Diocesan Priest Wins Korean Honor Fr. Francis Wallace' Gains High' Commendation Lt. Col. Francis X. Wallace, diocesan priest serving as a chaplain in the United States Army, has gained the high commendation of the Most Rev. Paul M. Ro, Archbishop of Seoul, Korea, in recog nition of his sublime Christian Charity and out standing international coop'eration while on Korean duty for the past 13 months. Father Wallace £lIS{) has been singled out for his tremendous contribution, both spiritual and material, in connection with the construction of a memorial chapel being erected in Seoul in memory of the Centenary of the Korean Martyrs of 1886, anel, particularly for the less fortunate childl~en of St. Paul's Orphanage. In a personal letter to Bishop Connolly, the Korean Archbishop praised Father Wallace for "his outstanding ,spiritu'al character and personal warmth," Archbishop Ro closed his letter' to the Fall River Ordinary with the eommen4 "Your Ex~ celleney can certainly be:pt'olHl of Fath~r Wallace." , , The New Bedford priest has just completed
The
ANCHOR
faU River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 1, 1966 Yol.·10, No. 48 ©
u. S.
1966 The Anchor
-$4.00 per Year PRICE lOe
"-----------------~------
Penitential Changes Are Pari of Lo,.g History
Jo'llt. Jo'RANCIS X. WALLACE
a tour 'of duty, in the Fat East and is, now statio~ed
~t Headquarters II, U.S. Army Corps, Fort Wads worth, Staten Island, New York. Ordained in 1947, Father Wallace's first and only assignment in the Diocese was as curate at Corpus Christi Church, Sandwich. In 1950 he replaced 'his pastor; Rev. George E. Sullivan, now pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Fall River,. as chaplain to the Cape Cod National Guard. In 1951, the Cape 'Cod unit was activated and Father Wallace accompanied it to service in the Korean conflict. He followed this assignment with tours of duty in Colorado Springs, Germany, Geor gia's Fort Benning, Hawaii, Edgewood, Arsenal, ' Maryland, and -again in Korea. Now in the regular army, Father Wallace, a native of New Bedford, was educated at St. Allselm's College, Manchester,' N. H., and St. Mary's Sem inary, Baltimore..He'was ordained by the ,late Bishop St. Mary's Cathedral, 'Fall Rhrer, on May Cassidy 31,. 1947. ' ,
in
Papal Enclosure At Carme'lite Monastery
So. Easton Laity Over-Subscribe Building Fund
The ceremony of Papal Enclosure of the Monastery of Our Lady and St. Joseph, formerly the Sol-E-Mar Hos
Catholic families new II' 0 I y C r 0 s s South Easton, have more than $90,000
pital, South' Dartmouth, will be conducted by :t:3ishop Connolly at 2 Saturday afternoon, Dec. 10. Solemn Benediction will be offered by the Bishop, who will also deliver the sermon. An open house will be held over the weekend of Dec. 10 and It from 9 to 5. Thereafter, the only place that outsiders may visit in the first Carmel founded in the Diocese will be the "Speak Rooms" two rooms in which visitors may stay and talk to members of the mon astery. The purpose of an Enclo~ure
first three weeks of their build ing fund drive. Their minimum: goal was $80,000 to be raised from some 400 families. This an nouncement was made today by Rev. Joseph F. Hanna, C.S.C., pastor and Louis A. Lyne, vol unteer director of the fund drive. "We are overwhelmed by the response to date," stated Father Hanna," and with more than lOlll families yet to be contacted. we expect still better re'sults. Volun teers ',in 'the next week will re double their efforts to contact the rest of the parishioners. The minimum goal of $80,000 Turn to Page Fourteen
Turn to Page Five
COM MEN D ED: Rev. James F. Greene, Ch.C. U.S. Air Force, former assistant at St. Joseph's Church, Taun ton, has been commended for leadership and service fos tering morale in camp.
in tha parish, pledged! in the
The recent action by the bishops of the U.S. to change mitigate the laws of fast anel· abstinence for the Ameri can dioceses is only anothet' in a )ong series of such actions. ]From the founding of the Thirteen Colonies, U.S. bishops lhave. been petitioning Rome ror various changes. For the stinence during Advent. He does except for Fridays. ~nrst time in hi::>tory, how 1840: The bishops ask the Pope @lver, .the bishops on their to continue his..dispensation from M
own authority-as recognized by abstinence on, Saturdays (except f;he Vatican Council-have made during Lent) forever and not (;he latest decisions in regard to only for 10 -years as the docuWriday abstinence. Turn to Page Six The following is a history of
abstinence in'the U. S.:
1789: When the U. S. is found
ed as an in'dependent' country,
~he laws of fast and abstinence
rn force in England are contin.
000 here. Catholics are to ab De§e~v<e SU~P@lft
stain from meat on Fridays and
v ATICAN CITY (NC) 5aturdays of each week. Pope Paul VI has described 1829: The 'abstinence and fast the weekly Catholic news Baws for Fridays and Saturdays t.lJre confirmed as "part of the paper as "a formula that (ilarliest, the most necessary, and desel'ves all possible support."
l;.1l1lost ·wholesome discipline of
He pl'aised the weekly news tJThe. Chul'ch '" 0 0" paper "for diffusion of current' Jl833: The U. S. bishops ask Catholic thought, for the popu 'pope Gregory XVI to dispense lar style that usually character American Catholics from absti izes it-and wisely so." He also IAence on Fridays and Saturdays. spoke of its "more .readily acces He permits U. S.Catholics to eat sible administrative possibili !beat on Saturdays (except dur ties," presumably referring to Jlog L,ent), but nev.er on Fridays. the low' cost of running a weekly ],837: The bishops ask the Pope newspapel'. Turn to Page Five, lit. fO'elax: the laws of f~t and -ab-
Pope Paui Say§ Catholic Papers
DIOCESAN CHAPLAIN IN VIETNAl\'l:Lt. John W. Pegnam, member of the USN Chaplain Corps who served as an assistant ~t St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, offera the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in Vietnam. Father Pegnam, serving with the Marines, has received a Navy commendation 'for hi~ leadership and conduct'in Vietnam.
'~.
Deacon to Assist
,
'In North Easton.; 'Parish Work
Educator Urg~s Teachers Study , :$tude'nts~' "Total Environment" -. WASHINGTON (NC) - Ana tional educatlonaloHicial said' ~ducators often fail because they do not know enough about their students' "total environment,'" 'including their family back , ground. The charge was made by Father C. W. Friedman, asso ciate secretary for the college, anq,university dep~rtJnent of the National Catholic Educational ,Association here. ",Efforts to educat<e students without reference to their total environment are doomed from the start to futlity and failure," :Father Friedman told an educa tional conference at Dunbar&.on College' of, Holy Cross here. ~here 'has' been a great deal of myth building as to what edu catron really achieves and 'bow it 'accomplishes itS objectives. It behooves teachers not' only ~ use the new teaching, techniques or new media but also to under-" stand the process 'of how people really acquire ideas and atti tudes," he said. Family Factor The NCEA official cited, re-' eent studies, including the report on the Negro family prepared by former Asslstpnt Secretary' of Labo'r Daniel Patrick Moynihan, to support the view tha~ the 'fam-, ily is the most important fador in education. "American' education has failed, not because it hasn't tried but because it understands so little about the process" of edu cation, he contended: He said a study of Catholic ~ducation, conducted b~' sociolo gists at the National Opinion Research Center of the Univer sity of Chicago, "likewise sup ]lOlis the contention tJlat the fa~iJy is the key factor in the
Food Chai~s Back Sunday' Closings:
Starting this week-end a de.. '. con of the DioceSe preparing 160' , , the priesthood at St. John's Sem inary in Brighton will assist the ,priests of Immaculate Concep tion Church, North Easton, iu iheir duties. Two deacons wiIrr take tums fulfilling the dutieo proper to their office, Rev. Mr_ Brian J. Harrington and Revq Mr. William F. O'Neill. Rev. MI'. Harrington will' be at the North Easton parish this week-end aJ'lQ! 101' the next six weeks. Then Rev. Mr. O'Neill will fulfillsilI weeks of service. The deacQnlJ will arrive at the plirish at nQoJtl Saturday and will return to :Ule seminary Sunday- evening. "; - The deacon will perform thOse duties proper to his ordaineQ! offi~be will baptize, disttib-. ute' Holy Communion, preactil and give ,instructions, officiate at prayers at the grave, take census, fill out parochial certificates; He cannot, of course, hear confes sions or celebrate Mass-actiontIJ ,proper to -the priest. , :' I , '
religious education of an indi vidual" "These studies sugges,t that teachers should study the educa tional process and be more con cerned about the environment from which the students come," he said. Cites Council Father Friedman" cited the' Second Vatican Council as hav ing a special impact on Catholic education. ' , "Old' attitudes ancient ways, comfortable patterns and accepted traditions, must give way to the "challenge of making' the council real," he saId. "The temptation is, to engage in the jntellectual ~d of self pity, to indulge"in mYth-making, to give in to the 'compulsion to see ourselves as battling against insuperable odds," he added. "Our task is to see-at whatever agonizing cos~the, crucial dif ference ... between the esse~e of our belief ,and the s,upe#il;Iali ties which can and p~rhaps JUU1lt be changed in order' to" make 'Chrsitiariity relevl;\ilt th,e' ni()d~ ern world." ' .. , .
rma
.~.
I,':'
"
"
" A't Conference
".:.
I :
:rl ~.
,,>,
"., 'NOTRE DAME '(NC)-'-S~ 50 experts in sociology, theology~ law, medicine, b~ology and ot~ell' fields related to the family and population change are pilrticl pating in the fifth annual qni ver.sity of Notre Dame Confer ence on Population here today. The conference, supportecll ; " with funds from the Ford Foun dation, is headed by Dr. William T. Liu, director of the Notre Dame institute for the study of Population and social change.
lLIJg«u'ilda Bish«»ps Aiid Anglican Ce'nte', KAMPALA (NC)'-TheCath olic bish'ops of' Uganda' 'have given a grant to expand the stu dios at the Anglican Church's literature and' radio center, MukQno, in order to facilitate training in the production'of radio and televisi,?n programs., The grant......w as announced at a meeting of the three-year-old Uganda Joint Christian Council at Makerere University College ,here. The council, set up by the Ro man Catholic and Anglican Churches of Uganda, 'is open to ,any church "which adheres tp the Apostles' Creed' arid' whihh accepts' Baptism by water' in the, 'mime of the 'Father and of the Son and• of .the, 'Holy Spirit." . , . ' 1. ';' (
i ::'
:':'""Dm$cuss P,OpUI(lltic.Im,;"
to
at
Necrology DEC. 11 RADIOLOGIC TECHNICIANS: Certificates as Radio Rev. Edward L. KIlligrew,1959, logic Technicians were presented to MarilynS. Beauregard Pastor, St. Kilian, New BedforcL and Roland E. Lambert" both of Fall River, graduates 'of DEO.15 " St.' Anne's Hospital School of X~Ray Techn6logy by Mother '''',Rev. Mortimer Downing, 19420 Marie Ascension, 'assistant 'administra~9r<,~ft to rigl1 t :'.'$.r. , Pastor, -st. Francis Xavier, 'H;1~ ,'Je.c'\nne Th(~rese of the Radiologic Department, Mr"Lambert; ,':annis. Miss B,euaregard,' Roger,i\i. B<llme, ,chief-technician, and Mother ,Ascension. _, ' , .. ··t, :JEFfREY' E~"$ULLIV ~N,
DENVER (NC)-Most inajor food chains in the Denver area apparently; will kee'p ,to the ,tra ,:, ,'Futl~fJl 'Dome '.,' l ditional policy 'of Sunday clos "jogs despite suggestions trom ", '550" Locust· Street .', .". FRIDAV-St.' 'Bibiana; 'VTrtin flome 'quarters 'that the :stores be ' n ..~ £ Li ...: \.. "i,_ "iFall 'JY;h.er, 'MlUlS. and MartYr. Itr ClaSs'.' Red. : . " . opened. Mass 'pro~t;'Glory;, , '2r'1d : TECHNY'. (NC).......,The ,Divine ,complete" requiremEn~ts fOl:, "bis
:, 'One chain took:a ·ft I page -ad- . ,', -,' 67..2..2391'-: ',Wor4 Airways-in Madang",New cOrnmellcia} pilot's"license. ',,'ol, Prayer of previous ."siiniHly; vertisement' in the Denver Post ,Guinea, 'regional headquarters,'of "Br.othel' Anthony., ,;will flY'8UP Creed; Common' Pr~face.. "Rose, Ii; ~S alllv,... , ',. " to<announce that it-will remain ,the 'Divine Word Society, bas ,a ,plies, and, personnel>to ',remote "Two'Votive Masses 'in' honor 3e1frey Eo SulllvaD 'a:losed on Sundays "regardless of 11ew pilot-to-be, according ,to the mission stations ,in New Guinea. of the Sacred' Heart of "JeSus' what action'may be taken by the society's ,major Seminary here in In the, second year of his no Pe'rmitted. ' .
other major food stores in ,the llJinois. vitiate 'at' the Divine Word scm Glory; 2nd'Prayer of previous
Denver market." , He is Brother Anthony Seng, inary in' Marburg;' Australia, Sunday; 3rd Prayer St. Bibi
Lou J. HugheS, Denver area ana; no Creed; Preface of Australiari-:born Divine Word Brother Anthony volunteered to branch ,lpana,ger for tl;le chain, missionary, who has 'just com:. s,erve as, a flying missionary 'to Sacred Heart. .
said ,that"wlth his chain ,declar 'pleted the aircraft mechanics Bishop Leo Arkfeld, S.V.D., Ap Tomorrow is the first Satur
ing '3 definite stand, the way was , courSe at Lewis College, Joliet, ostolic Vicar of Wewak, New day of the month';
mow open for others to do like Guinea, who is a Ucensed, pilot SATURDAY-St. FranciS Xavier, IiI. Wise. " The 29-'year-old-Brother IS himself. ' , ' Confessor. 'Ill" Class.' White. Mass Proper; 'Glory; 2nd tunling to Sydney, Australia, to Prayer ,of previous 'Sunday; gain practical experience at an Christmas 'DislIDlay OIROURKE no Creed; Common Preface. aIrcraft service station and 10 For the, 14th year, religi<,lus DoA~'·8lAL·AMt:e SUNDAY-II Sunday of Advent. funeral Christmas'illominations are be INCOAPOkATtO , I Class. Violet. Mass Proper; ing held at the Shrine of Our 57] second Street,,: No Glory; Creed; Preface of Lady of La Saiette, Attleboro. 'Trinity.' , The iluminations will continue fall River, Mass. MONDAY - Mass, of. ,prev,ious fiom 5 to 10 every night until FUNERAL HOME, INC. Sunday. III Class. 'Violet. Mass 679-6072 ., HYANNIS Sunday, Jan. 8. Regular shrine II. Marce. Roy - G, Lorraine RClJ Proper; No Glory. or Creed; ,. HARWICHPORT MICHAEL J. McMAHON services will continue as usual o Roge,' LaFrance ' , ' 2nd Prayer St. SabQas, Abbot; Licensed Funeral Directoll' .,~~, , during the Christmas season. Common- Preface. FUNER.AI. DIRECTORS
Registered Embalmer' ' TUESDAY-'-St. Nicholas, Bishop ]5 Irvington Ct.
and Martyr. III' Class., White. 995-5166
Mass Proper; Glory; 2nd FORTY HOU~S
Prayer of previous Sunday; New Bedford
no Creed; Common Preface. DEVOTION
WEDNESDAY - st. Ambrose, Dec. 4--St. Margaret, Buz Bishop, Confessor and Doctor zards,Bay. of the Church. III Class. White. . INDUST~IAl '@~dl !l)OMESTIC ~o $@!'e$ St. Bernard, Assonet
Mass Proper; Glory; 2nd Dec. 11--81. Anthony 01 Pa
Prayer of previous Sunday; IFtl.BNERAl. H10ME dua, Fall River.
no Creed; Common Preface. ' St. Mary; Fairhaven.
THURSDAY - Immaculate Con %9 LOCUS'II' SYRlElE1T ception of the Blessed Virgin IFAlL ,RIVER, MASS. Mary. I Class: White. Mass fHE: 'lcHCHOIl Seconcl Class POStage Palo at Fall Rive,..!' 672-3381 Proper; Glona;' 2nd Prayer of .; .: . Mass, Publlshel eve/) fhursday al 41u previous Sunday; Creed;,Pref 'Highlano l\ve.nue :'all, Rive, Mass, 02722, Wilfred .C., J,aines ~ .. 312 Millman, Street ily the Catholk: :Press"of' the' Dloces~ 01, fan ace of Blessed Vir!iin. 'Holy '!Driscoll Sullivan, JlI7: llivel .. SJJbscripUo~ price, by, mall, poslpald ," .. ; .. 64.00 'ile,yea,~ . .' -, - . , , , , ' ., .. '. -, 'Day-of Obligation., ",'." I
:,:'
,~
'.
Brother ,'to, Fly'for~,Mis'siol'is'.','_:.,. "
'I
.'..
.'
j,
.
no'
I
re
Home'
~
.
.'.'
m,' ,-
Funeral Servic.8
BROOKLAWN
'
ANDERSON & OLSEN
Do $adUvan &
'HEATING:=PBPBNG und
AIR. CONDDTBONING
~
CONTRACTORS
~
lHE ANCHOR-Diocese of;.'all RIYeP-...... Dee. ~
RESPONSE TO ECUMENICAL EFFORT: An estimated 800 mem bers of the Attleboro community visited St. John the Evangelist Church IJunday afternoon during the open house arranged by the, Apostles of Cood Will of the CCD program of the parish. Left, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Nerney, members of Murray Universalist Church, inquire of Dr. and Ml's. Harold Thompson, guides, on the use of confessionals. in, the spir-
1967 Press Month Theme1<now .Changing' Cburch' NEW YORK (NC)-"Know Your Changing Church" '18 the theme for 1967's Catholic Press Month to be observed bt February. William Holub, Catholic Press Association president, in a statement issued here said: "Translation of oN.. e excI'tement of the spI'n't Wi president stated. "To make these ~ th . Ch urc h- to people VI. e renewmg aware that the Catholic "'romote maturity of faith- 'press today is vital and needed '" lSOnstitutes the motivation of by modern-day Catholics, anx-
CathoHc Facilities ABed Plan for Needy
l:~~H~~~:~N~~;)~~~~~;~
Ad
-.r
r-------------..
$1.2
3
itual life of Oatholics. Center, The Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor of the parish, greets the Kelley f.amily of North Attleboro. Right, J. Russell Sweeney, a lector at the. church, explains to Mr. and Mrs. John A. Mac Donald, members of All Saints Episcopal phurch, and a gr/?up of children, how Mass is celebrated at the Altar of Sacrifice. Assisting in the affair wereRev. James, F. McCarthy .and Rev. Edward A.Rausch.
in or served by anti-poverty programs conducted at more than 2,300 Catholic facilities by nearly 17,000 volunteers 'last mid-Summer. The National Catholic Coordinating Committee on Economic Opportunity said that, as of June 30, there were 100,923 persons benefiting from anti-poverty most editors of today's Catho~ie ious to know what is going on programs in 1,078 Catholic facili press - newspapers, magazines, in the Church, is a service pres- ti~s in a score of archdioceses, books and pamphlets. ent readers can render, thereby which had enlisted a total of • ''Their success in interpreting becoming co-workers in the 7,943 volunteers to carry on the . the real 'life-to-be' of the people apostolate of the Word with edi- work. At the same time, 137,779 of God involved with the modtors, publishers, bishops and re- ,persons were reported in proj ern world," he said, "is best ligious superiors." ects conducted at 1,251 Catholic measured by the response genet'"Catholicism," Holub contin- facilities in 64 dioceses which ", ".", ¥ad in the readers." ued, "i~ news today in all publi- .enlisted 5,856 volunteers. ,"In the s,e circumstan,~s,·, .c~tions, to be sure. . ' These, it was pointed out, were Holub continued, "tolerance of ,l'But. only in the' Catholic· not Catholic programs in the lIlediocrity and inadequacy iR press," he said, "can the people. sense of content,· but programs the Catholic press must be of God find the fullness of in- _which followed, clesely the avoided at all cost. '. foqnation, inspiration,' guidance ,guidelines of. the Qffice of Eco. Any public~tion Which dqes ,and in-depth discussion neces-· ,nOmic Opportunity but for ..w hich 'not meet sPecl.a! need of the ,sary' for total appreciation of Catholic premises and .facilities "pres~nt a~e will des~rve 19 be ·what is happening-to help form .were made available and for "·;l·:' Ignored,". he said. . . the sound judgmentS, good con':' which Catholic sources enlisted Holub declared that "greater sciences, and responsible atti- the necessary volunteers. . ","",' ':,",' professsionalism in alUts opera-, . tudes so needed-in' working· for. ,,'The,, Catholic . ceol'dinating tions is the .goal of (.t,he) Cath~ . the salvation of our own souls.".. ·, committee, expressed the belief .Ie press today.". that there were other anti-. , Vital, Needed ' GtG • t poverty programs. conducted at "Too ~any still think of the' ,f! tClzes vo(:a es Catholic facilities at the time of Catholic press in terms of publi"Of Situation Ethics .thereport, but which were not f "th CPA . . reported, and that there have Ions 0 years ago, e NEW HAVEN (NC)...,.... Advo- been other programs initiated in eates "of the currently popular ,Catholic facilities since that time. Mass in Fall River "situation ethics" or "new morality" have a laudable objective, Religious -Freedom For Vincentians .but they are using the wrong The annual Corporate Com means to achieve it, Father AIIn East Pakistan Dmnion of Particular Council of bert Jonsen, S.J., doctoral candi- 'RAMGARH (NC)-The gov Fall River, Society of St. Vincent date at Yale University, asserted ernor of East Pakistan has as de Paul, will be held at the 7:30 in a Fall lecture series at Alher- sured the country's minorities of A.M. Mass Sunday, Dee. 11, at St. tus Magnus College here in Con- the same privileges and facilities Matthew's Church. necticut. as those enjoyed by members Following Mass breakfast win The Jesuit said it is "stupid of the Moslem majority in 'the be served in the parish hall. and futile" to dismiss the situa- . community. Many rich indulgences may be tionists as "pagan immoralists/' Addressing a public meeting gained by those who attend the noting they are Christians "and . here,' Governor Abdul Munim annual Corporate Communion 'their purpose is to state a Chris-, Khan said Pakistan's constitu and the general meeting which tian ethic." " t i o n guarantees equal rights to will follow the breakfast, Presi-' ''They are Christians," he all citizens irrespectiv'e of reli dent 'Edouard W. Lacroix points said. "who are deeply disturbed ,gion or belief. out. over the apparent irrelevance of their faith in the present world; Million Bequest They diagnose this irrelevance NEW YORK (NC)-Fordham as due, in part, to the enshrining Baldwin &. Hammond Vniversity has received, a be of. Christian morality within a Pianos & Organs
quest of $1.2 million to establish rigid, inflexible, unfeeling code Lew Dalbec, Proprietor
scholarships for needy students. ()f rules and laws which seem to !llhe money was left by Mrs. Syl be inapplicable to our present Sales and Service
'Yia Wilks in memory of her psych ogical and sociologicai 269 U~}~~. ~~2,~g6ledford
brother, Richard P. Lydon, a late ' views of the highly complex hu 138·140 North Main st.
Fall River, Mass.
liustice of the New York Su- man person and human situa . Tel. 675·7721 . tioL" , ~ Court.
'C
wee
THE MUSIC SHOP
Prominent Non-Catholics Request Pope to' Ease Bi~th Control Law's NEW YORK (NC) - Eighty five of the world's leading non Catholic religious leaders and scientists have signed a state ment forwarded to Pope Paul VI urging his participation "in forg ing a new consensus" in the "vital matter" of the "moral imperatives of regulating birth."
The statement was prepared by Dr. John C. Bennett, presi dent, Union Theological Sem inary here and Edward L. Ta tum, Nobel laureate, of Rocke feller University here. Dr. Ben nett announced receipt ot the statement has' been acknow'l ,edged by Archbishop Angelo Dell'Acqua, papal secretary of
state ~~t:orc:Iinar¥ affail's.
Population Growth . Dr. Bennett said the statement
originally was circulated to 100 :religious 'leaders and scientists and ,85 signed the 'petition. Orig_. inally. it was planned 'not to"re lease the statement publicly, but "Dr. TatUm and, I now, deem it in the pti6iic 'interest to release thi~' statement for the public record," Dr,,·Bennelit announced.. The statement asserted that the si·gnatories were aware' of
the','Pope's "sensitive position on
responsible parenthood and con
cern for ·problems of population growth expressed in the Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modem World" of Vatican Council II. , . . Fertility Regulation Future generations' will "hold today's leaders responsible if we fail to recognize and deal with the world population crisis while it is still manageable on the basis of free conscience and free
choice," the statement said. The statement reviewed condl.. tions t/lrough the ages, stressing that the time now has passed when man was called upon to exercise his fertility abundantly so that total birth exceeded fotal deaths. "Today man's future is threat
ened less by' rampant disease than by unbridled reproduction.. Therefore, if future generations are to enjoy the quality <of life made. possible through the ad vance of science, our new moral imperative must call for the conscientious regulation of fer tility."
..1~i-Fai'th Meetin~'
WASHINGTON (NC) -.:. T h. .teachings of Catholics, Protes-· tants and Jews about one an eiiher in reiigion textbo~ks was 'the SUbJect at lin Interdenomina tional Religious Education Assa ciiltionCoi:!ference held Tuesday at the Catholic University 01. , .AlJleric:,l", ."
famous for
QUALITY and
SERVICEI
1111I11I11I1111I11I111I11I11I111I1111I111I111111I11I1111I III 11I11I I11I1111I11I1IIIhlll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU1111I111I111I111111I11
~
D & D SALES AND SERVICE,
~
~
INC.
~
i
FRIGIDAmE
I
I~3 SE~~;:{~~~~~~;~MASS.I
iilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlIIlIlIIlIUlllllmllllllllllllllUlllllllllilfllflllllllll/l"H'F
Calis for Action' :OnWageLaw. ·ST. :GEORGE, WEillTFORT . 'The \Women!s \Guildannounces a ',Chnisllmas 'bazaar 'to be 'held ;at the o.schoolihall ton IBulgallmarsh Roaa {from .a ito i10_.tomollro~ !i\ghHfnom land il. tto '10~Satulla~y.. A (chowlier ,s~pper'will 'be ,senved bom ,a ito ',7.:30 'tomormw lriight ,and ra fS.Paghetti ·sUp'per ,at <the .same itiime ~Satm:day l11ight. iJlickets ifor tthe 'mea15 ,will :be availaole ,at lthedoor. In chalige of bazaar :allJ:angementsisMrs. Roberl 'Parent,' aided . bY" MI's. John B. :Caron. ss. Jl'lE'.nJR AND ;PAUlL, IF:AlLlL JRJrVlElR.
