con cerned with education at all levels and phases, including ele mentary, secondary, colleges, universities, seminaries, New man apostolate and the Confra ternity of Christian Doctrine. Bishop Elwell said he would serve as coordinator of the edu -cational programs of the eight county diocese. His duties will include providing information on all educational programs to Bishop Issenmann, he stated.
Conference to follow up plans for aid to developing countries. , At its general meeting in Octo ber,. the national association of all Canadian Catholic bishops, voted unanimously for establish- priests in the Diocese of Fort ment of a national Catholic fund Pprtal in the Kingdom of Toro ,to aid developing countries. are working with "third gener " The president of the CCC, aHon Catholics." More converts ;eoadjutor Archbishop Lou is are entering the fold at the rate ,Levesque of,Rimouski, Que., was ,9f 7,000 a year, he says. authorized to form a committee Uganda became Christia~ized :"whose task would be to launch· af~er discovery of the source of this organization." the Nile in Uganda. Anglican The bishops' meeting also rec- Churchmen from England moved ommended "that this committee in with the early British'settlers associate itself with lay special- and the White Fathers soon fol ists from the very beginn'fng of lowed. Ks work." Today, he estimates, approxiFight Hunger mately 2,500,000 of Uganda's Members of the committee an7,500,000 population are Catho nounced by the CCC general lid and approximately 2,000,000 secretariat here are: Paul Emile are Protestants. ' Cardinal Leger of Montreal; Co adjutor Archbishop'Philip F. PoThe Diocese of Fort Portal en «:ock of. Toronto; Archbishop compasses an area about 170 Martin M. Johnson of Vancou- miles long and 60 miles wide, vel'; Archbishop George B. Fla- he says. The 22 Holy Cross 1l.·ff C S B f W" B' h Fathers, seven African priests ..I , . . . , 0 mlllpeg; IS op arll. 12 White Fathers in the Gerard M. Coderre of St. Jean, _;,Que.; Bishop Alexander Carter Diocese ,care for a flock 'of of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.; Coad- 125,000., .. : jutor Bishop Albert Sanschagrin, In the nation as a whole, there AFRICAN ME.~ENTOES: Rev. James Donohue, C.S.C;, "O.M.I., of Amos, Que.; and Au- are eight Catholic Dioceses, five on temporary assignment at St. Joseph's Hall, South Dart WASHINGTON (NC) -Pope .xiliary Bishop Joseph A. Plourde of them headed' by African ~f Alexandria, Onto bishops. mouth, will return to work as parish priest in Uganda in Paul VI, through his Papal SeC The decision at the general' F,ort Portal currently is shep February. ~e shows Mrs. Irene Cashman, volunteer work retary of State, Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, has sent a letter of meeting was prompted by letters. ' herded by the Most Rev. Vincent er at shrine connected- with h~l,' some of his mementoes thanks to the American bishopb Gent earlier this year to the CCC "'J. McCauley of Omaha, Neb., a of Africa. In background is modernistic Holy Family group -for "the ) _.unificent sum" of general secretariat by Cardinal Holy Cross priest, raised to the presented to shrine this Summer by Rev. Herman Reith, ~100,OOO sent to aid the victims Leger and Archbishop Pocock. episcopate in 1961. of the floods in Italy. C.S.C. - , The letter. suggested some kind British IDnueDee of official Catholic body be es tablished to join the fight The British influence still is ago to seek funds to rebuild th~ Michael, superior of St. joseph against world hunger and pov strong in Uganda, with English cathedral, which originally was Convent in Sweetsboro, N . .1., erty. a primary language for the constructed in 1910. But he only and· Mrs. Patrick (Theresa) Gal Information, Education younger generation, although Paint Qnd Wallpaper got about a thi'rd of the money vin, and three brothers, Michael, The CCC established a com each so-called "kingdom" also needed," Father Donohue says. John and Frank. Dupont Paint
:mittee of priests and laymen to bas its own dialect. ' He :estimates it will cost a ,c:;;;:~1t cor. Middle St. In February, Father expects
study what is being done by "Beginning in the second year quarter of a million dollars to' 422 Acush. Ave. other countries and what might of school, the children start replace the facilities destroyed to return to his new home in Kasanga, Kingdom of Toro, be done in Canada. Meanwhile, learning English," he says, "and by the earthqu1tke. New Bedford Uganda. Obviously, he can't . a group of Toronto 'Catholic lay classes. in secondary schools. and Ugandan Saints PARKING wait to' get back to what 'he , men got together'and urged that . higher institutions' of learning Speaking, of' the Catholicity hopes will be his life's work. Rear of Store the Church organize itself for all are conducted in the English of. the Ugandan people, Father mally to, respond to world needs. language." . 'reminds his listener that, "We At a meeting in Ottawa in Thirteen Holy Cross Brothers even have our own saints - 22 September, the CCC committee representattves of the Toronto condu~t a se~ondary school in martyrs who' died for the faith" and were canonized several lay group worked together 6n Fort Portal Diocese and the order also operates a teachers' years ago. , the final draft of a proposal that ' The nation itself has "over went before the general meeting traIning school. Kasanga itself,-. where Father , 3,000 miles of blacktop roads and , of the bishops. more than 8,000 miles of other In endorsin"'g the principles of Donohue was stationed in a mis good roads." Kampala, the capi the proposal, the CCC assembly sion compound comprising a said the first objective of' the church, parish school, convent ,tal, is about 200 miles east of fOi' nuns and a recfo:ry, is' "about· Kasanga. Father pulls out travel <l)rganization should be informa two miles from the Congolese brochures to show pictures of the tion and education. The assem modern city. bly stated it' would '~inform and border," Father says. With its 8,000 Catholics, Ka On his trip home, he was de educate, not only the Christian sanga Parish is the smallest in layed in Athens two days by the ~oqlmUi1ity at the diocesan or airlines strike. "I didn't mind, the Diocese-., "Our church was national level) but 'also the en built about iO years ago from though," he confesses, "bec'ause tire Canadian community, (and) red clay bricks fired in a kiln: it was at. TwA expense." ~reate an awareness of interna "Most of the p'arishes in the In 'Rome, he had a - reunion tional cooperation and of social· with his mother, Mrs. Michael • May your Thanksgiving be an abundance of 'iustice in this domain, of inter Diocese: are much bigger than J. Donohue of New, York, who national responsibility." blessings and peace. And may you enjoy the warmth ours. Two have more than 25,000 went to Europe on a twofold of your hearth aglow,with the good fellowship of· parishioners." . mission, to meet him and to pay St~U dear ones united lior this festive day. The parish school draw,", her first return visit to Ireland youngsters from a wide radius. in 42 years. • Remember the cause of peace in your prayers "Some children walk five to six "It was great," he says exuber and to pray for the speedy, safe return to their hearths KINGSTON (NC):'-Cuban ref miles to school every day," says antly. ' ugees arriving here have de of our gallant modern. Pilgrims fighting today the priest. : In addition to his mother, scribed a new system ¢ngineered on the frontier of freedom in Viet Nam ! In March, an earthquake de- Father Donohue is enjoying get by Premier Fidel Castro's regime stroyed the cat~edral in Fortting "acquainted" again with to keep the faithful from attend Portal and a hospital operated by two' sisters, Sister I 'Catherine ing the Catholic 'churches in the Medical Missionary Sisters Havana. () , of Philadelphia. "Bishop McCau The system, known to Cubans ley 'came 'home' several months Fcnm , m; "Plan de la Calle," keeps THE OFFICERS, DIRECYORS AND .STAFF tM;reets off limits where there are "SPECIAL MilK Catholic churches, under the Now Manv WeQiJIJ' pretext that they are needed on from Our Own 'il1JfJ1l . Sundays and holidays to hold Tested Herd" csspecial children's functions."
Thanks Bishops
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Educaig@llIlgJ TV LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Wederal Communications Com mission has approved location of III remote-control transmitter on ·Mount Wilson at the' request of tile Los Angeles archdiocese.
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the conferences of b I s &oM throughout the world, calling ... tention to abuses in interpreta tion of concn~ar documents . . . to dangerous opinions circu'lat ing on doctrinal matters: The appointment and reftleoe ment of bishops: .
The selecUon of a delegaticlll of four prelates to represent _ U.S. ~ the international S)JJMia of . bishops established by p~
of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 24,1966
Why Not 'Different?
There is one inescapable conclusion that dominates all the writing and talking about the recent decision: of the Bishops of the United States to limit the law 00 ab
stinence to Ash Wednesday, Good Friday and the Fridays of Lent-there is a great responsibility and burden placed on Catholics to keep th,e comma.nd and the warning 00 Paul VI: .... Christ: ,"Unless you~o pe~ance.•• you 'will perish." The pastoral studies, equitabttt, salaries, social security aDa The Bishops have issued to 'Catholics the challenge to . health benefits of priests., ' be mature, to, be l.r~ly spiritJ,lal adults,' to fulfill oqt of
love and not out of law what they know they should do.
,It is a risk, of course. The majority of Catholics :may
Race Problems , or may not succeed ~ithout the persuasion' of law in keep , The bishoPs isSued a PastOlal ing sacrifice in .their lives. If they do, then it' will . ~ ~ statement on' RaCe RelatioiiB wonderful 'example of ,spiritual maturity. ~f they do, not, and PQVerly. In it, they streSseti the pot only morai duty but eves then the day may corne', when the Bis,hops h.ave to the "political iniUative" of eJim.. reinstate, by'law, a minimum of sacrifice in the llves of ~ating raci81 tension. . Catholics.. " "If men elsewhere become . . . , Meanwhile, it is interesting and~at timeg,-a ~o~rce 'musJone4 '~tli 'o~ d~inocraCj.·
. of dismay to read sOhle of the comments on the 'action of
the bishops stated, "they are CiiI f~r~ the c~oi~ of another' ~ the Bishops. Especially 8uiPrising is the re,mark of a di8t~n ~rful sy~m which also' promisee guished ana widely-quoted nun-educator. The president of equality, but at the sacrifice' ell 'Webster College in'St. 'LOuis is quoted as saying, "I'm for ~c , freedoms." , , ' anything th.at makes Catholics less separated in'''public - Citing urban riots" ~e7 civic functions." , ','" \ ,eharged that "racial antagonism It is hard to decide if heretofore abstention from meat bas been' a strong factor dividing Oatholics from, their fel 'tionally charged and irratiom. low citizens in a public or civic functions. aut it is even slogans." , hat:der to under~t,and why Catholics should not be 80me-' ./ "Moreover," 'the bishops cOD 0 ~hat different. "By their fruit yOQ shall' know, them." Creed instead of' its chant, In ' tinued, "we are still confrontec1 'Continued from Page One sung Masses; 'with the depressing problems cd! While no one' wants Catholics to live in a ,greenhouse, a exc~sed from this practical prac The substitution of the Apos"poverty, joblessness, and urban ghetto, separa:ted from the mainstream of,' social and civic tice." For the other Fridays of the tIes' Creed for the Nicene Creed . slums/' These problems especia1 life, Catholics are, nonetheless, supposed -to be ever mind in ·Masses for the dea£ at- which ly afflict the Negroes, the Span ful of the kingdom of heaven as well as the kingdom of ye~r, the bishops hold that they the vernacular is prayed in sign' 'ish speaking and the AmericaD: should still be' days of normal Indians, they. pointed out. '. 'this world. And this very awarenes~makes them look at penance, so kept in reverence by langUage' things through the eyes of God. Their actions ar~ s.upposed all Catholics. Abstinence is still . The ~se of the' vernacular " The bishops reaffirmed earlier to be supernaturally inspired and this should mark them the better of the acts of penance throughout the rites of o~dina': c statements which proclaimed 1 tion or episcopal coqsecration; that "discrimination based em as well as all other men and women of good will of every by free choice as' !formerly it T,he experimental use, in spe- 'race, language, religion or na was done' !'in obedience . to religious persuasion-as being different. Not odd. Not cific and controlled communities, tional orgin ,is contrary to right Church law." 'uninterested in this life, but men and women living now and always with the consent of reason and to Christian teacho The devout observance of Fri , for eternity, using earth to gain heaven, enjoying pleasure day as a day of penance will the local bishop, of the "Ordo ing." The prelates first asked that but seeking eternal happiness. ' bring to the :front various means lVlissae" as revised by the Litur. slogans be replaced by dialogue. of self-discipline. Emphasis here gical Consilium; All of salvation history is filled with this notion The permission for the Bish- Then they sought that "a COD 'in the limitation of tbe use of a remnant that is different, a people set apart. Why should stimulants and a, renewed em ops' Commission on the Litur- centrated attack upon pov~rty it not be so now? ' gical Apostolate to study re- be mounted upon many fronts" phasis on the \rirtue of temper quests for experimentation with throughimprovededucation,fam ance, especially the use of alco holic beverages, woula be a great 9;he rite of Mass, if the!ie are pre- ily welfare and relief services, help to individuals' and. surely, sented by individual bishops to- job opportunities and' low-cost , gether with specific and detailed housing !for the poor. , by' example, to all. , It is both a surprise and a shock to read, where a "It would bring great glory proposals, and then to submit ,They a ll10 noted the need :fm' such petitions first t() the NCCB fair-housin'g, in the SUburbS, :high-ranking cleric in the Protestant Episcopal Church has to God and good to souls if Fri ana then to Rome.~ating,"We canriot hope to solve said that he thinks it "quite uri~Christian" to focus religious ,days found our people doing vol ,the problem of' jobiessness b1 reflection on God rather than on man. The Bishop-elect of ' untee~ work in. hospitals, vi~it~ng our cities if men and women Peace ,"the SIck, servmg the needs of California went on' to say, "Let us henceforth be more the aged and the lonely, instruct
'.~re .denied' the: opportunity of , The. bishops felt duty-bound Jiving, near.the' places wheq
pragmatic and begin with maI!o It is through man thl;\t we , ing· the young in the Faith, par , ticipating as Christians in com , "to help magnify the moral voice , work is availabie.· will come again' to, talkingaboq,t God." , of our nation," and to insist that . ~While the issue of fair-hous munity affairs, and meeting our It is to be hoped that the Bishop wastaiking merely issued involved in the viet:" ing has been 'a source of graVe ,obligations to our families, our about a technique of religi~n-be concerned with man and friends, our neighbors and our nam conflict "be kept under con ,tensions in' some 'Parts of tlle
his needs and hopes and l~ngings-and not with the heart community, including our par 'stant moral scrutiny." .n~ion," the bishops said, "CoD
The bishops' statement Said , diti'ons have noticeably improved
ofreligion-:..:....the· basic work of man which is to know and ishes, with a special zeal born of, the desire to add the merit of that "it is reasoQable to argue ir.. certain areas. We urge support
serve God. ' penance to the other virtues ex~ that our presence in Vietnam for sound 'programs to assure
, Man's first 'purpose on earth is' to, love God. From ercised in good, 'works born of is' justified:" but that, "while equal housing opportunities for
that love, he will be moved to love all others in God, be we can conscientiously, support all, without discrimination based
the living faith," the bishops ex the position of our country', in on r!lc~, creed or color. Here is
cause these are also God's children, his brothers and sis plained. the present circumstances, it is a unique chance for responsible
It is "as most know", the, bish ters "in the Lord. To be interested in man without any, the duty of everyone to search for reference to God is to be a hu~an~tarian-good as, far as ops concluded, 'true that "vigils other alternative~. And everyone 'dialogue, for learning from suc cesses and from !failures, and -and Ember Days no longer oblige , it goes, but not going. far enough. ' -government leaders and citi to fast and abstinence." Turn to Page Twenty To make m::j,n the 'center of reflection is to make a zens alike-must be prepared to
change our course whenever a' man-centered, religion, and this is not Ohristainity.- Al
ci:hange in' circumstances war ready' it seems, that too m~ch emphasis has been placed, PUGn ,Latin Amelf'ucG The bishops meeting in Rome, lI'ants it." ~ , on man without any reference' to God-and this is to "There IS a grav~, danger!" Cooperation Week, voted by a large majority to create society. And man's' needs, his deepest longings petition Rome for permission for ,1l?e report went on, 'that th~ WASHINGTON (NC)-A ree and desires, cannot be fulfilled in and by a merely seculal!' 'the following: CClrcu~sta~ces of the. pre~e~t 0rd number o~ parishes are eX!
society. 'The recitation of the, ~oil ~~r m ,VIetnam may, m time, . pecte~ to participate i'n' the La~
(after the Sanctus to the Our 4i~nish.our moral sensitivity America Cooperation Week, .Jan.'
