Pope Paul
The CBOR
Says
Remember
The Needy
Christmas
fall River, M@$)$., Thursday, Dec. 14, 1967 Y~I.
11, No. 50
@
VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul VI has urged Christians to avoid making Christmas too luxurious this
PRICE lOll $4.00 per Yoar
1967 The Anchor
Corpse_ C~rdia~ Transplant ~ Theologically Lawful VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Vatican City daily news paper, commep.ti~g on the transplantation of a human heart "m a cOlipse into a criticaUy ill patient in South Africa, ~ restated the teaching of Pope Pius XII on v,arious kinds " surgical tranSiJ)lantation. The front-page article in to a person in dire need of it. article continued: '~When SIOsservUitore Romano said Ii The transplant is made from a lbat, although there is "no corpse its lawfulness is univer
ADVENT SPIRI'l':· Lawrence Egan lights the second candle of the Advent Wreath at St. Vincent's Home, Fall Riy-er in the second week of preparing for the coming .of sally upheld C * • .Ohrist. . "Is the principle also·' valid
gliestion whatever" about trans,. lllants of self-regenerating 01' g8ftic matter, such as blood from IIII\e person to another, there regarding the replacement of a ' rpay be no licit transplantation diseased organ which is con~ ....,. the case of removals which sidered vital for the organism, as in the spe.cific cases of South . . not reparable and are re Aflica and the United States? oardcd as real mutilations seri We- believe we can find the an OUSly undermining the whole swer in the speech of pius XII lliess of the organism." of Sept. 30, 1956: ftc article, by Italian Fran ANAHEIM (NO) - The e&can Father Gino Concetti, ob "'In desperate cases, when It president of the American OOl'ved that those who maintain sick person is lost unless there the liccity of transplants seri is' an intervention, and when MediC<'l1 Association l)ave. ~d OUSly undcrmininglthe wholeness there exists a medication,. a vised doctors· to be active in Of the donor's organism "usu means, an operation which, their church and shoulder re-' IIIb' advance- as justification the . without excluding anJ' danger spOnsibHity to counteract moral . motive of .charity or of man decay in American life. still has some possibility of suc ItInd's unity." But he recalled cess, an upright and reflective Dr. Milford O. Rouse, an .at Pope Pius XII rejected this mind admits without further - eider in the. Bapti~t Church, ad JllDtion. ado that a doctor may proceed -dressing the National Federa However, in the case of twin with the application of such tion of Catholic PhysiCians
_ans, such as kidneys or eyes, -treatment with the, express or· Guilds, explored the role of the
.physician in the Church's lay
.. iil considered licit to give one tacit consent of the patient.'" apostolate. .-
Dr; Robin' E. Fredericks, West Los Angeies physician, keynoted this theme when he challenged delegates to "care more about our patients and others, beyond just caring for Bishop Oonn911y announced today the introduction of, them." ; "The familiar teaching-find (I' :new special Diocesan Lay Award for individuals who Christ in every man is the sim ~ve been dediOOlted to various:phases of youth work. The Turn to Page Twenty
Suggests Doctors Become Involved In Laity Roles
New Di'ocesan Lay ·Award Announced_ by Ordinary
__ard will be made to those who have also manifested in . 4ierested in preserving the Neals of :family life and the eare of the sick, age.d and ~edy. It will be recognition for distinguished and outstand ing service to their neighbor in Wle aspect or another. .The medal has a raised image @f Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal with the Latin inscrip @on "0 Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have re oourse to thee". Below the' stat 1llle is the date 1830 which des ignates the year of the appari tion to St. Catherine Laboure. The back of the medal has file seal of the Diocese of Fall lItiver.
, Appointment 'The
Most Reverend Bishop
lllQS approved the nomination by :\"ery Rev. George Roskwitalski, O.F.M. Conv., provincial, of 1l'tev. Ferdinand Zwolak, O.F.M. (:onv. as assistant at Holy Cross Church, Fall River. The ap pointment is effective immedi ~ely.
Father Zwolak replaces Rev. Matthew Kotkowski, O.F.M
Co&w4
Face
Reverse
NEW DIOCESAN AWARD FOR LAITY
year and forgetting the needs of the poor. While appreciating the ex change of gifts "on this unique and great day of Christmas which marks the decisive date for the salvation of the world and for each one of us," the -Pope also called his listeners' _attention to other aspects of the feast day. "Permit us to recall to you," the Pope said, "two things most beloved SOIlS . and daughters: First, do not let Christmas be Turn to Page Twenty
Vatican .~Team' to Moscow Includes American Priests VATICAN CITY (NC)-A Vatican delegation, includ mg two U.S. pries'Ps, has visited Moscow for talks with officials of the Russian Orthodox Church on the "sociai teaching of the Catholic Ohurch." The delegation, led by Bishop Jan WiHebrands ()f _ . the Netherlands, secretary of ent) Orthodox churches," ex the Vatican" Secretariat for plained an official communique Promoting Christian Unity, of .the Osservatore Romano. included Msgr. George G. Hig.· Others in the delegation, gins, director of the social ac.. Msgr. Pietro Pavan, Italian spe tion department of the United cialist on the Church's social states Catholic Conference teachings and Mather Jean (formerly NCWC) and Father Calvez, Fr~:m'chJesuit special John ~. Long, S.J.,· of New York, ist in Marxism. an off~cial of the unity secre-The. communique stated that taria1. . . .. th~ d~legation "excl).ange views: The team was "m. the mter~st. WIth :professors of the theolo~': of the regular contacts whIch cal faculty of Leningrad inas- ar~ develop~ng between the Ro- mU~h. _liS they are theol~gians,', man CatholIc Church and each on the social teachings of the of:'the autocephalous, (independ- Catholic Church." .
Ecumenical Center In Whitinsville .For Faiths of Worcester Territory WORCESTER (NC)-A nonprofit, interfaith - corporation has been formed here to operate an ecumenical center in -nearby Whitinsville. Lasell House in Whitifolsville, n?w owned by the EpIscopal dIOcese .of Western Massachusetts, ~lll bec~m.e a center of e~um~mcal activIty under the ~iIrectlOn of. a board. representmg the EpIscopal dIOcese, the. Catholic diocese of Worcester,' and the Greater Worcester Area Council of Churches. . Morton C. JaqUith, a Worcestel' judge who is secretary of the standing committee of the Episcopal diocese said the purpose of the house ":"ill be "to promote morality and religion through the establishment maintenance and operation of an interdenominational ecumenical center for the promotion of Christian unity through study, conference, dialogue worship and fellowship." ' Lasell House was given to the Episcopal diocese in 1952 and has been used for conferences and o institutes. Under an arrangement agreed upon at the diocese's 6~th annual meeting
last June, the new corporation will lease the building and the 11 acres of land surrounding it for $1 a year for the next five years. The Episcopal diocese will also subsidize the new corpora tion up to $7,000 a year. During the five-year period, the cor poration hopes to acquire funds to operate the house independ~ ently. At th . .e end o~ the flv: years, the EpIscopal dIOcese ~Ill deed the property to the interfaith corporation for $1 and grant it a capital gift of $75 000 . J d . .,. u ge- .Jaqulth said the Epis copal dIOcese's decision was made after a year-long study cond~cted under the direction of BIShop Robert M. Hatch. Encouragement to proceed, he said, came from Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of Worcester and Dr. Robert E. Slaughter, execu tive director of the Greater Worcester Area Council of Churches. Judge Jaquith said the cor poration "is not closing any doors on possible use of the new facilities."
iNew._ A1rNnges
THE ANCHOR-Diocese offal) ,River-Ihu,rs. ,Dec. 14. 1967
2
Personnel Board
GerMltDml' Bishops Warn iof IDolngers, DiffBcM!ties In P,reachi'ng f,aith, MUNICH (NC)-The dangers and difficulties the.Church faces in trying to answer the ques rtionsoi modern man 'Were stressed by tlleGerman !bishops in a letter to aUw.hohave been charged by the Church with the preaching of'the ~aith. The iletrerwas apPl'Ovedat the meeting of the :Gel'man Bish ops' Conference at FUlda in September, but only released Dec, 1. Noting itbeman]T changes
iP-ers:lnai 'OPinions They warned against ,express ing pe-rsonal <Qpinions as iIlhDugb
they :8l'e ,of :tihe .substance .m:fbe
brou"ghtabout by the natural
faith.'
KEARNY (NC)-.Archbishop Thomas .A. Boland ,of Newark hml approved plans ,tr;{ Itbe Sen :lIte of :iP.riests jora personnel
The bishops said itbey realized
that tllls :self-exam'ina,llicm is -eon
sidered,unnecessary and :impr:u~
dent 'by many, and :s:tIlessed1ihat
the ChUIlCh will. IDeed greatlPati
ence and honest diIDQgUe 'wthin
itself :befolleit tClU1 'adequately
formLiiLate ;the :sUbstance of its
teachlng for modem man.
board.
'The iboard--:""wlli :review the 'first assignments of :rpriests, and concern itself with transfers, ~cial assignments :and ~ I~osi:tion of :pastorates; D 'Would also ev.a1:uate 'iPersonnel 'With the asSistance ,of a pro fessional. stafi of lJ):riests and la.YIllen.
'The report calls for an annual week:, an ,annual course in the010gy each Fall, • <two--y:ear ;lrarew.a! PlTo,gr.ain 't.~ /priests within :five ,years i)f .ftl ceiving their first -pastorate, '. graduate degree program; 'revi sionof the .format .for junior clergy exaniinatitlns and priesti' !l'etreats, ,aDd rthe -establishment of oanarchdiocesan book' club :and vitleo-ta,pe' hcilities" :f0l' 'home may intlleologieal ,trends. .sp~stwiy
-'
, sciences and technology~1he The bishops a!l,so .stated ,what
bishops stated: "Man subjugates they :!fe1t ltobe .thei;rtw.nftild
the world man up-to-mowun :responSibilities ,toward ·ime 'Va'
dreamed of ~easure; ,he lives ,can counciil: '''We must aCk.nnwl-.
more and more in.a world large 'iedgeWifh~'~eserwrtiion ly made by h'imself.''This affects novations !it brlngs1' and "mn'i!er- , " :a\(IllSs!LSSiJpP.il1F'lREJLATEs.,,: ~ic~;,i.~hQpjd,cha'rd 'O.~w, and -determines his think'ing ,'and stand and demonstrate:tbe', in- ~ , actions.~, lllovaticms' :as an ~n,»"d )eft, 'has resigned :as ibisbop ,of Na~ez-JJ:adk-son;" Mdss" and Despite these scientific ad 'the sUbstance ;of·;jjhe ·fallIIh··ithat wii[llbe s1ilooeedled il:i!yJBisllep lQsephBrunini, right: NCPhoto. vances, they 'Said, ~re 'Sb-n has lbeen ·uansmittea ~ . . ' . lurks 'the question, as !!orceftil :as the cerituries. ever: What is themeariing of In alltllis, why is D'lan bere? 'II 'L 1II<i.~.lI 'h is ,so stressed :the ,RealiPresence'of , , '' , . ' " .. .11 CIOOO.. .A:lU Jlas M any wond er i f 'Ii.h e 'Chu rc the Body :andiBlood 'Of tObrist '. "
supplying adequate answers to 1n the Eu--"",..:riist, " ". . ' " J , e X G S mimittee,1 Pro, . :PO,S,eS,.:,T,'m,. i,ni:n.ft,.,j" ..:.,'.~, :
,!NEW YORK I(NC)~A d9zeB .,..... . " ' , ' ,N.ew "YofkState'~~"';I"lato~ these 'questions, thebinhqps :said, ' On the :li~gy:;itlle'y .aeclaret'l: " .' . PirAW!!,ili'Cim"foll' 'IPiv-iests " , . " ,--;'I;afed~tbtheMohn 'Danand then went 'onto ~te ;that "A l;4..,.-av 'c"oIlSl"da.., d. '" , ,~ CULUJ., ' 't d f It" rd' .. "fW<U'.." =,e ,m==yas ' i ' " "," ' , . ocrati.c 'movemen't:""::have' '~~d ~ h e cert I u e once e., l;'ega. -' "a :scicial ritual, a socialaffirma- " "..SAN ANTO~IO (NC)' Ai in-d~ptll :stua.Y,of\Pl'ie~~y~!n eat mgthe ,~ubstanee and ,d~menslOn, tioil",of' ChmStianbrotlierhOOd, !CommIttee' :appointed' io" :study'i' iritffafu 1hetime.a~g/'man ~b:=,:n~;=.fn::ento, of ..do~ne ~ems, no l~nger to will not achieve its .f5bjeCt: ..', pr1es~y training" here has'pro-'" first indicates mtere~''~ng2i' ; . ., • ,' eXIst m ,cerlam 'spl1eI'()S. -Coq's "glorification and through posed a ,pI1ogram of apostcili~ post-0lldina:llion ,devellll]lID:ent. ~ 'l7.3-:;Y.elH'.-pld ,provisi,o~ ia Self-lExamination 'that 'the salvation of men;", wOrks 'for seminarians. ; .rwuid ce lP ram the :state ,charter ,bars ,8IlY' aid ,to , , .' Similar to the interneshipof " '(' ,~n , ' rog chureh-Ielated ,.sCh0ols., It', :was The bishops pointed out in ", . . " . - a medical doctor, the' progralll; ..' 'iI1l:!e;g:f:lup,iscomposed ,of rep,~!, one 'Of lthe .hottest lllsllesi,n. the their letter that 'tJ,1()" Vatican, AS$erts Yll.!l,go$l~w.ia calls for semilaarians to devote resentatives ,of the four \b>ca! c~ai;gnfor~and ,the de~eat of council ''um:lertoGk the ';great . part ,of fum time to teaChing,' -- sem1nar~, ~2 1aypersons',;3 -anew, --state: ,constitut\<m ~ effort of facing up ,to the pres N~'l!.Btll'(lID~ fl'@ lR-e:aogicn and towGlrking with youth: in ,B,l'01;her,13 SIster, 'and .:V{>~on, Nowmlber... ' ent, and preparing for the, fu ,~9NN(NC)-Neithera~tate- :parispes jand,com:m\ini'tY, :agen_C' dI~eetors ,of ~oth the '~.~l~se, '!l'.he ,new lCbnstitution' would ture-." They :admitted that '"'this :SJlonsored ,reliiioil 100r ;a ,estate- 'cies,' with juvenile delinquents, and 'fthe Oblates 'Of Mary lm-' ha~ Jrepealed the Blaine undertaking was bound to cause sponsored atheism exists in ,drug addicts, 'and alcobolics-all maculate. Amendment. 'The .charter failed, uneasiness ;in ~eiW'e of 1I:he YuglilS1avh, aileadingYiugoslav- intended to give them experience' , ~n addition to 'its '''internship'' most observers ;a;gnee, fOT other Ch'lill'ch." .iim comm~ :has said. for 1Jhemimstry. ' for seminarians, 'the committee 'reasons, and its, !backers haw Another problem, ,the G=an ' ' ' ' I 1 , h i s lpTQgram 'ah'eady is;in has called for a .guidance p~ amro11D.Cedlth:at 'they lWill at 'In an inter'lfiew ..- -'1er the <con""", ~ ... ,:t ;0:0 bl'shops sal'd, 'l'S that tl··le Chur":'" ..... I i ' dn 'the Catheffect .at Ass'.ump.ti0n ,Seminary; grmn ,concenm:e d not 0 n1. 57 'with' temptr.....;cu. . d'IVll"dua I',s ,as 'simil''ation 0 f " ' opened "'erse·lf n .t·o."he wor·'ld "at 10 Z c publication, <Glas :Kionma, and is believed to, be the most , th em plemmeal. . .a leading member mg h l y developed "interns'hip' of k nowledge,:·bU t als ...;,..... ......",,---"'.. a moment when she herself l'S th• Friel, C "hi . 0 'IWJUOU w.w> JULU;; Jl,=u:mners - ..... ",,,,,0 :5"",... .';~u~l=, "-sk e ommunist party lin Croati;~, ' any major ,seminary . -, t 'un ,'SplrI . 'tual ,rLJjLe, '.... "'---"'~ A,_ blu:Tn<>B l'nta~sely ~ ~w~ ' ..ed 'm' '''',''',u=;: ..... in thecoun , d eiV=o.pmen ~LUrs:an d llO ' .ro:::.seID ,,- ~, .....,<¥~ll, ... ~ ,-"·-~-~'~a"'cn.'" one of 'YllgoSlavia:sp constituent try,'" said Father LaWTence J.'I seJlL ,,,, - ' , - . . , ''''' ' al ----<..."d -... ' -", .....- .. of "G ............... III
'-'uw"ecu(on, emow.on.ua!iWl'--ISal 'cu. a JIIlres8 :c..=er-ence OIILI_ republics, 'liid !Ilotreject 'the posStuebben, chairman of the com ity, gllOw;tl1 $award refficient they would lback :some 'ohangef!o .sibllity, that the ,Qhurcll might· m,.ittee. :for,p'·riest11• ' formation. i ,w.oIlk,· l:and:Stuayib.:ili,·'i:tS,.:im:,':d',~m:..' ,bUt 'WOUld :lliightirePeaI' of· tile become activ-e .Un iadio :and -te:le-'i' v , ROME r(Nq ~.AlMeinorial ,visimI,programming.IH-owever, TIlecomnp!tee,01;le, oj 'six ap-: .mi~ ito Ihis -vocalii.ci1i:'.:',,' , Blaine '!PI!Gv:iSion. Mass :for Frnncis 'dai-dincil he :said, the use of 1ladio and p0P:1t~d., by ArChb'i~h,op Ro'be~,· '" ~ Spe1Jlman of New Yorlk waS ,of- ,tele>mll,".on, by the Ca'tlh1>1i,'c and.' E. Lucey of 'San Antonio to im., , ' .' ": . """"ay ~ .~ 4.>-,'iP-·~·""" 'p'lenient the' :s.>;";" :'V:ati'can I , ,~***'****'***~*#,***, f~-d .... '" -.uu ""'"" ~.' Orthodox C1mrches 'Wnuld hand- ' CO"...... ......, VL Fathers' Santa Susanna 'OhullCh," icaj)' Smd~' ,denominafu>nS. . Cohncil 'R,has been king an ' ~ IMAILIEARLYWI~ ",
:them-'
.
SU99'est ;I,n""terns:hip'...
·:tJheiIriletter~eibi:Shops:ai-
NewYo'r'k. ~.eformers S ·C<I h
tCo,
,real
, Memor·iaJ Mass
:;~~m: ,the . American church
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CHRISTMAS STAMPS: . NEW SYSTEM
In .'the iinterv'iew, wbiellapCardina,' ,En,larges '; peared, after Frid had , a t t a c k e d ' the 'Catllolic 'Church 'ina -r.adio "'!' interview.• he .'sai,d that·;Y....o" :~*; : ;,' " -CmCAGO i(NC)-John,Cardi-;, slavia 'was '''cover~d'' ,by ,reli gious broadcasts from abroact nal ,Cody of :Chicagohas an ~ Vatican Radio bas ,'broadcasts 'in nounced the reorganization and ,; , the Slovenian and Croatian, Ian": enlargement of the archdiocesan I ,;r: , ' school board. ..,. guag~ . ~ A m~jor element in the ;:; __ . ch ang~ is thea.ppointment 'of a, ::+: ' , human relations director who ~ USE ZIP CODE wiIlibe 'responsible for 1facilitat :;""jJf:~U(,1l913Uf**~**1lf*)Hl.Jt. ing m~g:r.ation progamsamong i FBWDA1{~Mass-of prevwus Sun theS20 lCajiho'liic'e1ement:31Y :and, day.ill V!iolet. ,!Mass !Toper; high :sChools iinithe ,archdiocese. Three ~abeJs will be delivered :by 14?ffer .No. Glory or <Creed;. 'Adve~t The human mela:tiinns .airectoris, Preface. tCanr~eT5 to !~Y.~ry, home duy;ing :the, Imon1lh ,~ ,EnnestV.. Y:antley;, :a 'N~,who; "was :formerlly tIIl 'ithe :staff of itbe; SATURDAY~St, Eusebius, BiSh lDecem!ber.. " '1;,1 Cb,icago ICommass'ioo, for Human .~p :and Marty.r. ,m 'Class.' :Red. Mass PI0per;GloI:Y >DO Creed,;. Relations. Advent Preface. ~ Cod,y ,said. tile. pm" , 'mhe~dbe1sGre: mary purrpose of .:the lI'eor,ganiza , \, StmDAY-Gaudete 'Stinday,m: tionas '''itogi"",e dn1Pro'Wld :serVice : ,Sunday m Advent: iJ: 'Class, to'ilihe ,elementary :and 'secondary , . -"--".:....-MAR_,, '--...',' Rose Qr Violet. Mass ,~; schools ,offhe arclrdiocese.'" '\file No 'G'lory; 'Creed; Prefaee of, new :s1l:tIucibuI;e'includes ::four :as- : Advent. . soCiate :slLPerlntendents,four as sistant 'SUperintendents, :and two MONDAY~Ma,s,s of IPrevWUS
See's Schoot loa",
.
".
DEC. 23
Rev. Owen J. Kimnan, 1l9O:I" Pastor, Immaculate Conception, Fall River. Rev. Oha:riles P. "Il'r.:imor, S.s., 1947, St. Edward Seminary, Seat tle, Wash. DEC. 24 .Rev. .'Tames :it,. 'iBeaQ'en, 1886.
Pastor, Sat:.1'ed 'Heart, 'Taunton. Rev:. 'Tiimothy ,3.. 'Duff, 19114, Assistant, St. Joseph, Woods Hole. ,DEC.27. 'lIhomaS 4J. S1apleto~ 1956, .iP.astor, CoIlpU!J ,Oh1isti Sandwich..
.Rev.
DEC. 28, :Rev. Charles R. Smith, ~ Pastor, ImmacUlate Concepti~ Fall River.
FORTY HOURS,· iDEVOT,IO,INI, Dec.il'7--St. Anthony 'Padua, iFaniRiver. 5t.Maxi's, Faimaven. St. Helena"s Oon~ iFciIl Ri\V-el'.
i
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J.