Parish Christmas acth~ities will include:a .Christmas Festival in .the 'chw-ch .hall aIi dllY Satur day, Dec. 3,leaturing handnuide items, games ,and a snack bar..~ meat pie supper will be served from 5 to 7. George A. Froment _a~d Mrs. WilliamF. O'Neil are co-chairmen ofa large 'commit itee_ The new>ly..... formed ginls' C¥O unit.willlelect officers at .7 Xhurs ,dqy jD~ght, Dec. 8 and will make plans for' a shopping day in Boston to be ,topped ;by. 'Supper .and .attendance. at a motion· pic -tulle. {Camp tEiue (Girls ,will IhoHl .a· Christmas panty .at White's ,res taurant l.1irom 1 Ito ~4:30 :-Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11 and Cub Scouts' ·will IhdJdthetr-s :in .the 'chul'ch ~hall at '7:30 'Friday, IDec. )Jia. '!J1he Womenls Club has shitell ;its Iholiday 'party 'for ~8 lV[onday nlght, IIDec. 5. VISITATION GUILD, NORDI EAS.T.HAM
'SAN . AN[,ONIO(NC)-~ :bishop Robert .E. Lucey of Antonio' .hasasked ·,thec1er~ .and Religious w.ho .oper.ate ,par- ishes,schools .and dIlstitutiom .in. 1b2 .arChdiocese '''in .all iDo> stances ttobegm 'immei'liat~y to (follow 'theminimumwl\ge law 'as <enaetedrecen'Uy \Qy ithe federal ;go:ver.nment."
'sam
'ST. ;PATRICK, :,EMJMOUTH ·.n~he W:omeri1s (Gulla .announces .,a '-Christmas ·sale for !l ~Satundl!'Y ;aftel!Iloon, D.ec. '.3 in 11:he'1panish ·hall. ~Membel's ,will ;also reliter .;a :float un.the ;townls ~CJhliistmas ;p.iu:ade. 'mhe ,uriit's ilast .meetillg if~atured ·a lPrQgram <entitled "llAn :Ev.eriing 'M':ith lMary:" !Madonnas ;and (eJliplanato~y mateJiial \Vv:eJ!e .on :displayana reaail)gs ,wene ~given .1::Iy ·:three lmember-s.
:JBlOJL'Jl ~GlHl.OSIIr, ATTlLlE130.RO .
'rohe annual :Christmas \);>llzaar ,will beheld 'toda~, 'tomonrow andSaturda'y 'nights irom,7to 1:0 in 'the church hall on' Linden Street. '[,he event ,will .also be qpenfrom 2 to·4 Saturdllyafter noon, with booths featuring items of, speCiaL tinterest ,to chrlilren. In addition' to. stands display ing hand-made Christmas novel 'ties, ,stuffed toys, \kriittetl ,goods, 'apJ;0nfi, candy ;and ,baked !goods, there ,will be an ,exaeptionally fine collection ,ofdewelry al~d' w.icker 'baskets on sale. 'Many (Christmas <gift .items -wm~be ,ORTHODOX AWA:RDTO "W.ELF.A:RE \'OFl1'ICIAL.: ltt. !found ,at:a lpem}y ,salelbooth :and Rev. John G. Nolan, nationafsecretary of the Cafholic Near .an interesting variety of .attic ,treasures ,will .. also be: av.~ilable. East w:eifane Association .aJ'ld president of the Pontifical (Men (of tthe paniSh ,w,m~Qpe);ate.•a Mission of lFa'le:,trne, 'is ·greeted IbN" itlhe(@r.thoc!lox !Ecumenical snack 'bar which will ·be ··~pen PartmiBtltdh~then~giOl;as,liighrt:,·on the occasion of the bestowal lthno4ghout 1the bazaar.. <of ,the .Gold Or.oss .of Ithe ,(i)rder of fue (CounciJ ,of 1R~hodes <001 Returns .for tickets ~on ..a&13e ;bhe :M6nsig.nor, :bhe diirst ipenson not a . meniber~'f 'the Ortno chil 'drawil)g 'to 'be 'held .at 10 Saturaayritght, mqy be 'made .at 'Hox rOhu'Foh 'to be 'so IhonOl!ed. '!\lC JPho:to. allY time during'the 'bazaar. 'Cash ,prizes .and ·v.aluable 'gifts wi'll !be ··awarded. ~rr.
""llil :effect, cleI!gy :and IRe» .have been ;asked ft() 'begm p~g lay employees :at least $1:25 per hour. In ;apasto~al ]e1. ter .to priests, Brothers :and 'Sis-' ters, the archbishop ,cited the papal encyclicals .on- .social jWl .tic, ,and said: ~ous
'''The time has come foraIill .those in charge of parishes, sChools and other institutions :b1 our archdiocese t.o re-examine 'the practices adhered to, espe cially in the re1'ition to 'our so cial doctrines. Un doubtedJ,y, ther:a will be unearthed mau,y viola tions regarding the payment oil decent wages." .Archbishop Lucey pointed out "to :the clergy and Religious thE;:ll -:the !present federal law :pre 'sctibes'fonly ,amin1mum, .and :you ;Should not be satisfied with barely getting by. fA 'lWage' Of $:25 \peT ihour :is mo't 'a livint/ "WlJ,ge .for a family ·of four. '":Furthermore;" he ·continu$ll, "fu1clulled in your consia.eJ;3tions 'should be the benefits that .are .due <to your emp!q;y:ees: namely, ,good ':working conditions, ,Q r.ea ,sonable workin,g week (4Cl 'hourS), :time off for J1olidays, 'holY llays, vacation .and sick \leave."
MUlAN,
:NEIW'BEDRORJD
'mhe !Holy iName 'Society ,Wtill .A .Christmas .bazaar .is planned -sponsor Lits ;annual tham :and lbean for .SatUl:d,IY, Dec..3 from 10 .to -supper iin tthe parish 'school ,on ;3. ,Coffee, .hot ,chocolate .and -Saturda-y ,e,vening, IDec. :{3, mllom . •doughnuts .will .be .a\lailable .in fi:{30 ,to 7. t1he -mOornillg .and a .buffet lunch . IA .cake walk \will lioHow !the twill .be ,ser.v.ed from .noon ,to .2. -supp,er. .Christmas, ,toy, .'!.pron .and .food HOL}: .REDEEMER, · .tables will ,be .featured, .w.ith ,OII:AJJHAM ·many handmane articles :to ,be
'Dhe ~se:uenth ,annual ,Chnistmas -on display. The event will take
turkey; ~hoot,l!/ponsoIted..by Ithe tilace in the .church .hall on M;;Js
Holy Name .sooie1}y" \willlbe held sasoit IRoan. ,at J. .Satund!!,y .afteunoon, IDec. ·3 · .'ST. ;:JOHN lB1\PIlIIST, .at the ,Sand ,Hit, ,0££ .Route :2~, ~t:JENmRM. WJlDLl\GE M'<est ,Chatham. [GunkeYs . and lPatishioner-s of IRev. Donala other prizes ,will tbe ,a..w arded.. (Oouza 'ann ;:litieniis .. 'Jther 'parts ~f lthe lIDiocese aFe iinvlteH 'to.at Mo:re 'COU.e;ge ttent! .a 'Feception ,in' his Ihonor \to Ibe \helt! :at 18 lMonday 'night, COOU:r.s.es . 'iJl)ec.:5 iin lthe IpaIiish lhall on TM<:iin 'TIFFIN .(N.C) - iw.ithin ,the ·R-oad. RefreShm~;ts ",.. HI ·'be next .few .years more state :,601 .served. .'Father Couza has been trans':' !leges -and urii versitieswill. offer credn courses;in 'I'e!i:l,iion, :Eather · ·.lferred fliom .st. .John .:Bqptist warish ito tbe IPastor of .Sacretl 'Robert -:T. \W"elch,j>rofessor,of .re lHearlt 'Church, 'Oak Bluiifs, .and 'ligiOD 'at 'the 'Urii "l(ersi ty ·of ffi;wa' ·!this ttestimonial 'is ,sponsol'ed ;by . !for T8 ;years, ,has .prenictea ,helle tthe ~St. .lJohn -Baptist Ladies' 'in '0hio. (Guilt!. ~peaking ,at JiIeidelbeJ;g Gol lege,he said denominational (col lJMMACULl\:TE ·C0NCEPTION. leges will .come to .offer .Ireligion ::FA.LL RUiER ,courses more .acceptable .to :-stu The ICJhristmas 'pady and 'dents of other faiths. ,molithlY ,meating,of:the 'Womenfs .Iowa ,has ,had.:a ..nellgion .de (Guild twill belheld 'Monday .night, IDee. 5, ,at;8 in the rchurch hall. ,pantment ..for .39 .'year-s~and lis me 'The prqgJ:am will .consist of .a .aeh>ing Jmany u:equests .:liuom .de nominational .aoll!':ges, about ,its :\yankee s:w.qp .and .potluck Sluwer. program, he related. The officers of the Guild, .Rather W:elch :said ,the Iheight .IUD·der tthe <diliectiolllof ;Mrs. Mlll' enedinterest in religion -is .a ;garet. Charbonneau', president, ,l1esult ,of reaqgnition tthat sudh \Will be in rchinlge rof lthe ·a1ifair. ·aow-ses ,aan ,be taQght \within an 1ST. JOS:EPH, .academic disCipline and interest [F.·ALL RIVER Jin religion resulting, from tbe ecumenical movement.' Deadline for ticket purchase flor a supper to .be ser.v.ed .Satur dlay night by the \Women's (Guild · iis tod<\y. Tickets laue 'a",ciiIaJj}e ifinom. -Mrs. Alfred 'Medeiros .,and I ilVlrs...James Bradshaw.. 'IDhe:giliW :.1 ItN5.URANm AGENCY, INC. ' iif. :also sponsoring .a 'Christmas $ale tomolTQw, Frid'!y .ana :Sat- I '9.'6 \WILlIAM STREET IUrday in the school hall. .( ,NE,W 9EDF.ORD, ·MASS. 'The "Men's (Club \will !precetle ins meeting 'Duesaay, ·'Dec. 16,with 998-5153 997 -9-1<>7 ' :a .ham .and bean .sUp'per .to Which ~~ER:S"mN';6;L <SIlRWIOE ~, :all ,men (of tthe IpaJ'ish, \whether "menibel's lor mot, ,ane Jin.vited. ~!--_ _..-----~
Sees lRengnm
.DO.NAJBOIS-YERT
Wriseon's-i"n 'S'en:a:n <!:rmhlldes ,CCD"
iP:lan 'C'emete'l'y
P.r-oMaJifrsorl Pr.og:ram P-arislhl :Soc;ieties
'ELL1:OTTLAK'E (NC)-Sevell congregations here ·in 'CanadE! .ar.e 'Cm'l'ying :the .eoumenica'J Mothers, and "Home ".and 'School ~spiri.t all 'the 1W<\y to \the :grave :y.ard. .!English ;and F!rench-speak !'\ssociations. ing Catholics ;ar.e (cooperating The ·pn~gram :will .be .&pear > hoaqea:Qy lrepresentatives .of mi'th United, Anglican, Presby ttenia.u" Fentecostal .and Bible seyan "Wisconsin Sena ,Club& Milwaukee, "Mqy;faix, .Fpnd .du .<Clhapel (Churches dnconverting .:a ilO..;acre Site into .an inteure. Lac,' Kenosh,!, Racine, Sheboy rltgious eemetery4 gan 'and \Waulresha. "We're ·notaskiqg the .SenJ:a men .to ,do the work but to IPl'O j ·,ade-:'the ..mealli!;" M!>gr.DOhe/1Y :B16 iDlMiDEND NEWS;I 'notea. '''And ':we believe "the iPr-o i :gram will Jbe 'moree'ffective by :Svs:TEMADC <>work'ing ·throu.gh (Cen 'teaohers:" :sAYINGS . 'M&gr.Drip.eI)Y· said :tbe ,pilot ( , rlHVESTMEIIl :t ,,pl'QgJ:alIl IWou1.a .be ,climaxed !lext [ :SAYINGS I ~r &piil)g ,;with <a ;seties <of 'Workshop ( pntjgrann; :.for·.all. gJ:ade .and Jli;l}h [!l£SULAI ;I ~~obools fuo...Y-s:", l" . , 1¥IlBr :WINCS
.NORll~FI'LARE (NC)-'lnaugu ration 'of 'an :archdiocesan 'pilot ;prqgram 'througb 'Serra Clubs for .religious vocation 'programming .amoIlg 'grane and high school 'Conlraterrii'tY 'of 'Christian 'Doc 'tcine 'Classes 'a~a 'adult 'paJ'ish soCieties 'is 'being stutlied 'here. The prQject.is.aimed .at .sl,mplc
.mentiIlg,other phases of vqcation
work ,begun .within the ,past few .y.ears, me .said. [,hese' 'include .:efforts Of ,priests w,ho contact ,panish. scho~ls, .a committee ·of lh~gh .school :students'and an ·o~ :ganizatioD .of :~ghschool reli [gion .teacher-s.• 4M~. BoheI\:r said :Ser.r.a ,Clubs are amoqg 19l'O~PS inte~ested ,in IPllomtilliQg '\locations tin the .arch (ill.oaese. 'Sennans .are .business i .and :pnlifessional ,men ,0l1ganized wrimaili.l\y iior .aii:liqg \Vocations. lliIe ,said IUIl1iil! now :<\p'peals rhave . UPROtSTERfNG 'SffOP ,. I lDeen rmade rmostly Ito IPl.\pi:ls ,i;n ~ :cntom [Made [llJIhtiISteIllIl. (Ilumi~ , ~ tCatholic Ignade <and Ih~gh ,sohools.
iRelfPoolsternm -lQua~YiWllfkmBnsbJP' , '''mhe (emaihasis ,was tmostly ·on l1iBI:ge ~Ieotion .Fine If.abr.~ ,ChJiistian wocations :andthe .ac rWotk (Guaranteeo if.~ee Estlllui1es
ceptance of b'IPtism, grace .and "fREMOlOEUlNP (OUR 'SPECfJlL1Y" pariticular ,giffts 'gi ven ,to ,Chern loy
[992;2891 Almighty ,God," rh~e~plained. . ( [1:602 (Acushnet lAve.. 'New Beltfol'll Se:ven Clubs
,.TAV,ARES
t!
'Irhe 1Senr.ansnow mill ;llttempt
Ito lpromote \Vocations -tl1l'0ugh
tGCID lteachers ,of :si'X1th, Ise.ven·tih
,and (eighth {graders, thigh school'
:students (df ,public ,schools .and
parish groups like Ithe lHoly ,lN~meSociety., the (Chl'istian
MOHIHIJr 'G!WR£H
·BtD\I31 :ENViElt0P!S
Write ·or iAhone «»72-1322
!-
~34Seconil.$tv;eet
- Fall 'River
5.50% ~~ar
.
5,.00'%
430%
Bass Rtvel' Savings Bonk 'Bank '9y 'Mciil "We Pay 'The Postage' ":50UJH 'YARMDUTH • DENNIS .pORT • HYDOOS ,. YARMOUT.HSHOPPING PI.AlI '. ,OSTERVILlE
II I
I !
,
"
THE ANCFfOR-
Three Cardinals
Resign Dioceses
for Curi'a Posts
VATICAN CITY (NC)~Threa of the Roman. Curia ilJlave resigned from the govern ment of dioceses near Rome which were traditionallly tied f;o such offices-. Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, dean of the College of Cardinals and Prefect of the Ceremonial (;ongreg;:ttion; Giuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo-, Prefect of the Congre gation of Seminaries and Uni versities; and Benedetto Cardi [tal Aloisi Masella, Prefect of the liCongregation of Discipline of the Sacraments: resigned their dioc esan posts while retaining their J!.)ositions in the Curia. ' The Cardinals submitted their t'esignations, "from a desire to respond promptly" to provisions oJ! the papal document Ecclesiae Santae which asks that residen tial bishops offer their rel!igna tions when: they reach the- age 3f 75,. Pope Paul accepted the' resig. nations and! provided for the ad ministration of the Italian: sees. Cardinal 'J?isserant, 82, becomes. the titulal! head of Ostia; Cardi llIal Pizzarcro-, 89, of Albano; and, Cardinal M.asella,87, of Pales trina. Pope John XXIII in a docu ment "The Government of the' 'Suburbicarian Dioceses'~~ pub lished in 19l12, provided 'that the government of the seven dioceses surrounding Rome, traditionally vuled by' cardinals who also. held offices in the Roman Curia, should ,be turned over to resi \ lliential bishops and the cardinals should retain only titular titles 00 them. TIle reason gi VeIL was the pressure of the cardinals" atrial work which 'made effec . eive rule of these dioceses inef lrective. The three cardinals were ex empted from the provisions of this document, however, and it was judged' that the document would be- effective with their GUccessoj.'S. Pope Paul's accept ance of the- cardinals' resigna tions now fulfills Pope John's· , Giecree and his own motu proprio Of Aug. 2 of this year.
Thurs.,
Dec.
1, 1966
5
Diocesan Brother To Open Library
NORTH EASTON (NC)~The - Food Research <!:enter for Cath olic Institutions will open a spe" cilized library on food service next September. Brother Herman E. Zaccarelli, C:S.C:, center director, said the library will smrt with a special ized collection assembled during the last 10 years including ma terial on budgeting, food man agement and food preparation. "While designed to supply food service information require T!lents for non-profit institutions, the library will also be of educa tional assistance to the entire food service industry," Brother - Zaccarelli said. Included will be a specialized E'NC1J€ L OPEDISTS: EClitor~in-Chief' oil the New Catholic Eneyc1oRedia, which was section on government publica tions and documents from many presented to the. American Catholic Bishops' at tlieirannual conference'in Washington, diffe~ent agencies. The library is Bishop William J. McDbmild, center,. re«toll of the Catholic University of America. also will contain books, manuals, The'.other four members, of' the editorial b0ardfg ~ecutive commj:tJtee~ left 'to right" are: technical journals and trade Father Johre P;, Whalen, managing ednor; Msgr:. James A. Magner, assoaia±e' editor;. Dr. magazines, published both in Martin R...P~. McGuire, senior editor'; and David Eggenberger; representa:tive'of McGraw:. the United States and other nations. Hill, the publfsher. 'NC Photo: The Food Research Center for Catholic Institutions was opened in 1955. Instihttions throughout the nation, and college students in the greater Bbston area, have been coming to the Center for Rol'~ assistance in solving specific food service problems. As a con "Mo~ern· natural. science' hos, "It- was- the ChuI:ch above all NOTRE DAME~(NC)-A vis sequence, B l' 0 the r Zaccarelli in' part, definitely been made w. h i c h b'rouglit G!reco'-Roman iting German Cardinal has ob said, the new library will. be possible by. the Christian's culture, andl every;tlting' implicit sel'ved here' that "between the available for research without' aW;:li'eness," he a,s s e'r ted. in it" as first principles "fur the Christian faith which the Church charge; on a community service "Through the .Jewish-Christian development of modern scien professes on Hie one hand,' and basis to local colleges and insti science on the other' hand, there tific knowledge; safely-through' revelation a new orientation and tutions. ' the alerting- of the attitude of ex.ists no hostile cleavage-there the- time of wandering. of: the Research undertaken by the peoples;" the Cardinal continued, antiquity, toward the world is. no 'rivaIry-inspi'red co-exis made possible for the first time' Center indicates that more than tence-,'" Small P3.J:ticle a' scientific view' of the cosmos $6:7 billion annually is spent by J. u- L i u; s Cardinal Doepfuer, Catholic institutions in the cardinal Doepfner pointed out and· so' ushered in the age of the Archbishop of Munich a:n- d United, States for food, food ser that the- postulation. of a created sciimaes." pl'esiden t of the German Bish vice equipment, and related food would was a majolT' step, iJ: pre The-- wodd of antiquity is op's C;::onference;. discussing "The service items. Catholic institu paring the wODld for science; everywhere inhabited by gods," Church. and' ScieI'l:ce in the World he' asserted. "Man sees himself tions serve more than 10;735,144 View of the Council," traced meals daily,. Brother Zacarelli 'as a small particle in·the numen some- of the more widely puoli said. Scores iousstructure in which all cized historicaL, conflicts between things are mysterious." the C;::hurch and, sci~nce. In, PennsylvaniCl""' Man's Responsibility Church. Led Way PHILADEL,PHiIA (NC) - A The Jewish-Christian revela
WHEELING (NC) - Fathe\ Pennsylvania s tat e legislator' tion's assertion of a world cre
Tl'te- idea of IDarwin's theory Frank R: Haig, S.J., president 01 cited the need fur a state com of evolution and' its impact: on ated out of nothing was a revo Jesuit-operated Wheeling Col missioner of highen education as lutionary event, Cardinal Doepf 19th~centullY' tfmught. is an ex a principal. defect, ilY the present nel'" explained. lege here in West Virginia said a."nple- of,such a;, dispute; ne,told an Institute of Jewish Studies a- Univel'sit'y> of' Notre Dame educational structure. "This world devoid of gods, conference. this created. world,. for the first has been established as a "per J"ames· J.!'iJ. Gallagher, chair "Wow: singula1l1ytragic this,es time became the possible object manent and integral part of'the man' of the'legislaturels commit college;" RaUtH Martin Siegel 01 trangement b'e~en the Church of modern nafural science' and tee- fOtl higher education, criti _the· WoodsdaU~ Temple here has and> science' wni'cw characterized cized' the Master' Plan. for Iiigh-, technology-," he' said: B'ERLIN (NC)-The year-long Olt:i' recent pasl) must seeln' to· er Education in Pennsylvania' at been appointed director.
"In terons of revelation this eeleratioIl' all the ~hristian' mil- . a.'"lyone familiar' with the broad a 'panel discussion sponsored by world was explicitly declared. to
J!ennium. in: Poland ended at B1'a horizon of the' Cliristian West," the Commission for: Ihdependent be' the responsibility· of 'man,"
Iystok with !Ii declaration of for lie' sa i d.': the' Cardinal' noted. "The'manner , NO JOBI TOO BIG
C'o'I.l e-g:e's; all1ld' Universities giveness fOl! the communist civil' (<i::ICU), hem at·LaSalle College in which <rlJd enters into' associ .' NONE TOO SMAll
authorities by the Catholic- bish ation' with the world consists
hete: • ~ of Poland. "The main concern oil the really.; finally in this: He lets
Stefan. Cardinal Wyszynski of ' present superintendent of public the world be as it is." COl •• "rued froUb Page One Warsaw,. Poland's primate, told instnuction,;' Repl. Gallagher more than' 4.n,000 worshipers at The l?ope' was; address,ing stated. "has-- been £Or' elementary' outdoor'Mass that he and the abo-ut 40' editors, of Italian' di secondary education. Th~ real other members of the Polish oeesan week!J.ies' who had, re Main Office and Plant need now is- for' a' commissioner hierarchy forgave the communist cently organized. an; Italian Fed 95 BridSe St., lowell, Mass. I of. higher' educatlion," o1lficials for "trouble, obstacles eration OD Catholic Weeklies. LUM~ER Tel. 458-6333 and, sometimes even humiliations He said that the "kingdom' of a:nd pain" that were experienced heaven often lacks the great COMPANY' Auxiliary Plants by the Church. means the kingdom' of this earth "We take nO offense, brothers," has at its disposall We mean that BOSTON DISPENSING
Complete Line
1lle said. "We forgive you, we our Catholic cause, even in the CAMDEN, N.J.. OPTICIAN
!nave understanding for y.ou, and effort to confirm and extend it, Building Material~
Prescriptions
OCEANPORT, N.J~ we will keep for you our hearts Ulsuall~r lacks the means propor for Eyeglasses
&"1d friendliness and love as be MIAMI tionate to its merits and. its Filled . 8- SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN lOOmes Christians and the- chil needs, It lives and struggles Office Houn PAWTUCKET, R.t da'en of a baptized nation." with inadequate tools, which 9:00 - 5:CO PHILADELPHIA 99,3-2611 except: Wad. often humiliate it rather than Fri, Eve: exalt it, But is not this in- the By Appointment Handic(!l~~ed economy of the Gospel?" Room 1 :.!IIIIII11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111III III III II1111111111111111111111111111111111111111' But he cautioned that this R~h'~at 7 No. Main st., Fall River 678·0412 should not encourage laziness. SPOKANE (NC)~Two handi "Let us always seek to furnish ~ m ~ eapped pri~sts conducted lI. the good cause we serve with closed retreat for handicapped b1:!tter instruments/, he said. women at Immaculate Heart Re treat House here in the State ot 'PWMi8IN.G:. &- HEATING, INC. y.v ashington. ., SallIS and Service The priests, Father Patrick Ill. " as tor' tJomestlc' Continued from Page' One n'Ioffatt, who is totally blind, anll! , ,- ~ and Industri81 John Michelotti, who had both is· to.. indi~ate' that while' .the' Oil Borners 1Itidneys removed some years. ago, Carmelites are interested in the 995"1631 lITeside at Catholic hospitals here. salvation of the world, their con I 2283, ACUSHNET AVENUE The Legion of Mary sponsOi'OOr tribution to tms saIvation is to ~ UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN Tel. 991-9358 the retreat with nurses- in at d.r,aw themselves, apart and live' NEW BEDFORD lives ()f pra,yer and' sacrifice: ~1II111!1II11111l1l1ll1l1l1ll1l1ll1ll1l1l1l1l1l1l1l1l1l1U1I1IIIIUIIIIIIIIIIII1l1I1I1I1II1I1I1II1II1II1II11II1II1I1I1I1I1I1I111111111lH~ tendan~ ~rdinals
'He', Lets the World Be as If Is' G'er-man Cardi.nal' Notes Science'
Ecl'UCCltion
Jewish Studies
Bishops of Poland
Forgive O'fficials
:SUtLI'VAN,BROS. PRINTERS
an
FAIRHAVEN
ANTONE S. fEN«, lR.' ~
Clergy
Conduct -
~
Your Treat
K ,I N G SIZE ••
LEM'IEUX
Mon-astery
~
While Thet Last!
Maclean's Sea
'f
THE ANCHOR'-Diocese
of Fall
River-Thurs., Dec. 1, 1966
In their commendable enthusiasm to respond to the documents of Vatican Council II calling for a greater degree of responsibility and maturity, .some people are distorting these out of their true meaning and using them, to justify what is ~ in some cases - merely stupid and in others - downright wrong. . , For example. A speaker at the recent National Coun eil of Catholic Women convention in ,Miami B~ach told the women there to "act on the basis of an informed con science"-a statement that is eminently true and in com plete accord with all that Catholic theology and the Council have taught. Then she spoiled the whole presentation by adding-even though their; actions may be ignored or rep 'rimanded by those in authoritYj both ,in and out of the 'church. " Why make such a ·statement' at all, filled as i~ is with overtones of martyrdom, giving the impression that , anyone who acts with an informed cons~ience is going to be shunted aside or ha,ve his knuckles rapped by thos~.in authority?, But this seems to be the kind' of ..s tatement that all too many people love to make-and W hear. It sounds bold. It sounds challenging. It wraps the speaker in the ~Ioak of "martyrdom' for the sake of principle." It sets up the figure of one person and her conscience against all sorts of high-placed and domineering prelates., ,
:'.
j':.. ,
. ,',I
c C D By Edward P. McDonagb '
TOTAL EFFOR'J-PART D In a previous eolumn 'We diseusse'd some Gf the - rent trends in CCD High School operations that welle noted by Sister Rose Angela dUJ'W ing her attendance at a Cate ehetical Conference this Sum mer. What follows is a continua. tion of these notes. TEXTS. No one text can servti the needs of every parish in,the °diocese because of the existence of varied sub-:cultures in aJlEv. given geographical area. Nevel' theless, ,texts in use should ~ 'approved by appropriate dioc esan authority without doing damage to an essential freedom of choice.
em..
"
• WHEN AND
WHER~.