Father) illl a loud voice or iD to its eVIls. Every means at our 22 to 29.
chant; disposal,__therefore, must be used
Father Louis M. Colonnese,. The recitation. 01 Ole CanoD DIil . tID create a climate of peace." administrative director of the Latin America Bureau, National GIf mOle B!lble Councill' Catholic Welfare ConfereDft\ and director of the' CathoDe , Jleadings in the Mass; '1ft 8daptipg'1:lM! VaticanCooo;. The use, ,for 1lbe above Jlead Inter - American Cooperati. eft decrees to the American scene, Ot:t:,r,"I\L' 'NEWSPAPE~ OF THE DIOCESE OF FAltl RIVER Ings on weekdays, 'eMf the Ifollow III wide number of topics were Program, (CICOP), said cultural fug English translations: COD- , and Jnformational events ale Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Iloll River fraternity of ~hristian JDoctrine. discussed: held and study groups . . The authority of the general formed to foster a greater intftloo 410 Highland Avenue ' ' . Douai-Rheims-ChaDoner, Knox, secretariat GIf 'the U.S. Catholic est and understanding of Latia , Revised Standard Version fCath Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-:n51 olic Edition), Jerusalem Bible; Conference, inc. in relation to America's problems and poteD-o PUBLISHER The use of prose translation of directorS and personnel of the tial Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. They have the endorsement aI the five sequences of the "Roman departments of th,e secretariat to Missal" as taken fr-om "Hymns ether offices quartered in Ute Bishop Mark McGrath of SaD-> GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGEIl fliago de Veraguas, Panama, see of the Roman Litur.gy"(i.ondcm, secretariat's building: Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John f. DriscoU The letter sent by Alfredo ond vice-president of the Latin 1I954); M 4NAGING EDITOR ~dinal 'Ottaviani of the i;>oc American Bishops' C 0 \lI n Cii>A rrhe "Dies Irae" be cptio~ o Hugh J. Golden The l:ecitation of ~ NiCen0 trinal Congregation in Rome 1lc ~CE~
will
and
Amermcan 8ishops Pr~pare Way ,For Ilmplementationof Decrees
Focus of Re,Ugion
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ltIE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaD
~iYer-Thurs. Nov. 24,1966
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::;::T~~nk~givin!J;:' '.the~ ":fu:I~, St~am "'~[fu®@@1.' {f@rr, YMO® [p~w@jU'@tfO@~~ . (
" . ,,,Happy Thanksgt~.i~g! Und~'f~ate'd" $ci,'ng' will' ~eet
ditto 'Feehan for the BCL champiQnship and Coyle meets
Taunton, so turkey and fo'Otball' will. predominate' on" the
teen calendar this weekend. With first quarter. report cards
.
safely in hand and ~ 'new quarter stretching ahead in film~, .Also at the· North Dart mouth school, .there's pride in which to improve upon or the achievement of alumnus maintain scholastic records, Patrick Carney; 'former student it looks as if everyone can re-
!ax until Monday.
council
president, ',who.
was
elect~d president '0£ the class of
,...,.. At Cassidy High in Tli\.!>nton, 1970"at BC,ga~ering over 50' : 3S;noted in a feature a,rticle;,el3e- per·cent.ofvotes cast '; , I ',where in this "isSue, gi~ls marked fat,ticia',:, MurRhY~~' juni&! at, ;,;; · :l'hanksgiving' with.a." .special HoJ;i.Family';Higll ..School/Nevy: ,!JWass. Alsollt CassidY,·the: atmtaal~otd" has}i~~n:~amed; lt~~~,: interclass, ,basketb,all ,:game \,'llI{ill s~a.tship, wiil~~r' in.' an,' .essay.' . · .,be ,fought (yes" ~at'llthel word con.t~t."sponsorea;by state,,-fue1, ", ~ ..theyued), in,the.·schQ()~lgym-Ion ofi:dealers,'E~a*"sUibjectwll$;t)fe;:.. ~ ,-; Sunday., Frosh :will-, challenge i~tt;ince ,6f"edlJll!:~tipn6-':n-;'~'i0- \;. ~.SOphs ,and juniors ,·wiU.,battle da\l:·~.w~.r~d>,--·,:, :'.::-, .. aeniors ,to d,eter:rnine whLch Tji~tik,sgi.Ying'e~e,.waj:d>usy at elasses will play for the sc}loOl Mt., St.. MillY;, ''Wi:ie:i'~ students championship. "Comical cheer- saw. a :mo'vie"· ,<trJ:i.~·' 'Moonspin leaders" will spur each class in ners,'\during·ib~:day'.and danced striving for the school trophy. to tne music' of' the New Breed At .Fall River's Je$us-Mary at an evening Harvest Hop. kadeD:lY, Theresa St. Pierre and. ,"Ceramics and dance iinprove ,." ".;.,.-"'-. "" : ,Cbl;il;tine Napert have been"lllOti- ment classes, are new on the PROJECTS PRODUCE BENEtITS~ At a tea for new members Qf the Friends ofSt. fied. of acceptance by St. Amile~s SChedule at SHA Fall River; and lfQspital School of .Nursing;:· ari art club has been added to 'Anne's Hospital, Fall River, a~:).VIi-s, 'W;iUiam A. Torphy, ~ho po~red, Mrs. Gerard For , :r,hanksgiving baskets w.e r e ,the extracurricular program at tin ~nd Mrs. Roger LeComte, pe~, mempers; Mrs, Henry J. Feitelberg, ball chairman, pr~pared by DomiQ.ican Acad-Prevost High, also Fall,.River: Rev; Mother Pierre Marie, superior, an~ Mrs. Adelard A. Demers Jr., gift shop chairman. "e~y girls for'1i1stribution to ,the ..~o~or roll students garnering .Ch'ecksfrom the projects were: pr~~ented to the hospital superior at the time of the needy and also at the Fall River ,hi~Qest merit at Prevost are , ~ial event. ~chool a Thank$giving assembly", Gerard Beauchesne, Philip Sab featured talks on the virtue of .. aqd Robert Lambalot, seniors; Plneault and Patricia Ledue. Briefly noted: Basketball ~gratitude. Paui'Lizotte, junior; and Ronald rome forward. Jesus-Mary parents met this , Coyle High staged its annual , outs at Mt. St. Mary'" '" '" Jl!'IA ,Sodalists at Feehan Higb. in Y!>!llet, freshman. No sophs? week and heard an explanation rally to' whip up spirits for its cheerleaders will boost morale Att1ebor~ . are also preparmg ,,' .. , Junipero ,Clubs annual turkey day meeting with at Prevost's first basketball Thllqksglvmg baskets; and a spe ,Tl\e Junipero Club at Bishop of the Iowa Educational Devel opment Tests, then met with Taunton High. On ,hand and game of the season, Tuesday, cial Tqankgiving issue ~f . the S,ta'ng has completed a member ~hool paper, .rose~ta, Will be ship drive, and the rolls now 'their daughters' teachers, and . cheering, were Cassidy seniors. Dec. 6 against Tiverton (: '" '" And Linda Viveiros and Carol JMA girls had their own b.b. JS~ued at ~t. Josep~ s Prep, Fall number 30 boys, directed by received report cards. Also at JMA, four seniors rep Smith of the Cassidy CCD at tryouts too, with all members of River. Jumor sod~hsts at Mt: St. Timothy Bennett, president. At tended a workshop on the teach last year's' team retained for the Mary Academy 10 Fall Hi vel' Holy Family JC members heard resented the school at a teen new lineup'" '" '" Mount's Mother prepared Thanksgiving baskets, an address' by Rev. George agers' march at LaSil1ette shrine. ing of mentally retarded chil McAuley Guild will hold its an while senior s~alists sent holi Saad l?f Our Lady of Purgatory The program included a Bible dren at the Worcester CCD con vigil, Mass and prayer service. · vention. Also in attendance was nual Mountola Wednesday, New. day cards to Sick and elderly Maronite Rite Church. A "rosary break" has been fea Sister Rose Angela ()f the Cas 30, with a scholarship fund· t9 patients in area convalescent Also at HF National Business tured this month at Stang, with sidy faculty. benefit'" '" '" llame night will see homes. . Honor' Societ~ officers are Lou Holy Family sophs won them.: a hootennany at DA '" • '" Stang Stang . s~udents car~ed their iseTrahan, president; Jo-Ann' a rosary recited each day dur ing the last 10 ininutes of the selves a stuffed animal for do senior Alan Roszkiewicz was a 'l'hanksglvmg baskets 10 an of Gallagher vice-president· Mar lunch period. Officers of rcli nating the most cakes for a stu delegate to a national youU: con feIotory procession at ~~al ! ,ti,a~~( Meiio, secretary; 001' gious clubs on campus lead the dent council cake sale. Who· gets fel!"ence on the atom held this Mass., .' " ~hy.Pedro, treasurer., " " ~aun~D ~oviem~kers .. . : 1 qpew:ning for faculty m~bers decades' and all students may 'the' animal for keeps hasn't been· month in Chicago. Sister Mary 'submit, special intentions, ill' ad ·revealed. :' Michael, Stang physiCs teacher, ". In. COD]\H1cflion With their at Mt. St. Mary Academy are- at was also in attendance. 'oourSe on film techniques, sea tendance ata conference Of sec- dition to the Papal intention of , :.' '.' Chess. Cross Country ,'iot's at Bishop.Cassidy are ~t- Mlda17 scho&principaIs. and ,;/World peace.
Stang Higli seems to, produce ,frig a, scenano based IIM\. tfle. guidance personnel at Rhode ., Diane Pic:hette, DAsenior, bas ; ~nper:s in bQtp sedentar-y, and "8to'ry of.L!ttle Red ~iding ~~. ,,~~nd,Col1ege.Thursday.Dec. 1; 'received' a full-tuition schBlar active. competition. Phil- st. Shots, sc~t, transition d~~~s ,~d~. ~e. Fall meeting. of the ship to' Union Hospital SChool of ; Piert~ 'of' the Nortli Dartmouth Nursing, 'while three other sen school recently came in 15th in an~ set~ngs are invol~ m· i~~~n.of Col1e~ and Sec ~ei,r pr~?~t.. ...• , mtdar:y SC;hools in Boston em, ,the 'iors' have', been accepted at St. 'a ,field oj ,250 in a· cross country' Anne's nursing schooL Also at ,t~te, . tr,l!ck;meet, Phil is also a :'A ~mI~rola dnve at Domt~- ,~~~Qw.irig day. , lean Academy saw sophomores Mount seniors will hear a talk 'DA,the Cooties emerged victo member of the Stang Chess the t~p sel~ing .class, and alfroAn ,py t~ .UMass guidance director . rious -from' ail intramural volley · Club, which has just defeated . the' fmancial line, DA socialISts W-ednesday, Nov. 30 and will ball tournament. Ruthlessly. did 'previously unbeaten New Bed ford High .. to 1. are saving money to contribute to take a Homemakers' exam Tues-' they trample the Roaches under project HOPE. day, .Dec. 6. College boards are foot. 0 the l' bugs that got Here. There scratched included Gnats, Lady Student Counci~ 'homeroom slated for Saturday Dec 3 Responding to an Anchor artl-' bugs, Tse Tse Flies, Fleas, Spi reps at Feehan are Walter Ko Christmas C~ntesi . . cle, Dominican Academy stu ders and Ticks. sinski, Dennis Gamache, Judy The DA glee club is sponsor dents are collecting texts and In another sports activity at children's books for shipment to Sumner, Tracy Monahan and ing a contest for a na'me for its John Carvalho. Also at Feehan, Christmas concert· also at DA the Fall RiveIl school, top bowl Papal Volunteer Jeanne Olsen in Chess ~lub offices are Ernest the junior-senior ~rom is slated, ers at the moment are Diane Bogota, Colombia. And DA sophs Gau.det and George .Kac~wka. i 0 l' Thanksgiving night at Ratte, Michelle Dion, Stephanie will jQurney to Boston on Mon Gratefully we give thanks .Blshop Connolly High 10 Fall White's restaurant. day to see a performance of to Our Lord for His boun River welcomed Father Burke, Another Northeastern Univer 'Julius Caesar. Wednesday, stu lGity Advisors tiful blessings and gifts. S.J., supervisor of New England sity acceptance has been chalked dents will hear a talk from NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A J~s.uits schools, for a two-dl,l~ up Ilt .resus-Mary Academy. Add David Lawrence, UMass dean May He bless all men with VISit, and also at the new boys Suzanne Lagarde to the list of four-member lay advisory com '.of I,ldmissions. peace and love. And may school tryou~ have been held : ,t~o~e with no more where-to-go mittee oq. finance for the New Orleans archdiocese has been ap for the debatmg team and the worries.' He soon restore to the ,;r. ""school ,paper has made its debut. . ' 'gass!dY sophom'ores have just poi,nted, by. Archbishop Philip arms of loved ones our 1/ ,, Hat Show .completed . a study of their M. Hannan. The action is 'in line fine young men sacrific . An inspiring with increasing effort by' the Mt. St. Mary's Frepch Club school's' stained glass windows. ing so much today fer Church to bring lay persons into Christmas gift • •• sponsored a hat contest' this Projects included explanations freedom in Viet Nom. the :?pherE; of Church adminis week, commemorating St. Cat.h of each' window's symbolism, THE HOLY BIBLE
tration, the Archbishop said. '. choice of an appropriate invoca " erine's Day, an old French tratii Revised Standard Version
. tion. Chapeaux were. judged' on tion ·to 'go' with itssulilject, and ' . Catholic Edition
(the' .basis of beauty, originality writ~ng of themes on the sub- r---.O_O_'_O-~--O~1 Approved by' the Church,
and humor by members of'the Jects. general, the windows handsomely printed, dura 'Nation'al French Honor Society. dep'ict tlie litany of the Sacred . C I' bly 'bound. Debaters at Sacred Hearts Heart and major Marian feastS. See Us ' , Forewacd by Richacd Car Academy, Fall River, placed T-he special study course was .... . The dinal Cushing,.Archb.ishop of Boston. Imprimdtur. • . " third in the UMass debate tout '~l~sed with ,a ~ible vigil. 'About Maroon cloth, nament held this month. Team ",'Ii 'freshm'an play tournament hard cover. $6.50 'members 'also traveled to Mel at Cassidy was won by' a group 'Fall River Savings Bank Black getw;fJe rose High School last weekend cifferin6 "Trifles." Thespians in '" leather, gold .to 'participate in.a practice tour cluded Marilyn johnson, Jane 141 NO. ,MAIN edges. $12.50 lllament, as did Holy Family de O'Brien,' Ruth Griffin, June fAll RIVER At your bookSlora haters. Raymond and Cassie Kijak. NELSON·NATIONAL Stang sodalists and their A parody of Macbeth is in the Copewood' & Davis Srreelll 873 COUNTY guests viewed "The Parable" last works at Prevost, with Richard Wareham ·Falmouth Cnmden. N.]. 08103
j S;OMJe~lI:~T week; then participated in a dis Desrosiers to star as Macbeth. ':V 5-3800 KI 8-3000 1
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LAF'AYETTE (NC)-Strengtl5 of the Catholic Church in Amer ica is, due largely to the Catholie school system, Auxiliary Bishop Warren L. Boudreaux of Lafay ]ly Mary ']'~nley Daly ette told some 900 Cathollil Remember the song of a few years back, "Getting to school teachers here in Louisi,. ana. how you ... Getting to feel free and easy ... "? Well, that Addressing the annual institut0 was the experience of a group of churchwomen in Ol~r for teachers of the Lafayette dio area recently when we, representatives of the CatholIc cese, the bishop commended! 'them for their sacrifices an«ll Church ,and Jewish syna- gratitude ~ot, based on this dedication to Catholic Schools. gogue, wer~ invited as gues~s world's goods, but an oppor~u "We are well aware of the Qf Methodist women in theIr nity for service to others outsIde mental suffering you endure, the ciliurch and school hall. of our own homes and circle of criticism you have received, the And welcome guests we were! friends. -'. ' bruises. born from those whe We gathered at ];:1 o'clock in T~en we 'sang som~ mOle, each think they know it all," he said. ""h . g sharmg a hymnal 'IY e mornln, . . . WIth her spe .' "But I can tell you," he added, met the minisclal hostess, raI.smg our VOIces "the people who pay the bills., -..... d r together to praIse God 'and to "",1' ,an ou k H' the parents and. the past~rSso :Methodist hostthan 1m. think you are doing a pretty esses, with one Luncheon' Together good job. That is ?lhy we turn Methodist lady children away from our schoolfJ assigned as speBreaking bread together as CO-CHAIRMEN OF BISHOP'S CHARITY BALL: At .,for lac,k.of roo~." I ~al hostess ,to luncheon was served in the . .. ". .., '. ,Thf:! bIShop saId teac~ers haw each Catholic sunny dining room proved an- the orgamz-atlOnal meetmg of the 1967 BIShop s CharIty. "a vital and indispensable role.SO OT Jewish guest. other gesture of 'friendship, a Ball, Miss Margaret M;. Lahey of fall River and John ,F. He counseled: '''fhere is, a, third First we were cordial welcome extended to Kane of Fall River wer~ selected from the District Council generation arising .in our time, taken to the each Catholic or Jewish guest, · th- r Women and the St;" Vincent de Paul Society, the man of unbelIef. Althoug~ f C ehurch proper and tongues were really looso a 0 IC _ . ' , h' often well educated, he cannot where the minened. We, were longer com"; respectively, to serve as co-chaIrman fo-r the Jan. 11t put'to"iether all his knowledge, ister explained the organiza- . parttnentailzed into "us-,-and, the ,social event. ' ", :, " he thinks he has outgrown })e,.o - tional structure· 6{' th~ ,Method- others";:' we : ~erew~men; :wit~ lief. You have the -answer, to ist Church, how it'resembli'ld and all the. interests women every giv.e ,him, as to, who he is, and Jnow it, differed drom', our', OWI1\ wher~: share: "hlisbands, 'hom'es~' where-he is going. This is your. function: of the Bishops, the children, grandchildren. More job.". " laity the ministers: He told us, over, we were ail churchwomen, By MARILYN RODERI()K too, 'of, some of the Methodist dedicated to the spiritual and . . beliefs for instance ,that there temporal o welfare, of ,()ur o~n Extension Vdlunte.ers ,., are ,b~t two true sacramentg-:;. 