,
New Diocesan CCD Office Building
E
The Diocese of Fan River has purchased the for mer Sacred Heallbs Academy elementary school building at 446 Highland Avenue, Fall River, for the establishment of a diocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine office building. This announcement was made today by the Most Rev. J'ames L.
at its Prospect Street Academy senior high school. Rev. Joseph L. Powers, COD moderator who is currently servi-ng as chaplain at the Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro, will make his headquarters for the swiftly expanding dio'Cesan CCD
- terminated the elementary aca- demy last June when j1t incorpor- ated the seventh and eighth grades as a junior high school program
the pledge of Bishop Connolly who said in September: . " • * :) we are to inaugurate a more intensive (,'Ourse in teacher..
training for released-time.* :;: ¢ We want - we need - more varied courses in adult education.* ¢ ¢ We need the help of auxiliary aids in the form of books, projectors, films and whatllver help make more impressive and permanent th~ teaching of Christ." The 12-'l"Oom structure will in-
stall audio-visual aids for ,adult
education.
"Final arrangemenbs," said Fa
ther Powers, "will be the result of
a coordinated planning of the lay
and religious groups at the execu
tive level of the CCD in the dio-
cese." The diocesan CCD executive board-which comprises lay and religious-will meet in the newly facilities for the. display of reli- acquired office building at 7 :45 gious educational material, includ- next Tuesday night. The teaching i,ng books, picture~, charts and film Sisters and Brothers cqmmittee strips. The diocese also plans to in: will meet in the immediate futUl·e.
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The ANCHOR
N. Y. ~rchbishop' Was Very Close _To Qiocese "He was a wonderful, thoughtful man." Thus John J. Burke, driver for Bishop Connolly, summed up the
late Francis Cardinal Spellman whom he drove to Boston and to his home town or' Whitman on many occasions. "He would always invite me into the house when we went to Whitman," recalled· Burke. "I ate with him many a time." He added that Cardinal Spellman took pleasure in showing visitors to Whitman the small grocery River, Th~rsdaYi Dec. store his father had operated. Burke said that on the Feb PRICE lOc ruary day in 1946 when Cardinal Vol. No. @ 1967 The Anchor '$4.00 per Year Spellman received word that he had been made a prince of the Church, one 0'1 the first to con gratulate him was the .late Bish op Cassidy of Fall River. "I drove Bishop Cassidy to see the Cardinal that day,'~ said Burke. P A warm, personal friendship Rev. Eugene Lynch S.M.M., direCtor of the Catholic existed between Cardinal Spell Relief Services in Indonesia, has been named provincial man and Bishop Cassidy and the Cardinal made many formal superior of the United States Province of the Montfort Fa late and informal visits to Fall River. thers, according to an announcement made in Ozone Park, An outstanding ceremonial occa N.Y. by Very Rev. John I. sion was the dedication on July 4, 1942 of a statuary group hon Blaney S.M.M., assistant to r"- oring George Washington, 10 the Superior, General. Fr. ~aied at Highland Avenue and Lynch succeeds Rev. Roger New Boston Road in Fall River. M. Charest, who was provincial Cardinal Spellman delivered the since 1961. principal speech 'at 'this event. The Montfort Fathers in the
In inspiring the Catholic school Diocese of Fall River staff St. children of the Fall River Dio Peter's Church, Dighton, where cese to contribute 'funds for the r the New England Mission Band Turn to Page Three has its' headquarters. Appointed as assistants to Fr. Lynch are Rev. Leo Blais of Montfort Seminary, Bay Shore, N. Y., ~ev. George Werner of Marybrook Novitiate, Hartford City, Ind., Rev. Bernard Blood of st. Theresa's Church, St. Louis, Mo. and Rev. Joseph NEW YORK (NC)-Most Byrnes of the Montfort Mission Rev. James L. Connolly, aries at St. Louis University. Bishop of the Diocese of Fall Missioner in Africa River, and Most Rev. James The son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Gerrard, V.G., Auxiliary Bish Lynch of Blessed Sacrament op, are among the thousands here Parish, Jackson Heights, N. Y., in this metropolitan city for the lFr. Lynch was ordained in 1954, REV. EUGENE LYNCH, S.M.M. funeral rites of Massachusetts
Tum to Page Twenty born Francis Cardinal Spellman,
Archbishop of New York. The Fall River Ordinary was
Most Rev. Bishop James L. brought with him the faith in a close friend of many years of Connolly issued the following humankind that can only mean the 78-:year old internationally statement concerning the death peace not only for us but the known Cardinal. B ish 0 p Connolly attended of Francis Cardinal Spellman': world. "In the passing of His Em "Churchman, statesman and many church ceremonies in New mence Francis Cardinal Spell diplomat in the best sense of the York as the guest of the late man, the Church and the nation word, he sat in on council of Cardinal who, likewise, was !have sustained a tremendous presidents, premiers and kings. present at a number of church loss. No churchman over the His judgment was always re-' functions in the Southeastern past 30 years has been more spected and frequently followed. Massachusetts Diocese. Cardinal Spellman, in his dedicated to the cause of peace "The Church has lost an out earlier years, was also a frequent with justice than he. The fact visitor to Cape Cod, firSt when that he was so frequent a voice standing voice for American tra in favor of our troops since dition. he was associated with the Bos ''Cardinal Spellman will· be ton Archdiocese and later when World War n, must -never be eontrued that he was, a hawk. much missed in these troubled he transferred to the then world's largest city. "Wherever be went., be times.-
Fall
Mass.,
11'
7, 1967
49
Fr. Lynch New Provincial Of Montfort, Fathers
f
l
II
l I
dishop Connolly Lauds Cardinal
Ordinary Attends Funeral Rites For Cardinal
-
World Mourns Death Of Cardinal Spellman A procession of ,m~re than 350 archbishops, bishops and monsignori together with hundreds of priests and .clergymen of all faiths marched into St. Patrick's Cathe dral, New York, at 12 :30 this afternoon for the concele brated Mass ·of Requiem for, the repose of the soul of been a dominant figure on the HIs Eminence Francis Car American scene for more than a quarter of a century. A friend dinal Spellntan, Archbishop and confidant of popes and pres
of New York for more than a quarter of a century. Estimated as the largest gath ering ever to attend a funeral Mass in the history of New York City, a congregation so large that it was necessary to set up loudspeakers outside the Cathe dral in order that the tremen dous gathering might he~! the concelebrated Mass offered by Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate to the U. S., and brother Cardinals of Cardi nal Spellman. Rev. Robert I. Gannon, presi dent emeritus of Fordham Uni versity and the Cardinal's biog rapher, preached the eulogy for the world-renowned Churchman. Father John W.. Pegnam, ,a nephew of the late Cardinal and a priest of the Diocese of Fall River was a concelebrant 'of a special Mass offered Wednesday at St. Patrick's Cathedral for th~ military personnel over
which the late Cardinal served as Ordinary. Father Pegnam, a lieutenant in the U. S. Navy Chaplain Corps, was ordained by his uncle in ceremonies in 1960 in the New York Cathedral, and served as an assistant at St. Francis Xavier Parish, Hyannis until his en trancEl into the Navy three years ago. He is the son of Mrs. Marian Pegnam, sister of the late Cardi nal. . At the time of his death, Sat urday, Dec. 2'0 Cardinal· Spell man was spiritual head of two of the world's most populous sees-the New York Archdiocese with 1.8 million Catholics and the U. S. Military Ordinariate with some two million Catholics. He was 78 years of age ana had . been a priest for 51 years, a
bishop for 35 years and a cardi nal for 21 years. For many Americans, Cardi nal Spellman was a symbol of the Catholic Church. He had
idents, his statements on com munism and education won headlines throughout. the world. He travelled hundreds of thou sands of miles, many of them as Military Vicar of the U. S. armed forces. His annual Christmas visits to U. S. servicemen at far flung posts around the world be 'came an institution. His 16th consecutive Christmas trip and last such visit was made to South Vietnam in 1966. He became noted as journalist. Turn to Page Two
\
Ordination Date Bishop Connolly announced today that the ordipation to the Priesthod for the deacons study ing for the Fall Ri vel' Diocese will take place on Saturday morning, May 18 at 10 o'clock in St. Mary's ,Cathedral, Fall
Rive,r.
CARDINAL SPBLLMAN Archbishop of New York
-t
2
THE ANCHOR-.
Thurs., "D,~c. 7,
Students
1967
to~Rate:
Ston'ehiU Profs Stonehill College students will shortly begin to grade their. pro fessors. By a margin of four to one the college faculty has voted to establish a system of student evaluation of their teaching. Students will rate professors on course content, stimulation of interest, coverage of subject matter, clarity of explanation, pa~ of instruction and other factors. , The move resulted from a suc cessful test of a rating system last semester' when som'e faculty memb~rs voluntarily requested student evaluation. The faculty' found that student comments and judgments were highly respot'{si ble, fair and informative. Permanent System _ Stemming' from this experi, cnce, professors voted to estab lish the permanent. evaluation system which, in addition to'l>ro- , viding individual faculty mem bers with analyses of their per .formances.; will also· give faculty 9 CAJRD][NAI. AT PONTIFICAL MASS: Among, the nolly; the late Bishop James E. Cassidy, the third Ordinary boards . and department heads data useful in considering pro .members of the hierarchy who attended the. Firs.t Pontifi of the Fall 'River Diocese; the ~te John Cardinal O'Hara, motions and tenure. cal Mass celebrated by 'Bishop C~:mnolly in St. Mary'l?: Ca-' then Bishop of Buffalo'and.late Archbishop of Philadelphia; 'The proposed evaluation will . thedral, ,Fall River on June 7, 1945 were: the late Arch the late Frands Cardinal, Spellman.' : v not elicit student judgments on o John G. Murray, Ordinary of St. Paul; Bishop Con 'bishopa faculty member's knowledge , -. . .' , of his subject or competence in his field, as these are considered to be beyond student capacity to judge, Faculty 40 feel, however, . that they can profit greatly' Contin~ed'fr~~ 'Pa-geOne ar~bdiocese 'unhl' 192'5 holding' after his 'electi'on ib th'e' papacy, of special affection, Pope Pius greatly from "seclng themselves diplomat, ·transllitor,,· and 'piiot 'posts including' assistant' chan- 'Pope Pius' XII named":Bishop XII gave Cardinal Spellman the as others see them" in the class during the busy life which began cellor. and .editor of The J;'ilot, Spellman archbishop of New red hat he himself had received room, resulting in adjustments in the small town of Whitman, archdiocesan newspaper. • York. The same· year, Worl4 War'. as a cardinSl and' whicn he had that will enable them to com Mass. He was. born 'there' on .In 1925 Pope Pius XI named II broke .out in Europe and.' received from' its original' owner, municate better with· the stu May 4, 1889, the, son of Ellen. the young Father Spellman 'to a Archbishop Spellman was named "Pope Pius XI. dents they are teaching. ·(Conway) and William Spell post in' the Vatican Secretariat . Military Vicar to 'care for the Cardinal Spellman greatly ad A committee to draw up a pro man, a grocer. of· State. He 'was the first Amer millions of Catholics who 'were vanced the interests of the arch pased evaluation form for fac He spent his youth in his home ican priest to hold such a posi soon to join the growing armed diocese of New York. Its 1,650 ulty approval has been ap-' town' where he attended the pub tion. In 1929 he was raised to forces of the United States. In priests and 180,000 students re pointed, including Dr. Joseph M. lic gramma·r school and Whitman the rank of monsignor. that post he became one of tht! eeiving instruction in Catholic - Graham, associate professor of High School. He was a good ·stu,.. Wh~n Pius XI made the first nation's most notable wartime institutions when he became philosophy; David R. McCarthy, dent and athlete. To earn pocket worldwide· papal radio broadcast figures; C\' bead of the archdiocese in 1939 assistant professorr of English; money he helped his father in in 1931" Msgr. Spellman imme Archbishop, Spellman" w as had grown to 2,246 priests :mcl and Edward MaeLeOd, assistant the, family "grocery' store' 31uj diately followetl him on the· air raised to the College of Cal'di 3-79,888 students receiving G,atb professoi":,of Germ!Ul~ '... " delfyered. ne)Vs~af~rs.,.: \ " wi'th anEn~lish translation 0:(', nals on Feb. 13,.1946. As'8'imaik olie'instruction in 196'1; . ".' ~ '. , , In 'septep1 berr:.·'I9{)7,,-'he en tl:lt~ address.,," , , ' . , . ' ' j ,,' " " " " ' : ' ':. .. . ; ' ter'ed Fordhlun.'UriiyerSit'y alIid " The same' year, Msgr. 'Spe~,. ., .·.l .. .. I . ass. rdiG, : . .'If··..··tb··e·r'e' for man became' a figure in in.terna.. . \ . ip " ,'-:' dis'tl'ngw'shed' '·h·.unse··' ' ., ...his.'.' :aca.demic recOrd,' .'. work on." tional affairs. when he secretly ,<,' FRIDAY ~Imm~CIll1ate'Conce-n -k' MAli EARLY WITH tion of .the .Blessed VirJm', ;colJt:ge publications,.::ind· in de- ~oo aJapa~.~CYCliCaldenounc~: ~'~IP'" !ill • "./ ,'c.i, Mary, !>atron,ess ~f.. the United ' 'oating,' 'arid as second' baseman' m~,. usso 1m s campaign':1o . . for.the collette team. Shortl-..1Je;- ,abo~lsh Italian Catholic Action' . : . ' " ,'. . . ...• States . of America.. .I. Class.. fore his graduation . . o I · of 'It I "1 ~" he left .to ~ ou t . a y an d rna d" e It aval'" lit White. Mass Plt.oper; . Glory; <"ter the'priesthood' and waS 'sent a bl eo· t the press 0 f the worIdin ' : " ,,2(, ,{.: Creed; Preface of Blessed Vir . . . . Pa . ' r .' :. ~ i gin. Holy Day' .of Obligation. ·'to·Roine. for: his theologieal. ns., " I .'lfi . , . studies by" William" cardinal The .-followirig year, ~gr. '*. ,t' ":.~. . ,:,~ .. SATURDAY-Mass of pFe~ous O'Connell of Boston. bS~ehl~an "was named titular
Sunday. III Class. Violet. MaSs . Father Spellman. was. ordained IS op of Sila and auxiliary
* Proper; No Glory. or" Creed; in ,Rome. on ~ay'. 14, 1916, 8Ild bishop Bostpn. On Sept. 8,
Common Preface. . ~~ :Ill a month later. was' awarded 3 ,'1932, he 'was consecrated by Eu . C ardinal Pacelli - later
~." doCtorate in theology frOm' the gemo * *,
SUNDAY~II Sunday of Advent. Urb8ll' College, run by the COD- Pope Pius XII-in St. Peter's
:te. *.
I Class. Violet. Mass' Proper; gregation for the Propagation of . Basilica. He was the first A.Jrter : tlSE ZiP' COD!! ~.
No Glory; Creed; Preface of the Faith. . , i c a n ever raised to the hierarchy
*,.****,********-*.***~."
Trini-ty. . His first assignment was as' an . there.
In April, 1939, only a month
M0NDAY-St. Damasus I, Pope assistant. at All Saints church in Three labels wilU be delivered by letter I
and Confessor. Dl Class. Boston. He served in the BostoD carriers every home during, the·' month "of White. Mass Proper; Glory; Pastoral Commission no Creed; Common Preface. Decembet~ .; ;.. ;. Necrology For Missouri See .. \ . , TUESDAY-Bles~Virg:inMary . ' . , ',:""': of Guadalupe, Patroness Of " . , DEC. IS·· KANI?AS CITY (NC) --.:. Fit::. \ '; .The . labels are: ~v. Mortimer"p'owning, 1942, ., teen lay members of the Associa" the. Americas. m Class. White. , .. , Mass Proper; Glorry;' noCr'eed; Pastor, St;. Francis :Xavier, ,~y- tion of .Parish ,Representatives, Preface of B1E;ssed Virgin., ' "~s... r , new diocesaq lay organization, of . the Kansas City-St. Joseph dio ,LOCAl. MAIL. . '. WEDNESDAY-St. Lucy, Virgin' .. ' DEC. 20... . ' cese, have been elected to 'serve and~lart III CI Red Rev. Manuel S. Trav:isses, ·on"the dio'c'e'san' pastoral comm"' yr. ,.' . a s s . ' . .1953;' Pastor,'Espirito Santo; Fall ...... ~~:o~:;f~;:.lI"y; no Creed;: RiY~r.. .' ". . . si~'ShOP' Charles H. Helms~g"
,
"'W@[fOdl 'M©llil[[[}lj~[Q)®@~h" @f.,., C~f@i,G11G:! ·Spellman.
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THURSDAY-Mass of previous. Sunday: Dl Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No' Glory or Creed;. Common Preface. .
;
.
. ". .
. " , ,:
pas commissioned the new asso,.
.MASSACHUSETTS
.~
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.,
Vincentian: .Meetinf'li . ; cigtiop. tofun:ction as a lay voice
. '" , . - :1/ ., in. the 'diocese. .~nual .C.ommlinion.' fo~. :Fall '. '-Tbe -Bishop described the p~s- . OUT OF STATE River PartIcular CounCIl, St. toral council-to be composed of seven priests;·three Religious and ~,---......., .Vincent.de Paul Society, will be held a~ the 8:30.A.M.· Mass Sun 18laymen..".".as a new structure, AU of 9 ur re'odlers ,areu.Il'ged t()..co~p~rate da~,. Dec. lq,,, 1D Holy Rosary parallel' in. the diocese to t h e ' Chur~h. Br~ak;ast and general S~nod of"Bi~hops recently c~n#Hh-~heir post dff;-celWt'ff ' f ' 'f'th D~VOYBON' meetmg WIll follow in the veried in: Rome by Pope Paill VI; :.....,.;. '.. '. . ".;,': .~ e ~ ec Ive use, 0 .' ,ese .
f
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/FORTY HOURS
Dec. l0-8t. Margaret, Buz zards Bay. St. Bernard, Assonet. Our. Lady of the Cape, East , Brewster., . .
:~~j:~~:.Ultatibn on· a var~etY'of;IQb~fs 'N,Ht' :sp~~~:'·~h~ ',m~H and fOl~
- 'church" hall. mE ANCHon
~1':'anoPu~~~s~:, ~:~ryRiV'e':~r~~~~s..a102;~
.br, thel :atholli: Press cr. tha Diocese at 'Fall ~vg~ ~Ull;~~tlon price by mall, postpalct
I
J
.l9f t'~). . ., t~e Iqo'q,,frprn .~~ [pe·opi~,y.i~'C?~c~rry" Hie "rrlai! j ,-;~uriilg 'tris··::h,.ap'p."Y, a"n:dT ,b~.sy:.:se.·aSQn·;: .....:: .",.:. ~.
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.second Class Postage Paid at Fall mver.
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'som"e
Such new structures, he said, help to carry out the Second .
V~tican CCHmcil concept of.shar- .,'. ed. responsibility at all levels in.. the work of the Ch~rch. 1,.'\, ·~·~EI-~·~"iW~'tl':'!i'~··Id·ltJ·~"·tl'l\1:·l11·'l!·i.~,\'~: ~~":Il1"!t:';:.l'~_~~':<l'''~~·'s$"'llll~. ~'oo;;~~""~"j'l;' ~l;.;i5~
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 7,
Pontifical Mass Celebrated For
Fr..
3
Priests to Plan
Boucha~d
Ar~a PD"og!l'am~
Most Rev. James L. Gon Dolly celebrated a solemn pontifical :requiem lVf ass Mon'dliy for the repose of o
lfihe soul of Rev. George J. Bouchard, former pastor of st. 4VIathieu Church, Black Brook, ;N. Y., in temporary residence at ~otre Dame Rectory, Fall River. Father Bouchard, son cf: the tate Alfred and the late Albina (Cote) Bouchard, was born in Mall River. After studies for the t»iesthood in Joliet and Rigaud, ~anada. the Fall River priest :was ordained on June 26, 1932 for service in the Ogdensburg, Jr. Y. diocese. Surviving Father Bouchard, from Greater Fall River, are: three brothers Albini, Ovila and Leo Bouchard. and four sisters: the Misses Blanche and Irene Bouchard, Mrs. Germaine Le ~que and Mrs. Paul (Maria) Courchaine. . Assrsting B ish 0 p Connolly ~re: Rev. Roland Boule (dea con) and Rev. Herve Jalbert esubdeacon). Deacons of Honor :were Rt. Rev. Msgr. Aflred J. Bonneau and Rt. Rev. Msgr. ;Arthur W. Tansey. Rt. Rev. Msgr. ~hn E. Boyd served as Assistant »nest. The eulogy was deli vered by Bev. Roger P. Poirier, assistant' lit Notre Dame, Fall River.
F@~
area program for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. This week (Jan. 18-25) is the focus of the yearly efforts for greater unity among the separated Christian Churches. Nominated by the Ecumen ical Commission of the Diocese and selected by the Bishop were the following priests: Rt. Rev. Robert Stanton for the Greater Fall River Area; Rev. Edward Oliveira, Greater Taunton Area; Rev. Joseph Nolin, M.S., Greater Cape Cod Area; Rev. Albert Shovelton, Greater New Bedford Area; Rev. Edward Rausch, Greater Attleboro Area; and Rev. Donald Couza, Martha's Vineyard. Programs for this year's Unity Week will include interfaith services, open houses of churches and religious institutions; youth programs, ecumenical radio and television programs and special unity panels and presentations.
o
Close to Diocese Continued from Pabe One patriotic memorial, Bishop Cas llidy manifested a farsighted lPirit of national loyalty, the llUlle spirit evidenced on count less occasions by the late Car Binal in his role as vicar gen "al of U. S. armed forces. On a less happy day, the Car lInal jo.umeyed to Fall River to preside at the funeral of Bishop Cassidy. On that occasion his .-.essage of' condolence read: "I 1001 a deep sense of personal ~ in the death of Bishop Cas IIdy. He' was a dear friend to _e and I have a great affection: ~ him. My affection was based lID admiration for his character 1& a staunch American and a Ile8l0us priest. During his years • a priest and as a Bishop, faith fully and fearlessly he followed the dictates of his conscience in the fulfillment of his duties as a eitizen and as an Apostle of Christ." Again in 1963 the Cardinal ftsited the Diocese, this time to bless the' school named in honor Of his friend, Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton. Now the Fall River Diocese honors Cardinal Spellman in death. At his funeral today in Pfew York's St. Patrick's Cathe ttral, Diocesan moUrners will be headed by Bishop Connolly. Another Link Yet another link binds the Diocese to the Cardinal. Rev. John W. Pegnam, orqained for the Fall River Diocese and a eurate at st. Francis Xavier i:hurch, Hyannis until his en ~ce into the Navy Chaplain Corps, is 11 nephew of the late Cardinal and was ordained by bim in 1960.