WhfIe
we might, deplore the fact, we would still do well to remember that, in the opinion of Teen .. Agers, educators take prime time from them. The CCD School This is not the message given ,by the Council. after School schedule is a further fr@~ , . The Council sees the Church as the Family of. God intrusion into the available time one family, embracing Pope and ,bishops and sisters and Continued from Page One, in observing it are present. It ap of the students and it militates priests and brothers and laymen and laywomen, all united ment stipulated. The Pope in- plied to all days of the year ex .. our gaining their attention. 0Ui' to Christ and to one another, all aware that they are the stead continued the': dispensation . cept Good Friday, "in so far as it only answer is' to make our is possible to keep tile law on . classes interesting and full ,o! Church. But the Chur~h must be understood in .both for another 20 years. . 1852: The bishops form a that day." meaning. senses-as the continuation of Christ in the world, divine, committee to study, what dispen1964-1965: The Vatican grants The familiar class-room situ . and as an assembly of fallible human bei:vgs, subject to sations' might be ;lccorded from dispensations from the Church ation must be re-evaluated. the Lenten fast for the western law on abstinence from meat on Many of our traditional notions sin ~md ever in need of renewal and purification. dioceses. The Vatican answered Fridays and other days, to Cath ,of religious education need reo Those in authority that th~ sister speaks of are, pre that the bishops should take care olic passengers and crews of va thinking if we are to reach as sumably, the bishops of the' Church. They are men taKen regarding "the growth of excep- rious airlines operating in and many students as possible. Sug from among men, but they are, by the will of God' and tions as well as the danger that from the U. S. The ."home port" gested approaches are speakel'Sil pan e Is;' discussions; group consecration of the sacrament of Holy Orders, the teachers lay in a. too rigid 'national uni- bishop would grant the dispensa 'of Christ's Cliurch, the, apostles, the men charged with formity. Everything that tended tion because of difficulties in dynamics suqh as role-playing; . by accumulatfon of exceptions preparing in-flight menus. liturgical a n ~ para-liturgical the mission of Christianizing the world.. And while i:t may to give the American Church the 1965: On Oct. 21, Pope Paul, services such as recommended sound daringly bold to "take shots at them," it is the semblance of a national- church met with the presidents or rep by Vatican II in the 'Instruction resentatives of more than 100 on the Liturgy; retreats with 8 action of a person who really doesn't know what the was to be avoided." 1866: The Bishops ask that national and regional bishops' wf>rkshop-community-life inte.. Church is. est; days of recollection; partio Rome grant a universal dispen- conferences and heads of ,reU sation from the fast on the Sat- gious orders. He made known pation in parish liturgical' ~ . , .0 urdays of Lent.. The . answer '--his proposals to mitigate the. vices such as Baptisms, wakes, , '. During 'th"e"."recent ·s~og.-,a ~,om~n' driver thought. ·to . . asked that each'bishop'make his' laws of fast and abstinence etc., all to acquire a' greater , own petition stating the reasons' '1966:' 0n Feb. 17, the Pope is-" sense 'of' Christian € o mmunity.. , get safely through a city ·by following carefully the driver, for the dispensation~ .' . sued his Apostolic Constitution ,. CatecJ;Usts: We' all 'long' f • . ; Bishops, received' the'ipOwer;',· on Fast'and Abstinence-"Poen the day when we will be able .. , in 'front of her.' Evell though visibility was -:Poor, she con.. "c'entrated"on ~'tiie tail-lightS of the 'automooiie ·up"a.head 'as'stated'in Canon Law,tbdis.:. itemini". Each episcopal confer sel~tour Gatechists using,as • .. -a~d was cOri!m'l-hilating', herself on gett'i~g' 'quite well' . ~nse ~heir di~c(esans fr,om. li1);., ence '(nation;il or .regionalbody primar.y qualifIcatIon- theabiJi1; , . . . . "'" stmence'onFndays when' a'Da-' 'of bishops), taking into account of a persont6 communicate wi• ." -when, the lead; car·' stopped. When : th-atdnve got out sh~.. tiona! or civic' holiday feli- on' the local' circumstances of en the students entrusted to him. "asked why -he ,'hau stopped and was informed' that· she'had: Uiat day; . vironment and custom, was te ·No .amount ,of training courses "followed him into his garage. in his'oack y:ard... ,."., ' . ' 1945: ,At the beginiling of form its own norms. ~'Substitute ,.. will make a Cate'chist out of-·. , . ' . . . . , ., . '.. -,, " ' , .., ' , : ' . World War II Pope Pius granted abstinence and fast wlto]]y or in, uncommu.nicative· or opinionated People WIll ~oI1Q~ the le~der. And they,. should be sure , to all the bishops of the world part with other forms· of peni-.. person. So, as you recruit, kee» that the' leader ·IS gomg. where they want to, go." the right to dispense 'from absti- tence and especially works' of in mind the most fruitful·sources. 'Rightnow many leads are being. cast. ,out iis'regards nerice on all days of the' year' charity and exercises of piety,", They are businessmen and WOlD Christmas. Some.' of these ieads WIll brillJ~, peopl~ to'a ex~ept Ash Wednesday and Good the papal letter stated. en, laity: with .teacher-trainin& Fnday 1966: Nov. 27 ushers in the priests and sisters and profe& Christmas that is filled with presents, trees, tinsel,' booze, 1949'T'h b " I" . new regulations for the U. S. sional men and women. Ofteli 'd Ch' t :, e ~l ove genera perrIS mas. Dlission was restricted. Penance is absolutely necessary the latter have interests beyond a h 0 II ay The Church. is giving' a iead, too. To a Christmas 1951: The U. S. bishops agree and Friday will always be the their work which will be of 'use that will bring . one to a' crib, a malden and a m'an, and on n.orms. tending towar~ uni-, ,traditional day of penance; meat to CCD. f t f t d b ti Maintenance of high effectiv may be eaten on all Fridays· Jesus Christ orml.y 10 as an a s n~nce ahd other. days except the Fri I'tv . 'to , a holyday " 'Christmas rules 10 the U. S. 'rhe regulabons ... and morale depends on'.' The time to start following the lead is now. The only are only suggestions, however, days of.Lent and Ash Wednes 1) Continued training. Bas k way to find Christ at Christmas is to start livjng Him' in and each bishop is to de~ide if day; the fast'must also be ob courses in Methods and Doctrine one's life here ,and now. t~e norms, are to be applIed in served on' Ash Wednesday and should be considered a minimum hIS own dIOcese.
Good Friday. prerequisite. Advanced courses, 1956: A repeat" 'of 1951.
given periodically in the diocese" . ". . U· • P'on ders are strongly urged: i957: The Military Ordinariate nlverslty 2) .Faculty communication. Fre- . is given diocesan status and.the Reli.gion. Center quent meetings of all involved members of the Armed Services, , in the CCD School program will . in wartime and on other occa LOUISVILLE (NC)-The city encourage an exchange of ,ideas. sions when conditions warrant, it, operated University of Louisville identify problems and bring • are exempt from the laws of fast here is exploring the possibility collection' of talent to bear aD and abstinence. of establishing a center for re-' their solutions. .3) Spiritual Renewal. T hoe / 1962: Merchant seamen are ligious studies.. nClC1r,l\l NEW~PAPE~. OF THE DIOCESE OF FALli PiVER granted a dispensation by Pope The .program would include Priest-Director should 'be JB direct contact with the teachers. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of th~ Diocese of Fall River John XXIII from the Church law religious ,education on under of abstinence ·when difficulties' graduate arid graduate levels,' continually giving encourage.. 410 Highland Avenue
and would be open to students ment and direction as a motiva from •• IH • I other colleges in the area. tion in the difficult task .. . Fatl River, Mass. 02722 675·715]
V ISlt .osplta Dr. Melvin Greer, philosophy teaching. In addition, offer OJ) MONTREAL (NC) - P a u 1 department chairman, is spear portunities for Spiritual Reviial PUBLISHER heading the project. Theology ization such as week-end retreat. Emile Cardinal Leger of Mon Most, Rev. iames L: ,'Connolly, D.O., PhE>." .. treal and Ailglican Bishop R. and philosophy teachers, under :l[or Catechists. Several parish. Kenneth. Maguire of Montreal . the plan, would be drawn from might profitably cooperate • GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER are now frequent companions.' the area. . the planning of such a weeken4. Rt. Rev. Daniel, F. Shalloo, M.A. . Rev. John P. Driscoll , , ,They visite~ the Shriners 1J0spi There are three Catholic lib Beyond the parish level, there
tal for Grippled Children here, eral arts, colleges in Louisville,' should be key priests, sisters aud
MANAGING EDITOR chatting and playing with flhe plus Catholic, Presbyterian and lay people, trained·in Catechetice
Hugh J. Golden Baptist semiI;Iaries. Turn to Pa~e Seven ;young patients.
• T"h' L' d' F IIoWIng .' e ea er,
:,.,
Advent
'.
.
.
'aiong
ANCHOR
a). Sd.. -A·bstrinence History ]189 to 1966
i, Top' Science S"udents .at Stang I
Will Join
Ch~i.tmas,Ho~iday.
\
ReCiffirms Stand Atjr \bo,tion
i in Florida Travel-Seminar I . ' . !
'Who says scholarship doesn't pay oft?' Not William Muldoon, John Fitzgerald and Suzanne Potvin of Bishop Stang High in North Dartmouth. Come December '23, whew
, the rest of us will be buttoning up against Winter's blast; they'll be off for Florida· to ' join' 'over 100 science 'stu- honors and, honorable mention '-<I t' f 50 h' 'I went to six girls. \<lien s rom. ,sc 00 S Girls' at St. Joseph's' Prep, '
, throughout the Northeast in School; Fall River, are at work an 11 day Florida science study on a concert, "Christmas
0
l'ilrog ram . Echoes," which will be given at 'The holiday program will in- 2:30.Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11 elude 'travel throughQut FIO'ricla, il,l; ,'Blesseq Sacrament parish 'eJ.imaxed by a science conventi'OD hall. '~'Don't miss it!" say they. in Miami. The Stangites wiU,at:Winners of firsfhonors at Holy ,tehd 'seminars at Cape Kennedy F~hy High in New Bedford for "~ndu'cted by NASA scientists the, 'first marking period are 'and will take natural history KAten Bowerli,Kathleen Ku..' "'tours into the legendary EV'er- rowski, Karl Fryzel and Richard , glades. Kurowski. It' seems to help to" '
,,' '1'hey'll appear on televlsroD have "K" as one of your initials, -'ahd be presented with honorary at HF;' Anyway, all these K-Kids , ~tizenship certificates from the had' a 93 or better over-all aver state of Florida. as well as' a age: acroll of friendship from the city Eighteen juniors at Mt. St.
@f Miami. Mary AcademY', Fall River, have
Scientific organizations and been induCted into the National
universities which will send rep- Honor Society, McAuley Chap
resentatives to address, con,ven- ter. The characteristics of schol
tion sessions of the students :in- arship, service, leadership and
elude the Universities of Miami character were discussed by N~S RECEIVES COMMENDATION: Mother Jane Frances, 'and South Florida, Florida,' In,. leaders in terms of the achieve':' stitute of Technology, Archbold ments of Mother McAuley, Ma-' principal at Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, congratulates Biological Research Station, the dame Curie, Florence Nightin Suzanne Lagarde on letter of commendation received as a American Cancer Society, the 'gale, Indira Gandhi and Jace:tue result of National Merif Scholarship examination. ' Tropical Atlantic Biological Lab- " line Kennedy. A reception. for oratory of the U. S. Fish 'and new members and for the faculty And plays are upcoming at Wildlife Service, and the Izaak followed. Upcoming NHS activ':' first issue of Hy Fy Spy, recently :Walton League. ities are trips to Nazareth Hall circulated at Holy Family High. both Prevost and Jesus-Mary. As the students travel through and a home for the aged. They plan three more issues dur- Prevost's offering will be a' Florida' they'll' hear lectures by Senior Philip Sabra at Fall ing the school year; And glee parody on Macbeth, with Rich noted biologists and geologists River's Prevost High has been ,club officers 'have been elected ard Desrosiers, Ronald Guille mette, Edmond Tremblay, Don who'll speak as busses cover the mimed winner of the Bausch and at the New Bedford school, in !llighways. Evenings will be de- Lomb. Science Award and is eluding Dennis Kennedy, presi ald Cummings, Gerard Beau voted to seminars, but there'll eligible for competition for sci- dent; Claire Sherbino, vice chesne and Normand Martel in also be time for swimming, fish- ence scholarships at the Univer- president; and Theresa Hart, leading roles. Jesus-Mary will present "The Trouble with Moth ing and relaxation. New Year's sity of Rochester. Also at Pre- treasurer. Eve will be ushered in at Cape vost, the Christian Youth MoveJesus-Mary students are in ers" Sunday, Dec. 18 in the Kennedy and the entire holiday ment is preparing the first issue their kitchens these days, con- school auditorium, with Lucille pro'gram of fun and work will be of the Diocesan sodality union's' cocting homemade fudge, which Phenix and Alice Dumoulin in star parts.' , , filmed by the Florida Develop- paper, "Chi Rho." Editorship of will be boxed and s,old by sopho ment ,Commission. , ' this journal passes from one mores, with proceeds going to Chriistmas Concerts , Most of the participating stu- member' school to another, and the ;,chapel renovation fund at "dents, note program officials, are "'Prevost's first in line· this year. ,the,academy: ': The glee club at St. Anthony's ,'members of. Future Scientist' of .. 'j ",Teenagers Spoiled ' ",AStAl:atherine's hat contest at High will include in its Christ'. 'America Clubs and many,' are .Nre'teens spoiled; asks a Si!r- ;"Mt"St, lv,[ary's ended with Moun- ,maspro~~am .Noel au Flam~au, \Winners"of local, state and .na- "!vey'reported on' fn Essa,'school ;,.tie Joan. Flanagan ,hiking honors "Pab~t!):jthe Remdeer, ,A MUSical, '.. tional sci'ence competitiohs.' ""p~perat'St. 'Anthony's High, New for the pliettiest, bonnet; Mary ",Ch,li~st~"IS ': ca;r~ and Merry :', Babemas Tropaew'n ".' "Bedford: Yes; 'Slly si>rlu~: teens "Jane SuHivan for the funniest; ;};:~n,~tma~.,,~a~mgthe club ~ce "Latinis1$ at' Dominican' Aead- 'ate' :parent-pamperi'!d, h'ave' too '.\and: Denise, "St. Laurent, most: Rene Je~te,}m~~~aen~; Da.w.n Ca "''0my 'ate, proud of a ,trophy,:I'inany'lux'uriesand,toomuchfree :original. "'" Vice-president, Claire Poi :.- ~arned from the Association'for ''''titne; wHich'they waste:'-'No,"say .. I! J3asketbal-l's. under way "here, '" ,tras: 'Se<lret'ary'; 'Roger Gaudreau, " 'the 'Pri>moti'on"of ,the 'Study' of ,. 'others! teens are under' unprece-, ,there and, ,everywhere. Practice ,,:treasurer.,' ,; ""Latin for' outstanding test setkes"; dented 'pk'essure 'to succeed'lind at the Mount is under direction ';",1 At:Mt.dilt Mary ,the orchestra ""Iin'ade' 'by, "graduate 'Madeleine "'ll'nb"on the' Whole resporlding'" of;,Miss,Margot Lavoie, coach; and glee cluR,will combine in a :, 'Souza and seniors Joyce' Macek "well" "they earn their" extra" ,and, ~t'Do:minican Academy, Miss pcogr~m to be offered Sunday, ~"and Therese' Chouinard. 'The 'm:()n~)< by,taking on' 'spare time :,:Anna,Ferris',' an ass'istant,coach I 'Dec.' 18. 'Betty Ann Picard will ·""oos1$ were' taken last YeaII', 'but: I jobs; :}'nd'such activities as 'Peace ,;at Dur.fee ,High School, is help- narrate scroipture selections. 'the trophy is a new arrival' at 'Corps work and participation in' ing ,with, team tryouts as DA's Alsl;) at the :M:ount, the science the Fall River school. civil rights activities show their regular coach convalesces from cl1.J.b plans a field trip to an area Still in the line of scholarship, dedication to high ideals. What's a foot injury. brewery this month. Sadly, no Jesus-Ma.ry Aca?emy ~as~n- your opinion? ' ,Edmond Tremblay is debate samples will be offered. nounced lt~ honoI: roll, wlth hIgh Dom!nican Academy's student club president at Prevost and Lots of speeches at Holy Fam honors g~\llg ~o Suzanne .La- 'council is looking towards next ,Rene Boulay will serve as libra- ily.' Marine recruiting officers garde, semor; Dlane Dugal, Jun-' S'uminer and raising money to rian, for the group. showed students a fHm on maior; and Doris Desrosiers, sopho-' send a representative to a UMass ' "
,mara,
~.Th~en~~~~S~~r~~.~~.~' ";,~~[D)t.Td@fr:r@~ lE*~s'@:lfQ"':'~~~~e~l~~~~:fe~~rm~~~oo.~ ~~,
7
Tt1E ANCHOR- Thurs., Dec. 1, 1966
Sp _,C)-The Puerto
Ric, .. 1 Association's firm stand "'bainst criminal abortion and expulsion of any member convicted of such practice was reiterated here by the group's new president. ' Dr. Luis 'F, Izquierdo Mora
told a press conference: "There is no place in the medical asso ciation .lor these men, who are not physicians for us when they practice criminal abortions." , Dr. Izquierdo recalled the as sociation's standing $10,000 re ward to any person producing evidence which leads to convic tion of a physician for practicing a criminal abortion. He also recalled a resolution
passed by the association urging the Department of Justice to' boost its efforts in curbing abor tions. rine life, then answered ques
tions about the same; David
Lawrence, representing UMass,
spoke oil admission require
ments; Mrs. Carl Sector of Bur
bank Hospital, Fitchburg, spoke
on nursing as a profession; and
James Murphy and John W.
Heap 0:" the U. S. Post Office dis cussed the importance of using
zip codes on mailing addresses.
Feehanites visited the United
States' oldest synagogue last
month, the Touro Synagogue in
Newport. Also at the Attleboro
school, five students have been
chosen as representatives at the
first Diocesan Math Meet, which
will be held Thursday, Dec. 15
at Stang High.
Dominican Academy's year
book, Dominilog, was one of two
yearbooks from Massachusetts to
win First Honors in the annual
ratings issued by the Catholic
School Press Association. And
at the end of last school year,
Patricia .Niedbala of DA was the
only', student in Massachusetts to
receive the Apostle of the Word
, award from the association. The
,honor was" received by student jOlj.rnalists from 48 high schools, . colleges and, universities.. . ,The Prevost Maple Leaf' hall begun a new ieatur~potlighting 'outstanding seniors. F1rst honors: Robert Lambal~t. Also at Pre vost, the NHS Will holdinquc 'tion rites Tuesday, Dec. 13 and a Cliristmas assembly Friday, Dec. 23.
~. H.Sen«!lte MANCHESTER (NC)-Pciesta
of the Manchester (N.H.) Di~
ocese are planning a priests'
senate at the suggestion 01
Bishop Ernest J. Primeau.
'1~llro~~~I;r~~~'~~~::::~~':~~':':'~"':'~:1:':'~:.:':~::~::~~~'I "'Il~IC'·n~M\~ ~D, 'm. . ~.,. E
' raising projects: a 'wstry sale in,~
; ,
.. n", , [l1IlI / '....on mue ,rom Page ix' her senior art appreciation stu- ffllfill umwlI & r ~ L1.m[j !!J 'by the diocese ,to serve, as a 're- dents are planning a trip to Your investment In the Society of the Divine Word Annuity 69urce for the entire, diocese. ~hode" Island School of, Design
Plan will provide generous interest palfments for life, with
"There exist fine Catechetical Friday; Dec. 9. And at 7 Monday . ,
'Training Centers in such places night, Dec. 5, "The Parable" will ' J'
regular checks coming to you every six months. You will
Marquette, University; Ca'th- be shown in DA's auditorium. " also share in spiritual be~eflts and gain personal
"olic University and Manhatian 'Sponsoring sodalists invite one
satisfaction in the knOWledge that your money is helping the College, to name but a few. and 'im to attend. , cause of Christ all over the wond. Certain tax' advantages Both the parish and the Diocese 'Recently elected' officerS of also combine to improve the financial return of an would contribute to this tl,'aining "the' Senior boys' sodality at Stang
nnd both reap the benefits: are John Carreiro, prefeCt; Rob- '
'SINCE
So goes a rough summary of ert Powell, 'vice-prefect; Richard' Sister's 'notes. We are indebted McNally, treasurer. And Stangite ,1,904
to her. Lo'uise Durant is receiving plau mall coupon today for addltlona/lnformatlon dits fof her third place medal! By now you should have firm 'won at a speech festival held m
Society of the Divine Word '
plans for participation in the Holyoke. • Girard, Pennsylvania Dept. L "?l •
'CCD Leadership Day PI"ogram Budding Essayists' 'at Bishop Stang' High, North, ,',' Essays of 45 Feehan studentlS,
Please send: information on IIln SVD Annuity Dartmouth, December 10tb~· .. "ia;'~ beep. accepted for pub.lica-' ; '" ,Co~!ra~.ln the,amount of $ , • If you are interested in retion in a semi-annual anthology. .... '~
.'eeivirig a CCD'Diocesan news- ,~Yo\1ng ~erica Speaks." 1n • • N(\me, AgO.
letter which will begin publl- ,,'chided'. will be the work of 121
• Address ' . cation shortly, please send' your ' sertior's; 15 juniors and 18 sopho- . " III ' _ 'name, aqdress imd Zip Code to""'mores. '" ,:' Il'~~.J~~~~~~~ CIty St~te Zlp# - -. . lln~ at 5 Hunting Street, Nol1h Joanne Porter and Marg~ret Attleboro, Mass., 02760. Medeiros are responsible for 1;,00 ,
'as
Sl':D. Annnity'Contract
-<, . \ / " : ( " r---------------.. =
I
t
I.
I
..
I •
p
8
THE
ANCHOR-Dioces~ of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 1,
Nuns' Lectures'
1.966
".
P:= (~puJ~rn_
Hatma!dlT1lg IPwvesAdvel1lhl1i"O!;Bs
.
For Houscew8ves,
=."
here have launched an adult ed
P(j)~Dcem~n
By Mary Tinley Daly ~here did you get that hat?" asked the swinging tune of the 1900's 'when hats were hats and no real lady appeared in public 'without one. Laden' with plumes and flowers,. :velv.etsand laces, such millinery prompted /the
~~~~~~~ p~~~~~~ :~dt~~efrec~~ tures have been attracting aue.. iences of some 200 people. The nuns, Sister Elaine Marie add Sister Simone, are theologY, instructors at ;Loretto Heights College. They have found thehi' adult students willing to extend the lecture period beyond the!. normal class time. Each hour-long lecture is foi lowed by a break and then 0 question and answer period. Sis.. tel' Elaine Marie reports that too interest in the Second V::itica!l Council is dem'onstrated by tbcl fact that very few people lea~Q ..during the break and the ques tion period lasts from an hoUr. to an' hour and a half. ; i Sister Simone ados that "Cath olie men and women have alOe'
. of questions they ~ould like ·ttl
PLANNING .CHARITY BALL:· New. Bedford. Area. ask and they'seem 'gratefuI" i9i'
members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic' Women .the opp'ortunit.y." . . . . . ranging for fhe annual Bishop's Charity Ball on Jan. 11 This is a good sign' !for the at Lincoln Park al:e, seated: ·Miss Helen McCoy, St. Law..; . Church, according to the Siste. . . . . . ' 'W .. , .
renee'S, New Bedford; Miss Lydia Pacheco, St.John's,. New·' of Lor~tto, who. S~YS,.' ~ ~, .
Bed~ord; 'Mrs. Emmet AI~on!l, ..St. George's,Westport....': ::~~~kfu~~ ~:i~~tI:ri' ~~ti;d=' :,
.Standing: Mrs. James W. LeltPt, Holy Name,. New Bedford;. ' . l e v ' e l . " ' · ''.'.