Mass Ordo
FOR,
"CHRISTMAS MAIUiNG
"t':
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c,
~I.-....--..:..'~...;...-.,
,Sunday.: I:I .Class. V.iolet..MasS· ,P..ro:per; .No Glory i)r Cceeci;'. Adv-ent Preface.
No'
Eni".r Dining liN THE
,JJ01.1Y 'WULIER -AND
WiEDNESD:AY...,...E~'Weanes <day lin ,A:rl1\terit.iI[ caass~Violet.
Mass ,Proper; No ,Glory'
tCr-ee?; Ad~t
~_ _MAS_, _SA:_C_H_llJ_S_En5_J _ _...)
directors.
TUESDAY'-:"'lVI "as s ,. Of iPrev'ious 'Sund1\y. 1'1 'Class. 'Violet. Mass Proper; GioJ:Y . or 'Creed; Adve~t :PlTeface. ,
SPOUlm nOI
1R'
~ee.
THURSDAY4t. 1bomas, Apoa.. ~tle. Il Class. Bed. :Mam; .P«)per:i . ; , Glory; CreadjPrelaeeofApe. .i:les.
.P
,~
IimAu:RANJS
AIJwGp Ifi"ee ~a"lCing
New ,letlforCI,Hotel.
~
O_UiI' __ OF_,_S_T_A_I_,E_ _.....Ii11
A~~J of Gu,r/readers
or:e .urged :to cooperate "";~f1h 1tlbeir post office. 1I1h,e ,effeotjYe :use of :these ~a'be~s wiU speed·· the mail ,and:take some of /the ~oadf.rom tlbe· ~Ie who cany~he moiJ during ,this ihappyond ~sy season.
0.5. High Court Ag rees to Hea If
THE ANCHOR
Thurs., Dec. 14, 1967
Priests Protest
Bio$ AlP'pearn
C{ijt~~~[J'@~ CC@~~
WASHINGTON (NO) Th2 U.S. Supreme Court has Qg,reed to decide whether mcial discriminattion by real lasta,te developers and agents :thlolates the U. S. Constitution. If the court's answer is "yes," the decision would enforce an 1866 law as a nationwide fair housing law. The Court agreed to hear ar guments in a case involving a ~gro bail bondsman from St. ~ouis, Joseph Lee Jones, and a ' GUburban real estate developer, :who refused to sell a house to I'Qnes and his white wife in 1965. , The developer, Alfred H. Mayer Co., said the couple could DOt buy in the Paddock Woods development in North St. Louis f=ounty because it was not com ,any policy "to sell houses and JDts to Negroes." .wnes then filed suit for fIO,OOO in damages and an order requiring the developer to sell. . e U, S. Court of Appeals for the eighth Circuit ruled against Iones on June 26. The Justice Department supported his ap oeal to the Supreme Court. Baste Arguments In his appeal, Jones relies on taro basic arguments. The first is a law-sponsored, bonically, by a Missouri sen &tor-passed in 1866, the year lifter the 13th amendment abol Ishing slavery was ratified. 'l'hat law states that "all citi ~ns of the United States shan have the same right, in every lltate and territory, as is enjoyed bY white citizens thereof to in Ilerit, purchase, lease, sell, hold and convey real and personal property." It was passed over Cbe veto of President Andrew 6ohnson, and seldom used-the last time in 1903. The law fell into disuse main IJ' because of the 14th Amend-' ment, which emphasised state action. Its intent was to pre ftnt states from passing Jim Crow laws, but as Reconstruc- lion ended and Souherners re gained influence in Congress, the amendment's major thrust was turned to prevent the fed oral government from taking action which the states had 'the ability to take. Vestiges of Slavery In 1883 the Supreme Court lIeinforced tills interpretation by preventing the federal govern ment froin enforcing laws such as that of 1866. unless the states enacted laws to the contrary. In his appeal, Jones charges that this standoff has resulted ill inaction at both levels-and in the process the nation has &Uffered "from the vestiges of Xegro slavery." Jones' second argument for lederal action is based on the Mth Amendment's prohibition against state action which de privespersons of their consti tutional rights. "State action" in this case Is the· licensing of real estate brokers, and other involvement ~th real estate, transactions, such as the recording of deeds, the taxing of sales, zoning ami other regulation.. The Court of Appeals said this argument had much weight, but said it was up to the Supreme eourt "to take the lead in expanding constitutional pre cepts."
3
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Th~ needs of the poor "must taka precedence over parish and di ocesan building programs," said 27 priests here who issued a statement regretting the fact that the archdiocese will spend $7 million on a new cathedral. The new structure replaces the cathedral which burned in 1962. Construction began in mid November. Said the priests: ''The poor have a right to look to the Church for effective sup ··port. But our prophetic voice is too often muffled by our own wealth and comfort. For exam ple, here in San Francisco ·we priests ha~e been guilty of a lack of vision and of silence as a new cathedral was planned and· be gun'" co '" Exchange Views "It would have been difficult and most unusual if our arch bishop, priests and people were to have made any other plans in 1962, when the old cathedral burned. We ourselves did not speak out then co $ co
NEW DIOCESAN CCD OFFICE BUILDING: The 12 room building at 446 Highland lwe., Fall River will be the new Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Office Building serv,ing the vat'ious phases of this most important work of the Church.. , .
r,
.
"Though only a small minorit;, of priests, we can be silent no
longer. We deeply regret our common mi4>takes here in San Francisco. We hope that other Christian communities-even on the parish level-will learn from our failures." The statement was released 1965, President Lyndon B. after three of the group met with Johnson assured that the Cuban Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken. refugees would find a welcome One described the talk as "8 in this country. The President frank exchange of views." called upon each state to extend
"the hand' of helpfulness and
Benefit Missions humanity, to 0\11' Cuban broth VIENNA (NC) - With money ers." raised from donations given by In addition to the USCC, accident-free drivers and from Catholic World Services (Prot the Church's annual Epiphany estant), HIAS (Jewish) and the collection, Austria's Action for International Refugee Commit the Support of Vehicles for Mis tee (non-sectarian) have been sionaries filled 88 of 228 re aiding in the work of resettling quests for cars and trucks for the Cuban refugees. mission use. Statistics disclose that since 1961 some 267,000 Cuban refu gees have arrived in this country. Of this number, 181,000 have been cared for by the Catholic agencies and 106,000 America's Economy King have been settled in new homes. Fnr the Best Deal Come To
Christmas Present for 72 Americans Return to U. S. Homes from Cuba BROWNSVILLE ( N C ) Cbristmas came a bit early for 73 American citizens. Their p.-esent-they're home. The role of Santa Claus was played by the department of immigration U. So' Cat hoi i c Conference. The 72 men, women and chil dren were amojlg some 2,000 U. S. citizens still residing in Cuba under the Red regime of Premier Fidel Castro. John E. McCarthy, director of the USCC immigration department· in Washington, said efforts will continue to repatriate the other Americans still in Cuba. Under McCarthy's direction, Hugh McLoone, director of the Miami, Fla., office,of the USCC department, came here with a staff to aid the returning .AJnericans. , CKS lIelps They arrived aboard a special ,flight from Havana to ,Mata moros, Mexico, then came here by bus. McLoone and his staff aided the homecomers with cus toms and health requirements processing, then started each family toward home destina tions. The arrival of the 72 came on the second anniversary of a program in which the, USCC immigration department has been a participant by which 89,370 Cuban refugees 'have
Confer P'apal Honor On Swedish' King
STOCKHOLM (NC) - Pope Paul VI conferred the Papal Gold Medal for ,1967 on King Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden on his 85th birthday. The presentation was made in the name of the Pope by Arch bishop Bruno Heim, apostolic delegat~ to the Scandinavian countries. Meanwhile Archbishop Heim 'presented a belated wedding gift to Princess Margrethe, heir Home Masses SACRAMENTO (NC)-Bishop presumptive of Denmark, ~ri'd Alden J. Bell of Sacramento has her French-born husband, Prince given permission for home Henrik. Masses in certain parishes within The gift is a bronze bust of the diocese, as pa~-t of an inten-' the princess' father, King Fred s1v~ parish home visitation plan. : erik IX, the reigning monarch.
been airlifted to the U. S. through 1,022 plane flights. This program was arranged by the U. S. and Cuban govern ments. The plane flights re placed boat crossing from Cuba to Florida during which an es timated 5,000 refugees reached this country between 1961 and 1965. These refugees were aided in a resettlement effort after their arrival in Florida by Catholic Relief Services and by the Miami, Fla., diocese. AsSured of Welcome When the plane flight pro gram was completed in late
Committee Bac;ks Open Housing MILWAUKEE (NC) - The judiciary-legislation committee of the Milwaukee Common Council has given unanimous backing to a city open housing ordinance which would dupli cate a state law already in 'ef
fect. The state law bans dis
crimination only in the rental or
sale of housing which is not oc
cupied by owners.
The ordinance was sent,to the committee by a 13-6 vote of the Council against ~onsideration of it on the floor. It will now go back to the Council with the 5-0 endorsement of the commit tee. ,. Father James E. Groppi' and other NAACP Youth Council leaders who attended the com mittee meeting expressed dis appointment that bhe ordinance proposed would be stronger than the state law. "We are tired," Father Groppi said, "of political structures '" (0 '" that 'give to the black man his rights in piecemeal fashion." The NAACP Youth Council has been conducting daily marches for a city open housing ordinance for three months.
Camp for Refugees MUNGOD (NC) - The U. S. Catholic Relief Services (CRS) will cGDstruct 800 living quarters for Tibetan refugees now being resettled here in India;
RAMBLER
Broadway Rambler Prepare Statement
INC.
'OTTAWA (NC)-The Catholic Bishops of Canada will present a statement opposing a proposal
to relax the abortion law to the
Canadian ,parliamentary com
mittee on health and welfare on
Tuesday, Dec. '19.
768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM, MASS on Rt. 138 CHARLES J. I;)UMAIS. Pres.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 1-4, 1967
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many other analogies in the political order, it limps rather badly-and to aqandon the metaphor--<:onceals' almost as much as it reveals about two radically different historical situations. In other words, it>simply will not do to equate the totalitarian German society of the 193Cs with the remarkably free and open. American society of. 196:7, nor will it do to suggest, without a number of refinements and qualifications, that there is as much need ,and .as much justi'fication for civil disobedience in the latter <IS there w.as in the former. . To put it another -way,there 15 a hidden fallacy.of major proportions in. this .all-teo-'facile equation .between two historical situations ·which, in ·fact, ..are only superficially comparable. . -Area. of Agreement In saying this, I am not sUg,.. gesting that there is no need ·or justification for civil disobedience in the United States at the present time. On the contrary, I would.agree with' John Cogley of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions:'-and with the other Time Magazine respondents who share his point of view-that the citizens of this country, like the citizens of every other country in the world, have the moral (but not the legal)' right .clOd, in fact, the duty "to resist 'evil, to refuse to ,coGperate with evildoing, to do all in their power :topersuade others that the evil they see is·evil, and to encnurage others to have no part in it." The fact that I might notalways agree with tHeir definition of what is evil and what is not is beside the point. Obviously they must follow the dictates of their own conscience, not mine or LBJ's 01' ~')bert McNamara's or Bishop X-.' or Father Y's or, for that matter, the collective 'conscience of the electorate. . Needless to add, they must also be prepared to take the consequences and to pay the) price 'of their civil disobedienee, 'ioeluding imprisonment if that's what the courts require ·of them~ Qua.lifying' Factors Granted, then, that citizens have the moral right and indeed the duty to 1 follow the dictates ()f their conscience even to 'the point of civil disobedience. But that's not the end of the story. ..., At least two ,additional factors must be' taken into account in '.any serious discussion ·of civil disobedience: 1) There are limits to justifiable civil disoberlience; , 2) . civil disobedience, as Bayard Rustin, amol1'g others, points out in the Times symposium, "is not
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,Speaking at the national col loquium of the Friends of the Univer.sityof Louvain here, the cardirial said that the Catholic University of Louvain is irre .placable because it can harmo nizl! and synthesize science and :faith. The criticism of the 'sci ences, he said. is one -of the fun damental duties of the Catholic university. Cardinal Suenens said that tbe dialogue between the Church aha Catholic university' educa tion must deepen in the ·coming
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or should be, the limits of civil disobedience? Is civil disobedience justified in the case of Vietnam? The New York Times Magazine (Nov, 26, 1967) put these ques'tions to 12
NAMUR (NC) - "The Church asks .that the harmonization of science and faith be stressed more and more," said Leo Car.., dinal Suenens of Malines-Brus
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What justifies an act of civil disobedience? What aTe,'
more or less evenly divided; pro and con. Some of t}:lose who replied in favor of civil disobedience in the case of Vietnam buttressed their 'a r gum e n t by drawing a· very sharp anaWgy between th e Germany of Adolf Hitler and the United States of LBJ. There is un- _ d{)ubtedly something to be said
C~.:dina I Say~
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By Msglr. George G. lHIiggiIms (IDir~ctoi", &Denal AdiOin IDe]l)t., USee)
well known scholarS and writers. Their answers were
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John Cogley explicitly notes, with regard to the' first of these . • . ,/;L. '.' t"-,::o two points, that "those opposed . ~, ,.,~ to the Vietnam' war .have· no 1
right to .destroy law and order
at home or to practice sedition J
or sabotage. To say they -did
would be to tum the case for
civil disobediences into a·charter .
of anarchism." . '"< ," .. £';P ,H" . <~Ix Anarchy Advocates ~-,~
Unfortunately, however, that's . precisely what· some .proponentS j ~
and practitioners of civil ·diso·,l,.~ bedience are doing - at the pres1
ent time. A couple ·of examples' 1
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The cardinal also stressed .th1? lmPWtanceof aid to developing
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Speaking 'Of deepening reE gious development .in the uni-' versity, Cardinal Suenens em phasized the need for lay theo logians. There is no resason, ~ said. to deriealize .and monopo lize theology. . lliny TI':'hec]ogians The ~ardina1 appealed for th2 university's oooperation in a study of pastoral problems. He urged the 'university to estab lish better contact with tJUl masses thr-ough communications media such as television. Men of 'science, be ,said, must popularize' their knowledge. In' ,concluding, the cardinal said that there is no need for ..the scientist to abandon his faithCJ11t to ',soft-pedal it.· Why .not, be asked, seek tb,e light with the aid of the light? Why extingui~ the ,brightness of the faitll ;and ,of Bev$tion1
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CHRISTMAS
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of a group at Columbia University called' The L..,. ",L-_ ."'.. c~ Resistance. stated r'ecent.lY .'that .~' WOBURN NATivE: Arch ending the war in Vietnam·tra·n-' 'bishop John J. McEleney, scends everything else and is therefore more important "than S.J., of Kingston, Jamaica, abiding by all' the traditional recently named to head the rules" including preservation of metropolitan See with su-f an drderly America.'~ fragan Sees of Montego Bay, Secondly, a Negro civil rights J . N B h militant blatantly told .a Conamalea,. assau, C1 a~as, gressional committee .a few' and HamIlton, Bermud~l, IS ,a weeks ago that he wouldn'f.hes-· , 'native 'iVoburn, Mass. The Hate to shoot Mrs. JohuS{)n ·if he New England Jesuit became thought it necessary to ,do S{) in Vicar Apostolic of Jamaica order to achieve equality for th · I f ' " e .in 1950, and in 1956 first N egro peop e -0 the ',Umted - ·B· h f R" t 'Ne States. ' . 18 Op 0 mgs on. . To'mouth this sort ·of ..anarchiPhoto. chal 'rhetoric .in the name'of.oivil
.disebedience'or tostomp.al'Ound
like American storm-troopers-3S 'seveI:31 hundred .anti-Vktnam dissenters .did in 'New Y-odt·City a -few weeks . ago .is ·to -strike ..at BUENOS AIRES (NC) - :A. the very heart of the democratic ogroup of Argentine priests have system of:government. protested against what they ~ . Political Argument "the boldness of self-appointed' .What about the 'political -rele';' post - conciliar clergymen 'who vance of civil disobedience, spe :advance ·erroneous ·and -danger cifically in the case of Vietnam? .ous ideas" on Church I'enewal. The 'political argument in 'favor The 64 priests spoke in a letter of civil disobedience,.as stated --published by the newspapell', by John Cogley and other con CIarin-sent to Archbishop Juan tributors to the Times sympo Carlos Aramburu of Buenos sium,is that- "dissent is not Aires. enough * ¢ *; asth~ dissent has .Two cases cited by the letter escalated so has the ·war." . concern a lecture on .marriage Therefore, the 3t:gument con:' problems given by Father Victor tinues, civil disobedience is ·not Heylam, a Belgian theologian, only poli tically relevant, ,but .ab at the medical school .of the solutely necessary .as ,the only Catholic 'University -ot San Sal means of reversing the present vador . here and· an interview U. S. policy with . regard to given to ·a local magazine by Vietnam. Maybe ·so. ' ,Father Alejandro Mayol For my own. part, however, I The priests' letter said that think we ought to listen very attentive1y to Bayard Rustin-who Father Heylam presented "too knows more about the theory venturesome ,ideas on birth con trol ·to be good." Father Mayol, and the practice of civil-disobe it said, gave "extreme views -on dience than most of us-when he Vietnam, birth control, sex re sayS' that "no algebraic formula lations and celibacy. can guarantee that a 'given act The letter further denounced of disobedience will 'stimulate "unapproved liturg'ical experi the necessary poll tical response." mentation" iri severali:hurches What disturbs him, he saxs and deplored what it called dis and what also disturbs the edi mantling churches of their rich . tors of the New York Times and collections of saints' images. The many other outspoken critics of latter was called a virtual re our Vietnam policy - is -that , jection of the practice of paying much of the recent anti-war re honor to saints. sistance "does not seek a ·politi
cal response .at all""" (and)
therefore becomes self-defeat-
ing."
Fl'Om -where I happen ,to be sitting-not far from the Con
NEW YORK (NC)-Orthodox 'gress, the White House -and the Metropolitan Nikodim ·of Lenin Pentagon - I am inclined to grad and Novgorod announced agree with this c-onclusioD. plans here for publicntiQf1 <of a I realize, -of cout;se, that many new Russian edition .of the proponents of civil disobedience Scriptures, the first Russian Or ... look at the matter -differently.' thodox edition prepared since the light of the cold hard ·facts the Soviet revolution. of American political life. Metropolitan Nikodim ·made So be it. I think they would ·be the announcement of the new well advised, however,to keep edition at a -!.lleeting of American reexamining' ~heir .position in Bible Society officials here..
BETHibI§MEM
of
OUR ,GIFT 19 YOU
Priests. Protest
Do ngerous ·Ideas.
Russians to Publish· New BibUe Edition
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This Christmas you'll ibe f'emembersd In tho Midn'ightMass m lBEtCh'ehem. Ttw celebmnt" f\rchbishop ·Albert Gori, will offer the :Mass for the members and benmctors of th1s Asscolao Non.••• How bebr CllJ1 .~ say 1blmkyoul :rlJ 18' mission countries (Where catiu)nc~ thoush few• .are mostly of the ·lEastem Rites) the Ho\11 ':f.atrnlr 'betps·llinlkms bm:ause }lmJfilad 1hJs1lOl> -omn. ·8tIRd 'Ileyalnths Gaza Sbtl (m>t -one <fiJ 4hem .e Chrlstil&D) .am ~eamIng itq makfnl, ~rtf.·'ttl8ABC$, at tt1e PanfiflcliJ~ ~ter· 1M the.BJJnd. Le;pers itn ~DiDa me car..cJ fOriby -ndW ,pdeata and .Sislers. '1JIa]lOOJ'MvD 4h..Go:~pettJl'.ellCbed~ttJemin~,pt.imq, lra13 ~8ffiop1a •••• 'ThIs season ~ . WOO'll you~.tbtrmiss1ons lin y.om'~-'-()IW ~rieSts:end$fs"~nd Oll:You.'1bJy.as1l tbtl 0triStfQii1d -to.!tilaa you ~1wa1jJ
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Director of Relief Reports on; Aid ~n Vietnam
Aida Alves, Student Advisor for 38 Years, Retires from Ful'-Time Position
WASIDNG'FON. (NC) the final day of the U.S. bishop's meeting here, Aux iliary :Bishop Edw8ll"d E.