Protesting Priests
Minister Arrested
WILMINGTON, Del (NC) lI'wo Catholic priests and a Pres bJterian minister were among 13 demonstrators arrested here fol IDwing a "si·t-in" at a Wilming ~ real estate office to protest alleged racial discrimination in tbe· sale of a suburban house. They were charged with tres passing In warr\lnts aigned by Ioseph Miller, the real estate
Utrnotfy We®lk
Six pri~sts, all of them ac tive in ecumenical affairs, have been chosen by Bishop Connolly to coordinate the
an
8laD.
1967
CARDINAL AT BISH.OP CASSIDY HIGH: Cardinal Spellman on the stage.. of the Bishop Oassidy High School, T'aunton with Bishop Connolly during the dedication pro gram on May 3, 1963 that followed the blessing by the Cardinal of the Taunton School for Girls that was named after his long-Io·ved friend B~shop Cassidy.
·Church Supports Newark Low-Cost Housing Program NEWARK (NC) - "It is time we put into practice the advance social doctrine we have," a priest. observed as
Religious Diminish LOURDES (NC)-5ince 1959, the total number of women Re ligious in France has diminished by eight per cent.
Great Gift Idea .
.
An
EI,ectri,cDishwasher
he unveiled an'$18-million program that will transform 41 inner-city acres into a "new city.'; I
Christian Response to Sum- , mer 1967....:.... Newark," is being sponsored by the Apostilic Com mittee of the Newark Archdio cese which has been supplying Sister-volunteers for inner-city work during the Summer. ~A
Father William J. Linder said
"the Church has to take the ini
tiative in creating the type of
housing necessary for raising
children in a decent and whole
some atmosphere." The risk in
volved, he declared, will scare
off profit-making institutions.
Victimize Indigent
The plan has been drawn up
In cooperation wIth the office of
Essex County Planning Officer
Arthur Bray. Father Linder said
the purpose is "to stimulate
thinking about what' could be
done" to help sol.ve Newark's
crucial h0l!sing problem.
The plan envisions 1,300 low rent and eventual1~? cooperative ly owned low-rise dwellings un der Church 'sponsorship, The area earmarked for renewal now houses 3,500 people in 1,249 units, of which only 82 have been designated as "sound". The complex will include a co-op sh,Qpping center, .ball field, swimming pool, skating rink, schools and a small chapel. All units will include three bed rooms.. They will rent for about $100 a month, with an ownership price of about $10,006.
Modern electric dishw1:l:s<hers have increased capacity and greater washing power which eliminates hand tinging completely. You can have a built-in model or a portable one that can be moved between dining table and sink. So take the drudgery out of dish washing. Order an electric dishwasher for delivery December 2ard.
Families in the area are no~ ·paying $100 or more a month for two-bedroom COld-water flats owned. by absentee land-
·FALL RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT COMPANY
Jorda.
Call Your Appliance Dealer or
I...· ..
4
Pr®O@te Str~sse,s Resp@w~D~ility F@[)' .' S)[9'iritliJol, SO:CB@; ~[)'@®[)'®~S .
THE A" :HOR-Diocese of. Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 7, 1967 .,(
«:@U'[Jl)@Ho~~~UUMB@l1O'~~@ ~®[m®w.
CROWLEY (NC) - "As we thank God for His blessings, w'e must remember our responsibil-. ity for both the spiritual arid social well being 'of man," said Auxiliary Bishop Warren L. Boudreaux of L3fayette' at an ecumenical service. Bishop Boudreaux was the principal speaker at a commu nity .interfaith Thanksgiving service sponsored by the, Crow ley Ministerial Alliance.· Both white and Negro Inlnisters of the Louisiana community belong to the Alliance. "In this technological age, there are those who ask 'why the Church should be involved with social ills," Bishop Boudreaux noted. "Others would.deny the 'spiritual alms of, the church ..and ·concemthemselves 'only with social evils. ' '''But man' has two, destinies. He is ,a child of God, to~r-nal life, ·.and ·1Us ,is -a pilgrim ~
jJ@~o~[fu.~~~~g~frO@J[m .[Q)O@~@:@@~.
]By Msgr.· George. G. jHIiggms
(Director, Social ACtiOlll Dept., USCC)
. Last: Summer, in the wake of the Israeli-Arab war~ jt
looked for a time &s though we might be iii for. a major
crisis in the area of Christian:..Jewi;:;h relations ~md that
the dialogue between Christian~''and' Jew's: iI} 'tne Unit~d
States might have to be " '
. d f' ·:'t I T A Dr. Neusner 'about the futur~ of suspen d e d m ~ m. e ~. . the dialogue. .
number of promment JeWIsh '.'The overwhelming' .majority
spokesmen took the position . of the very rabbis »,ho pushed
that the "silence" of the Christian churches at the height of the Middle East crisis rendered any further dialogue between the two groups absolutely mean- ingless. My own instincts told me at the that the situation wasn't really as bad as' all that and thart the .c!isis in. Christlan-Jewlsh .relation~, however unpleasant it might prove to be in the sho~ run, would probably ,dO more good than harm over the long haUl. '. If nothing else, I thought, it would help to clear the air, and hopefully, would also help to move the dialogue to a new plane. Pessimistic View . '. I am still of this opiniori in o Spite of the fact that, within re- cent weeks, still another JeWish spokesman-Dr. Jacob Neusner Professor of Religion at Dart~ mouth College--has stated that "few, if any, serious Jews, ex- eluding those whose professional' responsibilities require them to engage in dialog!1e, are now ptepared to renew the conv(!rsations (between Christians and Jews) which have flourished in the past." ("A Strain on theDi.a. logue," The American Zionist 'October 1967). ' '. These are stJ;ong words, but, : subject to correction, I am pre, pared to take it on the authority .of Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg of Englewood, N. J.,. that they do ;not represent the dominant view among American Jews, now that the Summer~s dust has sdtled. The fact that a manoi Rabbi" Hertzb.erg's s'tanding in Uie Jew- ish Icommunity has publicly dis- associated himself from Dr. .Neusner's vet·y pessimistic point of view with regard to thl: future of the Christian-Jewish dialogue 'is most significant, for Im;t Summer, at the height of the Middle \. East crisis, he himself, by his own admission, was also strongly tempted t9 call it quits.' . l\'[ore Optimistic ~t the present time, however, he IS much more optimistic than
earth with legitimate goals bei'e -among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. He hC!s a right tEl be free, to edu cation, to human dignity, W moral and intellectual health. ,
0
'
"The Church. has a responsi bility to prod man to spiritual goals. Take away this and you have destroyed the Church'l> reason for existence, .But aa Christ"told us, in the p~l1~able of the Good Samaritan, we must also be' concerned with the wounded, the deprived, the dis ·possessed, the lonely, the sick," he said. 0
their Ghristian colleagues hard
est in May and June," he writes
."It is also the function of flbe in the Nov:. 22 issue of Th'e Na-.
Church and her members," the tional Catholic Report~r, ''have
bishop said, "to pour the oil come to a different view' of ·both
and wine of Christian love inw the usefulness and 'even the.
• " I, ·the wounds of, ·those whom life achievements' of the dialogue. CCD, DIRECTOR: l\1:sgr., has 'robbed of their dignity. We "In the fiTSt ,place, that 'we .must save the whol~ man, b9dY Russell.J. Neighbor has been could continue to talk .at ..all, ,and ·and soul. To betray either ia tie named director of the 11at-· that we kept coming back to talk ·betray Christ." ionaI office of the Confra-' some more, ~n the mi<ist -of ..a situation that was laden 'with' tentity of Christian' Doc deep and explosive emotions, was trine. He succeeds 'Father in itself a great new fact. Joseph B. Collins, S.S., who Agree With Rabbi "Enough relationshiQ had been will continue as a consultant. ,J-j' built up in recent years ·between
respotfsible Jews and Christians, ~fm@~:~@B'InJ$ that we remained in the same rooms even when Vl/'l.:wer;:very angry with each other."
". ,.tt . ITHACA (NC) - A protesting
Rabbi Balfour Brickner ·of the Union' of American Hebrew Protestant chaplain at Cornell
"-1 THE HOLY FATHER'S 'MISBD~~ AD.D Tim Team .(Q1~DlEIi'JTAL CHURCH University here and an 'equally Congregations, 'Rabbi Marc Tan
. , . enbaum of the 'American Je~ish - protesting -Cat hoI i c chaplain Christmas is Chri.st's Birthday. This year, to wound up in the same category 'Committee, and Dr. Joseph show Him you love Him, give your presents to Lichten of the Anti-Defamation reclassified I-A in the draft. the 'POor .~•. Fpr instance, train a boy for the . '"The Rev. 'Paul' E. Gibbons, 34, League, 'and a numb'er ;0£ . other priest~ood. We'll send you' his name, h8~11 wrIte U~ited Ministry clerg'yman who ' Jewish ,leaders tend to agree .to you, and you 'may stretch payrn'ents to suit with Rabbi Hertzberg in, this serves five Protestant denomilHi~ , .your-cwn ·convenience ($8.50 a month, $100. tions at the :university, received regard. ' NO year,$tlOOfor the entire six·year course). TN bis reclassification notice five It is my impression, in other NEED friend 'who has everything, if you sponsor " words; that they would 'go albng weeks after he" returned his 5errnnariaA In 'his name, will appreciate this with, Hertzberg when he ,says draft card to the Ithaca Selective more than 8 ',gifthe doesn't need. We'll send LEAVE that "the very fact tha~ we were Service Board a~' a protest THE your friend ·our 1rtttactive Gift C8rd before against U, S.· involvement' in the so angry in June has convinced HOUSE Christmas. te1ting'him what you have done.. , . Vietnam war. . both Jews and Christians not to Or'$POflSOr.8Sister·to-be($12.50a month, $150 :A week earlier Father David ~nd the discussion but' that it • 'yar, ~811 >together), a homelesa -child needs to be pursued in depth." Connor, Catholic chaplain,. re ($1'0 a -month), or feed" refugee famlly for two ceived the same "greetings" after weeks .($5). Your 'friend will be -pleased you Need Is GreateJ: he too had turned in his dl'aft ,'. thoughto01som~ne,elsewhenyou remelllberoCt Rabbi Richard L. Rubenstein . 'card. Both pieviously had been him.' . . . 'Please write to us today to be aure' director"of'the B'NaiB'rith Hil~ the Gift -cards reach your friends beforeChr1sto leI ,Foundation in .Pittsburgh, classified in '4-D, normal classi fication for clergymen. The two , mas: We'll sen<J the cards as 'soon 8swe:ht!a1 makes the ,same ·point in .a re clergyDien returned their draft from you. markably frank 'adicle, '!Did cards to, .the board following an \ Christians Fail Israel?", in the Oct. 16 protest march against the .Dec. 1 issue of The Common 'We'ilsend 8 ·Gl.ft Carell (or 8' letter, If you prefe1) ,
,Vietnam w a r . . ' weal. to .the 'person you designate for each of thet*
. The' new classification means '''1 can understand those rabbis 'Christmasgifts: '
the two clergymen' must be ~ho lost their cool," he w~ites. 0'$10,000 wfllbliild 8 parish 'plant' complete '
available for possible induction "Nevertheless, I think they were (church, school, recto!)', convent) where. the
into the armed' services at any profoundly mistaken in their .re Holy ·Fathersays.'It'e needed overseas. Nam.
time. ,Their new status is I-A sponses. If the recent-everits It tor ~ourfavorlte saint:. In your loved ond
"delinqu~nt" designating failure demonstrate anything, they .ex~ memory.
to carry a draft·carp. as required You c:anbuild fa church now for $8,800, • hibit the greater need for forth MORE bylaw. 81FT school 10r$3,2OO, and the Bishop 'ncharge right Judaeo-Christian dialogue. CAf.rJ will write to you. . Nothing.in what ha~ happened
Y~urstrlngless.gifts In any amou.nt ($5,~. 1USGEST10Ni can justify an end to ·diaiQgue.
$1,000, $500, $100, $50, $25, $10, $5, $~) -As we get to know each other
will help the neediest wherever they are - !ll we will und'oubtedly discover Indlaandtbe Holy1.snd, for Instance. Remlml even deeper layers of similarity us to senda Gift-Card. al}d differeince between us." Prescriptions called for o Our missionaries can offer Immediately thlJ The willingness ·of so many and delivered Masses you request, Just send us your In·' distiguished Jewish leaderS to tentlons. lOFl begin the dialogue anew and CMOCOLATES hoP.cluJly to pursue it in eve~
600· Cottage St. 994-7439 greater depth as time goes on, is
OUR ... The MIdnIght 'Mass In Bethlehem will be of-' a most encouraging development. New Bedford· GIFT fered for the members of this Association. Thlo J, Ask Gove[j"no~ Act . t ·--In view of what happened last
TO Isou,r, Christmas ttl,ank-You gift to you. Plea8~' Summer, th'ey mfght have been
pray for all of us, especIally our priests on tempted to, cut their losses so
fi!lster~ overseas. And have. a happy .Chrlstlna . : H.,o\RISBURG (NC) '-Some to speak, . and to withdra~ f~om • ' I 150,000 telegrams from Catho ~--~-~-~~----~---~. f! lics (throughout I the state have' the dialogUe until further notice. Hand of Friendship ....,,~=,..., Dear ~~CL08ED PLllASE FIND .$ been 'del~vered to Pennsylvania \ ,MoniJinor Nolan: In~tead, they have again ex
Gov. Raymond ·P. Shafer asking I'OR_';"\·~ ~_ _~--=......,,..., !! him to act on behalf of st!lte aid, tended the 'han,d of friendship
to their·.Christian coUeagues. I
for nonpublic schools. NAMIl.'_ _: _ _ __ admire them for doing 'so, .and I'
A bill which would authorize :'S" think I can assure them, 'without
the state to "purchase" secular education for children in private fear of contradiction, that their
opposite numbers in the eath
sc~ools has been locked in com I otic community are 'equally mittee for some three months.
TH. ·I:ATHDUC NIAll lAST WILIIARI AB,BDCIATIDM ready and anxious to take up whet'e we left off last Summer 'New P'wbJication and to make' up for lost time
NEW YORK.(NC)-The Paul as rapid!y as possible.
i ist Press and the National Coun Rabbi Hertzberg warns us that· . cil of Chut'ches of Christ in the we may find at first that the U.S.A. announced publication of, dialogue will now be "less agree:'
FRANCISCARDItfAL.IPEIJ.MAN, Pres'. I "Second Living Room Dia able." So be it. I am i',iclined to
MSGR. JOH,N Q. NOlAft, tbtIDnal S9crtta" 373 New Boston Road logues," a continuation of an agree with him, however, that
Write: CA1'~1C NlWl. EAsT WELFARE A~ _ orig'nal eculTI'.',,'c.,ll pubH;:hing it wiH a1;:0 be "more open * * •
330 Madison Avenuo-New York N.Y.1GOlf Fall River Telephone: 212/YUicon &5840 ' • project in the United States. and more constl'ucti ve."
time'
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DutchTheologian Deplores Church, Secular 1!)ffiwb;ion
Thurs., Dec.
1967
Identify Priest In l?h~~~~[f@~h
CHICAGO (NC) -Father Edward Schillenbeeckz, O.P. said here a disastrous divis ion now exists between
SAIGON (NC) - The pries~ photographed giving Communion to an American in a North Vietnam prison camp' has been identified here as Father' Ho thanh Bi~n, vice-president of the leftist Liaison Committee of "Catholics Loving Fatherland and Peace," a minority sponsored and controlled by the Hanoi government.
Churoh activity and secular ac-' Ilavity. The d i vis ion "must be bridged," the Dutch theologian told a symposium on "Ministry m the Church." The symposium, a study of the prie9t in the modern world, was aponsored by the Association of Chicago priests at the Center for Continuing Education at the UlI'liversity of Chicago. "Man's relationship with God i:l:ever exists in a pure state," Father Schillebeeckx said, "be muse that way it would be out of 'context." He explained that "man's re - lationship to God. is nourished by his relationship to his fellow
The photograph was furnished' to two East Germans, working for a government-owned East Berlin movie organization, by the Hanoi authorities and was reproduced in Life magazine for Oct. 30, The name of the pris oner is given as U. S. Air Force T-Sgt. Arthur Cormier. A sign visible on the wall behind the priest and prisoner bears the words: "Easter Day, 1967."
- man." Later, in a discussion group with other theological.. special Ists, Father Schillebeeckx said
COMMENDS WOMENS COUNCIL: Mrs. John D. Shields of Strong, Pa., president ().f the Natio~al 'Council of Catholic Women, was received by the Vatican Secretary man--only 11 cleavage." M State, Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, former Apostolic Delegate- to' the U.S., in Rome. The Church, he said, "has. many ministries" and the priest The Cardinal commended: the work of the NCCW, of which he. has kept informed since hood is a ''functional ministry;" leaving, the country. NC Ph(}to,. "there is no dilemma between
our attitude toward God and·
Questioned about theological ....ming in the seminaries, I'ather Schillebeeckx said the parish priest "must have Vision· but 'he need not be a theologian." Be claimed' that while some poun'ding in theology is neces IIary, priestly studies should .tress things such as the human Ities and the natural sciences. "Too much theology and the· priest will be speaking in a monologue, and op.rs must JWW continue to be Sl dialogue," Father Scbillebeeckx said. In Profound Difficulties Dr. Colin Williams, a Metho . dist, said the ministri means "'pt\rticipating in the servant way. of Chri&t." Dr. Williams, director of the doctor of ministry program at the University of Chi"cago Di
vinity School, said the priest hoQd exists for the benefit of the whole people and "has no mean ing in itself." The Church, he said, "should· be a community in which the world sees that its fears are al ready overcome." Yet today the ministry is in profound difficul ties, Dr. Williams said. One reason for this, he stated, fa the excessive time spent in ad ministration. "Sometimes you wonder if you are not just being l& secretary to your congrega tion." Another factor is "worry about whether you are being a priest or an underpaid psychiatrist," be said: "These things are tear ing apart the way ,weare per ~ g our roles."
7,
Says
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S. Tradition of Law Endangered
Prelate Urges Revival of. Rationality
DENVER (NC)-An archbish- ' t~d, members of the Denver CatJlolic Lawyers Guild "8· re vival cK rationalit.y" is needed to preserve the tradition of law and order in the United States. Archbishop James. V. Casey,'of Denver said that the tradition of law is. "based on .the love of God and· neighbor" and that it is· in danger today• "Although this tradition of law continues: to operate in our 80 ciety;," he declared, "leadership· is-losing sight of its very founda tion.· "Ideals of li1berty, justice, equality are respected goals. but the' roots of this tradition are decaying," he asserted 'in his sermon at the annual Red Mass, sponsored by thE! guild, in the cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. Foundation Crumb~ing "We use the tradition to ob tain the good things of life," the at'chbishop continued, "but the foundation. of our philosophy of life is crumblinlr." "In the course of erecting a legal structure for society which would serve the ends of freedom and- justice, leading modern· jurists have cut the idea of law loose· from its' traditional' place i~ the structure of a religious all~ moral universe in which· .a}(w}C' the idea oi law" like jus tice- and freedom, finds its ulti mate roots," he ·said. "Ill' making lllW do what law .CaR do," he- said. "they· have for g,<)tteR what law- is." WASHINGTON (NC) - At a The remedy, be assertedt is "a'_ aews conference after the last revival of rationality." I eession of the U.S. bishops' an Blual meeting here, ArchbishOl) Foree of Faith .John F. Dearden of Detroit, pres111· an appeal to the 150 law . ident of the National Conference yers, jurists and lawmakers as of Catholic Bishops and the sembled at the Mass, he declared: \ United States Catholic Confer "We need you as public leaders ence, thanked representatives of who will bring the force of your news media for their interest ia faith to bear, proclaiming: Man the proc~gs. .is' not merely an animal who "'I do want to express thanks," passes into extinction in the Ilae said, "for the interest, the concern and the cooperation you llnave shown throughout this en tire meeting. We appreciate the OTTAWA (NC) - Father R. fact that you are interested in Martin Jeffery of the Timmins what we are doing and We are diocese has been named assistant unxious to be cooperative with director of the office of the re !fOU and talk about things we iigious education of the Cana l€ llInsider newsworthy." di.!w Cat.halli! CcwferenC'l0 op.
Archbishop Dearden Thanks Kews Media
Education Post
grave; the living God is. the the one great reality of life and man is His creature; man is en dowed· by his Creator with cer tain inalienable rights that in no way depend upon another man or state or government. "Man has a right to justice, freedom· and equality due to his origin in God and his ultimate
destiny in eternity," the arch bishop said. Judge Sherman J. Finesilver toJd· 100 lawyers attending a breakfast which followed tbe Mass that the Red Mass is "a cel ebration of conscience ill' which we of the bench and bar reaffirm our dependence upon God for wi~m and understanding."
The same priest appeared in a photo released earlier showing him giving Communion to an other prisoner Lt. Cmdr. Richard A. Stratton, U. S. Navy flier. The occasion was also said to be last Easter Sunday. The Liaison Committee of which Father Ho thanh Bien is I!l vice-president made its appear ance early in March, 1955. It in cluded 14 priests, all of whom had been connected with the Viet Minh, the Viet Cong of an earlier phase. Since 1955 the committee has acquired no new priest members and is believed to have lost a few by death. These priests are not in good standing, ecclesiastically. On March 12, 1955, the bishops in the North issued a warning against them. They ate avoided by the great majority of Catho lics in the North.
A Famil.y
52 ISSUES OF ~l1t ~ntl1llr For Only $4.00 (Mailed anywhere in the United States)
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A· •.. Centleman
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. .' ·The infinite number of tri,butes that have appeared in .])I'int since Francis Cardinal Spellman died Saturday is
DniWessive but· the varied sources from which they have
cOme are startling. They serve as te8'timonials to the many
I.
faCets of his dedicated life.. , .
. The testimonials have come from every corner Of' the
iImrlJh because the tremendous force which His Eminence
exel'ted in the cause of religion went far beyond the .limits
of his archdiocese and his country.