. Miss Kathleen Roche, Our Lady of Fatima; New.Bedford. Sister' Elaine Marie adds that .. .. the're "has been a. reorientation ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . .in theo~ogical education since' '.' . . . . '.: . ' ." . . . Vatican II. The" Chui-Cli' is con-' . fronted v.vith its reai responsibi).:.' '. :'" .'::.. ' . '. '. '.' .' ity to give realans:Wers to 'real '.... . ~ By MARILYN RODERICK ~ . , problems which confront re8l '" . p~ople."· ( . '.1
]pOet Arthur J. Lamb to put cade hat in front of a mirror words into the beak of . the pulled all the drapes out of i~; maucy little bird at(jp Nellie's the rest of us pricked our fingen; :hat: "He don't know Nellie and sat back aghast. .]like I do!" In this era 'of nearRaided? This innocuous ·little · hatlessness, result ))0 doubt of group? bouffant styles "Now that's real cute," the of hairdos, Nel'big pohceman grinned. '.'that · lie's saucy little . funny .little doo-dad. is real cu~e. 'bird and other Think I could .join the :-Class? My ·heady accoutre wife's already m-ember and I · $ents of' those was waiting for her outside,but aays have all this looks like funJ' Upsho't? A co-ed )nillinery passed from the · mod .picture. class, of a~i thjngs! , Only we ~f What did our newest, most un.,. ...... ld g conventional memper want to tackle? Certainly not apolice"' - ...e 0 er· en-· eration "take man's'cap but a couple o,:£warm · to"at not hats, and . for an. aesthetic reason:., headgears for his daughteJ;s who . ..... b~t a practica' 0l1 e : our aging ride'motorcycles--:"the kind of" . 1Irated hair doesn't protect our thing' that wo.n't wrap them domes get cold. selves into their. eyes." . MrS'. Filiherti was equal 10 il.. headful of thinning, tease 4, the occasion, with patterns for and spray-saturated hair does~'f jersey headpieces to keep those protect our brains from freezing... motorcyclists warm and with as.Winter winds whip. Moreover, '. eyes unencumbered:Mrs. Police with still enough vanity left, we' man did the sewing, but it was want those protective head. cov':'·.< Mr. Policeman who did the cut erings to do more than merely" ting, the shaping andmadepres-' protect-we want 'em to flatter! entation of his gifts. . Undoubtedly it was this same, The brief co-ed intervalwa's " psychological need that induced.. lively but now we're back just each one of us, a dozen women, to· distaff membership, learning This 'column is slanted tow'ards be like a breath of fresh air to . lhree Catholic College~'" to respond to a newspaper invi more tricks of the trade with' women, but if you are a very a woman who spends most of her In U.S. Program tation for a hat-making class.' every session.· We find ourselves smart wife you'll manage to waking hours within her, own WASHINGTON (NC) -Three Sounded like fun. It was-and is. curiously studying the hats of leave it around for friend hus four walls;' and as one of my Catholic colleges are included iJlll "No use wasting your time ladies we see on the street, in the band to read, perhaps some feminine friends always says, a new educational ·research pro eon c 0 c tin g bargain-base theater, even in church. We where' between the sports page "It's much cheaper than a gram of the U. S. Department of' ment hats, girls," the teacher, haunt remnant counters, pfcking and the finan psychiatrist." Health, Education, and Welfare Mrs. Vera Filiberti, told us. We up for the traditional "song" cial page. The Since this is a fashionYcolumn, office of education. I mustn't forget to mention the liked 'her idea and we loved be those three-four.th yard lengths reason is that Manhattanville College of tbe ing called "girls." it takeS to concoct a hat. 0 n e 0 f the gift of clothing. In my budget Sacred Heart, Purchase, N. Y"; Beautiful Fabt:ics weAcnadl'l~wl.titthhrtl~fet_poefnum·roiOsUtshnoeUssse._. bones of con conscious family, Christmas ap . . tention a ire d . . pears. to be a perfect time for Mary College, Bismarck, N. D.. Awkward at first, we entered. wives, we find ourselves effect most frequently mother's wardrobe to get a lift. and Maryinount Junior College, a world of the until-then, un-. ing a triple play with those by wives at this Here' again, however, there ." Arlington, Va., are among insti-" known. That unknown was a' dowdy old Win'ter coats hanging ..' season is the should be a word of caution to, tutions included in the program world of beautiful fabrics: bro~ in the closet: f, shorten and' '. gift-giving hab well-mealling busbands that the, known 'as consol'tium research' development (CORD), HEW'lJ .. · cades, velvets, velours, crisp taf make them more stylish; . i. use as of the i l' sweater and skirt tQat the sales :leta, butter-soft felts, clingy d\! the cut-off material for a' hat;: . 'spouses. The lady helps you pick out Dec. 17 . office of education' announced•. , vellYJcs. We learned of imagina-.. 3.. save the price of both a new" consensus seems may well be selling for half The program links groups of" tive styling, feathers and ho.w .to. coat and a new, hat. 10 be that most· price' by Dec. 30. small colleges which pool their handle them, fur and how to .So, "where did' you get that" males don't give a serious The after Christmas mal'k-. talents, resources and facilities'-; manage it, sticky-stiff buskram hat?" We made it! . thought to what they're going downs are generally excellent,.. for work in educational research." , and how to tame it how to use ,.'. to . buy for their better halves. only in most families the holiday pellum and our husbands" old tee Cardinal, First lady We hear such .statements as "He' expenditures have left little ex Novitiate F'rierids .." shirts as underfilling for our' hands me a check the night be tra cash to take advantage ot hats. We,nQ longer felt. like' Cited' for HUl11.anity .,. fore Christmas and generously them. 'A very smart spouse ''l'heFriends of the Presenta';"': Anne Boleyn "~i.th her head NEW YORK (NC) _ Francis (he' thinks) says 'Buy yourself would take advantage of this tion of Mary Novitiate will spon tucked beneath her arm" as we Cardl'nal Spellman of New York· al·ttl t H oney, ' or "A k Id ' h'IS WI'fe a sor a display of Christmas items l e presen, now e ge an dgive' came to class, complete with our and Mrs.. Lyndon B. Johnson sewiIlg machine - what am I gift certificate for her favorite from 9 to 6 Sunday, Dec. 4 at St. blockheads: the straight head, were selected for National Insti ever going to do with a sewing store along with a small' token Anne's School of Nursing audi the bubble, the pillbox and' ~l tu'te of SCl'ences 1966 gold. medal mac h'lI1e-h e k nows I can 't even suc h as a b ottle of pel'fume so torium, Forest Street, Fall River.. th~ rest. . . awards. stand sewing on buttons!" that h~r side of the tree wouldn't Others 'cl'ted for awards were I k t 00 b are. 'Twas' a world of steam 'and While it's not the gift, but the 00 press, pull and block, size and comedian Danny Kaye; Gen; thought, as the saying goes, As a' parting word of advice to WEAR bm'sh, sew and '~hape, "keep David Sarnoff, Radio .Corpora:':', many men, even those that give.' the'husband who is truly trying" .: .S.hoes That. ':Fit that true bias," "widen a 'bit tion of America. board chairman;' the gift some thought, don't seem to think of a gift th:itwould be more for the shape 01 the·"facl:L"· and" Keith' Funston,' retiffng, really to know' their wives. most '.phi'asing to his wife, try "iHE FAMILY SHOE .STORE" And as we worked we talked" president. of the New York Stock Underneath the harried exterior. to remember the things she liked woman-talk in a woman's world Exchange. . ." of a busy m.other and home- when you were courting or first . for ·those Saturday mornings~ The .awards for. "distinguished maker' may lurk the soul of a marrie4. She probably has':!'t service to humanity" WiJr..be pre':' Mata' 'Hari who would like. changed ~hat much in her likes Policema'n Appears 'Until one. day *. *, • from '. ,~i~. ~~~:. at ~pe" i.n . s.~itute's ~nri.u~l. nothing better than along 'ele- ,. or disli~es s!nce. then, only ~ow: 43:FOURTH STREET the doorway of, our classroom gant .housecoat to make' her' feel .. 8h~ IT\ay. n.ot have .the ti~e 01' .Fall River OS 8-581 , '.' emerged, the fOl'm of ~. Dig S·,. ., ". I ,'feminilie :when' all ·the '''IndianS'' ; money. to jndu1ge t~em. • . Policeman""': biggest· policeman :.. '. em,IJlc::irs t~. "Expore. are put 'to bed: Some ~women .. ,:, .. ' .. we've seen since the da.y~e got Management Concerns adore' eooklng . and would love'· ir--~-_,~,~~~----~~,:""""---"",!,,--- ,",-!,,,",,!,,""''-P'6 1 . that .. ~NC) ·· ' -.. Manage-kitchen ' . being, 'gifted with' Ui~tim'usual .. H··,.·.·.·._. ,,',R' $fQ·.U'· . . . . parking ticket. . , ., . "C'HI'A'AG'0· . v. gadget,o';e 1A'o'ul~ The 'lad;y bl~ckliig a red felt me.iit'll De'eper Conceri'dor1967:"qiake too big a"dentiri the steamed her ha~d.<lsw.e~l a.s her:.: In Irrdustry;the Na'tionand the' )~udget to:buj; -for 'iheIi:ls~lve~'. '.' :;' ::' ~', Rt: ~. at. The -Narrows in ,North Westpo."':" .! '~':" . pat; the .Ia~y pulling. the ,green' W:Ql'~d ·will. be exploredhete in 0,11' .t~eother hand,thel:ifis 'the ,.... ,. : ' . . . ' ., "; · ha~ ..down oJ} a l?~ock 8~ht. the ll.:t~ree;-day·m~eti'nlrWhiClhiVi)lgir~ Who. ",ouldn.'( be c~.ugh~ . ' l' .Wh.ete. The fabnc; the gIrl tr~1ng on a bro- bring 'together business' execu;' ·.qead 'in the kitchen if she didn't .. ~"tire .I;amily· - tiv.es;jjH~nagement scho~arsand ·.haveto, anq for 'this ·wife appli . ,Can .~ine .. theologians from the' United ances are .not the pe'rf~et gift BenedicHne bbl6f~ States, Europe and Latin A'mer":item: . Economically Oblates of st. Benedict will' ica. ." . ,". '. One of the most. appreciated hold a chapter meeting Saturday The management seminar will afternoon, Dec. 3 at Portsmouth' 'be· sPolisored. by the Nation'aI gifts imaginable and' one I'm FOR Priory, Rho~e IsJand. The meet- .. Conference of Christian Employ-: .sure few husbands would. even RESER~ ATlONS . give a second-thought to, is a ing will begin at 4 with Mass, ers and ·Managers, an education PHONE ;.' followed . by' a 'conference:' A ' al organization founded In 1959 small trip for the two of them Communion SUPPel' will 'be to study the means· of applying minus the children.· Even· a 675·7185 " serv~d at 6. Friendso~ D1ell),bers <?hristia~, m.or~.1 " principles to ,weekt;lndin Ne~ York.Qr Boston for a change of scenery. would ;;. ,;"_,,;,,,;, , are invited. business and industry'. .
a
ar-
WORL'D OF FA'S'HION''. .'.' WHAT TO BUY HER ".
'John's Shoe. Store
an
W.·.·. IT:··E S'· ,·F·.o·
v.;.,~
"'.'y
m'
'e:
~
__,··.Q·"f_."
,
'
9
Make St."N,ich~las Day Spiritual Break in Frantic :Holiday Rush
'Uft:
By Joseph anc!!, Marilyn Roderick Most hobbies have theiK' unpleasant side and gardening b nQ exception. One of the difficulties in any garden is 'G?ne unwelcome pests which tli"y to share its bounty. Decay i':rng matter in the compost heap gives off heat sufficient ,1';:!) keep a family' of rodents the kindly saint who 'was the '\;:Tarm for the Winter; seeds first Santa Claus. Very little is
mroql the bird feeders are actually known about this gener
mtrown to the, ground where ous man's early life except ,that
lin Parishes.
ANCHOR-, ,
Thu:s., De¢.
T I
1966
Racial Programs BRIDGEl.'ORT (NC) - The 8'1' parishes of the :Bridgeport dio cese have been asked to take steps toward promotion of "rea! racial understanding and the de struction of the walls that preju dice has built for, a hundred years." The Bishop's Commission on Human Relations, a lay-clergy group established by Bishop Walter W. 'Curtis of Bridgeporl to advise him in the race rela tions field, has sent a manual 011 race relations'to every pastor. , Th~ m~nl;l'al outlines 'a sweeping program to bring the individual Catholic into ,the struggle for'ra cial'~itaIH:~:a!ld ~,iT!Points the ,; pa.ri~~as 9:key unit in the effort Tn~, 'in'anu?r~$ays '''the parisk'" shotil~;be 'Il,ute that its own'" sklrl$' ,are ".Ci~ari in' th'e area oe·' rac~alhafmony'" ' .
@ley may be easily obtained; bits which has come down to us
through myth and legend. It is
CJf unharveste4 fruit and vege f:ables are sure to be found under believed that he was born into
1l»ushes here and, there; and a very rich family in the city Df
Cj:orns are in abundance where- ' Parara in Asia Minor. Orp,.haned
OVer, an oak tree' is found:' ' wheri very young, he was be
With these and other, sour,cell , lieYed to have led' a very lonely
oi :food "available it is the rare, life until he decided to devote
~arden which does not have himself to gOOd deeds forothers.
Clrouble, from, ~e Jqtim~ with , When the, bishop of Myi'{l ditld;' rJ,llbbits, ,squirrels, chipml,1iik~., arQu~ 325, he was'ii,venholY' gophers, mice, and rats. 1'he; la~- "' orders and became: the bishop's tllar, ~J;e ,never welcome and the successor; and from that d~y garc!E;ner must find ~: way' iO hence he was the benefactor of" exterminate them as soon as all, especially the young. In Eu ropean countries the young be ~ey appear., QueeriMother Opens
lieve that the beloved Nicholas Xn my .garden the rodents ap comes down from heaven and SONGSTRESS KATE SMITH a 1964 convert to Cath pear just about this time of leaves all good little boys and, olicism, is shown receiving the Benemerenti Medal conferred Opus Dei Center
veal'. I suppose this is because 'LONDON (NC) Qu eell the ,children are back in school girls a token of his love such by Pope Paul VI from Francis 'Cardinal Spellman of New Mother Eliza beth .opened tha ?And ,'the, garden is quiet mOst of ' , as cookies, fruits or a small toy, , York at a luncheon. The papal medal waS awarded at the new 'facilities ,of Netherhail 6h~ ti me and beca,use fOod' is' ' and a message to prepare their Cardinal's recommendation because ()f "the happiness she House, an intenlational univer-, hearts, for a holy and hapPY' ~ttliJ'g sCarce it is "to" Christmas. ' ' has brought to so many ,people and her ()utstanding Chris sity residence ball and student' lettle down for the Winter. ' , eel)~roperated be're by O~' We' have been celebratin'g thE! 'tian life." NC Phot(). ',', At any rate, we have two chip:. Dei, a, .secular institute. feast of'Saint Nicholas with the "':In~[s, two squirrels and uP Net~erhall House is one CIi lliIltil this week, a rat.,I saw a rat children for the past few yeal"$ more than 200 university centeFli and have enjoyed it very much. M\ly 011 two occasions but that eonducttld by Opus Dei in 43 had waS enough to make me press The Ii rst couple years oountries, and is open to studenbl the' panic button and get to tbe" the good saint leave' a small toy of a}l religious denominations. under their beds but last year' NCWC Official Says Catholic Education Xaardware store for rat JK)t900. ' The new multi-storied centa The one I saw was under the we had him Dring the mother replaces an older building whicll Will Never Be Abandoned grape vine about 25 feet from and child from a lovely hand Opus Dei acquired foll"' a bastell carved Italian nativity set. This ibe house, 80 I placed the poison.· LONG aEACH (NC)-A top presence of the supernaturai In in 1952. It ineludes residential. l!n a long tube iii the vicinity of year we hope to have him bring the handsome figure of St. Jo authority in education said here everyday life." He said: "The facilities, a theater, dining room. 4ihe vine in t~e hope thM the seph and perhaps one of the lit Catholic schools, far from being natural law is the law of God; lou.ng~, snack ba~, llbrary, read oot would take the bait. It did obsolete, are needed now more obedience to this law obliges ing and music, rooms arul ~ tle animals that inhabit the ood I have not seen it since. chapel. ,stable. all." than ever. 'i'here is no question that the Some 3,500 nuns and lay Both Joe and I feel that this "This awareness, the cardinal jjW)isons which bave been devel.,. University Students
is an excellent way to bring the teachers of the elementary continued, should be supported lWed of late for rodent extermi by "greater emphasis on the !lllation do work, but one must be religious aspect, into the waiting schools of the Los Angeles arch Ask ReBgJon Courses
",ery careful that such poisons for Christmas and at the same diocese heard Msgr. James C. Scriptures so that Christ may be ROCHESTER (NC) - More are not accessible to children Oi' time to acquire a completed Donohue, director, Education a living factor in the lives of than I,OOa University of Roches !!logs, cats and other animals. A , nativity scene that we could Department, ,National Catholic both teachers and students." lWng pipe will normally do tbe never afford to buy at onE! time. Welfare Conference, assert that, "In the United States in this t~r stud:nts aave sigri~ peti ~ick of keeping large animals' Perhaps you will find a better destructi ve criticism of Catho century, many have depart~ bons askmg that courses m reli way 'to celebrate the feast day , lic schools is "an exercise in" from belief in God and in the gion be instituted.' f)way from polson but unfortu futility,," The' private university h8£l &lately small chipmunks and or this patron saint of little chil divinity of Christ," he said. some' 3,000 students, Dr. Robert -"Our schools, our' system' of aquirrels are capable of getting dren but whatever way you Concepts of right and wrong Bevan, Protestant chaplain, saiGi education, wili never be aban 00 to , a space small enough fO,r a find, I know you 'and' your chil are deteriorating as norms ofl the students are seeking "an op dren will ~njoy it. doned," he said in his keynote Mt. portunity to delve into the who!/! This "Cookie Sensation" would address at the teachers' two-day' human, conduct and expression, This is not a pleasant subject the cardinal said. He added: area of human experience." make a bit on St. Nicholas Day meeting in Long Beach Munici @@ a gardener, but nonetheless "Conscience loses its compelling pal Auditorium. or any other day, for that mat lllI3ts do exist and they do fre force as sooo as it loses its basis tell". Methods will be reevaluated in Jaw as a true conscience." iIIuent gardens. Their occurrence and there will always be need ean be kept to a minimum by Cookie Sensation These are the circumstances for our schools and more than' keeping a clean garden, that is" ~ cup butter (this has to be that confront teachers, he said, \bly allowing as little debris as butter, no substitution will ' ever a need for: you, the Cath olic teach~," Msgr. Donohue and that, compel emphasis on' the ~ible to accumulate. 00 here) presence of the supernatura!. declared. In tile KlteheD ~ teaspoon vanilla, extract , Teachers, he continued, "are Every year ,ilt this time I get % teaspoon almond extract women for all seasons Who geM.. . .erwhelmed by the crass com % cup confectioners' sugar lessly work to weave the fal:wic lIlercialism of' the retailing iu 1 ¥4 cups sifted cake flour gf Catholic life in Amerh:a.~ riustFy in its \lttitude ~ward i cup finely chopped pecans (:hristmas. As I'm writing thia Chocolate syrup Law of God ' MeMORIAL CARDS eolumn the Thanksgiving turkey' 1) cream the butter with the llle$l&- _<I;. lila- ItIalIe • tile filIlIst lleeIIl Noting that many nuns today' flaasn't even graced our tables vanilla and almond extractS un"" are inclined to seek involvement !t~.~ ,wei&1tt' portrait, paper.... ·ft'0Ilt tt. ":~,_ _ "M lilt d8eeased _ lJIDd yet Yule deeorations have til butter is softened. s..- aIllI 1WI14t, date '" deattt asMt "...., in the' problems of the world, ~ IJeen up in the stores for weeks 2) Add confectioners' sugar in Dllt' ~'~ari 9J~ and just 1M r/clIt sire- tie ti - _ I Of . .lIet. Msgr. Donohue said: "The chit lind ever the' city streets are halv~ and cream until fluffy IIhC8lI use lIIOSt atlJ iitIcJ ., • ~ dren in your classrooms are the ~ III SlIatIshot of }'lMW I-.l _ tie already festooned with h~ida)' after each addition. ' , avenue to the world beyond the ...... .. ltleso ClTds. pdands. 3) Add flour in thirds to classroom." A, SAMPlE Of litES( ClRDS WIU. 81! SEIIT lit If8ttEST " cre,a'm,ed ~ture, blending weil. The worst offen~er, however, Yo~ may have to use your hailds The two-day institute opened ' 39'3 New Boston Road' EDWARD LACROIX lleems to be the toy, indtlstFY. to 'blend in the last of the {iour " with Mass ,offered by James, ,. ' 126-A 'Fre(ferick Street, ' 'Fait ,River"6r8-5671 Probably this is its season' to' '" '" ' , New BOdfonl, Mass. 02744 "'make the big kill" but it does " as this'makes qui~e a 'stlff batter.' Francis" Cardinal' MclntYll"e of, Los AngeIes; IIttest to very bad taste that we ' 4) Mix "in well the finely' Ir., hi's, sermon the cardinal are bombarded with a deluge of chopped nuts (I used my blender asked the teaehers to 'stress "the ' toy commercials on the televito get the nuts quite fine. .on from Halloween' on. ,Joe' ,S) On a lightly greased ,cookie elaims that i1 the hoiisewives of sheet shape teaspoons, of the this nation want to picket' against .!:lough into ,a' small crescent DADSON OIL BURNERS ~~ CQ~~ ~ything ,this brainwashing 011 shape. ....1' young" through, the video '6) Bake in a 350° oven' for 12 , '24.Hou'r Oil Burner SeTvi4:e ~be should be the cause~ Well:" mi,:,utes. '" , famous Readill9 HARD COAL HEtt ][ m not awfully good on a sOap.;., . '; 7), While,: still warm, dip ~ ~I box, therefore I thought I'd .Il,u!;,,,:, cookies in' chocolate SyruP and NEW ENGLAND COKE ~ ~ pst one of the small waystha't:" :ro~I in' sifted /, C9rifectioners' ~'~~,~ 213 CENTRAL AVE~' paren~s could help bring Ch,ri,ai ':' 'guga,,: I~fQurid this' a bitmes~ ~~", ","'~ , l\)llck .mto Christmas. ' " :, ," to ,do, so I painted: each warm December 6th, the feast of'St.,< CookiE; (usin.; my pastry brusb) 992-6216 :Nicholas, is the perfect opporiu-" wi~ the syrup" then 'sprinkled Daty to take 11 break in the fra. it ,with the sifted sugar. ' NEW" BEDfORD, tic holiday preparations and 'te;tt:, " "Makes about 'i1a~ dozen ,540 PI,l;!Qsont Street Tei. 996-8271 New Bedf~ J'oW" cbild.reJl of iDe bisio17 eJi, '~ ,
' I • . ',
and
time
of
we
Far From Obsolete
wi""
..
....
:IDEAL LAUNDRY
SHeLL"Premium" Heating' Oils
'BLUE RIBBON'
,LAUNDRY
=
~g~e~~
GLEN COAL & OIL
(.. <".~:
CO~,
~O=S
s·
Inc.,
Renewal Taking'
Hold in Canada
THE ANCHO~-:-, Thurs., Dec.,] , 1966
A!aska Sen~tor States POSiitoon On BBrrth COnltro~ WASHINGTON (NC) -" Alaska's Sen. Ernest Gruen ing, a leading advoc'ate' of govei'nment - financed birth control programs, ,issued a re lease her,e relating his own posi tion to the statement on birth control and government policy' issued Nov. 14 by the Catholic bishops of the United States. The Senator's statement, briefly CDutlining the goals of his own efforts, explained that every ef fort would be made under a gov e1"nmerit program to maintain the freedom of the individual a~d to respect the, individual eonscience. "The statement read: "I would sai;:that throughout the hearings of ,the subcommittee on foreign aid expenditures of the govern ment' operations coinmi ttee, the' emphasis of the subcommittee has been wholly on the coordi lIIaiion and dissemination of in JlQ~ma"tion., ", 'Freedom of' Choice' I "Certainly coercion shoul'd °1. never, be used and this was re,. pe~tedly affirmed by the chair':' I man. What is soughi i~ that all' people should have access to this' in~ormation and thereafte'r have' freedom of choice both as to whether they wish to re'ceive in':' formation qn the subject of birth <control' or not and', having re:' eerved it, whe'thet'they wish 'to utilize it 'by 'any' of' the i,'atioUs methods available: ' 0 "·This' should' be within the realm of the individual's ,free dom of choice and all efforts to impose one ,method of birth con ,~rol or another or, not to use any such metho'd should be left wholly to the individual, and should· be in, keeping with his, or her own beliefs and con science." , ,i$:en. 'Grueni'ng, author ot a hili'to establish population con- ' trot offices in the State Depatt.:. ment and the' Department of Health, Education' and Welfare, was chairman of the government 4lperations commi tte.e.' .0.
.'..
.
~on-Cath~Hc 'Couple In 'Mission,: Program {;>
DAYTON '(NC) ,-Craig Haf ner, 28, a pilot who, recently served two years in -r:illlzania as a Peace Corps Volunteer, plans to return to Africa next year .as a member of UMATT; United Missionary Air Transport and Training. llis bride of three months, Jill, will accompany him. ' The Hafners are not Catholics, but are currently enrolled 'in, Front Line, the Sociiody of Mary's lay missionary training ,program a~ the University' of Dayton. UMATT, initiated and sponsored' by the Cincinnati Province of Marianists, serves Protestant ,as well as Catholic,mission outposts throughout East Africa. Hafner said he was so im pressed by Africa (luring his Peace Corps tour that he wished ~ return. While in Africa" he met Brother Michael Stimac, S.M., UMATT's top field repre sentative at Nairobi, Kenya, a key figure in establishing the flying missionary network. Sub sequentlY,Hafner decided to join the program.
Drops 'Catholic' 'QUEBEC (NC)'-The Quebec 'Catholic Teachers Corporation has dropped' the word Catholic from its narrie an'd will be known "hereafter as the Quebec Teachers < 4;lo[poration.' ,
'REMEMBER PATSY LI? Shl;l'S a U. S. citizen now, but in 1942 this young lady was a bruised and wounded ,little orphan, found by ,a Marine ,Chaplain in the midst of 'Guadal canal fighting. Fa,th,er Frederick 'M. Gehring, C.M., left, Who 'found P~itsy, Li,coilgratu-' lates her'on becoming· 'a, U.S. citizen, as her husbillld, Joe Buck, Lee,proudly looks on.
War"s "Miracle Girl' Now U. S., Citizen -Fo~mer . .
~
.
EARCELONA' (NCf-An iJl
BALTIMORE, (NCr'-~t,doesn'.t convinced the girl was her own., "She was told the stOIJ' of how happen e,very day out when it the girl was .found on the island, does" the scene' is familiar. , There' were, 131 eager men,' 4,000 m,iles from where tile ship women, children' in the Huge went down and how Father room at the General Post Office' Gehring, onetime missioner in bu(ldi;"'g here.' Each was certi-' China, just ,rriade up the name Patsi Li. But Mrs. Li persisted, fied ,as qualified .fo.r the, ensuing ,cer'emony. The 'big momentcame· was flown to a Pacific' island and sure enough the girl was her when they took the oath making ,them naturalized citizens of the own daughter-her real name , was Patsi Li. United States. , The one who made the cere Arranges Education mony unusual was Mrs. Joe After the war, Patsi Li went Buck Lee, 30, ,of nearby' Elicott back to China with her 'm'other. City, Md., Her husband and a priest watched' intently, proudly' The rrioth~r remarr,ied. Patsi's beloved "Father Fred," to whom as she took the oath. she wrote often, persuaded the Amazing Story The priest, Father Fredei'ic M. Gehring, C.M" now at St.' Vincent's parish, Philadelphia, 25 years ago was a multi-deco rated Navy chaplain serving SAN 'FRANCISCO (NC)-The' with the Marines on Guadalcanal' personal witness of committed in the' dark, early days of World Catholics is essential 1£ others War II. are to ,be attracted' to the And MI·s. Joe Buck Lee-she Church, Archbishop Joseph T. was Patsi Li, the widely famed McGucken of San Francisco said "miracle girl of World War II," central figure ,in one of the most _ here, stressing the role of the amazing stories of that conflict. clergy in the conversion process. "You must it.lvite [nonThe flashback centers on
Catholics] In and let them' know
Guadalcanal in 1942, when 'na thel'e is a cordial welc,ome wait tives brOught the, ,6-yeat'-old Chinese girl, ~ore dead than ing for' them," he said. , alive, ,into the Marines" lines, "The contacl: bt:;tween a priest placed her in the arms of Father and a layman is:a sacramental,"
'Gehring, l:Ier tiny body bore he added. "The' priest does not
saber ,and bayonet wounds, have to argue, Just the 'way he
multi-bruises. " ' looks, his cheerful greeting
~ Som~how' the Marit,le doctors these things have a sacramental , brought her back to life. She beeffect: . .Just :Jeing in touch with came the mascot of the Mal'ines. people causes a grace Which
The Leathernecks insisted she brings them to the Chul'ch, ~r.
have' a name, so 'Father Gehring back into th6 Church."
called her Patsi Li-white plum
blossom.
· I :Stresses ' P,ersona ' I ssentia W ·Itness E
On Torpedoed Ship None knows how Patsi ,Li got to Guadalcanal. She was fleeing Hong Koilg with her mother and sister to escape advancing Jap anese forces. The, ship was tor., pedoed. Mrs. Li saw one daughter drown, the other float away, clinging to a piece: of the ship's wreckage. A,' co....esporident ; wrote the Patsi Li story/Mrs; Li, who had made it ,to a sister in New York;! 'l'ead the st~r~~ became
war'
Spanish Interfaith
Bible on . Presses.
Navy' 'Chaplain Proud Witness'
"'.
EDMONTON (NC)-Two Ca nadian social action priests, Whlll have, traveled back and forth across, the country throughou~ the first year of the post-concil iar age, report Church renewal! is taking hold. Father J. T. Shea and Father William F. Ryan, S.J., of the social action department, Cana dian Catholic Conference, were interviewed here following a conference with priests and laity on, th1!' Church in the modern world. They have held such con ferences i'n 12 Canadian dioceses. They assessed the new climate which has been developing here since the close of the councill last December. New ecumenical relationships have been the highlight of the year, they said, and these have been particularly noticeablc in the field of social action. There is also a new -openness of episcopal leadership, the prie~ts claimed. They cited the annual meeting of the.'Canadian hierarchy held in Ottawa -in Oc tober during which experts among the clergy and laity were invited to advise the bishops. . That meeting, said Father Ryo- . an; was conducted in 'the same ,open spirit, as ,the, council itsellt. an~ "helpeq to, dispel the ide:n, that any One man has all the an sw'el's' about the imp,lementatioB of Vatican II."
o
mother to let him bring 'Patsi to the United States. PatsiLi, arrived in the Uliited States in 191iO. Father Gehring alTanged for her schooling with the Sisters of Mercy at'Our Lady of .Walsingham Academy near 'Williamsburg, ,Va., where the girl embraced the Catholic Faith.' Then she attended Gwynedd Mercy College, Gwynedd' Valley, Pa:, and the nursing school at the Catholic University of Amer ica, Washington. She was a nurse at Providence Hospital, Wash ington, when she met Joe' Buck Lee. Father Gehring officiated at . their marriage in Washington. Mr. Lee keeps a trim little
ranch-type house in Elicott City,
continue's her career as a nurse.