'parish, .congregation, sisterhood. . ·n:, '...' : : .. '.' W~r'k in ,Inner City Baptism and Holy' Communion We, had our various 'study -as contrasted' with the seven groups, organized;, 'we' found;:'," 'Little girls ,have always adored • day, home scerie ,by' ',:wearing "CHICAGO' (NC) - _ A' 19651 Sacraments in 'the Roman pretty much along si~ilar lines,: dressing up,and big girls feel the something 'long, and 'flowing,' it graduate 'of the' University 'of Church. These' two are based on keeping groups small enough"to same wa'y. If you plan to give a woiild-' put quite a' derit in your -South '-Dakota 'and his" recenl the life of Christ: whcll' He, was all.ow for individu(l~ particiJ?a-:- holiday party, here, is your budget; then' the answer" is to BrIde a're working and living baptized by John the Baptist and tion, large enough for variety in chance to adopt the "Romantic" sew a hostess. outfit. If you're at here as Extension SoCiety Vol un when He instituted tlte Holy personalities and interests. look for your hostess outfit, and all handy with the sewing ma- teers, in the inner city. Eucharist at the 'Last Supper. reawaken that chine, most' such outfits found Jay Hennies is teaching sci Following this was a panelf disearly love. The in the pattern books are labeled eilce and physical education at Marriage Question h cussion, moderated by one 0 t e dramatic ,a n d "Easy to Make;" Some of these St. Laurence School and coaches Question came up 35 to the Methodist ladies, with panelists daring hostess 'fashions are m&de of only two 'CYO teams in, the inner city. Sacmment of Matrimony. The being one Methodist, one Jewess, this season will pattern pieces that gather, at the His wife Mary, a' graduate o~' minister explained that his one Catholic woman, its theme be a b 1 e to neckline, but because of their Duchesne College, has been ehurch' believes strongly in the largely volunteer work in which choose between elegant materials, they have the there a year. Their work in-' sanctity of marriage, that it is', we could all participate for the Ion g flowing look of a more complicated s~yle. eludes 'helping to form a parish truly of a sacramental 'character welfare of our own comm'unity X"O b e s called , -Fabrics :1;01' these at home council for better communica';' bii't in the life of Christ Heat,:, and reaching out ,to the .metro- oaftans or bur clothes range from the very opu- tlon 'between the Church and th~ tended the wedding feast of 'politan area near which we"aU nooses"and th,e lent cut velvets;- embroidered people it serves. ', Cami, as 'a guest, when He - live. We learned of the, needs more casual but silk organzas, and free-flowing Extension Volunteers serve fOJ' changed water into wine. With for volunteers in so many fields: equally elegan~, chiffons to the \ more practical ....at 'le'ast one' year. Canaidate~ a wry smile, t'he minister added'; visIting the aged and lonely, not look of the plush but equally ~riking' oriental must be between 21 . and 45, "And it looks' as though the only in t.heir ,own homes but, in j~mpsuit~a.nd harem pajaJYla~. printed, cottons. Imitation gold singIe or married without pres:': :Methodists ha:vti ever since been the many nursing homes ~earby The tentlikf~ silhouette ,of, the dependents. ' Teachers;' trying to change wine back into, where "people are hungry" for robes is marvelous for anyone' and silver lame can be fourid ent this year in the fabric shops and nurses, Newman aides' and parish water!" " , companionship, for SOIneOne ~ with 'figure problems-certainly also sequined 'Jl.laterial by the workers are needed.' Applicants "All our' questions were an- talk to from the outside,"- much more so thana tight pair yard for a glittery holiday gala. should write Extension, 1307 ewered fl'ankly, candidly, arid of 'wooien slacks or a sheath' The only things lirp.iting any gal :SOuth Wabash Avenue; Chi~ag4bo with such understanding! A whole host of eye-opening dress. with needle and thread are time lll., 60605. ' h f t opportunib,'es fgr service were With that "one touc (} na ure The jumpsuits" culottes, or which makes the' whole: world set forth and as the' Jewish pan,;, harem pajamas seem to demand and imagiriation. Well, if you decide to iet your Onl,y Living Founder kin" caine' a fluke that could elist commented, "Let's look into Ii slender, youthful figure and ' 'd ' t us the reasons .for our giving 01., one particulilr orange crepe sul-' Scarlett O'Hara or Auntie Mame MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Batry llappen anywhere an sen all into gales of laughter. Some- voluntary service - the philo- tan type hostess pajama that image take over and _indulge 'College, has conferred an honor Joody had pushed the wrong but-. sophical 'why' of it all." ends above the knee would need yourself in a dramatic hostess ary doctorate of letters on Msgr. ton in the intercom system. In, The Catholic panelist told 01. the legs of M~rlene Dietrich to outfit, be ready for many com- William -Barry, 80, the Florida pliments, a few strange looks (we institution's only li~ing fouri~er. , the midst 'of serious .9is,cussion, having discussed this with the, do it justice. are still in puritanical New En <came comments from the office: Jewish lady previously and One of the top youthful, de gland) and many envious "When Mr. Smith arriv'es, please learning that in that' religion signers of these new pant-type glances. Also be sure all sticky' ELECTRICAL Illi ve him 'this package," and "Th~ "charity" as we commonly think at home outfits is Leo Narducci hands are put to bed before.you Contractors Belephone man will, be here at of charity is synonymous. with who is a native Rhode Islander. don your 'at home glamour. moon."" , tjus 'Ice. 'Leo graduated from the 'Rhode , We ~ere' then sh~wn through "Twas really great, ,"getting 1f,> Island School of Design with my ahe entire plant: offices, Sun,day know you," women of other sister-in-law Betty in 196Q and IIChool rooms for children, beau- faiths. ' lin the short span of six years tifully furnished drawing-room since his' graduation his desigris available for meetings and wedeim 'be'" found in almost everY Est. 1897 ding receptions, thence to ,an- Opposes State's New" fashion:' magazine that features' other chapel. Thetewere hymns, I I lin" 'article 'on this new style. led by a choir of ladies with all Birth Contro Po icy Most of his designs seem to sell of us joining .in, and a homilYBURLI~GTON (NC) -'Oppo- in the $40 to $60 range and are 2343 Purchase Street delivered by o'ne'of the Method- sitioh from Catholic sources here done in soft feminine materials 944 County St. New Bedford ist ladies, the like of which cropped up' against tp,e 'decisi~n' such as crepes and billowing ,- New Bedford 996-5661 would be hard to surpass, its of the Vermont Board of Health chiffons. theme, very appropriately, 'to convert its birth control proSew Your Own Thanksgiving and what it should gram from a ,voluntary' basis to If you feel that much as you' ,mean to all of us, the /l.pirit of a ,public p o l i c y . , would adore decorating the holiThe opposition was' voiced by the Vermont' Catholic' Tribune, Plan Co'nve'nf.ion Burlhigtori-dioces'an newspaper: ,The New Ertgland 'Conference The 'dioceSe covers, the, entire, I of Diocesan Councils ,0£ Catholic state. . The 'paper questioned what' Nurses will hold its ,ninth con vention in November, 1967 in part th~ st~t«b's Planned ;parent ., Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. (Jo"trae~~fI'. ~ J913 ' Bridgeport, Corn: , Delegates hood Association will play in ~ DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM from the Fall River Diocese the' new policy and what' provi , , 'SUPPLIES were, among those present, at a sions are to' ~e made for the· con 'Q)99, &enville Avenue I planning meeting in Bridegport. sciences of those whQc seek birth 'I WYmar1l '3-0911 204 ASHLEY BOULEVARD The three-day conventiori will: control information. The' paper New Bedford I New B~df~rd ' .-' have as 'its theme "Witness also asked ,how grave the popu WY 3.8405 Q -' thrQugh Commitment." t.ationproblem is in the,state. ' - -
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'lGddies' Anticipation .Adds Joy to' YU'le, Preparations
1966
9
Set Yule 8azaars Throughout Area
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick The time has arrived when we begin preparations for a.ristmas. For our family this is certainly .the pleasantest time of the year because it means that we will be decorating _ the house, the children will be wild with the anticipation of ~hristmas, and the house by prayer and anticipation, then will be filled with the cook they are still worthwhile cus mg smells which accompany toms. Food of course, ever since the 8 holiday. But most of all we
Christmas bazaars highlighl; the calendar for women's guilds throughout the Diocese at thjg' season. Festivals will be held tomorrow and Saturday at St. Wi.lliam's parish, Fall River, and. Sacred Hearts, North Fairhaven. with the North Fairhaven event also continuing on Sunday. Slated for Friday and Saturday, Dec. 2 and 3, is the "Christmas Village" of Our Lady of Fatima parish, Swansea. St. William's bazaar, first to be held in the new' parish center, will continue from 6 to 9 Friday night and from 1 to 6 Saturday. A large committee headed by Mrs. J::lmes McKnight Sr. and Mrs. Paul Batcheldor will be re sponsiblefor a Ivariety of booths; including dolls, novelties, garden items, grabs, 'pillows, rugs and! needlework, . t~yS; aprons, bird cages and curler bags, Christmall decorations and a white elephant display. Santa Claus will gree~
children on Saturday, note the
chairmen, "and refreshments will
be available both ,days.
North FairhaveD North Fairhaven's bazaar wili open at 5 Friday night, continll ing through Saturday and Sun'..
day from noon to 10 o'clock. The
Dover Street entrance to the hal!!
will be used, it is announced.
Proceeds will benefit the parish school improvement fund. Featuring Sacred Hearts', ba
zaar will be the display of man,.
articles made by parishionel'\i
and an array of special gifts d0
nated or purchased for the event. Awards will include a doll aoci knitted wardrobe; afghan, buffcl server, blankets ,and quilts. A
special children's prize will be
a bicycle.
Rev. Alexis Wygers, SS.CC., iii
serving as bonorary chairman.
with· Mrs. Doris Larocque ami Mrs. Janet Robichaud general
chairman and co-chairman.
Homemade pastries and other
foods will be served and bootM
will include children's, baskets.
knit goods, nightwear, countI7
store, white elephant, I'eligioua
articles, candy, plants and flow.
era, games and a fishpond. '
Chrisbnas Village ,Christmas Village, a "gala ba zaar designed for the whole family's Christmas shopping.~ will be held at Our Lady ,9f Fatima church hall, Gardners Neck Road, Swansea, from' 4 to 9:30 Friday, Dec. 2 and from 10 to 4 Saturday, Dec. 3. Chairmen hope that residents of surrounding communities wil[
visit the annual event. Featureci
will be hand-knit goods, home
made foods, toys, boutique itenw. flo1'al arrangements, aprons and an e~clusive children's store.
will be celebrating Advent and early beginniQg of Christianity, has always been part of festival oojoying each other. celebrations and it seems quite There is something about Ad fitting that as we prepare spir .,-ent which brings the family to gether. For one thing, there. is itually during Advent for th p birth of the baby Jestl c 'We tl~e making of the wreath, which means a trek to the woods for should also prepare 0." ,__ ",dval foods. If you're fortunate enough ~il1e boughs and anything e~se we can find that will 109k good to have a freezer, then you can' do a great deal of baking during Em a wreath. Then there is the £lctual making of the wreath. the days of Advent, but if your Ci)U1"S never has the professional space is limited then you will be ~uch (in fact,it is rather limited to items you can store in aloppy), but the children enjoy tightly sealed containers. INTERFAITH PANEL: At interfaith panel discussion ~ because they help put it to . . The best place to start your I /:ether. . presented by Fall River District Council of Catholic Women holiday cooking is at your favor We have come a long way in ite food specialty shop with 11 are, from left, Mrs. Richard T. Hawkins, wife of minister \Wreath-making. Now we have a very, very long list of ingre of St. Mark's Episcopal Church,; Mrs. Rebecca Twersky, in frame to which to .bind the dients. Most of these well stocked structor of religion at Temple Beth-EI ; Sister Mary St. arcens and candleholders which, grocers have already put' out the Clement, F.M.M., principal of Espirito Santo Scho()l; Rev. believe it or not, do keep the big boxes of bright golden rai ~ndles in place. We set our sins, shimmering green and red Raymond Drouin, a.p., St. ARne'S Church; Mrs. Vincent wreath on the kitchen table and cherries and all the other 1us A. Coady, district president.: Sessi61~ was held at St. Anne's ~ous . ingredients that go into ~e of the children lil:bts it audirorium, Fall River. holiday recipes. <Ivery night before prayers. While you're balcing goadies Then there is the Advent eal iBndar, which the children really for your own home, don't forget enjoy. Every year Marilyft Bays that food makes a very charmhl,it \bat she ia going to make one, and welcome gift, especially for: but ,somehowor' other this never those people on your list who en Newspaper Reaqers Give Opinions joy good eating'"' and a1se f« ~ts accomplished, so we end 'lip Of Parishes, Priests' Work those to whom you wish to give buying one. Along with the cus tom af opening a window of the only a small token. If you do SAN FRANCISCO (NC) ~ geat objection I have about IDY Advent calendar every night, we give any of the praducts of you!' also set tip it ~rib in which the kitchen as gifts, don't forget to What do Catholics think of theit' parish -is • • • with the word. ehildren place one straw f{H" ~ach Utclude a copy of the recipe 85 parish &ftd the work of their ....."none.!' 'New Lit.r~F' an extra personal touch. Make parisfi priests? good deed they have done that The Monitor, archdiocesaa . In second place for objections day as well as removing one fOl' this Advent a time of prepara newspaper here, decided k ask, was "lack of friendliness and every bad deed. Needless to $ST, tion in every way. these latter are few indeeq. By I first tasted this fruit cake at and its readers responded witb unity" and in third was '''lack the time Christmas rolls around Joe's Aunt Mary's and I w.QlI a wide variet.y of likes and dia- 01. communications bet wee n priests and laity."
rou ClJll be sure that the Infant amazed at bow delicious it was likes. lesus win have a 90ft crib lin and with very little preparation . Parish priests scored high, all Objections were also voiced :Which to sleep. in comparison to othe fruitcake· the mO&t frequent response w to such factors as "resistance 011' I suppose that one of these recipes. With the column in the statement, ''Tbe best thing· slowness to change," "poor ser .ays the children will be grown mind I made Mary promise that about m,y parish is. e oo" was the mons," "lack of social activities," ~d they will have more im(l()r sbe would divulge her ,recipe, this simpie answer-the priests.][a "the new liturgy," "lack of in taot things to do than spend year, and here it is. Mary, b, Becend place, was the response, • formation about the parish," and their time at home with their tbe way, is Mrs. Manuel Perry "our new church." "The pastOl''' "the soloist during Mass." parents, but right now they are of St. Anthony of Padua parish was given particular notice in When asked what they would i/O full of innocence and .the joy cIo were they pastors, the main Fall River, and she is always a tbini phlee. of Christmas that we cannot help great help in my seal'cb for , Respondents found, a total. 01. jOrity of respondents said they bU,t enjoy everything aloog with recipes. t€ 6 different positive thinm would continue what the pastorn them. Thus far we have man about their parishes ranging are currently doing. Coffee Fruit Ca:lle ~ged to keep the religious sig 1IIl'om "adoption of new liturgy" . Seventy-five other suggestions %. cups strong coffee ~ificance of Christmas uppermost to. "lots of money" and from "the were al:;;o given. They ranged '1' teaspoon cinnamoa ill their minds and this too adds new assista~t's dYllamic ideas" from "practice and improve on 1 teaspoon cloves pleasure to the pre-Christmas fm "our humble and frugal! singing, liturgy and commen 1 cup sugar lileason. We would only hope that p~rish. tators,". 10. "quit talking about 'I 15-oz. box raisins other parents might share this mOlley," and from "implement
:2 cups mixed candied fru!\lsJ joy with their children by adopt Asked to list their objectiooo Vatican II in the parish" to "buy
3 cups sifted flour llmg some of the Advent customs. 00> their parish, respondents gave a ton of aspirin." .1 teaspoon baking powder' am equal number of dislikes. In the Kitchen 1 teaspoon baking soda An old Yorkshire tradition is The majority, however, com- % teaspoon salt Urge Teaching Religion ehat if you keep count of the pleted the statement, "The biEl 5 tablespoons shortenin~ lItumber of homes in which you 2 eggs, In Public Schools ea.t plum p~dding during the 12 % cup chopped walnlllt meat. 'WINDSOR (NC) - The Uni Yule fete; Mardi Gras 'days following Christmas, you , (optional) , will know how many months of ,)!)aughters of Isabella of North .ersity of Windsor's theology department has advocated teach happiness you wlll have in the . 1) Mix together im. a saucepan! Attleboro will sponsor a chil lIIeW year. If you want to go the eoffee, cinnamon, elovea, dren's Christmas, partT from ~ Ing religion in public, sehools. The department submitted a along with this belief and guar sugar, raisins, and candied[ fruill. to <l Saturday afternoon, Dec. 10 ONE STOP .ntee your friends and family Bring to a boil and boil gently at .Knights of Columbus HalI, report of its recommendation to SHOPPING CENTER the MacKay Com m is s ion 'many months of joy, then you'd for 5 minutes. Remove ~ Smith Street. The unit will eo- better start your Christmas bak':' heat and set aside to eooL
• Television • Furniture sponsor a Mardi. Gras dance witlil. through Dr. John HoHman, a minister of the United Church Ing soon; and what better time
;. Appliances • Grocery
~ lCnights of Columbus at • could you begin than on Stir\Jlt ~) Meanwhile in a ?owl.. Saturday night, Jan. 28, also at . and a member of the department.