For 38 yeal!'S, Miss AIda Alves 'of 25 Page Street, New Bedford, has been handing out Thmdaids, aspirin and encolU'agement to young students at the Swain School of De sign. First as secretary to the director'--she has outlasted five and' is working on her sixth-and therl as registrar, Miss Alves has deve!<>ped a deep interest in and an affec tion for "hel!''' students through the years. Tbe ad-. mil'ation society is mutual.. On Nov. 26, the annual
~
Swanstrom of New York. eXelm ~ve directoJr of CatlWlic Relief Services, read a statement with particular emphasis oq CRS aid m Vietnam. . student print show and saJe He referred to "some ~. the opened at the Swain School. It adverse publici~ t!llat has ap peared in tl!te Clttholic press in wa.§ dedicated to Miss Alves by the· students themselves. The ex oonnection with our eJ1£orts in hibit closes todaJr. Vietnam." "Tbat. night I felt like Miss B'rshop Swanstrom saId "it has . been reported! that tlJte major America," the sprightly AIda A I v e s admitted, "especially f;jOrtion of owr J!lll'ilJ!5ram in Sotltb . when t.hey gave me two dozen Vietnam was fOIr the members oe! the PoptmIar Forees and their l<mg-stemmed rea roses." Aq almost lifelOlllg communi-' dependents, but more impo$nt lly that we weue only ~sting . cant of St. John the Baptist tIrem at the JreqJuest oj! General. Church; "I was t.wo wben we moved to New Bedford !fl!'om Westmoreland! ~ause the Viet namese Government was .not Newport and rVE~ nevell' known any other parish," Miss Alves is ]l»8ying them any wages . . . always ready to help in parish Live in Destitution activities when time permits. "T~ fact is that we had been Bwring: her .yeaJ:S at the Swain assisting these men who make ap sort of a home guard for the· SChool, time has been in .short protection of their lime villages slq)ply. However, at the end of this month AIda Alves will .against the onslaughts of the Viet Cong since the middle of retire'. "I'lt come In three afternoons J'une, 1965'.'" a week just to help out,'~ she Bishop Swanstrom quoted says, "buJ I'll hlLVe some time· &om a' report bYQ the CRS di reotor in Vietnam that "the f<lr myself, t.oo." The '>time for herseN" may group most Ignored and most lIlleedy are the widows, orphans, s.till be sparse. Already the ac as well as: dependents and tive almost-retiree is planning .things she' can do when. she maimed of both popular and re closes the- chapter. on a five-day ~ional forces . . . "When these men are killed,. wurk week that often stretched inQ. the- night with work she tK' maimed, their families are brougb t home from school. !eft on their own, and! live in "I can spend more time in con complete destitution . • • We have agreed fo help these de . valescent homes, visiting old pendents. in cooperation with people who don't bav~' much company,· she says.. "I can get the . milita!1Y and both Catholic involved in things at Church. !lDd Buddhist ebaplains.... I can catch up 011 my sewing Aid to Norflb Vietnam amI· I haVe a six-room apartment Bisho{) Swanstrom also re . to take' ca·re of. rll keep busy." ferred to reports o'l/ Caflho1i4e aid Five feetalmost. five. "in hIgh heels," to. North . Vietnam, that Pope she says wistfully, Miss Paul VI "was attempting to send Alves admits that while the spir aid to Nortb Vietnam and· the it still is willing "my knees are q tI est Ion was ilmmediately getting weak." Nised' as to why)he AmerIcan U's- all' a qU~lStion of time, Bishops agency could not lend she says. some financIal support to such She recalls that "not too long a program." ago;'" she attendE~d a Swain stu He noted that "no agency, not deet's wedding. "Then I went evell the League of Red Cross to the hospital to visit the two SocIeties, is being given an op new babies. Now I have an in J!)Ortunity to esf;ablish a relief . . vitation to the wedding oX one program in North Vietnam. The of the 'babies.' Time flies." German and French Caritas or When she' first started at the ganizations have made a few sc~ool, "we had. just about 25 small shipments of medicines students. Now we have 81 and through East Germany and Rus next year we'll have 9c.. That's oia and it is now reported that the capacity of the school right tiley have been received in now,'"
North Vietnam, but nothing has
Despi te hel!' 33 plus years at faeen said of their use." the art school, Miss Alves never The bishop added that"even has taken any courses. "Never liR U.S. government regulations had the time," she says in her . Jl;)ermitted it, I am absolutely quiet voice, her eyes sparkling. oonvinced that the North Viet Will l\oIiss Students nam government would not give She will miss the swool and WI permission to freely assist people undoubtedly in need in her work there. Most of all, she will miss the students. that' area." "The).' spon me terribly," she admits. . Names MaryknoUer Frequently a :studenft will pop in t.he open duor just to say Guatemala Bishop VATICAN CITY (NC~-Pope hello. "Other times they'D look. in Puul VI has named a 11. S. Mary knoll missioner to b~ Auxiliary and' stop just long enough to Bishop of Guatemala City, an say, 'l\Iiss Alves. This is one of archdiocese conducted by secular the days you wish you were clergy. He is Father Richard J. twins, huh?'" She smiles as she remembers. Ham of Chicago. With retirement, AIda Alves Father Ham. born in Chicago m 1921, studied in Chicago sem witl have time to find new i1n terests to fill the large-size gap maries and completed his theo that will be left when she closes llogical training with the Mary knoll Fathers. He was ordained
m' 1948.
. For 1:0 years he traveled in the 111. S., speaking in parishes and sehools on the work of his soci ety. He was sent to Guatemala in 1958. He has been serving as pas itor of Our Lady of Guadalupe Jl)a.rish, one of the two Maryknoll llmrishes .in Guatemala Cit)'.
Aid Latin
Am~.m'oca
WASHINGTON (NC) - The U.S. Bishops National Annual Collection for Latin America has allocated $5,000 for a leadership training center in Coban, Guate mala. conducted by the Bene dictine Fathers.
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 14, 1967
5
Heads Committee On Ecumeni!m
L
WASHINGTON (NC)-Father Bernard J. Law, editor of the Mississippi Register, newspaper of the diocese of Natchez-Jack son, has been named executive director of the Bishops' Com mittee for Ecumenical and In terreligious Affairs, B ish 0 p John J. Carberry of Columbus has announced. The bishop. is chairman 01 the committee. Father Law, who will assume his duties here by Feb. 1, suc ceeds l\1sgr. William ·W. Baum, who is now chancellor of the diocese of Kansas City.- St. Joseph. Father John F. Hotchkin, a priest of the archdiocese of Chicago, is associate director. Father Edward H. Flannery, a priest of the diocese of Provi dence, is executive secretary for Catholic-Jewish relations. The Bishops' Committee for Ecumenical. and Interreligious Affairs is a committee of the National Conference of· Catholic Bishops. Its function is to rep resent the Catholic bishops of the U. S. in the efforts to achieve unity among Christians. It also seeks to further Cath olics' relations with the Jewish community. and to develop on a regional level the areas of dia logue witif' other religious tra ditions as well as with the sec . ularist tradition as these new dimensions have been opened by the Second Vatican Council.
ALDA ALVES
Reorganize Agency
her desk officially for the last to- the United- States from the . Azores. time. . Right now; though she doesn't She hopes to eto some travel ing. . - have time to plan ahead. She "Some- day, I'd like to see has a job· to clean up at Swain Portugal;' she says, adding that School-and she' doesn't have her ancestdrs, way back, came much time to do it.
RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) The' Brazilian b ish 0 P s are launching a reorganization of the news agency ASAPRESS, which they bought three years ago, in order to widen its coverage and increase outlets.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, 1967
Chu~ch
Villenium-But Not Yet
Support.
NJ®«:essciry Phase
Not Just Words
@{F C6~rist8(!jtncty
The Ohurches of the diocese echoed Sunday at every Mass with the voices of men and women, boys and .girls, all taking the Legion of Decency Pledge. Perhaps it would· be more accurate to say-reciting the words of the, Pledge. For' the words are said once a year. And there is every eVidence that the fulfilling. of them is far from being a smashing success. No matter what people may say, in an area of the S'ate as Oatholic as the Diocese of Fall River, if the Legion of Decency Pledge were taken and kept scrupulously by .all those who actually reci,te the words, there would be a drastic change in movie policy and the distribution of books and maga~ines that would be openly evident,· and this, within a very few weeks. Noone call seriously say that undesirable movies and · unwholesoyPe magazines are patronized exclusively or even largely by the non-Catholic citize~s of the, area. Such a statement would be an insult to these people and an as eauM; on the truth. -. : '.. . . . .. '. The fi.rst course of action is for Catholics, those wbG Ilaid the words on Sunday, to live up to the Pledge they have taken. . The next step is for them make their views on these matters known. Edmund Burke once wrote: "All thaJl; :is necessary for· the forces of evi-lto win i~ the world is fur enough good ~en to do nothing." <>
KANSAS CITY (NO) ,...., Too much emphasis on Church law as the basis f()1" Chlirch support was cited here by Father Roderick Bin;.. dery, O.5.B., as a prime reason for the failure of Catholic theo--. logians to develop a satisfacto~ theology of Church support. Father Hindery, a profesSOJ1 of moral theology at Immaculata · Conception Seminary in Concep tion, Mo., addressed the conven.. tion of the National Council for' ·Diocesan Support Programs.' ' · In appealing for financial s~ port the Catholle Church hee ; "appealed the." mere law rather, 'than the' Gospel, sanction ra~ ·than value," he said. " , " 'Calling" Church support. , :"defillite moi'8l responsibiii.,. . ,Father Hindery stated: . In ChrIs&"s Image
to
.iChrist, If Be were active 88« .. theologian in 1967, might . . . . be'- pop~lar ,because lie sPoke 01 : money' and the obligation to giwl money quite often. He had mucti ·to say about debts, taxes, esti mates,. affluence, capital gains. profits, security, financial wo~ sacrifice and motives for givin~' A newspaper article on a leading American composer Church s'!Pport, Father BiD Pennsylvanians Bo'mbard Governor Shafer
started in· an ordinary way by relating· the composer's dery said, "Is "one necess~ works and an accou,nt of his latest travels. But in just a With· Petitions for Educational Aid
phase of the whole Christian life. few paragraphs the article turned to th~ nauseating &C The Christian needs to give • A bilI which would permit the be a more thorough Christian ,oount of the composerS material possessionS-a yacht in the HARRISBUR(} (NC)-Almost . 150,000 . Pennsylvania Catholics state to "pur~hase" secular edu Mediterranean, a Rolls-Royce convertible and a swimming, have sent telegrams to Gov. Ray- cation of s!udents in non~publie ·to be a Christian in the image q:I pool in Palm Springs. · m o n d . P. Shafer asking for pas- .schools is now pending in the Christ, His Father." The .listing of these status syml)ols was done in such sage of some form of state aid to House of Representatives· but people did not ask support for a jejeune way that it would be· laughable if .it were not non-public schools. that bilI ·exclusively in their significant of something deeper-the assumption that pos_ Eighty-five thousand tele telegrams. sessions ~are the goal and proof of a successful life. grams have been sent from the , The· wire appeal was coordi . . . Philadelphia archdiocese and nated by Citizens for 'Educational SAGINAW (NC~ - Bishop A man is poor indeed and a reporter young indeed· if . 15,000 from Allentown. The bal Freedom, whose president, Jo they think that a catalogue of things complete with price ancecame largely· from· Pitts . $eph· Grengross, denied that It Stephen S. Woznicki of Saginaw: has ordered that Catholic higli · tags can sum up a man's happiness or degree of Success. burgh and Harrisburg. There are was either a "Church-state" or ·schools operating· at a defid eight dioceses in the state. religious, issue. ,be given financial help by pap. There is much poverty in America if no other standards Most telegrams a~ked the gov"It is a question of helping · are con·sidered. Not so long ago a popular singer was asked ernor to. "act at once" on behalf children receive equal aid from ishes in his See which do not have high, schools. about his early life when he and his wife of a quarter of of "legislation for non-public the sta,te in securing their'edu. The Michigan prelate ~ a century were just married. He summed things up wisely school children." cation." , .' gave the diocesan board of ed 'I . and well when he said that in those early days he and Rosie ucation authority to determine in 'whieh Catholic high school had all the things. that money could not buy. . , grade school graduates maY, Much more significant than yachts and cars and swim . enroll. ming pools. Bishop Woznicki' said he wiD personally.make assessments 011: FLINT. (NC)-The president decade ,and some will go out of 'area parishes based on thelr of the University of Detroit stlldbusiness. , . . ability to pay. Catholic higher education will "B.ut these few' will not be The two decisions came after There are two ways of looking at the many appeals become stronger than ever as ty,pical," he declared.· "On «be St, Andrew school boaw4. being P1,lt forth for various worthy purposes. A Sunday it responds to the challenge of contrary, the typical catholic the called a meethlg of area parlsti newspaper published an entire page listing the social activi Vatican Council n. colleges and universities that representatives to work out a ties· aimed mainly at raising funds for charitable and reFather Malcolm Carron, 5.J;, ~ave ha4 strengths. in the past way for the high' school to ope'J'o arch purposes.
told the First Friday Club of : will now become evep. stronger ate despite a large deficit. ..
Flint that many laymen and as they capitalize on the spirit Of .. Later Bishop' Woznicki sail 'One reaCtion i'!l to be annoyed at ·the nuisance 'valu~ clergy have been unduly renewai unleashed by Vaticrm his thinking in the St. Andre. , of these appeals-,-they make a. person uncomfortable if alarmed by publicity given to n.", . case will apply wherever sit& , . he ignores them and poorer if he does not. . new lay boards of control at , . Happy 'ffeet . . nar' situations exist, iil tile But .a second and! mOre worthy 'aittitude' is· become such places· ~ the ~versities ,The co~ncil's pronounc~ment8 dioc~se. '. f· .. ··t h h d ·11.L..~··· of Notre ,Dame, St.. Louis and "are haYing, it .profound and .' H;e said the. purpQse of' tile aWl:!-re. ,~. ~us.' ow ~uc .. ~. WI U~ eXlst, 1:t:l ~very . Detroit. The changes were made happy' '~~eCt • upon CathoDe new diocesaQ placement pelie;r' commumty. For all that Americans are, supposed. to be a in part because of the council . bilth!'lr, .~du¢.atlon," ,F, a. (~, ~ r is .to . use . the Catholic hi,. materialistic peOple, they show themselves srirpriaillg ready. 'ni~ndate to involve ,laymen Carron ·stC!ted. He said lay tal 'schoolsmore 'efficiently" , . to give of their own resources and to 'p.ry' 'their'neighbor . m.ore deeply in the. adminis~ra-·. ~.~t. yii~ en~a,n~' CathoJi~.~: . , . ti f Ch h affa versities,. ,and that ability win loose from' some' of his. The charitabieagencies "and the .; on () urc lrs~ become,.., ih.'~. ,0.nl.y·' le.adership. test. ~·I·s·ho· p. s of·· Kan'''s' a~ ., h k'd ·tten· b h· ". d' '-. " , "Some people· seem to fear ~ researc . ~~r un erwrl . y t e v'anous . ~lyes"propams that sharing legal control of recognize~ by'progressive Catb. ' and actIVItIes are proof that these are fulfIllIng a purpose these Catholic universities with . olie institu.t:!ons of higher ec'hi For." <:on~e,rei1c~' and are worthy of support. laymen is tantamount to some cation.,'·..,.', . . KANSAS CITY (NC)' - The .. . . ' .., ' k i d f . . th be "I am not saying that ·aU the Catholic bishops of Kansas haw And they testify to the goodness that lies in People. .n.o a glve-away- e deans, Vice' preSIdents and pres established an 'interdiocesan • . . ' gmmng of the end for these l'dents '.0'·f·' Catholl'C colleges an'd -------'-----------~------...;....... private institutions,'" F nth e r " . .ti· '11 b .. 1 . .. ganization, the Kansas CatholJe Carron admitted. ' umversl; es . WI. . e aym~, . Conference, to lumher. the s~ be explamed. . action aims of the Church 'on a "These changes do mdeed· "I am. sayin'g ·that virtu nll , .. b u. t 1't isth ~ statewide level. mark a b egmmng, e a n of these jobs are ,now· open beginning of a new and greater.. to laymen as ·welf as to clergy. The conference will seek a era ·of these universities," he They will be filled competitive- _ nulliflied approach in presenting c l a i m e d . . 1)', and this friendly competl- the position of the Church to an Father Carron conceded that tion is creating a very healthy, the people of the state. (\1:1:'''' '\L. NEwcDAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL' P~VER a few Catholic schools will be- very vital situation." Its composition will include II I Father Carron said the spirit board. of governors made up Of Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioce'se of Fall River" come secular. during' the next of Vatican II has brought a new' the bishops of Kansas, which , _ 410 Highland Avenue . ' . . . "openness", to Catholic unlver- ..forms one ecclesiastical pro"... Fall River. Mass. 02722 . 675-7151 A S,k PermlSSIQn slties. He noted, for example, ince, a·nd representatives of tbe
PUBLISHER MUNICa (NC)-The German that at·the University of Detroit .. diocesan educational, welfare
Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. Catholic Bishops' Conference has law students are inVQlved In' a .. and legal offices, and an execu
asked the Holy See to. grant per- program to extend legal aid to . ·tive director,', Vincent W. De
GENERAL MANAGER . ASST. GENERAL MANAGER mission for laymen to distribute : the .poor, while architecnUal·~ Coursey, - of ,Prairie :Vmase.
.,. Rev.' Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A: . Rev. Joh'n 'P. Driscoll . Holy Communion at' Mass on . Students, :are examining urbrm·· DeCoursey' has ,long, been 3Sl11O-, ., . MANAGiNG EDIT~,R'" .,~, .:,. 5undayswhen churches are very. 'renew$! problems·· facing" como. ·-ciatcd 'w:ith· ,the· ..KaTisas 'd~' , ~rowded;. ", . , """;', • muniiieiiD the .DetroitareL :,. indust·ry:. '.''', ."."", : . . , Hugh J. Golde~ ;. ...' "', ~.' ;.:,
Telegrams Ap'lenty
Standard of Success
Pc Irishes to, Aid High Schools
Jesuit Educator Predicts· Catholic· Colleges to Become Strong'er
Nuisances?
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Glee Clubs,· Chorales 'of Area Planning, Rehearsing .Spec:ial Programs for Yule Seasol1l
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 14, 1967
7
Theology Schools Plan Cooperatfiwe
Hear that music? It's glee clubs and choil-s throughout the Diocese practicing for Ohristmas programs. At Bishop eassidy in Taunton the combined glee club and freshman (morale, directed by Sister Stephen Helen, will present its ooncert aIt 8 Sunday night, "'he theme ,ed b Y d'IscuSSlon . . f or \i IJ lIUW sessIons Dec. 17. Wl'+:h "Ohrist the Light of the juniors and seniors with the World," the program will pUl1pose of formulating a defini-
WASHINGTON (NC) - The<! Washington Theological ConsoJ'a tium, an association of semina ries and I,miversity theological faculties, has been established here.
The 33-member association in-
eludes the school of sacred theol~
include traditional carols from tion of morality and comparing ogy of the Catholic University many lands. Cynthia Cruz will it with those offered by philosoof America; Wesley Theological do a ballet to the "Coventry phers from the time of Artistotle Seminary (Methodist) of AmerCarol" and Sandra Lucy will to the present day. ican University; all the religious Advent at tSt provide guitar a c c o m p a nactivities imen · communI'ti es w h'ICh maintain
10 "I Wonder As I Wander," Joseph's Prep have included .. the 0 log i cal faculties in the
sung by Alice VelOZ!!. Also heard a special Marian program honWashington area, and the theol . will. be a violin, piano and flute oring tqe Immllc~late,Concep- . . ogy departments of Trinity Col 'rendition of "Gesu Bambino", by tion, a luncheon with postulants lege and Georgetown University.