He was known in the DioceSe of Fall River for he
came to share our happiness on joyful occasions and. was present as' Simon in bearing the' cros~ of sadness at the final rites in-1945 for Capt. Arthur C. Lenaghan' of the Army' Ohaplain Corps and again in 1951 as a last trIbute to his beloved Bishop Cassidy. . . Cardinal SpeHman's life was a litany of .acts of love
of Ms fel!"owman. Race, color or oreed meant nothing to
this great' charitable man. He has many great monuments .but as Sterling Brown, president or'the National Confer ence of Christians and Jews started:."Cardinal Spellman's. finest monument was his courageous leadership at. the Sec ond· Vatican Council in behalf of improved Christiam.-Jewish relations and his s-trong endorsement of the principles of religious liberty." He manifested his love for all men not only by his discourses and writing but by action. For the past sixteen' yea~s, he has spent his Christmases' with m~mbers .of the
armed forces-from the Arctic to the South Pacific and from Korea to the battlefields of Europe. He not only consoled the boys away fTom home and in danger spots but he became the great consoler to the' parents of these fighting men. How many parents were comforted by letters from their sons who wrote and said Cardinal Spellman offered their Christmas Mass at the front! How many parents were startled .and. delighted when a note or' a call came from the busiest Churchman in New York and they were assured of the welfare of their son! ' Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles became the spokes man for aU who benefited f.rom these Christmas visits when he said, "Cardinal Spellman's deep devotion and gen erous sacrificing spirit manifestea for our men in the armed rorces has stirred the admiration of us all. He was a man of sterling character, deeply imbued 'with the traditional New England patriotism." , But his 'patriotism was great because. of his immea-. surable loyalty. And· the world today can learn the· true meaning of this abandoned virtue,' a facet of lov~while he was friend and confidant of perspns in high places, he remained ever sensitive to the plight of the humble and the needy and was unfailingly oPen towards all, regardless of creed, color or n~tionality. . Many tributes will be used to sum up the life of Car dinal Spellman, but perhaps the greatest is "he. was truly a man' of God * * *" A GENTLEMAN OF GOD "
the
mOORlon ~. ~.,ftseph's. Rev. John F.
Tau::'j
1J"Q Agree. Or . N~t to Agree THAT IS THE QUESTIO.
The word dissent, fur .some, sends cold shivers up the spine; for others, it ~ comes a blessed moment f~
'
demonstration. Both are e»o tremes. . Howj!ver, every mim shoul4 be concerned about "the right to. dissent."
The right to dissent is nothing other than the right to disagree. Both. the right to agree and th(i right to disagree are founded omL the same principles. This foundation rests on a sin-o cere evaluation 'and a positiVO logical presentation.· If this is the @~ trlJul?@@«:@frfhJ@~5<e lKlD9Jh$ case, why do we have so mallJf, YAKIMA (NC)-A committ~e. critical point has been reached. who fear dissent? Why do sc. appointed by Bishop Joseph. P .. It noted that in the last three many men spend their efforts hi: Dougherty here in the state of years the schools' combined op frustrating or even stamping Washington to study consolida erating deficit was $239,357, and out 'dissent? , tion of the See's three Catholic said that if current operating There is little doubt that the high schools has recommended deficits were to continue for the cause for some of this reaction unanimously that there be one, next five years, the total deficit· is a resultant of the turbulence " comprehensive high school. would be close to $50,000. of the t.imes. The totality of oUl' " society is complete with emo The comprehensive school tional issues'. wou'ld be on the site of Yakima' Central Catholic, with a faculty Belies F~tration drawn from the three existing· D;~ILO r schools. The committee recomg U oilJlii !!i The dissenter in this setting mended that the proposed con-' VIENNA (NC) _ Vienna's faces the grave danger of aban solidation take place by Fall, Franziskus Cardinal Koenig, ar-' doning both,reason and reality. 1969. . riVing here.after a five-day visit . Emotion and not reason . takes The report said that consoli'; ,to communist Rumania, told .command of, the dissent. Detroit dation appears the only feasibfe newsmen that he had been in- and Newark are examples of thtS ~nd desirable means of contin:" ' "formed' shortly before leaving abandonment - of reason on the ?' uing, strengthening and improv- Bucharest that long-imprisoned' part of 1;bose in disagreement. ing Catholic secondary education .Bishop _Aaron Marton of Alba The other fault of many dis in yakima. ., Julia had been freed by the senters seems to be their nega . It asserted that each of the Rumanian government. tive reaction 'and rather fatalistic: three schools is now an unecoObservers here believe that ideal. Why do so many dissenters nomical educational unit, labor':' the move signalled a softening offer so mariy negative proposJ,.
ing under extreme financial , o~ :~e Rumanian attitude toward' tions? Too few dissenters pro
hardships with inadequate plants, the Church. Repor.tedly, Car.dinal pose anything positive and con materia).s and equipment. Koenig had gone to Rumania as 'Structive. The committee declared that part of a Vatican effort to imThis type of negative attitude the three schools have done an prove the nation's Church-state' in dissent only belies insecurity extraordinary job in surmount- . relations. and illogical.:. frustration. .' During a recent smog a woman driver thought she could ing these handicaps but that a The cardinal indicated that Fundamental Right get safely through a city by following carefully the driver leaders of the Orthodox Church Despite these pitfalls we must in front of her. Even though visibility was poor, she con · in Rumania had supported him : in his request for widened reli- respect a man's right to dissen\ centrated on the tail-lights of the automobile up ahead and to disagree. If we attempt' to was congratulating herself on getting along quite well when ,gious freedom. curtail this right we are destro)' Bishop Marton, long a target' ing man himself. There are some the lead car stopped. When that driver got out she ....asked . KANSAS CITY (NC)-The · of the communists' drive against people who are so self-righteous why he had stopped and was informed that she had fol Kansas City":St. Joseph Diocesan the Church, . has been under Expansion Fund, which raised a 'house arrest since 1955. Before that they would have every man lowed him into his garage in his back yard. molded to their' own image and Right now m~ny leads are being cast out· as regards peak figure of $722,000 in 1964, !, that; he had been imprisoned for likeness. A person of this frame has begun a downward trend, Christmas. Some of these leads will brin'g people to a suggesting tha~ the fund might opposing state interference with of mind would be. very satisfied Church operations. Bishop of Christmas that is filled with presents, trees, tinsel, punch, become inadequate to' support to live in a dull, drab world cd ·Alba Julia since 1939, Bishop monotony. What a bore it would. a .holiday' Christmas. . . capital expenditures such as new Marton, now 71, was born in the. be. The. Church is giving lead, too. To a Christmas that buildings or replacement.' . ' . This is no mere flight of iJJ)a., diocese. he now ~eads... will biing :qn'e to a crib, a maiden and 'a' man, and Jesus· In ~he future, the'fuild might ! Cardi!1al KoenIg also mdIcated ' mation. There is a danger boUl be used entirely to payoff the Christ, to a holyday Christmas. principal and interest on the ·that his visit would improve· in government, civic life and the ,Catholic-Orthodox .relations in church to view a dissenter as 8 .. ' construction of high schools. Until .now, i.t has been used to Rumania as well as relations be- rather insidious and' suspicioua tween the national government person. This is wrong. . ~finance and complete other pro We must consider each man 88 grams' and forms of diocesan' and representatives of the diflerent .religious groups in the an individual. We must admit construction as well. the fundamental right of an in~ This information is contained nation. vidual to disagree, if this dis in a proposed schema of finances Layman 'Gets P.ost agreement is sincerely rational to be considered by the diocesan --~'r' I\.i. NJ:\A'~"'PER OF TtiE DIOCESE 9F 8=l\ll ""'ER synod. COLUMBUS (NC) - Donald and logically honest. To hold The schema notes that the ex- Kelley, real estate broker aDd to any other theory is really IlClt Published weekly by The Cathonc P~~s of the Diocese of Fall River paziSion fund declined to $710,000 appraiser, has been elected worthy of the totality of ... 410 Highland . Avenue . . in 1965 and $678,000 in 1966, and .chairman of. the Columbus DI- human person. Foil River, Mass. 02722>675·7151 . says "it might be questionable as qcesan School Advisory Board. For Open Hous.-">9· . PUBLISHER, .. to whether it would be ade- He is the first layman ever to IU .·Most ,Rev. Jal1"!es'L. Connolly; 0.0;, PhD; . qilate to finance· other projects hold the post. A 'member ot'the .WILMINGTON· (NO) - A sJt. which are supPorted by the Di-' board since 1966" be was un~-' in demonstration to dramatille GENERAl MANAGER ASST.GENERAL MANAGER . ocesa~E~pan~iop fUJ)d and if so . mously chosen to succeed :Msgr.: the need for .a state open ho~ . " It. Rev: Dahlel F. ShcilloO,'M.A.· . Rev. jc:)h"p. the question would·:rein8.in as tID Paul O'Dea, principaLofSL:· lng_law-was staged,in the-Will ·~.:~A~N~I~fi . the: .me~od of . financing these-" Charles·.:Preparatoij· semiriU7,- :Diington office of' Delaware"aw. .' ...... J' Mugh· .J•. GoIct. .. ';,' ,'. : ~...,. other diocesan· prolJ'8lD8." , :. board ·ehairmao. ". .'c·· . Gharles ·L. Terl'¥, Jr. ~ .,.... 4 ' . '."-
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THE ANCHOR ,fhurs., Dec. 7, '1967 , .
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--------""-- .Pope ~aul~s Gift Aids ~ef~,ge~,~{ In Palest.ne ..
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Still .babY· among Diocesan: high Schools, ConnoDy , High in 'River has ~ready got itseii'8li 'auxiliary group.' Known as :.the St. ~IgJl~tius Loyola mub, the nE:W unit will be open to fathers -!>f Connolly boys and'allotJie:r .interested men in the Fall River ·area. ,. ' 'R d d b D J 1:. E M Tuesday the annuall Homemaker ea e y r. ou,n .' an- test was administered to seniors. Ding, the club plans a sports Altogether a rather nutritious Right early in the New Year day. Today the science club
Fan
. VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope P.aul VI' donated' $50, 000 to aid P~1estine refugees at the same time that the
Church's international charitable organization,'C a l' ita s Interna . and a glee 'club concert in the sponsored a discussion on can tional, launched an appeal to as -Spring. cer; and tomorrow students will sist victims of the recent war Jesus-Mary and Prevost sodal- . go on a "Romeo andl. Juliet tour," in the Middle East. . Ists have a date for Sunday, Dec. whatever that may be. Maybe The Pope turned over the 10. They'll be attending a day of Romeos will be distributed to $50,000 to Caritas International spiritual commitment at Ba7 JUliets? . together with a letter to its View, Riverside, R. I. On the At ConnOlly High 30 boys out president, Msgr. Jean. Rodhain, agenda are ,talks, films and dis . of 76 hopefuls made the basket
written by Amleto Cardinal Ci eussion sessions, closing at 4 ball team. First scrimmage was
cognani, Papal Secretary of . .,' against Tiverton. High.' Since
,with, fl ,Mass. State. The letter noted: "In the " Freshman Susan Costa' is top Connollly' has .only' freshmen
next few weeks near the sacred. . student at Dominican Academy and sophomores all of now, boys
feast of Christmas in the land r. in 'Fali River for the first mark . will. play ~ ,jayvee schedule for
where there was announced the lng pertod. She's the only girl in '. a' few seasons to come. Also ex good news of peace to all men of the schooi to attain high~st hon peeted on the competitive sports good will, these refugees camp ors. Seventy-one other students, agenda: track. baseball, and i,ng under tents face with lively . however, are right behind her, possibly soccer. apprehension the coming rigors receiving high honors· and The Cassidy Physics Club of Winter." bonors. made the scene at the Boston The letter noted that "the Holy AtMt. ,St. Mary Academy the Museum of Science recently, and Father, making himself the in Humanities Club will present A. also at Cassidy. the. former prin terpreter of these woes, calls on Christmas Carol, .with Jacalyri' cipal, Sister John Elizabeth, was all those who have the means to Hodge and Janice Pieri as honored at a Mothers' Auxiliary remember their. needy brothers Scrooge; Anne Collington .as his meeting. whose fate is bound both to the nephew; Elizabeth Sullivan, Cassidy acceptances include amount of assistance which can Cathy McMullen, Kerry Mello, Linda Tremblay to Chandler STUDENT COUNCIL: Stud«mt council officers at Mt. be brought together and also to SuzanJ;le Lauzier and Nancy School of Business and Diane Martel as the Cratchitts; Paula Quigley to Marquette. At Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, are, seated from left, the speed with which it can be Cordeiro as the Ghost of Marley St. Mary, Nancy White is head Patricia A. Smith, president; JacqueHne ,Cummings, treas distributed." The papal appeal came at the and Theresa LeBlanc, Charlotte ed. for Northeastern. Floods of urer; standing, Judy De Paola, secretary; Mary Beth Soares, conclusion of a three-day meet Wal and Susan Pacheco as' the acceptance news. still to come, vice-president. ing of the executive committee three spirits of Christmas. The of course. of Caritas International in Rome. play is scheduled for 7:30 Wed. Parent-Teacher Guild ~so at DA, varsit7 captain nesday night, Dec. 20. New at SHA Fairhaven is a parent-teacher' guild. Speaking The international organization Washington Trip at the unit's installation banquet for, this season is Michelle Gau . ended its working sessions by is thier, with Beth st. Amand suing an appeal for aid to Mid The' National Honor Society was Rev. Patrick O'Neill, Dioc and the National Junior Honor esan superintendent of schools. named as jayvee captain. Pla,.ers east refugees. The statement was will participate in a basketball signed by Msgr. Rhodain and by Society at Sacred Hearts Acad Guild officers are Arthur Mar emy, Fairhaven, are looking tin, president; Joseph Cataldo playdliY at Bridgewater State . the vice presidents, Auxiliary forward to Spring, when mem Jr., vice-president; John Kalife, College under direction of Miss Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom of bers will spend their April va . BROWNSvn.LE, (NC)-Two treasurer. Secretaries are Mrs. Nanc7 Walsh, DA coach. New York, executive director af cation touring Washington. Trip laymen - a migrant worker and Leo Grenon and Mrs.' Donald U. S. Catholic ReHef Services At Stang High in North Darl chairman Paulette St. Onge has a bank president - have been Provost. Four meetings will be mouth the queeQ of the school's (CRS), and Msgr. Abramo organized several cake sales to named by Pope Paul·VI to re held yearly, with the- next slated first Hiomecoming W ~ d ·was Freschi, head oftbe Pontifical swell the Washington fund. ceive Benemerenti medals for for' early January. Relief Organization. Betty Zebrasky. Her court in Other NHS officers are Patricia their service to the Church. The Coyle Band and Glee Club cluded Nola Cloutier, Sue Cour The statement read: Le' Doux, president; Patricia The medal winners are Fiden will jointly present a ChrIStmas noyer, Madeleine Hoaglund and "The executive committee of ,Kalife, vice-president; Claire. cio Salinas, a migrant farm program Wednesda7 night, Dec. Sue Ann Machado. Each received Caritas International, meeting in Bouchard and Cynthia De Mello, worker and A~ J. Tony Carnesi, 13' under sponsorship of Manus a souvenir ciharm, was'presented Rome, has studied problems treasurers. Sister Julie Louis~, .. president the Pan American Pro Musicaand the Coyle at halftime of the Stang-Feehan stemmng from the great sufier 58.CC. is moderator. .Bank here. Fathers' Club. Titled ''The Mean game, 'and reigned .over t~ -ings of the moment. The Cassidy debate team won. T-he.two will be presented the ing ofChristmas~ the event will Homecoming Dance. "In particular, Caritas Inter eight of 12 competitive rounds at medals by Bishop Humberto S. be "a festival of sight and sound And area school newspaper national, joining with all the the annual Melrose High De Medeiros of Brownsville at reflecting the beauty and joy editors will meet at Stang this great national and international bate ·Tournament. Representing ceremonies Wedn~ay Dee. 20 of Christmas for every man," Saturday, discussing ways of im organizations, desires to meet, the Taunton girls' school for the at the Shrine of San Juan. says reporter Michael Lowney. proving their papers and pool especially with the arrival of affirmative were Ellen Finnegan, . Salinas, who was born and lives The band will also join the Cas ing useful ideas. Plans will be Winter, the neeas of the refugees Pamela Desmarais, Deborah' in La Joya, Tex., is the father of sidy glee club .Sunday, ·Dee. 17 discussed for a journalism work of 'the Middle East. Nunes and Diane Quigley. For nine children. Duri:ng the Win in presenting a Christmas pro "With the coming of Christmas shop for local school papers. the negative were Elizabeth' te'rmonths' he drives a tractor gram; and small gFoups of Coyle Stang chairmen of the' event are '. it .therefore launches a pressing Michney, Kathleen Curley, Julie 'for a small fann in La Joya, and musicians will provide carols in Nina Carroll and Mary Ann appeal to the member organiza Lemire and Jane Masi. Debaters in the Spring and Summer downtown Taunton and in area Adamowski. tions themselves and to all in also have going a raffle on a works as a harvester and me shopping centers from Dec. 17 discriminately, hoping that each TV set, with proceeds to finance chanic' following the crops until Christmas. responds generously also to the h'ips to out of town debates.' through the midwest. Bead Team Eastern. Rite Men app~als of. other organizations." At Jesus-Mary Academy in Fall' 'Carnesi, father of five, serves Karen Pacheco and Moniqtie 'Form A.ssociation River students heard an address as financial advisor to the dio Goyette are basketball co<,cap by Miss Patricia Scott, admis cese of Brownsville. tains at Jesus-Mary this season. DETROIT (NC)-Meri from 10 sions officer at Bristol Commu Recently the JMA hoopsters met Eastern rite parishes in the De nity College. She explained the Bishop Feehan High at home. troit area have formed the Asso terminal and transfer programs ' e Ie . Sl~ncy Iyes Also at JMA, sophomores Claire elation of Catholic Men of East offered by the new institution. ,$12 Million to India Robillard and 'Muriel Lapointe em Rites. Purpose of the new A program spanning musi~. , h a v e 'received certificates in lay association is to help mem history·from Bach to the present.. NEW DE.L~ ~NC) -,A. rec-. connection with an essay-writing bers ~'rediscove!" oUr 'heritage, 454 MAIN· STREET I' 'I, ,time .'was ,presented to the' stu-:' ord $12 mIllIon \Vorth of:food- ,_ event; anu. the 'mother-daughter identity and mission as Eastern dent body of Coyle High iii' stuffs ":was dona~e~. to·.In~ia by alumnae" 'Christmas' party is.: Christians" and work for Church SOMERSET, .MASS. "... ,Taunton" and to seniors from the U.S. Cathollc RelIef Serv'f .. M d ' ht D r.ene.w,.al. ,'.'." '. . '., ".' ":', ,Bishop Cassidy by the Coyi'e"~' ices' (CRS) .during· fiscal 1966- : slated or· on ay mg, ec. '. '11 in' the' school auditoriuin. In Joining in 'the founding were band; Highlighting the program' . 6 7 , . . ' , ' charge.' of arrangements are representatives of the Maronite, TELEPHONE 675-7992 . were performances of Mous- ',. An' "official report "released Rochelle' Goyette . and Charlotte Byzantine, Ruthenian, Romanian sorgsky's' "Great Gate' of Kiev" " here by the; agency's IIidia pro- Dube. and Ukrainian rites. and Hermann's "Train irr the" gram said that 'the' food was disFreshman class officers have Night" , ',. trtbuted . by . 4,669 cEinters been named at Coyle High. Class ~
Busy Week· throughout the country.' president 'is Paul Bernacchio,' It's been a busy week at Mt. The $12 million total is near- supported by· Richard Tosti, vice-', , , St. Mary's and there's still some 1y double the figures for 1964-. ' president; Robert Holmes, secre- . to come. Tuesday there Was a"65, when the agency' spent $7.6. tary; Jolin' Smith, treas1,lrer. Stu Spimish supper sponsored 'by the. million on food imports, and four dent council representatives are and DOMESTIC Spanish club with Ftench"club, times ,the. outlay on food in. Thom~s ·.Bradshaw, Martin . INDUSTRIAL . .. members as ,guElsts; and alSo on,' . 1962-63. ' . Fontes, 'Howard Waldron and ~. 'Providing data'on CRS aid for JamesWebstei'. . , P rotests C uts ,', . 'agricultural -development the Happiness Is •.• $:'. '.' 'MUENSTER (NC) - Juliwi . report·i'·said ':,that- the ;gency' ·Dominican -Academy seniors '+€ a rdinaf Doepfner of Munich haS;' llelped: 'pro~de .finan.ces . total:,;, will have a, ,special. day .tomor . "',written"to German Chancellor·'· ·ling"$1.5 mHlion'··for construct.. · row- with- the';theme- "Happiness: ~1 .. 'Kurt,Geotge Kiesinger to protest! ····lng· over 4iOOO 'irrigation' wells' Is~ "':."'/1' Conferences, folk sing "312 Hnlma'n street ','. 997-9162 ." New BeCiford l!"'- against g'Overnment ProposaIa to'i in the, 'states ~of' .Maharal;htra, Ang1 and'.igroup -discussionS will ':~<ll-" ,'. ""~' ":,'" '4 ' ..•. ,.• treduce l filiJiUy' allowances. " ': ...,"Madhya 'Ptildeslf;and G,njerat;-"" highlight ,thlr· program. '. -, ~ ,.~
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Meets Tonight'
'fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Dec. 7, 1967
'It .Take.s Tim,e
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District No. 1 of the ~ will conduct a closed meeting, tonight, Dec. 7 at '1:40 in Com= munity Room of St. Mary's School, Spring· Street" FaD · River. The' school yard is &vaQ.. able for parking.. . Plans will be completed __ · the Bishop's Charity Ball sched uled for J~n. 10 at the Linco~ Park Ballroom.. . Ball donations and Guild dueu are to be returned at this mee~
.But This Cake's Worth It'
lJy Mary Tinley. Daly
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Talk about eating your cake and ,too, :a '. l'1easant surprise awai,ted us as we prepared to start the 1967 Ohristmas fruit cake. There stashed away in a tight tin can, was a chunk of Judith Wilson's fruit cake. How It escaped no1;iee aU these several thicknesses of news months, we'll never know . papers, change papers as they ej'nee it was top favorite absorb water and let dry over larOund our house during the night. Soak citron' in boiling '1966-67 holidays. Sliced" very water until soft enough to cut thin and served with a glass of easily; if you use package-d sliv :Wine, a cup of ered almonds, soak similarly. ~ggnog or cof/Prepare pan Qr pans.(either,one fee, 'twas per12'vx 3lf4 deep,or two .. 9lf4x leet finish for a 31f4 ). Line bottom of - f>ans with III e a I, a justwhite shelf paper, letting pap~ right snack for extend an irich or so up th'T sides. holiday guests. Line again with second paper, And now, would letting it extend an .,inch;abo-&e you believe it, top of pan: Do no~. grease,. the Chat cake, one cake wi~l do it for you. ~ar later, is Second Day, • even more deliSecond day: Cut up all fruits!., dous, moist' and nuts and grate lemon rind onto fully aged. Matter of fact, this paper and dredge all With , one experience impels us to make cup of flour until each piece is two of Judith's cakes this 'year flour-coated. Separate eggs, beat and put one away (if we caI;l yolks until pale yellow. 'In sep withstand the' temptation) and arate bowl, beat butter until forget 'about it until Christmas very light and fluffy, add to this 1968. remaining 2 cups flour alternateReports from readers who ly with egg yolks; add sugar tried Mrs. Wilson's recipe last gradually (high speed on mixer);. year were overwhelmingly' en- add stiffly beaten egg whites and tbusiastic. Wrote one woman mix thoroughly. from Chicago: "When I saw it was a two-day operation, I hesi'At this stage, Judith Wilson tated about starting. And when reconvnends transferring batter . W to a huge bowl (we use a turkey I read further that 'Chie'f' il- roaster) and dumping the flour son (retired Chief of the U. S. ' Secret Service ,Frank J. Wilson) dredged fruit and nuts on top was pressed into service for the to be mixed in evenly. This is final stirring process, I wondered very important and very arm h t wearying, the cue for 'husband. if my husband would be t a co- or other strong-armed individual operative. He was and we're both grateful for the best fruit to enter the picture. Lastly, add cake ever to come into our sherry and brandy, Blend but do not overstir, to keep liquids house.". ,Now, as another Christmas from draining flour from fruit. looms, this column has received Spoon into prepared pan or pans. many re'quests for the how-to Bake at 300 degrees on bottom' on the Wilson cake. So, with Mrs. shelf of oven for· 1% hours, Wilson's permission, we reprint leaVing oven door shut. At end the recipe, .nearly 100 years old, of 1% hours, turn heat to 325 that came down from an ancestor degrees and bake one more hour in Fredericksburg, Va. ' or until cake is nicely browned. What You Need D Let· cool completely in pan on cake rack so air can circulate. Ingredients: 10 eggs; % lb. butter; 2 cups ~ sugar; 3 cups 'To store: Wrap cold cake in flour; 1% boxes currants; 1 box several thicknesses of cellop~ane seedless raisins; % box golden kitchen wrap, then aluminum' raisins; % lb. figs; English wal- foil. Fasten with rubber bands nut meats from % lb. in !lhells; to keep all.ah; out. Store in cool 1 cup blanched and slivered place (garage or attic) in tight almonds; % lb. citron; 3 half- tin cans (potato chip cans for pieces each candied lemon and example). orange rind; ¥.l lb. each red and This is not a cheap cake, ap green candied cherries; 3 slices proximately $6 at today's prices candied pineapple (one .each for the slightly more than seven white, red, green); grated rind' pounds but it "doctors" itself as of one lemon (an essential in- it ages,' requiring no addition of gredient); dessert spoon each of alcoholic spirits. Once yOu try nutmeg and allspice; winp.glass it, you w!ll find it is worth every of sherry, same amount of cent of' money spent on ingre brandy. dients every hour of effort. , . First Day
Method; first day: Pick over
raisins and currants for stems; . Pennsylvania Upholds wash and drain a>t least three Sunday Closing law times; spread out to dry on PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A law requiring Sunday closing of StateD' Catholic Heal~h large food stores was held con stitutional by the Pennsylvania Officials to Cooperate AUGUSTA (NC)-Officials of Supreme Court. the Portland diocesan bureau of
The law was challenge-d in a human relations services and the suit by a store in Hopewell Maine State Department of Township, on the gl'ound that Health and Welfare met herp. re it was unspecific and vague. The cently to ,explore areas of co· high court's decision affirmed a operation between the two ruling of the Beaver County ~encies. , Court of Cornman Pleas. The Catholic bureau 'conducts several statewide programs unThe high court rUling'said the der the direction of the- Roman American working man "is en Catholic diocese of Portland. Di- titled to a' day of rest with his ocesan officials felt the two family." The ruling also stated agencies should set' up a ml~ans tha~ because of "necessity, char of communication and coordina- ity and recreation, some persons tion for their programs. will be required to toil on stinOfficials said the meeting had day". but the number "so en .been useful, but did not give ,gage-d must be kept at a miili details. 0 mum."