.104 AUen St., New Bedford together the flour, bakIng""""" Ute han. A large planning The 'report has the backing of
hnday, the first Sunday of Ad dell', baking soda, and salt.
_ eommit&ee i;; beadea. bv Butta both Catholic and Anglican de .ent. This is ...Ie day when cus 997-9354 partment members. 60m dictates that every member
S) In II large bowl JDix'" PeW. .t the family, even the baby, gether the shortening (sottene4it have a hand in stirring the pud _IIIlIIIHlllllmHUlUI"IIUlllmIIlIIlHtUIIHlIIUlIlllIlmlllUll1tIllltlItll"mlllllltlllllllUllfflmlllllllm~ and the eggs until they De welIll ding or cake that the mother is blended. ~ ~ baking. Many of the customs of Ad 4) Drain the eooled fU'UM mJbF, Maintenance Sup"' ~ ~ 'rent that we use such as the ture and reserve the liquid!. wreath, the calendar and the crib SWEEPERS - SOAIPS Closed all day 6)) Add this liquid and the ~ ftbat Joe discusses in the begin-, DISINFECTAP(rS ingredi~'mts alternately to the ~ ~ Thanksgiving ,~ llling of this column have beelll FIRE IEXnNGtllSHEU !landed down to us from OUll' lmd shortening mixture. OPEN FRIDAY torefathem. Their original mealll " 01) Fold in the fruits and ~ ~ llngs have become a bit obscured Tum into III wen greasri ~ 5 'A.M. to 6 P.M, ,~ 4Wer the decades as they hav\) pan with wlqI: paper Uner~ § M86 PURCHASE STII&f been handed down from genera.
NEW BEDFORI!l ,~ ltion to generation, but if they " Bake. tl 351}4 O'Ven ~
belp 001' families prepare foil' 60 mmutea M' ntill _ ~
m37i6 ' 5 UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN " Tel. 997-9358 § tile coming Qf the CIuiat CbiW tootbH>ick comes \MIt till1lto
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,Likes, Dislikes
CORREIA &SONS
SCHOOL
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Friday Is Still Fish Da,
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THE AN(H0D.-, Thurs., NOY; 24, "1966
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~@@ [fcdJ$ WASHINGTON (NC) <One 0 fthe nation's top C'ath olic educators said here lay school boards are "now the' order of the day" ill Catho
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WASHINGTON (NC)-On thqj day that President Johnson Ul}co derwent surgery at Bethesdl~ Nav'al Hospital in nearby Mary.. land, the Catholic bishops of tl$ United States, more than 200 ~ them, assembled in meeting ~ the Catholic University of Amei' ica here, joined in prayer for thG the chief executive. The day before, the bishops gave assurance of their prayers for the President in a messago dispatched to the White HouS() from their meeting. The messag~ signed by Archbishop John n" Dearden of Detroit, new lw. elected president of the Nationlllll Conference of CathoUc 'Bisho~ read as follows: "Dear Mr. President: "The Catholic bi!ihops of ,tho United States assembled i«i Washington convey their assur 'ance of ,prayers' for the speediv. recovery of the' President mull THANKSGIVING MAss': Stude)1ts at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton, prepar~ 'the continuance of. his goocll for offertory procession at Thimksgiving Mass with chaplain Rev. John Moore. ;From left, health. "On Wednesday, Nov. 16, thei«) senior 'Cm:ol Pclcheco'with globe; junlor,R.osemary Ferrari with triangle symbolic of stu will be a recitation of a prayeli' dents, faculty; Joan Dray with cib,oi~ium; Donna Logan with .cruets; sophomore Yvette for the President by the assem. Cloutier with picture of classmate Debbie Cardoza; freshman Suzanne Tremblay with bled bishops."
lic education. F a I. her C. Albert, Koob, ID.Praem., acting executive sec retary o~ the National Catholic ,. Educational Associatioq, pre dicted a "much more open man " ,ner of deciding policy matters" . in Catholic education in the , y,eaJ's to C(;II:ne. . "Local concentration of au thority will be les'sened in,favor "()f a broad apptollch wh'ich will '''include the voice of the Ca:th(jlic "laity," Fattier Koob' 'declared. He endorsed the growing trend toward parish and diocesan school boards with strong lay representation. . The NCEA official spoke at a seminar at St. John's High School, conducted by the Chris school' seal. . tian Brothers, here: His' subject S. Sailors Help . was "Catholic Education:. Pres 'ent and Future." , Noting the,outpouring ,of anal GZIRA (NC)-American sailo~ , ,ysis and criticism of Catholic ed have renovated and redecoratecll ;, ncation in the last few years, a Catholic Action youth centei' . ,,Fathel' Koob said' it has enabled here. .. Catholic educators thumselves In addition to contributing
,; ,to be more ,realistic in nssessing their time and en'ergy, 20 mem-.
By Dorothy !Eastman , ,their strengths, and weaknesses. bel'S of the crew of the U. So.
For what are you most grateful this Th anksgiving? Sophomores at Bish(:)p Cassidy, Navy's cruiser' Columbus aided
Need Professionalism the project financially. In future, he said, "any officii:'l High School in Taunton have a very special reason for gratitude: the recovery from a The sailors responded to' aid report given about the parochial serious operation of beloved elassmate Debbie Cardoza. Debbie has been in Cailton appeal for help from Father A. schools will be prone to profit Children's Hospital for some time anci still faces many months in a cast, but she is able Muscat, made through the U.s. able self analysis, mon: keenly embassy. ' to keep up with' schoolwork carried _this for her class. a'wal'e of 'both strengths and week and light the second can \ and enjoys frequent visits. weaknesses, and less tin/4ed with The senior class chose a world dIe, and so on, 1JIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIHllllllllllllllnnlnlltlllllllllllllllllllll the emotionaHsm of defense.", from fellow students. In view, globe to symbolize their, intenSister Miri,am Gabriel' has ."The old mentality. which glo of all this, her picture was 'tion of bringing Chi-ist to the plans for· an Advent service that POLISH-ENGLISH MASS BOOMS rified the schools merely because world they will soon step out the' girls ~ill write themselves carried . by sophomore Yvette P!lAY THE MASS contains complete t)f their' a'postoli'ic purpose" has. Cloutier of Holy Family-' parish, into: Carol Pacheco of St: Paul's hl 't1?-eir own contemporary i'an Ordl.nary'Canon of Mass, ]20 Polis. 'd,isappea'red from the' scene in in Taunton at a unique, offertory pa,rish ,was ehosen to ,represent gU:;lge. E~ghsh Hymns, Stations,. Gorzki Zale" Catholic educational cil'cles, he' pl'Ocession which' was part of a the seniors. Besi,des the standal'l:l ,texts, Confession·Rosary Guides. ' . )60 pgs: cloth : $2.85 ' , aeclared. Donna Logan of S.acr~d Heart many ,liter book;s. will be used Mass' 'celebrated Thanksgiving: : $1.75 i ' . )60 pgs. paper : The' NCEA official stl'f!ssed the' ev~ at' Bish~JP'CassidY. parish 'was ehosen to can'y the" in the religioil course, inCluding At )'Our religious dealer or write: absolute need for professionalism , ",In preparation :for the Mass,' cruet and, J'oan -Dray,' also. of , 'Ijlodern novels, " ' ',',' " REV.' PAULP. WYSOCKI all levels and in all areas o{ each c;:lass <;Iiscussed ·ideas for • Sacl'ed Heart, the cibori,um. ," FilJ!ls, !1re also bei}l~ used,ef-' .. Catholic education: . " ' St. AliatbertCburcb. TbompsOayjlle, Co. .
'Father Moore says that this feCtively. During, their, retreat what their repi'esentatives would He s<lid religious communities calTy in the pl'Ocession. Such - type of approach, designed', to, this month the girls 'will see' two Free Descriptive Literature 06_
tt>day are "increasingly aware of v.rocessions, 'tpey, learned, date make the liturgy a vivid experi- fi,lm,s-."NobodyWaved Good-, ItIUIIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIHI!IIII1I11I1It111II1HIfIIIIIIIIIIII_ . the fact that academic' p:repara " from'" the- second. century, 'and are ence for the girls, wili be <:arbye," which they will view with tiO;l for all teachers is more , now being' reviv,ed:ir:dhe'Jiturgy.. ried out through the year. "The 't'heir pal·'ents,· and the, widely BC':'"
impo~tant than 'ope:ning .new, ch,\imed short film, "The, Para
Sistei: Miriam ,Gabriel; head of • thing we would like to do is to schools.", ,In this; respect,'. 'he' Cass.idy!s ' religion.; aepal'tment, innovate as much as, possible, ble,,, which will be seen during added, the si;iel; F(lrmation according to t.he decrees of the .school hours. Discussion sessions with Si,ster Marga~et Eugene and Movement - which emphasizes Vatica~l Council and the Diwill foUqw both films,' . FOR YOUNG WOMEN
Rev. 'John' Moore, newly improved professiomil training appointed school chaplain, were ocesan statutes." Parental Prayer Asked
196 Whipple St., Fall River
tlf nuns -, rspn)dudng note-' iilstrlJmental 'in making prepara.;. The: Mass is· part of a wider The Cassidy student retreat
Conducted by Franciscan
worthy results. tions for th,e Thanksgiviilg Mass. discovery the studeilts at Casthis year will stress the special
Missionaries of Mary Organized Efforts • sidy have made: that learning role of parents Iil religiolls for... Much Thought . ROOMS . MEALS .. He said Catholic education in. mation of young students. They Sister Miriam Gabriel says religion can be meaningful and OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY
the future will put increased· that the girls gave mucIi thought often fun. Sharing their enhave-been asked to join in fam- ,
Inquire 673-78?O emphasis on quality over quan-, to the choice of which gifts thusia~s is Father ·ivrooFe, assist-' ily prayer for the'success of the tity and on its function in the ant pastor at St. Joseph's Church retreat. "A school' program only woulO oest'syml:iolize meir ap:" total community. supplemerits the home," Father predation. for. what (ipd had 'in Taunton and first priest ad. "As parochial schools become' given their class... "It was most: visor to l'e on the Cassidy facMoore says, . ' more professional nIl that' i!ltel't~sting 1..0 hear' their sug uJt,y, as 'well as Sister John Moder'n chul'ch music for the 3 Savings Plans they do and increasingly con gestrons and,the reasons fOI' .their. Elizabeth, S.U.S.C., school prinliturgy is also part of the pro scious o( obligation to society at cho'ices," Sister says. -, - ' cipal, whose encouagement is gram. Sister, St~phen Helen, a Home Financing large, they will fit more eomfort , The· freshmilll girls first pro' responsible for much of relimember of the Diocesan Music ably into the general picture of P9sed a"lamb~a fitting 'symbol gion's "new look" at the Taunton Commission, is in charge of the education at large," Father Koob for the youngest class, aware of s c h o o l . ' music at Cassidy. said. its need of leadership. They de To Be I"ived Father Moore says of the reli cide(l however, that a live lamb He caJJed for more organized gion course, "We continually re "We've got. to make the stu just' might present .difficulties, efforts aimed at upgrading'Cath dents aware that religion is not evaluate the course to make it so they chose their school seal. .just a subjeet to be studied olic education. flexible because we're teaching 261 Main St.. Wareham, Mass. Presenting it in behalf of her but one to' be lived," Father religion that they may live it." "Wnat is needed, he said, "is a Telephone 295-2400 clas,;; was Suzanne Tremblay of Moore says. "And that's what Living it and loving it, we large-scale pl'ogram of research, 8ank·~Y·i\lall Service Available St: Jacques pal'ish. might add. we're trying to get across more perhaps in the form o'f an exper Class Pill and more-that religion is some imental school, to arrive at better' The junior girls fiI'st chose a thing that you don't leave in. the goals- for Catholic schools today." class pin, then decided that it classroom - it's something that was not solely the priv.ilege 'of you bring with you out of the the junior class· to wear one. classroom into the world." , Their £j'nal choice for their gift Indicatio_ns are that this is get . At 1,OOO'th Bapll'ism Rt. 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford was certainly unique, since they ting across to the students very :L<:AMAKURA (NC)-Baptisms ,One of the Finest Facilities in Southern New England desig'l1ed it themselves. It is a well indeed., ' in Japan are few and far be triangle, a Trinitarian, symbol, For Advent: this' year, for inAvailable for: tween. covered with m 'lterial from their 'stance,: a separate Mass will be So Father Joseph Crehan, school uniforms and interlaced celebrated each week for 'a dif BANQUETS • TESTIMONIALS S.S.C., of Jamaica Plain, Mass., with red and black stl'ips of ferent class. In the first week feels that Assumption parish fASHION SHOWS and SPECIAL PARTIES cloth. The red, one of th'c school' the freshman girls will have het'e passed a _milestone' in its colors, represents the girls, and their Mass which they will FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CONTACT: histol'y when he officiatec] at the the black, the habits of the fac light the first candle on the 999-6984 or 636-2144 1,000th baptism in the 54-year ulty. Rosemary Ferrari of the Advent wreath. The sophomores old parish; . Immaculate Conception parish will have their Mass the second
u.
Thanksgiving Mass at Cassidy High 'Stresses Gratitude for Student's Recovery
Center in Malta
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at,
St.