" ~nna ,White, Donna Cole 'and and novices of the St. Joseph Purpose of the consortium is ,Pamela Gilberti. An added j at- oo~unityanda pilgrimage to "to promote greater cooperation .;AttleboJ:'o•. traction will be the award. of La:.·~~aletteShriIie; ,_ ..... • . • among seminaries, schools: and l1' money tree.' Colt€geACcep~" .~--.__..._-.,-departments .of theology, wiUt a '," , . BOOK- STORE :'·Doing a r\1shi:pg business is the book. view to strengthening. the pro.. "During. the week of December 1'Z the' ·Bishop Stang Dramatic Susplms~ ·is.. over for 'm~n:v' "'''store 'a't$is~op,Oonnolly High' :SCh~l~ Fall Gust<npehl ' grams' theological 'formation Club, directed by Sister Mary Diocesan seniors, .but most are aN, from left, Johil Cheney, Paul Domingue, Joseph B<lI"MT, . 'and' ·education." . l .' ... -~... F ~er 'Michael J. Scanlon, ...eresa, Wi'11 presen t a Ch' rIS tm as sOO watching their mailboxes whilestJorekee.pers pro tern ar.e Joseph V.era and Paul Dernplay, "An Empty. Gesture," at fur news of acceptances at nurO.S.A., professor of dogmatic the North Dartmouth school and sing .schoOls, colleges, etc., Ac-' ers. ~heology a.t AugUStinian College, .. is secretary of the consortium. also for local· hospitals and shut- cepted by. St.. Anne's Hospital . ·ins. Program coordinator will be schOOl of nursing are Stangites Not· only do the 'tutorees benefit . cial ceremo~y with Miss Barbara He said' he nopes the organiza .' "Cathy' Sweeney, who'll also 'aid Kathleen Borg~!s, Joan HaYeS, "b~t the hitdrs "are forc~ to con- O'Brien of the Bristol·County i tian will soon. be able' to' sign · . ;'Sheila Mahoney with costumes Margaret Iszdebski and Kathy cretize their own ideas and ap- Agricultural School as guest up as members several schools .", 'arid makeup.' , Pietkiewiez, Also in at St. Anne's pr!>aches and al~o gain a certain speaker. And June Z8g91, lYIar,;, that haye not yet joined. ' These include Virginia (Epis , , " '1'hree 'prSformances of a is Vivian Bacon of :SHA Fall senSe of accomplishment." Con- . garita Procopio, Suzanne 'Braga 'Christmas 'concert will be offer- River. Also at SHA, Mary Lou cretizing the tutorial picture at ..and Margaret Aleixo, ~present- ." copal) Theological Seminary; the "~ by the Cecelian Glee Club of ': Burns, Susan Cal}tin ,and Pamela Coyle, 97 freshmen are being" eel, the Tauqton SCh<lOI,iq. a "Howard University School of .. JesWi Mary Academy, Fall River. teDl10~ have been accepted by tutored by 27 'juniors and seniors ."state your views" meeting at ~ligion; the George Washing All will be held in the school Stonehill. June Neves of SHA in 'algebra, generat science and' the TauntonDaily Gazette office. ton University religion depart auditorium at 2:30 Saturday", ;h3$, be~n n~tified by Northeast- French. There's been a ~otice- ' 'Discussed was the' American po- ment, ,and religious education afternoon Dec 16 and at 8 Sun-,,' em Umverslty that she has been able .. improvement in ID-lldes,'sition with regard to 'the Viet-. department of the Catholic Uni day 'nigh~ Deri. 17 and W ednes~ , .. :a:~epted on the early decision particularlY in 'algebra, . say nam war. versity of America. day night, Dee. 20. The Saturday. .plan..' At Cas sid y Hi g h, NHS officers. .,' Bishop S~ T h r 0 ugh the consoriiwn, performance will be for religious" 'iKa~leen Delaney and Maureen The Dominican Folk MUsic •.. 'December 16,. 17, 18 , "A Father Scanlon said, member of .the Diocese. Theme of the, K~nneyhave each received a Club has chosen officerS, namely' Christmas Star" will be pre- schools will now be able to draw '3M,A concert Is "One Stl:\.r" and . $400 boardoftrosteesscholarship Collette Lafonte, president;· 'sented by the Stang Music De- on. the resources of 185 profes 16 numbers will be included on to Union Hospit~ in Fall River Paula Labounty, vice-president; ·partment. The Freshman-Soph- sors, as well as share each the program, ·with, Mrs. Oscar and Lorraine Grasso has also· Sharon Andrade, treasurer. Also omore Glee Club will open the others' libraries, classrooms and. Barnabe as accompanist. A spe- been accepted at Union. at. DA many Ohristmas projects program of familiar and tradi- other facilities. eial presentation yesterday ~- . Not lacking either are college are under way. They include tiona! Christmas favorites. High ternoon was for elementary representatives to explain the preparation of' Christmas bas- lighting this' group will be "The echool youngsters in the'JMA charms of their particular cam- kets, entertainment at veterans' . Twelve Days of Christmas".. . Dedica.tes College area. puses to bigh schoolers. DA girls hospitals and organization of The Junior-Senior mixed' For Seminarians Religious. win be guests of heard addresses by Miss Claire children's parties.'. chorus will sing "Cbristmas in bonor at the Ohristmas program Giannamore of Rhode Island Mt. St. Mary debaters attended SCripture" assisted by the' draQUEENS (NC) - Auxiliary planned by; students at St.·· College and Miss Mary Sullivan a novice debate tou~nament at matic club's tableaus. Solos by Bishop Johri J. Boardman of .Joseph's Prep 'School, Fall River, of Katherine GibbS Business Mt. St. Charles Academy in I Paul Franco and Cynthia Assad Brooklyn dedica.ted the new Ca for 2:30 .Sunday afternoon, Pec. SChool. Miss Giannamore also Woonsocket, with first team, will be featured iJI!, ,this part of thedral College of the Immac at Blessed Sacrament ~arish visited SHA Fall River, - and members Cathy Polak, Dawn' the program. . utate' Conception here in the ··.han. In charge ..of arrangefuents .others making the trip to SHA Hannafin, Carol' V~oncellos A group of carolers will' en- presence of two cardinals. are Sister Paul Joseph and Miss were Barry Smith of Johnson and Laurie Sampson winning ; tertain midst falling ·snow. ,The Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of Camille ·Audette. and Wales Business School; and fiv~ out Of six debates. 'I:he sec- Stang Concert Band will play Washington and John Cardinal Also on that popular Dec.. 17 David Lawrence of U Mass. Re- ond team, including Madeline "Sleigh Ride" and accompany Cody of Chicago attended the date will be the Christmas con-' 'versing the process were several Lemaire,Cheryl Dean, Nicole the Glee Club in the final num- dedication. cert of Sacred Hearts Academy, SHA girls who trekked ·to the Letendre and' Jane Arsenault, ber, "Halleluia Chorus". Fall River. It'll be offered at· SMTI campus for a meeting with . had a 1-5 record.' Director of the Glee Club is 8 that night in the school as";'; Barry Phelps~ , A Bible Vigil- marked the' Sister 8t. Bernadette, S:N.D: and The group is sending packages · .. sembly hall, under direction of'·"· Formation of a journalism feast of the Imacu~ate Con,cep'; Mr. Alipio Bartholo directs the to the Appalachian area, bring ing bundles to local homes and t Mrs. Tobias Monte, and will fea~"~; league is under consideration by tion for Jesus-lvl:ary' CYM'ers band. tore traditional and modem' .'representatives of sehoolpapers and· Prevost ·YCCL ',members; . ,TJle latest noti~, of accept-. hospitals, and 'providing toys Christmas carols. Also' going a':"'.' who met· at Stang High' last and also at JMA, seriior prom an.ce~ by Stang Seniors are: and clothes for needy families. caroling are SHA's Parables, week. committee members plan a cake WIlliam Heroux and George - who are offering a ChristmaS More strenuous is the new sale at Bradlees department ~liver to Northeastern. Univer EL~CTRICAL . program to guilds and organi- item on the agenda at Coyle store Saturday, Dec. 23. Slty. Contractors zations throughout the greater High: interscholastic wrestling; With Christmas. c1os~ at hand, Fell River area. . Wrestling, say 'advocates, .deWelcomed Baek , Spartans are putt10g 1Oto ~rac. skill' enduirance, strength, G' l' t ST'iA F a II Ri ver we . 1 . tice the saying, "giving .is. " far . · mands 8tu d ent G overnment . aggressiveness alertness and . Ir s' .a. .n. . ' . . ~ more bl esse d th an .receIvmg. ;- " . ' , ".. ' ! .. . comed SIster FranCIS SebastIan Tbe Student Council ~s sponsor- . As Je~gag~ 10 ~~" Co~le, _, and Sister Anne Dolores on their, in'" a drive ]ed by 'Uenry Ward April seems f~r off, but:,,, agl~tYti'.to i" 1 compe "foil'ow~r~ .... ' an, ' " d,president ,f'> ... , SCh 00 s are a rea y preparIng:;" • ht rsaredivided1Otomne • .. . . ' ,ret urnt0 l c ~sses and Paul"Desrosiers, for Student Go~ernment Day in I w.~.g, c~asses and matche~ are automobile .. acc,ident necE;~~itat.. ", treasurer called' '''Op'eration: Boston b~ el~ti~g representa..··; d~~~~ .. II1:to. .u~r~ t~O-.rn,lOUt~ . ' :ing ,t~eir hQsp.it~li~atiori.. A~d;i Mall-Call":'The • go31 '·of the' tives wholl ald 10 the annua1:::~At p' " . "'. ,'::'.' . SHAers at:e preparmg fortheI~, 'program is being ':co~ordin'ated-' . student takeover of state offices.,,;·, .' ,. r~v9st" ~ stU4entB, ar~~nnl;la1 g~~m~et ~,th tryout.s, ",by 16 .areascl;t()Ols." .,~ .... '. ,.'i At Prevost in 'Fall River the on the fl~~ quarter hon~t: .roll.. .for,sophomo,re,sand. Ju~i'tlt:s :held' . Stang's C.S.M.C., moderated . 944 County St. · ".Nat~onal H0D:0r Society spon-, i! 1V!!>nE;y.:,ral~mg; ,~vents. .at ~he., Sunday: ... morning: " . Meari~hile by Sister Cecilia Marie, S.N.o.'· I sored an e~ectIon which .res~lted. , ,Flalld"edRlver po~ s sc~()()l.have m~ . IPe~~eI:~ of t~e; ne~ SHA .drama:,:.1 is' '. pllotirlg l'Project' Joyful'l, Ne~ .Bedford inthe.,cholce of Paul LIzot~e ali .."c u a top LP album r ..ffle . club,. the TrInIty Square Play school representative. Patricia sponsored weekly by ·th~ YCCL house, attended a perform'ance Maurano will represent Domiri- and a penny sale sponsored by of Julius Ceasar at the Rhode lean Academy, also in Fall River. the memory .book staff. Island School of Design auditorSeniors at Cassidy.High view-. In basketball news, DA was ium; ed "From Generation to Gen- defe~ted last. week by Bishop The entire SHA student body . eration': and "Phoebe" in prep- C,assIdY and JMA won a 3~-36 paid tribute to the memdry· of aration for a visit by Sister· ~ctory over Wes~port HIgh. Msgr. John H. Hackett' at 'a' stu Beatrice, administrator of St. Basketb~ll co-captams. at JMA dent Mass Dec. 8, while a special Margaret's Hospital, Dorchester, are Momque Goyette and K~ren. memorial Mass for Msgr. Hack which cares for unwed mothers; Pacheco. At SHA Fall Rlver ett and Mother Anna Gertrude MANlJFACT1JREBS
The religious explained the prob';' they:re Judith Sullivan and Jac- was attended by a student dele . 1erns of the young mothers and' . ·queline .Proulx,; an:d . t~e SHA gation at Sacred Heart Church. how.the hospital helps in meet..:: :' team has sco:red Vlctorlesover An Advent rally marked the of OWSTOL .COUNTY
iIlg them. :.' ,Feehan and· New Bedford High.' penitentIal seasOn' at Bishdp Cas ", The :films,w~re also see~ ~Y,''': ... , Two.W~'8treet "',siciy,.'hi~hlighted·~Y ~~ditatioris THE , AREA'S MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK
... -' . ,.,' boys at CoyleBigh School i n ' . ". on' the songs of Slmonaild .Gar . "Taunton, in addition to "You'rf{'" National Honor SOciety'· tutors ·funkel' arid 'a: "ch;eer'praYer." , .' ATTLE:S~RO ·F'ALIL.S _ , ': No' GOod:' and"'Very Nice, Very~ lift Coyle'High :have 'discbvered' Also' at CasSi'd-y"; the "student NORTH' ATrLEBORO.·,. MANSFIELD '. "'''~'''The 'shoWings were' 101- "'tb~J;"project isill'lWo-wi!Y street/ ;'eoUhcil'waS' 'installed at '!l'spe
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conege Trustees Affirm Autonomy
THE ANCHOR':-Oiocese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, 1967
Women Units Aid Mightily In War Against Poverty
NOTRE DAME (NC) -Tbe new board of trustees of SL Mary's College passed a resolu tion which rejected an outright merger with neighboring Noke, Dame University. The resolution; already ap proved by Notre Dame's tm& tees and 'faculty, says, that the' two schools will remain "autOll'" omous but cooperating instilla tions." Despite the action, St. MarTa . College president Sister Ma~ Grace charged that the schoolll intend an arrangement which is much closer to merger than to autonomy. , '. She ,also, objected that 1lhe board-five nuns, two priests and five laymen-was not con stituted according to the eo). lege's' statutes. She hinted that some alumnae might file suit challenging the board's action,; , At the same time, the board elected Mother Olivette, sup~ iior of the Sisters of the Holy Cross: who own the college, president of the board and Sis ter Gerald, treasurer of 1libe order, as secretary. Sister .Mary Grace charged that this action maintains con trol of the college "in the hands ,~f the religious group. This is not in line with modern trends in ¢~tholic higher education."
:By Mary Tinley Daly She is a slim and poised 23-year old Negro girl, flying llefJhe friendly skies" for United Air Lines iill her attraetive blue uniform· of stewardess. Her name is Betty Patterson 'and she has been flying United for 15 months. We first saw her at the head table at a Council of Negro Women and 'Oonference on Women in the United Church Women. Its aim War on Poverty. That head is to frame and carry' out effec-, table ineluded wives of eight tive volunteer service programs eabinet members, three Coneresswomen, Mr. and Mrs. R.
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against poverty throughout the , 1 nation. Focus of WICS concern is ,,' all those young women likely to Sargent Shriver. remain at the bottom of AmeriTV star Barbara W a 1t e r sand ,ca's economic, and social ladder &tty, Furness, unless speCial efforts are made )lead of· Conon their' behalf. J\1D1ers .Affairs. ' Vice President Hubert 'H. Humphrey, 'addressi!ig the conWith her aplomb, C1e could hold !ference, urged the women to ~r own among find jobS for teenagers hi their them. ~ e t It y own cOmmunities, 10 "call thePatterson is the mayor of your town" and see jirst member of what' can be done to employ the Women's Job teenagers in the poverty group, Corps to become an airline stew- also to see that children of the ardess. yet, only two yearfl ago, poor be sent to Summer camps she was desperate !for, a job and which, he said, were 15 to 20 per heard indirectly of the Job (cent empty last Summer. Corps. "Because of it," she said, Among the efforts of the War. "I s able to further my educa- on Poverty, ,delegates were ti wa d to become a whole per- c- shown a film made in Spanish .. on"an Harlem in a Catholic Charities ". 'College Students lEnd son. ' " ,sPonsored center,' ,a "Foster Boycott of Classes Betty is just one of the many ,Grandparents" program. In this oalvaged by the Job CorpB, the program, the physically and ALUMNAE HONOR SENWJR,S: Miss Pamela Cor~irO, "NEW HAVEN (NC)- The residential program for girls 16 emotionally able over 60 years v boycott of classes at Albertus through 21 who are out of school of age and with an· income of school captain at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River; pre- "Magnus College here ended and out of work and conducted less than $18'00 a year, or $3,000 sents traditional bouquet to Rev. John R. FoIster for of-'· ~fter the college administration by the Office of Economic Op:" fur a couple, are paid $1.50 an fering to our Lally at alumnae 'reunion and reception for revoked the suspension, of 2:1 portunity. hour for a20-hour week to pro- seniors. Three hundred students and alumnae attended. student leaders.. Some. 600 students boycotted Among other efforts, mQst of v~de loving care and attention to classes last week to protest the them familiar . by now are:' small children who, fur one annual event. month-long controversy at the VISTA (Volunteers In Service reason or another, are not living Catholic women's, college· here. To America); Head Start for un- with their parents. The :specific dispute between. derprivileged children; tutorial, Wonderful Volunteers! the students and administration health, legal and emplo~'ment' Noting the tremendous in involved. curfew and dress programs as well as programs volvement of women in the !fight regulations. \for migrants and .Indians. against poverty, Mr. Shriver After negotiations, the stu 'Woman .Power' pointed out. that hundreds of dents and administration work anti - poverty programs have 'ed. out a plan for a provisional At the' aforementioned con- been administered successfully, A gift of fragrance of one sort pU:t a smashing scent on the mar .. government, composed of ad ference, more than 300 officials by women's organizat!ons; more ministration, faculty and stu of national women's organiza- than 300,000 volunteers have. 'or another is for the ,most part ket called Miss Balmain. The de 'dents. signer describes it as having
110ns were given an across-the- served in Head Start and many foUnd on everyone's shopping board look at the work being thousands more t})ave served in list, yet the choosing of said "clear green, woodsy, smoky
scent is as delicate a subject as tones." So if you have a clear . Ohio Colle'ge to Change .;, done for the po()r. The confer- < a wide variety of other anti ence was under sponsorship of green woodsy girl on your gift politics and religion. Many wom the Office of Economic Oppor- poverty programs.,list, here is her present. The .Offici'al Name in July Nevertheless, he said there is . en use a certain house of Christian Dior also has tunity and the Departments of much to be done. For example: . ,perfume as' a '. COLUMBUS (NC)-The Co'}.. .its own fragrance on the market Labor and Health, Education Head Start is reaching only trademark and - lege of St. Mary of the Springs called Miss Dior. ' and Welfare. ab')l.lt a third of the children ,if this is the here w~U ohange its name tl)' '. ' case and 'you Male CosDletics R. Sargent Shriver, Director of who need it; the same for com - Ohio Dominican College, e£This will, be a big year not , feotive July 1, 1968. ()EO, noted that at least cine mil- bined Youth Col'pS and Job know which one , only for the female cosmetic in lion volunteers have partici- Corps; health, legal and literacy she uses, you Sister M. Suzanne, president
dustry but for the zooming male of the co-educational 1,000-stu
pated in both public and private programs are reaching less than have no prob-' cosmetic lines which have be programs related to the War on one-third and adult job training lem. But if her dent college conducted by :D0
come big business. One company, minican nuns, said th,e new name
Poverty in the past three wears. efforts are reaching only 10 per preference in fragrances is tremendously successful in the which had been discussed "fOIl'
Among the efforts, Mr. Shriver cent of those in need. wbman's field, has introduced a more than 20 years," will make
pointed out that more than 10,Much remains to' be done and elusive, then be collection of preparations for "a legal distinction between the 000 women volunteers' from. all the representa,tives of those prepared for a bit of trial and _ men called the Braggi line. Such college and the motherhouse of religious and racial groups have more than 300 women's organi served through WICS - Women zations throughout the country error. Or perhaps I should risk things as Facial Cleansing Bar, the Sisters~ach of which now Facial Pickup, Protective Out 'has the name St. Mary ,of the in Community Services - in were' urged to "get on with it." : a bad pun and say if, you're go 'jng to spend a cent for a scent door Cream, and Nightcap Facial Springs." The college was found screening applicants for the then you'll have to do a bit of Massage are but a few of the' ed in 1911 as 11. girls' school ancf Women's Job Corps. WICS was " det~ctive work to find out the Flint ·first friday Club items in this collection that went' "co-ed" in 1964. ' :, incorporated 'in 1964 by mem , type of person' you're buying it urges the male of the species to bers of the National Council of To Meet on fridays ", for. /' take as good care of himself Catholic Women, National Coun FLINT (NC)-The Flint First as does the female.. Perhaps the Until you know the personal ,;, . cil of Jewish Women, National Friday Club for years has been ity of the perfume receiver, .most outstanding item in this I: O· OJ.. JeaA SAVINGS
5 ,~ J 10 a SYSTEMAnC
. the target for quips by out-of , you're entirely in the dark, but collection is Face Bronzer that
town speakers. But come Janu once you place her in her nice alloWs a man to retain a year-
Latin American Aid MONTHLY DEPOSITS ary and tpat'll all be changed. , little niche; sporty, sophisticated, round tan. OJ.. a 1""ESTMENlT Program Expanding' A recent article pointed out' Invariably the out-of-towners dramatic, etc., then all you have • 10 year SAVINGS that very few women wear per-' WASHINGTON (NC) - Ken would remark the Michigan com to do is race to the nearest cos N9TICE ACCOUNTS fume or cologne daily. Perhaps neth E. Boxler, administrative' munity had the only First Friday' metic counter and describe her , this percentage would be upped 01 a REGULAR assistant of the Latin America Club which met on Mondays. to the well-informed' salesgirl. • 10 year SAVINGS
Bureau, U. S. Catholic Confer Considering the club has been If she turns out to be the if: more women were presented' ence" believes U. S. diocesan operating since 1958 and lack of sporty, woodsy type then you with fragrances as a gift. This
participation' in Latin, America space on Fridays in a centrally could try asking for, Tweed. is one item that most of us hesi
Cooperation Week, scheduled located dining room was the rea This is' a fragrance that was very tate to buy for ourselves yet
generally Dec. 10 to 17 through son for the Monday meetings, the popular when ,this writer was one that we all adore getting.
out the nation" will double ex- joke became threadbare and un first experimenting with per pectations. ' • funny over the years. Club Concert Bank By MaD
fume and there seems to be a "'lrhis year a record 75 dio The club has -announced that revival of its popularity this sea IThe Cathedral Boys' Choir cd
'We Pay The Postage ceses throughout the United beginning in January the club son. A more worldly and chic Fall River, under the directiOll' StateS"have announced that they will switch meetings from a maid might prefer one of the of Rev. William· G. CampbeD, • YARMOUTH SHOPPlNI, . . . will observe Latin American downtown hotel to a nearby scents that are being created by will give a concert tonight at 8 Cooperation Week," Boxler said. Knights of, Columbus hall-:-and the Paris designers to go along in the New Bedford Hotel for • SOUTH - YARMOUTH • HY" This compares with 34 dioceses the meetingS will be held on with their, clothes collections. the members of the New B~ '. • !lENd POll ' . OSTERVIU Fridqs. . ~ ~ear. ' - Pierre Balmaiahas recentq' ford Catholic Woman's Clu'"
PERFUMES FOR NOEL
5 00
4 50 Bass River ,Savings Ba'nk
Christmas Toy Adverti:si,n'g Unsatisfactory to Parents
1----'
THE ANCHOR-
i
Thurs.~
c
M.y moot Ilivi.d: reeollectfuns cd Chrisfunasas 'a; ehild eenter mround the ~ tree" CliriSJtmas. mOJ;ning, and, oddlY enough, the firnit bowl. Ftnr the life- of me I eam-, Bot remember' many of' the' gifts ]i ll'OOeived! bu,t I do ~ IIte!Il:beIr how much fun it of funk; is: an' unde..--atatemem., was bUJYinll a. tree-,. rummag E.wn: thiS wquld: DOt; be: so> in,.. iIlg through the' attie lOOking tolet'able if yoU, didD!t. h:we to: for fast years: Christimas spend ev.eI')1'" availal'rle minute
~~'
This'
,
was: It tune
'
fbt' generosity
and t:>l'ehty;' good food and rots of it Was the key. It was an oc easiG:J: foi'" a big 'fruit basket with 'figS and:' d:ltl2S, ::r pel"Sim 1Il0:J; that had to ripen to just the right mellowness before it colli:;!: be eaten, and: a pineapple Chat no one knew quite what 00 do with. There were all kinds of fruit to be eaten by greedy llttl2 boys who> could never quite get their fill. , Not the Smne Food was eve~hcre~, The waInuts mat: you tried so des- pentcly too eraek: without using • nutcracken" 111 bowl :full;. of salted: cash~ stuffed dates tb:m were' yoW!" mather's; special-, Q', sweet bread, pies;. it; waa ovet'\v,helming. Of. course, it lust. isn't. the same noVlP~ As. we have grown older and' more sophisticated we have lost our childish inn~ eenm and the. special sensory' thrills we associated with Christmas (the lights, smellS, tastes) are' a. thing oil the past.. !Iowevelj r cannot lXel'p' but wonder mat: special unspoken deligIlts my children are expem encing now tilat: they willl look: back on 2lt OJ!' 30: years, from naw and. describe tD their childree-. :Will it be'the St. Nicholas, cook :les,. the Christmas tree, the, Christmas MasSI the smell of baIting in the hause. olr maybe a sJ;reCial gtft. they will cIierish in y=rs to comc-?" Whatever it may be; it is: Iuppening for them now and they are ex:pen.-, encing it in their own unique
way. In, the KitCIDln. If you're like' the rest of:
us.
barassed toy-shopping parents, you're thoroughly disgusted, at this moment. Your children have been urainwashed by the boob tulle into wanting every one of the million and one toys that the bright little boys on Madi son: A venue parude before' their eyes during the months of pre Christmas. viewing. Not onI)! do the poor unsuspecting children want. these higll priced gim. micks but 'they have been led.' to believe, by the use CJf every ad'vcrtising trick in the book, tha:li said toys have special propertiesl generally: only at... tributed to saints and angels. To say that: the: children are dis. a~ointed when by New Year's Da¥ these toyS: resemble It pile
Seminarian$ to' Staff Industrial Parish VIENNA (NO) - Seminarians: doi.ng their pre-ordination year ~'pastoral work and priests a3. signed to minister to workers :will share administration of a new parish set up: here in A~ ib"ia as part of the Vienna' arch dioi;:ese's attempt· to, train tile aeminarians while crea~ a apeclal industrial milision. Announced at a p=ess confer ace, the new 'parish will briIig the, se1]1i'n,arlans togetheF fG share ,ttieil:~"ex,.~rieriCes.and. -.e. exl)eriet1ees '6£' speCially lnined priestis.
from NovembeI!' on,. lOokingl for' some mang;y mustan,1' or some dipp.~ dolly, that does every;thing but ch:ange its o.wn diaper (at, least tlrat's what me catchy lit-, tIe f.rig!e sa~ that. some junior ,Mitch M.iller wrote: to> accom pany. the delig!JJ.tful C01D1Iler" ciaL). 'The supply doesn't: seem to =:ch the demand. anymore and by the time: that the: .. Chri..stmas club cllllcks' have beern cashed all the television toU!L"'CL rrmrchandise has been. torm from the s'rtelVell' and. cries of "We're- not taking. any more ' orcb..-si'" wreet wear:w mothers, dads and' grandparen1:s~ No Mysticism I c:erlai~ don?t know the solution 00 tne problem except perhaps' someone should make to,. manufacturers: and the men> in the grey flannel suits state truly what these toys really do without giving them any mys ticali properties, lil1d1 t~y should aJso. see tll it that stores; do not run out of items by Dec. 1, or thereabouts. A different side of' tne toy picture can be viewed, though, if S!QU! come at:mlSS a: catal'ott 0£. qui:t.e- different moking play' j.t~
called
<i:m=ati.ve
p~,
9
Oppose School Aid Efforts
By Joseph and MarilYn- Roderick'
decorations, and testing tile ligh!;, sets to fiDd which ligJ'rts bad bUrried out. r remem1'JeF the excitement Christmas morninlt of o!lerling preserits and hOW' beautiful everYthing: rooR:eci and
Dec. 14, 1967
EDUCATIONAL TV: Atop. Motherhouse, overlooking the Hudson river near Ossining" N.Y., the Sistem put. up a. dipole antenna, an all-day job. Disc antenna at left is part of. the Marylmoll Sisters' educationa} television equipment. NC Puo.to-.