As he sat and watched his
"Child of Miracles"-the title of a book .he wrote about her '.beco'me a U, S. citizen, Father Gehring remarked: "I'm still waiting for that day of bigger thrills-the day when Patsi wiU make me 'a gl·andfather.'''
t~rfaith Bible prepared' 'by Her';;' del' of Barcelona, 'a Catholic pub
lishing ,house, is on the presses now and will be distributed! thJ:ougho~t Latin America earli ,in 1967. ' ' The new ,Bible, approved by ,Latin ,American' bishops 'and! edited with the cooperation 'of 'the Protestant' monks of Taize, ,France, will be ,'distributed te ,Christians throughout Latill' America. ,
8 DEBROSS OIL co. Heating Oils and Burners NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD
992-5534
WEBB' OIL COMPANY TEXACO .FUEL OILS DOMESTIC & HEAVY DUTY. OIL, BURNERS
Sales ~ Service -'Installation MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEE STREET, FALL RIVER
Phone 675·7484 FIVE' CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU
GERALD E., McNALLY
ONE-STOP BANKING
Construction Co.1. Inc.
FIRST·MACHfNISTS NATIONAL BAN K
o
454 MAIN STREET , SOMERSET, MASS" t't
'.' TELEPHONE ~7.S-79'92,
OF
TAUNTON, '
Norton"W. Main S,t.-Raynham., Rte.. 44~T~u~t~n; 'fy\ai~ Sf; , ,No,rt"', Dig ht,cln , Spring St.-N~",h E~ston, Main St. ' , Member Federal Deposit' Insu;ance Co;p'or'ation : ., . .. . , \
~
(
Elementary, High Schoo. Teachers
Are Stonehill Clinical Professors
A gl'OUp of distinguished area elementary and high school teachers' have been named' as clinical professors at Stonebil,l College, North Easton, for the academic year 196'6-67, it has been announced by Rev. Richard M. Gorman, C.S.C., Chairman of the Department of Education at the college. The Clinical Professor pro gram at Stonehill, now in its sec ond year, is an adaptation to the liberal arts college of Dr. James B. Conant's recommendations that outstanding elementary and secondary teachers serve in teacher education programs of colleges and universities, The concept derives from the highly successful practice of medical schools whereby outstanding, physicians pal,ticipate in instruc tion and training of medical stu dents. Stonehill pioneered last year in introducing this program at the small college level. Function of Professors Clinical professors teach in the methods and materials course and serve as resident supervisors of student teachers' at their re spectiv~ schools.. 'In the m'ethods and materials course a cliriical professor' gives' ai'series of lecfures, discus~ions or'demonstrations on current· techniques of' tea/:hi ng alld il'l':" stl"i.lctional 'materials in his spe':' cific field. He also' leads . the' analysis and critique of class presentations that the students give as part of the course, eval uates unit plans, tests and' other' original worI:- which students compose as ;lssignments. . .'. As a resident 'supervisor' of,
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 1, 1966
Protest Schools
several student teachers, the clinical professor briefs them re garding the school's policies and programs, observes their teach ing sessions weekly, and meets with them frequently to discuss their techniques, matel"ials used and problems that arise.' He also helps to assess the teaching competence of the students and confers with the college on all matters'th'at relate to improving teacher education. To be appointed as clinical professor a high school or ele mentary teach~r' must have at least a Master's degree. Selection fO!' this important work is recog nition that the teacher has achieved high competency and recognition in his profession.
Offerings Melted For Flood Relief
VATICAN CITY (NC)-More than two pounds of gold from, gifts to one of Rome's most fa mous shrines were presented to Pope Paul VI to 'provide funds to' help Italy's flood victims. The gifts included rings, neck laces,: medals, bracelets and chains of gold which had been presented by Catholics to the Cl1u'rch of Our Lady 'of the Altar" Shrine of the Bambino Gesuo> The shrine is located in Rome's of Heaven, atop the city's Cap itoline Hill. The Bambino' is a carved wooden statue of the Child Jesus which is greatly venerated by Roman and other Catholics all over the world. It is.a European custom ~or chil-. dren to write letters at Christ mas timl to the Bambino, telling' Him what they want and prom ising to'be good. The statue lias long been re garded as miraculous and it is only in recent years that it' no VATICAN CITY (NC) - The longer is taken to the bedsides Church hopes to find in employ of seriously iii people. Over the ers honesty, competence and a years a large quantity of gifts, social sense, Pope Paul VI told including mallY gold items, have a, g.roup of Portuguese business men here at an audience on Fri-' been presented to the shrine. by' C~'tholics grateful for some day, Nov. 25. f:lvor received. ,."Honesty means a conscience The gift is the first major pub {o'rmed by principles of the nat lic response to the Pope's au ural and Christi::m law," he said. thori.zation to Italy's bishops to "Whoever has such a conscience dispose of votive gifts given t'O will first of all pursue truth in cQurches and shrines to help word as well as in deed. He will raise money to assist flood vic se'ek the good, not for conven tims in northern Italy. iei1Ce and benefit, but by follow-' The offerings were presented ing the dictates of a conscience to the Pope by the Franciscan whiCh is in conformity with the provincial, F fl the l' 'Giroiamo moral law. Contenti, O.F.M., when thePope "Competence is likewise use visited the Roman church of St. ful to the modern employer, not· Sebastian to celebrate Italy's only so that he may contribute vel'sion of Thanksgiving Day. actively to the scientific and in The standal;ci pric'e of gold in dustrial development of his own the U: S. is $32.50 per ounce. organization, but also that of The gift given to the Holy Father his country. by th.e Roman' chUl'ch would "The social sense completes then amount to approximately the profile of the ideal Christian $1,050. . . executive such as the Church de sires him to be. A business is Students' Protest not simply an economic activity to be pursued with honesty and Ban on Movie competence. We must never for MANCHESTER (NC) - A get that it is above all a wOl'k di group of some 40 St.· Anselm rected by men, with the help of men, and at the service of men. College students here picketed to protest against the banning of It is a means for attaining man's a condemned movie. over-all ·progress, and this im The students - one was ar piies that those who 'run it al rested for jaywalking, another ways bear in mind the human for passing out handbills-took implications of·thefr task." no stand on the mel'it of the movie, but prOtested the right of city officials to ban the showing. Providence Native The college is cOllducted by the Is Pakistan Bishop Benedictine Fathers. MULTAN (NC)-Bishop Er The film; "The Bakony," nest B. Boland, O.P., an Amer evaluated by the National Cath iCfln from Providence, R .. r., was olic' Office for Motion Pictures in installed here in Pakistan as the its Class C (condemned) cate third bishop of Multan.. gory, was booked into a local Bishop Boland, 41, .was conse theater, A commitiee of alder crated last July in SS. Peter and' men in char'ge of licenses, banned Paul Cathedral, Providence. .the showiIig, The committee was The .diocese of Multan has supported by Mayor Roland S. about 20,000 Catholics iri a total Vallee', who contended the board population of T)1ore than7,0O(j,OOO of.. al.derm.en. is.a ~egislative body mostly Moslems. With ill right to pass. such rules.
.Pope Describes . Ideal Executive
'e'
FIRST ESCAPEE: Navy Lt. (J.G.) Dieter Deng-ler, who made first esc~lpe of an imprisioned American ser-' viceman in Vietnam, received the Sword of Loyola from Auxiliary BishopCletus F. O'Donnell' of Chicago. The award, begun in 1964, was preRented by the Stritch School of Medicine of Loyola University. NC Photo.
Members of Catholic Hierarchy, Jewish Leaders Exchange Tribute WASHINGTON (NC)-Leaders of the U. S. Catholic hierarchi and the American Jewish Com mittee exchanged tributes at a luncheon during the annual con ference of bishops here. The AJC honored the Catholic hierarchy in "heartfelt apprecia tion" for' leadership given by American bishops at Vatican Council II in securing passage of the declaration on relations with non-Ghristi.an .religiuns. 'Spiritual Bonds' P;'esented with' commemora tive plaques by the com~ittee were Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, James Francis Cardi nal McIntyl'e of Los Angeles, Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis, Lawrence Cardinal She han of Baltimore, Francis Cardi nal Spellman of New York, and Archbishop Ratrick A. O'Boyle of Washington, chairman of the administrative board of the Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer-' ence. . CardiJpl Spellman, dean of the
American hierarchy, alsoac ce~ted in behalf of the entire hierarchy a set of two tablets of the Ten Commandments in scri bed as, a symbol of the "en during common moral and spir itual bonds" between the AJC and the Catholic bishops. The tablets will be placed per manently in the bishops' head quarters at the NCWC offices here. Making the presentations for the AJC were Judge Joseph. M. Proskauer, honorary president, and Charles H. Silver, consultant to the Mayor of the City of New York, both longtime leaders in efforts to improve Jewish-Chris tian relations. Responding in behalf of the American bishops, Card ina 1 Spellman presented a scroll to Morris B. Abram, AJC president, pledging the bishops' to contin ued efforts for mutual under st.anding, respect and coopera tion between Christians and Jews.
11
!P@~ish tHJ@~p
NEW YORK (NC)-The Amer ican Jewish Congress has asked! for a mo'ratorium on "all Title ]I Funds" authorized for parochial schools under the Federal Ele mentary and Secondary Educa tion Act, pending an investiga tion to determine whether non public schools needs are' being met at the the expense of the public schools. David Haber, chairman of the Congress's public education com mittee here, protested the New York City Board of Education's assignment of public school teachers to parochial schools at the same per-pupil ratio as to the public schools. Haber said: "There arc 1,000 classrooms a day in New York' City without teachers. We can not sit idly by when the New York Cit.y Board of Education provides public school teacher!3 to parochial schools while this situation exists in our pubJie schools." Assignments of public school! teachers to parochial schools are authorized under the Federal! aid-to-education'law, which pro vides that public school boards offer remedial reading, tutorial!' and enrichment services to dis advantaged students in noO-:' public and public schools ,i Ii ke. '
Milwaukee School Enrollments Drop ,MILWAUKEE (NC)-Currena. statistics of the Wilwaul;:ee arch.." diocesan education department. here disclose 4,441 fewer pupils in its giaae schools this year. Father Harold J. Ide, assistan~. superintendent of schools, said he "assumes" the decrellse call· be attributed to families whe moved from city to suburballl areas where schools were al\ ready filled. The total current enrollmenfl· is 92,957, as compared wiUll 97,398 for the 1965-66 school!, year. There are 237 grade schools in the archdiocese.
The Best
For Your Car
"You Can Whip OUf Cream, but You Can't Beat Our Milk !"
6V2%
Intere$t on Your Savings' , I nvestedl n
Your Gull Hill Route Man ;s
Always at Yo~r Service!
FOR HOME DELIVERY CAll 998-5691
·CATHOLIC CHURCH
'GULF HILL DAIRY
AND
INSTITUTIONAL BONDS
so.
DARTMOUTH, MASS.
'in Units of $500 or More
Keenan & Clarey, Inc. Minneapolis, Minnesota for detailed information write to
.CHARLES A•. MURPH'y Registered Representative 145 Pond Street Winchester,' Mass. PA 9-2696 Anch Name Address· City
:
: ·
~~~'~~,~~;~~~
! Color Process ~
Year Books
Booklets
Brochures
~. American Press, Inc. ~
I
0 F. F 5 ET -
PRINTERS
1-) 7 COFFIN AVENUE
.
,
.. .
LETTERPRESS Phone 997-9421
New Bedford, Moss.
~~~~'"'"~, ...'"~~ 'r
''1I'o'getl1er We Should \Stand"
".. i.
.God Love "You A Presbyterian pastor told a story which illustrate9 lluo~ much the Church must integrate herself into our secular world if it is to be saved. A Tomi Indian of the Mezquital valley in Mexico was converted. He burned all his books of magic and dedicated himself to preaching the Bible. But he felt that the redemption of souls' was inseparable from the redemption of dry land. So along witli. his preaching, he. taught his people how to grow wheat, tomatoes and corn in their valley. His biggest problem was a highly iJ;ltoxicating drink which the peopl~ brewed from a shrub, So he taught them instead to make cloth out of the shrub and eventually built trade schools' for dressmaking, knitting and carpentry. IrL 30 years, his downtrodden people had' become a"vigorous and' self...reliant community with neat homes, . plumbing, electricity and in the midst, ~~ Jh.e .village, a peautifUI '" . church. " ,. ...,. . ''':
(
rn®~ ~® rm®[h@
"CIDEcflD~~~fuD®8D@@JLJDDOO~®DDroffiD~,® . ~
:1 •.
. '.
"~n'~L!D~~~'~'W@;B~g~~flDU~ , Of course, y~u can make Qld-fashione<$ mayonnaise In your new-fa~gled. kitchen. Begin the way,W.\do :~ with :sunny, golden e~j'9J yol;ks~ Then. :add-sn espt4bl~dY':~PiCY vlnegar~ild JusUtle righUouch of seasonJngs~ '()lIand ~Iemon juice oome next ~ a'dll'Qp at a time. Now. be careiut to 'stir vigorouslyalld ' .keep everYthing 'chilled so the dell~ate m~xture doesn't sspa ,rate. ThEil's ·th~trlcky,part.·" .' ;·Y'<~., But why gO,to all this trouble whe;l~~~~'~(all for you in.'the ",:; careful, skillful blending of our FI~ASimav(mnSlI8'o' .. . We know.that the dressing make~the,salad 0' ,~andmany
other· tempting dishes. Tt~at'8 why we<goto 8ucl-': lengthi kb .
mIxIng real old-fashioned mayonnaiH. It pl~aselJ6UI to have
you enjoy the ta&tlost mayonnaise we know how to whip u[O~
After all, in a hundred and~me important ways, at first
Natlonal.o .
0
..-'
-"-'-.-,
, i\1I'aybe wllat'we ne,ed iii Latin' Ant'crica~,are nqt,ill1st .A\merica~ ", pries'ts who will t:ikeon a c'ountry parisb,' but rather III :team of. ., teCiuiicians: b,ygietiists. doctot-s;' nurses, elecirieians,engineerS and a .-rieSt. Send them: intO. the' sluiDs, first to; give tb0 people 'bread 'tor" tIieir stom'aoM, then to blk aboui the Bread of Life. Our D1i~~ions must not be apart from the total situation of the people whom we serve. If the Commonists can combine all lib eral g~ouPs, leftist movements, off-beat beatniks intO a revolutional'J' movement, , ag:dust soci~7 and dec~ncy. Why' cann~t tbe. (ll;1urc,h mold together: her l;Z~(t reli gious communities and separate m1ss19n ar)' organizations Into a !i~le. 8alit to carr;' on the revolution of Christ' fa the . world? Why does nch missionary sociei;,.· kave .. have its OWll " .emmary! WhY' do we have scPl'rate ,offices fer ,begci~ for tills mission and for that missioJi!'why this separatism while the go" Lord prays that we'may be ODe ,as He ami the .Father are 0!It~
0
. '.", '
What a tremendous force the' milllon nuns in the world could be,' if they were fused into unity! In a' recent Worid War we hed
.You
come· first
aD
Allied Commander. We' have a picture' i~ our office of the National Director talking to Pope John before a tremendous globe of the world. The National Director was suggesting to him that he was the Commander and Chief of all the missionary forces: "Why not unify all of us soldiers in the Missions?" he asked. Pope John answered: "That is what I intend to do." But he died before he could do it. Please' God the Church will eventually come around to his vision but until then, at least The Society f9r the Propagation ' of the Faith is trying to help every single religious community in the world, every bishop in 'every missionary area of the world. It is for this reason that the Holy Father said: "It should be helped primarily and that:it occupies first place among the mission societiea • of the Church"'·
,0
, I
GOD LOVE YOU ~ an anonymous friend' i~ New Orleans for $2,000., ••• to J. M. H. for $4 ""We are the parents of 10 children. Our life is one of continual sacrifice since someolMl alw:t.ys.,needs something, bat we are all in good health and always have enough to eat." ... to C.R.E. for $11.· u I placed your MISSION magazine On niY desk at work and most people could not resis& 1lI donation for the poor 01 the world."
. Bishop Fulton J. Sheen's talks used privately for over 40 yean help people of all faiths find meaning and deeper happiness ill life, are now available to the general public on 25 records-THE . LIFE IS WORTH LIVING SERIES. In 50- talks of 30 minutes each. His ExcellencY offers wise, ,inspiring guidance on problems affecting 'aU age groups: love, ma,rriage, raising children, suffering, anxiety, loneliness, alcoholism -and· death, as well as principles of the Christian faith. A wonderful Christmas thought for schools, clubs, colleges, rectories, prisons, the LP high-fidelity album, manufactured by' the RCA custom dept. can be ordered froIDiBisbop Fulton 3. Sheen, 366 Fifth ~venue, New York, N.Y. 10001.: ,'$57.50. fa)
Clri out this column, pia YOUI' saell'illee .. il aDd mail It .. Most Rev. ·Fulton J. Sheen, Natlonllll Director 01 The' Society'. iDiePrcpa~atiolll 01 the 'Faa..., 366 Fifth A_DUe,' New York, New York -10001, Or to YOllrDloeesan Di:reetor, ilL &e~. Ms':r. RaT mOM' 'I'~ 'CoDSidine,'I68Nottia 'MaillSkeet, FaD alveI', Mass. -,
,.....
I
'"
~
'
'
• .
•
...
:·CONVENI.~NT·:8AN~ING :WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PA~K~ .P~OBI.EMS
at the
'.
.,SLADE'S:,· FERRY TRUST. ~tOMPANY SOMERSET. MASS.
f:
.'.... mOst friendly, 'democratic lANK oHering
, ,CompleteO~e-Stop Bonlcing
, ".~
"
.....
,"
..
~u.b ,A~unls, - Checkin9~ou.
Auto Loans .
Business lOaM .
". SavingS! .Accounts ... Real _Estate loaM
AI Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman '$I. Bridge . Me~'~ fed~r~I.Deposit insur~ncG· 'corporation
. ".
.....
, . ~. 1
•
I'
!
~
'
Seek Restudy Of Comp~aints At St.. John $ D
NEW YORK (NC) - Th@ United Federation of College Teachers (UFCT) has girded for a second attempt to have St. John's University in Jamaica, N.Y., disaccredited as result of dismissals of 21 teachers last December. The UFCT, affiliated with the AFL-CIO American- Federation of Teachers, has prepared a pe tition asking the Middle States Association of Colleges and Sec ondary Schools to restudy Us eomplaints against the university and to take disacerediting action at its meeting next month in Atlantic City, N.J. The UFCT's first attempt at this goal last : April failed.
a
Diocese Welcomes Latin American Students For Ye(fJl"-.(J](t §@cred HeOLfttt$, Cassidy High Most of' lllS can manage to wait for Winter's first snow, but not Elisa Soto Porta of Guatemala. She can hardly wait, for the flakes They'll be the first she's ever seen. The dark-eyed Central American States for a year as a student at $acred Hearts Academy, Fall River, the U.S. Catholic Conference, formerly the NCWC. She., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Powers of Our Lady of
17-year-old Maria to start falling. is in the United under auspices of
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Dec, .1, 1'966
Ie
13 -,
Dedicates
~c~ence Ce,ntfHf
CHESTNUT HILL (NC)-The
new $5,250,000 science center a{\
Boston College here, which willl house, the biology and physics departments, was dedicated with two days of ceremonies. Scientists from more than 150 academic institutions and learned societies participated in the aca demic convocation and attended science seminars. Father Michael P. Walsh, S.J.. president of the Jesuit college, awarded honorary degrees 00 George W. Beadle, president o!i the University of Chicago; Wil liam Bosaorth c.astle, hematol ogist of Boston City Hospital al.ld Harvard Medical School; Donald F. Horning, special assistant ,t~ President Johnson .for science affairs, and Jmiu;!~ A. Van All~1ll .of the University of Iowa. ' , Horning, the' con vo c a i i 0 ill speaker,said: "There is the n~w " thrust in the America of 1966 an aspiration to excellence in ittJ higher education as in all things.
I see it· in Bo'ston College as ]I see it in many places through~ut the country: '.
"We must re~examine old 2t . titudes concllrning' the' role' oj! . the federal government, and that re-examination is' taking p]a<:e. ~e ~ust:.,a~ways be c~n. cerned with the 'maintenancet"pi1 . our; pace 0.1; achi~vement in ence itself, but we must nOw ,.turn . our -attention to broadeJ1' needs of our people."
The new science center, nalT!ed Higgins Hall, has 178 laborato ries, lecture halls and adminis trati ve offices. I
Fatima parish,' Swansea, whose daughters also attend SHA. Elisa, as friends and family call her, is not the only Latin American senorita in the Diocese Also in the country under the USCC program is Susana 9rtiz of Cordoba, Argentina. She's en- ' roll~d at Bishop Cassidy High,. in Taunton and is staying with Mr. and Mrs. JQseph McCarty,' also' of Taunton. She was tecent, ly the 'subject of an'infoqnative Dismiss Case , article iii. 'Cassidy's 'school paper, 1't.. spokesman ,for the 97-year- , by fellow-student 'Cheryl Mc , old university, largest Catholic ,{;affrey.· " institution of higher learning in ~now's nothing new to Susa!la,' - the U.S. (some 13,000 students), although in Argentina it 'comes said St. John's had. no ,comment in what are Summer months on the situation now,' but probhere. Both she and Elisa' will' 'abiy would issue a statement at' 'find Christmas differently cele-'"
a "more appropriate time." The' 'brated in North America, how-' university is conducted by the" ever. In their homelands it's Vineentian -Fathers. . \Isheredoin with processions and
The dispute began last De- fireworks. cember when 21 professors were The girls'met each other brief"':; dismissed' by 'the university'- ly when they arrived in this' without being informed why' country arid since the beginning they were dismiSsed, according 'of school Elisa has spent -a week to the UFCT. end in Taunton with Susuna. A group of dismissed teachers Did th~y relax and talk Spanish? s04ght to resolve the dispute by "No," said Elisa consctentiously.. tfiling suit in the B'rooklyn Dio-' "We're here to learn' English." cesan Tribunal, but the Chui'ch Customs Differ
"ourt. said it lacked jul'isdiction and dismissed the case. Teen-age ways differ in North and South America, agree Su Convene Dec. 1 sana and Elisa. "Girls haVe more
In April, 1966, the Commission freedom here," declared Elisa,
ELISA SO']['O PORTA SUSANA ORTIZ on Institutions of H~gher Eduand Susana noted that single
St. Francis dating is a custom that hasn't
c,..~tl'on of the Middle States . as is very glad and proud to be a yet made its way·South. in her own vocational choice. Residence teen-ager." And girls at both Association of Colleges and SecOn cars: some of Susana's Both Latin guests have a wide FOR YOUNG WOMEN ondary Schools asked its memg f' t t t f "h Cassidy and SHA are "glad and ber institutions to "refmin from friends drive, reported Cheryl in ran e 0 meres '8, par 0 • e proud" to :welcome their Latin 196 Whipple St., Fall Riverr
her article. "But they don't go to reason they' were chosen for a guests and join in hoping that revoking (St. John's) accredita- school with a car!'" she exyear's study in the United States. Conducted by Franciscan
they'll be ambassadors of good tion at this timc." claimed, glancing at Cassidy's Susana enjoys reading, music, Missionaries of Marry
will l>etween north and south The commission's April report well-filled 'parking lot. The legal travel, parties and discussion ROOMS' - MEALS
. announced that it would again driving age in Argentina is 18. groups. H'· t k . 1 when they return to their home avmg a en piano es OVERNIGHT HOSPITAlIVY
take up the case in November, in In Guatemala,' said Elisa, it's sons for s~ven years, she's a full lands. '
Inquire 673-7890
view of the" December, 1966, 'only 15, and there she drives, fledged member of Bishop Cas
meeting of Middle States Assobut students in the United sidy's orchestra and glee club.
ciatlon. States under the USCC program Sports, especially softball and
The UFCT at the request of aren't permitted' to drive while basketball, are high on Elisa'n
the commission submitted the here. list of interests and she partic
lengthy ,brief outlining "the reEducational practices differ in ularly enjoys her art courses at
sponsibility of St. John's Uni- North and South America, both SHA. Her ciass schedule is on the
versity hoard of trustees, appro- . girls pointed out. ,At age 13 in mixed-up .side, she admits. She's
p1'Iate corrective action' and the . Al"gentiria,' students decide upon ',' taking religion and civics with
present educational effectiveness. their future career, then attend ' seniors, Latin with freshmen and
and accreditable standards." a five year school speciaiizing in English with juniors. She has as
The Commission on Institu- their particular field. aims for her year abroad: "T0
tions of Higher Education of the The Argentine'school year ex- learn English better arid to un-
Middle States Association of tends from November to March, derstand American customs."
Colleges and Secondary Schools, reports Cheryl, and the school Elisa's host family is an all
will convene today at Atlantic day begins at 8, closing at 1:10. ' girl group, whereas Susana's in
City. Twelve subjects a year are' cludes four boys and a girl. Elisa
studied, including such courses' feels at home, however, for her
S" h th own family consists of "three
· t h IS xpl~i.ns as ory, pams, ma' , geog E "raphy, biology,and anatomy. little sisters," in addition to her
At. P·en~a. Se~i~arv In Guatemala l l' mother and, father. She admits
H Elisa' attended. grammar scnoo!.. she's suffered pangs of homePHiLADELPHIA (NC) - The,' for seven years, she explained.' sickness, J!lut she is thoroughly
"; ,~ . chancery pffice pel'e has denied' Three. years of, high school fol-.. enjoying her taste of American,
allegations of lack of freedom in lowed and she is now hl;llf way life.
St. Charles Seminary in subur- through a, two year. teach~r .Makes Paper
ban Overbrook; claiming recent- training cour~~, ~he expects.~ On the tlSCC progl'am for iU ..
dismissal of ,threesemiI1arians, embark on ap'rimary teaching students are visits to various'
was: due to ~'seri~ms" v.iollltions . car,ee'r 111"' january Of 1969. Her parts of'the country. Elisa. has :
til::: rules of thc semll1ary, 01. year in the United States won't already Visited' New York City, ,
the laws of. the Ctiurch, ~nd pos- ' ooun't toward~" requlre'mentS in·' 'Her one word comment: ·~Big.N ,
sibly of, ciyillaw." , " Argentina" sh'c'said 'but" she Mention of the American passiOlll , . Prior 'to 'the 'publica~i9n :of the 'thinks ,ih~ other.be~efiiS she's ,f' ,dieting ~re~"a chuc~le. ,"Vie. .... -.., .' el:iafl~ry statfW1ent, sem~naf~"of., .. deri ving, , ,from: .her' sta~ . in- 'the'. do,n t,~av:e, ,dietl'. s.hc J!l\ld.. ". '. ' ·O",r: new.. car tOMS $TiLLtht C?eryl. McCaffr,ey noted., ,fieials., declined to discuss.r~- .. :north ,will more ,than compen., t.OW6st in Tow~ only: $4;'~9 annual 'ports' that tbe three seminarians .-' sate for, her .Jbear's setback. ' . en<hng ,her' artiCle, that "Susana .ervice ehargefor. every $100, bor had been dismissed, two others' " School teaching isn?!: Eli~'s ' had resigned,and' a par!sh pr~e~t 'ultimate g!>al. While teaching,' .----~-------""'!"'-. rowed. Stop in at our Main Bank 'or . hac:t ,be~1'1 suspended .£01', 'parb,C1:- she' plans to work towards beany of our convenient neighborhood' . pation in an expe'rim'ental, clan- coming' ,a' dentist. That'll take ,', , branches,--' ' destine Mass at the ·seminary. . 'eight more years of study. Even- ' Just Across The' The chancery said 'it had been 'tually' she thinks she· might like C:oggeshalD St. Bridge constrained from publicizing .the· to practice in the United States, F(lirhaven, Mass. "faults or failings of others" out but that's in the far distant Fi.n~st Variety of of charity, but was forced to future.
make the statement because "reThe medical world is already SEAFOOD .
ports attributed to one of the in- ·familiar to her, she said. Her Served An)'wl;ere..l.. Arso .1,' dividuals'invQlved do not reflect father is an obstetrician,and a $TEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN &I'~ ~ ~ tile full truth." dentist uncle ill, encouraging bell'
sci
Dismissals
.Thinking a~o\1t
a, "NEW,CAB?
of
.. :
luto
$re
a'
(ASA ' BLAN'C'A
~:its~. &ww.