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Miss Clorinda A. Ventura, cD& trict president, will preside ana the Cathedral Guild will se1\Vfl as the hostess group.
· Elementary School Enrollment Drops
MASS, iN CLASSROOM:. P·attY Lynch and Christine O'Neill, sixth grade pupils at Ursuline Academy, Wilming ton, Del., place hosts .on the -p~ten held by Father Richard .DeLillio as classmates sing an offertory hymn. A guitar Mass is offer'ed once a' week in '~ different classroom, in the private elementary -school. EadJ, girl participates in the service either as a .commelltator or lector, or through pray ing .aloud personal petitions, and passing the handclasp of peace. NC Photo. '
NEW YORK (NC) -'- EnroD ,ment in Catholic elE!mental"1' schools in the New York arch-' diocese has declined for the fourth consecutive year, accord ing to Msgr. Raymond P. Rig ney, superintendent of schoolS. Msgr. Rigney said the 333 ele ~ mentary schools have an enroll ment of 165,590, a drop of 4,600 pupils from the 1966-67 school year. The 99 high schools of' the archdiocese had an increase of 201 new 'students for a total of 50,037. In all, archdiocesan schools now enroll 215,627 students.
Msgr. Rigney said the decrease in elementary students occurred in each of the seven counties within the archdiocese. He cited . several possible factors. contrib uting to the enrollment drop, in cluding dislocations of inner city , schools caused by urban renewal projects, and the encroachment of rrommercial, industrial and in stitutional establishments upon By MARiLYN R O D E R I C K ~ _ residential areas. Ile also cited continuing efforts to reduce , class size and a decline in bil'ths.
f WORLD OF FASHION .
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TIPS FOR PRE-TEENS If you're looking for a gift that's a little different for your eight yel:ir old niece, grand daughter, godchild or even daughter, I've come across one that any young miss would love. It's . a book on manners and g roo min g geared for eight, nine and 10 year olders. White G I 0 v e san d Party Manners Manners is" the title and. it's beautifully. il lustrated WIt h line'. drawings to appeal to a little. girl. with b '!l d dIn g feminine instincts. Published .br the Rover B. Luce C<)mpany, It s written by Jarjabelle Young and Ann Buchwald in a merry, chat ty style that teaches without preaching. . Truly, speaking from the point of view of a gal who toured Boston looking for a book on grooming for' the pre-teener, it is the only decent one available on the subject. Teen books on style, charm and beauty' are printed in abundance but the
State Distributes Sex' Education Guidelines TRENTON (NC') - The State Department of Edu'cation has begun distribution of a booklet giving public schools informa tion on establishing and de-' veloping sex education' pro grams. Written by a committee' of physicians and educators, ,the' booklet is intended to cover the' development of such programs on both the elementary' and sec ond'ary leveL
little girl who hasn't yet reached' her teens is sadly neglected. First Steps The story of how I happened to begin ·looking for a book on tlli~ subject began with my'own eight year old daughter. After a . recent trip to the library she be came fascinated with a book that by the use of photographs showed l\, little girl how to brush her hair correctly, take care of her own nails' and in general take the first steps on the road to becoming a well groomed woman. , An my efforts to purchase a copy of this book were in vain, but I was determined to find on,e along the same lines. Finally, after. much browsing in Boston bookstores,' I came across the one' mentioned above and Meryl was deligQted with it. -{\s mothers of small children will admit, it is quite difficult to introdl~ce them to the pare rudiments of cleanliness. There fore, wheri they reach an age where they begin to show an intbrest in good' grooming for_ themselves, everything should be done to encourage it. This book (and perhaps a pair of spanking white gloves) may be just the enqouragement your pre-teener needs to. help her on the road to becoming a charming, well gro,omed young miss.
II
.• HYANNIS
,- HARWICH PORT
• SOUTH YARMOuni
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, 549 COUNTY STREET
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6~ COIHIANNE1. S1i'. YAUNTON Attleboro - No- Attleboro Taunton
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9
T11f ANCHOR-
Gardeners Should Prepare
Thurs., Dec. 7,
Yards for Winter Rest ,
Dominican Nuns Need Elevator
,
By J_ph anti Marily" Rod....i~~ For the last few weeks we have been busy getting the prd<m read¥ for its WiDteI' rest, a job which will continue lit Ieaat until Christmas. 'l'bis may seem rather late in the .-son to be cle8ning up and putting the finishing touehe6 . . winter-protection. but' it The mother and daughter prayed II actually the ideal time. For an night at the tomb .and toward _ thing'there is DO need to morning, when Luey fell asleep• . , mucll. cleaning up until St. Agatha appeared to her in a
.... I'!"t of \he :leaves have fallen
It's not a skyscraper, but Do_
minican Academy's convent on Park Street, Fall River. has !lve lUgla stories. involving scores tJf
stairs. These become wearisome when climbed many times daily, e.wpecially for elderly or infinn Sisters. '1'"0 help them along, the oonvent has had for many years a small elevator. But now the elevator too has given in to age and infirmity. ReluctanUy it wrote a letter to its clientele: "Dear Sisters: I am extremely tila"8 wlUlngT'to'be~'repfa-ced~:But it will take almost a year to con_ . struct and install my successor. I will, however, do my utmost to serve you un til then if you help by allowin g me to rest. In other words, walk when you ean. Thank you. "Your Elevator
vision, called her sister'. and pre--
...... \he trees. I have never dieted that one day she would Ioeen one whO enjo:red. work _ ' become a martyr. h thoUght of raking _ ...... When the morning light appe"ared, Lucy's mothe.r was eured and the young girl vowed to dedL"lI!f,..ttwe,rm~llIir Jilr atr~.tfWGat:\\'ef'8WJ1'/!ll;'Jal'm~ 1tone and I would rather spend complished when a rejected "ort perioqJ of time in the gar- suitor ;aenounced. her as a . n ~an long afternoons arid Christian. Her penalty was slav~ "ery in a house of ill fame but weekends getting chille"'. she chose death rather than The most important reason for Iaolding oft on the final cleaning despoilment. ad winterizing is the fact that Christmas Wheat ae ground is not as yet thorA lovely custom on the feast of . .ply frozen and before adding St. Lucy is to plant the "Christ_ything above soil level one mas Wheat." The Wheat, if a\lSt be sure that the ground is pressed into a pot of garden soil, Indeed frozen solid. Otherwise, watered and kept in 8 fairly "'atever you use for mulch. warm room is supposed to sprout aIJove t&e ground will prevent by Christmas Day and is symh ground beneath It _ bOlic of the bread we receive at freezing until aub-zeru weather the altar. We haven't done this lifts llIld _ can ca.... havoe at home yet, but Melina did It at _Ill \he roo>t sptems of IlI-lL Sister Mary David'. kindergar_Sell teo. and the children aeemed to I have made it • _ enjoy it very m.uch-at least Meliasa did. -.e' of I>lJIiIIll &Oil around ... _ of aT plant _ I The Swedish eoffee eRk"" _ _ . .tof _ _ rolls ""rved on the _min, <Jl _ • -",.'17 _ of _ . t.... 11th are a Mlrbtful _,. 1 - U S - _ a _ o I . _ 10 .-Ind 1Iae youngoI>en <sf _ -.king :leaves from day to daT 4Ioes not appeal to m.e. Fo.r aD-
a1_
........ -.belacPLI Ed .... P'"nlr ( - 10, - _ .. _1
·._ca_ __ _._01.-._ au
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to remain 4orm.ant for a year or lJf
..1 _ _ I _ u . _ _ ...11 for IIilllq.
I cover each rose with a WIl ... soil about 18 inches deep, and. _yother tender plants are pven -.e same treatment. In the '8Pr!ng it ;" a simple matter 10 remove ,the soil and throw it Ioack into the \>arjiaUy prepared ~. Sometimes I cover the hill With straw, mostly becaWie I think it looks good. but I doubt • this has any effectiveness. As to cleaning up, this Is • job which ne\l'er teems to get com~ted to my satisfaction I usuaU.. stal'! by cutling back au the mum stems, raking up the leaves wttieh seem to ga.ther every-wile'" JOU turn. and trInuninc IKlck the roses. Then the annu. which have escaped our attentiOll eet pulled up, greens get a last ...-uning and are tied to proteet ~nst snow dam'!\le, and the I8rden gets a thorough raking _ band-cleaning. Everythine llammable gets burned to proride a little warmth and odK', aDd the prden is ready .fur' mow, with all the talk of air pollution, but I take comfort in the caet that in my area the cit,. disINNes of trash b,. burning so eYeD If I went to the trouble of buntiling up all my trash, it woulcl only end liP polluting the air anyway. III tile I[llehe_ Tired mothers and fathers .taT abed; your eldest daughter will wait on you instead. For tis St. ~ucyls feast. Dec. 13. and the custom among the Swedish is the oldest girl in the home presents her parents with rolls -.cI coffee to remind them of the
.at
wir'gin martyr Lucy.
ItaI7 Ie _
w.,
a country that
aelebratet this feast day, fw Lucy bom In Sicily. The "ry is told ~ Luera mother was seriously iU fGr JWUl7 years with hemorrhages and that her _ucbteoo urI"<! her to 110 and ....,. at tbe tolUl> <sf st. ~ ...t the bleeding would ...-.
e_DC L u e~ 7
!D&I'l)T. AIM, _
Latin word 1wr:. mea" JiPi;, It Is appropriate that her feast ...,. comeR dUl'lng Advent w_ weare prepariDC for the _DC of the Light <sf tl>e World; ..... Ibis could _ be pelnteil _ 10 the youorer members of the
fanillT. I won't gu.ara.ntee that Joe and I 'IriU be served cake and coffee in bed as the Swedish suggeat, but I do intend to make the fOOlOWing 'kugelhupf tbe evening before, even if I have to do the serving myself. This is just the thing for St. Lucy mom. The recipe was sent to me by Mrs. Mary Lou Fo1cQ of New Bedford. Mrs. 1"ole. wrote that this is a favorite of her husband and three children.
RaeelJluP! J,l, cup milk ¥.. cup sugar
% teaspoon salt 'ri: stick margarine or butter 1 paekage dry yeast ! egg, (beaten) 2: cups unsifted flour % Tablespoons f i :n. e
brea.
e"""bs to 16 whole blanehed almonds ¥.!: cup seedless raisins lh teaspoon grated lemon rind 14
1)
Scald
the milk, (
don't
boil
Fundraisers Help
The elevator's appeal was notIced by members of St. Catherine's Fundraising Committee, Domin ican Academy's auxiliary group. They decided to initiate Project Elevator in order to raloe funds for Old FaitMur. suocessor. Their kickoff event is • candy sale which started T u e 8 day and will continue through December. Chainnen are Mrs. Walter Romanwicz, Mrs. Samuel L.,. and. Mrs. Andrew Bomanwicz.. Ttl.". remind ....eet-tootbed Fan - Riverites that everyone neetI8 WOIUUNG TOGIilTHEIC: &a1>bi Yehllda Cohen ~ors ~ at Chrisbnu that if .>:..' ·th S' , " . . Ge---~ d..... Len w. obtained from Deminie. ......,11118\08 W1 ISu". . . . .anen ..,n. an ....ary ore. A.ea<letn,. It'll _ wloat mi~ members of the faculty at Mary\hll1"8t College. Portland. be ealled an elevated llt""ject. Ore. A ~her of science "",d education, Rabbi Cohen fi. . i4; eailY worldng with the Siaters and students em the Catk-
Ardtbishop Plans New Laity Ccwncif
olic campus. NC Ph. .
'Mirade' Nun Dies
In. LOUIS (NC)-PIans haft been mapped he'" for Iorma_
Missionary. S'ster Worked 42 Years After Cancer Diagnosis .sEATTLE (NC) A msr caftDftization by Pope Pius
XII in 1.46. Sister Delfina's death was .ttriooted to cancer of the boRe after a three-month illness.
whose recovery from eancer 42 "Years ago was a factor in the canonization of a saint. died here of cancer. Sister Defina Grazioli. n, a member ot the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart st. FrancH Cabrini hospital staff here f()r 51 years, was ill from 1921 to 1925 from what was diagnoaed as incudlble eancer. In 1925 she received tile last rites of the Church as staff members of the hospital prayed to Mother Frances Cabrini. fa1.l,lldress of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart, for her intercession on behalf of Sister Delfina. Three days after Sister Delfina's life was despaired of she recovered sufficiently to reswne her duties. H~r recovery was attrlbuteci to Mother Cabrini and was GAe of two miracles that led to her
it only heat it until you can see the steam rising from. the milk: and little bubbles forming around the sides of the pan. It is best to watch It closely. %) Stir the sugar, salt and marAlumnae to Meet garine into'the warm milk and stir until shortening melts. Cool Alumnae of Sacred Hearts to lukewann. Academy. Fall River, will meet 3) Put the % cup of warm at 3 Sunday afternoon. Dec. lQ (not hot) water into a large in the academy chapel for their warm bowl. Sprinkle the yeast . annual lily ceremony. A social on the water and stir with • hour will follow in the gymnafork until the yeast is dissolved. torium. Mrs. Charlene Crispo 4) Stir the lukewarm. mixture Boyle is chairman. into the dissolved yeast. Add the eggs and the flour and with y-our electric mixer beat vigotGusly whole almonds on the bottOO1L for about 5 minutes. 7) Stir batter down. Beat thoroughly. Stir in the raisins 5) Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled In an.d lemon rind. 8) Pour carefully into mold bulle, about 1'" houri. I) Sprinkle the bread erum'" and let rise again until doubled. over the sides and bottom of a in. bulk, about one mo~ hour. weU _ _ I,. quart _Id. g) • Bake in • 300- oven abeUt (Copper Is Arrange the 5C minutes.
-l.
1967
Ukrainian Archbishop Marks Anniversary
ne><t Spline 01. • new ArebdiCouncil <sf the Laity whiclt will emphasl.e senioe and. offer a representatift voice to every l.ym.aa, priest and religious. The plan was approved at a joint meeting of the boarda etf tbe Archdiocesan Councils of Catbolie Men and of Womea... The new organization will lieplace the two councils. OCl5!la
(ACL)
PHILADELPHIA (NC)--Pope Paul VI has sent congratulations to Archbishop Ambrose ·Senyabyo, O.S,B.III., metropolitan <sf Ukrainian catholies in tile United States, on the 25th anni~ary of his eonsecra·tion as bWlop. which he observed Sunday.
The. Pope said: "We pray and wish you all favors and blessings, all that justly can be expected from God from whom goes the dignity of the priest-
famous for
QUALITY ami
SERVICEI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• haed.-
5 f. L (OlUNJ & SONS 5
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INCORPORATED 1937
'6EIEIW .CONTRACTORS . . ENGINEERS JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., P.... Registered Civil and Structural Engineer ~J Society Professionaf E:'1ginp"'rs
M~ber N("O"
RlANCIS L COlLINS, ./ll., Treas. TIfOMAS K. ·COLLINS. Sec'y.
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ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER. MASS.: ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs., Dec. 7, 1967
fflE ANCHOR-Diacese of Fa!1 River-Thurs., Dec. 7,1967
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11
BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING •
Variety of Thought, Opinion Reflected in Season's Books No one can complain today that he belongs to a monolithic Ohurch, and nowhere ill the new diversity of thought and opinion reflected more clearly than in the season's books. Oonsider only such titles as "The Posteonciliar Parish," "The Ohurch and Revolution," "The Church Made Relevant." "The Church in Transition." More daring: "Trimming the Ark," "G~d Is a Christian in meeting today's New Language," "The Kingchallenges. They are "The dom of Downtown." But on Church in Transition" by Desmond Fisher (Fides, $3.95); "The the other hand there is no
Worth of Person Seen in Book
Powerful Book Reveals~ Plight
Two books which special people will be happy to find beneath their Christmas trees are uPrl.. macy of the Person in the Church" (Fides, $1.95) and uABC of the Bible" by Hubert Richard. ($3.95). ·"Primacy of the Person" is • symposium on the subject by noted educators, sociologists and priests. It asks the question: HoW can the human person be served by governments, institutions and organizations rather than be manipulated and exploited by them? It considers how the Church can "become a nonmanipulative community" and truly be relevant to the deep needs of .contemporary man. Bible Dictionary If the Bible is to be the mainspring of liturgical renewal, surely it must be made as understandable as possible, and it is to this task that "ABC of the Bible" addresses itself. Father Richards notes that his "aim has been to make the theology of the Bible available ,to ordinary people in as ordinary a language as I can manage. and to show them that Christ stands at the center not only of the New Testament, but of the Old Testament too." In alphabetical order he discusses books of the Bible, important wor~s, people, geographical features, feasts and modes of worship. .
Here is a book that cries its message to man and God. It is the soul-sickening almost unbelievable account of the daily hell which ill the life of the South African Negro. In unforgettable photographs and words 27 year old Ernest Cole tells what it is like to be black in South Africa. "It is an extraordinary experience to Jive as though life were a punishment for being black," he writes in "House of Bondage" (Random House, $10). No day passes without a reminder of your guilt, a rebuke to your condition, and the risk of trouble for. transgressing laws devised exclusively for your repression. Some of these are merely petty and mean-spirited, others teTrible in their severity and injustice. "They deny the small comforts of a park bench and a drinking fountain, they make essential permits subject to the caprice of hard-eyed bureaucrats, and they countenance p r i son without charges, drumhead justice, and political exile. Unreasoning Hate "Today implacable, unreasoning hate is a barrier neither white nor black can pass. Between them there is no glimmer of fellow feeling, no will to understand. What has developed in both races is a rigid and perverse psychology of opposites. What.:ever the other says must be untrue; whatever the other likes must be bad; whatever the other fears and hates must have some value; whenever the other is decent distrust him; whenever the other smiles in friendship, beware."