Gefting
PITI'SBURGH (NC) - T'wlJ priests from the Pittsburgh area have- attacked' current Churcll efforts fa. obtain state school aid, both charging: that state- aid. would create- greater !1acial im balance. in public schools. Father Donalc;1, W. Mcnvane,... civil. rights leader and assistant at St.. Richard's church in Pitts burgli's Negro Hill District,. charged that substantial num bers oil white Catholic parents are sending their' children to parochial schools to avoid 'pub lic school integration. He charged that state aid to parochial schools will permit more parents' to do so; 'and will leave tite public schools with a higber percentage of Negroes' in their classrooms. Father .Toseph PL Corrado, as sistant at St. .foseph's church in New Kensington. said passage of a bill now in the state Legisla ture "could, very well lead to schools tilPt would be completely segregated and undo the work of the cL1.'il rights movement fo~ the. past 10' yeaJ!S." ' Their protests were made as tho~ of telegrams were sent by Catholics to Go.v. Ray mond J? Shafex unging his sup. port. of some. kind. of. parochial school aid measure. They were sent. in response to a, pulpit. ap peal N<W. 26.
Our Lady of Fatima Statue for. G1lIatemala
Sacred andl Secular' Being Brovght CrOSeT Jesuit Tells Nuns,
things" These: toys: are sturdy,> and are cmafed', to arouse the, C!NCINNATI ~NC)r-A theo imagination:, and expand the: logtan observed here that the' sensoxy~ motol! and perceptive sacred and. seculaJr ue. nol as skills. of thel ehildren using separate as: the)! used to be" and tbem. Such items, axe featured add2d that while, the process. of as a Thermostat ]l'o;:m"Elgg, in,.., sectdarizatiOI1l going on: in the' cubator through whic:h. seven to Church involves llisks; it also, of 12 year olders can watch the fers opportunities' for the Church. my3teiy of' hatching' or a paper F~r Thomas, E.. Clarke, S.J., costu:ne: kit fffi? the: little: girl: flheology professor .at Woodstock in your' Iiouse' wfw' loves to College and associate editor of play with clothes, America. magazine, spoke 00' Tftese: are but twO) of the: un nearIsr 500 SisteJ;s, of: Mer~ at. an usuaL and fascinating: toys: that educational conference here. this (obviously lIigllIY intelli Sister Mary Honora, president gent) center turns: out. They dOl of Our' Lady of Cincinnati CoI Ver!Y little: advertising" yet' they lege, was chainrian of the three. are becoming quite' successfur, day conference which drew Sis :which only' proves that if' you' . ters from 01'1iO; Kentucky, and' do> build' a better mcmstrapo the' Tennessee, world win beat a path to' your In an interview" Father Clarke door. said the Church already has ac This is the perfect. dessert cepte<i "a cerlai'I1l secularIzation foe: the nolidays; colorfUl" easy of temporal institutions, such as to prepare and abIe to be made science and' politics,'" which at ahead of'time. This recipe comes one time were viewed by the from MrS'. GIadys' Maceda of' Church as· subordinate to it. Our Lady of Mt. C'annel Church, "Ti'le Ci'lurch now' asser,ts the in New Bedford. Strawberry Angel JTello Ca.Il:e 1 angel fOod cake, ready' made Urge Nuns to foUow
or nome made D ' P
4' regular a ounce. or 2' fiunily emOUQtllt rocess size packages of strawberry S'It LOUIS (NC)~The general jeUC) . chapter- of. the Sisters; oj! St; J'oo Z small' packages' of frozen. sepn' of Carondelet has ut'ged straWberries (sliced) members to assume mo~ indi Whipping cream vidual responsibili1:;y" through 1) cut the angel food cake democratic nQrninafion and elee fnto> small cubes: and sefr aside. tio,."l~ procedures;, arid called; for 2) Combine the jl~n'o: with 4 the: formation of 3. policy-making cups. of boling watl!x and stir badly elected: by' the Sisters; until dissolved. Then :told in the '1'112 Sisters of St. J'oseph of partly thawed sliced strawber Carondelet number 4,500' teach ties andstir until thickened.. ing and nursing members sel'Ving 3) Fold in the cakll' pieces.and in the United. States, Latin: mix well making sure that the Ameci.ca and .rapan. The general g,..'>{atine mixture covers all the chapter met here' to refine· con cake pieces. Pour into an angel cept5, of' religious government cake pan (tube pan) or 3 loaf and administration. The next size pans. , such meeting will held in 1969. , 4) Chill 3 to 4. fOIZr hours or The chapter issued a statement overnight. reaff~ing· tIle, ~gregation's , 5) ,Spr,ead. whipping; cream on effort. 'to serve the Churcli. .It or, serve, wi1;h, small ,~coops of through, the' elimination of'mis... ice cream.· , eryand ignoramc~_ It alSo called , 6) For' ,an, orange' p~apple on the $ist~rs' to "Jile creative, ,calt(?' uSc .'the "recipe ,as' above, not: only fI!.~pto.V:ing old m.etn- , ~,.Q.~ qmmgepineaple jello 'od~'but ,in finding. ne.w forms· ~nd one..,lllrg~.,,~~~: o( 4I1lined,., service,. in, tqe: aJ;eas of their'· chilled crushed pinea~ple. apostolate.""·
of
.
value- and the relative. autonomy of m:mfS life in such: areas," Father Clarke said.. ID:v:oLves Dlmgers SeculariZation: witain the ChtL.'"Chl. itself, however, 1& "a. more' di1IffuuIt matter," he- said, and while- "not n:ecessariI.y bad; it does involve' dangei"S." "Expressions; of the sacred are being brought closer to secuIax' life," he e:xplained." "For: ple, the process of secularization &as brought 1Il change. in the lit. ur~ from the- Latin tOI the ver" na~r language-.'" Another ~ample, he said, is the diminishing of the status of the priest as "lJearer of the: sa cred'" in II world' Where' the sacred JtO. longer plays' as' large a part as formerl'y. This change may have ll\ bearing aD the "crisis si1luation fu wnicft many priests find themselves," he suggested" and their "search for :Jentity."
WASmNG'1'ON (NC) ~ l\fem bers of the :Blue Army of the United States Block Rosary wiIll send!
lIt
statue of Oun'
~
of
Fatima tn Guatemala' about mid, December. Described as a "Christmas gift," to> Guatemala and other Central American countries, tIle statue will be' presented' to Bish op Constantino Luna. of Zacapa, Guatemala.. Later it will travcl from diocese to diocese.
exam
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10
THE ANCHOR":'
•
Thurs., Dec. 14, 1967
SouvemJo[? Booklet Been~ ~[[®palfed
-"':-0- - " ' ; " " " - , , -
CthulT«:B1 ~rr@~re~s In LQtl'itli Am®raca PI e a s e s Pr"".aIClJ@.,e" II
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Anthony lIIL Gomes Diocesan Co-Ordinator of the'Bishop Connolly Charity Ball, announced today that a11\ committees in the Fall Rivei' area are planning 'the Charity PATERSON (NC),-Bish~ Ball in its variouS phases. Mrs. Op Lawrence B. Casey of Nedderman has repo.rted that Paterson, one of nine' U.S. ' . the Charity' Ban Souveni!i' Booklet will contai~ many. names in the five categories. bishops who met witTrr Latin American prelates in Chile, re There are tpe Veri Special! turned with a deep appl'eciation Friends, 'Guarantor!!, Benefac for the forward look the Church : tors, Sponsors and Patrons list,:" lis taking in some parts of South . ings. The deadlin.e, for . names America. 'for the Booklet is Dec. 27. A , "The Church in, Chile is a fine new category has' been added example of what I mean," Bish; this year, namely, ,the Very' ClIp Casey said. "It's one of the 'Special Friends. This listing m 0 s t progressive in South contains names of contributors America. Actually, they began of one hunded and twenty-five Itheir renewal program before dollars or more. These' donors :the Second Vatican Council. are 'entitled to three ti<;kets, ad "At a briefing session, we mitting six persons. Iearned the practical steps that Persons desiring to have their ihave already been taken to names in the Booklet may con bring the Church up to date in tact any member of the Society that country. Their attack on of St. Vincent de Paul or Coun problems is bold. A good part of cil of Catholic Women of t~e it is still on the planning board, Diocese. but in some areas they're ahead ' ~f us,," Mrs. Murphy, a member of the, Presentee Committee, Frank Discussions COMMIITEE MEMBERS: Finalizing plans .for the annual" Bishop's Oharity Ball through the Chairman, Mrs. Archbishop' John' F. Dearden scheduled for J'an. 10 are: members of the committeE: from ,the Fall River Area: Mrs. James, A. O'Brien" ~r, <l,n-, Of Detroit, presfdeilt of the Nai. .Robert Nedderman, ticket chainllan " Rt. Rev. Anthony M. ,Gomes', Diocesan Oo-ordinatot 'no~ced that, fO,rty-f?ur y.o~mg tiona! Conference M. Catholie·'. "'A' '. ' . ' ,: ,ladles from the vanous ,II ea~ Bish'ops headed the rlelegation.' .··of the Ball; Mrs. William .- Murphy, presentee committee; Robert Coggeshall, decorat',the .. Diocese. wID Ibe pre~ Bish'oIl Casey l:md'thb,:..~her U. S;" "ing committee; Sr. Mary Joel, RSM, Naiareth Hall.. ' " ·'sentedtOHisExcellency. James prelates who'atterii:led al:e'mem-' ... " ' L. Connolly at tb~ Charity B~ll berB" of 'the BiShop~" COlrlinit't'ee '", ,, ".: . ".; .' .' • • ,~. .', to be held Wednesday eycning, for Latin " Jan... 10, at the r '1Illey ·met in :'L3s 'Rosas 'a' re'" '" ' . ' ' P a r k " Ballr90m•. ' , . : .... ' treat house in the subu'rbs 'Off , , .' • • ' . 'Santiago de Chile, with r e p r e - D , e p r ' I V e s N a t l o n ' of Potential m:r~f ~~:n~~o::~co~~~;:' sentative,s ofCELAM, ~he, lAtin tee, ,announced that, Mr, COil;"': American bishops' council. " ' " ",. f , "We searched for' the pl'ioriti'es' MI~MI" BEACH . (NC)':':"'l?ls:::: ,cludi~g the' educational ~~st~m, 'and 'equ'al clvil'andsbchil 'rightll' gesllalI.' a 'memper ~ "tile .com-. ' the Latin American Church pro'crimination in various. fOl'ms hou,sing, Jol:?s and economic op- .by· all of our citizens, the con:': ': mittee, will be i~ c~arge of ~~f1 posed for 'itself," Bii;hop € a sey' 'continues t.o deprive th~Unit~d portunity, ,justice, health and tinuance of racist attitudes and ,general decoratio~ at ,e said, "and, Within this il'1;ame':' . States of "the full potential> of ltS. welfare services and in the repractices;' and what might' ' .Ballroom. work,' lihe :tasks which the U. S. ';huJ:l\an resources, more than 150 ligious' life of communitics. ipractices, ,and what might be Sister Joel, R.S.Ml, a tC<lchel' Church can best assist. The dis:" adults' and youths concluded' ..·.fhe riots and other forms of nomena. of our nation. These . at Nazareth Hall School, Fall eussions were frank with noth- .here after a six-day institute' violence recently expel'ienced' ,circumstances, among othcrs," River; gave' a progress report of :tng held·back.", ' conducted by t~e:NatiOn~1 Con- as examples, are part of a.mul- he said, "have resulted in, white 'the advancement of the excep-· , 'rhere was no air of paternalism' . ference of. Chnsbansand Jews. "ti-fa~ete4 '. probl~in in· which and black cities 'half free and tiorial children at the" schoo), '\ 4)~ the part of the U, S. bishops, ' R~prese~ltatives. of, youth-.: discri~inatio~ is .the common half les~ than free.'" , Nazareth Hall School, Fall, .. Bishop Casey reported: ' ser~~~ I?'.oups; fe~eral state and "d,enommapor" Dr. .Joseph J:I. p 'ti ' A ' h River, along with Nazareth Han, .. . . . eommulllty' agcncles,. 'and the Douglass of the NatiOnal Instl"OSI ve . ppro~e.,; . : HyanniS; the 'St. ,Vincent de . Slm~lar Pr,~blems ' three major, religious faiths par:: ',' tute of Mental Health, ,Bethesda" ]father ·Francis T. Williams, ,'Paul· Health' Camp, Catholic'''; hat was good," he said, "be- ,ticipated in' dfscissions" 'temied 'Md" said in summarizing the C,~.V., a, ~eniber. of t~e f.acuIty Boys' Day' Camp and Nazareth eause there's nothing more cut"unusu~l", by James·M.Eagcn;' "'meeting. '" ,at Ba~ry College ~~Mlaml, who'" " Day'·Camp are the beneficia1'es ting to a Latlfl' America!l ::than NeeJ .national- vice' presidcnt. ".; "Those, facets are poverty, the, " ,was a representative of the Na-' of-·tltie financial succeSs of the to ,have North Amcricans -- or "We've" gotten,' adults and, lack of the achievement of, iu'll'· tional Catholic EducatiQnar AS.;. thirteenth annual Charity Ban anyone else ll.~ acting that .. way. young people together.' Such a· , ' ,'sociiltion at the institute, urged in "honor of Bishop; Connolly. The Church appreciates the aid bi-racial conference would' have' , ' a ',"more '. positive approach," "', ' ., " . " it has received 'from the 'Church been. unthinkable in Miami C~n'duct$ Financial . poiritiil'g out'that ..the churches 1'~ C~-~J?onsors ~f .t!Ie Ba~l here in recenJyea:rs~the,priests ; Beach:' -IOor' ~ven five years Study' of Schools' . are moving, perhaps not going : are,tbe afflhates of the, ~ouncJl and Brothers and Sisters work ago,'.' ,Eagen said., .. , fas.t enough' to suit everyone" '. of ,.Catholic Women a~d the ing in the missions and the He explained NCCJ WOl'k' has '... GRAND ISLAND (NC) ' - A but 'definitely moving.'! conferences of the SOC?lcly of funds. But the Chur~h in each changed in the -last· few years .. financial 'study conducted for the As the· subject of 'qack of St. Vincent de ,Paul.
of these countries wants to stand from striving to "erase 'discrim- departmel1t of ,education of the 'communication" came up an,.
on' i~s own feet as soon as pos ina-tion' between Cliristians and :. Grand Island diocese herc. in other priest, Msgr. Bryan O. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
sible." , . , Jews to' bringing Negroes and Nebraska has, concluded that '. ,Walsh, executive director ,of the· While many of the, Church's. whites cioser together." "gai'ns, can only be made by in South Florida Economic Oppor':' :O~L problems in Latin' Amcrica are " divid.ual. institutions through a tunity Council, and chairman of
CO. . Comm.on Den.omfnator different from ours, Bishop diocesan system in which re the Diocese of Miami Human
Casey said, many others are •Throughout the sessions, con- sources, and .talent are pooled, o,Relations Board, asked: "How markedly similar. ducted in a round table discus- purchase of big items centrolized. do' you get people to change? I Heating, "I noticed that as the Latin sion format, it was repeatedly and building repairs scheduled." think there's too' much com Americans mention certain prob noted that implications of racial Specific recommendations in munication between adults and
Burn~rs lems," he said, "our bishops discrimination COR tin Ii e in, cluded: preparation of 'an up-" young p'eople. I'm more con
would smile and nod their h,eads many areas of national life in dated' statement on education,' ceoled ,about the values :we.
365 NORTH FRONT STREET in agreement. Things like thc in giving the present objectives of co~mumcate. than . how we NEW BEDFORD, flux of the masses to city sub Bish'op Re,ed Urges,
the diocesan school system; 'es ,commun~cate them. T~e' adu!ts
\Irbs, and thc angUish of 'de tablishment of a diocesan board commumcate all their J'aclal
992·5534 pressed rural arcas, 'are just as Fair Housing' Law
of education; enlargement of the '~eligious prejudices to their cQmmon in Latin Am'el'ica as OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) _' professional diocesan staff, in I s. they are h.ere." V' cluding a business administrator, , ,Bishop Jctor J. Reed of Okla la personnel director and a cur:" ...---------~------------... '.., ". homa CitY-7'ulsa has spoken in' riculum coordinator; establish -of a 'proposed fair hous ment of a policy wherein the Pamphlet Designed' favor ing ordinance for Oklahoma . City. only funds on hand in a parish To Aid Immigrants WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBLEMS would be an amount not to ex The bishop expressed his sup ceed three weeks' operating STOCKHOLM (NC)-Officials at the fund; that all, others would be t)f the Catholic and Orthodox port for the measure at a meet deposited with a diocesan cen ehurches here have prepared a ing of the Oklahoma City Coun new pamphlet designed to heip cil here. He said: '''As a native tral fund; and that an investment Oklahoman, I am proud 9f our committee would analyae the immigrants to this country find SOMERSET, MASS. past record in taking steps to fund's investments and activities ehurches of their own denomi '. relieye suffering, and ,I urge ,on:1 weekly basis.. nations. . .' . . The most friendly, democratic BANK offering Printediri sevenll European you to pass .this new ·effort in , languages, the, pamphlet lists the. that direction." ' Complete 'The ordinance' p;'ohibit~ dis-' 'Bishop Recovering e1ergy, and. churches of the: two WORCESTER (NC) - Bishop g r 0 ups. ,Distributed. thrOugh crimination in sale or rental of Club Accounts . Auto Loans church ane). Swedish goverllment :housing, based' on color, religion Bernard J. Flanagan of Worces 'Checking Accounts Business Loans . Clffices, ti,le ,pamphlet was paid or national ·origin. '., tel' was ,reported resting com" Savings' Accounts' .. Real :Estate·· Loans for by the nation's Catholic In The councU~took:no' action on, fortably,. in St. Vincent hospi " ~tSomerset . Shopping: Ar~a,-Brightman St. Brid'ge f,?rmation, Service (KIT), Luth the .measure, which reap _. tal' h~re followIng surgery to ~ran Relief, Service and the pear 'on the· agenda' of, the next. correct an arthritic condiHon in ,Member Federal Deposit' Insurance Corporation' council, meeting. his left, hip: Swedish government. ..... Q
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Conclude' Race Discrimination Continues
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In Open Housing Cou rt ActioEII CHICAGO (NO) - The Ohicago Conference'on Race and Religion has filed suit in U.S. District Court charg
11
lHE ANCHOR
Chicago Involved
Jewish ~1.gerJ~Y laud~ C@o\g~~~@~ SAN FRANCISCO (NC) "We knew him asa gentle, un pretentious and friendly human being and the memories of our close association with him will long be cherished," the presi dent of th~ American Jewish Committee said here on receiv il)g word of the death of Francis Cardinal Spellman. Morris B. Abram said in his statement: "Having been privileged to enjoy a warm and long friend ship with Cardinal Spellman, we will remember with appre ciation the quiet but determined and effective personal "~ader ship of the cardinal in support of the adoption of the Vatican council's declaration on non Christian religions, which called for 'mutual knowledge and re spect between Christians and Jews.'
I
,:
ing officials of a local,'commu ni,ty and 14 real estate firms with discrimination and attempts' to block open housing. It marks the first time the Catholic archdiocese of Chicago has been involved "directly or indirectly" in open housing court action, according to Father Ed ward M. Egan; assistant chan-, cellor. "The archdiocese felt it could not remain s!lent on this matter," stated Father Egan, secretary to John Cardinal Cody of Chicago for human relations and ecumen ism. In addition to the archdiocese, the Conference on Race and Re ligion is sponsored by the Church Federation of Chicago, the Chi cago Board of Rabbis, the United Synagogue Council of, America, "The condemnation of anti and the Union of American He Semitism and the insistence brew Congregations. that such bigotry 'ean nevel1' find support in the Catholic The suit charges officials of Hinsdale, members of the Hins ATTLEBORO AREA CO.SPONSOR~: Preparing for the 13th annual Oharity Ball tradition,' w hi c h Cardina~ dale community ''relations board, benefit,ing the underprivileged and exceptional children of the-diocese, are: Mrs. John Spellman affirmed in 1964 as and' ,t.he real: :estate firms with; '"J. +\fullaney, decorating committe~; Mrs. Adrien Piette, presentee committee; Frank honored guest speaker at the :~limg an :agr~ement last Fall", °Mel~o" St. Vincent de Pa\.!.l Society; Miss Angela Medeiros" decorating oommittee; Mrs; , American Jewish Committee 'annllal national meeting wiJi ,<:h permlt~, the real estate "Charles Landry vice-president of District IV DCCW " :' , agehcles to aV'oid 'showing and: " , , , " , • 'j long, be recorded in religiolls ",; and, ,gener.al history ,as one o1l selli'h'g' prop~rt~ to Negroes. ' 0 , ' ' the, ,major ,pronouncements in Hinsdale is' 'a' :western slibul'b ,', helping to build a society :free of Chicago where most homes',' of in~erreligiQus ~nd intergrouJ), cost between $40,000 Ii n d' ' hosO,lity. » $100,000. ,,/ .. :i ,',II', PrIvate' Atrreement, ; ,,,,"
Tlk' sUit"~h~rges that real"es-: ..