Francis' Residence
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Offering You
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Declares Urbolrn 1E~@mJ@[[ffi)D~~ 1r'o®@ lJ@
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11
THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 24, 1966
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~O'®~@fr@S) 0@0' ST. PAUL (NC)-Northern -:By Yolande C. Murphy WASHINGTON (NC)-Report~ racial problem~ may be far more serious than those of In the light of the prayer and concern for Christian unity that is spreading ers covering the daily news con~ the South "because northern "throughout the world, priests and parishioners of St. John the Evangelist Church in ferences held ,in connection with ghettos are tied into the econom Attleboro are holding a public open house from 1 :30 to 4.30 Sunday afternoon, Nov. 27. the meeting here of the National!
of Catholic Bishops
ic life of the city," according to Clergymen of all faiths and members of their respective congregations have been invited Conference joined in an expression of thanks
the director of the National to attend. The event coin to the bishops for conducting
cides with the completion of Catholic Conference for Inter these briefings. (,
racial Justice. . John A. O'Connor, editor oR Matthew H. Ahmann, who extensive refurbishing of the the Delmarva Dialog of Wil~ heads the NCCIJ offices in Chi church edifice and is aimed
·cago, at a meeting of the Priests' at promoting a better under Committee on Poverty Services standing among all denomina of the St. Paul - Minneapolis tions in the community. Archdiocese, has observed the It is generally conceded that "white backlash has been. felt many non-Cathol;ics regard a most severely" in northern cities Catholic church as a place of where Catholic ethnic groups mystery and are curious about it. . , predominate.' Therefore the' open house has He urged Catholics to help been planned so that visitors · end racial strife by coming to may 'view the baptistry, the · . grips with the economic· prob priests' vestments, sacred vessels, lem.
the confessionals, the 'Stations Equal Opportunity
of the Cross, statuary, the altars, Among the ways this is al and the tabernacle. ready being done, he said, is Greeting visitoi's Sunday aft '1hl'ough Project Equality, under ernoon wil be Ht. Rev. Thomas which many dioceses al'e putting J. Walsh, pastor, Rev. James F. the economic powe~. of· .the McCarthy and R.ev. Edward A. Church behind racial justice by Rausch, assistants, and the requiring all companies with parishioners. which· they do business to offer Assisting Bernard. A. Lofgren, equal employment opportunities. chairman of the Apostles of Good During the past two years, Will, who Is serving' as general Ahmann reported, Pro j e c t chait"man, are Sister Agnes Equality has been launched in Marie, RSM, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald the nine dioceses. . McNally, John Balut, and J. To date, he said, 12,000 busi Russell Sweeney, guide commit . ness firms in five major cities tee; Anthony Magina, publicity; have pledged to follow the PI'0j Mrs. Herbept Clegg anl Sister , .ect's pt;ogram for equal opportu-. Dominic Marie, RSM, refresh nity in. hiring and employment.' ments; Mary Cabeceiras, Mrs. Ahmt\nn said that NCCIJ' James Foley, and Gail Dever, c> hopes to see the project become general arrangements; Lawrence nationwide by next year and Duf£aney and Dr. and Mrs. Fran- q that plans for programs are al cis J. Curran, displays. ready underway in California Historical Highlights and ]5 southem states. St. John· the Evangelist Merit Employment Church is considered one of the "Project Equality," he said, "is best examples of English and' a way for the Church to say that' Fl'ench Gothic architecture in we as an institution will use the Attleboro area-in the realm our financial resources as best of a cathedral edifice. possible * " "to open. .new doors It was built in 1932 under the to racial g1'OUPS, I aegis df " the -late Most' Rev. . "So far. H's the largest merit' Daniel F. Feehan' and the late einploym~/lt seryice aside from Most Rev. James E. 'Cassidy,' who the fe(\er!ll stru/?ture.",. , 'was then serving as apostolic · ::. Spepki'ng of oth~r NCClJ. ef administrator. .. . . " forts to promote racial e<;tuality, . The pa;'isi1 itself dates back to. ' ,'Ahmann . pointed to"29' 'l~~al . 1883 when' a few citizens of East interracial councils established' Attleboro (now the city of Attle in 15 southern states since 1961. boro), who were members of' Members of the NCCI.J southern St. Mary Church in Noi-th Attle councils, he ..L:eported, joined' boro, undertook their worship James Mereditfl'" as supporters in services in Union Hall on Rail his June march in Mississippi, road Avenue, with Rey. John J. Need New Force' O'Connell as theil' pastor, But, Establishment of such councils a Saturday night fire, forced the "to rally the Church's constitu parishioners into Dean Hall aJ~d cnts" is imporblJ;)t in both 'was also the impetus to. begin a North and South, he added. ' church building fund. "Unless this task is underThe chul'ch' that came into taken," Ah~ann warned, "cities bel'llg )' )1 Sept'em b e l' , 1885 , was on all over will have sel'ious probthe site o.f ,the present parking lems for decades and the backlot, across the street from the lash will just .move the Negro rectory on North Main Street, behind another fence. It was the' second Catholic "We need a new force in the church to be built in Attleboro city so that everyone is equal, -the fil'st being St. Mary Mis so rich and poor .can live togeth- sion in Hebronville, Bishop Cas er, medical services be equally sidy served as a curate at St. accessible and educational opJohn in 1.899, just prior to his portunities be equally available." appointment to St. Mary Church in North Attleboro. Young Adults Assist After the death of "Father John" in 1910, the Rev, David F. Member in Vietnam Sheedy, a native of Fall River DOVER (NC)-Just a week who was serving a't St. Patrick end of work by a young people's Parish in Somerset, was named group here in New Hampshi\'e pastor. He served until his ~quipped Raymond Lemelin death on Easter morning, April with 300 pounds of Christmas 20, 1930, and was succeeded by p\"esents so he can play Santa the Rev. James M. Quinn, then a rector at St. Mary's Cathedral Claus to membe.rs of his platoon in Fall River. serving in Vietnam. Taking into consid'eration tgat Lemelin, who resides in near. by Somersworth, was active in {he physical capacities of the the Seacoast Council of Catholic church were being overtaxed, parishioners began a drive to Young Adults before going into . the armed forces. build a new edifice at the cor ner . of North Main and Peck Members of the council got together over a weekend at the Streets. This was none too soon. Fit'e Chapel of the Nativity here, again, on Feb. 1, 1932, left the wrapped and mailed the 300 'pounds of presents so Lemelin parishioners without a church, and services were conducted in ~ould pla¥ Santa. o
,
mington, Del., asked to be heard as one 'Of the final news confer~ ences opened. He told the bish ops that "we members of the press wish to express our sincere thanks to the National Confer~ . ence of Catholic Bishops for the generous provision of daily briefing. "We wish especially to com mend the Bureau of InformatioJU under the direction of Msgr. Vincent A. Yzermans for i1s ready spirit of cooperation." The other riewsmen indorsefll ' the st.atement with their ap-' plause.
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Grant to College PURCHASE (NC) - The U.s. Office of Education has ap proved a $221,000 grant for :J three-year project in the field oil music curriculum developmenfl at Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart here in New York• The remainder of the funds needed for the $300,000 projecfl will be sought from private sources.
,FACADE TELJ~S; MUCH: Sandblasting of St. John the Evangelist Church in Attleboro has accentuated the Biblical accoul}ts that are carved into the Weymouth granite. On the bogses of the central archway are subjects from the first to last chapters of Apocalypse; on the central boss, the eagle and books, symbols of St. John the Evangeligt; the Crosg, boat, and fisherman's net, his apostolic. labors. Im mediately above tte central archway-flanked by John and ~zekiel-.in the Old 'restament, John's forel'unner~is the mtroductlOl) to John I: "In the beginning was The \Vord and The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us." I~ the ~able triangles, just below the Cross, are peacocks, symbols of immortality. the old Bates Theater until the new church was ready for occu pancy in the fall of the same year. The Rt. Hev. John J. Shay witS named pastol' in 1949, upon the death 'of Father Quinn. Mon signor Walsh has been pastor since Monsignor Shay's death in early 1961. Nothing Changed Guests at the open house will enter the narthex on the same Tennessee marble floor; go into the nave through the same carved oak screen; face the same Italian marble lined sanctuary; and the same rose window which is de voted to the Holy Eucharist-life after baptism in the Christian' faith-symbolized by the lamb and the chalice. All that has been done in the cun:ent reno vation' has simply restored the church to its o\'jginal beauty. But all of the church appoint ments are related in some man ner to the Catholic way of life. This, the clergymen, Sisters, and guides will undertake to explain to visitors who might inquire at Sunday's open house.
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Recom'm~nds "T,wo'iRec~nt
Books' About Vatican
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God Love-'You
~'I
By Most Rev. Fulton 'J. Sheen, DoD. Most of the missionaries of the earDy Church were i~~. It is to that condition we must come in the 20th century. St. PauU. at the close of his letter to the Romans, mentioned a number oi· laity (about 16 of them) nine of whom were women. One was Phoebe who carried the letter of St. Paul to the Romans acrOS5l the sea; Then there was a married couple, Priscilla and Acquila, - who had the same trade as Paul aud who only worked witb him at the..... trade but also taught and catechized others. There were Paul's fellow prisoners. AndroinicDs and .Tunias, lIlnd bill personal' secretary, Tertius, who did his apostolic work, writing letters for Paul who was almost blind.
By Rt, Rev. Msgr.John S. Kennedy Still more books about Vatican II? Yes. Will anyone 'be imerested in them? We certainly hope so. Probably the best books of all are still a decade or a generation away, because an event so tremendous cannot be judged and eval uated without clong perspec he gives us the bac~ground and tive and profound research. the point of the few easily over But there. are now two' on looked paragraphs. in the Con hand which are well )"orth stitution on the Church in the
0ur attention. The f~rst is The Modern World whi<:h are con Council and ~he Future, with cerned' with contemporary athe ism. . text by Mario Wonderful Photographs ' von Galli and What he writes communicates photographs by the sweep and the fruit of the • Bernhard Moos council. And Mr. Moosbrugger's brugger (Mc truly wonderful photographs Graw-Hill, 330 flesh out these essays. Their like W. 42nd St.,
New Y 0'1' k.
has not been seen elsewher~, so far as I know.. ' $10,95). The se,c
Most impressive are the faces; ond is The
those of popes, churchmen fa . Church Aft e l'
mous and obscure, theologians, Council by
onlookers. Mr. Moosbrugger has 'K a r 1 Rahner
a genius for probing, definitive (H e rd e l' and
Herder, 232 Madison Ave., New use of camera, and one studies and restudies what he has caught York. $3.50). I. "Sumptuous" is the only word in his lens. Father Rahner is seen in one for; .~he von Galli-Moosbrugger of the Moosbrugger photographs, ~Ihlboration. ·It is 'a large, but engaged in earnest convetsatioD £lOt' unwieldy, Volume, beauti fUlly made and featuring scores with Father Hans Keung. He, Itl splendid photographs. So fine like Father von Galli, is aSSeSS are . the photographs, and the ing the council in his new book reproduction of them, that one and loOking to the future. He prono\Hlces the cOuncil a lIlay be tempted to think of. this as primarily a picture book. But success. It was the greatest in scope and the most productive Ute text is quite as excellent. Father von Galli, who wrote it, of all the councils. It -achieved k a Swiss Jesuit. He attended true unanimity in true freedom. But one 'cannot say tbat the aU the sessions of the council, al\d not in any casual.way. life is council guarantees that the Church has, in fact, been reju 8lIl acute and informed observer. He writes here nBt principally venated arid is now ready for ·the future._ So far, we have only 118 a reporter (although he does function in that capacity), but' a written intention to this effect. A beginning has been made, but as an interpreter. And his inter pretation deals not principally only a beginning. with what actually happened but Role of Theelocy with the significance for the Two themes stand out in the future. riches of this brief book. One is . O~rvers' Opmioll8 ,that of the local Church as being The book has .reportorial fea~ the concreteness of the Church tures apart from the main text.' of Christ, the actuality of Christ Thus, there is a council chron present in a' specific place. The elogy. There are excerpts lirQQl other is that of the Church as :the speeches in, and documentR of, sacrament of the world's salva the council. There are' opi nions' tion. The meaning and the appos Itf the .Protestant observers. iteness of these ideas are very' These incidental features are well brought out. not thrown in haphazardly. They A meaty chapter considers the have been carefully selected and' role and responsibility of theol-' woven together in akin<ll of ogy, and the several specific: tapestry depicting the council. theologies, in the Church's fu The ordinary reader, who is un tu·re. Father Rahner notes that likely to study the documents the council has given theology in their entirety, much less to many and indispensable tasks to have access to an unabridged perform, and urges that these go account of the council, gets here forward. ' , some sound idea of the ovurall MO;.ving Novel picture. Georges Bernanos has been As for Father von Galli's five dead for 18 years. It might be linked essays, they are pene trating and poised. Father von supposed that anything from his Galli is looking for meaning, not pen might now seem somewhat outmoded. I have not tested this merely in the words promul supposition by rereading such gated but in such consequential phenomena the dialogue major works of his as The Diary an,ong the bishops which took of a Country Priest or Under the Star of Satan. place outside the council ses But I have' read Molichette aions. He is charting a 'process of development. And in doing sO, which is now published for the first time in English (Holt, Rine he is admirably objective. hart and Winston, 383' Madison Overlooked PaI'a&'rapbs AVe., New York. $3.95). Believe There is no doubt that his me, Bernanos is not outmoded. II)'mpathies are ·progressive. But No one should look to Mou lie is no rigorous partisan. lbl~h cbette for laughs. It is relentless er than eastigating, he explains. ly grim. S.ome will pronounce it He dlseerns, and makes us feel, grotesque or black with cruelty. the presence and the working of Actually it is instinct with com the Holy Spirit in the council as passion, and a marvelous ten ,. whole. derness illuminates it. . :He treats of vital matters This -is an exceptionallyy mov which have been little discussed ing novel, with no false moves.' I\!isewhere. Thus, he looks at the Bernanos, while softening noth ~bjection that the council ttid ,ing of the dreadful plight of a. ~ot in any real, incisive way, child destitute of everything take up the currently burning ,human, pours out ·pity upon -her,.. iSsue of the relevance of God to and invests her with a kind of . the modern world. 'n'obility.; The whole bOok stirs 'He shows that this issue is in with the mystery of. fate. It ittJ· deed dealt with in various parts believable and terribly disturb <if various documents. Mo:reQver. ing.
the
as
not
D I A LOG U E: Anglican Bishop John H.. H. Moorman of Ripon, England, will head the Anglican representatives in talks with Roman Catholic leaders ,to official dialogue between the churches. Bish op M90rman was an 'observer at the Second Vatican Coun. cil. NC Photo.
Common Bible Continued from Page One . 0:>
responded warmly' to Fatber' Abbott's invitation. . The Rev. John H. McComb Jr., secretary ~f. the society's «:hurch ,rell,\tions, said: "VIe welcome his w&rds with great interest and apprecia tion." The invitation to take :part in the common Bible production was taken under advisement bF ~ society. . Father Abbot said that Cath olic and PrOtestant Biblical acholars today are iri "substantial allreement" 'on the best texts to use in translat,ing the Old and. New Testaments. He said a problem still existll handling th.~ Apocrypha, a . collection of late Hebrew writ ings not included in·the Catholie Bible but regarded as part of. -the,:Scriptures by Protestants. ' C)Il
Father Abbot said: "None of us can say at· the moment the best way to present these bookS." He added that di!;agreement OVei" the issue· "does not prevent WI from giving our most concerted attention" to the larger task.
Hospito I Reform Continued from Page One_ community," he said, "it fls net an apOstolate and therefore it bs not a witness foo' Christ." Father Maher called en ren.;.· gious superiors at every level to "face up to the n~volution whicl!L has hit the Church." He stresSed' that if Religious hesitate, "the outcome will be well near irre parable." Father Maher warned that Religious are discoverm,' that "we have not only lost some of our recruiting power but _ have lost to an alarming degreo our holding power.'"
Conling now to our own times,. what are some of the facts ilia the. mission lar~~s? First, governments are gradually taking overr schools, hospit.als and, in some instances, leper colonies. While' some of this .repre sents confiscation, secularism' and bigotry, may it. not perhaps ·aiso be providential? Here in America,' the Catholics are the salt in the salt cella.., not .necessarily 'the salt of the earth. We are a 'kind of .closed community, the world much more affect ing us, than we affect the world: According to the Gospel, the Church· was to. be a seed centered in a' field as wide as the world;'she was to be yeast leavening the loaf of life; she was to be salt hi the stew of mankind..The seed, the yeast and the salt cannot work if they are kept in a bag, a tin or a plastic box. It'behooves us to ask if God:is strippinC us, of. our influence and privilege, to get 'us out of our' eells.. . WIllen He seDt fortb Rts first distiipleli, Be Mid *bem to tab ' & Miek. NO.breacJ; 110 paek,II0 mone;r , ia thtlir belts,· _ pickiac' and ebooslDg of 1odC1np. Their pOwer , was M be their laith. Could It be that it Is' more bDportaat .. ' "ve'CbdstlaDll In sebOols'tbn to ban chureh sebools! WiD_ oar IaJ' missloaaries ·be:. mOIle direet eoataet wUb the people' ot .otlaer DaUo:esthb Is possible through Hprofessiollal _issiOD . HIes'''? Let 110' ODe' saJ" tIIat the latter are to be dODe awaj- with. beeause. this would be central'Y to the Gospel. But tile HprofessiODai o missionaries" must beeome more awl lDOI'e cledicatecl to traintDc ..., missionaries. aoUliJ:lg' lor their joUrBe7 1nU
'If then, there are anY.yeung men ana women who wish to serve -the secular world and ~ -De the leaven in the mass, to help the sick and the poor in the slums ttl the world, write to aay of the MiSsionary Societies and' make inquiries. When you write, ask these questions: "What· percentage of the members of youi' Missionary Society are ractually serving mtlle Missions? How many are sta.ying ill the United States?" If you do not find a great Pl'oportion of the members of the Mission' Society actually working on the Missiona, you cannot be sure that you will be sent. As for you who cannot go., , it' you share this vif~w of the Church being the salt of the earth, Send a few sacri1iees to ,me that we may seQd them to the HolT Father for the developmeot of lay catechists ill mission landa.· GOd Love Yout' ". Bishop, FuDtoD .J•. 'SbeeD's iaIks' lISed privatf!l:r 191' over 4e veal'll to help people of all faiths find meaniDc and' deeper hap piness iD life, ue BOW available' to the ceneral public OIl'!S . 'II'fIeOrdS-:-TiU: LIFE IS WORTH LIVING SERIES. In 50 talks of ' ~"minute8 each, HIsExe~,. offers wise, inspirbig ~uldaDctl·· .00 problem,s_affeetiD&" all.,.re croups: love. marriage.' raising· ehU.. dren, suffering, anxiety, lonlin~, aicoholism and death, as weD . as principles ofihe Christian faith. A wonderful Christmas tboagbt , for: schools, clubs, colleges, rectories, prisons, the LP high-fidelity,. album. manufactured by the RCA custom dept., can be ordered fll'om Bishop Fulton S. Sheen. 36G fifth Avenue, New York, K. Y. 10.001. $5'7.50.