Ji4;za;.
t
'4 ,..'
So~' ~aste", 1
.
:"
.'.
' . ;:-',
i
\ ',.
,.i(
~
\ . \ ':,
I.
','
Prive
Continued from Page One
•
:,Five'Tend'enciesl:mportant'
was .set ~.~ realistic arrtount ·for the newlY formed' plirish. The overall goal is $420,000 for ·,land purchase, con~truction, fur nishings and equipment. The balance of funds needed 'is ex pectedto be raised over the next 25 years through various special · events. .
.,I'n Latin .Development . lFrom' "Social Revolutlioo lin due New Latin America" Edited by J6hlm J.,Consj~ine, M.M. Mexico in years past: went through a blood revolution, . writes Marina Bandeira. Cuba is a warning to us all. But Chile has shown us that bloodshed is not inevitable in this struggle for 'integral development. Is it possible to release the whole of Latin America " ;,rC . 0 m un,derdevelop'IDimt? group!t within a .country, negoti ~ r ating solutions between' coun ',This is the great challenge tries or,even groups "of countries. which must be placedbef6re Brute forre, 'all-powerful per
Prior t9 the start of the drive a 16-page brochure was mailed to each family which outlined the building program for the new church and parish·hall now 'uhder construction' on Purchase Street. Bishop COhnolly canon ically established the new parish on April. 12; 1966.
,: 'the Christian social movement .sons, organizations, or countries, An Latin America. The most' sig- have more difficulty imposing "ni:ficant features, their will, ' Commiiftera 'Members , t:h eon e s t 0 More' and more the tendency . '.which 1 would _is, to discover new social articu~ ,The funds were raised. as ,fol 'like to call the ;latiQIls of groups,'of social units, ·NEW HABiT: Sisters of the ,Holy Union of the Sacred lows: Memorial" Gifts, Goal .' attention of the .of "political regimes whiCh are Hearts are being seen this week for;'the first time -in their $30,000, raised $30,782; Special 8 0 cia 1 move: llble to recognize and accept this ments, w 0 u I d interdependence that has been new habit. Left, Sr. Marie Albert,' S.U~S.C. of St. Michael's Gifts, Goal $45,000, raised $53, School, Fall River,wears the 'new, habit; while Sr. Barbara 536; and Parish Gifts" Goal be: the acceler. discovered, $5,000, Raised $5,925. The com ation of history; On an interational level, this Mary, S.U.S.C.., right, SHA vocation director, is: wearing mittee included Louis A. Lyne, a t e n den c y c o n ' c e p t finds it most typical ex the old habit for the last time. director; Raymond Richard, pub towards com'pression in the admission of the licity; Mrs, Margaret Hayward munitary living; principle of coexistence. · and.Mis~. Joan LaRock, co-treas v era 11 plan" ' . Overall PlaOO,mg' ~ urers; and. Theodore R. Lari ning; the emer-. If governments are to meet the - n Ir . '. IN ' II v· viere, recorder. gence of a third, underdeveloped, .demands of their people, they .... i world; 'the increasing cosmopol can no longer afford'to be em II~ Also Frank A.' Ready and Jo ·ittillism of man, or the new plan ,pirical, shortsighted or simply seph F. Kairys, co-chairmen of etarian man. idealistic. Governments are ra SAN JUAN (NC) - The "urg "We want to emphasize that memorial gifts; Roy E. Owens Acceleration of llIistory quired to organi,ze the march oi ent need of religious instruction" youth lives in the framework of and Michael Hegarty, co-chair As from the Qeginning of the progress, to make plans for. the to combat "the conscious or un circumstances and environment men of special gifts; and MI:S. 19th" Century, the world has .... solution of problems, to establish conscious rebellion of youth" for which the young are n~t Roy Owens and Mrs. Irving witnessed the speeding up of "priorities in the execution of was underscored by the BIshops directly responsible," the state Vose, co-chairmen of parish gifts progress through technical ex these plans. of Puerto Rico in a pastoral. ment said. and the women's division. . pertise, The Industrial Revolu . Governments are becoming letter. "The young cannot- be made Cost of the brochure and cam .!ion created new societies, new more '01e bishops proclaimed the responsib4l because they are the "t f is ex · t dpowerful f thO . and more paign expenses were underwrit eomforts, t h rough ever Improv1 pee • e t'0 eu capaC! y or or observance of Youth Week from victims of social norms which tem by friends and relatives of ing techniques, through socia.. garnza Ion. Sociology, statistics, Oct, 23 to 30. They urged the ' 1 and SClen 'till-c me th " II d the island's young people/ to study' are defective and provoke the Father Hanna. Therefore every economlca pu bl''b'l't' IC opmlon , f po ki s, an . conscious or unconscious rehel ods. POSSl I lIes 0 ma ng a sCIenti and meditate on the message of lion of youth. Proof of this is penny. of every dollar contrib · l' f f ts, all 11 uted goes towards the new fi All this b rought a new t ype 0 f c ana YS1S 0 ac a ow Vatican Council II to youth, _L ' 'k ; b' t th e establish a dialogue with adults, the increasing difficulty which church and parish center. The. Il;Ilam reac t'ion th roug h out the f or th e re d uc t'ion 0.f rIS ,u.. 'b'lit d parents experience in education bulk of the clerical work in world ; modern man IlOpes th a t Illeasure 0 f responsl I y an and be alert against unscrupu of their children." . volved was prepared by women 1111 may benefit by a yet greater power which thereby falls to lous persons,
of the parish and Brother· Her ·acceleration in scientific discov governinents is- proportionately
Stall'~ in Family man's research clerical staff of 'ery; he is no longer fatalist, and increasing" "In thes~ days when society"
. he. will not wait for any "so If, during the last century, the experiences' rapid and radical The, 'bishops asserted delin Holy Cross Seminary. . ""called pormal process of 'evolu Industrial Revolution had the changes, it is' not strange that quency is not a product of prog , A f~/,lalr~pori~f. the building lion to bring'·his grandchildren ";'ch'aracteristicofharnessing'phys- ,,,youth,, :,'thll. most delicate. p~rt ress. They ,added;. ','But certainly some nameleSs. benefit. in a far ical 'force, today the. plienome- of the social texture,". il!..,af m~~e~~~ ,p,rogreS$ .wilJ. . bring .,fund dJive. will be made. after ,;,. i' distant future. . ',"non of'i'iitionalization, 'esp~cially tected grea.tly by the ch~nges, .aloQg,a,~~.gativ.eweightofdelin .. the Ne)/V' .,Ye~r:.· , , ::, .' Instinctively, he assumes ~is "'.'tWtOugh' piaririftig, alloWS 'thede- ::"the. bishops .,said. . ' .' . quency j,f", ~e do not place as ,. . . ,',"; .,.j t.: proper role of man as subject;,of ':"~iiii()n:'ri1'akers ;to' reach the 'or-"" The statement was signed 'by .,~h~;.,f~~~~tlon.:;of,our~rogress 1 culture subject of .history. ':: ., "garHiation of seiCial'life 'itself;" :' 'Archbishop' Luiz Aponte 'of' san " ;~)t~r f~Ith)n G<>d",o.W'. gratitude to i, : : ' Commuhitary ,i,. "''-' . Emerg,elice of, Bishops Alfred·F. Mendez.. ': n.ot cPri-,::.,,:" ftft, ':"",' ' .-,...." -'" " ' . ' ,., '.... ·',n·se··' f'A '. 'b .". . t ,vfI but·pubbcand OffIcial .for ;: This ,rapidly changing world . The cOlltrast betvy:een fully de- ''';;; .'., "0, . recl 0; 'rrermo ·H.·t' ..' ,';";,.,, .: "I~ 1,,, '.' .•,1 i~, Is reacting a,gainst the individu- ,:"ve~o,pe.~.'~n.<;l ,l,l~d~J::de,,:,~~op~d Torres6f':I~6nce; '~~fael"~rovas .'&PTr:i::;i;,;':i~e~~;defenseof all ,. .c,' alism of, the past centuries. So- 'i;(lQ,':l~tP~ll,lS ,anQther ~haractElns- ofCaguas; ,and AUXIliary BIShops '. .. " . . '. .. ., '. "", ,';' .. '," .' , . " . i,' cial groups withlocal.:natiob.alJtf,~~,~ur,times. . , ." . ",oJuan'deD!os'Lopez'of SanrJuan :~,' .'w.e:'~ant" .. :to~ str~ss;··the ;1 , and even international loyalties.",,:,;,~,t.must .~ .. recalled. at, this '. ,~d ¥tu.1.~.o Parrilla o~ Ca~~ bIShops· continue~, ,t~«:~bsol~te ,,;', ·c'" . "'" , , '.' ;':: are drawing together in a more ;:I,:~mtt,hatthis sam~ prqblem, .' and u~gent need of religu)us m Commercial Industrial .. grganic unit..~hJs, same c.ontrast exists. Within' 'iji-"':" ·.. ·,.J!0 ".. 'S·"··· .'" ,str~c~on, a.,~ell understood ,I,; .," I~:stitutio~a' I ," . . t ' I ,,~«nlJ\«l!(lJJ G«ill'l, . OC.Bet.o~$ reli-ous educatIon h' h starts ' .. !.Socifllexp'eriments ~re¥ing .:.coun,,n,:s~ ~.my own. country, "'. "<', • '.w IC. ." '. .., "\·1 ! undertaken aU over the world., BraZil, we fmd areas of extreme- 'lNI~m~.' He(ID<cl! ~n the famIly, contmues m the Painting, and Decol'ating , Some aspects of life in capitalist', ~a~~ de,:,e~opment ,which ~re sctt-ool and· is defended ~d per 1F«Il~8 ~uver . ~72-19Y TI ~ountries such as boards of di- becommg richer every year . FORT, CREDIT (NC) - A . fected in an adeg,uate SOCial en rectors fot the sharing' of re- while the'typically underdevel- . Montreal· layman has· been ,_vi~o~ment .. formed by publie74 WmiOlMSOIl1l Street sponsibility (the ,socialization of oped areas, the maj~rity of .the named· first secretary-general of opuuon, ~he... press and other decisions) prove this tendency. coup.try, are becommg poorer a new national association of mass media. The interdependence of inter- an,d protesting this state of Holy Name, Societies in Canada. ests be it in labor unions or em- .a~ai.rs. . . Sean Fl, Tobin was named, to t. plo;ers' associations, are indic,at, The Second World War lind ,"the"positi~nat a rec,~t meeting ing the new possibilities' of ne- ., the years that followed it .saw of' the natiOnal prOVISiOnal com gotiating solutions by social,. the great awakening of.' the ,r:nitte,e of ~he HNS.. The, co~mit'. ~backw.ard" peoples. The. poorer' tee orgamz~d the aSSOCIatIon on . 'countries began, to . accuse the' a cO'IIm1ohwealth system. .' . , .~ "'LOAN . ASS~CILA'.Il'KON .OW' . A1'TlLlElBQRO: <, Afi'ltllfu> l8ishCIP>S S;frll.[]<dJJ,:.ii~her ones of being re~ponsi~le~,: " ,'" . "Lot( . IR f,..f9r·~heir4istress and f:asti~a~ed,uiF·~ ..·.""';.;':.,""'=C=.,,,=c"";"',=,=."".m=_--"""""""""lI '.t,,-.': ,','1',··:, " 9 lUlII'91 C!lI1'MS ,ll,l~ c~lonial exPlOitation"" . 11:'M'\\@~re~A 0 ,4%% on an Savill1lgs ··ACOOUUlts .ThlS new type of nationalIsm JERUSALEM. (NC)-Concern ~VlJl.\D\lbrn ~\'t1.... . ~': for liturgical ·reform was the declares that underdeveleiP~Emt ' . . dominant theme of the 17th is not an inexorable decree gf'~' . ONE STOP 4%. %' 0111 Timoe car-tilicates meeting. 0'£ Arab bishops; of' the ~~te, :rhe poorer' countries de-. SHOPPDNG CENTER Attleboro - New lBedf~rd Latin rite, conferring, at the mand fair prices for their 'prod ~', Television • Furniture home of -.- Jerusallfm's Latin-rite ucts. . .• ~ppliances • Grocery Patriarch Archbishop Alberto The meeting of African and' Gori, O,F,M. . :Asian countries'.at Ba~dung in .]~ AlIen St., New Bedford ~ Bishops from 13 Arab coun~ 1955 should not be ignored. The . ;997-9354, '-' tries attended - the' three-day .meeting al Geneva, ·in' 1964 of meeting', They discussed the toe Corifer~nce :of 'the United adaptation of' the liturgy to the Nations Trade and Developm¢nt, . language and customs of the showed Latin America clo~ing' Arab na~ions and sought to de- ...ranks with other underdevelop- . '. velop a unified policy for litlir:'" 00 rontiile'nts; . e: gical reform, .\ ' , . . -.It. is th~ third world coming . -' 0." The prelate also discussed ecu- into existence, The third world'" "~eg,:.'Mti!iter Plumbfitj-' 293~
!!Denical' affairs and began toe" is not necessarily 'against the. " . GE9RGE M. MONnE ,.
restructuring of the Latin Epis- .. rest, ~f the world. Together they' ', ..;,:''pyer 35. Yea~ ..
eopal Conference of 'thl,;' Arab';' . want to find solutions for their "~:" .~5~,:- Wcishing~on( Stll'~et, .Fairh'a~en .. ,.Qf Satisfied Service
Countries to conform with the "common ailings and fight for the' ; . ,994~505a .. , f ; . norms of the Second Vatican enforcement of decisions which"" "806,,.NO. MAiN SJREEi a::oUl1cil. will benefit them alL IMDDU lltiveD' 675-74W y,
'.
B=slL orms of .pMllert'o R:c' Stress· · ed for Religious . Instruction e
G
. \
Li.qi~g
T,Jiirdiw~r.cf-"'J'uan·;
,Hlte~" ~llr "r'!!s~t;
~nly
l",'
• • , 'I;
1,1.,:
II",N" "",·E.L'L'Y:":"', .
PA.,INTING,,' SERYICE'
.
i'·
ir
lr@!bOii1
& 501'1. 5'
e
I
, .: , , I.' ,.'
,
"
,',
',~'
.
-
M'"on.'1'"e PI um beIn9 & "'M'.'...,
eatlli19
C I' ' ' nc.·
BISAILLON'S ",GARAGE,
. 24:H'our .Wrecker Seryice·
Bis"op Stresses Michael. Bote~ho of. Coyle Thought. ,F.irst U"S~. Stud'ents Favor ,'. Catholic Schools' 'Draft Overhaul' MILWAUKEE (NC) -A P9D Teen Mayor; Serves Taunton Youth Moral Purpose, disclosed the majority of Mat By Dorothy Eastman
PASSAIC (NC) -
Pater'son's Bishop Lawrence B. Casey declared "the time has . eome to reassert in the clearest possible terms" that Catholic schools exist because they "have a strong religious and moral purpose." Addressing the annual Paterson diocesan school teachers' in stitute the New Jersey prelate discussed the sacrifices being made for Catholic schools, edueational methods,. discipline, quality of religious training, dialogue with students and purposes of Catholic education. Bishop Casey said Catholic schools "do not exist, as some thfuk, to preserve conservative methods of teaching, or because we seem to be more successful in maintaining a certain external discipline and decorum among our pupiis. Religio1llS Emphasis "The truth is that,. however beneficial such things may be, they simply are not important enough to justify a separate school system," he said. "What really justifies our schools as a ,separate system is thei! moral and religious emphasis, and this not necessarily in a narrow sectarian sense. "This is the one great gift, ,really, that we can offer to.. our. students which they cannot ob., tain in any other school," he continued. "We Catholics are in the school business because we believe that no system of education is complete or adequate if it does not root itself firmly in belief in God and commitment to Jesus Christ and His teachings. This is what Catholic education is meant to be, and this is what it must be if it is to survive." Discipline NecesSary
Taunton may well be the first city in the United States to have two mayors-one for adults and one for teen-agers. Benjamin A. Friedman is the adult mayor and on Oct. 8th Michael Botelho, 17, took his oath of office as the "teen mayor." The Coyle senior, who is a member of Our Lady of Lourdes parish in Taunton, would like to make politics his career. He seems to have gotten off to the best start in history. The concept of a governing body of, for
and by teen agers was first pro
posed late last Summer. After a
long hot Summer sparked by
some unrest revolving around
teen-age dances, relations be
tween the adults of the commu-
. nity and the riot-quite adults were becoming rather strained. Mayor Friedman had ordered' the teen dance hall closed and some of the, young people re sponded by picketing City Hall. Mayor Friedman refused to bar gain with the pickets because he wasn't convinced they represented the majority of the law respecting element of the youth in the community. Into this hornet's nest' stepped three lads with a proposal so constructive;so well thought out, that Mayor Friedman was im mensely pleased. The three, all students at Msgr. Coyle High, were Michael Botelho, Ronald Rusconi and Harry Allison.
quette students favor overhatiJ., ing the country's current selee- tive service system. Some on per cent of the students voting expressed dissatisfaction with the current .draft laws, 22 per cent were satisfied and 7 per cent were undecided. A. total of 572 students, both male and female, participated in the referendum sponsored by 'Associated Students of Mar-quette in conjunction with the National Student Association. The uni versity is conducted by the Jesuits.• More women (81 per cent) than men (69 per cent) expressed dissatisfaction. with the draft system, but more men (49 per cent) than women (36 per cent) believed the laws should be changed to include drafting of women for noncombatant ~ posts. The students gave overwhelm ing endorsement- to a nation's right to conscript its citizens for military service with 92 per cent voting in the affirmative, 6 per cent opposed and 2 per cent undecided. The results of the poll will be forwarded by NSi_ to the Presi dent's national advisory commis sion on the selective service sys tem.
, CathQJHo~$D[?rotest(IJnts
The neatly dressed, clean-cut trio impressed the mayor when they called on him in City Hall with their proposal for a com mission of teen-agers to super vise social, cultural and athletic activities for teens in Taunton. According to their plan,
youngsters between the ages of
15 and 19 would be eligible to
join in the planned activities
and tl\ey would be issued non transferable membership cards.
There would be adult supervis
ion by advisors appointed by the Mayor and parents would be iri "ited to activities. . .
Ship
W!hJ~@t
to India.
BALTIMORE (NC)-A 20,000 ton shipment of bulk wheat,val ued at $1,695,000 has left here fo" India under joint Catholic Protestant' sponsorship. Transportation and .distribu tion of the cargo, shipped aboard the tanker SS York, is being fi nanced by Catholic Relief Serv ice&-National Catholic Welfare Conference, Lutheran World Re lief, and Church World Service. The grain was donated by, the U. S., .government, under the Food for Peace plan.
As for discipline, the bishop MICHAEL BOTELHO, of Taunton declared "there is an absolute need for discipline and order if the students are really'to learn.Teen ~~uncil lers, Marilyn Faber and Elaine principal at' St. Francis Xavier At the same time, he said, selfAs a result of this meeting, a . Robino. . School in East Providence. discipline "is far better than pro tempore Taunton Municipal In his inaugural· address,· Michael's mother was a costrict regimentation.". : ,Teenage .Co~ncil was' set up. ". Mayor Botelho' described the' foundress of the Villa Fatima' . "It is far better to teach our·Michael. .Bote1ho and Stephen .·fledgling teen age council all an: Helpers, women's auxiliar.y 1Cl Whe're youngsters to. act on; principle '; Lond.~rs weJ;e. eo:-chairmt;n for.. organization that. has as one; of, .the ~istel's. She ill serving her. rather than to 'regiment th~m. the'first meeting,,'Whic~ was set .. its,fundamental'concepts the im,. .seventh consecutive term as G()OD military . fashion. If: they are "P. to present to the young peo-,. :'provement of the local commu-' president' of the organizatil;)n. shown the reasons for. imposed pIe of ,Taunton the plan for a.' mty" oil. 'a teen~age' level. • Big .Project , regulation&-and they ~re ask- fully r~ognized and orthodox. ', ..: " .Wants· to Serve .: {)ne ;. of ,the big projects of Means A ing for. these reason&-they are municipal ceuncil for Taunton Stressing that the organization Michael and, his· fellow off.icials mo!e likely 1Cl respOnd favor- residents ~tween the ages of is anxious to be o~,service to the. at the moment is the redecora ably," he said. ' 15 and 19 years. ' community, he said, "it not ting of the office in, Taunton While the. result ,04lIl not the 'Mayor Friedman's warm wel only. provides the opportunity' City Hall where ,His Honor will precision of action one finds ill come to the group made it clear for teen agel'S to take part in the hold forth, and where the Coun perfect external conformity," the that he intended to give them civic development of the com cil wi,ll ;meet. The new officials Bishop continued, "neither is his wholehearted support. "You munity in its specific area, but are elbow deep in sandpaper and that inner resentment and rebel- are setting an example not only in addition, presents the commu-' paint preparing the room that lion, nor that sullen discontent for your city, but for y~ur eoun nity with effective workers and was given to them for their ex which regimentation constantly try," he told the 'young people. trains its future leaders in civic clusive use. breeds." Plans were made at that meet- service and responsibility." Expenses of the councP will Need for Dialogue ing for the election of a 10 memOne' of the g~oup's first proj be provided fo~ in the new city In this context, Bishop Casey ber group, including a mayor, ects has been to assist in solicit budget ~ow bemg prepared. stressed the need for dialogue- council president, council vice,. ing contributions for United The city of T<CIunton has taken "upwards as well as downwards- president secretary and six Fund in the Small Business a large step forward in its rela 1001 Kings Hwy. within the school, with students councilm~n at large to represent Division. tions with its teen-agel's and the through student councils and the 4,000 teen-agel(S in the city. Michael is the son' of Mr. and new teen officials have accepted with parents' groups.. . of Taunton. Mrs. Arthur Botelho of 20 a great responsibility. Other NEW "It is of paramount' imporA spirited campaign followed, Briggs Street in Taunton. He has communities all over the country tance," he said, "that the admin- and while the young 'candidates been an altar boy at Our Lady will be watching with interest Open Evenings istrators consult with the stu- kissed no babies and handed out of Lourdes Church for 12 years this pioneering concept of teen dents regularly and listen with DO,cigars, they°threw themselves and attended Sacred Heart government· being put into prac an open mind. The aggiorna- into the spirit of electioneering grammar school. tice. mento must be evident in our with gusto. He is spiritual chairman for lichools if they are to be successThe election was held Oct. 2, the Catholic Youth Organization ful in· preparing. students for a and the turnout at the Central of the Diocese of Fall River and life of Christian commitment Pire Station polling place was president of the CYO group in and fulfillment." very good. his own parish. He ill co-editor But, he warned, "in th,ese da31\ll . When the votes were counted, of the Coyle student newspaper, of free discussion with ;your Michael Botelho was the first "The Warrior," and a volunteer' pupils know where to draw the teen mayor of'Taunton, if not worker Our Lady of Guada:' invisible line which prevents the first in the entire country. mpe Spanish Center in Taunton. them from losing thek ll'e8pect Electecf::bn the ticket with him The Botelho family has close :lor their teachers.was the n&W cOUlllcil president, ties with the Dorothean Sisters MANUFA£TURERS Arthur Henrique, II sophomore of VillA Fatima in Taunton. Two at Taunton High. of Michael's aunts hold positions 'NATIONAL BANK
Named to the eouncft were of responsibility in the commu of BRISTOl. COUNTY
ti!Ye BishoP Cassidy ~igh stu-· nity; Mother Mistress Almerind~ .M'LANTA (NC)-Archbishop Costa is mistress of novices for Paul ~. Hallinan is one ~ 20 ap-. dents--Jean Carter, Donna Per THE AREA'S MOST ACCOMMODAtiNG BANK
Frances Delgado, Mary the American province of- the pointed to the newly created J'3. ATTLEBORO FALLS
Mianta amun\ln~ ~lations Bowen and Carolyn McCaffery~ Dorotheans, which has headquar Commission, designed to cope .Mso elected were three Taunton ters at Villa Fatima; and Sister NORTH ATTLEBORO • MANSFIELD
;High atudent&-Margaret Wwt. Dorothy Costa is superior and -'tb Rcial l)llODlems.
A. 'NA,ME
.GREAT. DEAL
GEO. O'HARA
CHEVROLET BEDFORD
at
Race Problems
o
~.
,','
o
,6
.'