Church Made Relevant" by Peter . J. Riga (Fides, $5.95); and uThe Church and Revolution," also by Father Riga (Bruce, $3.95). Dividing his book into three parts, F ish e r d,iscusses the Church before, during and after the Council; while Fathe-r Riga's first book concentrates on the For those in enthusiastic step Constitution_ on the Church in with the postconciliar Church: the Modern World and his sec"The Postconciliar Parish" (Kenond on the relationship of the edy, $4.95) will be of great inChurch to the world. terest. This absorbing book Quite another problem is exgathers the thoughts of some 19 plored by Louis M. Sevary, S.J., "card - carrying, dues - paying in "The Kihgdom of Downtown, priests and parishioners" on (Paulist Press, $1.25). His conwhat parishes are like and what cern is with what can be learnthey might be. Also given are ed of teenagers through their many striking examples of U.S. music, and he has learned a parishes making an earnest efgreat deal. Comparing Downfort to relate to their particular t-own to the kingdom of God, he environment and problems. Aldiscusses the forces that mold together a hopeful book. teen culture: money, youth, pow"Trimming the Ark" by Chriser, communications; then shows topher Derrick (Kenedy, $4.95)' DANIEL BERRIGAN, S.J. how topics Of top' interest to goes to show that the same publisher can be on both sides of in the air as well, a growing teens such as loneliness, friendimpatience with the mere idea ship, searching and social probthe fence. Mr. Derrick adopts a let's-go-slow attitude about of fidelity to the Faith, a frank lems are reflecting in their songs. He closes with a study of teenmuch of the new-Church enthu- hostility toward all such ideas age life, including dancing, siasm, saying for example: "One as revealed truth, absolute morality and the Magisterium of the drinking and drug taking as can sympathize with those who major influences in the lives of Is there anything more fascifind it enjoyable and stimulat- Church." ANew Language .. many youngsters. This book will nating than the myriad ways ing. Bliss it is in this dawn to be ali vel And plainly enough, it In "God Is ANew Language" be very vaJuable to teachers, people choose to spend their time operates beneficially in many (Newman, $3.50), Dom Sebastian CCD instructors and parents- on eal·th. Probably not, which ways. On the other hand, it is Moore of England's Downside not to mention teens themselves. accounts for the changeless popularity of autobiographies a one-sided thing, a force hostile From Father Berrigan Abbey contends that much of and journals. to catholicity, universality, tJhe Catholic thought and "theology JiConsequences: Truth and'" ••" In "Picnic' in Babylon" (Macall-embracing and 'balanced is essentially unrealistic. He de- is the newest book from Daniel millan, $6.95) John L'Heureux view * * * votes his book to a thinking Berrigan, S.J. (Macmillian, $3."Jt has ,become apparent that through, with the reader, of new 95). In it he discusses the need ... writes the journal of three years a heavy price may have to be theological ins,ights for a new of faith, his own experience at preceding his ordination as a Jesuit. He is marvelously uninage. paid for something originally Selma, Ala. and finally the LatThree books discuss the post- in-American tour pressed upon hibited ih his description of comseen as simple liberation and updating. If renewal is in the air, eonciliar Church witn emphasis him because of his peace activ- munity life (one wonders if Jesuit censors would have ok'd on the role to be played by the defecUon and disintegration are Turn to Page Sixteen it in preconciliar days) and also conveys his unusual situation as priest and poet in a succession of fresh, memorable entries. , "Mission to Peru" (Bruce, • $4.95) is the account by Dan McCarthy of the three years he and Particularly directed to religious are three new books, and one of them is directed hIs wife spent as Papal Volunto a particular category of religious: the domestic or. manual worker. It is "One and teers in Peru. It ghould give athome supporters of the Latin the Same Spirit" (Pflaum,$4.50) by Rev. William Hogan, C.S.C., director of the Stonehill missions encourage.ment when College Institutes for Sisters and for Local Superiors. Father Hogan, basing his obser- they see QOw much is' being done' vations on his many conTurn to Pa&e Six",_ tads with domestic and ,him are swept into its vortex. dence inspired in them by a manual worker rel igious J Many people know the genuine good priest, a. holy religious, feels that such workers often, warmth, the esteem and confi- man or woman. '" '" * Yet an individual' caught up in the exthink themselves to be inferior perience of such affection knows to intellectual laborers in the also that he is not the only one vine;yard. It is his concern to loved. Unlike conjugal love demolish such ideas and to mpp which is so frequently a terribly in detail a spiritual road such jealous thing, there is no resentreligious can follow. ment on the part of, one who is In "The New Religious: An loved by a religious, if the religAuthentic Image" (Bruce, $4.ious happens to be loved by 95), Father Ralph J. Dyer, S.M. many others." "relates the traditional values of Women· of Church the religious life to recently disThe place of women in the covered insights of contemporChurch from the earliest times ary theology." Considered are to our own is considered by Sischarity, the three vows of reter Mary Lawrence McKenna, ligion, fo8ith, hope and fraternal S.C.M.M. in "Women of the love. Church: Role and RenewalOf love Father Dyer beautiful(Kenedy, $4.95). She hopei ly says: "Once God has transthat her book 'will bring women formed the human affections of to see more clearly "the richa religious, a veritable sponness of the long tradition ill staneity of love follows. The rewhich they stand." Her desire ligious begins to scatter his love everywhere. Persons all around fATHER HOGAN Turn to Page Sixteen JOHN L'HEUREUX, S.J. lack of volumes of standard spirituality and the booJ{ of God's own word, the Bible, continues to march to new heights on the sales charts. The happy result of all this: no problems when it comes to selecting Christmas gift books.
Journals Depict Varied Lives
Stonehill Priest Writes for Domestic, Manual Workers Religious Life
HERE IS CHRIST: Christ suffers ~ body of this African baby with advanced malnutrition. Like one in every foUf African children, he died before his first birthday. \ Photograph from JlHouse of Bondage" by Ernest Cole, (Random
House. $10).
If Saviour Caine at Chris tmas, It W6uld Spoil Whole Feast
Discussion Units Emphasize Unity One way to digest the thought
I often say to myself that if, at Christmas, our Saviour were to of the renewal is to join a discome to us, it woud spoil the whole feast. If J"sus were to invite cussion group. Heaven knows, no such organiz.ation need suffer Himself to our home (even without His family) under the appearance for lack of topics, even though of a displaced person or some oli man whom nobody wants because he discussion guides are far from is old, or under the form of sollie young prisoner out on parole-that the cut-and.dried one-answerwould be the end of our Christljlas. The whole thing would be spoiled. only affairs they used to be. Th~ now is one of mutual Every time that our Lord comes into one's life. everything is turned attitude discovery and many questions upside down. Think for a momeDt. Look at Zacheus. After he met our are posed which probably have Lord. he hadn't a penny to his name! (This also happens at Ohristma~ no conclusive answers. One excellent set of discussion time Ix> certain fathers of famili.... but not exactly because of religion!) But Zaeheus was filled with joy and a great sense of liberty, and he books is the Witness Books experiencedl'lhfinitely more satisfaction in Turn to Page Eighteen (Pflaum, .75 each). By recognized authorities such as Mary Perkins Ryan, Mary Reed New. land and Father Gerard S. Sioyan, these books probe 'such matters as bringing up childt·en in a. Christian atmosphere, how to teach religion meaningfully, the mystery of death and how to form one's· conscience. Possibly the most provocative book of this series is "How Do I Know l'm Doing Right?" by Father Sloyan. "The demands that should be put to the self uninterruptedly to resolve the question, 'How do I know I'm doing right?' are, as a matter of fact, all in the realm of agape," he notes. "In every ease one needs to ask whether the requirements of love are being preserved. The object of concern is the motive til love or .its absence. As to the act itself-be it abortion, acelPting gifts in office, or exprescontempt for another-it too has a certain objective character. This may be described as the first detriment of morllity but CHRISTMAS IN fOREST: Illustration by Eleanor Schick from MChristm... DOt the iast. Accepting sizeable Turn to Page Eighteen In the forest" b;» Jan Wahl. !Macmillan. $3.~0.
.me
Children's Christmas Books Please Throughout Year Little children's Christmas !l'tockings can be brightened tlll'iftily and profitably with any of the "Little People's Paperbacks" issued at .45 apiece by Pflaum. Written by Gerard A. Pottebaum, himself a practicing COD teacher, and distinctively illustrated by Robert Strobridge. each considers one small point of God's dealings with man. A prefatory letter to parents explains the pedagogy behind each pamphlet, and the text itself includes the child at every' point by way of questions and suggestions as to things he might do or say or sing. "The Praise Parade," for instance, notes for parents, "There is something about parades which speaks a universal language . They are a si gn of the' spirit which unites and inspires people everywhere. Even the little people share in this spirit ... when they decorate their tricycles and wagons with crepe paper and ribbons saved from Christmas and parade around the block to the cheers they hear in the heart. lOThis is the spirit of Psalm 150, from which The Praise Parade is adapted. Words and pictures are set in today '5 world of skyscrapers, floats. drum majors and majorettes. You might like to draw from the costumes and color in the artwork and organize your own praise . . parade, with banners by the childrpn, along with their horns and coffee-can drums." ·Christmas Ideas Good a6 a pre-Christmas gift would be "Children's Christmas Ideas" (Maco, .50), which tells youngsters how to make gifts, ornaments and good things to eat for the holidays. For readers 9 and up there .are several delightful reprints which hopefully will introduce a new generation to parental favorites. This doesn't always work, but these books are so attractive in format and illustnitions that they've certainly got a fighting chance for acceptance in the '60·s.
';Doctor Doolittle: A Treasury" by Hugh. Lofting (Lippincott, $4.95) will undoubtedly benefit from the soon to be released film of the same name, but all by itself should find its way into many a young heart. As appealing as ever are Doctor 'Doolittle and his young Boswell, Tommy Stubbi:ns, to say nothing of the immortal animals: snappish Pol... ynesia the parrot; motherly DabDab the duck, practical Jip the dog and a whole menagerie of others. Do get this! Another treasure is the newly issued "Lost Prince" by Frances Hodgson Surnett, known chiefly for "Little Lord Fauntleroy" but the author also of scores of other beloved books. This is another Lippincott reissue ($5.95), and tells the story of an exiled 12 year old boy who didn't know he· was a prince and of the adventures he met in recovering his kingdom. Arthur Rackham illustrations grace a reissue of Washington Irving's "Rip Van Winkle" (Lippincott, $3.50) and make it much more inviting to peruse than when it's encountered in a reader or English textbook. Kitchen Madonna Certainly not just for children is a tender sensitive story of a boy and his sister w:ho set out io get an icon for their homesick Turn to Page Eighteen
kiTCHEN MADONNA: Illustration of Mother, and Ch lid is from JIThe Kitchen Mcdonna l l by Rumer Godden (Viking, $3.75).
Poetry Lovely, JoyOUS. Part Of Chri$tmas Celebration Poetry seems a part of Christmas along with carols. mi.stletoe, stars, trees and all the gala rest of it. And the poets annually do their part by supplying books appropriate to the s.eason. This year there's Phyllis McGinley's "A Wreath of Ohristmas Legends" (Macmillan, $R.95), wherein the poet explores folklore of many co[\ntries and turns her treasure trove into the lilting poetry which is her characteristic. Particularly lovely is "The Birthday," which tells of angels who on Christmas Eve select "a f.ew most fortu-,-... nate children, sleeping warm in their December nurseries, kiss them twice, and bear them off to visit Paradise." The children play with the Infant, then return to "their accustomed beds." their parents think they've dreamed everythill1g, "but they are wrong. That child whom Christmas captures grows beautiful and wise, possessor all his da;ys of arts and raptures and. heaven-dazzled eyes." Turn to Page Twenty
, PHYLLIS McGINLEY
.
12
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 7, 1967
Latin Lands Look· for Help TOWOFdl UniVSFlol ChUFeh From "Social Revolution in the New Latin A_rica" Edited by Jom I. CoasldiDe, MoM. It is now over 10 yell-rs, points out Bishop Manuel Larrain of Talca, Chile, sinee Pius XII convoked Latin America's bishop. at are historic meeting of Rio de 1.... eiro, from which emerged n(}t only a vision of the g<mel"al proolem. of Latin America's l,atin America· repeals Itie idenChurch but above all, the de- tical sente""" to all· her br_ cision to face them with the in Chrisrendmn. . Although it ma.y seem paracalm confidence of those wh(} are not overcome by obsta.cles but put their trust in God. Like tlie :U'o"'a"bhmo'un~ tains, the Latin American Ch u reh convoked by her supreme Chief
answered to the great problems
presented: "1 COffi.e in the na.me of the Lord of hosts. ,f Therefrom the
Latin American Episcopal Cawt oil (CELAJo() was born. As .John XXHI stariecI !WI pontificate we can report Uult the first act of hi5 jfOvernment was to speak to Latin America, addressing a portion of its epUteopate gathered in Rome fcMo the third ""';on of CELAIil. In his last - . . 011 . . . - . then, wbiIe hishi5 Iipo _ _ _. . final
p_
and bleolliDp flew _ our eontineot, Wilh fiUal pride. _ ma,. say tIIat we were the lint and tbe last In his -...~ first fruilll of his _ _ Pope and the flnal reciP-lll of his blessing as tJllhrersal Sh I!p. eM. Now his .11: tr. Pope P..a VI, conotaDIJ,y dispYp IlOo _ cent, alfertion and inten.t ,.. lhis ""n_t - "Cbrislion _ menaeed/' .. he e ~ it. We can. therefore 1"tI!PIT wiUt0lll hesitatiQa to the • _ _: who is calIlng! It is the Pope. -the sUcceIBOr' Gf. Peter" tile CIfte who has . - - solicitude of all the chu~.'"
e.-
LatiII'
Plea . , Wbo is ciilling? 'It is Latin America itoelf tWIt is ciilling. It
is the same 'as in St. Paul's vision, when he saw a Macedonian appealing to hitn.---'''Come over and help us." The CIuirch ef
$peciolids to Aiel Stu .! on Priests WASHINGTON (NC) - The complete list of eight specialists chosen t'O usiBt in the in-depth study -on the Ministry and. Life of Priests has been annmmced hece. The study~ a mandate to the Bishops' Committee on PaSteral Research and. Practices, headeeJ by .lohn Cardinal Krol CJf Pb.ilade\pbia, will be approached ..,.. havingselec1ecl specialists clevelop approaches along these lines: tbeoIogical, spiritlAality pastoral, sociological, liturgical, . historical, ecumenical and psychological. The specialists selected to assist in the study are Father Bernard J. Cooke, S.J., of Milwaukee. theology; Msgr. WUliaa A. Bachmann of Cleveland, 5piritUalit)'; Msgr. .John .J. Egan of Chicago, pastoral; Father Andrew M. Greeley of Chicagu, sociological; Father Godfrey Diekmann. 0.S.8., Gf Collegeville, 1IiDn.. liturgical; Msgr. .101m Tr:acy EUis of San Francisco, hutorica1; Ksgr-. William. B. Baum. of Ka:Dsu City, Mo., ecumenical, and Father Eugene C. KennedY'.. of Chicago, P8¥cbolollicaL
..JIII..
d.~x\eal, we ask l~r help 'because we are conscious of our strength Wi,"ffili. 'M,1l!'f&f'U\\\f'looW&"IlM have deposited sncb enormous reserves of faith, "hope and love in a continent where there is this regerve. i1 it were not for placing them at the disposal of all men and all the Church. We ask for help, not because we wish to receive, but on the -contrary, because we want to give, Because we wish more and more to become a living power in Christ's Mystical Body. Because in the hour of Ute Council we were COlUlCioua rtf being. a part of the pilgrim Churcb lbat makes pn>gre•• amidst lhe anxieties an4I pmb!ems of a deve10plnc WOl'IlI.
_
CaBo'
WbAl Is cal1ing! It Is the Church of V _ II cllaIocuinc wilh the ...md; ooeldac in the li&bt of doeblue .. _ _ '" _ lhat_be _ _ "'the ~ t ww:a:5 ; Dl. all lUItklnd. Tbe CImrdI _ _ . _ __ _ . . . . aII _ h e r ~ ...t _ _ InItie fuIfilJIoIeM eif her __
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Churchmen Back South Carolina Race Harmony COLUMBIA (NC)-Bialtop Ernest L. Unterkoefler of
Chariest(}n was .monk 14 So. Carolina reHgioll8 Ied.en who signed a statement npporting a new statewide ere... dedicated to "commUBilr ,..lift aM to ~ and elCplllOlll( ...eiel har'!llOlQ"." Gev. RobeR E. ea.~ned tAe 4I'P!'ip a ti-. wWdt
_ak _
crew out of • ~ _ _ .,. tile state brand> of lhe Nati....al ~ation for the AdvaRcemeDt
serve and expancl racial __ mOlQ'." "We furtiIer l'I'lI7e1'fu1ly ~ that _ their _ Gbjedlve of _ inc UOll of _ .. ~ i • ., _ _ _ __ the slate will be - . , .a rh' .....
of Colored People and wu 01'ganized by a group of industrial. educational, communicationi aDd business leaders. TIte group i8 known .. tile South Carolina TuIIi: FGI'Ce fer C _ t , Uplift. Ia tbeir IllaieJDeDt tile .. leaders asoeried 1IIoT .... """"Y etfc>rt to imprvve Itie _ dKlOlUl of life· lor . . JlM(Ile . ,
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people., .... ,
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erate ill ewJrJ"'.
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ourselves," the statement aid.
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~~ when you give a modern
Spiritual progress woulcl net be consistent unless it were acoompanied by social progress. The equatioD. of temporal ACtiOO
GAS
and spiritual action, of the en-
eroes of the world and tile Church, seem. to gather in Latin America to give us a vision of a Church which must be inti.malely present to God in it evangelizing task~ and, as well, autheotieally praent to mea. 10 its civilizing action. Here the twe spheres - the human and. the religious - are brought together by a deeper nnity which shcmld. constantly be rec:li5covered and realized. UDiy~1 Tuk A question, an analysts. IlIlCI an appeal. This ill ,what we ,lu.ve sough~ to present. Our goal is epitomized in tbe words of John XXlU to cardinal Lienart: ,jThe future of those vast regions depends .upon the effort carried out in their favor by the ensemble of the Church." It is a universal task, 'as farreaching as the mission of the Church. The answer to the question, to the a,nalysis, and to the call, will make it possible for the men of the America of the southern half of our Western hemisphere, freed from injustice, to raise their eyes to the heavens and envision the Southern Cross IIhininc there u a sign of hope. This column concludes "Seclal Revo_ IIa _ ...... Latin
It
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GI. the or&iM\izaU ctt. .stimulate actiCla ~ fee COIIUDunit, uplia _ p~
_ ,
III . . .
.et CImrdI Is lIpilllitu.al an4I relIP>as _ it is . . . tl1Ie 1IIat in tile f"lfillment '" !bat _ the _ U a l pmblems of man are invulvecl: liberty. justice, ..Udarity .... peaee. A JllJiritu.al advance _ ... _ intilnalel7 ""_ _ AaIeriea: Itis
BISHOP'S ANNUAL CHARITY BALL: Members of District No.4, DCCW, of the Attleboro Area, arranging for the annual Bishop's Charity Ball on Jan. 10th at Lincoln Park, are: Mrs. Edward Galligan, hospitality committee; Mrs. Mary Travis of No. Attlebor(}, presentee committee; Mrs. Harry B. Loew, District No.4 president; Mrs.. Alfred "Jackson of No, Attleboro, preseIitee committee.
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Social Reformer Asks Public' Aid For Ghetto Parochial Schools DAYTON .(NC)-Cooperative, tax - supported parochial - public school programs are called for in urban areas .where public schools are undergoing racial change because of the exodus of white famiUes to the suburbs, according to social reformer Saul Alinsky. Alinsky Is head of the Indus trial Areas Foundation of Chi cago, which has established com munity-based action organiza tions in a number of cities, among them Rocheste:r, N. Y., Chicago, and Oakland, Calif. In a press conference in Day ton, AlInsky said if he were "in the midst of fighting for an in tegrated school system, one im portant thing I woul~ be com mitted to would be the integra tion of public and parochial schools" in cooperative pro grams. Share Facilities "I would be all out for federal funding, and public funds for parocohial schools Co $ $ I would~ try to get the kind of arrange ment where parochial schools would be right next door to pub lic schools." Such a plan would provide for a two-way sharing of facilities, he added. The reason for this (position) has nothing to do with the fact that the Catholic Church really has a bomb on its hands as far as the future 00: parochial schools is concerned," he .continued. "The reason is that the paro chial schools in most urban areas of America carry within them that precious element which is so essential to an integrated school pattern-white kids. Ur ban public schools are rapidly losing their 'white kids." . Black Power In an address sponsorfi!d by the University of Dayton student
government, Alinsky said the meaning of "black power" has changed for many people since it first was used several years ago . in relation to the Negro community. He adhered to the definition. that "power" is simply "the ability to act." Black power is the "power Qf an organized Negro community," he said. '\It . is the mass organization of the ghetto so that the people can exercise the power that is legiti . mately theirs." Legitimate black power is not the use of power as a conspiracy or in an evil way, he said. The poor must·organize them selves in order to exercise the kind of power already being em ployed by the rest of the com-· munit)J according to Alinsky. The poor must have' their own representatives, not those ap pointed by others. Negroes Brainwashed He conceded there is "a great deal of rejection of whites" among many Negroes. He took the view that this is a "psycho logical reaction." "Negroes have· been told for years that they are inferior, that they ought to be ashamed of being black," he said. ''There has been a brainwashing of the Negro population that has be come a paralyzing and immobil izing psychological factor." "We have destroyed their spirit; we have degraded them; we have exposed them to a kind of hypocrisy that is killing," he saia. "Imagine bein!: a Negro and 'coming into a church to listen to the jazz of a serman that the cross of Christ knows 'no color line and then going out, knowing what is outside in this world every time you turn around." .,
lHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Dec. 7, 1967
Meryknoll Missioner's Film· Wins Venice Award KYOTO (NC) - "Six People -Ten Legs," a story a crip pled school boy and his five -companions here in Japan, has been awarded the Lion of St. Mark Award from the XIX Chil -elren Film-Festival of Venice. The motion picture was pro
of
"This was the first time that man had used a force 00: his own creation to do his work," she said. "This was the technologi cal breakthrough which helped all those nations Who crossed the threshold to become as strong as they are today." Ask Oursellves Question Lady Jackson's address was part of the program entitled "Awareness," sponsored by the Detroit archdiocesan Institute
lQ)o@«:@S@17i) ~M[9JW>@ij'fl'
~@MIlil«:O~ <e@IlilV®Ilil@$ KANSAS CITY",(NC)-Fifty two archdioceses and dioceses are represented at the fourth National Council for Diocesan Support Programs conference being held here in Missouri. Msgr. Joseph' C. Walen of Grand Rapids, Mich., public re lations director for the council, said 20 Sees were represented at the meeting in Oklahoma City last year:He explained that the conference· was 170rmed to ex change ideas on fund-raising techniqueS for diocesan-wide purposes.
for Continuing Education, to bring various aspects of the problem of poverty to the atten tion of the general public. Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit attended the meeting, at which Father Charles E. Cur ran, moral theology professor at the Catholic University of America, also spoke. "OnlYo 20 per cent of the coun tries of the entire world have crossed that threshold (of tech nological deyelopment) and to day those countries control 80 per cent of the world's wealth," Lady Jackson said. . "As I see it," she ·continued, "we look at the 20 per cent and we must ask ourselves the ques tion 'now, what are we going to do about it?' "The question comes to what . are we, as 'People of God, doing as Christians, as voters?," she declared. JInflluence Olii Others Lady Jackson spoke of her work on the Pontifical Com-·· mission on Justice and Peace. "People expect me to say something when I come from the commission. They expect me to provide the directives which will end world poverty. "We have received congratu latory telegrams and letters from· the United Nations' U Thant and the Pope," she said "but I only wish that the Pope's confidence in us reflected our influence on others." She .asserted that "those of us who do have gifts of the earth can share our gifts. This is not any Pollyanna idea. "I'm not sure what you call it if we don't share our gifts, but if we don't share t~em I know we are not Christians."
luced by Father James F. Hyatt, M.M., director of the' .Good Shepherd Movement here in Kyoto. Festival officials, in an nouncing the award, applauded the picture as "a story which stimulated a spirit of solidarity
among young people." 'Six People-Ten Legs," one of seven motion pictures pro duced by Father Hyatt, also won Best Picture Award at the Pan Asia Catholic Festival held HI India last·year.