Cut out this column, piD :roar sacrifice to it aDd mail It to Mos& Rev. -Fultoo S. SheeD, National Director of The Society tor. tile PropaA'anolll of tile Faitb,- 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10001, or to your Diocesan Dlrec*or, Rt. Rev. Raymond T. , ·CoDSidine,368 .North MaiD Street, Fall River, Ma~. ' _IIItftItflIlUJIIItIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlIIIIHIIIIUIttIl!
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WO~KSHOP Il~{ SACREiJ MUSIC HELD IN TAUNTON: Studying Cassidy High, Taunton, addresses an amlience composed of music-inter..;' the, ,day's program are l Mr. Charles Haynes and Mrs. Edward Studley, ested individuals from all parts of the Diocese. Right: At the registration'" both' of' St.' Patrick!s Parish,; :Falmouth;· ~Rew James' F; 'Lyons, chairma:n , d,esk, are, Dyreen Bettencourt of Cassidy,High, ,TauJ~ton; Norman Gingras~: of 'the Dioce~an" l\1usic ~ofumis~ion; Rev. John Can'tjanes, 'J)astor of Christ, of Fall River; Sr. Patri<,:ia Gertrude, S.N.D., Stang High" No. Dartmouth;, r..{ithei\Ch!lrclt,'F,alm9uth; Mr.s. George West of S~. Jos~ph's, Woods HQle; , Sr; Mary Eleanora, RS.M., Mt. St. ~ry'sFall~River; Sr. ,Stephen Heleng ' Center: C. Alexanqer Peloqui~, Who d,irec.te'd, the' worJ{shop" at Bish9P S.U.S.C., (jassidy Hign, Taunton. , ,".,' " ,
Cath'ol,ic" Jewish fL'eade'rs' Address 'College Students
c,'
"
N,~t'ional Th91n~~9iving
Day,103 Years Old-
Oppose Transfer Of., Department
WASHINGTON (NC) - ?he 'status of one of the Catholic Uni versity of America's academic Because its national observ-, departments was discussed' at ance originated in the midst of what was tantamount to' an th~ Civil War, the celebration emergency meeting of the de of the festival of thanksgiving partment's faculty and students was associated in some minds here, with its ~trife and passions. Its Father Gerard Sloyan, religious nationwide observance was slow education department chairman, and often neglected in some and other' members of the de parts o.f the country. partment's faculty, atterrded the Thanks to the aid of such reli meeting and informed the stu gious leaders as Archbishop, dents regarding the facts of the,' (later ,Cardinal) James Gibbo.\1s situation. • cI., Baltimore, the natipnal ob.,. The university's board of trus servance soon developed. tees it; scheduled to meet this, On Nov. 14, 1881, Archbishop month, It is expected that one of. Gibbons issued what is believed the items on its agenda will be, to be "the first official direction consideration of the questiOn of by a prelate of the Catholic the transfer. For this reason the" department's graduate students, Church," in regard to Thanks felt it was necessary that some giving Day. In a circular letter to the action be, taken to inform the administration il»l; clel'gy and laity of the Baltimore university archdiocese, he urged priests to' their concern in this matter. encourage the members of their Richmond Synod congregations "to assemble in .RICHMOND (NC) - BishofJ church that day to assist at Mass .." The archbishop delivered John J. Russell has convoked ," the sermon that Thanksgiving the· Richmond Diocese's fourth Day in the Baltimore cathedral.· synod for Dec'. 5 to put into Following his .example, many effect laws designed to carry out other Catholic bishops issued the teachings and pastoral diree'" similar letters to their pastors. tives of Vatican Council II,
°Count Your Blessings,' lincoln Told People
,'WASHINGTON (NC) -:- Th~ observance of a national ,day 01. thanksgiving in the United States has been fixed by presidentfal' proclamation for 103 of intercultural affairs for the years. When President Abraham LinAnti - Defamation League of coIn, i,n the midst of the Civil B'nai B'rith, gave the keynote talks at a Judaeo-Christian stu- 'War, issued his Thanksgiving . Proclamation he de~ignated the dent conference here in New last Thursct'ay of. November as York. a time. for his' people to count Representatives of eight area their "blessings and bounties" I:olleges participated in the con-, and be grateful "to the ever ference which was sponsored by "watchful providence of Almighty Manhattanville College of the God.'" . Sacred. Heart here, and Jona, S·hO'rtly afte· l' 'the fam'ed 'Plym·_ College and the College of New ou'th' Colon>y celebratl'o'n of Rochelle in New Rochelle, N. Y. : Th'ank·S·gJ'vl·n·g J'n th'e Autum"n of Speaking on parochialism and 1621 an attempt was made to pluralism in contemporary so-· make it 'a anImal event, held on ciety, Msgr. Adamo told the stu- October 16. For the next 10 years dents that "in the past parochial~ the New England colonists cele- ism held sway and acc~ptance of brate'd a harvest festival by at another's parochialis~ wa·s]got tending church services, followtolerated." ' e d by a great feast. Better Balanee Mrs. Hale 'Mother' "In modern society," he' eonThanksgiving Day has been an tlnued, "we are trying to'main- annual event in the New Eng tain a better balance. Since' Vat- land States since 1680. There, as lean II we are urged not just to in some other states, there have live and let live, but to .foster been days set aside for "fast mutual respect and collaboration and prayer" and "feastdays of and to accept pluralism as' a bert": thanksgiving," but the modem,' eficial way rof life.'" national Thanksgiving Day beDr. Lichten reminded the stu- gan in 1863. dents that his generation lived Much credit has been given to through. Auschwitz aJ{d Dachau Mrs. Saran Josepha Hale, often and that th'ey are living in the called the "Mother of ThahKs shadow of the events that took giving Da~"" A native' of 'New place there. "Your generation and mine," Says Catholic School he continued, "now experience System to Contl"nue Ule common situation of Viet nam, Watts, Selma,a:nd it ill not HADDON TOWNSHIP (NC) enough to accept religiQu/:l ~om- The Catholic school system will mitment. We must ask what 'we' , ,continue to function on its p'res can do to make the wodd bet:' ' ent' gI:ade levels, Archbishop Cei tel1, to make it such' that· we estine' J. Damiano, bishop M ean really speak of the 'family" . Camd~n, asserted here in New 48If men." '" '.: : : :Jersey.', '... . , " ' . ., Spea~ing at the dedication of . :~eY," :faU) ,Y1 '~igh Sch.ool, " k B "I" PIC as. Ian ,the ,arc~b.i~liQP,laid. ' '. . ROCHESTER (NC )-The A.s-'·' .'..theCa~holic schOo~ aie, ~ . IIOciation of Catholic Colleges of on"the way out. They CU'e 'Con:" Ute State of New 'York have tributing ,to the common good. elected Father Charles J, Lavery, A Catholic home' and Catholic. C.S.B., president of John Fisher education go hand in hand.. College here, to head the asso- There is no substitute for either eiation for a two-year term. <lme." ,
PURCHASE' (NC)-Msgr. Salvatore Adamo, editor of the Camden Star Herald, and Dr. Joseph Lichten, director
file
a
England, she.was for years edito l' of Godey's Lady's Book, a magazine published in Philadel phia, which had what was then a fabulous circulation of 150,000. Through its' columns she cam- paigned for a national observ. wrote ance of Thanksgiving Day, to four Presidents and all mem"; bers of Congress. ,. Cardinal Gibbons Shortly after the Battle of Gettysburg she had visited Pres-' ident Lincoln at the White House on behalf of her proposed na tional day of thanksgiving. On 0 .c., t 3 1863,th e P reSl'den t·Issue d h'IS f ame d proc IamatlOn . f or a. "D ay 0 f Th an k sgIvmg . . . an d P raIse to Our Father in Heaven." Every' U, S. President since has issued such a proclamation.
Jewish Exhibit
DETROIT (NC) ~ A gl'aphic· arts exhibit on Jewish life and· customs will be held at Mercy' College here next month. Featured will be works from the collection of Irving I. Katz, executive secretary of Temple" Beth EI.
Solemn Devotions PAT~ONESS 'OF
Dn' Honor of SAINT LUCY
THE, EYES
·ST. ,L:U.CY SH,RINE December ·5 thru ·13 254 MERRIMAC ,ST"* RTE 110, METHUEN, MASS. ServiceS lven,ings cit 7:30 P.M. Blessing with Relic of St. Lucy
Your In!enti~ns ~iII be Remembe~ed at this Shrine'
St. lucy Devotion Booklets Mailed upon Request
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,'14
~THE
ANCHOR-Diocese ofFaIlRiver-Thurs. Nov. 24,1966
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From "Social lRevolutionn inn Uue New JLatm Amedca"
]By Johnn J. COlll\silllliJne"lW;lW~
What seems to be the poteritial co~munism in Latin
America? We have, seen:sometli~ng of the kiri~s of People
who support or actually ;belong'to. the Comm~nist Party,
and how ·they. are aclhieving theitobjectives, It: is also very
important 1:.? analyze 'and; ~~is~ would redeive;'a~ el:lOr
evaluate theIr prospects, ~or. mops' boost if Ca~tro, with the success or failure. Within'the '--:., aid of: other Redilations, suc eontext of the theme -Cthe "reeds in' making Cuoa- an' ·ceo:.:· Church ane:! Social Revoiution, nOIrtlcally advanced and prosper~ .
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oommunism offers an alternative ous country. ,~-- " .. answer to the Now for conditions that are it'· '. problem. 0 n e unfavorable to marxism. First, must not become economists are not supermen btlt "(T'J,r;;): .,!It ~"!.'}Y;~~ so exclusively sometimes fail as ~ell as s.u~eoncerned' with ceed. They are subJect to dlVl-' communist acsions among themselves and they' tivities as to do make mistakes. Latin Amer forget that the ica is still a testing ground for m 0 v, e in e n t international communism.,. ~ac:,;·· . '. ''. :~:. . ~:'.:.':' . ,. is based on an tics and strategiesll!~·tihaei'con i de 0 log y . t~nual, mo,d..i~~cation ..This neces to which many ".Slty':to·,expenment mlght eventu'.'
communists are ally work in their f~vor if; in
.'~'.: ···.Wer~ theegg,lfI'Y.ous·er~ed 'this mornhi~~. all they were. Ii inc ere I y , ,their continual testirig'of ,strateeommitted. In the present situ':'. gies, they are coming near~r~ \", "'''-cracked up to be? Were they really fresh'l'Sometimes they ation the critical question is the". the approp~iate.ones:",. \,;'"'-, edent to which a strictly mate:,;.-,' . The A.lliance'· for ·Pr~gress,-..," lose their your shelf. But not rialistic ideology that promises a '., though ~tha:~ a dubious start; , • society of equality andju~tice \ll;0W seemS o~ ltl; wa>:·to substa.n at First Natlo·nal.'lf you··tJon't take our eggs off the shelf, we will appeal to the impoverished "bal accomphshment ln the relief masses of Latin America. -,of Latin America's social and wilt e'•• make sure you always ge.t fresh eggs. Let us bri~flY reviewthe-fac- l;!Conomic p~blems an.d may
tors in favor of communism and thereby ~rovlde a co?slder;lble. We"put a lot Qf extra effort Into getting eggs to you that are
those against. Douglas Hyde and f~rce agamst commUnIsm.
, other experts ha'!e cited the fol,\. ' ,. Role of Church' strictly fresh~ We pick up eggs directly from nearby farms•
lowing as contributing ~ the "In the socio-economic field the nest-fresh eggs are rushed our modern progress of communism: first, 'Church has taken the lead in
bad social conditions - malnu- agrarian reform and social de
[plants 'and they're usually In our stores the same- d~y.
trition, destitution, poor housing, velopment in many of our coun ifliteracy, bad or inadequate tries. Examples in Chile, Brazil,
From henhouse to YQur house b~tWeen dawn and dusk ••• education. . Peru, Bolivia and other countries
These factors are of equal im- are very well known. In spite of
freshness I And we date .each box, you· oaln check this partance to the 'communist move- handicaps the Church has made ment. But I would stress this:, impressiv~ strides forward. Ba Ir_hnels'for yourself. It's anQther way we say ••• The people in Latin America: ,'si~ :education programs, coopera
who have little or no edu~ation, tive'~; credit unions and other'
--the peasants, for exampl~9: .socia~ aSsistance projects. are now'
not distinguish between theeeo-:Wid~spreadthr~jlghout the c6n . '."',
aomic proposals of comI!llWlU,i"m·"tl"'"Elnt: There is, - ~'eGUl'se; a' and those of a more· balanced '. need: ::101' more. Newi"dioceses, Weology. ." : - : . . .';'mOte ~-!rid ,better seminaries,' at'e ; .. ' : . . : .- : : The communist propoSals lOOk· ,OOeded in Order to ~ure 3de~ r'~~ ····i ,,-;' fine to ·tbem,".:aild tb~ir-' '~ate spiritual and:·iiociai'·.asSiBt-' " ." . ".~" ' :~ ". ,-".!,.
Reither aware. 'of .nOr CoIllcer-nee ance for OUr peop~e~ '(:<i<::' .': ' . ' . " ab(MJt the con~uenoes lJIl·.1Jb¢" As it stdyes::towafd·~li.~
./., ;' . " aystem involvech Few Latin Alnerica, :the chuteb'keePa.
.. what communis,m reall,.' is. ~ clt;!lli,. in, mi~d>.tbe,'~ls fer} :
" at. our chief concerns shoold ',be D¥.inki~d. ~~~in~ted b7 ,Pope'
_ instruct. ,our peoPle . 00 ·~at lo~XXIIl in bis l~t encyclj.eal; .
Ute,. know wbat oommuniSRI .Pace~)n ,Terns-trUtb, jUstice,_: ..
means.· . charity and freedom. Tbese fMlr
Seco'ndly, extremes of: wealth '.' principles alone can provide a
and poverty -existing -side by, secure basis for our oociety.
side, and an absence. of. social, The important fact about the
Conscience on the part of the. . Latin American' Church is not.
wealthy, have given ris~ 'to a' - that it lacks money and person-'
"7 widespread' determination . to '. nel· to .carry out the programs it. bring about social change. ' envisions but that it haS underThe' more this change is op-. gone a true aggiornamento. The posed by ·tbe ruling group, the first ,reform to make is b.yall ' stronger the .determination of means that ?f the Church Itself•. the people becomes.. The situa-. The ~cychcals.of Pope' John· ~ion is not improved by the fact. and Pop~ Paul an~ ~he work of that often those who work for . tbe .. Vatican Councll are .the :ius~ified 'and needed change are providential means of. renewaL labelled as communists by those The Church all over Latm Amer who:oppose'iL -- .. ' . ' . :. '}~" is: ~committed to. adapt the . :. . -" . ' . _.: ~terna] mesl'age of good tidings
. ; Other ':aVOI',lDg. FM~~' . ' ,to,matlkind within its:milieu~.
.j\::lhir.d fa:etQr that fav.orscom"',~·i1ur "rJatin' American people "of;
munism is the growth of mate- this time and of the times to.
rialism since World War llI. Our come.
resistance to marxism has been The liturgy is' transforming the
weakened by a loss of spiritual spirituality of the people of God.
values, a hedonistic attitude Pastoral programs under the di
toward life6n''the part of our" ,·tectio'n' of the hierarchy' are"""
youth and adults, and the disin- reac4ing the people as never be
tegration of family ties. . for~.· New techniques of the
Even if communism should apostolate are renewing Chris
disappear from the scene, this tian action. And, very imJ!lor'~'
growth of materialism is a suf- tant, an emerging laity, more
ficiently great calamity to our :. conscious of its role within the
society; ,C!lurch and in relation to the
Fourth and fifth factors aiding . moder,ll world, is taking the .