StD .John's University Adopts
TtiE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 1, 1966
Policy of ,Watchful Waiting
Responsib~e For Promotion of,' ~em1ce
All Citixens
By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC) The first task of the Church in these troubled ti~es, fope Paul declared in his 1965 Christmas message, "is her role as the messenger o( peace." For this reason, he said, "'we . . . are making a 'new' plea for peace~and .this, n,ot simply because peace is ~ All of us, on the other hand, good thing in itself, but also ,because it is a gooq which is must have profound sympathy' those officials of our govern un such danger today. We for ment who bear the awesome re
know. ,., * * that millions of hearts sponsibility of making life-and are trembling and suffering, death decisions, ,by the· day and DR. WALTER 1HI. ENGLISH awaiting the re by' the hour, about our national turn of peace." policy with regard to the Viet J[n recent months, nam crisis. the Holy Father We have a duty' to pray for' Ihlas repeatedly them and to try to understand, and ever more even if we cannot always agree insistently re with, the reasons which lie be Dr. Walter H. English of the iIlewed this an- ' hind their decisions. Sp~ingfield, Mass. public school guished plea for Slystem has accepted an invita Public Opinion n-eace. "God is our witness," he It does them no to work tion to address delegates to the CCD Leadership Day Program Ihl a s solemnly at building peace so long as feel stated, "that we ings of hostility, contempt, and scheduled for Saturday, Dec. H) are ready,' for distrust,. as well as racial hatred' at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth.
our part, to try every approach and 'unbending ideologies, con The Leadership Program is - even outside the ordinaril)' tillUe to divide men and place designed to. exploreopportuni
accepted forms of protocol them in opposing comps. every time we judge that the "Hence arises a surpassing ties 'for Christian leadership
Church' can usefully bring to need for renewed education of' : available to Catholic students at the governments the 'weight of attitudes and for a new inspira-. . tending public hig~ schoo~s. Del:" egates from all parishes of the its moral auihority for'the main tion in' the area of public opin tenance and progress ,of a just ion. Those who are dedicated'to Fall River Diocese are to be in vited under the auspices of the peace ahlOng men and among the work of educatlQn,. 'particu peoples." larly of the young, or who mold Confraternity of Christian DOc-' Bishops Share Conviction public opinion, should regard as . trine, the agency responsible far the religious education of those The Catholic Bishops of the their most weighty task the ef United States, meeting in plen fort to instruct all in fresh sen.,. attending public schools. The program, under chairman ary session for the first time timents of peace.;' I ship of Brother Thomas Mulryan, since the close of'Vatican Coun Regardless of our attitudes C.S.C., of Coyle High School, cil II, wboleheartedly and unre with respect to the tangled issues servedly associated themselves involved in the Vietnamese Taunton, will consist of confer with Pope Paul in thisall-im-, crisis, we must never' settle for ences, discussions and religious services. Entertainment. and portant work. war. as an acceptable solution to meals are a1so provided for ia They made it clear that they' international disputes, except the 9 to 6::10 schedule for Satur &hare his deeply felt conviction and then only with great reluc day, Dec. 10. that this is clearly the first duty tance and with fear and trem Dr. English .will be one of the of the Church in these trQubled bling-as a last resort. principal speakers scheduled for times-to be the messenger of Our goal at all times must be peace. . peace-not peace' at any' price, the student conference. He· is God is also their witness, then, but a peace which is. based on Director of the soci~ and psy Utat they too are resolved to. justice and safeguards the sacred chological services unit of the . .carry out this task by' every rights of individuals and com Bureau of Pupil Services in Springfield. Since 1948 he has means at their disposal. munities. been a teacher and guidance The bishops noted that being. counselor in the Springfield the messenger of peace at a time Pope's Wa.rning schools and from 1963 to Jaml when our own country is enThis peace will not be ary of this year he served as gaged in a bloody conflict. il'l achieved easily or without sac Southeast' Asia is a most diffi- ,rjfice, but" cost what it ~ay. in Director of the Office of Inter eult' pastoral' ·,ty. They terms of national prestige,..· it group Relations for the city of
llmow that their fellow citi- must be achieved before it is too'· ~pringfieid.. zens differ among themselves' late, as Pope Paul solemnly Howard Gradll.ate "Gver the moral issues involved warn'ed the leaders of the world' A graduate of Howard Univer in this' tragic conflict. The)' do ~n. his peace encyclical of Sept. sity in Washington, D. C., where not claim to be able to settle' ar 15.
he received. his-B.A. and M.A.
ll'esolve all of these issues au"We cry to them," the Holy degrees, Dr. English earned his thoritatively in the name of the Father said, "in God's name to doctorate in education from Church. stop. Men must come together Teachers College, Columbia Uni Under Moral Scrutiny and work out concrete plans and versity. He has served on the For my own part, I eo not terms in all sincerity. A settle faculties o:f CCNY, Springfield think that they can reasonably ment should be reached now College and Westfield State he expected to do 'so in the ful- even at the expense of Some in College. fillment of their pastoral office. convenience or loss; for it may An accomplished lecturer,. Dr. Their pastoral task at the mohave to be made later in the English has served as president ment is not to try to determine train of bitter slaughter and in of the Council of Churches of authoritatively, in the name of volve great loss." Greater Springfield and as the Church, whether or' not our 'chairman of the ste.ering com Each Responsible nation's involvement in Vietnam mittee of the Conference on Re is morally justified under pres. In summary, we are called ligion and Race of Greater ent circumstances. upon to do every'thing within Springfield. He was recently ap It is clearly their duty, howour power to create a clill\ate of pointed by Governor Volpe to ever, to insist that this issue and public' opinion in the United serve on the Massachusetts Com-' all of the related moral issues States which will enable our mission on Children and Youth. involved in the Vietnam crisis nation to move in this. direction In commenting on plans for the be kept under constant moral as rapidly. as possible-before it Leadership Day Program, ~roth scrutiny. is too late. er Mulryan said, "We are pleased This 'duty they have fulfilled We can have confidence in the that Dr. English has accepted: m their recent statement on peaceful purposes of our gov the invitation - to the CCD
peace. The)' have' reminded us ernment, but history attests to Leadership . Conference; His - that we are all obliged, in con- the fact that even peace-loving . broad experience.in the fields of science to keep testing and re- governments cannot negotiate an education, ecumenism and race fining our jUdgment - not only .honorable peace if the climate of relations will provide our dele about the war itself but also p\lblic opinion is running in gates. with good insights into the about the means which are being favor of war or if their people challenges that await them as llIsed in 'the war - against the are unWilling to approve "a set- they assume their roles as ma norms of morality. . tlement reached at the expense ture Christians." Brother Mul Need Sympathy, Prayers of some inconvenience or loss."" ryan J indicated that 'the Bishop . None ·of us, .they have noted, Hence, in the wor.ds of Pope Stang facilities are being readied 'is free to transfer this personal PaUl, "every Christian today to handle an even larger num- . responsibility. to ,the officials o~ should -consider himself respon bel'. of delegates than the 300 our government or to those 'who" 'sible, in his own way, for the , . who attended the previous CCD are professionally involved in., 'prpgress of the .spirit of peace Leadership Program' held laR forming public opinion. among humanity." May in Taunton.
Spri.ngfie~«D
Man
Tci"'Addre$$. CeD
JAMAICA .(NC) - Teachers is lack of academic freedom anel resumed picketing at St. John's tenure at the university. In a previous attempt to have University here but the nation's largest Catholic institution, of -the university disaccredited last higher education clung to a April, .the MSACSS declined to watchful waiting policy as a sec take action, but indicated it ond attempt to disaccredit it . would restudy the situation at a later meeting. neared. Pickets appeared in an appar There has been sporadic 'pick ent move to dramatize the ap eting at the university since fe~-. proaching meeting in tAtlantic eration members went on strike City, N. J., of the MiddYe States in protest against the university policies. Association of Colleges and Sec The university conducted by .ondary Schools. the Vincentian Fathers with The . United Federation of Col lege. Teachers has filed' a peti campuses here and in Brooklyn tion with the MSACSS, asking has some 13,000 students, making - disaccreditation of St. John's: it the No. 1 U. S. Catholic insti The controversy started last De tution in point of enrollinent. A spokesman for the university cember when the university dis said St. John's had no comment charged 31 teachers. T·he federation claims the on the current situation and teachers were not told Why they most likely would have none - were dismissed and tha_t there until action by the MSACSS:
good
.
t
FOR T·J-tE FRIEND \NHO HAS EVERYTHING THE HOLY FATHER'S "MISSiON AID TO THE ORIeNTAL CHURCH
SHOPPING What to give at Christmas to the friend who has USED everything.is a problem nC?o longer. Now,.ln his TO B~ nama (or hers), you can WIpe out hardshIp•••• A Young me.n. need your help to become- good· PROBLEM? priests. Millions of babies are hungry all the· time. Christmas will be happy If you ~elP peol?le like these in your friend's name. We II send him
(or her) ~ new artistic personalized Gift Card In
time for Christmas, saying what you have done.
: .• To train a' native priest costs only $60C? all told ($100 a year, $8:50 a· month). To tram a Sister costs merely $300 ($150 a year, $12.50 a month). Give an altar to a· missIon church ($75) a chalice ($40), a ciborium ($40), a
·taber~acle ($25), a sainfs picture ($15), 8
sanctuary bell ($5). For as-little as $10 you can
hled a family of refugees for a month. , FOR OHRISTMAS
NAME
A
OHURCH
Build
••
church, and nama It yourself for the saint of your choice? You can do It fur much less than you think. The Holy Father says a church Is
urgently needed in Decamere, Ethiopia ($3,750),
for instance; In Zahle, lebanon ($3,695); In Muvattupuzha, India ($2,473), and scores of
poverty places. What an appropriate, lasting gift
at Chrfstmas In your loved ones' memoryl •••
Write· to us. All gifts .re .tax·deductlble, of
course, In the U. S. A.
8
.~
In 'Bethlehem, orphan girls will find their Christ ONI mas stockings ampty. like to- be Santa Ciau.s-· tc. SANTA one of them? You· can 'adopt' a. little girl for ClAUS only $10-a month ($120 a year). We'll"send'YOU
her photo, ask her to wilte to you.
WANTED:
••
~ OUR
The MidnIght Mass In Bethlehem will be offered
GIfT fiH- the members 01 this Association. This is our
TO Chrfstmes Gift•••• ~ by day, all year long, YOU members share also-In the' Masses. prayers, and ,acrfflces of our missfon' priests· and Sisters. ·In tfme, for Chrlstmes, enroll yourself, your familY and friends? The offering. (used for the
.poor In 18 developing. countries) Is very low.
You can enroll your family (living and deceased)
In perpetual membership ($.100) or annual
membership ($10). To enroll an Individual
(living or dlilC83Sed) the offering Is $25 (per petual) or $2' (annual)•••• Ask us to send Gift Cards before Chr.istmas, If you wish.
o
lDear
Monsignor Nolanl
Please return coupon with your offerlnfl
-----------------~ •IlNOL09IlD CO PLEASE "'ND $ _ FOR:-
_
NAMII:
--",.... 0
STREI"i"
OITY·_ _~
_ .:.-
_
OTATll__:..._..:_l!IP COillZ_
l'HUn WIiIII.PARIiI ~SSDOUATIDN
NEAR EAST MISSIONS fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PresIdent M8GR. JOHN G. NOLAN, Natlonal8ecretary Write: CATHOLIC .NllAR (AaT WELFARE Asaoc. . 330 MadisOn Avenue-· New York, N.Y. lOOn Telephono: 212/yUkon 6-5840
Predicts Coming Catholic-Anglican Talks Part of 'Breakthrough ' ST. LOUIS (NC) - Anglican Bishop John R. H. Moonnan, who will head his church's delegation to the new AnglicanRoman Catholic dialogue commission, views that commission as another step in the "new break-through" in the. ecumenical movement generated by Vatican II. . Bishop Moorman of Ripon, England, was in the United States when fonnation of the commission was announced. He said in an interview here that the new group "will be preparatory, one which will plan rather than ac tually conduct, dialogue." Its first meeting will be next Jan. 9-13 in Gazzada, Italy. After deciding "how dialogue
should take place," he said, the commission will most likely branch out into sub-groups which wilI.take up specific prob lem 'areas in dialogue. (!)In Nati«J>lllan lLevels Such areas will include canon law, theology, liturgy, mixed marriages and Anglican Orders, he said. He speculated that such groups mfght be set up on national levels. . Some nation-level dialogue is taking place now in Engliand, Bishop Moorman said. Before leaving the United States, the bishop was scheduled to meet with Msgr. William Baum, secre tary of the U. S. bishops' com mission on ecumenism, which has held three national dialogues with Anglicans to date.- Bishop Charles H. Helmsing of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., and Father George Tavard, theolo gian and ecumenist', both active in the n~tional talks here, are among the Catholic members of the new 21-member preparatory commission. Official Observer Bishop Moorman, a historian specializing in the middle ages and an expert on St. Francis of Assisi and the Francicsan move ment, was an official observer at all four Vatican Council ses sions. Until that time, he said, he was "not too much involved" in ecumenical affairs. Since the council, Bishop Moorman has helped arrange the historic meeting oetween Arch bishop Michael Ramsey of Can terbury and Pope Paul and has been deeply involved 'in the ec umenical movement.
THE' ANCHOR Tkurs., Dec. 1, 1966
Churches Gather In No. Attleboro
He is in charge of the library of the new Anglican Center which opened this Fall in Rome. The center, a place for study and research in Anglicanism, re ceived a warm welcome from Pope Paul. Some 2,500 books arrived at that center last week, while Bishop Moorman was still in the U. S. The center will also include living quarters for a permanent Anglican representative, lecture halls, discussion rooms and a chapel.
Ob$~rv~!rs Speck £fr ~fr~@IJ'i)U'@ Sytnlod . ATLANTA (NC) - Non-Cath olic observers spoke to delegates at the three-day Atlanta Arch diocesan synod which considered parochial education, the sacra ments, celibacy and birth con-. . NEW MOTlHIER GENERAL: Mother General Marie trol. De Piro, S.S.D., right, and Mother Provincial Virginia Bento, Delegates favor a program for S.S.D., at Villa Fatima, Taunton. more masses in the homes and a greater role foJ;' parents in pre paring their children for first Holy Co;nffiunion. Several delegates favored a cammunal service before private Mother Marie De, Piro Served in Taunton confessions while othe.rs wanted a communal service without pri For Six Years as Country's Pt:ovincial vate confession when there is no Word has come from Rome, life in Rome. She came to TaUR . question of serious sin. How where the SLters of St. Dorothy ton in 1954. ever, Archbishop Paul J. Halli She was recalled to Rome in nan said he would not favor any are holding a general chapter, -af the election of Mother Marie 1960, vy-here she has served as practice beyond private confes De Piro as Mother General of Vicar General of her community sion in a communal meeting. the Order. for the last six years. The newly formed priests' sen During her provincial ate in ate will investigate the question . The newly elected Mother of celibacy. General is well knOWl) in the t.he United States she did much The non-Catholic observers Fall River Diocese, having been to further the apostolate of the Dorotheans in the Fall River represented several Protestant stationed at Villa Fatima in Taun denominations, including. an ton for six years when she was Diocese. She will be remem Episcopal Bishop, and members Mother Provincial 'of the United bered here for her zealous work, particularly in the erection of a of Jewish organi~ations. States for the Dorotheans. large new wing built at Villa Born in England and living Fatima during her term of office State Defends Ban for some time in Malta, Mother to meet the growing needs of the De Piro has spent most of her Novitiate there.
Sisters of St· Dorothy
On Miscegenation-
WASHINGTON (NC) - The attorney general of Virginia de fended his state's laws against interracial marriage and told Supreme Court justices the laws are so obviously constitutional that they - should be upheld without a hearing. Such laws are exclusively a state function, declared Robert Y. Dutton as he filed a motion urging the high court to affirm Virginia state COUl·t judgements prohibiting -'Richard Loving, a white construction worker and Soviets Sentence his Negro wife, Mildred 'bern living .as man and wife i~ Vir Baptist Women ginia.. BERLIN (NC)-Three womes Button's motion w.as fHed in members of a Baptist group have been sentenced to a labor camp reSponse to the COUl't'S request in the latest -of a series ef arrests for his views after the state had passed up its chance to oppose and trials of Baptists in the So viet Union, according -to the the Lovings' bid for Supreme Court review. The miscegenation Soviet news agency Tass. ban "reflects a policy which has' Tass, which announced the obtained in thL commonwealth .. ~ntence on Nov. 22, said the group' preaches non-allegiance to for over two centuries and which communist rule and tha.t the still obtains in almost half of the women were convicted on 50 states in the union" Button said. ' cha'rges of winning children to their view and setting upa secret religious cell in Chebok Wyoming Priests sari.
In October, four Baptist lead . Elect Consuhors
ers were reported to have been
CHEYENNE (NC) - T h r e e arrested on a charge of putting their religion above the law of J)riests have been elected to serve on the diocesan board of the Soviet Union. In August, six consultors here. others were imprisoned for such Bishop Hubert M. Newell of religious activities as organizing religious parades and baptizing Cheyenne said Fathers John Meyer, Joseph Fraher and John 40 persons in the Don River. Murray were selected by their fellow priests for a· one-year University Grant term.. . Representation on the moc WASHINGTON (NC)-George town University bas received .aR esan board is an adaptation of the plan of establishing a senate unrestricted gift of $10,606 from the American Oil FoUndation. of priests in each diocese. Tile Rumber of clergy is. so small in Father Geral'd J. Campbell, S.J. ,miversity president, said the Wyoming that additional repre Junds will probably be applied sentation on the existing board ~as viewed as more practical tD the Georgetown President's than establishment of a senate, Fund, which is used :\!or eperat it was stated. ~ expense.l
17
Protestants and Catholics d local churches united in Nortill Attleboro at a community Thanksgiving service. Am 0 n g participating churches anr' pas t.ors were Rev. Norman A. LeV'- inson, Central Congregational; Rev. Thomas Urban, Plainville Methodist; Rev. Annando An nunziato, St. MalOY'S; Rev. Rogell' LeDuc and Rev. J. Omer Lus sier, Sacred Heart; Rev. Bruce Hanson, - Grace Episcopal; Rev. Harold Wilson, St. Mary's; Rev. Harry E. Bronkar, First Baptist; Rev. Ray I. Marlin, First Meth odist.
Rev. Mr. Harisoll and Father LeDuc were coordinators of the service and a supper preceding the event was served to mem bers of the interfaith choir whicl1l participated in the program all Sacred Heart cafeteria by mem bers of St. ~'lary's parish guild]. Ushers were members of the CCD of St. Mary's parish. Another ecumenical service b lJ31anned for January.
·German Catholics Plan Aid Program COLOGNE (NC) - Germalal Catholics are planning aid fOil underdeveloped areas in Latilill America, Asia and Mrica with il program of 155 projects repre senting an outlay of approxi mately $5.5 million for the fir~ half of 1967. This vast prospectus of activ ities was projected at the amma] meeting of Misereor, the GermaEil bishops' overseas relief organi.. zation, held here. The bishops are depending upon the 1967 Lenten Misereol1 collectian to finance this prG- '" gram.
FAMILY
A
52 ISSUE$ OF For Only $4.00 (Mailed anywhere
In
""
the United States)
;""""""------_._------'-----~---------------------------~--; ~Ile Aur4tlr 410 HIGHLAND AVE., FALL RIVER, MASS. :
: ,
:
#
Enclosed find $._
_
_ for _._.._ .._ Christmas Gift Subsll:riptions sent to:
:
:
PLEASE PRINT P L A I N L Y :
# # #
# # #
:
# # # # # # # #
:
:.~
Name ..:
~
:
Address
_
_ .:
: ~
City ; ;;.
_
State
Zip
__
GIFT CARD SHOULD READ:
:
# #
#
#
: From , .
_
,:
City-State
:
_...............................................................................................
~
.'
#
#
: #
:
# , # ,
#
# # #
•..Stieet _ - '
Parish 1rA» receive eretlit
:
_
\
#
--------------------------,-------,---------------,,-------------FOR ADDITIONAL GIFTS USE SEPARI\TE -. '
SHE~
AND eliP TE) ABQVE
.for each' 1-yeor Subscription to..
Canada, Mexico, So. America, Central America and Spain add $l.OO for postage
• •& E _ ~
ci.ip :AND"SAVlE'
,
..
\
FOR ~1lJ9~ANCfE ,
['"111""""""111"""""""""""""""111""""111"""111111"111"111" §
(CIL&SS A
I
SECTION 1
~.
-
,Il0RALll.V IUNOBJlEC1PONAlmILIC fO~
GIENIERAL .PAYlRONAGIE
§
~
!illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIi 111111II11l1l1illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
:
111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
CJL&SS A SECTION 2 . MORALLY UNOBJECTlONAllLIE FOR
ADULTS AND ADOlESCENiS 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII III 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
§.
.
~
~
CLASS A
§
SECTION,3
is
§ §
=
MORAllY UNOBJEC"II"IONABLlE
5== o§==
§
FO~
ADULTS ~,.
== 5iI111111111111111111111111111I11I1I11I11I11I1IlIRllllllllllllllllllllllllnnnllntllllllllll
.
Alice' of Wonderland in Paris Fighting Prince of Donegal Fantomas (Fr.-Ital.l And. Now Miguel ,Flight of the Phoenix Batman Battle Of The Bulge . Follow Me Boys Biflls Do It . Frankenstein Conquers The Bolshoi Ballet, The (Russ.) Word Billy the :Kid vs. Dracula Frontier Hellcat Bremen Town Musicians Gambi( Capture That Capsule . . Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Country Bo)' Gulliver's Travels Beyond 0 Daydreamer the Moon Don't Worry, We Will Think Hansel and Gretel. of a Title How to Steal a Million Dr Who and the Daleks I Deal In Danger Evem.!)g With ,he Royal. Invasion Quartet Ballet. An Is Paris Burning? Fantastic' Voyage Jack Frost
After the Fox Agony and the Ecstacy, lhe Alphabet Murders. The ," Apache Uprising Assault On a Queen, Atlantis. The lost Continent Big Hand for the little lady; Big T.N.T. Show. The Bounty Killer, The Boy Cried !I1urder. the Brides of Fu Manchu Bridge to the Sun e'mon. Let's live a little Deiector, The (German made) .Die, Monster,' Die '
WHEN IN':»OUBT', .
•
,
'CONSULT LIST
last of the Renegades Return of the Gunfighter lassie's Great Adventure Russian Adventure Man Called Flintstone Russians Are Coming, The - Rings Around the World My Fair lady Romeo and Juliet . My Son, the Hero Mysterious Island Secret Seven Namu, Killer Whale . Sergeant Was A lady Night of the Grizzly Singing Nun, The Paradise Hawaiian Style Sleeping Beauty Pied Piper of Hamelin Sleeping Beauty, The (RussJ • .' Smoky Pirates of Tortuga Plainsman, The Snake Woman -(Purple Hills Son of a 'Gu nfighter Queen of Blood Sound of Music, The Queen of the Pirates Spinout Rare Breed, The . Tarzan and the Valley of Redeemer, The Gold
Dr. Gold/ootand the Bikini Machine Doctor Zhivago Dracula, Prince of Darkness Eye For An Eye, An Farenheit 451 Frankje and Johnny Frantic Glass Bottom Boat, The Great Wall, The (Jap.l • Guns of Darkness Gypsy Girl Heroes of Telemark Impossible on Saturday It Happened HEire
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter Jo~nny Nobody Johnny Reno Judex Judith Kid Rodelo Kwaidan (Japanese) la Boheme let's Kill Uncle little Ones, The lollipop Cover, The Mad Executioners, The Marco the Magnificent. Merry Wives of Windsor, Tile
Fortune Cookie ' Ada' . Funny' Thing Happened On Alphaville (fr.l the Way to The Forum Alvarez Kelly Great Spy Chase, The Ambush Bay Great War. The • Any Wednesday Haiy! .Mafia Arabesque Armored Command' Harper Bang, Bang You're Dead Hawaii Blues For Lovers ' He Who Must Die Breakfast At Tiffany's. Hustler, The Idol, The (Br.) Bunny lake Is Missing Cast A Giant Shadow Inside Daisy Clover. 'Johnny Tiger Chamber of Horrors Kaleidoscope Claudelle Inglish Couch, The King Rat Dead Heat on a Merry-GoKiss the Girls and Make· Round, Them Die EI Dorado la Visita. . , [I Greco .. lost Command, The Enough Rope liquidator, The
Madam l( Main Chance Male Companion (Fd .McGuire 'Go Home Mickey Oile Mister Buddwing Modesty Blaise (BrJ Moment To Moment Money, Money, Money (F.rd Morgan Naked Prey, The Nanny, The Not On Your life (Sp.l Not With My Wife, You Doll1 Pawnbroker, The . Pad and How ~o Use It, 'Ale Picture Mommy Dead' Panic in Year Zero Penelope Professionals, The
Mystery of Thug Island, The Shameless Old Lady,
Naked Edge Slender Thread, The
One Spy Too Many Spy In Your Eye
. O.S.S., Mission For A Killer Stagecoach' . .
Othello Sweet light in a Dark ftOOll Out of Sight . TeKican, The Pit and the Pendulum The Uncle - Traitor's Gate Plilgue of the Zombies. Planet Of The Vampires Trunk, The Poppy Is Also a Flower Twenty P~s Two' Psychopath, The Warning Shot , Waco Reptile, The Sardonicus , Walk in the Shadow Wrong BOK $cre~m 0.1. Fe~r Secret of Deep Harbor 'Weekend With Lulu
Promise Her Ariythifig Susan Slade
Rage Ten little Indians
Return of the Seven . Thousand Clowns, A
Ride Beyond Vengeance Three On a Spree .Rocco and His Brothers (/talJ Thunder of Drums · Thunderball Rotten to the Core iBr,) Sands of the Kalahari Times lost and Time Remembered .
Season of Passion Second Best Secret Agent in To Trap A Spy
the Whole Wide World Town. Without Pity Two Women (!tal,) Secret Agent Super Dragon Shakespeare Wallah (India) Up To His Ears Shop on Main Street, The Veneian Affair Spirit Is Willing Walk, Don't Run Spy Who Came in From the Weekend at Dunkirk Cold, The West Side Story Stop the World, I Want lo Where the Bullets FIf
Where The Spies Are . Get Off . Sucker, The (Fr.-Eng.) Wild Seed (was: FargO>
Alfie Flame and the Fire . :' Life' at the Top (Brit/sllJ Pressure Point·· Anatomy of A Marriage Georgy Girl • Lolita . PUmpkin Eater, • Red Desert, '. ", Collector, The Girl With Green Eyes (Br J" lord love a Duck Cool World, 'The . Hill. The love a la Carte . Servant, The' i§ . SECTION' 4 . . Darling '. , .' Important Man (Mexicam '. ,Marriage,· Italian Style · Storm Center " , =. MaRALLY UNOBJECTIONABLE ·FOR ' . Divorce, Italian Style <ltaM . Intruder· Moment· of Truth, The·' " · 'Strangers in the: City . Dr. Strangelove '. . " .. Juliet of the Spirits (ltal:) Night of-the Igu~ . "' Taboos of the World Ittatl .§ ", 'ADULTS, WITH, RESERVATIONS' '§~ , Elllipse Utal,) " ... Knack; 'The (BrJ Nothing ,But the Best (Br.f This Sporting Life l-Shaped Room" The ·Too Yoilng to love, .... .9rganizerj The (It.u i.lliillllliil"ill~"IIIIHllillillllllilllllmillllllllllllllll~"llIutilllilll'lIl11ltili1 8\12 Utal,) " .
l!IllIIlIllIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIllIIlIIllIIllIIlIIlIlIIlIlIIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlIIlIlIlIIllIIlUlit .=
'i
IFf..
'CLASS ·A " l
.,.
(ft.
§
i
§
.!§
§
== !§ §
!§
,§ §
!§ g §
-..' Agent 'for ·1t.A:R;M.- " " " , '.' Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders -, , An American Dream Arrivederci, Baby Blood ·and Black. Lace' ~ Boeing, Boeing· Cassanova' 70 . ~. Cincinnati Kid, The MORAllY" OIBJECTIONABtE City of Fear . Cry of Battle _ . IN PART FOR ',A~ Curse of the Voodoo ... Dementia. 13 Desert Raven Devil and The Ten
81LASS B'
Evv ... Fine. Maonllss, A From Russia With Love Group, The Girls on -the Beach He Rides Tall· . Hon,eymoon Hotel lfow to Stuff a Wild Bikini Irma la Douce Kissirf Cousins Lady l last of the Sel.Tet Agents long Ships, The . Looking. For love love on the Riviera
.. ~u~~~~a;i~~I~nts
f""Ill"'"""I1""'"I11I1""""I11DIl"IllIUlI""IlWI"""IU1IIIIIIIIII"""
Affair of the Skin, Aft Green Mare (torJ love and Marriage Balcony, The High 'Infidelity-UtalJ love Is My Profession (FFJ Bambole Utal.! I love. YOll 'love UtaP.) love oil a Pillow (FrJ Image of Love lovers, The (frJ . Bell'Antonio ,UtalJ Boccaccio 70 UtalJ , Joan of the Angels? loves of a Blonde' Bonne Soupe, la (FrJ Jules imd Jim loving Couples Breathless (Fr.> ' Kiss Me Stupid' Modemoiselle Knife in the Water Magdalena (Ger.l Christine Keele, Affair" The <Oan.) , I la Fuga (ItaU Maid In' Paris (FrJ Circle of love Knif.. in the Water (Pol,) Married Woman,' The (f&f Cloportes (Fr,) . la Mandragola (ItaU Mating Urge " . . Cold Wind in August' la Notte (Night> UtalJ Miller's Beautiful Wife (ItaU Contempt (FrJ . lady Chatterly's lover (f.rJ . Mistress for the Summer, A Dear John. (SwedJ law, The (Fr,) Molesters, The Doll. The (Swed,) let's Talk About Women Mom and Dad (Sideroad) During One Night (Br,) OtalJ' Mondo Pauo UtalJ Empty Canvas love Ga.me (FrJ My life to live (frJ Girl With the Golden Eyes . .love' Goddesses. The Never on Sunday (Greek! . Itt)
. love in 4 D.iIiwIsio~II~IJ . New . .. .TIMI ,"': wau · ,.. "
i
CLASS C o
CONDEMNED
§ §
I §
itllllllllllllllllIIllIlIllIlIllIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWWHlllllllllUIU!UIl'1!Wl
~~~:d H~~~'
Man In the Middle ..,' " Return to 'Mr; Moto, 'Rlt Marriage on the Rocks, Sandpiper,'TIle·Money Trap " Seconds Mozambique •. -. ' Seven Women . Night .Must 'Fall Seventh Dawn' No Greater Sin (was: 13 and Sex and The Single. Girl ,Anxious) .. Shot in the Dark, A. Silencers, The ' Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mommy's Hung You in. the Closet Sleeping' Car Murder, The and I'm' Feeling So Bad Sm;lll World of Sammy Lee,
The (BrJ " . Oscar, The . Our. Man Flint Soldier in the Rain Pisto'l for Ringo Space Flight lC-1 lBrJ Psyche 59 Spy With My Face Racing Fever Strangler, The . Rasputin Swinger, The Red line 7.000 This Property is Condemned
~IIIIIIIIHllllIII"III11II11I1I11IIIlIllIlIlIllIlIlIlIlIlIllIlIlIllHII""IIII1I1I11II11I1U
.~
.Victim lBr-:l
·Visit, The .