GI E
US THIS
D· Y...
British Economist Says Christians Should Sha re Gifts of Earth DETROIT (NC) - A world renowned British economist said that those who have the "gifts of the earth" should share them, and that if they do not, they are not Christians. Lady Barbara Ward Jackson, speaking before some . 2,000 people in Cobo Hall here on poverty in the world,said "the whole human race is undergo ing a scientific and racial revo lution which started with the little engine Henry Ford brought over here from England yeaJ:S ago.
13
"our" daily bread not ·'my" daily bread.
. We pray in the context of "our'O Father;
not "my" Father. We cannot call ourselves,
Christians unless we recognize the suffering and
the poverty in the world and see Christ there.
We are ready to admit to our own need, but so
reluctant to admit to .the need of others.
Unless, we as Christians, are by love so
united with the whole world of mankind that
the sickness of the world &our sickness,
the poverty in the world its our poverty,
then we are not Christians at all.
Do not think that you have no connection ~
the leper in Africa. He is your brother.
Do not think-"that is the job of the missionary.."
" He is there in your place--able to do for &000 suffering only what you make possible. As preparations for a bountifui Christmas
get ooderway, remember how much a little
shared by you will do to cure a brother
lSuffering fmm leprosy. Sulfone cost $2 per
patient per year. This can be enough
ro arrest the disease. Can you say no?
~.:....I:l
M.LVA1rXON AND SERVXCE ARE THE WORK OJF=3
crfIHlJE ~({](;~I&1f-'U IFCQJm 1rIHIlE 1£DlrelDJ1DAGATIION q}IF 1rlliIIE IFAJ11rIHI ~lEND YOUR GllIF1l' 1fO I'll" ~(gll1 Reverend Edward T.,O'Meara The Right Reverend Raymond T. Constdl~
.
NAME
National Director 366 Fifth Avenue ff~ rQr~! N~~ fqrk 10001
OR Diocesal} Director
ADDRESS
368 North Main Street
Fall River. Massachusetts 02720
ZIP
College President Links Removal With Opposition to Merger
Reviewer Compli1es Ann'ual' Book lust for Christmas
SOUTH BEND. (NC) - The line' had been set. "Right ~ow, president of St. Mary's College 'the statement has not even been .has. charged that she is being adopted by the St. M,ary's trus c', :,replaced .because she opposes a tees," he said. "I don't think any By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kenn~dY' : ,quick merger with Notre Dame sort of Bhedule can be estab , University. lished Wltil it is approved and It is that time again-for making a list of bOoks " Sister Mary Grace, who ad the committees are named." for Christmas' giving. If you have a well-stuffed wallet, ministered the women's college Cooperating Schools 'Vou may be interested in some of the de' luxe items with for two years, was told that she Sfste,r Mary Grace was one of # would be 'replaced Jan. 1 ·by which we shall start off. One is. Leonardo da Vinci, i' Father, John.J. McGrath, .a law . the originators of the program massive yolume containi~g Ne~\ \\~tament portion .. in a professor at the Catholic Univer . which led to the current con reproductions of all the pnn separate volume '(Doubleday. sity 6f America in Washington, fliet, under which studerits from .' I .' ti d d . D. C., who has played a maJ'or St. Mary's have been able to elpa pam ngs an rawmgs $5.95). , . . s tudy at N 0 t re D ame an d N 0 t re role in the reorganization of sev of this master (Reynal-Mor Father John J. McKenzie's Dame., students have attended row. $22.95). Another, is, Art Vital Con~ of the Biple (Di eral CathC?li~ c?lleges~ " classes at St. Mary's. Stu~ents ' "I believe .thatI ,was relieved ls . lib ii ...... t Treasures of RussI'a by M.' W.· mension Books•. $4.50) demon . as' presidimt bec'ause of the wish . a o have rary p Vlu:iges a strates .both the. notable schol b'o't h sc'hools" . . .A lpatov" which '. . ' . , . _of the board, '(the' trustees 'of s t . · bas over a hunarship and the winning human . , She said she feels strongly dred color plates ~ityof this eXl?ert, Father Fred .-, Mary's) . that a· merger' with .- "that we muSt be cooperating of masterpieces erick I!. ~cM~.nus'Sacramental - Notre Dame proceed much .more . schools. We have 'common tradi unfamiliar to us Liturgy (Herc:Je~' and Herder, . rapidly," she said. ..., . ,tions .:.....: both' have . the . same m the West $5.50) is a valuable ai!i to im~er. .Bu~ the charge that ih~ '~o' in-' founder and both are .operated (Abrams. $25). standing of the liturgy.
sbtutIons '~ere ~on~mPIatIng a - by,Holy Cross 'Comniwiities. A fine' gift, a n d . . ' Kennants Memoirs
- merger was de~ed by~rge. "But I also believe that St. In the field of autobiography, N. Shuste~, a.ssIstant· t,o. 'Not~e~ Mary's should maintain itsiden . for triat matter 1!I fine invest I should have to nOnllnate Dam.e pres~.dent Father Theodore 'tity as, a' woman's college.'" ment is the Ran George F. Kennan's M e m o i r s ' ~esburgh, C.S.C.. ',' 'St. Mary's' has about· 1,5'00 1925 -' 1950 (Atlantic - Little, dom House Dic A Joint Councill . ,women students. Notre' Dame tionary 'of the Brown. $10) for first place. Mr: ,Shuster then read'a statement p. has 6,000 men. . . . , Eng 1 i s h Kennan was in the thick of some ~ adopted bya joint c'ominittee of Language (Random House. $25), of the most significant interna the two 'institutions calling for which after several, months' tional developments of that .. "formal and ,explicit coordiria · [p'@[j'C!Ii~M({,!jW ~'li'®n«lt~s' oteady use, I enliorse heartily. A . quarter century. . ., .lion" between them. l%@[l» f{)s«:ti'<ro\l'@O'$lhip fascinating and richly informa Topping the field of biography . The statement-approved by ASUNCION, (NC)-Paraguay's tive work is the Larousse Ency would be. Nicholas and Alexan the Notre Dame trustees and fac cIopedia of' Animal Life (Mc- dra (Atheneum. $10) by Robert ulty, but not yet acted upon by 11 bishops, speaking after.a·con Graw-Hill. $22.50). K: ~Massie, an exhaustive and those at St. Mary's-authorizes · vention that altered this nation's 1940 constitution to allow Presi The year's l?est books on Vat dramatic account of the reign 'creation of a joint council and !can II are both big and brim-. and ruin of the last of the Rus 'faculty-administration commit . dent Alfredo Stroessner to run for third term, have criticized ming with fresh detail. The first sian' emperors. Svetlana Allilu ~ee to study coordination of ad Str'gessner's' leadership of the is American Participation in the yeva's ~ Twenty Letters to a . ministration, ,faculty, arid stu country as "dictatorial." Second Vatican Council, edited Friend (Harper and Row. $5.95) . . dent bodies "appropriate' to all In a pastoral letter drawing by Monsignor Vincent A. Yzer is of uncommon interest because the varlous levels of college and heavily on the decrees of the mans (Sheed and Ward. $14.95). the .author is Stalin's daughter. university interests." . It presents the interventions of The same Dom Hubert Van .• But the statement specifically Second. Vatican ,Council, the Ule American bishops during the Zeller mentioned earlier makell .. states that "the University of bishops explained: "We believe . COU11cil, along with Illn historical a second appearance on our list POL ISH DELEGATE: . Notre Dame and St. Maiy's Col ',that the proposed constitution not allowed for social and . mtroduction to each council doc.,. because of 'his delightful auto Bishop Ladislaus Rubin; 50, . lege are twoautonornous but co .has institutional controls over the \IIment and :an .expert's commen biography, One Foot in the who speaks eight la'llguage~, 'operating institutions," and that tary on each. Cradle (Holt, Rinehart and Win : "each has and will continue to executive power" thus creating a political' authority which' is The second is The Drama of ston. $5.95); Not delightful at aU, survivor of two years' have its, own board, administra Vatican n by Henri ¥esg.uet, a but grim, appalling, and eon prisonment in a Russian pris- tion, faculty and student body." · personalist and dictatori8L" The revised constitution gives French joumalisty.oho covered, .science-stabbing is Piri Thomas' on, camp, 'serves as Stefan "There bas been no use of the Stroessner the same. Powen to &nd here reports;.the proceed Down These Mean Streets Cardinal Wyszyn" ski's deM- .word 'merger,''' said ,Shuster. declare a state of seige and swI mgs from first to last and is an (Knopf. $5.95) , a' review of the Paealty Opposes astute observer (Random House. author's rise from the horTOn of gate for 'Polish emigrants That word has shaken the St. pend constitutional rights· that $15), slum life. . . throughout the world, in ad- Mary's faculty-24 Sisters and tIl1e Paraguayian president has Ideas for Pray.er Exotie LaaciSeape&. .dition to his .work as 8ecr~", ' 'about 125 layrileri--accordirigto ' held under, the 1940 constitution. so-called Dutch catechism, There is a piquant charm tary general of the perman- . Sister MarY Grace. ''"Ehe faculty A New Catechism: Catholic 'abOut The Feasts of Memory ent Vatican office for future· opposes.merger and I am sup .Faith for-' Adults (Herder and (Holt; Rinehart· and . WInston.. Bishops' Synods. NC PhmO-. porting them," she sai~" Herder: $6), is extraordinarily $5.95), in which Elias Kulukundis " .She said that Dr. Shuster .has Maintenance Supplies , . pushed the St. Mary's' ,trustees 'effective in approach and word-' tells of his search for his 'ances 1og. Karl Rahner's Belief Today tral roots in the' colorful Do for 'conclusion of definite ar . SWEEPERS -. SOAPS (Sheed and Ward. $3.50) .is a decanese island' of Kasos. .., . ' : ran~emeritSby n~xt Spring. This, DISINFECTANTS
slim book, but affords consider Conducted tours of .other ex she said, was one 'of the.reasons FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
able' help in the living of one's otic landscapes: are provided by WASHINGTON (NC)' _ The' _ she opposed the ~ove., .' faith at a time of questioning Evelyn Ames 'in A Glimpse of "Th and confusion. Eden (Hougliton-Mifflin.$5), Na'tional Shrine of the Immacu'- . . e collaboration' program ' CO~ In The Catholic Avant-Garde which describes an African sa late Conception here is dedicat~. must proceed slowly and with ' 1886 PURc;HASE STREET (Holt, Rinehart and Winston" fari; An African Season by ing three memorials in the space _ deliber~tion on both campuses," $5.95), Jean-Marie Domenach Leonard Levitt (Simon . and of one week. : she said. "I don't think it can be ' NEW BEDFORD _ . accomplished with a 'Sprfug . and Robert de Montalvon trace Schuster. $4.95), a young Peace Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle ded- deadline." 993-3786 the development of new atti Corps worker's rehearsal of' his . icated the west apse, featuring '. Shus~r dEmied that any dead- . tudes and undertakings on the ,experienceS' as a teacher. in . the 3,600-square foot mosaic of . part of French Catholics. Medi primitive parts· of .Tanganyika; Mary Immaculate, on Sunday tations on the Church (Herder Lords of the Atlas by· Gavin and, will dedicate the east apse, and Herder. $3.95)' is a compila- Maxwell (Dutton. $6.95), a his- highlighting the mosaicS of st. ' , tion of extracts from theologians. tory of intrigue .and . battle in Joseph and of the Second VatiDom Hubert van" Zeller has modern Morc;>cco; anq Their. c'an..Council, on Saturday. Arch.L . alw~ys written w~ll on prayer, ~hinrng, Eldo~ado, !?y, Elspeth bishoppJoseph Fitzgerald" O,M.!.,: neyer better than 10 More Ideas Huxley (Morrow. $6.95), an in- of South Africa will dedicate the' for. P~ayer (.Templega~e. $4~95), ;" traduction to A.us~rapa:,,:·..:.: .. ~. tli~I:d ·m,l:!~orfal,· ~he Cha~l ,o~ '. AND· LOAN, . .:'ASSOCIATION' OF . ATTLEBORO . -..-.-" WhICh comprIses 200 brIef, meaty A lot of people have enJoyed the Queen of the MissioriS'to:- . essays. From Father Louis Evely At Ease: Stories I Tell to Friends morrow. '.' there are,two new books (new, at (Doubleday. $6.95), which is ., . ..... r' 4~% :on' 'aU' Savings Accounts least in English translation). One easily the least stuffy and most is Credo (Fides. .$3.05). which likable of the various autobi better gift than Paul Horgan's 4% % on Time Certificates is a series of meditations on the ographical ventures of Dwight The Peach Stone (Farrar, Straus Creed; the other is The Word, o~, D., Eisenho.w~r. Ano.ther popular and ,Giroux. $5.95). Mr. Horgan Attleboro --New Bedford God (Herder and Herder. $6.50), ,book is 'Our Crowd' (Harper is a shrewd and sympathetic stu" a set of homilies covering the and Row. $8.95), which surveys dent o~ the human. heart. Chaim : , liturgical year. . ; . 'the wealthy, Jewishfaniilies of' , Potack's' The Chosen' (Sibon arid Schuster. $4.95) opens up the EWIIUllllllllllllllllllUlUlIIlIIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlJlIlIIlIIlllIllllIIlIIUIIUilllllllilllUlIlIlIllIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlI1I1II11111111111111~ New, Testament New York. ' world o( the Hasidic Jew 'and' § B' . .§ Father'Libert Vander Kerkeri ' Biography, Fiction follows the growth to maturity ~ ~ treats incisively a subject which Biography in the grand manner of two young friends who ar~ = • • = concerns all of us in ,Love and 'is represented by Robert Blake's among its· inhabitants. i§ ;1": Wit § Loneliness (Sheed and, Wa~d.. Disraeli. (St.· Martin's Press. $3.75). This is sometimes,rather .' $12.50). Di'sraeU.' -is·.. the an'swer IIi 'Mdre Lives Than One involved, but it well repays the to a biographer's (and many a (Houghton Mifflin. $4.95); effort one must make. .'Voice .reader's) prayer. ,A·... jewel of' a Charles 'Bracelen Flood gives wj ;i§:. S'.::·ls:tb/ "':';'. c' " from the Desert by Father Albert:",book Is Elizabeth Hamilton's ,his best work to date! ~he ~1<)ry ". i§. avera e' ' Ib • Peyriguere (Sheed and Ward. Heloise (Doubleday.•.:..$4.95).. ·..an ··.of·a young man unwIllmgly in- " ' 5 " '. -'. 9. ,.... .' $3.95).9ffers ,sirpple butp()~nted,/,':exquisitely wrought recital of volved in .the Korean War. The,.", ;i§' .. 'I,," I spiritual direction. ' the' joys and sorrows .of, .the" 1 I0ney,.);;p,Ike (Dutton. $4.95) 18 -§, S.(:::L:,. "",l} 5=-=== ..r:', ...''"', ,,!; ;'''.''.• " ..' " . .
. ';",;Tl'!a-.publishers of·the Jeritsa-:·;=rtwo ornaments of the 'tweifth not the best of Bryan' Mac- 5' Tel. 997-9351
lem' Bible, that excellent tr~ns~ _,century, Heloise and Abelard. c Mahon's., fiction . but this; .~I.i$l:l ., 5. U"NlON~~RF. FAIRHAVEN 18tion, hilVe now brought otit'the~t':' In fiction, there is Prbbll'b')y ri'o;; '~;;'haii~its mo&~ts.~;,.!. '~"'~:"}:;l'f~I~;li)i(~lillnllltlllllllllmll""mnnllnlllluilljlllillllllllllll!~IIIIIRIllIIllIlIlIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUlIlli€ . ' .
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The
SCHOOL
Three Dedications At .Natlonal Shr!ne
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IlARGE",LIVE ••·~l 7'9'
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THE ANCHOR-Dioc"~ of .... River-Thur5., Dec. 7, 1967
III
THIRTEENTH ANNUAL
BISHOP'S CHARITY BALL FOR THE BENEFIT OF
·UNDERPRIVILEGED
CHILDREN
.</.
8-9
CONCERT
*
'.
M~~MAN'
'WOODY CIInd His
©fI'd\l~stra
*
LINCOLN fj)ARK :11.
BALLROOM
*
Wednesday ~vening' JanuQU"Y 10
CONDUCTED UNDER THE
AUSPICES OF
~
THE SOClE1V OF
ST. VINCENT Ole PAUL AND
THE DIOCESAN COUNCil
OF CATHOLIC WOMEN
~~
Pupils of Nazareth, Hall lovingly flock around their Shepherd ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t
Tltis Message Sponsored by tlte Following Individuals and Business Concerns
,.. Th Diocese 01 f.II
a• .,.
4 ••••••
Cape et:od and The Islands
THE EXTERMINATOR CO.
STERLING BEVERAGES, INC.
BASS RIVER SAVINGS BANK
FALL RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.
TEXTILE WORKERS UNION
OF AMERICA
GLOBE MANUFACTURING
Fall River
co.
ANN DALE PRODUCTS, INC•.
R. A. MeWHIRR COMPANY
BUILDING MATERIALS, INC.
MacKENZIE AND
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. YOM Ei.l1SON
YELLOW CAB COMPANY
MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS
ALLEN'S CUT RATE
WIN~LOW,
FRANK X. 'PERRON
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euAUIY MEN'S AffAIR ."
. . , :SOBILOFF BROTHERS
.. ' ..
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New' Bedford INC.
'
PA~LG. CLEARY & CO., INC. o
GEORGE O'HARA CHEVROLfT, INC.
STAR. STOH
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'FHE AI""~:0R'.-·
Thurs.; Dec. '7,
Ponder Graduate
1967
Theology School 1m Ne'V England
Stone[}uo~~ ~[fO®~t Continued from Page Ten b not to see obsolete forms re vived but their spirit recaptured. In this vein, she suggests that women be readmitted to minor orders, as they were in the early Church. Available in hardcover and paperback editiqns is Bishop Jrulton J. Shekn's new book, "Guide to Contentment" (Simon and Schuster, $3.95; Maco, .95):' In his wellknown style, the Bish op ofRochester- dfscusr.es. the en~ emies of contentment for the' • modern man, and' means of 'ex- : ordsing th~~e enemie£'.
WINOOSKI PARK (NC) A study has been launched of the possibility of develop ing a graduate school of th~ology ,to
serve all the dioceses and religious orders of New En gland.. _ Formation of a committee to study the school proposal for New England's bishops and major superiors was announced by Father Eymard P. Galligan, 8.S.E., superior general of the Edmundite generalate here in Vermont and chairman of Re gion I <if the National. Conference . of ThIajor Superiors of Men. Father Galligan said that the .cornniittee will present its first report to bishQps and religious superiors at a May meeting in Baston. • Less Duplieation The' study resulted from dis .' cussion at an October meeting of the bishops and religious superiors in Hingham. Mass. At
llhat meeting, Father John V.
O'Connor, S.J.. Jesuit provincial,
pointed out. that ~ England
DOW' has 68 major and minor seminaries, and it W3S- agreed flhat means of ~ater coopUa ~on and less duplication should be ex:plol'e& . In announcing plans. for the joint study, Fatlaer Galligan said: '"I think it. should be made clear IQrom the beginning that if such a center of theologieal studies !!hould eventuate. it would not ·be 1Hlder the direclion of any one diocese !'r religious congre gation, but rather under the SUperviSlOn of a board of trusteea which would :represent the in terests of the New England hier archy. religious CODlID:uni.ties and laity. "Eventually there would, I suppose, 'be an ecumenical di mension to the whole crevelop ment."