<ilommunism are the inadequacy avant garde posts in th.e task of
Gf QUI' present social structures transforming the face of Latin
in face of a population explosion America into one which wHit
and the political instability. .reflect the truth and justice of
which in many countries invites t~~ message of God over the
rommunist take-over. message of a materialism that
Finally, Latin AmeriGaIl com- ,enslaves the people.
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MelS"" ""'SONd.,. Tile Follow;", J.diyidua}s and
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.. Tlte Diocese 01 Ian Riyer
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16
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov.'24, 1966
Ip "J1 • I 0 PPO!r~UHMUty · . rova~e~tla.:. .for·
Chra~ti'ans'
1
, l'he' Fl,Irniture
Open Daily 9 A.M.
Wonderland
to 10 P.M.
of the East
Including Saturdap
'and Jews
By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept. NCWC) - On Sunday, Nov. 13, Cardinal Spellman pledged to a gr~)Up of Jewish leaders that the Church in this 'country do anything it possibly can to implement' the spirit as well as the letter 'of the Vatican council's' Declaration ~n the Relations of the ing awareness on the part of Church to Non-Christian Re- both groups that, if each is to be ligions. . 'The Declaration,.' fully itself, Judaism and Chris adopted.by the Second Vati- t'ianity must meet, in 'a spirit of
will
limn Council and promulgated by mutual respect and reciprocal Pope Pa~l VI on Oct. 28, 1965, love on the plane of theology, ll'epudiated anti"It is evident," as Cardinal Semitism, and Bea reminds us in his recent the an ci e n t book-length commentary on the eharge 9f C91 council's declaration, "that such' !ective , Jewish a diaiogue requires not only a l!' e s p () n s i ,_ love of truth but :also great hu bility for the mility and charity, One must not death of Jesus, aim at triumphing over another and called for or proving himself right( but fraternal d.ia simply at searching for truth and logue between serving one's neighbor." Catholics ~ and The purpose of the dialogue, Jews. Cardinal in other words, is not to prosely Spellman made , . tize or' to "co\lvert" the other his remarks during an 'event, party, but rather to help all of believed to .be unprecedented in us, Catholics and Je~s alike, .to the. history' of 'America's ·tell·· become more fully. aware _of our gious communities, at which1he ~. 'comml?n spiritual patrimony. American cardinals and some of Economy of Salvation the bishops assembied in Wash In the words of Cardinal Bea, !ngtonfor the annual conference: Christians and Jews "live by of the American Catholic bishops substantially the same faith (in joined in a' ceremony with )~adT the God of Abraham Isaac,' and. ers 'of the ,-American Jewi!i R. Jacob) and shape. th~ir lives ac Committee..aLa reception at tile cording to' the same divine. wis Catholic Uriiversity, dOom. The occasion was the ;pres~n; '''They express their praise and tation by the American Jewish adoration of God" their sorrow Committee of commemorative for their sins and their supplica plaque.s to the American cardi Hons in the same prayers in na1s ana t9 Ar~hbishol} Patrick· spired by the Spirit of God. A. O'Boyle of Washington, chair "They can both be said to fo1 man of the administrative board lo~, though in" various degrees, . 9f the National Catholic Welfare the same course of divine in Co~ference in "heartfelt appre struction and education which lI:iation" for the leadership given is called the economy' of salva by American me~bers of the tion. Roman Catholic hierarchy in be "Through it they come to' a. half of the passage by the Vati knowledge of the gFadual rev-' lCan Council of the ."Jewish dec elation of the mystery of man's laration," and of its implementa.'" . 'salvation, hid den in God throughout the ages, to long for tian.. Practicii Guidelines pnd to .seek its realization, Cardinal' Sp~ilm~n's pIe d g e . though, each travels towards it fttat the Church in this country . along· a different road." will de everythingit'possibly 'Solemn Obligation ean do to foster strbnger: and more extensive bonds of niut~~l Inevitably, of course, as Car umde.rstan;ding,r~spect,and C?QP~ .dinal . Spellman pointed out at eration betwee'n Catholics and the AJC ceremony, we can ex jews was not an idle PT9mise . , . pect to encounter-occasional dif ficulties and frustrations as we The bishops' of: the United J' ointly' try to plumb the biblical States have already established a' special Subcommission on and theological depths of our € : atholic-Jewish "Relations. common spiritual heritage, but Within the near 'future this I Share Cardinal Bea's optimistic subcommission, headed by Bish 'conviction that, with the help of op Francis Leipzig of Baker, God, we can go the greater part Ore., will issue a s.et of practical of the way together. Indeed we guidelines aime!d at fostering are' under a solemn obligation and promoting mutual under-' to try to do so without delay. , Btanding and esteem ,between, In the spirit of. the council's Catholics and 'Jews, which,' in declaration, the Church in this the words of the declaratio!,\. country will also vigorously op "will be the fruit, above all, of !pose "as foreign to the mind of biblical and theological studies Christ, any discrimination against and of brothe~ly, dialogues." men or harrassment ,of tbem Social and Civ)c: because of their race, color, con-, From time to time in the past ditioIt'in life or religion." ' there' have been ChristianThe council's declaration, alas. Jewish dialogues in this country cannot undo the past, with all of on social and civic issues of mu its bitter memories of hatred tual interest. This kind of co and persecution, but, by the 'operative effort, which will un grace of God, it can help, to doubtedly be endorsed and,com usher in a new era of "mutual mended in the subcommission's knowledge and respect." . guidelines, is most heartening Living Document and, please God, will become What proud boast it will be even more widespread as time for the !Tnited States if we 'step goes on. . out.in front and set an example Until very recently, however, for the rest of the world in this eatholics and Jews in the United regard. " . . States have rarely, if ,ever, come ,Working hand in hand,Chris together at any 'level to talk' Hans and Jews together, we have about biblical and theological a glorious opportunity to trans matters of .mutual interest and, form the cou!1cil's, Declaration On the Jewish People from a €loncern. Growing Awareness lifeless piece of paper into a· They are likely, however, to living document which can lit 00 so much more frequently' in erally change the faee .of the the future, for there is a grow- earth. .
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 24, 1966
NCWC Secretariat U. ·S. Catholic
Says Teachers of Religion Face Task Of Dispelling Doubt ,and Confusion INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Reli gion teachers today face the cru cial ,problem of dispelling the theological doubt and confusion that have arisen in recent years regarding the basic tenets of Christianity, a n'ationally known Scripture authority has told 1,200 teachers at the Archdioc esan Teachers' Institute here.
that sponosorship to enjoy some degree of approbation. "These bishops felt that they sbould know 'in advance wbo.the speakers at these conventions would be. Others pointed out that according to this procedure the bishops may seem to' be in volved in censorship." , The archbishop added that "to resolve these points of view it . was decided to send the matter of the role of the general secre tariat to a committee for study and for later suomission of their recommendations to the body of bishops."
Father Barnabas Ahern, C.P~, faculty member at St. Meinrad School of Theology, declared that doubts and confusion in the mind of the average layman have come about as a result of developments in contemporary scholarship and religious re thinking by intellectual leaders.
COOJRID>D:NATOR: Miss Al
ma Herger, of the National
Council of Catholic Women's
Urge ~eform staff, Washington, has been
AREQUIPA (NC)""':'" Lawyers, teachers, economists and workers named coordinating secre
tary' of the organizing com
were called upon to' join in a concentr.ated effort to achieve, mittee for the Third World
an authentic social revolution in Congress the Lay Apostolate,
Peru when the National Confed to be held in Rome in Octo
erationof Catholic Social Circles ber, 1967. NC Photo.
held its convention here.
Peru CathomiC$
The group also issued a call to all pressure groups to' end partisan conflicts and jointly seek to obtain social ,benefits from the government. The convention discussions , WASHINGTON (NC)-Francis Cardina~,Spellman of New York covered a, ~ide field of socio economic problems plaguing the and Father Paul McKeever, president of the Catholic Theo country, and emphasized the in logical Society of America, justices that exist when the ma joined to present the society's jority of Peru's citizens live Cardinal Spel\fnan award to under subhuman conditions. The convention urged the Father 'Paul Kevin Meagher, O.P., at a ceremony at Holy Re Peruvian law schools to be faith ful to juridical tradition and the deemer College here. The presentation followed a demands of justice and to exert effort to abolish legislation meeting of the theological soci which tends to stifle social r~ ety at the Redemptorist hoiJse that saw Father McKeever, a form. Teachers also were urged" to theology professor at Il}1macu instill in their pupils from ,the late Conception Seminary in earliest" grades a deep social Huntington, N. Y.; assume pres sense and' a desire to serve idency of the society for 1966-67. Members of the society and otbers.' Economists, were asked to several bishops attended the stUdY the economic situation of , simple presentation of the med al, scroll and check that com the country objectively and real prise the award. It is given istically in order to lay a founda annually to a theologian for, tion for solid reform. outstanding contributions to the ological studies. ' I This year's recipient, Father, Meagher, was chosen for his work in theological publishing. MADRID (NC) ~ An appeal Moral theology editor of the for social justice based on the New Cat hoi i c Encyclopedia nonns of the Second Vatican scheduled for publication early Council was made by Bishop next year and a member of the Antonio Anoveros Ataun of Ca- ' board of the Catholic publishing diz in a special message pub house Corpus Instrumentorum, lished in La' Voz del Trabajo, Father Meagher also collabo p'ublished by the Catholic Work rated closely with Fr. Tiroinas ers' Brotherhood., Gilby, O.P., in editing portions The bishop pointed,to the fact of a new edition of St. Thomas that "1.6 million Spaniards have Aquinas's Summa Theologiae. an income of less than $42 a month." He blamed individual selfishness and a "feudalistic system prevailing within the up per classes" for this injustice. "Furthermore, he added, "there exists in this country anti-social and anti-Christian groups" that are unju'st, lacking in principles and which are enemies of broth erhood.'
O'omin'ican Wins Theology' Award
"As a result," he said, '''many Christians today have grown un certain about those verities
WASHINGTON (NC)-Some students, several carrying placards, picketed the Catholic bishops' meeting hall on the campus of the Catholic Univer sity of America to demonstrate student dissatisfaction with the univ:ersity's administration. Milling about outside Caldwell Hall, where more than 200 of the nation's bishops were dis cussing changes in the American Church, the well-disciplined demonstrators left wide paths for the bishops to reach their buses and cars. Many bishops, seeing the pick ets, left the, building by other exits, but most stepped down the main stairway and walked through the silent crowd. The silence was broken for prolonged applause for Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York..
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which they had long clung .. with simple faith." Much of the new religioUlB 'thinking is included in the doe uments of Vatican H, Father Ahern pointed out, leaVing the average Catholic "with the un quiet feeling that Il4>thing is any longer certain." While this is a traumatic ell perience, he added, it has served as a "necessary catharsis for the false security which has groWIII up in the Church during the pas! 60 years." , Father Ahern stated that he was referring to the fact that most Catholics had grown up to believe that papal infallibility applied to every utterance,of the Pope "and even to every pro noUncement of the Roman COl!lP gregations."
THINKiNL
Ask Greater Social Justice in Spain
Students Protest . University Policies
17
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fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preafdent l MSGR. JOHN 9: NOLAN, National SecretaJY
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f§'ll'. JOSEPH, IFAlLlL RlVlER
A Communion breakfast will be served to Boy Scouts follow ing 8:15 Mass Sunday morning, Nov. 27. Items for the Women's Guild ehristmas s'ale Thursday through f§aturday, Dec. 1 through 3, may be left at the school or rectory at any time before Monday, Nov. 28. The sale will feature food, aprons, 'Christmas items, hand-: made goods, hats, jewelry, reli-, ;pous articles and a white ele phant booth. A meatloaf supper will be served Saturday evening, with ticket deadline Thursday, Dec. 1. ' OUR LADY OF Vl!C'J['ORlY. €l:JENTERVILLE' The Women's Guild has com'" pleted plans for the annual € : hristmas Bazaar and chicken pie supper scheduled for Satur- , day, Dec. 3. The affair will run from 1 to 8 in the evening. Three new members of the 8\lild were introduced by Mrs.. Edward O'Neill at the last meet.,.
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S'll'. JOHN 'll'ElE lRAP'Jl'l[8'll',
NlEW lRJE][)lFOlRJIJi
The parish committee will serve' breakfast in the church hall following the 7:30, 9 and' '10:30 Masses on Sunday. _ The Ladies Guild will' sponsor a cake sale and Christmas table in the church hall following all the Masses. on Sunday.
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DELIVERY'
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Boys interested in playing par ish league basketball .are asked· to meet at Franklin Street com munity center at 9 Saturday · morning, Nov.. 26. Teams will · be formed from grade six and up. . 1-
,Jesuit Guidelines I
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OBEDIENCE: The theologicai FORT WAYNE (NC)-A fou1' point approach to joint effort in foundation for the 'l(irtue of religious activity in and around obedience was stressed as the downtown business districts was best way of most intimately con analyzed in an "exploration" 'of . forming itself to the example of Christ and the evangelical coun interfaith cooperation here, . Lyle E. Schaller, regional' sels. Yet the decree underlines the dlurch planning office 9-irector, importance' of a mature and re told representatives of 11 reli gious congregations meeting here sponsible effort of the members' that downtown churches should: of the order, both at the level of "(1) establish substantial com . full consultation which normally' muni<;ation; "(2) C 0'1;) r din ate preceeds decisions by superiors as well as at fue level of effec present efforts, to avoid over lapping and compe,tition; "(3), tive implementation of such de-' effect cooperation in feasible cisions: The decree, in answer areas, such as youth '~ctivities; to strong appeals by Pope Paul, ~d ::',(4) consolidate efforts reaffirms strongly the central which could· include merging of position of obedience in the life of a Jesuit. . n»hysical facilities." E.xpressing amazement' at t~e The Regional Church Planning <Office is a non-denominational rumors of proposed changes in agency with headquarters in the Society 'of .Jesus, the Hoiy Father stated he was console'd Cleveland. Schaller said a' tiumberof in that "the conclusions 0:" your Congregation have for the most ':Ilactors have contributed to up part dissipated them. He appeal beaval in current downtown sit ed that the Jesuits not weaken uations. He cited "decen traliza tlon-the flight to th,e suburbs," their sp'irit of obedience~ithiD Uie socie!)'." • a prime example~~ . ,,:
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GENERAL: The new decisions provide for the resignation of the'Jesuit general for reasons of serious illness' or age or to avail himself of the help of four assist ants-:general.
ST. JOSEPH,
. ATHEISM: The Pope's request . FAIRHAVEN
that the Jesuits take "'as their Members of the Sacred Hearts responsibility the meeting of the Associajion wi! receive corporat~ challenge of modern atheism was € o mmunion on Sunday morning, accepted. Dec. 4, at the 8:15 Mass. The group will' conduct a REPRESENTATION: The base ebristmas Party in the church of the representation of Jesuits basement on Sunday evening,. in local level meetings was con Dec. 4, at 7:30. Dollar gifts will siderably broadened. Elections be exchanged. will now be held permitting all Reservations for the La Salette · members Qf a province who h~ve Shrine trip must be made no taken final vows to vote and to later than the Dec. 4th meeting. be .representatives if elected. One half of the elected represen- . IIACRED HEARTS. tatives must be professed priests, NO. FAIRHAVEN however. The Ladies of St. Anne will receive corporate Communion BROTHERS: Greater dignity 00 Sunday morning. at the 8 was given to the Jesuit brother oiclock Mass. . and his role was stressed within There will be no .regular the society. !I'hey can now fill meeting this month. ' 'VIfhatever forms of the apostolate . '. they are capable of, eve~ admin"; liT. JOHN THE BAPTIST. , istrative ones. All distinction eENTRALVlLLAGE' .' social division 'betweenbrothers . The Ladies Guild will hold'a and priests is to be eliminated.. apeci!ll meettngat 7:30. Tuesday
Bight, Nov. 29, in ~e praish hall COOPERATION: An· element
iii order to prepare for a recepW'hicn reflects itself in many of
tion honoring Rev. Donald A. the decrees is the re'commenda
eouza who was recently trans- tion to promote more, ample ,c~
terre~l t.o Sacred, Heart, Parish, - operation with bishops in' pas- .
Oak Bluffs. ' toral activities and in particular The Chrjstmas party for Guild with regards to programs of or members, -their husbands and ganic pastoral action'laid down' friends will be held on Thursday by the episcopal conferences of night, Dec. 1 at the Rendezvous various nations. Restaurant, Dartmouth, Advance reservations may be made with' · COMMUNITIES: J uri die al Mrs. Joseph Baldwin or .Mrs. questions regarding the practice of religious poverty and the ren Alfred Azevedo. ovation, of the. spirit and duty' of Jesuits to religious life in the simplicity of community life were also resolved.