Who's .Afraid of· Virginia
Woolf? . Yellow. Rolls Royce, 1111 Young alld the Willing; ,Zorba, The Greek
-
~1II"111II1I1I1Il11II1I1I1II1II"lIIl1ll11l11nllllllll"III1HI"IIIUltllllllllllflllll"lI.
§
Those Magnificent Men·!II Their Flying Machines
Teenage Millionaire
Texas Across the River
That Tennesse Beat
Tiko 'and the Shark
Trouble With Angles,The
Ugly DaschiJnd, The
Voyage 10 the Bottom of abe
Sea· When the Clpck Strikes White Mane (French)
Willie McBean
. Winnie 'The Pooh
:Years of lightning, Day of DriJms You Have to Run Fast
The
'1'orn ",Gurtain . ..,..... ..... " " Vice and Virtue (frJ Village of the Giants Viva las Vegas
Viva Maria
Way, Way Out!
What A Way to Go
'What's New Pussycat?
· Whl. Killed Teddy Bear' ..
Who's Been Sleeping
Bed
ill"
Why Bother ·To Knock
Wild Angels
What ·Did 'You Do ia 1IIe
War, Daddy?(
Young Dillinger Zombie
Nude Odyssey, The (It aU Silence, The (fr-J Odd Obsession (JapJ Swedish Wedding Night . Of Wayward. Love UtalJ (SwedJ Oscar Wilde (Br,) Take It All !A 1joue PiendIW Passionate Summer (fr.·1tat'J (Can.l Phaedra (Greek) Tales of Paris (frJ Playgirl After Dark (BrJ Temptation (Fr.-ltaU Please, Not Now! (fsJ Terrace, The (SpanJ
Port of- Desire To love (SwedJ
Pot Bouille (lovers of PaRs) . Too Young, To.. Immoral. (Fr.) Viridiana (SpJ Prime Time Wasted lives 3.'1d The ~
Private Property of Twins
Question of Multer:, Weekend (Dan,)
Repulsion White Voices (!taU Saturday Night and Sunday Woman in' the Dunes fjaft' Morning (Br,) Women of the World (1taU Seven Capital· Sins <F'J ,Young World, The lfrJ
Sweet afld S9ur. /frJ .. . ,.>~'.,."""
,.
;.,:
.. ".
Shift, to \~ndoor Sports
'{HE ANCHOR-Dioce8e of Fat! Ri"~f-lhu'5., Dec. 1. 1966
19
11 Schools Will Participate Coyle High Stat Athlete In New Winter Track Loop (Carlin Lynch No'V Proven Coach Scouted Dartmouth and' Be for Cross
Football coaches along with their student managers busily cleaning equipment and storing it away for another year. While physically engaged in this task, un ISw Joe Mill'anda <lloubtedly the mentors are replaying the entire season. For Carlin Lynch, one of the most some the' year has. been re successful football coaches ever to compete I'n the Fall RI'ver warding, l...lLIut, for oth ers \Red Rocketeers. II d th Coach . Art Post's t . <I-.h st' men pu e e maJor upse m Diocese, has enjoyed an out II ere are many que Ions the Bristol County League as' standing season as an assist'ilnt which must be answered. they defeated the Bomba~diers at Holy Cross College in Worces Me
. ture as the grid head, the Raid ers won the Trl-County Confer ence championship. J n h'IS secon d season, L ynch produced a Tri-County title, plus the Massachusetts Class D cham piol/ship, completing his tour at Semerset with 12 wins, two ties and two losses.
Optimism, bowever, rains in ibe basketball Cl1lmps as the eourtmen"prepare for their sea oon openers 'in early December, llaunching the winter Inter
19-6 to salvage their only VictOry ter. of the campaign. Has Many Responsibilities !Last-Minute Win., Lynch, listed as the head Lynch was also active in the B)'shop Stang High of' Dart " f ' . 'CYO . mouth, in a gallant effort, fell ...reshman ootball coach at Holy aren program, servlIlg as 21 'n )·ts bl'd to knock BI'shop Cross, \".'as a jack-of-all-trades director under Rev. Walter A scholastie'schedule. 'Sharing the short I ftC' S II' th F 11 ......' D' spotlight with basketball will be Feehan High of Attleboro from tOh~ he rusaders coaching staff u Ivan, e a .ntver IDe &l new winter track league the ranks of the undefeated. In IS year and played a tremen esan Director, and as a baseball formed in Southeastern Massa the first-ever locally televised dous part in the college's 6-1-3 umpire. ehusetts, football game, Coach Chet Hane (won, tied, loss) record. Guided Stang wich's Shamrocks came from be "He has one of the' toughest He was appointed as Bishop 10 Events hind to. complete their first per jobs on the coaching staff be Stang High School's first athletic Winter track is emerging as &ll fect season with a 9-0-0 record, cause he has been given so many director and head coach of foot major high school sport in the by winning 23-13. ~sponsibilities," head coach Mel ball and baseball in 1959. With area with the formation of the In other league action intra Massucco said yesterday, still no upperclassmen enrolled at the Southeastern Massachusetts Win city rivals Msgr. Coyle High and beaming over the Crusaders' 32CARLIN LYNCH school, Carlin played a jayvee ter Track Developmental Asso Taunton High played to a score 26 conquest of Boston College schedule for two seasons. . tn e "b' " for ' b o tHowever, another of his re ciation and Capeway L eague. less tie through the :first period . Dill . Ig one·' h· II) 1961 and still without a ""h' sp.ortsibilitie,s was scouting and'\ 'senIor . ,;;, Jl )s new"· l'eague, an ou t gro wtb then Coyle broke loose fot 15 sc h 00 Is. cI ass, Stang embarkeu . rna d e p'·ol·nts' in the second stfll'l~a to· The H 0 Iy C ross h ea d c o . ac his helped Holy Cross'. upo~,.,a varsity grid schedule, of the Capeway Lea,gue, )S h findings · .. against Dartmouth and Syradi~e. . up of 11 teams. They are Coyle lead 15-0 at half time'. Coyle . explained that Lynch's fneshman playing mostly Class D teams of Taunton', Lawrence High (Ii added another touchdoWh' after team spent most of its practice .The. Crusa!iers ~,u~led what cO!JId and t.he Spartans completed its Falmouth, Dartmouth; Wareham, the midway. rest and, played hours )n scrimmages' against the' .' 'r~ termed the bIggest .l.lp's~t.,?f . .first formal campaign with sin Fairhaven,Old 'Rochester, New fla~less defense to' chalk up' its varsity, using the offensive, and he "N,?wEngland maJor gnd' 'wins; a tie and one loss. . Bedford Vocational, New Bed defensive patterns that the season when they edged Dart in 1962, Lynch unveiled Stang fifth victory of the season. ""ross' Saturday opponent would mouth, 7-6 and the Worcester i'ord, Middleboro, Bridgewater New Bedford Quarterback .... t t· d G't b I to the Bristol County League :!Raynham and Tabor Academy. Tom. Farias lofted a. '21-yard employ. . e a m con ame aI or- 0v.; and in the Spartans first cam . As a resu.I~, ~assuccovolun- b~nd Syra~use for three pel'l . Clubs will' cOMPete in 114ll touchdown pass to Carl Loria paign directed them to an un il'lvents .-: 45-yard high hurdles, with two seconds -remaining to !cered, CarlIn did not have alll od. F th f Si ' beat~n season, winning eight anQI shot-put,. .50':'ya~d dash, two-mile. give the Crimson a 20-14.y,~rClict opportunity to get his Frosh
: . a. er 0 x.. ,....... 'tying one enroute to a' BCL :rrun, one-mUerun, bigh jump, Qver stunned Durfee High of players ready for their' oppo Carlin, the son of Mr. and flag. SOO-yard I run; SOO-yard run, Fall River. nents, but he still did a remarh: Mrs. James Lynch of Taunton, Stang finished runnerup in' t~ l,OOO-yard run and the relay. &ble job in preparing the year is no stranger to the Holy Cross BCL the following year with an Somerset Champions th f C Each participant may take llDngs for next year's varsity. c~mpus liS e ormer oyle 8:-1 record and Lynch's final part in three events, two running The successful Capeway Con Area Players High. three-sports star was an season ~aw the Spartans win the and one field evellt, one running lference terminated ·its first year outstanding end for the Cru Bristol County championship and g Dnd two field events, or one run 'of operation with four holiday L Amhon t~e dar;a ~YS on the sac;lers during his collegian play the State Class C title. ning--one field--and the relay. clashes. As expected Lawrence :rnc -coac e res man. team ing days. Lynch's record as a scholastiG: This rule Is incorporated to give' High of Falmouth, the confer a~ Mark Doherty. of N~rth It was while a college student coach was phenomenal and he more boys an opportunity to mee champion, riddled Barn DJghton, a former Coyle otand that Carlin met Frances Sabasta, seems headed in the same direc participate. All meets will be stable, 49-6. Dartmouth beat out; Roger Lacoste of New.Bed the girl that was to become his tion in the college ranks, but held at Lawrence High, Tabcli' . Fairhaven 38-6 and Old Roches J!o~d and Ed Ready of Easton lllnd his wife and mother of their six n e i the r accomplishment out ,,-th Oliver Ames. h'ld . J'ames, C arI'me, E hza . . Acad~my or. New Bedford .Voca:"""" bested Den' I1IS-.Ya r m· ou, ' . .. . C I ren, weighs his success as a man. tiona! sinCe' they Ilie equippecll :l1l-20. The only close" contest Lynch ~Id ~ ternflc Job. and i!J beth, John, Mliry and Ann. with board ·tracks. . 2!llIW Bourne edge Wllrehiuft'15-0 IJm enthUSIastIc teacher wIth. the Following'his graduation,'ear- . .. ' ,. flo' preserve 'r;econd place in the h~hman a~d working with ~om lin and his' bride headed for Colllrt Competitiou \llllInference. ··,l Bc)]sture With the e?ds.and Ime Colorado where Lynch was an And, while the first mdOCK'i' Somerset eked out a 14-12 tri .~kers on the verslty. assistant football and head base ta'ack season is gaining attention. 1l!llill:ph to apture the Narry Lynch spent most of the .time ball coach at Pueblo CentrlU ~ goes without' saying ihat the League ChampionshipJiri itt/ 39th . nlli the press box when' Holy Catholic High School. 1 < ', • •, . ' " basketball campaign·will oHer "'Thlmksgivil'lg Day meeting with ~o3S was 'on .the gridiron: Hill"": 'Lynch'~' coachiri'g s u c c e s s its many thrillll;·especlaDy in the Case High Of Swansea. :!Cot!cb.· ~ was' to observe the 'opposi started .Pueblo where in his WYman ~. Bristol County circuit in whieih J'im Sullivati's pen.naQt 'wiiln-ers I &n's offense and mpli;:e adjust- first yea~ hi's team won the State tile 'oompetition AB-·always keen. «1Jrove fot' a IlCOr~j'bn the' oPening' , _Jib in the .Crusader. defense. footballchamplOIlsbip' and in his 3·6592 Al80,.lbeCause tbe BCL courtmesl.'· ,~ies of. doWJlS re~a¥d .. .' . . " ' l a s t was,' fhe runn!'lrup. In:. qoi~ ItHARLES f;VARGAS nnk with the best • 'the entiN. l'm the second fram~ 1011()Wing lll' . R' 1 0 0 • ' E'd , . baseball,. campaigns, Carlin's State as the area tourney :repre- . lease .iouchdoWl!! ~"Jead 1l4-C1l1lt ChlglOUS . ~c.ato~s teams placed second in the Col 254 ....ROCKDALE '.' . . , . AVENUE , "; 8lentativeB haVE .tabUsbed ImP ·'Jmalftbne. ' .' '. orado State championships: "', ,,", I&ually. Horton Bigb WOllll the battle Returned to DI INlEW BEDFORD, MASS. But, alll eyes win not. be fo... «Ii IJtatistial bat droppeq III ClHlIGAGO (NC)-Dr. D a v i d . ~. "', eased Olll the', BeL lDumueh. ',iqueaker to the visiting seekonk' m.Hunter, deputy general sec.CarJu~ retu~ned to· the..··Fall',,, the other leagues have also ~ Wamon 114-G. Oliver "Ames elf . ~ry of the National Council fl€ ... ,.,River DIOcese m 1957 as the head manded Uleir mare of attentiClC JIortlli. Easton, Hoekomock QUlI~hes, ~as be~ elected ~cb of ~ootba~l ~t .. ~omerset lllWluaUy with the close mcil8 League representative bombed ]plresldent of the :ReligIOus' lEdUl lHhgh. Durmg hIS InItial veo Imd evenly balaneed eo:mbtMs. Dighton-Rehoboth eli Nall'Ity' \OOIt!Olll. Association. Norlin ·PWbJ 1Dpsd League 46-14, .,,' ,. _Ellected vice presidents were ~ ~ The most :t'iYid same m. .' OI!Ice:beatal Foxboro ~ l&abbi Eugene BoroW'itz,il>roJ1eg.. minds eli the :football 1!lIIildt stubbom Mansfield ~1:'Q,' GiltW dHebrew Unibn·'College, ~ .;rbanksgiving ~ game, ~ !'1m the MJlIlual battle between 'tAw ]l!;ew York; Dr. Clifford Carey. f':.' cme they willJ. :iiw with IiIIlIlIISt JIochOrDoat ~. ,., :. . am:oclat4l general secretary,' Na- • _til JIleXt Pa4 BQlkiay games flSOI!le1 iCouncil of YMCA, New .........<ltJCe amaxin.,;!i'eSUl.w and tbbJ .. WoniI:; and Sister MarY AriJn lIda, ~;;'Il eon~, ~ lIIIO _~ ~dent, Mundelein <COllege,
SAVE MONEY ON
YOUR OILHEA'!
at
eatt
ana'
Elect Officers'"
the
:•
coaches.
:•
:J B
: LUMBER CO.:
~~
~
• Jlim AU1ebclR IllJ1gh ~ _ tbe third ~ IIh>e ~, fdA ~ ~ 0Jlllwfh ~
ic..
lPLEIK1l.J (NC)-A U. ts.
~
~cer Wllth flbe Special Jli'orcetl llti. Vietn&m '1ileeeived ~ PapaR
Balemenmtll medal 1& recognic> . ~ cot RmI wtstanding, , !aitbfull I!lIllld lloDg JIt3l'ticipation' llm. tOO ~~llic religious programbl tnIi@ l Be b U. Cd. Eleazer? Ji)ElUlr..J!A ~Ne)-A. ~ ~ ~ly, whose wife SllM' ~nS1 Qltlwll~ Mgil ~ , ~ ~ l»!Je hi Ga1Desville, I.i'h. . 'f'he ~ ll'eads: &a lbeI!pOO buiillc:n ~ ~ b ~ Ibe:re fuIll ~ ~ ~Prei'lll:e Pontiff, h~ ... fte soo~p fiIf!. :li ~ 011 ~ ftlat Eneaooi" Parmly W b$ •. XsmlU21'DMp ~ m ~ ~gni2ed &mild &'!Ward.ed.· ~ gold \OOw 1lmm i!he llllmne .• mne ~~ ~Sll 'Benemei'enttt designed b 'Af ~toilfy ~ ~ fiil. lJi11:Cl)gn~ ~ me!13' b. .~
Catholic Schoolboys luild Lepers Home mmtery.
_tion, with beadquaraten i&l. Wew York City, i:l; am. interde lOOminstionel, interdisciplinaJrY ~p ooncerned with the D ~~emeJll!l of religiolOO w~ ~
~~~&e~-=
~ed~~~
~~·~,·s·~~~
~~~
~
Emg.
~
HOG
~' ~l'JlJ ~"
'
Hyannis 2921
~
II.
• : •
HEATING OIL·
•
11 NeOLH p' ARK BALLROOM 1m. 6-Between Fall River (ll)nd New Bedford
AVOJiiabie
~or:
BANQUETS @ '[]'/ESiDMONgALS fASHION SHOWS (\1ti1dl SiPIECIAL PARTmE$
Fath:eli'
'."
Dartmo~h 997.9384
fetfl/kI....,,_
@fiD@ of the FDnes~ Facilities Dn Southern New En&9landl
rJIl'ants ~e reclpi~ h ,lillg~ ~ .~Sll' thfiimea~to; ~gJ? Jl;..~d!J fSammpsOll!" ~ '~~D:>'2l~'~~
III II
k
•: •
f ••••••••••••••••,
~17Il~r@~(l)lm
~cW1'R'mt1w
~ ~ ~erm~~'£Wl!'M
:
So. bartmouth and Hyann.s
IRECTRICAI.
9P_
~l!l!llOO Q.t/ ~ ~ ~ ~ [hlr..
• •• •
Officer in Vietnam : Gets Papal Medal··' ~~g~ngiOUS Education Aooo-o
FOR COMPILEl'E INFORMAiHONI CONTACT: ~ rt~ $:l. ~w,JEled.forc!J
999·6984
@I' ~3~-2744
•
20
THE ANCHOR 1, 1966
Eng'fish Prefer ,Douai Version
Thurs.,' Dec.
Race ~~fregll'ation,
I.:ONDON (NC) - Th~ Doti~ translation of the Bible in Eng lish, first published in ·1609 arid Class~$ revised by Bishop Challoner in 1781, is still the most p'opular ~n version among English'Catholics, , PROVIDENCE (NC)-An according to a survey 'published here. '., , llIuusual experiment in educa The Universe, British Catholic tional racial integration il1 . weekly, in a survey among Catl! \'Tolving students of a Catholic olics of all age groups from 11 and a public elementary schools on, found that 45 per cent pre Es underway here. ferred the Douai text. Another It involves 110 students - 60 29 per cent chose the Jerusalem from Hbly Name School and '5'0 Bible published in this country !teom the Thomas A. Doyle Pub 'in October. The rest were ab01,lt Ric School. After obtaining nec 'e51ually divided between th.e ,essary approval from various Catholic edition of theProtestartt <!ducational ~boards and parents . Revised Standard Version (RSV) ()f students involved, classes , and that of Msgr. Ronald Knox, were started, in the CathoHc, Many people in the 20-to-30 school. 'age group liked the Douai ver An objeetfon came from the 'sion best. So did older people Rhode Island branch of the generally. The average age of all 'American Civil Liberties Union who chose this version .was 54. which claimed the program vio For those preferring the Jeru Rates the constitutional policy of ,salem J,3ible the average age was separation, of Church and Stat~. .35; for the RCV, 46; and for the But a spokesman fOI' th~ . Knox, '49. ACLU said it is unlikely legal INTERDENOMINATIONAL THANKSGIVING SERV~CE:· A ~olid~ycongregation Many preferred the -Douai be; action will :he taken at ,this tiine' because of the "limited and te.n~ in St. Francil' Xavier Cathedral, Alexandria, La., heard :Pr~sident Johnson's Thanksgiv-.cause'of its familiarity. Most of 'porary nature' of the progt'am," ing : proclamati{)n read bJ~ the ,Rev. J. J. Spane of',Sp:ringl1ill:Bapt~stChurch,. An overflow: "those whopicke4 the Jerusale~ Dr. John W.!Limg of Brown Uni':' cr.owd attended the ceremony, sponsored annuaJly by the Central',Louisiana ,Ministerial Bible did so because of its "mod-' , , '.,. ern style." Some coilv~rts chose versity here', chairman of the theRSV because they'had been ACLU Church-State committee, Association and held this year for the first time in a: Catholic church..NC ~hoto. brought up on the Protestant
warlled legal :action may be version.
taken ,if "the'program is bl'Oad" Those taking part in the sur ailed." , " vey were not asked to base their The Holy Name school is pre replies on the whole Bible but on ,clominantl~' ,white, the Doyle: , the various' versi<lIlS of a sub school predominantly Negro. The mitted text-=-verses 18 to 25 of plan originated with Father ,the first chapter of St. Matthew. clToS'eph T. Gallagher, adminis of the Incarnate Word. Nothing was too sacrificing as HOUSTON (NC) ~ J a.m e s kator of Holy Name pal'ish, and Francis Cardinal Mclntyt'e of "The development of religious long as,it was done from the began to take shape last Septem Los Angeles says the I:eligious communities of holy women pro motive of the love of God and :Women's Colleges ber. vides a history that is pre-emi ·the charity of Christ,'! the Caligarb of nuns "signifies some School Boards Approve :Receiy'e Grants . thing superlative" and should 'nent for virtue, devotion and fornia Cardinal declared. ·The program involves fourth, not lightly be changed. sacrifice for the love of God and He pointed' to the' universal NEW YORK (NC)-The Col. /fifth and sixth grade students ",While even the religious life the love of neighbot; - because respect given Sisters, "a respect .lege of New Rochelle, New Ro from both schools with teachers is not immune from the vari that is not accorded in gt'eater ,chelle, N. Y., and Manhattanville of the love of' God," he noted" fwm both institutions, Holy ances of fashion in garb' and emphasizing that at all ,the prin- 'degree to any other men or ,College of the Sacred Heart, Name School personnel will take thought," he said, "it' must not 'cipal 'episodes in the life of women." ,Purchase, N. Y., are among the ceare of science education since be overlooked that the quality, Christ, the 'Mother of God and This respect, the Los Angeles' ,25 women's colleges named to the school has an outstanding of permanence has been glori other holy women had a pt'omi Archbishop asserted, is recogni . receive' $10,000 grants from science program. 'rhe Doyle ously maintain'ed in the history nent part. tion of "a 'dediCation to holiness Time, Inc. , schooL personnel will provide 'of our Sisterhoods. There is' n9 and goodness and further mani The company said the colleges Reverenc~ and Respect, for social' studies. sphere in life where such a su'fests an indirect praise to Al' were chosen for the unrestricted Through 'the centuries, .he The classes are planned on a . 'preme standard has been mainmighty ·God.'" grl!nts on the basIs of outstand added, Mary c and these holy pupil-teacher ratio of 27-to-1., tained. , j This reverence and respect are, ing academic, qualifications 'and women have been emulated by The racial balance in the classes 'Virtue-Devotion~Sacl'ifice g~OUps of women who joined "stimulated by the religious habit, . the numbers of graduates it has are 55 per cent Negro and 45 "Hence we do look with ap employ~d. . ' together to live lives dedicated the cardinal said. per cent white. The progl'am was prehension and some a1jlrm as to pray'er, education arid good divided along temporary lines the 'fashions' of oui' time seem works on behalf of the poor and pending completion of a new to be making an attempt to in afflicted.' ' public sC;hool under construction trude bey.ond the barriers of "Nothing' was too menial., here but may be E'xtended in custom and principle that have Nothing was too m~g'1anim'oul? definitely if thl! program pl'oves been the' guideposts, the protec successful. tors and the sanctifiers of holy Father Gallagher's plan first, women for centuries." Sodety IErnlarges
was submitted to the Catholic Cardinal McIntyre commented
drocesan school board and ap IEltecll.Illl'Dve \BoCllrd
at the centenary of the Sisters ;proved. Msgr. Arthur T. Geo CHICAGO (NC) - The Cath ghegan, superintendent of Cath olic Church Extension Society, AU THE olic schools, tl;1en took up the ILCO){!JIosnall'D«ll Vch.llll1lteell'S . home' 'mission agency of the plan with the Providence School WORLD NEIEDS Church in the United States, has To Afr\l'(tI]<ek l?B'olMems Committee. ,enlarged 'its' executive' board Ii CREED NEW'ORLEANS (NC)-Arch from five to 16 members of the bishop Philip M. Hannan has hierarchy. St. Francia GIl'{tllntt' ~udli' H05pi~(Iln ' forme~ a volunteer society of 1'10 quo • One 0'1 The new 'me~bers were ap 115 avallablo young people to attack,Louisiana oUbjeetB of mert ID>GhJl !P[J'@<i,;eSsang ,!)ointed by the board of gov and women community problems. Patron Solntllo 'ernors during their annual'meet PEORIA (NC) - The long Hand.omoly The. new group will work "in ,ing in Washington, D. ,C. ,to ongroved aild proposed telephone communica the field of educatiOn, 'recre3~ ,broaden representatiqn on the onam_led brass tion system for centralizLng data On pollshod tion programs, f<yfiilY "set'vices policy making board. \ walnut bock 'or .. processing in 11 hospitals of the all or desk. and the various aspects - of the Archbishop John P. Cody of $10.00 Sisters of the Third Order of St. socia! 3postolate." , Chi.cago" chancellor of the so Francis received a boost with a ':Y The organization will not re .ciety, continues as head:of th.e
$1,743,386 federal research gt·ant. place any eXIsting groups, but . executive board. Other members
The grant will enable a two assist those already fUllctioni;lg -reappointed 'were AI'chbishop
year test of the hospital informa and it will "begin works which .:~eo Bim: of St..Paul:-Minneapo
tion system that will link hos are not being performed."
lis; Bishop Stanislaus V. ~on,a
pitals in three states to the com of Green Bay, Wis., and retired
Membership in the person-to munity's computer center heI'e in Illinois. Basic data will be person: humanitarian. programs ·Bishop Ralph L. Hayes, Daven
P9rt; Iowa. The fifth member of
sent through telephone wires to will be open to those who have a shared computer. The complete graduated from college or those the board had' been the late
over 18 who have completed AI:cllbIshop'" Edward F. Hoban,
~ystemis to be operational by bi~hop of Cleveland.
'their education. The term of the ~nd of 1968. service will be one year. with The project called HIS (Hos pital Informati,on System) will option for renewal.' There will AIPl!P[J'cve Ve!i'n'\tIlc{\Jj~(tI]li' have terminals in nurse's sta~ be a s~ort training period be LONDON' (NC)-Benediction «ons, laboratories, services areas ginning next Sum.~er. 'may now be given in English and physicians offices. Patient The new volunteer society is throughout England and Wales,
information will be stored at the being established in honor of 'it was officially announced here. computer cehter and be instantly Margaret Haughery, an Irish im The service may start with the available to the respective hos migrant and New Orleans resi traditional Latin hymn but an
pital and its stations. A vear- ' dent of a 'century ,ago who gave 'English versi,on';of 'the . Talltum
long feasibility study was ~alled ' her entire life assisting the !east Ergo' and the following, prayer~
wccessfUl. ' 10l'ti.lllate: '\i;:uow available.
Start PtTowadencee
cl,Ga'rb ,Signifies Som'et,hing 'Su,p.erlativel
o
Los " Ang~les Cardinal Commends Nuns'