P'eruvia',.. lndians " , Mrs. Stanley Janiek is Chair tatebrokeH; ahd Hinsdale offi":, ': M~ss, Kat~leen c; ,Roch,~ ,of, ,'mittee,: Mrs. John J. Mullaney, WASHINGTON (NC) - The 'man' and Co'-Chairrria'n' is Roo'-' cials privately 'agreed that sales.: .. New Bedford,' presidetft of 'the " MI;S. Adrien 'Piette: ' U. S. Bishops' Committee foy men would show' and sell pl'op.:. - Dioce~an" Counci~ of Catholic Hospitality Committee: Mrs. ert Coggeshall. Latin America has allocated erty in the village to all qualified Women, and Edward F. Ken . Charles M. Landry, Mrs. Geol'gc' Presentation Ceremony Com $9,000 to the natienal training buyers only if. the seller' added nedy of Taunton, vice-president . Whalen, Mrs; Albert Jackson. mittee: Mrs. James A. O'Brien, , written instructions to the listing of the Central Council of the Cape Cod Area Chairman; Mrs. Vincent A. center for Indian eateehisis ill " . . . contract stating the property .St. Vincent de Paul Soeiety, Coady, Mrs. Tl)omas Cahill, M,·s. Cuzco, Peru. could be shown.to all qualified jointly an~ounced today the ?ecoratmg Comml~tee: Mrs. William Murphy, Mrs. Leonard buyers regardless of their reli-, ,various area committees to Ch.e~ter Savery,., Mrs. Nestor : Berlo. gion, race, or national origin. serve in diverse capacities Robldou, ~rs, Gl1bert Noonan. Hospitality Committee: Mrs. The Conference on Race and' for the annual Bishop's Charity !'resentahon Ceremony Com MiehaelJ. McMahon, Chairman; mittee: Mrs. Chester Savery. Religion asserts :the agreome,nt, ,Ball scheduled for Jan, 10 at Hospitality Committee: Mrs. ,Mrs. Herve Cummings, Mrs. amounts, to ~,"unwrittenal;-,!Lincoln Park. Miss, Roche ,and James Quirk. ' Leon!1t,d Berlo, Mrs. DO\lald , sumption" :tha,t properties whose . Mr. Kennedy, co.,chairmen of ,Hin,ehc1iffe, Mrs. Stanley Janeontracts do not include such in- , ; the" affair, stat~d ,Iha,t "Bishop Fall River ,Area ick., ' , ' structions will. not be available ,", Conpolly's love of the under,." Decorating Committee: Frank M~: Orner Levesque, .Miss to minority, groups.. " '", pr~vileg~d a n,d, excei>tional, Medeiros, Michael Mulyk, Da'So. Dartmouth Jacqueline Matthews, ,Mrs. Ro The, text, of, the, suitsliid it.is, children in the Diocese has, be- : vid Carrier,' John E. Kane, 'Mrs. meo Parent, Mrs. Raymond ,and Hyannis being, filed, on behalf of "'~ll come so, contagious, that the ,Eugene Gagnon. Poisson, Miss Clorinda Ventura. N~groes i~ the Chicago are;! Who heart ·.of c;lVery~ne., now .~olds: Mrs. Alfred Berube, Mrs. Rita Miss Jane Brightman, Edouard ,So. Dartmouth 997·93114 have the 'ffnancial means 'to" them ill a spec~al ;way as the Martin, Mrs. Theresa Viens, purchase property in the Village" object of their lov.~.", , Mrs. Geraldine Hodkinson, Mrs. Lacroix, H. Frank Reilly; Mrs. Hyannis 2921
Robert Nedderman, Chairman
of'i':Iinsdale." " . , Following are, the committees: Lorraine Latessa. The suit ha~' 'been joined by a" New Bedford Ar~a Mrs: Bernadette Levesque, of the Ticket Committee.
Negro couple, Jolin and Rose Decorating Committee: .James Mrs. Alice Garand, Mrs. Isabel
' Polk, and by four white couples' '; J. Gleason, Miss Angela Medei- 'MacDonald, Mr~. Joseph Velozo, Jiving in Hinsdale. The Polks ros, Mrs. John Silvia, Miss Mrs, Mary Berlo.
claim they could not, find hous Lydia .Paeheco, Mrs. Elmer A. Mrs, Wilfred St, Michel, Mrs.
ing there solely because of their Paul. Albert Auclair, Mrs. Owen race. Edgar L. Gobeil, Manuel F. Hartnett, Mrs, Stella Pavao, Cardoza, Miss Eileen Pacheco, Mrs. Mary Gagne. Manuel Sardinha, Dr. David MrS. Fra)lk Medeiros, Mrs, Sisters Plan Joint Costa. Donald Hinchcliffe, Mrs, Frank Presentation Ceremony Gom Kingsley, Mrs. ,Edna Boutin, College Operation mittee: Mrs. John Silva, Mrs, Mrs. John Albernaz, 'LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Elmer Paul. • Mrs. Kenneth Leger, Mrs. Sisters of St. Joseph' of Orange Hospitality Committee: Miss Mary Perreira, Miss Claire PER will join with the Religious of Helen McCoy, Miss Pauline O'Toole, Miss Clorinda Ventura' , the Sacred H;eart of Mary in Davignon, Miss Diane Loran MrS, Laura Mello. ' conducting Marymount College Mrs. Lorraine Viveiros, Mrs. gel', Miss Agnes Rogers, Miss on'the Loyola University campus· Eleanor Szydlowski. Alfred Almeida, Mrs. Lillian here in California, beginning Taunton Area M, Theodore, Miss Anne Lin next September. ' Decorating Committee: Ca gard, Mrs. Margaret O'Shaugh !Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of The affiliation has been an mille Denis, Normand Hamel, nessy. nounced by Sister M. Rayrriund Mrs, James Williams, Mrs, Aris Mrs. Catherine Heald, Mrs. $200.00 up to $30,OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts McKay, Marymount president, tides Andrade, Mrs, Richard Stanley Pitera, Mrs. Joseph Up to $60,OOO-for Corporations "Paulson. Fazzina, Mrs. Frederick Nassiff,' and Mother M. Felix Montgom DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR
ery, St, Joseph College of Mrs, Raymond Poisson. Presentation Ceremony Com Orange's president, who said mittee: Miss Adrienne Lemieux, Miss Jacqueline Mathieu, Mrs. February, May, August and November
the two groups will cooperate Mrs. Richard Paulson, Mr. Wil Helen Oliveira, Mrs. Victor All Deposits Insured in Full on levels of administration, fac liam Fagan, Master of Cel'e Aguiar, Mrs. Yvette Rousseau, monies. Charles Viens. ' ulty and trustees. A joint ad visory council will guide the re Hospitality Committee: Miss lationship. Helen Shove. Appeal Loyola University aild Mary Attleboro Area VATICAN Cl:ry (NC)-After mount College affili,ated earli , Decorating Committee: Frank er this year. Marymount's sea Mello, Miss' Emily Medeiros, an appeal ,by Ruthenian-rite side campus in the Palos Verdes Ml's. Yvette Landi'y, MI's. Rita Bishop Nicholas Elko of Pitts burg, the Holy Father has taken Peninsula will become Mnry Mourningham, Mrs. John Mul ' the' bishop's case out of the mount Junior College. St. Joseph laney. " hands of the Gongregation !for College of Orange will continue Mrs. Harry Loew, Mrs. Ed normal opei'ation of 'extension; ward F. Galligan, Mrs. Alfred the OrIental Churches and con-' ._' '" Main· Offi.ce: .4 Winthrop Street, Taunton fided it to a three-man commis summer sess,ion and :community ,Travis, Mrs, Frnnk Mello. , Bra'1ch Office: 1400 Fall ,River Ave., Seekonk si~ 11.&' bO....-lf 'named. ' ' programs. Presentation' CeremolloY Com-
All Is in Readiness for, C,harity Ball ,Jan. 10, Affair Promises to Be Best Ever
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rHE ANCHOR-Dio.cese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, 1967
Plans Move Forward
Ca'iholic5o pITf(!)testants . For~ .-Joint Rei ~gicws IF<<ncilities Corporation
Rochester Semi:nary to COoperate
I'n New S~dy Cenife,'
BALTIMORE (NC) Tbe Father Walsh. who is also R~ (N.C') - EHom.M the s3me tin:!.e/Bishop Fut Baltimore archdiocese and the pastor of the Catholic parish toward creatiOn of 3111 ecumen:o:· ton' J'. Sheen of' Rochester' agam Coliunbia Cooperative. Ministry in Columbia, said. "the decree . feal sem.\'nary he:re moved ahead decllired! Catltolic: intentrODt 10 -a body of' 13 Protestant de on eeumenism, issuing from , wi.tb th2 schedul:i!mg of' th1i!. m.e.rg- cooperate in tile: neW" vcmCure:.. . nominations - have armounced 'Vatican COuncili n,. poinlled out er of tw~ madOr' Protestant sem- He said! the, new study eenter· formation of a col'POm«ion that wb.ilIe deep diviisjODS exist. inaries fo~ next F'aJL wouL:l!. liave ''intmb to, giiv.e'" St. which win provid~ jointly Christian churc:hes. nev Bernard's Seminmry in Racbester· owned religious facilities in tile. ert~ we do sfui.re. in one "and we- tllUst t1Iat St. Bernard~ new city of Columb!la. Md.. Baptism' and worship one God." in tam wm] have mud'.t to g;.,ve'" I Sena~ halfway between :Baltimore aml The Columbia: approacll,. lie the: merging Protestant schook :Washington. D.C. said. "co~%es OW'". basie Se.~tember" 1968~ was set as: Lawrence Cardinal Shehan unity. WhITe each Christian of Baltimore and the Rev. church maintainS its particular' A the dat~, for the. move- bY' Bex,.. Clarence Sinclair, e."iecutive ip,tegrity of doctrine and. prac , . ~.' 00 'f':'1 :,.,).~ Hall" EpiScopal diviirlty minister of the Qllumbia Coop . tice,; we. can and should join·tc> _: . WASmNGTON {NC) _ . ,~b:ao~. of. ~on College.. in. erative .Ministry, joinU31' issued getJter :\fhenever: Po~ble." IIj'1J- ,U.", S' .~. :"-,.. -1'-""" q~u~r,.. Ohio,. to. Roc:hes~;. ,Jlu.e ~". ~~e: ~as,. V(i)~t:Ul . Heie it. will. merge with Colgate a statement' 'announcing the new . eorporauori;' known' as the· Reli 'l()'() to ~irnJ:it ~1ts,to' test;: ,:·)i4chestlj!.W .DiY~~, SchtW1I,. ..an: gious 'l~acilitieS' Corporation. HEADS C~NF;ERENCE:: :the oonstitutioooijty of fed!-. ipterdenQIIUnauoMlJ· Ji>rotest~t, which .......m construct building:; James F. COFaianni,. 415" has 'eral! aid[ to' churCh.-related . iIistitution, to form the. Rochest for worship and church-related .' " . . . .. .... Centen fall". Theologica]) been named!·.executive 'diree schools:.. ,activities .and lease Ulem . t o The measure, sponso~dbil71 ,~tuPies:.,··' tor of' the Litm-gical Confer"'· CHICAG.O' (NC) ..:.-. The; Participa;liilg COngregations in sen.. Sam Elrvin. of North elmo-: .. " Unity, Dialogue, Columbi!l'., . . new Duteh catechism has be enee, Wa.smng&€J>P', D.C. Me' I.iJl.ao was' attached' to, the: Senate" version of' the Er~enllaJTy and! Bisoop'Sbeen, speaking of' the The corporation,' described as come a ''best seHer" in the Photo. Secondary EClucation Act. Pina] rel'ationship of' St. Bernard's to .. the first of its .kind, will act in eoopera~ion with an Ecumenical Netherlands and deservedly action on. the biJE!. will be 1il'rlS: th~ ~ew center" sai~: "m those Planning Commission \1' hie h so, according to a Dutch Jesuit .week;. Then the HOUse and. Sen-. things we share In common., teacher and author visiting the will determine what facilities ate will hammel' out, a, compro- there will be unity;, in those United Sflates. , mise. b i l l ' · t h i h g s . in which we diifer, there will be required. The statement said the inter' Father Felix J. Malmberg. 8.J... '.E'fle ~ate' has 'passedl sucb will. be dialogue and.. charity~... WASHINGTON N € C') _.Msgr•. ~l1leIIlts to edUC31tion. 1:rilDS faith corporation, which hopes a member of the governing board Dir~. ChaJrles: L,. Ti!GrlOlr" reti$g: O'NeU C'. D'Amour, superinten~ m. the: past bull eacllt has: been director' of' the, At:nelrican Assn for eventual Jewish representa of Amsterdam.TheologH:aI Insti tion, was formed on the premise tute; ~iscussed the cateChism and .elIlt of the Marquette, Mich.,' di rejected. by the ~ouse.. . ciation of' 'illleol'ogieali. SChoolS;. th~t too mneb money is ~t · other aspects of the Dutch - ocesan schools, bas beeIll named canedi the- Roc:frestelr center.- "One <J)n building and not enough on Church experience" at Loyola special assistant on boards of of the more: stgnUiicanfl; sfeps: No' Chan"'ge ministry." education to-the National Cath University..
,--DUBLIN (;N9)i -Con'trallY to toward! the pa1lteJrn. 0:11' semfnary He noted !:bat. Dutch Cath<IJlies olic: ,EducationaD Associatiolll EXJ;.ftss1Ol1l 01 Trus1 edw:a:tion for coming d'eealbs" belief; people !fa not resist ·have· already bought 400,000 here. Father ,John J. Walsh, execo .change. Chairman Ivor Kenny Tne Rochester Center for The...· In his new post Msgr. D'Amour copies of the catechism and
ave secretary of the archdioe- added that tne "printers don't will provide Information anell of the bish COmmunications ological Studies will be croselY esan commission for Christian related to· tbe University of know how to print fast enough." services .relating to Catholic Council stated~ "They resist un unity, described the: C2lthoWe... c;ertairity, not knowing where Roefiestelr; Dlr. Tayl'or' said' the' The book, he said, presents ve~ boards of education.,. which now Protestant venture as an "ex clearly: "the message of salvation n~ber more "than 2100 on par- . they or t¥r" country or thei'r' growing' pattem, in. seminal')" 00:"· pression of the trust we have Chun:h . is going .. • • The tool! ucation is: £"01" seminames fo· for our- time,"
ish. and dioceSan. levels.. in one another." ' that they have to reduce this' un form in "c[usters'" around! unii Father . Malmberg .defended MsgJr.. D'AmOlJIlt was gIven a e:ertainty . is calTed! communica.. versifii2s i'n the> l!Tnited! S'ta1:eII: the Engli.sfJ version of' the work leave· of absence for' his new tion,..· and! Canada. as "a very good translation." The assignment by Bishop, Thomas translators,. he said, "kn~w both L. Noa of Marquette and. by the· language idioms very well." '. Marl?Juet.te diocesan. board' of ~ ucati'on. He will maintain offices. Laymen Active CHICAGO (NC) - An ex Father MallJ,tberg also reported. in Marquette. iled Bishop says stepped~up that the laity is playing an active" Father C. Albert Koob, religious persecution is be role in the Dutch Ch1!llI"Ch to an O.Praem.,. NCEA executive sec retary, said the appointment was: ing pursued by communists ·extent previously uriimagiI1Cd. ''Thrs ,is' a very sound' and"' in response of a' JreCiluest for against families in Lithuania-. Auxiliary B ish 0 p Vincent healthy movement," he said. "It . NCEA services. from 'Catholic Brizgys' 01: Kaunas,. Lithuania. represents an adult approacb. on sc~ool superintendents. at. their the' Dutch' bishops' w an~ua1 meeting, here in October; woo has rl~sided here since his the part exile by tbe Reds from his See to establish a close contact witb eity, has revealed that at the . laymen in regard to, aM' things' C.fe~ymen beginniIllg (If' the' current !:Chool touching on. Church 'life." year, high school students in Some 500,000 laymen are ac... Lithuania were required' to an tive in the work .of the Dutch lIWer a qUeI;tionnaireabout their WINCHESTER ~NC) ~. Two-. personal religious habits and pastoral C'ouncil which under took its official duties only last Catholic priests and five Protes those of mllmbers of their fam tant leaders joined fu waming' year, he said. ilies. against a reportli!d mc:rease of' Though lay participation is "Of the 16 questions asked." drug usage' am.ong youth, of this' the Bishop said. "thefollo;wing initiated on a grass roots level, town. one of BosUln's wealthiest were typical: Do the members of he said,' it proceedS upward and fastest _growing suburbs; ;your family (father, mother, through districts to, regions and thence to the national level The members of· the' year-old: _grandparents, relatives) believe "Many expert. laymen take Winchester Ecumenical Associa-· in religion? What religious holy tion quoted' Police Chief Joseph· days are obser:ved in your fam,. take part in highest level~ adiv By! Do thE! members' of your ities of the supreme committee," J. Derro as saying the use· of: .' HOME ·IMPROYEMENT' LOANs: nar~otics has. increased sharply family attend clIurch servIces? the Amsterdam priest said. Father Malmberg also reported dunng the past year.. Do the members of your family ., PERSONAl LOANS ebserve religious practicecr at that most of his lay countrymen They. craim t.tie, town'"s major home? What religious books. '~favor the so-called new liturgy, ,problem among the· young is: have you rectd? Who advised you be£ause the sac:l'aments are for ~oking~uana • VACATION LOAN,S; . to read them, When was the last the people." Msgr. Joseph, W .. Lyons. pastor ONE STOP' COMPLETE' B'ANKING SERVICE; AT ANY' time you confessecil to a prilm!" of ·Sf. Eulalia's CathoIic church Bishop Brizgys continued: directed a senes' of sermons OF: OOR' 6 HANDY I&A.... KS "In view of the fad tlrlt It , I the drug. problem at Masses in· decree (law), issued in May 1.966 his church:. DRIVE-IN' 'SERVICE: AT Alt, BANKS. forbids any attempt to teach .Ca~holic Agen~y ligion or religious p~ctices to' "Drugs an too'. available MADRID (Me)-The· Spanish within a few miles; of our town. children and youtlts ,Under pen... alty of thre,e years in a slave government has taken official Ml:!JlY of the young people are labor camp,. plus the fact that' action aga\pst a Catholic' news using marij,uana and there has government employees already service on a charge of violating been evidence of glue"'sniffin&~ the country's press laws.
are persecuted because of pri he said. . The ministry of information vate or publil:. religious practices' this questionnaire indicatro ~ has .instituted court action stepped-up religious persecution against the Catholic. Information VV1TH SIX CONVENIENTLY. LOCATED, BANKS:
Agency of Eastern Europe oper of families fu Lithuania." INI NEWI BEDfORD)
ated by members of Opus: Dei, organiza,tion . of· ~tholi'c: priests INSURANa AGENCY~ INC. ~. SOtlTH' BANK-Cove. St., at ROdney Ereocll Boulevard and laymen, for violating Arti~ . . Fiscclll Report WEST BANK-Kemptonl Street;' at MiI~§freet' ,.... . 96 WILUAM'STREET .... ALBUQUERQUE (NC) - TIle . cle 5 of Spain's press. law. LUND'S 'CORNER BANK-Acumnef' Ave~ near lund'S' NEW',B'EDfORD MASS' The 'artiCle"requires' the gov:. ,; )Jew Mexico Renewal, Santa Fe I'" ; .• DARTMOUTH' BANK-Darfmouth St~~ ·.~ar.. R9ciciaJ~. A."~::,' archdiocesan newspaper, has re ernment to guard 'against· any 99~5tS3 997~91167 ported a loss of ~9,704 for the attempts: ."to distort public opin NOR~~,.8ANK.--Acilsltnet AYe., at: Coftilr.I! Av~. ,. - .. , .. PERS~Al SERVICE: period Dec. I, 1006, through Nov. ion or oOstruct,the. free. dffussioD.;.. · -cENTER BANl':""'P'uJ'cfmse' and Williei'm: SIS.""":;" ".' ."" 10,1967. . of information.·
among
Approves
Judicial! Rev·jew · '-d Of 5 h I
Dutch. Catechism Is "Best' Seller'
'er .:
Michi'gani Prelate -In' NCEA Post'
LithulClnia Reds. Continue Drive
of
Fight Drug Menace
SAVE: D01WS'
with .the· MEROIltNlS,
IIEconomy"1 Auto, loaR Plaa
or:
Spain Prosecutes
re-:
are·
·DONAI BOaSVERT:
Conier'
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Texan Suggests Joint Vent'ures For Religions SAN ANTONIO (NC) A Texas Catholic layman who took part in the recent World Methodist..Qatholic di alogue said here: "Our common Christian mission to the human race deserves cooperation first, while the theologians mull over .the real meaning of doctrinal issues." "We agreed to go back to our own institutions and prod them into joint ventures everywhere," said Daniel J. Meaney of Corpus Christi. "There seems to be unlimited opportunity. for sharing facili ties and programs. These include cooperation in training of min isters, uniform wording of com mon prayers, and joint state ments on social issues such as world development, peace, fam ily life, poverty and race." Meaney made the comments af·ter his return from the meet ing which was held near Rome in October. The meeting grew out of a decision last year by the Wotld Methodist Council in London
to meet with Catholic ecumen
ists in response to unity senti
ments expressed during the
Second Vatican Council.
'!Bligb J!)Iramm' The nine-member Catholic delegation was headed by Arch bishop John Murphy of Cardiff, Wales, while Bishop Odd Hagen of Stockholm led 12 Methodist delegates. . Meaney was one of two Cath
olic laymen who participated
along with a group of priests
and theologians from the U.S.,
England, and Italy.