',' ,
:: . MAHIOGANY
Continued from' Page One Some of the decisions reached were:
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"fflE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River-Thurs. Nov. 24, 1966 ,!
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19
Feehan Corrals TQP Honors Dick Collins of Marion: . In Ratings of Area Clubs Stang Grad __lays Goard at B~
,
Bishop Feehan High of Attleboro, at the northern end
of the diocese, Lawrence High of Falmouth, in the middle,
geographically and Nantucket High at the other extreme are the three leading powerhouses among the 27 scholastic footbaJl . clubs-within the the Commonwealth. 'They are: (OOnfines of the diocese lines Feehan, -Falmouth and Nan -during the season which tucket.
Majoring in Business AdmRnnstration lEy Jfoe Miranda
Richard Collins of Marion is a starting guard on the Boston College 1966 football team. A member of the first
statistical compilation reveals. JFeilllllUi Outstanding In one sense, the ratings are a Stang High football team, Dick mtle unfair because of the dif At the other end, 11 failed to xerent team classiiications. The win a single game and only two has grown to six feet, one inch rankings are based on a point are from this area, Martha's and is listed on the BC grid brochure as 210 pounds. system regardless of the accepted Vineyard and North Attleboro. State classification of .each Business Major Fifteen of the 27 in the rating schqol. ,But, the compilation compilation played at least' .500 The senior lineman is major does; however, give a quick and for the season. ing in Business Administrati~n easy e<>mparison of the relative and described as an average stu ,Nine-one third of the ranked stren'gths of the 27-listed aggre clubs-tallied more points tha,n dent, a leader and an extreme gations. . ly conscientious young man by were scored against them. Thir Pre-Thmanksglving Ratings teen of the 27 talliedJOO points officials at Boston College. Football games are not won Dick is 21 years old and the or more, during the campaign, 0n statIstics. But, e<>aches and and, only two registered more son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. :I1ans alike realize that statistiCs Collins of 64 Holmes Sreet in than 200 points, Durfee and Fee are' valuable in determining a han. While the Fa)) River Hi)) Marion, Mass. He is a'member of Il:lub's strong and weak points. toppers paced the scorers, North 8t. Rita's Parish and one of four, It'goes without saying that the A;ttleborowas the temp most children. :rankings do not include today's ,scored upon., North's opponents Dick's' older' brother Edward, Thanksgiving Dl:\Y ~ 0 n t es t s • ran up a total 178 points.Jr. and his younger., Robert both Presstime preceded game start-: The leaders gaitl'eli their. po~i-, attended ,Tabor ,Academy in ing tiltles., ' ,tions by ,displaying alharound, Marion. His sister Ann is em Feehan "holds the top, spot ·strength.' The high scorers. were ployed in New Bedford.; Bob with '16 '"points' by' winning eigh~ now is a freshman at SMTI. ' straight. ''fh'e Hanewich-coached among the best defensively. Five Collins was an end for coach of the top: seven led in offense; IOOmbine scored a 'total of 20r C/lrlin Lynch's ',unbeaten Massa four of the top five were, deferi points, ,second best to Durf'i!& chusetts championship team in .' sive leaders: Durfee, first Qffen High of F~ll River which is in 1962, the first season Bishop sively, had to' settle for ~e~en~ seventh place in the ,rating. Stang High School competed in place defensively. But, 'Feehan, Durfee piled up ,210 points.' the Bristol County League. :But, Feehan had far-and-away second in scoring, was tops de ,Dick was cho::;en as an end on the best "defensive mark It held fensively while Falmo,uth, fourth the All-State Scholastic football' best offensively, rates: second de' sev~n of its eight season's oppo- ' team, picked in Boston, after a lllents scoreless. -Durfee was the fensively. brilliant 1962 campaign at Stang only club to penetrate its goal TV Plans and was further honored with DICK COLLINS
line and it tallied the entire 24 As we go to press, plans are his selection to the All-Bristol points the Attleboro Shamrocks being completed for the first County League club. gave up throughout the Fall fleam, winning the starting right determination and was a credli high school footbal game tele Great Desire eampaign. to ,his school, teachers and par guard assignment.
cast ever in this area, if not the The Marion gridder play,ed ents while at, Bishop Stang. Three Undefeated Gained Recognition
first in the entire Common freshman football for Boston _ Four finished in a tie for the wealth. Miller and his staff have given
College in 1963 and the following . the' right offensive side of the mmner-up spot in the ratings. Those who have been unable year was promoted to the varsity,
They are Lawrence of Falmouth, line continuous praise this sea ranks, b'ut' only his tremendolls son, ,Collins and teammate Tom Nantucket, Bis.hop Stang High of to procure tickets for the Attle boro se))-out' between Bishop, desire and fighting spirit earned' Sarkisian" a tackle,have: been North Dartmo,uth and Somerset. Each garnered 14 points by vir-, Stang ',High and· Bishop Feehan' ,him a first team berth this the subject, of his compliments. High, for the Brist91 County campaign.,
tue of seven victories. ' , ' , Collins' work for'Be has been, league crown, will.-'be: aQ,le',:to , 'Durin~ !lis sbphomore and,
-------Coach Jim Sullivan's Somer-', consistently good and his'':!ccOlu-;o , watch the holiday game on TV CITIES SERVICE IIet Blue Riliders recorded the juni.or seasons as an Eagle, Col plishments havebeell ma'¥l'" DISTRIBUTORS '" ' best offensive recOl'q' ox', the if present, plans: are consum-: lins played behind an excellent Miller'toid The Anchor. , • ' - ' - - - - , ' - ...:''------' 'field of, Be, guards and never deadlocked second-r>lace teams mated. Dick' ~I>ent an. int,~~'estiri,g , " had the' opportunity to produce. 8,um,mer, sailing. The, BS,~enio,J; , with a total of 186 points while . Gasoline
Falmouth tJ,irned in the best de ,At Spring practice, this season, a!sowa~a. crew mempyr, tn the, St~p Tourney fensive mark of tlle -four' ~n-'
'Fuel and Range
Dick showed well enough to gain' annual Newport to Bermula race " ;, JOHANNESBU~G (N C)
ners-up by limiting the opposi a spot on B~ston College's third last year:" ", : _, . . '.' . " ' , ' tion to' 43 ppiRts, an average' of South' African clergymen called team as a, guard. ' , ,Car:lin Lynch Comll1ents just a Ilttle more tnan six points off their third" annual .Ecumen
By the time Fall practice came, Lyn~h wa's high in his praise ical Golf Tournament because
:I game in its seven contests. OIL BURNERS" Collins 'was ready to make his _ Going into today's traditional the government will not a))ow move and his early performances of Collins, noting that since he For Prompt Delivery boliday engagements, there, are . a Negro Catholic priest, Father so impressed coach Jim Miller entered Boston College he switched from tackle to guard. Christian Phetla, to participate. & Day & Night Service 14 undefeated and' untied clubs that he was promoted to the first and did an excellent job in the, in the Eastern Massachusetts, The priest had participated illl transition. three of which are located here the tournament for the past two G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS The forme,r Stang mentor, in the Southeastern section' of years. Footba'il Fans now an assistant at Holy Cross Rural Bottled Gas Service ,PLAINVILLE (NC) - Priests College, said that in his nine ~ating of Area Scholastic G~id ~ams at: Our Lady of Mercy church years of scholastic coaching, 611 COHANNET 51. Point here in Connecticut requested Dick was one of the best he ever ' " League Season Points Points TAUNTON coached., parishioners to come to confes Aga~st Rating 'Team Record Record , For 201 ' 24 'sions an half-hour late last Sat 16 Feehan 6-0-0 8-0-0 The ex-Stang grid master told Attlebo~o - No- A"leb~rc 14, . 'urday. A letter read at all 171 43 Falmouth 7-0-0 ' 6-0-0 The ADl;hor that Collins pos Taunton day Masses told the parishoiners: ses~. tremendous desire and 14 138 72 Nantucket 7-0-0 "We're sure you'll understand," 14 12053 , Stang . ' 6-0-07-1-0,. The letter then' explained the 14 186 61 Somerset 2-0-0 7-1-0 half-hour delay in' confessions 136 76 11 ,Bourne 4-1-1 5-2-1 would enable the staff of parish 10 210 71 Durfee 5-2-0 5-2-0 priests to watch ,the closing mo 10 109 119 Barnstable' 3-3-0 5-3-0 ments of the Notre Dame-Michi 108 1,36 2 New Bedford 2-4-0 4-4-0 gan State football game on te)e 129 139 8 f)liver Ames 2-3-0 4-4-0 vision. 8 84 56 Wareham 3-3-9 4-4-0 78 102 8 Coyle 2-4-0 4-4-0 104 108 8 Provincetown 4-3-0 92 101 8 Norton 2-3-1 3-3-2 fj 111 103 Old Rochester 2-2-2 3-3":2 Building Contractor
7 79 !H Attleboro 3-3-0 3-4-1 139 117 "I ~ ~ 3-4-1 Mason'ry
• 12'1 Cl IN THE J)ar~~ 2-3-1 2-4-2 '14, 104 5 :ralrhaven 2-4-G 2-5-1 GREATER N 163 5 Taunton 1-4-1 2-5-1 -4 38' 162 X. B; 'Vocatwnal "'5-2 1-5-2 TAUNTON AREA 38 141 4 Mansfield 1-3-0 2-6-0 4Cl14'1 S Di8hton-Rehobo&b 1-2-0 1-5-1 Open Evenings 'til 9 except Saturday 20 . 141 2 Seekonk 8-3-0 1-4-0 '10 143 2 'Dennis-Yarmouth 0-6-0 1-7-0 7 JEANmE STREET 4Cl 178 North Attleboro C'l-5-1 (}-"i-l 1 AUTHORf1il!b ,FAIRHAVEN WY 4·7321 20 148 C> Jlartha's Vineyard (}-'1-0 IT. 44 NEAR TAUNTON DOG TRACK, TAUNTON DUl(P . -.:
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20 , i' .THE ANC;HOR~ Thurs.,. Nov. 24,
Church 'i~ u. ms .C(O)iilceD'n~d W~th AU
'19'6 L ' <JJ
s.
Continued from Page Silt those constructing harmonious 4:ommunities in eve~' part' of our nation."
The Conferences of Bishops atld "communicatio in sacds". (sharing in. common worship) was the subject of a report which mentioned that the Council's Decree on Ecumenism leaves to the local episcopal authority the ooncrete course to be adopted in matters pertaining .to the parti cipation in' the worship of churches that are not Catholic. How'eye~, national conferences ~ bishops are permitted to de termine the rules for the enti re tenitory and these. would limit the.decision of individual bish-'
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· .It was pointed out that at the present time bishops in the U:S. iltave the authority to permit a :nimited 'form of common wor ~hip .bub' that further guidelines' · are awaited from the Holy See.
Priest Distribution The bishops proposed that a Opool' of priests be formed from the dioceses from which. priests may be assigned, for a time, to dioceses in need Of priests and to the Militl1l'Y Ordinariate, to Latin America and 6ther places. This study will· be done. by CARA (Center for Applied Re search in the Apostolate). It was suggested that the priests be permitted to volunteer for the 'pool' subject to clearance, by their bilihoPS. C
PLANNING VIGOROUS RENEWAL OF AMERICAN CIIURCH: Four participants at last week's National Con ference of Catholic Bishops session in Washington were (left to right) Bishop Edward· A. Fitzgerald of Winona, Minn., Bishop James L. Connolly of 'Fftll :J;ttver, Bishop Lambert A. Roch, Sioux Falls, South Dakota and Bishop Hilary B Hacker of Bismarck, North Dakota. The needs' that might be met the Prppagation of the Faith. Santa Fe' will ',lead .tlie· commit-· by . the permanent diaconate; Archbishop Patrick A,O'Boyle .. tee for the.Montezuma Seminary" especially in those areas of the -was elected' chairman of the '~while Au~iliar.Y_ Bishop ;Steven.... South and West which are with- . Bishops' Cominittee to C.omplete· A. Leven will·lead :the commit- '. C?ut priests, are to be studied. the National Shrine of the Im- tee :for the' American College at: Re~e~ence was a~so made to ~pe . maculate Conception in Wash- Louvairi University, Belgium.' eXIS~mg. apostolIc ~ork bemg:· ington.' , .' . Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan carl'l~d .out by the.laltr a~d the.. Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort of Atlanta will"serve' as chilir-' ~erm~ss~ons already _obta.m,able. Wayne-South Bend, Ind.. will man for the Bishops' Commission In. mISSIOn areas for ReligIOUS, serve as chairman of the Bishops' for the Liturgical Apostolate. Siste~s and for se~ected laymen Committee for the National OfBishop John: J.' Carberry of" to. glv~ Commu.mon where a 'lice for Decent Literature. Colombus was elected as chair-, pnest IS not avaIlable, Archbishop James P. Davis of - man of the Secretariat for Ecu-.
'" Religi<plUlS fund! RQlosoll1lg .
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The bishops asked that its committee on Canon Law con-. suIt with the Conferences of Major. Superiors of Religi0l;ls" Men and Women so as to estab-_ lish procedures to be followed_ by Religious solliciting funds, N1at5@[I1ol COU(ACii It was moved that bi'shops rec- . A committee was formed to' ognize the right of a Religious to raise money within a diocese., study the diocesan pastoral coun cils where the diocese's priests, but it. was also realized that this Religious and laity are asked to posed certain questions of p1'O- form a consultative board to aid cedure involving the' right of the bishop in' his pastoral tasks, the 'Ordinary to know ,and ap This committee was' also asked' prove the types of fund raising' to look into the possibility of .drives being initiated within· his diocese. establishi~ a national pastoral council composed of priests, Re ligious and laity to form, a pas Reports toral plan or to give an overall view of what the bishops should A report on pastoral director be doing in the U.S. ies, outlining suggested proced It was found that 30 dioceses ures in the pas10ral relationships (Fall Ri:ver among them) have al which should exist between' the ready set up senates of priests to bishop and his faithful was read, assist the bishops; 34 are com Migrants and travelers were pleting their establishment and referred to in a report that drew 60 dioceses .are in the prepara attention to the solicitous care tory phase of founding them. the bishops have already shown This committee will initiate a for special groups such a;; those study of the priests" senate and who ser:ve 'on the sea, the Span aCt as a clearinghouse for the ish-speaking, Cuban refugees' dioceses requesting information. and migrant laborers.' . lNt ~his :n:tatt~F' Those serving in infur-dioce-: san offices were also made sub ject of a special report.
-
B.irth ControW
The bishops strongly oppo~ed all government attempts to urge poorer families to adopt birth control procedures. The assem bled body of bishops strongly opposed even apparent relation ships between government aids of all sorts .and the practice of birth control.
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..
It was decide& that the presi dent of the NCCB should appoint a committe to study the whole problem of the restoration of the permanent. (married) diacollate. It will have to looll'into the kind of training program and center ~hat such a' restoration would ~quir&
menism and Interreligious M . fairs. . _ ." Archbi~hop Edwal'd J. Hunkel er of Kansas City .will head the Committee to Confer with Men Religious w h i 1 e p"rchbishop Thomas A .. Boland of Newark . will head' that for Women Re ligious. Richard Carainal Cushing' of Boston will serve. as chairmOiR of the Bishops' Committee for Latin America.
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We pause to give thanks again to Our Merciful Creator for the bounty of His blessings and favors' bestowed upon this great Nation. Let us continue to reflect upon the millions of The Lord's unfortunate people who today ~o not ~nioy su~h a bounty. . Also .Iet us pause to sh~re spiritually our. blessings with' our undaunted, selfless American patriots fighting this day ,for free dom for all' in' Viet Nam. As we remember, their sacrifices, let us share their intentions,theill' thoughts, their concerns' in our prayer~-for .them and their families.
At
l'ery.·"'ft,·,...Hearted,
O'd·"asJ.ioJletf
Appointmen.ts Auxiliary Bishop John J ... Doherty of Newark was elected chairman of the Cominittee on the Pope's Peace Plan. Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of San Aritonio was named chair man of the Committee for. the Spanish-Speaking. Bishop Charles P: Greco of Alexandria, La. was voted chair man of the Bishops' Committee on the CCD. It was also announced that Auxiliary Bishop Cletus O'Don nell of Chicago had been elected chairman 'of the American Bom'd of Catholic Missions, and Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of· Rochester, charmian oithe Comrriit~e-e.for
Happy Thanksgiv~ng THE OFFICERS, DIRECTORS AND STAFF
.,