Books of Prayer Tliis would seem t~ be the' !Zvely year in religious books. Two' more f.rom his; p:::olific' pen are "Teach Us; to. Pray" ~ew man, $2.95) and "Credo" (Fides, $3.95). The first book concen ~ates on the necessity.' of loving G<Jd in one's neighbOl: as a pre requiste to prayer and the sec ond examines the Apostles' Creed and' the Nice.ne Creed' article by article. /' "I don't know of. aJllY ~aYeF CIllSlt's 'short but; good!,.,· .... writes JlI1ather' Evely. "Prayer has too· . DlRuch to accomplish in us te· do· lllt fast. We always start by- aak fi':lli rar the' wrong thing or right thing in the wrong. way; we approach prayer ftnllt of our ~lves, wheras God wants to filt • with himself. 80 he makes. IllS wait till werre ready to Jre-' oeive; not some grace that'll en able us to do without him. but llbe total gi£1t of hi'rnselif. He lets. lIIIS die' in a slow prayer; like Lazarus; so that he can; make· us Mve with his own life. But how rould we ever carry 0, message of ~urrection unless we' died Qlirst? How c:>uI:d we gG oo:li to others Wlless we took tile time ood the trouble to die?" Here's an. in1lniguing and Io-ve nv book, "Table Prayer" by M.D. Bouyer (Hocder and Herder, $2.95).' It contains p!l3'Yers to precede and follow meals throughout the year and on· cer tMn special oc£asions•. :F'Olr :£an~· dUes" it wouI'd' provide a mean ~ngful moment befor'e the clatter; of meaLtime and ilt w.oullil get away from the rote mutte'ring of "Bless us, 0 Lord." For religious communities it offel1s' spiritual sustenance to accompany' bodily lllOurishment. '"
HONOR '.lli'A'UN'FON ADMINISTRATOR :: Rev. Edward A~Oli~ei:ra,'adIDmistratorof Our Lady of Lel!I!lrl!fes Pm-ish,. Taunton,.. center" with his mOther and sisters, at atesti monial given by parisMl'mers ();l1! his appom1tment as administrator after serving 2() years as assistant. Mother Claire Ediward, Sl!JSC~ principal' and saperiorat St. AntOOnys, Taun ton; Mrs: Chura Ofureiirn~ Father OIiveira,. Sr., Ma.ria Anj:o-. teacher at Espirlo Santo, Fan River;oSr. Claire Flran~s:,. S:uSC~ teaeheJj·at; StL Micb:aelr~ Fall River.
Mi~ed
Schooli Aid..·Bird Draws,
the
, Ge,ts
Cautious" Support, Prompt
Reactions
Oppo~ition
NEW ORLEANS ~N.C»)-'Fb2 ence aclrnow~ the statisti~ program is now being ehal:1:enged and said. the state should; be in' the U. s.. Supreme Court on newly formed LotIisilma,Peder ati:Ofli of Citizens; fOr Edueati'onali "ever vigi:lazJ.t.'" fl!Ir ways to assist' the grotmd's that it promotes segregation in the public schoolS. F'reedom will ask the: state's: IlQn-public. scl'.toiJ1S~, Since. 1962,. 1:h.e state has. made-. Most of the students receiving 1968' legislature" which meets: iJb tuition grants to pupils. in sec the grants' are· enroBed in white May, to consider' pmpesall fOlT aid' to' children' in noI1l-pl!lbl:i:~ utar private; sdi:ooIs;, Btrt that: schools established to avoid in tegrated public schools. . schools. CEF's proposal iinmed:iiatel'y Provides TeJdboob S d Another Louisiana scbool-aid! drew. cautious support from Gov.. John McKeithen .and! state sen program survived a - Supreme Continued! fioom Page Ten a.tors B. B. Rayburn' Of. Boga, ilti'es.. "It is saiQ! sometim~'" he Court test more than two decades. IUsa- and Adrian. Dupl!a:ntiel" of Writes,. "'that We- must mateh our " ago. 'Under that Jaw. thee state New Orleans. . apostolate' to the poor by o~ . p.rovides textboob to pupils in But the LouiSi·ana. BaptiSt to the urban. and! suburban ricH. I ' all' Louisiana schoo:rs, regardless Convention, the American CiiviJi Gi've equalily: good. priests. ro the· J. of reUgicms affiliation. Liberties Union and sevenl! New affluent, andl equal results. can MeKeithen's press eem:r~ce Orleans public school officialS ~ predicted!. Cl .. Cl But the theoYy' wa,s called to annou.nce appoint-_ VATICAN CITY (NC) were j!Jst as prompt in opposing neglects, the flI¢s: of' life. Who· . men! of·a special committee to Thieves. broke into a 'souvenir the bid. ()I! what' in Christianity can help explore means of financing' ed store on St. Peter's Square and Save $6! Millon the rich become poor in spirit? ucation in Louisiana.' &!D. Ray carted off an estimated $50,000 In announcing CEF's plans, A priest who, serves the poor bum was one of 1l&ose Damed to worth of ros<¢es, souvenirs and executive director' Elnilre: Comal! with ~, seriousness cannot fa.i.li the body.. Vatican stamps. '. . Meanwhile,. New orleans su noted that non-public schools to, become' poor in Spirit. But wh~ will. teach poverty tothe perintendent 01_ public. schools educate 150,000 Louisiana '-chil' Dr. Carl Dolce, school .board dren, .thus saving' taxpayeJTS $62~5 priest who SeJrVes' the rich? BEFORE YOU million a year. Sunday Homilies president . Dr; Andrew ~~. BUY-TRY McKeithen in a press confer'Fhree books: of timely bom- and boom member. Lloyd ~tti
Hies or' med:iifatilims for each ner .antl.?unced their. OPPOSltiOn.·
PA~K Sunday and! feast: of the liturgi;- The ~t:ire board ,has not taken cal -year are made-to-order gift. a p~Sl~on on. CEF s.proposal.. t' "'. sts· . Rittiner SIDd he diel not believe suggeS}OIlS ~u:r' pme ;. slSters th t . ch· :Ii t achin' -:..: . Continued from. Page Ten OLDSMOBILE and! families: who like. to prea a. s ?O . e g. u:ugJ~n by such dedicated young' people.. d proVlde as ~ood an eduOldsmobile-Peugot-RellKlult pa1.'e. for' S'und'a¥'S: on cou: John Howzrl!' Grifffu CC'_ d' . .....ll.4' ...... _ th catIon as: the public schools. 67 MilblIe Street, faiJflaRlt It's rare for aIll author.' tl> put """ r .ay DI/5P'." .Il...,·ree are "God Sp~ke One: Wordr' by Fa together a' "read'e~ crontairiim:g excerpts even from hi:s wollks in ther Henry Febren (Kenedy, $4'.95); "The: WOl!d of' God'" by progress. Such an atlithor" how ever, is John Ho.war!I Gri£fin.. Louis E.vely· «.~. and Herd ""JIbe John HowanJi Grlftm Read-· ex., $5.50') 211dl "W'hat"s the Good! er" (Houghton. MijfiJj.D,. $&50) Worn?"'" by li'a:ther StanIey Mas,.. 'contains four of ms boob ira! c0n, lowski (B.I!tlCeo. $&95}., o densed form, including· the con troversial "Black Like· Me," and ·DOMEStlC & HEAVY -DUlY OIL .BURNERS many short stories articles. . , ,. .. . WEAR Also offered is a sectiOll of Shoes. That Fit photographs, which will illus trate·a· forthcoming book, "The ,"THEFAMlty SHOE' STORE~ MAtH O~F~- 10 DURFEE STREEt, FALL RIYER F~es oj Intenigenl:e."
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Mass
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WEBB OIL' 'COMPANY TEXACO FUEL OILS
ana..
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Plan $23.7 Millien PC Developmen,t DELEGATE: Archbishop Guido del Mestri, new Apos tolic Delegate to Mexico, in succession to Archbishop Lu igi Raimondi, now in Wash ington as Apostolic Delegate 1m the U.S., is about to take up his duties in Mexico City. NC Photo. .
PROVIDENCE (NC)-Pr9vi dence College has announeed a development plan that will cost $23'.7 milliom over the' next 10, years. The school will remain. a lib eral arts undet:graduate college under the .auspices:.or the :D0 minican Fathers, but· will in crease its enrollment from tbe present 2,551 to 3,000 and ex-' pand its physical facilities to provide effective teaching and ~.
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Lutheran Reports Impress'ion$ Of .Lay Apostolate Congress
17
THE ANCH' Thurs., Dec.
1967
7.
NEW YORK (NC)-A Luth- on ~e :laity is only a beginning, eran layman who attended the n9t D iinu1, word c'n 1his subject." Cntholic third World Congress On fte fteme ofChristiiDD unity, for the Lay A,Postolate in Rome Lutz said "most Roman Catholic c!D.If © said most Protestant and Ortho- laity 0 I) I) wmlld like to find a dox observers were "astounded way t1:lTC~ fte barriers to in SA<:JtEITD m::EA~'ll'. at the apparent depth of renewal tercommunion, want a rela.'l:a N<D'a'll'ITI ATI;r,,];;O~IR({J) which is underway in the Church tion of their Church'.;; regula of "Rome around the world." tions on marriage "vith nonA father-son potluck suppel? Charles Lutz, director of the CaUlolics, and tend to see the will be sponsorerl by the :Boy Center for Urban Encounter, St. old coniessional differences be Scouts following 5 o'clock Mass Paul an observer-consultant for tween denominations as less Sunday evenlPg, ])ec. 10 in the the Lutheran World Federation significant than conflicting view church hall. Corporate Commu at the congress reported his im- points within e2ch denomina nion will be recei'Verl by the pressions in the December issue tion." Scouts at the Mass. of Lutheran Forum, an inde A IC1Ike sale will follow alil Masses Sund<lY, Dec. IV, .and pendent monthly published here. . In discussing the congress' coHee and .doughnuts will .also concern with renewal in the Calls Solidarity be 'SeT'Ved, under -eYO sponsoJ' Church, Lutz noted that two sJUp.Proceeds will benefit ~ dominating themes were the 0 GLOUCESTER {NC) - The "Teens Turn A~ericrt" program maturing of the laity and unity new~formed Camden diocesan slated !l:or Snndny, Dec. 17. among Christians. priests' association has estab "Applause greeted any speak- lished. a temporary executiv-e ST. ..JOHN BAPTlSr, er's suggestion that Catholic committee rold issued n ,call !for .~ALL' 'RIVER laity are coming of age," he said, a consensus among priests on-di '''1'.ae Women's Guild will hoid "even though there was disagree- ocesan, parish IlDd of:ommun.ity .3 Dhristmas party at 7 l\iIonday ment about what that means." issues. night, Dee. 11 at White''S Testau Negatively, he obseil"Ved n'irhe New ..Je:rsey group DJIso r.aJ,t. Mrs. R(}ger Caron, chair "tendency to speak of 'the a~provetl.:J tentative statement man, annnunces that the program Church' as distinct from 'the of purpose which ,calls for mutu win include games, prizes, e.1~, laity"" The doctrine of the laity· al assistanee aJIU:lDg priests, [~r tertainment ,md a gift exchange. is relatively new on the Roman personal fu1fill.ment ·l'm 'spiTifu Members are :neq12estecl to puil' Catholic agenda, and needs more al, inteUeetual and material their names cn thci1: ,~ts. Tick~: discussion he s a i d . ' levels, and for renewal of the <l e2dl today. . iDe is . Clericalized Laymen' entire Church. ,,< ,.,. POPiiE:, PREI.JATE, PRINTER: A long and gracious ST.JOHN BAPTilST, ·"More lay voice in directing i\1sgr.Edward B. Lucitt, !for friendship \Was evidenced numerous times when the .lat-e CENTRAL WJTlLiL&OE the Church's affai~ co C '" may be mer president of the now de fine," he added, ''but> there'~ the funct priest senate-council who Pope IPlius XTI" Cardinal Spellman and Joseph E. Sullivan, The IDmual Christmas bimqulOt r danger of producing merely chaired the association's meet outstanding Lowell churchman, met in Rome. of. .dhe Ladies' Guild' will ta1r~ c1ericalized laymen * ¢ * To talk ing, said the new Camden bishop pla,~ .at 7 Thursday night, Di;e,. of freeing the laity for theil' true (yet to be named) will have the J 4. .at the Rendezvous, D.a1't-;-, and essential function of apos- option of reconstituting the mouth. Reservations should be tolate in the, seculal" is inade- priests' council elected under the ,made iby Tuesday, Dec. 12 witl:!" quate i! it means the faithful late Archbispop Celestine J. Mrs. Helen AndlTUSlriewicz. .. have only a passive role in the Damiano or disbanding it. Then New Mexico EpiscopaHans, ·CathoJics life of the Church. he will have the option of having ''The Vatican council's decree .anotherbody elected or doing P To Joint IHon~]' C~l!'dinol without such an advisory group. PHILADELP'iElIA (NC) - The In .addition Ito :approving 1he LOS ALAMOS (NC )-A joint . "But many priests feel the 111'~year-old Catholic Philo University Shelves Episcopal -1Roman C.athol(c proposal the \bishops urged the need for a ilarger IbDdyto cover joint ilay· ,committee to enlar.ge ·patrian Literary Institute here a wider area of iProb~s,"Msgr. church building will be con Reliq~on Center honored John Cardinal Krol d Lucitt said. 'TheY' feel there is structed in ~ suburb here with the ·soope ;m .its :dialo,gue to in 'P.hi)adclpbia, witb a citation as LOUISVILLE (NC) - A pro the approval of the Episcopal clude other d:enoJllin2tions .if room for both a council and CUl ':a 'j)Qsitive demonstration" 'Sup pose center for religious studies association, the latter's pi)Wer and Catholic bisbops of Santa Fe. they wish to participate. ~rting his l~dership of .~ 8t the municipally-operated White .Rock Methodists and The church construction was Archdiocese. University of Louisville has been resting.,only in the moral per . 0,: recommended 'Qy the White 'Rock Presbyterians CUlU'.imtly hold ser suasion of its members." shelved-perhaps permanently. Lay Committee ·after <f seven vices in tire :Same elemen1.ary Dr. Melvin Greer, philosophy moritb mudy lind approved by school where Episcopalians and department chairman who was E'Piscopal Bislmp C. J. Kinsolv Gatholics of the town now meet Banquet Raises 1iJ)eBrheading the. project a year ing III and Catholic Archbishop for worship.
ago, said the proposal now is Funds for Needy James P. Davis ·Of Santa Fe. Church .of the Holy SpirH w.as
~nding in a faculty committee. BOGOTA (NC) -More ·tl'mn The approval came ata meet proposed as tbe name,;;for the
He added: "I'm fearful it might 600 persons attended .a $350 joint buildiQg. ing of the two :bishops with rep die there." plate "Soup and Bread'" banquet resentatives of the lay committee here in Colombia for the bene ,of 'Episcopalians and Catholics OpposeConvers ions fit of the social work and hous and pastors of two Los Alamos NEWDELID (NC) - A con ing programs of F.ataler Rafael churches - Fat her William ference of Harijans - India's Garcia Herreros, C.F.M. Wolfrum of Trinity-on-the-Hill 100 mil'lion foTn).er "untouch South • Sea Streets The seventh annual· (Banquet Episcopal church and Father of a Million); so named because Clay Dennis of Immaculate ables" - has lIsked the govern ment to discour.age what it of its million peso ($70,000) Heart of Mary Catholic church. Hyannis Tel. 49-81 called a mass conversion of Hin goal, 'Il'aiiserll over three million Church of the Holy Spirit . dus to Christianity.
pesos ($210,000). The church will be constructed
The social works ·of Father in, White Rock, .agrowiug com Garcia Herreros began in 1954 munity of approximately 3,000, with a television program he ten mUes from Los Alamos.·It will entitled the Minute of God. ·be located on a six-acre site Since then, with the help of an owned by the Immaculate Heart increasing number of benefac parish. RI. 6-!Belween fall Rivercnd New ~eilford tors, severai housing -projects One of Southern New ,En9rand~ J1iJres't ,mciIities have. been financed. One is the Minute of God development Now Avajlable for: named after the television pro gram. .
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFaI1 R)ver-ThurS., Dec. 7, 1967
Vietnam Honors Msgr. Harnett'
. Civil r<~JSJ[fllfr~l C@mmission Say§ Race, PoYe~,fry ~((@lb>~'®ITll'l)~
SAIGON (NC) - President Nguyen van Thieu of 'South Vietnam has awarded the second highest national decoration to Msgr. Joseph J. Harnett of Cath olic Relief Services for his work in behalf of Vietnamese refugees. The highest decoration is given only to' chiefs~of state. Msgr. Harnett first came to Vietnam in mid-August, 1954, to assist in receiving and reset . tling the refugees arriving from the North. He established the Saigon office of CRS and trav eled through the country in the' interest of the refugees. He later became Far East director of CRS. In his decree -awarding the decoration of the National Or "der, se<;ond class, to Msgr. Har nett, President van Thieu refers to him as "a venerated mission ary with a charitable heart." "With spiritual and material means he made a valuable con tribution during the 1954 exodus of nearly one million refugees leaving' North Vietnam :for the south, to escape from the com munist yoke," the citation says. '';From 1954 to 1966 he visited and comforted the refugees throughout South Vietnam. Be cause of his not~ble work and his high spirit of sacrifice, the i.- Vietnamese people will remem , ber Msgr. H§rnett with respect .' and admiration."