Meaney said the atmosphere
of the conference was "lively
and perceptive, with its great
humor, moments of deep: spir
itual communion, and high
drama."
Shortly after the session be
gan, he related, the Methodists
asked if the subject of papal in
fallibility was closed to discus
sion. "At this point I got the dis
tinct impression ¢ ¢ <) that if the
Catholics felt the last word had
been said on the subject, the
Methodists were quite prepared
to pick up their marbles and go
home." They did not.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, 1967
13
Jesuit Questions Advisability of Completing Shrine WASHINGTON (NC) "I eannot say whether this shrine III III • symbolizes something quite Catholic, or images something rather un-Christian." The speaker was not one of a dozen Jesuit seminarians who picketed the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception asking that the $25 million yet to be spent on the edifice be spent instead on the poor.
Bishop of Buffalo To Receive A.ward .:NEW YORK (NC) -
:Bishop
James A. McNulty of Buffalo has been chosen to receive the 1968 Shield of Blessed Gregory X Crusader award of the National Holy Name Society. The award, reserved for members of the hierarchy, will be presented at Buffalo on Jan. 11 next. .The award is named for BlesSed Gregory, who reigned as Pope from 1271 to 1276 and who eommissioned Blessed John of Vercelli to have the Dominicans preach devotion of the Holy Name.
He was, instead, Father Wal ter Burghardt, S.J., theology professor at the Jesuits' Wood stock (Md.) College. And he spoke at the dedication of the shrine's west apse, which CC;>n tains the statues of six Jesuit saints. It was built with some $800,000 in Jesuit donations. 'Provocative' Sermon "On the one hand," he said, "there is a passionate convic tion that basilicas and marble columns are an anachronism, an affront to the poor, a medieval display. of pomp and wpery while stomachs are empty and bodies bleed on' battlefields. "There is a gathering murmur that challenges the Catholic
talks With Cardinal BERLIN (NC) - U.S. Sen. Birch E. Bayh of Indiana held a 40-minute talk with Stefan Car ·dinal Wyszynski of Warsaw dur ing a four-day private visit to Poland, the U.S. embassy in Warsaw announced. The spokes man did not say what the sena tor and the cardinal discussed.
hierarchy to echo the decision of Episcopal Bishop (Horace W. B.) Donegan of New York, who recently announced that the Cathedral of St. John the Divine would remain unfinished as a 'prophetic symbol that our society i~ still as rough-hewn, ragged, broken and incomplete as the building itself,'" said Father Burghardt.
Plan to Entertain Troo·ps in ,Europe WASHINGTON (NC) A group of 15 students from the speech and drama department of the Catholic- University of America here .will go overseas during the Christmas holidays to entert·ain United States troops ,serving in the European com mand. The group which will be ac companied by Father Gilbert V. Hartke, O.P., head of the speech and drama depa,rtment, will pre sent ''TIle Dollmaker's Dilem ma," an original Ohristmas mus ical written by a number of the cast members.
"On the other hand, there ts an ageless tradition that man does not live on bread alone * 01< « a feeling that if an unfin ished cathedral points- a pro phetic finger at the present, at man's inhumanity to man, n perfected shrine may well point to the future, symbolize man's hope for man, while it reminds the worshipper it is not stones we .nust fit together, but the community of men."
.I
.,
Father Burghardt said later that he had no·fixed poSition on the question, but that he Wall torn by both arguments. Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of Washington, who was present later thanked the priest for his> "provocative" se~mon..
Abandon P'roject ZURICH (NC) - European Protestant denominations that had planned a shortwave broad casting station here have a~ doned the project for b()th fi
nancial and ideological reasons.
.
,'I
Credit Unions Bring
Overseas Relief
ST. PAUL (NC) - Coopera
tives and credit unions are "ma
jor tools for economic efficien
cy," the executive secretary of
the National Catholic Rural Life
Conference told a meeting of the
American Scientific Mfiliation
here.
....
Msgr. John G. Weber of Des
Moines spoke on Practical Proj
ects for Overseas Food Relief,
and said that cooperatives and
credit unions "contribute to
social stability, distribute bene
fits to the masses and bring
about broader participation in
decision making."
To illustrate his talk, Msgr.
Weber showed slides comparing
Jordan and Israel. The former
was brown, with little apparent
vegetation. The later, however,
was green and full of growth. He
said that Israel had put orange
groves where there once were
sand dunes under their coopera
1ive program.
THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH _. . . SEND YOUR GIFf TO
Honor A.rchbishop NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Areb-. bishop Philip M. Hannan wu honored at a testimonial dinner here for' his eommunity efforts
.nce becoming archbisbop 4li
liew Orleans in October ~ 19Oi.
The R1aht Reverend Edward T.,O'Meara
...
National Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York, NtIW York /000/
The Right Reverend Raymond T. ConsliJllftl
OR Diocesan Director
. ADDJi~SS .
368 North Main Street
FQllR!ver•. MassQ~hllSe"s()21ZO
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 14, 1967
Board Endorses Aid for Private
.Bur<eau S\fU'~~$~$ ·e X r : E d j y c @ \ { O @ I l l l " S c h o o I P u p i l s
S
MIN~EAPOLIS
(NC)
The Min~es01Ja School Boards
Association" (MSBA) dele gate assembly has endorsed
1111 S~~ttD~~~
WASHING'l'ON (NC) The Family Life Bureau of the United States Catholic Conference (U S C C) has
state aid for private school pu pils enrolled in some classes or . activities at public schOOls. mailed a special pamphlet on . By a vote of 47 to 45, assembly sex education to every convent delegates recommended 'a policy in the United States. It includes the MSBA has opposed in the a paper addressed to teachers past. The resolution stated that cn the importance of the topic shared time program add "sub and a list of recommended filnls, stantially" to the maintenance lbooks and recordings. costs of private school ·districts. .' In an introduction to the pam The measure' was adopted at · phlet, Father James T. McHugh,
the close of a two-day meeting : 'dil'ector of the family life.bu 'of about 100 school board mem .' re~lU' with the cooperation" of
bers from throughout the state. the 'National Catholic Educa :,;>:, Shared time programs irivolve l''!1onpublic ·school'pupils; in' the ';', tional Association, the National '.", ." Center .of the Confraternity·: of . 'districts"'wheretliey' live, on a =,lpaI"t':'tiIIie basis 'eitherin" classes ,Christian . Doctrine, and, the ".,USCC Department of E d u c ! l t ~ o n l ( : o r '·In such activities· as" music .,: has' ,undertaken the. task of.for "'lessons and ·band. '., I mulating 'a total program of sex The MSBA proposal would · . education which will utilize the count the nonpiIblic school pupils reso,urc.es of home, school and on the same basis as Slimmer" parish; , school pupils in determining ..'!Such an undertaking c~r:mot foundation aid. This involves' · be effectively conoluded by on~ . '.. .... . cpnsiderihgthe' humber of days ·" sm~ll group of people, however, ' , ''':: • CIRCUS PERFORMERS: Artists I and performers' Of the' French circus world 'receive .-:" t~e pupil·.att~rids schoonn rela · land * * * the· success of any pro- ,j ';--(:: J , ••••• '" • .' , •• .' , " ·tion:· to the number of 'days in l',: gr1!-~' for se~educa.tion or·.film- ,YOInmun~o:n d.ip;ing the'trad~tion;al,a~nual ~as$, of '~'Jul:fgler of Notre,'Da~e,",of£,~~ed ' the school year.' .. ily life e?';l~ation IS depe~dent for all Circus people at the PariS .River Circu~, NC·Photo•. , ' .. ,,-., .. ,Last year!s delegate assembly · ~n th,e.. abl1Ihes and professIonal,,"" . :,'. : ,. ··considered this aid proposal and
t'he
:E£~::~~U1~Ae:~:r;~n::0;~!~n:~~~':~ lack'Powe~~~~dersFrig'hten .Dominican ·_!.,ft~ided the M.SBA should study own' endeavors," Father 'Mc- ' . : . D~lega~es reJ~~cted ano,ther ,r~sII 'h said - D u t c h .Theelo.,gio.n.· Hears..'". !De . ' t...oitBeliefs ", olutlOn mvolv1Og conSIderation Of 'nonpubliclichool pupils in
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First Step 'pETROIT (NC)-The Nether"Iftheparish-by':'geographlcal Dutch liberality: "Much.' has" computing state aid. , . Father John A. Meyer of the lands' famous Dominican theolo- boundary system as' .we now been made of how liberal we are 'Rep. Albe!'t Quie'of Minnesota Family Life Apostolate of the 'gian came to Detroit to ten have it, doeS not work; another . in Holland but I do not think recently told advocates of pub Newark archdiocese writes: 2,000 people about "Man and: SoCio~ogical unit muSt be uSed that we are that far ahead of lie aid for private and 'parochial · "]~or a long time we have 00 God." as the basis for the parish. Only the UniteI'! States or anyone else. schools here, "don't lose hope." ne~d •that an, effort to stimu-' He' did that, but, he also in this w-ay and by follmring The difference lies' in the 'attiAddr~ssing -th~ First District late parents to fulJ1i1l their re learned a few things about man: the guidelines of Vatican n, 'and tude Of the Bishops there, and co~ventIon of CItizens for. Edu sponsibility as educators would from Detroit's Black Power lead putting fundamental change into the. fact that laymen occupy key ca~onal. .F~~om. h.e~ Rep. be sufficient to provide for the ers. What he learned he didn't Practice can a cleavage' be POSltiOns in the press, radio and· . Qwe Sald. 1 m oPti~istic about sex education of children. It is say, but he didn't like it. averted." ' TV media. . the future of education on your . only recently that we have' come "What these- people believe is Dutch LiberaJib' Leads to Vaeuum (I . p~rt." ~e recommended a state-' lilt :realize- that mllilY parents frightening." he' said. "But en Celibacy: "The questi()ll in ; WIde dIalOgue to d~velop. school aren't able; that many don't tirely just, even though it shows Holland has the same urgency "There is a greater openness, aid, legislation. · eare, and that even those who a' lack Of, sociological responsi as it does here in the United as a result, and the Dutch people are able ana. who do care can·. bility ." . ' . states. There is a.trendto·uh will sa-y what people everyWhere' profit by the sup;port of the .,. Thetheo-logian is- Father Ed";: couple the vow· of.the.priesthood· . are thinking." . from the vow' of celibacy. in ,. Church: reform: "~t has been', .' · schools iQ' achievina what .they ward Schillebeeckx, O.P. He se are trying to achieve." cured his. Information .from favor of the man who wants to said by at least· one Protestant ", The Family Life Bureau de- members of the' East Side Voice . be a priest first-and then decide" \ that today's' Catholic .Church, sCribed the mailing as "a first . of '. Independent Detroit,' the whether he wishes to·.be m.'arried reform will lead the Church into· Over, 35 Yean
step, to inSpire ami! encourage Black Power group. or not~" " .... an un-Christian vacuum and that of Satisfied Service
some thinking and. planning in' Floating Power The Dutch Catechism: It "is Protestants have a definite .obli-·· Reg. Master P,lumber 7023
.,' various" diocese~ and 'parish " While the priest was fright not radical iri, my., thinking. gation ~n warning .Catholics. . ·JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. schools.. It will publish a. ~ned by. their beliefs-the o'on There ,!ire some conseryatives ,about this cul-de-sac,' SInce ·they,· 806 NO; MAIN STREET paperb~ck ~ook early next year' tent was not reported-he also who !lre opposing it ,and, as',you" have gone that ro:d and are now·, Fall River 675.7497 tha~ WIll glve. a forma~ f~r a put his finger 'on ariother· pr'ob", know, it now is being re"iewed on· the ·way back:. ' .' ""..... ~--_---,., serIes of, 'pansh meet10gs of' 'lem,the apparent lack of com in Rome. The Dutch Catechism: . " ,. parents and teachern. 'munidltiori' between white is not the catechism, for ,otherS ",," "Negro communities in the U. S. necessarQy, It is, a .good,·catl~-·" Seattle Arch"ishop , , 'Father Schillebeecb, in addi chism for the .Dutch and could tion to delivering his talk on serve as a good example for- . 'Stadium Suplrnorter combining.the ~piritual and sec others who wish their own." I ' r ular; scattered comments on: SEATTLE (NC)-Archbishop Fl t· '. ..' Thorn.as A. Cop-nolly of Seattle oa 109 parlshesL "I str~ngly feel that the territorial parish onquer, periness, , . 'Jb.as given enthusiastic endorse~ plan should pre-empt the float... ' · :inettt to Seattle's "Big SportS ingparis~ plan," he said. Town" aspirations.' , Avert Cleavage .. ' ~ MINNEAPOLIS.. (NC),.,...."Cath:.. " .. ' Seattle.. has been granted a The.. floating parish-whIch olics,h.aveavoided ·loving ,each franchise under the new Amer':'- . 'has been approved in' OkIahoma:.. , .other ..py .;:loving something we ,,' ican .League baseball expansio~' , and Ge!)rgia and has.stirred con- '" ,call, the, ,Church," ,according to·: ' plan provided it secures ap":' troversy' by 'not being appri)Ved'" .Urban B.'-Steinmetz, .,executive . . ,proval on jl. bond issue to raise in other' dioceses _ is, not "the' . director ,of the iliterdenomina-.. funds for a new, domed stadi:" answer for all"people,;j said: the tional· Upper .Peninsula ,Famil, . .. ,.' urn, .The' election, which' will Dutch priest.· "it can cause a·': Life,Bureau in, Esl,:anaba, Michl" place the_proposed increase real , . cleavage between the pe~ple of' gan~.'. ' ':, ' ,.-,,: eState' leVy before the public, God and the hierarchy." Speaking ,at a",regional 1 Con "will'be held in February. ., 'But, he 'addedthat"from a. 1!ratel"l).ity of Christian Doctnne Archbishop Connolly has urged sociological point of view, it is Co~gress here in Minnesota, he all' adults to support the bond necessary to look to new ways liked pre-Vatican Council, II issue. He told a gathering of of forming parishes." Catholics to devotees of ''the youn,g . athletes to "ask your. great Russian. uncrowned St: parents, your families, and your A d Pavlov" who have, acted; sat; friend:; to support this ~fort to WCDr Wi..-nter stood and genuflected when com bring big league sports to our NEWAR~" (NC) -Congress manded to do so. , city. Seattle is 'now a thriving ,man. Dominic V. Daniels of New '. Catholics, he said, have devel": ·.HEARING·AIDS •• ZENITH. ACOUSTICON • UNEX metropolis, but until it is the Jersey is this year's recipient' oped an "avoidance technology.~ • lOSMETIG • BIOLOGICALS • VITAMINS home of big league football and of· "the .- annual Archbishop They start loving where theYI baseball, we will not have·, Thomas A. Boland award, given should have finished loving, he
achieved true 'big town', status,~ for. Christian accomplishment in said. ''They love GOd by aV9id-'
the prdate declared. : 'the cc;>mmunications field. The ing His, st~ange people." . 'J
" "I hope I live long en'ough to Rep'~esenta~ive' sponsored. legis- .',. aCcused pnest!:i;.- huns,. andf.:·
'.; " '." IR~~:R. SimA., ~ROP•. " . see some of you boys p~fo~_ in ", la110n . which" resulted 10 .tl!-e 'laymen' of failures 'iii.. operiess. " Prompt, Freef)elivllIJ in" F4Ll'RIVERo 59MERSEI', .TIVERTON' ,VlClIIIIY the ,~tadium. as profeSSIOnal formatIOn of a commission to:. ·.~~Only when we.conque.r.thislack: ~~r~, ,Archb18hop Connolly ·de- :s~ud~~·tp~,.effe~tsofthe:distribu-, of.openess canwebegintoiove''', ',,'202 .ROC:l< $T~"., .. (COJ!,NBR Pi= ~n\iE SfJ ' . w . RIVII ,.,:~:};~.~~~ .' ". ::. ",;'.. ':'. ,''''.;:'. ;':f.•:;·:~??: ~~:"Q,l)s.~eI}-7,'~~~~~;r,,2, ...• ; .. ,the'. ,??uiCh/'.:·Ste~~~~ s~ied:';'
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THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 14, 1967
Letter Stresses Pope's Concern For Truth
15
N®~~tQe PB'ob~em ~G'O[j'~ ~fr@~O{tJITI1~
VATICAN CITY (NC) The Pope is conce'l"lled for the "integral preserva,.tion" of revealed truth and for its
VATICAN CITY (NC)-ThEl Vatican City dally, L'Osserva~ tore Romano, has plunged into a dispute over whether students adequate presentation in our should wear neckties, and has time. emerged with a rap over the This was the central message knuckles from a fellow news of a papal letter drafted by Am paper. leto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal L'Osservatore Romano strong Secretary of State, to be read to ly supported a school principal a meeting of delegates from who insisted on shirt, tie and Catholic theological faculties jacket. The principal of a busi meeting in Rome. The letter was ness school in Rome said that the sent to Gabriel Cardinal Gar school's regulation requiring stu rone, pro-prefect of the Congre dents to dress "decently and in gation of Universities and Sem inaries. YOl.!NG ESSAYISTS·: Among winners in vocation essay contest sponsored by At. conformity with the school·s The meeting had been called tleboro District Serra Club for seventh and eighth grade students in St. John's parish, dignity" meant wearing conven tional dress. . for Iii study of the existing norms W h 'e n 'this announcement
for seminaries and universities Attleboro, are, from )eft, 'Edward Healey, Phil Busch, Phil Norton, Paul Rockette, Rand stirr{ld an uproar in the Hallail
in the light of the Second Vati ,McNally, John' White. press, L'OsservatoreRomano re
can CounclI. Approximately IsO plied: "The requirement that
universities or Catholic theolog studeryts wear a tie emphasizes
ical faculties had been canvassed respect ,for a rul~ of proprie~
for their opinions on what revi sions should be made: . , and civil behavior."·
Rome's daily Messaggero cO,un Cardinal Cicognani stated in 'tered that philosopher Ludwhr the letter that "one of the great Wlttgenstein always wore an concerns of the Supreme 'Pontiff and lives in an extremely diffi. open shirt when teaching at THE HAGUE (NC) - A top value for me if they are not ap in this post-conciliar period is cult age. The winds of change Dutch Catholic government offi proved and supported by the Cambridge and that physiciSt the safeguarding of, the integrity that blow through the Church Albert Einstein wore neither tie cial criticized many Catholics in views of ,Rome. of the faith. "I am very much in favor of make him very anxious and un this country who "make the nor socks when teaching at "He maintains, in fact, that in great mistake of intellectual · renewal in the Church as that easy. Princeton. the face of the variety of cur ""I must say that I am often arrogance." has been expressed in the latest "In fact, an argument over
rents of thought which agitate annoyed by rude and insulting Dr. Joseph Luns, minister of ecumenical council, but only in the modem world, the integral foreign affairs, deplored reli side the limits set by the Pope." statements that some Catholics ties in Italy, which for the mos&
part still lacks elementary inlrti
preservation of the revealed de gious experiments "outside the Stressing that he was a great in this country dare to make tutions, seems highly ridiculous."
posit (of faith) must be the ob , scope of the rules set by, the admirer of Pope Paul VI, Dr. about the Holy Father." said Messaggero.
ject of concern for all, particu Pope" as "wrong and danger Luns referred to the Pontiff as ' larly for those who have at heart ous." "Why argue over ties when we
"a diplomatic Pope." the true good of the Church. lack classrooms?"