Howe Pg'j@[(Btf)f
WASHINGTON (NC) - The While the report offers no con ~roblems of race and poverty crete solutions - which other ~annot be resolved imtil their commission reports have done oolutions are made America's ,it makes clear what problems the first priority, the U. S. Commis ..solutions must attack: sion on Civil Rights said in a "'The ,policeman who >00 '* * has often not provided protection for l!'eport released here. ,The report also warned that citizens within the ghetto, does @I.e solutions do not Ii.e at the not treat them witp dignity and end of a search for culprits and respect and views his role as oonspirators, or in cheap or pain that of keeping' Negroes 'in less cure-alls. line * 0 0' , . ,The report, entitled "A Time "Inadequacy Of sanitation ser ilo Listen * .;. * A Time to Act," vices 0 C> * the absence of needed oompiled data learneci: in com"'; health and recreational facilities miss~on hearing~, and State and the transPortation s.ervices which would make them 'acces AdVISOry Commltteee me e t lugs over the past two years. sible ' The commission w~\rned t h e ' . nation that it faces two choices "The merch~nt who sells 1Of; lu dealing with race anil poverty: rior merchan~hse or Who, explOIts "'The nation may continue to the economIC ~e!?endenc~ of struggle with the problems Negroe~ by provl~I~; credIt at :Which inevitably arise when we exhorbltant rates , ar:e divided into, separate, un , Educatioll1 Practices ~,. equal and alien gro~ps-either / "The absentee landlord who i&orn by violence of co-existing reduces serVices and allows In an uneasy peace purchased at property to deteriorate once tile cost of repressive action. Negroes become tenants. Credit Rates _ "Welfare programs (which) "Or we can all together make have been devised and adminis iDle commitment which will re tered in a manner which tends «leem our promises and ideals by to break up families and pei-Ilet opening the doors of the ghetto uate dependency. so that Negroes and other minor "Real estate brokers; builders ity groups can become '~ull par and mortgage lenders (who) un ticipants, in' American society, restrained by any effective 'gov NEW MASS IN ENGLISH: Composer of "Come Cre wJth a" truly' equal opportunity ,ernment regy.lation, continue to for all. confine Negroes of all income ator Spirit," a ~ew Mass in English, Richard Yar~umiam, ,New Orleans College levels to ghetto areas and to re autographs jacket of a recording of his creation for Fr. President to Retire strict the'" housing ,market in Leo McLaughlin, president of Fordham University, which NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Sis ways which, facilitate exploita ter Mary Louise Lemoine, pres commissioned the composi~iori. NC Photo. tion. q Continued from Page Eleven ident of St. Mary's Dominican "Union practices I 'of discrimi- ,:. "gifts' while in public office is College here for over 20 years, ':wrong. Was it wrong in this nation which have not been will retire on Jan. 1. eliD)inated by civil rights laws ease? Mutual ,excitation by the The board of trustees accepted Jerseyites Organize Association to Speak unmarried tends to be sinful and government action. Sister Mary Louise's retirement cOnduct.' Was it sinful in this request, and voted to elect Sister 'Not for' the Churc;h' but the. Ch~rch' ease? This is the kind of 'ethics pu~Ed~~~o~eJ:a~~~':~st:;~i~ . Mary Ursula Cooper, present of the situation' that the Chris overcrowded and inadequate ELIZAB'ETH (NC) - Forma- , Gerald. McNamara, president executive vice-president of the , Gan 'is constantly enguged. iIi schools which are, as a practical tion ,of a senate of layme'n hav- 'pro-tern, . , r said the association is college, 'to fill the unexpired whether he admits it or not." , term. ~~tter, segregat~ 'by rac~ and. hig eq1,1al status with '~he N~'w:- . ,not seeking to evolve into"'a sen Living Room Dialog'ues by cl~, and which are stl!mla.- . ark Archdiocesan Senate, of ,ate-type organization itself. "We The second in an ecumenical Uzed by 1he community.'" Priests is one of 'the first goals: ,wish 'to.remain a completely in studY' 'series, "Secona Livin'g of the New Jersey As~ociation ',dependent voice," he asserted, Room Dialogue," edited by Wil 'of Laynien~ '" ""able to, speak out against any liam B. Greenspun, C:S.P. and Charles' McCafferty 'saId the. "senate policies with which we eynthia C. Wedel, is now avail Continued from Page' Eleven' , assoCiation, which already has ;di~agree." , able (Friendship Press, Paulist members, will strive to be: I 300 dietributiffg his gold than he 'had Press, $1). Father GreenspUn is ' independent a~sociation, ~~"""!"'----------":. national director of the CCD ever felt acquiring it., '~ T~R Think of, Mary. Never did she speaking ,not for the Church but Apostolate of Good Wi)! and WY,mcln I~ Miss Wedel is Associate General 'feel·more poOr, more deprived, to ,the Church. ,He and Victor 3-6592 Paint, and Wallpaper Secretary for Christian Unity more despoiled, more abandoned, Smith, chairman of a committee, parish and diocesan councils, of the National Council of 11180 when our Lord was born. on CHARLES F. VARGAS hope the association -will achieve Dupont Paint Churches of Christ. The dialogue ~ had chosen the worst mo . ~,cor. Middle, St. 254 ROCKDALE AVEf\lUE deals with such matters as war ment, the sorriest place. She was representation in the senate w:ith : ,ijIi' 422 Acush. Ave. and peace, the generation gap, a ,~gee, a "displaced person," details ,for its establishment be. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. I Q"t::.t New Bedford the dignity of man, the institu and everywhere refused. yet ing worked out with the archdiocesan councils of men and tional church and the new !twas then, iii. that' place, that PARKING, , morality; and they are structured she experienced such joy that women. , , ::\ Rear of Store ,,} McCafferty and other offIcials • ' - for use by ecumenical groups of the world does not know of one ' disavow any rabble-rousing at Catholics, Protestants and Or greater. tempt. He believes .the' goals can thodox believers, Some 5,000 lit is a bad thing to come to groups throughout the country Cbristmas already 'satiated with be accomplished in a rational ElECTRICAL have used the first dialogue book joy. We'are too rich in the goods manner. It is the association Contractors in this series and many of them of this earth to rejoice in the wish to speak'to the Church with' .pecifically asked ,for this second goods of heaven. In our comfort- responsibility, he asserted.' book. ' able homes,. not a thing is lack ing, even when the Saviour is Mqntle·Plumbi~g not there. We are like children, too oCcupied. with their gifts to look at God and' rec~ive Him Continued from Page Eleven Over 35 Years Ukrainia.9 maid~ How they scour W£th both the confusion and the of Satisfied service , London for an icon and end by joy which 'comes from the ,Reg. Master Plumber .7023 making their own is beautifully knowledge of our poverty. JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. From ''The Wor& of GOd" by told by Rumer Godden {Viking, ',944 County St. 806 NO: MAIN STREET, $3.75); Louis Evely (Herder and Herd'" New Bedford Fall Rive; 675-74?7 "A Handful of Thieves" by er, $6.50) Nina Bawden (Lippincott, $3.50) is also set in England and is the story of a group of children'.who fiVE C;:ONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE" YOU, Wlhitf!" Farm Dairy try to recover money taken from· the grandmother of one of them. "SPECnAL MILK Fun' for young detective story From Our Own lovers. Ending with a picture book, Tested Herd" here's a seasonal beauty, "Christ Acushnet" Mass.' 993-4457 mas in the Forest" by Jan Wahl, illustrated by Eleanor Shick • Special Milk ·OF .TAUNTON (Macmillan, $3.50). It's the 'sim ' . Homogenized Vito D Milk 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ple story of how the animals of • Buttermilk ' , . ~rton, W. 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Capeway Court Conference Plans Weekend "Jamboree By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach Basketban enthuasiasts and Capeway Conference lol.. lowers are anxiously awaiting the circuit's first azmua! basketball jamboree which will be held this coming week- , end at the Bourne High gymnasium. Lou Bachand, host athletic dkwtor who is head son c:an :find talent among his mg the j'amboree for the reserves -and junior varsity conference, has announced personnel the format for the Dec. 8-9
events which promise two excit
ing nigh.ts of basketball. The At Lawrence High in Fal
eJ!hibition con- ,
mouth, ex-Providence College
tests will give
bnckcourt a~ Noel Kinsid has
area hoop buffs
lost .rack Carreiro and Bob Pena
the opportunity
!TOm last sea1;on's third place to observe all club. The Clippers are consid eight conference ered by many conference follow... tCi!ams, and more ers to be the league's dark important, the horse, The feeling is that Fal jamboree idea, o mouth, probably. not strong if success enough 00 win the crown, win ful may be tried m21te a 'respectable showing by other area with another winning season. Peter
leagues.The Wareham finished with a 7-7 Bartek
first game scheduled at 7:30 Friday night league record a year ago but pits Dennis-Yarmouth, league Coach Bill Maxwell is faced with the unenviable job of starting favorite, 'against Dartmouth. A meeting between Barnstable :t:-rom scratch for the upcoming, campaign. An :uve starters from and Old Rochester of Mattapo,i sett will follow. After a 10 min last season have graduated. ute intermission, Barnstable will Steve Ben, Leroy Gomes,·
battle D2l"tmouth, then D-Y will Wayne Lopes, Jaclrie Lombard,
John Dutton and Jim Walsh
~~:;:e qld R,ochester. Pairings at 7:~0 Saturday 'have 'had some varsity experi night· match 'Bourne against' enee but never have worked: to KICK. IT! ' Father ,John 01BrieIi, 'assistant pastor,' St. Andrew's· Church, Clifton, Wareham; then Falmouth op":' gether as, a unit. Coach Max N.J." about to put his foot in it, ,plays,GaeljC:'foot9.~ll with County Galway in the top well's 'chaJrges. like IGnski's ·poses· .·Fairhaven. Another 10 . level of competition in the Gaelic Athletic Association of NewYorl{~ Gaelic football is de minute break will precede the Clippers, may not win the league title but they may prove to be serilaecJj as "somewhere between soccer and American football."· NCPhoto. Bourne contest With F.airhaven and the night will conclude with the league's sp:>iIers. Falmouth meeting Wareham. Regfunals Club to Watch
The jamboree will afford
The Old Rochester training prognosticators the opportunity eamp reigns wi1:h optimism as to see all teams in action before Coach Ray Carvalho prepares his SPECIAL TO TB!E ANCHOR with Lavoie, a former. Durfee Krzyzek's a-rea, ,the big Se~lwnk predicting what tQ expect from hoopsters for what could be the Ten Fall River Diocesan ath- 'great. and Holy Gross,of FaIl .end, stopped halfback Terry 'the Capeway Conference this Regionals' best season in the 1etes'toQk pari in 'the 64th annual River parishioner, started on the Edwllit fora two yard loss. fo!?€ season. However, on the basis of eonference. The Bulldog's skip last season's results, Dennis-, per,,' who bad 70 boys at the f~,otball: meeting between Boston -offensive kickoff ,receiving.,team ing a passing plaYOD .third do'\V-o Yarmouth has to be rated favor.., opening pracl.ice .. session,' has . ColJege and Holy Cross, last Sat- and cemter.ed ,on ,punts aad' extra ,wbi~h ,was intercepted and gave. u:rc;Ja;y aU Fitton Field, Worcester. JjlQint tries for the Eagles. HOJr-' 'the Crusaders goodfieldpaBitioD ite for this campaign. , sl'owly been cutting his squad. ' " I; 'Fhe- Game, annually a feature man, listed as a tackle from; at the l3C 44. " , ":' With a· 'good crop of experi J Talent G'a1ore ' '" fer alumni of both -schoois at- North, Attleboro' and a former,· The hQ~e:rrs drove "tOI the Co;iCD :Red Wi,lson's Dol~hbis eneeil sopb'omores, on hand, in..:' tracled, a capacity crowd of., :Bish~ _f~~' Sta;r, ,~w spot ',l!Z where MIke Kam..mski"~· field eame;m second .to Fairhav~n in cluding 6r 5" Tom Decosta arid 25000 people including a large servIce dunng the contest. amI' ,goal atttmlpt was WIde. ,On an. loos.:.66i' 'suffering onry two 6' 2" Peter Trow Coach Carvalho deiegation f~m the Fall River performed 'with ,'BC's 'kickoff other . first period Crusadei' . team. series they marched to, the' ,nine losses in. l~ague play --:" both to is carefully appraising a host of , DiOOese. backcourt talent, hopeful> ~f' Series Dispute, The Crusader trio whoheI:ped . and 'again a FG try was wide of "the Blue Devils, but then upset . t!ng . Fairhaven in the Teeh coming up' with a unit ,which Boston' Colleg~ scored twice their teammate~ prepan: for ~e ' the ma~k~ ", tournament, proving they have will improve the 6 win-8 loss in, the, final half to overcome a :BC ctJ?test.,dunng pr~ctlce dnlls Holy Cross dominated 'the of . to be reconciled' with this Winter. record compiled last season. The 8-0 deficit and notch its 32ndcempnse Read!, a nuddle ,~ard tense in the opening quart~r, hut Coach Wilson's son Dana, the w0rd' around the conference is win against 29 losses and three and former- Oliver Ames grldder a stout Boston College defense ,club's leading scorer a year ago, , that Old Rochester is the team ties. Ho'wever the victory total is Who, attends Holy ~ross church with Callter Hunt playing ~ to watch. is only one of four starters re disputed as Holy Cross officials ;m,~outh ~ton; Tnpp, a former leading role, denied the 'CllU turning. Doug Whynott will be claim the series now stands BC Taunton High ,st~, .and mem?er saders a score. I'see Tough .Jobs at center with Bob Angell and 31, He 30 and three ties. of St. Mary s. 'm that Cl.ty, c HC scored on the l1irs·t play Dartmouth, which finished in Steve Johnson at the forward The Eagles of coach Jim MiI who work~ Wl~h the defenSIve of the second period via a spee a tie with Old Rochester last ler included Carter Hunt Kerry secondary m dnlls and Lacoste, tacular catch by end John V!1i duties. Replacing Bob Johnson, the' campaign, ma.y very well fight Ho~an, Al Borsari and 'George a former St~ng fo~tball.er from onis, who leaped high am~ squad's leading rebounder and it out with the Mattapoisett club ·Lavoie' of the- Diocese and Hunt st. Anthony s Pansh In New three Boston Cbllege defendelro to catch O'Neirs, 31-yard palm second high scorer, will be &gain thiS time around. Coach played a prominent role as a Bedford. Doherty, an ex-Coyle quarter- in the end zone. ' Coach Wilson's major problem. AI Palmeri's key man will be fu1l' time defensive end. Coach Tom Boisture of Holy back, provided the backup for' Hunt. Horman Shine' He has talent aplenty moving :Bob Gaspar who averaged 16 up from J!)-Y's once-beaten points. in league play in '65-66. If Cposs had six Diocesan memben Holy Cr~' Phil O'~eil and saw Holy Cross drGve for· a' .first junior varsity unit. B~rring un the Indiaris can muster any sup OIl' his Feister, Dick Zrzyek, Dave spot. se.rv1oe ~ a, kickoff ~eturn down and goal at the eighi 'early port. 'for Gaspar they will find foreseen injuries, the Green Dol Farinella and Mark Doherty who specIalist, takmg ~ne BCkickoff in the second period, but again ,phios couJ,d go all !be "way in themselves in the thick of the saw game action and Roger La a~ the 12-yard stripe and carryIi spirited Boston College defense conference race. 1966-tt7. . eoste, Bill Tripp and Ed Ready nlg 13 yards :to the 25.. beld, Terry Horman making a Eourne and Barnstable, the woo helped the Crusaders pre Non-Playing Partici»an'ts _ key tackle in heJping 'stop the . Blue De~ ,Rebulldi~ circuit's seventh and eighth place pw:re for the big contest but did In the ,non-playirtg category, Crusadersl who attempted a Defending champion Fairhaven fiiJishers last season, could' be in not dress for the battle. four area·' persons 'had promi- field goal, which just ,missed has lost tree starters from last for another, long Winter. 'li'he key operatives in the nent roles. Nicholas Cariglia, su- from the five. seasllln's onee-beaten club. Coach) Bourne played practically all game were Hunt. a former Stang perintendent of schools in WestHunt was the Fall River Di> Wayne Wilson has the job of seniors and it appears that the High star and member of St. po~, was an official. serving as ocesan's hero in the second ,pe!1i finding a successor for the Canalmen will have their prob Lawrence's Parish in New Bed back judge and ~alking the 00, several times just missing on league's top scorer in Howie lems before the end of the pres ford', for Boston _ College and sidelines with footballs and ex- blocked' punt attempts and Barrow along with Tom Johlll ent campaign. Branstable, on Krzyek and Farinella. of Holy changing them for the game balls making key stops as Boston Col son and Dave Netinho. He suff the other hand, has Noah Bell, Cross~ frequently were Jack Kineavy lege took over the game's mo fered another jolt when veteran Bill Glover, Charlie Faria and Krzyek, a St. Raphael's High of Sometpet and Walter Quinn of, mentum in the latter stages and guard .Gil Vieira broke his left Jim Trocchi retunung but how School product from Seekonk, Swansea. the hand writing of victory was arm at the tail end of the foot much new Coach Bill Wyman was instrumental at defensive The other person was Carlin on the wall. ball campaign, The loss of Vieira, can get from his men is problem end for the Crusaders, while Lynch, assistant Holy Cross The Eagles moved within field' , who is not expected to get into atical. Fa.t;inella, an,ex:-Coyle star from 'coach, who is the defensive co- goal range late in the period but action until the middle of Jan-, The expected does not always St. Mary's Parish in Mansfield, ordinator for the Crusaders and Bob· Gallivan's attempt ,:as uary at the earliest, could cause materialize on Gape God-as iri' 'did an outstanding 'job- at tackle is prominent throughout the'Dio- blocked ,by Dick Giardi, enabling cese as a fonner Coyle High star, Holy Gross to leave the field at the Blue Devils and Coach Wil any othe":' competitive circuit. with the offensive squad. son some early problems, " This is why some pundits are '.' '_ BostOO1 CoHege- n"layers and ex-head ,football .,coach at il'ltennissioh with a 6-0 advlW,On the Bqston, College side, Somerset and Stang' Highs. tage. Lester Smith is the only reg differently evaluating the con Holy Cross kicked off to open, HWlt, a senior' who ironlica~ <'ula!' back from the championship ference's finai'-'sta:ndihg~ In any , .];Jors,a.ri ,of S~, ,Patrick's PariSh the game and on a second aqd 10 learned his football from, Hfe team. Fairhaven's plight appears', event, a~thrming season looms "in, Wareham provided the back up for B~ center Mike E~, situation. Be· tl"ied to penetrate Turn to Page TWenty to be "loomy unless Coach Wil- for the Cape, ,fans., ~ .. '.
Local Interest Strong· in' HC..BC Contest
20
German Cardinal Stresses Peace With Poland
THE A'NeHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs., Dec. 7, 1967
P!ilD~@cdJ®~[p)rmO@J Hl!1M@tn Re!@U'o@[]1)$
H®@d
See--: ~[J'i)~[f®@~o~g ctaccai C@rri)*~oct·
FREIBURG (NC) - Nor repeated over and over again maHzation of relations be and not lost sight of." Msgr. Dowling noted that or tween Germany and Poland ganizations which had been is the prinicpal task con working together are now sharp fronting .the German people, ly divided-supporting or criti Julius Cardinal Doepfner of Mu cizing either Board of Education nich, head' of the German Cath President Richardson Dilworth olic Bishops' Conference, said or Police Commissioner .Frank here. Rizzo. Addressing a meeting of the Frightful Proportions international council of Pax' Msgr. Dowling said: Christi, international Catholic ."The issue has centered· on the pea c e movement, Cardinal youth and about them certain . Doepfner said that the task of things are clear. Their legitimate · reconciliation is made difficult aspirations should be listened to by the Polish government's lack and heeded and their unfolding of trust in the' German people potential nurtured and given op~ '. and by the attitude of refugees in portunity for expression .,- but . Germany from the former Ger through appropriate and orderly · man territories now governed channels. . by Poland. "Although it would be unreal In November and December, istic to. think that the schools can 1965, the Polish and German function in isolation froin the . bishops exchanged conciliatory society in which they ~e situ o'letters. Poland's communist gov ated, they' cannot be ,permitted ernment later . denounced the to' become the very arena in Polish bishops for their part in which the tensions of our urban the exchange and used the bish life are thrashed out. · ops' action as a pretense for re "School children are. not a· fus~ng permission to Stefan Car commodity -to be used to 'gain a. dinal Wyszynski of Warsaw to point in our representative form' go to Rome for the end of the of government. To 'consider them Second Vatican Council. as ,such is a retrogreSsion 00: German laymen criticized the frightful proI1Ortions." 'content of the German bishops' P[f@w~~cial "letter for not going far enough O. Impedes Education . Continued from Page One in begging forgiveness. Commenting 'further,' Msgr, Reject Nationalism land departed for the mission of Dowling added: ' . Malawi, 'Africa, the same year. Cardinal Doepfner urged Ger . "For the adults of' a city to lIn 1960, he was the first Amer man Catholics to. give greater permit such a problem to slip !can assigned to the Montfort intQ the -schools is a retrogres:' support to Pax Christi. Pope Mission in the diocese of Sintrmg, sion for two reasons. Paul VI, he said, must not re Borneo, where he be<o,imie re:' main alone in his work for peace. ."First, vt goes' against the gional superior of the Montfol·t . whole. form of out government The cardinal warned Germans' Missionaries. . to reject ef~ectively and pru which· provides means and' chan- . In June 1964,.the new provin dently any resurgence of nation nels to present complaints and cial was appointed as field di alism. to correct policies ---' primarily sector of the Catholic Relief Ser - In a communique released at through the vote and also vices, 'With headquarters in through established agencies. the end of the meeting, Bernard Djakarta, Indonesia. Cardinal Alfrink of Utrecht, the "Second, permitting the schools .' Netherlands, international Pres Serve in Nine Dioceses to become' the arena in which · ident of Pax Chris~i, stated that The. united States Province of issues. are fought out impedes the gap between rich and poor Ithe Montfort Fathers includes the education of _children. How much can be done in the schools' POilE AT WORK: This first ,picture of Pope Paul VI in the world is the greatest 138 priests, 'brothers and scholas . tics, in nine dioceses and three with all' these activities going ... at work in his library since his Nov. 4 operation shows threat to peace. Commerce between the indus nnission areas of Haiti, Africa and ,on with all this tension?' This the Pontiff signing the official text of his.recent message trialized nations and the devel Borneo. Ft. Lynch ,will direct' problem should. be handled by to th~ peoples and rulers of Africa. With the Pontiff oping nations is marked by in . the varied apostolates of home adults l!nd, not by school-aged' justice, the communique said. It and foreign missions, Marian children to the detriment of their . Gregory Peter Cardinal Agagiani~n,prefect of .the Con gregation for the Propagation of 't~e Faith..NC Photo. urged influential industrialized publications; parish work, inner own education." .nations to seek'a just solution to Cllity apostolate, and seminary .the situation and supported the .(training... , ,proposal of Pope Paul VI to in The r,Iontfort Fathers, founded I' . ternationalize development ·aid. in 1705 by St. Louis deMontfod, Continued from Page Eleven eam~ to the United States' in Canadian Listeners Respond to Radio Cunningly combining amedi 1902. The United States Province Plea for ,Peru U nde'rprivil~ged \'Nas est;iblished in 1948, with eval-type bestiary with an al Rev. Frank. Setzer, .as the first p,habet book is John' Ciardi in "An Alphabestiary" (Llppinl!QU;' A Local businessmen offered sort VANCOUVER, (NC) pl'ovjnci~l'superior. ONE STOP
·$5.95). Ponder this: B 'is for radio plea here and the response ing and~leaning facilities, stor SHOPPING (;ENTER
'.BOMBERS,· 0\11' naiiona~ pride. 'of 1,00Q persons of all denomina age space and volunteer help. o And also for BOYS who like tions made.possible a factory for Stevedores loaded the material • Television '. Grocery Bombers to ride. And also for the underpl'ivileged residents of in crates without pay and wharf • Appliances • Furniture CQntinu.e~fr9m Page Ninteen BLESS in God Bless' Our Side. a town near Lima, Peru. ing charges were waived. "f<>ach . Lynch, was outstanding · B is for BAD (the Enemy) 104 Allel1l St., New Bedford The, Norwegian line ship, SS On Sept. 10 a listener 'called defensi vely iii the final half and whom we Bless our Boys' Bomb the open line program" "Action Hardingertrailsported the "in 997-9354 was instrumental in the BC's ers Bravely to Bomb. And for Line," on radio station CFUN stant ~actory", free to Peru. BELLS we ring out when we here. He told about Father Neil stopper 'unit's 'success in con welcome. .them home. taining the Crusaders. John MacCauley, a Vancouver · B is for BANNER, ~hich born missionary of the Oblates . EagUe Scorfing YOURS TO LOVF. AND TO GIVE! Boston scored what proved to proudly we hail. For BLAST and of Mary Immaculate on 'home the lite ot a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL: Love God be the winning points in the for BRASS and for BURIAL:" for a three-month leave. more,and give to. souls knowledge and love of DETAIL. And for BILLY and God by serving Him in a Mission which uses the third period when Erwin leaped The listener related how BUCK, who are studying Press, . Radio, Motion Pictures 1nd TV. to bring into the end zone to cap a 34 Father MacCauley's parishioners BRAILLE. His Word 'to souls everywhere. Zealous young yard march directed by quarter and others there from Comas, girls 14-23 years interested in· this unique Finally, there's. '~Discovered back Joe· DiVito. who received Peru, live in poverty. The listen Apostolate may write to: The O'Melia Trophy, symbolic 'by Love" by Ancelle, an anony er expressed his 'idea of starting REVEREND MOTHER SUPERIDIl ' mous French housewife (New of the game's outstanding per a cooperative clothing factory to , DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL "" man, $3.95). It's a prose-poem former, and sparked by Brendan 50 ST" PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30. MASS. celebration of a woman's feel help the people of Comas. McCarthy's, BC powerful full Within days other listeners back. Gallivan's placement gave ings toward· her husband, rang BC a 7-6 edge and it was enough. ing from love and alienation to ,donated 31 treadler sewing ma . chines, bolts of C1oth~ needles, The Eagles added an insurance reconciliation. Ancelle catches in, a few lines machine oil, clothing and toys. touchdown in the final period whim Erwin bolted into the end more clearly than in 'pages of
thou-shalt-not's the real reason
zone from the.. one to cap a 56 yat'd Boston College penetration. why love out of wedlock is
Dispensing Optician wrong: "Our mouths seek each Announces the New Location of His Office .'; other, our bodies embrace, tree Back @jp)®[li1 lHIolllsing and vine intertwined. One fire at J. lESER, Prop. DETROIT (NC) - Fifteen burns in both and the hearth
RESIDENTIAL
of our house /g'lowS with it. In
197 BANK ST.-:"'Cor. Purchase St. ehurches of various denomina INDUSTRIAL
tions in southeastern Michigan Him and through Him and with
Opposite Fall Ri.ver Trust Parking Lot COMMERCIAL held interfaith ·services as a Him the love-making of a man
Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.-Sat. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. demonstration of support for an and a woman are made holy, and 253 Cedar St., New Bedford . open' housing .measure now become a Canticle of sacred . Closed All Day Wednesday' Tel. 678-0412 993-3222 . .,' . pending in the state legislature. ri~s, a mallS to the,glory of God.~. PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Ra <tia! conflict here in Plmnsyl- 0 vania is incre<lsing according .to· Msg-r. Philip J. Dowling, execu tive secretary of the Archdioc lIlSan Human Relations Commis sion. The prelate made his ob servation following a flare-up and demonstration by 3,500 Ne-' r.Jl'O high school students outside the Municipal Education Board building. "The events of the past several fays have pushed Philadelphia toward a deepening division \lVhich, if ~ontfnued unchecked, ~ay ca:use irreparable hatm. Accusations and demands for resignations are dividing the ~ty. Statement upon statement by groups who really stand. for llbe same basic things are in-flam tog emotions against one anMher: This is an intolerable situation." Split Widens "The Cardinal's Commission alit' Human Relations," Msg·r. Dowling continued, "wishes to make an impassioned plea for a balt to this frightening dissipa Cion of efforts. The problems of our city can only be resolved by $Oncerted efforts. This must be
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