Dr. Luns expressed these and "He has one of the heaviest other views concerning the post tasks that ever had to be ful Message of Faith conciliar Church in a biography filled in the history of the "And this means in the first written by Han J. A. Hansen, Church," he said. "He works BOSTON (NC)-Two Catho NEW YORK (NC) - Cardinal
parliamentary correspondent, for place those who have the pri lic nuns are teaching 30 Boston De Volkskrant, Dutch national mary task of the high intellec policemen the rudiments of the Spellman's "finest monument"
tual formation of its ministers. Catholic daily. Spanish language so they can was "his courageous leadership
In offering his views on Cath But it is not only the integrity better cope with problems of at the Second Vatican Council in
behalf of improved Christian
of the Faith that is in play. There olic life in The Netherlands to the city's fast-growing popula ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) Jewish relations and his strong
day, Dr. Luns stressed that as 'a is also the presentation of it ad tion of Spanish-speaking. equately to the men of our time . Catholic he was "Vl~ry much a -Seminarians of the Brooklyn The policemen, who bought endorsement of the principles of
and Rockvllle Centre dioceses Roman Catholic." by the priests of today and to their own dictionaries and are religious liberty," S t e r Ii n g
· will take their four years of 'Rude Statements' morrow. paying other expenses incurred Brown, president of the National,
"In other words," ,he added, college work at Cathedral of the by the ianguage course, will Conference of Christians and
"Because of all of this, the Immaculate Conception in the Pope has confidence in those "the authority of' the Pope in Brooklyn diocese' beginning in soon be graduated from the Jews, said.
religious matters is absolutely valued collaborators who are language laboratories of the binding for me. Local statements, September, 1968. the teachers of the', sacred sci DoJ:l, Bosco Technical High 1!!1I11111111111111111111111111111/11111111111111111111111111/1111u;, The Rockville Centre semina § DRY CLEANING '.. § ences, theologians, exegetes, views and theories have no School. rians currently are taking such moralists-and he invites them, Instructors are Sisters Angel-' § and § at St. Pius X.Preparatory ,ita and Carmen, of the Oblates to make themselves aware of his Enj~ys ,, courses ~ FUR STORAGE ~ Semii18ry in Uniondale. The ar concerns, to remain faithfully of the Most Holy Redeemer, rangem~nt was worked out by Teachi~g united and obedient to the mag both of whom hold master's de ,~ ~ Archbishop Bryan J. McEntegart, grees in education. isterium (the Church's teaching PORTLAND (NC) - Rabbi e authority) to work with love, to ' Yehuda Cohen said "it's just bishop of Brooklyn, and Bishop Capt. Jeremiah P. Sulllvan, § C~EANERS ~ maintain, develop and present wonderful" teeching the young Walter P., Kellenberg of Rock sponsor of the language course, , said there are now 18,000 Span the message of faith and to form women students at nearby ville Centre. 34-44 Cohannet Street IS
Under, the plan St. Phis 'X ish-speaking persons in Boston, § tomorrow's ministers of the Marylhurst College,: conducted ~ Taunton • 822·6161 ~
Seminary will be solely an insti e Lord of wh'~h the faithful peo most of them immigrants of re by the Sisters of the Holy'Names 1uti,on for high school studies. liilllllllllllII11I11I11I1II111/1111111111111111111111111111111111lS , cent years. He, said they include ple in this world of change have of Jesus and Mary. , 12,000 Puerto Ricans. The num need." "The Sisters do everything ,ber of Spanish-speaking is in they can to make me, feel at ereasing, each week, Sullivan home and the, students are sin said. cere and interested in what 18 BONN (NC) - The German .going on .in the world today.," bishops have made an urgent 'Die rabbi said. LOS ANGELES, (NC)-Car appeal for support of the seventh" In addition to tearlhing educll ~ dinal Speilmap's "jove ofCou~", tion and science at the College, j\.dveniat campaign;" which aids' try was subordinate only to love Rabbi Cohen, is working for bls the Church in Latin America'. of God,'.' Francis Cardinal Mc "Hel~ ~nnually, 4urin'g~he ~d doctorate at the University of Intyre of Los Ang~les, ~id. Portland, conducted' by HolY veJ.lt season; the campaign last PRINTED AND MAILED "As a churchman, he was even Cross Fathers here in Oregon. ,year collected more than $12 ' more the proponent of love, de:' , Rabbi Cohen also commented: million. M~st of it was used' to Write or Phone 672·1322 279 Barnstable Road votion to 1ale people' of God HSometimes the students' forget , aid catechists, S9Cial and educa ~ SP 5-0079 234 Second Street - Fall River and the promotion of religion and call me 'Father.' .. · tional programs,' and the lay amongst men," Cardinal McIn apostolate in Latin America. :¥ & 2 i tyre said. "These were the high In this year's appeal for con Suppo~~ motives and constant impulses tribution, the bishops stressed :!lllllllllllllllllil/ll/llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~ which permeated his persistent that the funds will also help sup ly active and dedicated life. He port literacy programs and FAIRFIELP (NC)-The presi was truly a man of God-a gen dent of Fairfield University told leadership training programs for tleman of God. America has lost an alumni group here that some laymen, as well as priests and § INC. § a great patriot 'and the Church form of public financing must Religious. a stalwart priest and the hier be made available to private in archy a prudent counselor., He stitutions of higher education if will rejoiCE! in greeting his they are to survive in the next maker whom he has served so :to years. , faithfully." Father William C. McInnes,' ONE STOP Cardinal McIntyre recalled his S.J., also ~recommended a stand SHOPPING CENTER own collaboration with Cardinal ard accounting system be used Spellman in "all fields of human by all institutions of higheredu' . Television • Grocery endeavor," declaring that "biB cation so that costs 'could be ' . Appli~nces·. Furniture , deep devotion' and generous compared a· realistic basis. ." ., ' ' ' _''This system could' do much to 104 .Allen St.." New Bedford "= . . . sacrificing spirit manifested for our men' in the armed forces has dispell .the linancial myths', in " " 997.9354 -~. 'SE(,~ND MASS~ ~ &tined the ·a.diW,I'aUonof US allo" this atea~"·.b!,~aillll.' -, >-, '." •. ' i , ,,;. . , immURHlDlliHHIIIIUlIIlIllJllllllllllliIllIUIIIHUlJJlllJIiJluIHl:iiillllllllllllllmll""lIIl1tJmlllllllluIIJlnnJllllll
Deplores' Arrogance f)f 'Some Catholics"' Dutch Official Stresses Pope's Authority
Catholic Sisters Teach Policemen
Lauds leadership
Seminaries Merge
College C.ourses
Rabbi Cohen Catholics
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'Ask Aid' for Church I'n: Latin,Alllerica
Card,inal Spellman Gentleman of God
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THE ANG; 'J'Ri-Diocese of FaUI R;j,v.E!lT~ 'Tirnul1Si..ID'ec: t.41,,119'6:"
Says Exfen'SlQ'n Society' Seeks Enlv·olvemen.f' i'n~ .Modern World! i
Asks U'!Y]svelTsi'fs'es A.nsweO'$
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NOTRE DAME (NC) - The "inmost" questions· oji' meDl if prE:sident, of St. Louis University they gh'e more' rD'one~ and' pres- has: challenged universities to gP tige- to, disefplin§ "which the' beyond' the realm of purely in more' directly deal with man~" tellectual development and help He' called fOll' more stress: on' men find' answers to "ultimate" su.ch .studies as, psychology;: So questions aOout the meaning of ciology, genetics; cultural an exiBtence. tfu:opology, economicSj philoso-: "For all the .expansion ()f phy, political science and,.his;.. llmowledge, for all the concern touY', fOr the' immedimte material ~la.n1s Inmost tifewants of man, for all the hopes But all these studies, he' said; put ill' the perfection of a just 'are' peripheral to, ·the intelIec' political and' social system, there tual; discipline "which deals' with. is an ever growing feeling' that the' inmost life of' man '", " '" in Il)resent day man is cut adrift. relation to that which is, botli without ultimate meaning and . closest to that inmost lif.e and . without guiding purpose for his which at the. 'same time: is tit llife,'" de(;.l'ared: Father Paul ;r ted}~ beyonell it" God" 1. mean' Reinert, S,J. * * * Uleology;, in, its widest Father Reinert spoke' at a sym meanings and iii. all its varied ~i1J:m on "U'ni·versities ill' a' De parts," .v.>eloping World' Society," held Father' Reinert warned, how ~ connection, with the- 125th an ever, that theological studies Illlive:rsary oj) the founding' of the must be' caruied.'.· on: at the same 1Ol'ni,v'ersity of Notre flame., level of scholarly competence as other university fielc;ls. . .Modern intrumentalit~ "Theology must· be researched\ He said. man. will continue to studied, developed, criticized. freel. adxift without answers "un tr.ansmit'ted;':' within,· the.: vital l1less the Wliversity enters into milieu of the modern WlL'\te.r flbe situatioDJ * • * The."university sity.," he stated" adding, that. it is the only modern insll'\l11lental should welcome. the contJ:ibu. ilty which will. be able, to cope with this malaise of emptiness; tions of comparative religious studies and comparative Value ,~is seemingly hol~ow and vacu ous· re-echo of the question systems, including non-theistic 'Why'r'," Father Reinert. stated. s.ystems, like ethical' hu.manism. "I am, not suggesting, that. the IlIniversity is or shoul<K be- a. aurrol~ate church nor do I at ant. think that knowl'ed'ge is a oobstitute for religious' faUh. w be said, ':"1 am simply * C> • sayin~ litere is no other institution· re alistically available to many men to help> effectivcly 19 this IlftOSt basic of' queries. 0'n13l' the' lIInlversi·ty· can- begin .. .. .. t;) Btli. this void~'" Father Reinert said? uni'V'ei'si eies will" best fulfill' their l'e apoosibility t& nelp' answer the
Ohic. Church .(;tloups. Decide to Merge . COLUMBUS, (NC)--The Area. <Council of Cliurches and' tl'le lInter-Church Board for Metl'o~ Jl)olitan Affairs, two Columbus <church groups-;, have' merged' to form the new Columbus Metro politan Area: Church Board. TIle merger ended a year of joint planning. The lnte.r-Church 'Board is made up of' 10 local Protestant 2lodies :md: the Catholic- Diocese of Columbus. The Council of .\Churches,. au older rrroup;. is made up of individual parishes, all Protestant.. By-laws call for memhers' of the new organization to "act co opeuatively' in projects of com mon nature' when the needs of the' community' demand and: our Christian conscience approves" and· to "speak in a united voice to the community when a clear COnsensus, perceives a truth> that must' be spoken." Denominations re'presentedJ are: Presbyterian, Methodist, 'Catho lie. A.M.E'. ZIon and Episcopal € h urches. Lutheran. Churcht in America, American Lutheran . Church, lJnited Church ot € l u'ist. Community Cllurclles,. Chrisfiian Churches. and Mt. Calvary Bap tist Asso(~iation.·
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LA JOI:'i:..A (NC) - James J. Kavanaugh, author of the best selling "A Mod~ Priest Eooks. a,t His Outdated Church/' whG ·announced his resignation from the priesthood in October, 'will .be married Dec~ 16, to' Patricia Jean Walden, 35, a San Diego' .nurse. ThEl wedding will be wi""· Blessed by an Episcopal pries&. .
SA'N A\N.TONIO (N€); - TJie national director' of the EXten sion Society Volunteers; said here that tne' society- bas set. its: sights on) a program of total involVe ment in the modem world and has tur,l1ed its· attention from fi nancing. churcli. contruction to touching' the daily' lives of people: Father John Sullivan. whose headquarters are in Chicag.o, headed-' a. recruiting, team; that ¥isited. St, Mary's Umversity, Incarnate Word College' and OUr TI.adY of' the Lake College, hel!e. Father Sullivan said in: am in terview that during, its early days the society "helped' build over 8\000' churchelf," but added that "it became· apparent. to, us, a· few years ago, that wliat' we . were' doing was nolr the most gripping prol{ram futhe' world.. There are greater needs than . for. church buildings.'" Twofol'd: GOal' The society's goals, 'the direc tor said·, are twofold: "We must analyzoe' the needs in various areas of the nation, but we mus,t do, this. throUgh the ex KANSAS' ORDINARY: penience' of fulltime involve Bishop David M., Maloney, ment," He said the. Extension fOt'mer auxiliary' bishop of Socie'ty seeks. to. train, v:olWlteers to. canry theil! work into. the: com . Denver, has been named! b-y munity long after their enlist Pbpe' Paul VI bishop of Wi ment. is. up. chita, Kansas. NG PllotQ>. 'the: malior problem, faced: to
Ac,ceptabi:t~ty P'roblems;
N'A,B' U'rges, Coope·r.oJti,on, WithC.de Authorit,
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Firms p'resent.
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day by the society concerns reo 'cruitment, Father Sullivan said. "It is- si'mpl:y diffcUlt to get the word ;across that we have a program and we need peoplc," he remarked~ The effect of the volunteers: in America's inner-city gnettos has been minimal, the director ob served, and- added: "rin afraid it is small because of our nUIi1 hers, We have requests for workers' from every major city i'n America, but we cannot fill them:· Social Progr:t.m "We are not out to baptIZe ·everyone. We stress a social pro gram;" Father Sullivan said. "We rWl job opportunity pro g,rams,. spend time as informal COWlSelS in court rooms, work with school dropouts, develop recreation- programs. and train commWlity teachers," he con. tinued_ Father. Sullivan\. wh<t. has headed the program since: 1961,. admi tted that. the going, hasn't been easy,. "'Ii'he' problem. we had,'" lie re lated,. "is; that there' was nOo pre cedent for us. We. have.: come along; on. tl'iab and er.ror., "What L look forward to," he added, "is seeing what our train.; ees: do when' they get out. of the program~ This is; ~ impollf: ant.. We l ve been through the mill, but. rin more hopefilli and more enthusiastic than ever."
Wisconsin CoUt!ge Head to Retire
WASRLNG'llONi (NC) - The and" together with the selectiOns value'" filins are designed: for tl!'end, in' themes; andJ.. treatments, of dialogue, are presented for use in Qj1ick. advertising: cam. RACINE (NC) - Sister' M. employed! in, motion- pic~ is thein' Shock value~ ROsita Uhen, president ()f' Do paigns and ·there is DO central l'aising,problemsfor'viewetlS;, and JiBnican COllege here for' 14 When an "adult" theme and agency to coordinate the. acfv:er also for' the televisiolll indUsfr,y. "frank'" diil1ogue' are, treated· in tising: as is: the case with other years' will' retire next· .Tune' 30 So--cal!ed, adUlt. storieS";. "frank" no. "trailen;" many, find,. the: con~ products and' services. Feature and· will be named' president dialogue; sex and nudit'yl seem emeritus. Her successor has' not centratlionl of shock. elements· length filJ:ns can cause probfimis t~ be found· more and more in particula.£1y bad.. because of the. current trend: to yet. been chosen. motion; pictures., Some' may' ar 'J:ele¥ision: is, having; increas.' program adult-theme pictures on Under her administrati~n the gue that th:is: indicates: at, grow ing, plloblems in this, connecti0I4 televIsion. four-year,. liberal arts college ing public acceptance of' these npt onl}\ with "trailers,'" but. witJI B:coadcasters havebeen\wamed became coeducational in 1955 tfiings, but there~ are still many "adult". feature fi1.ms, themselves.' and purchased' the present cam D)'I the NAB: code authoIit;w that persons who. a'\tOid· such; filin The National'. Association1 of there- cannot be III double; stand pus. site on' Lake Mfchig;m. faue, it they knoW" in' advance Broadcasters, which has. its: ard--one fon movies' and· al sec what they are likely to see, headq.uarteI1> nere" has called ond for all'other program mate A new dimension bas: Deen attenti'on to,these problems" urg rial-in deciding; what is; accept added! to the ptoblem of' view ing. tlie cooperation. of film, pro-' able for the te!evision screen. eTS, by. the "trailer;" or preview ducers and TV stations. with the, 'rniey: have been told that, of a coming' attraction~ More NAB code authority iIi, meeting and more one hears parents them" NAB is strongly for self . while all mass media/should mir ior the' nation's life' and times, complain that they go to' a pic regulation in the industry" warn ture 'house after selecf!ing the ing that seIf:"regulation itself is: television must assume this role film. with care, and· the' film it on trial' today - not, only, in' in a way that is' consistent with self proves, unobj'ectionable, but broadcasting but. in American I ''its, universal accessibility in the home." a "trailer," or' preview, is' flashed for. Bristol County busi\less generally. (In the ,screen without warning Shock Value Films andl for some minutes the fam "TrailersI' are said to give, ily is subjected to a concentra broadcasters a partIcular prob ' tion of precisely the things it ~ri$tol lem, because these: short "shock sought to_avoid. ' llV IP'ro~lems r~M~t Com~~ny . ~mJ[7Ji$1ki "Trailers" are put together to . (Ql!p>~ll'ili . , sti.mulate 'iew1!r inter~st in a ,il'AUNTON,. MASS•. 1'0 N@Inl~«:(!jJ,l!'boIDCS coming' picture. Tel' this end, WILMINGTON (NC) St. scenes arc taken out" of context Matthew's Catholic' parish will THIE' BANK ON permit non-CatholiCs: to' serve TAUNTON GREEN on its .parish council with f'ull rights. and privileges. In,y~n"~'iement' Member o.r Federal Deposit' The non-excli.Ision· policy was , BOSTON· (NC) _·Setl. Edward Insurance. Corpora.tica announced at a: meeting of'the I M, Kennedy of Massachusetts parish's I5.-member organiZ'iDg·. , ,urged Boston College's; newly committee; called; to) explain to I created Council. on Urban; De:uel opment to "take the lead ire a parishioners, the duties and· 1fri§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§§:=i1~ general revitalization of ghetto metho.ds of electing' representa '. tives to, its. council~ . neighbornoods." . St. Matthew's, parish' is. one of "What I call upon you to do, is to take the college into the ci~," the larger parishes in the' d.i~ .I Sen, Kennedy declared. ''What cese of Wilmington. It: has' more I am urging .is that you transfer than 1,500 families with total " . the skills arid ljlbilities you have membership: running as' high as de'veloped. from the academic 6;000· members. towers to the tenements of Bos Diocesan guidelines can; for ton. Only by personal action, in all parishes, to establish parish .' BANQUETS, .' WEDDINGS • PARTIES the' streets of the city, can we councils" with, a, majority of remake our slums and renew the elected: laymen, by Jan. 1. To. •. ,COMMUNION', .BREAKfAStS faith of the slum dwellers." wards the end of November;. st. Sen.. Kennedy spoke at a din Matthew's parishioners; will I 1'343 Pi:~ASANT STREEJ' FALl: RIVEII ner marking: the: formation of the nominate by ballot 24 candi council as part' of th~ Jesuit-run . dates; and on Dec. 17 will' elect 993-77.; eollege's' Institute' of' Human 12 councU members from the Sciences. . nomin,ees. ~"
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Negro Students Postpone Walkout At Chicago Catholic High School CmCAGO (WC) - A Negro stuilent who hail planned to :tead 19 fellow stut1ents out of Mendel Catholic High Sehool here said th;} eOlAnseling of a Catholic priest and tne students' own faith helped to avert the walkout, and prevent a possible riot. The stul1ent, David Burnett, saW. Father George Clements, aS3istant pastor of St. Dorothy church had counselled 1he Negro seniors 10 find another way to protest alleged discrimination at the school, 'OPerated by the Aug'ustinian Fathers. "We 1ee1 that our cause was just but we have decided to postpone walking out of our school because we still hope we can make {:hristians ~ut of the pet>pIe who teach and study in our school," Burnett said. '''We at Mendel nre here 'becnuse we love 'our school. We have been burt by the remarks of some faculty and students, humiliated by them, and treated witb contempt by them," he continued. "Our Catholic faith has taught us nat to return hatred :for hatred, or hurt for hurt. We know there are many who will not understand our ::ction but W2 nslr 101' neither sympathy no1' encolll"Ugement." Burnett smd the Negro stu dents' complaints centered on rnciol slurs spd derogatory hu mor in the ,classroom, the lack of student represelltation on the student senate's human relations committee, .nnd the lack ,of Negro history in .the curriculum. Dmiles Official .Bins T~ EXPress their griev.ances,
ciol discrimination at the school. Bd he added: "1 do believe there pas been discrimination from students.' But in a school this large, while it's bad, it's predictable. When I had a kid I was called a lot of names too. And I still am. So is Cardinal Cody." Later, Father Hartigan met with the parents of the Negro students involved. Participants did 1;1ot comment on the ineeting except to say it had been am icable arici useful. But a member of the faculty who asked that he not be quoted by name said: "We did not have racial trouble because .of the wise action of our students .and faculty members, .and we will try to better our situation hel'e at Mendel." " He said that a curricular seg ment in Negro history is -being planned, and that the school will have a representRtive number of Negro 'students on the human relations council.
Cardinal's Decision Evckes Admiration
Thurs., Dec. 14, 1967
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Newly appointed music direco tor is George Campeau: Organ ists are John Danis and Susan Bochenek. Music at the 8:30 Mass Sunday mornings is directed by Frank O'Neil. !:ontenlporary music will ac company the 8:3Q Mass Sunday morning, Dec. 17. The .eYO will sponsor a dance for high school students at S tomorrow night im the paris!nl hall. . The Christmas meeting of the Women's Guild featured singing by the Parables of Sacretfil.· Hearts AcademY,·and a demon-' stration ,of Christmas decor~ tions by Mrs. Marion Munro.
ADDRESSES EDUCATORS; Conference' of -Catholic School Superintendents held was addressed by Charles J. Hitch, left, new president of the University of California .and former ,compb'oller of the Defense Department, Wash ington. With Mr. Hitch is lVIsgr. Arthur T. Geohegan, con ference chairman and supe.rintendent of diocesan schools, Providence. NC. Photo.
ST. JOSEPH, F1\LL RIVER T-he Women's Guild will hold its .annual Christmas party ~. 7:30 tonight, with entertainmep-t by the Franco Family Singers. An e;x:change 01 gifts will he held aner Christmas candy wi~ be available for purchase.
OTTAWA (l~C)-The admin istrative board of the Canadian Catholic Conference and the ST. THEAESA, apostolic delegate to Canada SOUTH A'J"TiLE:JORO have expressed their regret Bnd Confraternity <of Christian' admiration that Paul-Emile Car Mothers members will caro] dinal Leger of Montreal has re-' Wednesday, Dec. 20 at the signed from his See to become .a Maryknoll. Missioner's "WeekGy Pt'ogram
homes of area shut-ins. The missionary in Africa. unit is sponsoring a "Kee:lJl The administrative boari! said: Gets InternationCiI Citation
Christ in Christmas" billboard "All the members of the ·board TOKYO (NC)-UThisWoman . long .group discussion is directed on Route 1, South Attleboro•. wiSh io express their deep 'l'e Also a Christmas project w,as by an lNAP instructor. TNA'P is You," ,a weekly television pro gret at the loss 'of ·such .an in the ·donation of gifts forchii1-, Instituto Nacional de AcCivn e ,gram conducted 'by a Maryknoll spired leader." They ·said 'they they hnd ;tlonsidereddisrup~ bad ,profound .afuniration Ifor'the InvesUgacion-was :founded ·by dren at 'Wrentham State Schoon missioner in 'Chile has been se and mailing 01 cards made by the -slihool \Schedule, he ,admitted, cardina1's 'decision, 'Which '\does lected 'for :tbe Japan Gold Medal Father'D'Escoto and is the insti lind had sought .adviee 1r.om ,per-. honor to 'Yourgenerol1s ,spirit." tutional producer -of '''This .children in CCD classes to 'Sel! Award, ,educational television's vieemen in 'Viet 'Nam. SOIlll '''within and without" 'the ~ hee <delegate, :l\rchbishop hlghest :intern.ational citation. \It . Woman .Is 'You." 'SS. PETER AND PAUL, -school, 1ncluding F<tther Cl1ml mAP's <-goal, said F.ather EmanueIe <Claiizio, said: "';1 .am ~s 'the fiIst time the .awal'dhas ents, whose JPariSh OIl ,the !.ar ;grieveil ,by the unexpected ,but been 'presented t(l .a ·program p~ooto,is 'one of upliftiJ1;g ~I.d FA'LL RtFVER Cub Scouts will hold a Chris sou:th;w;est -side -of Ohic~ ·is great and ooble gesture o>Of IHis produced in Latin America. safeguarding people ofthe slums. .mas ,.party tomorrow in the locntm1 near .the school. Thr-ee Eminenee Cardinal .P.aul-Emile "We .are WIOrking so that nei Producer .of '.the .show is :Rather mmr.by public 'SChools hav.e llad Miguel D'Escoto of the Catholic ther industry nor any political church han. Also 'tomorrow, the Leger." ;raciu1 disturbances within the .Bishnp cClarizio .added: ..·It ,js a Foreign 1III.iBsion Society ,fif .party will e= .be .able 14> i.ak-e CYO will 'sponsor a Holly JfQJj> lrom8to 11 in the school han; past ,lew months. loss .!or the .Canadian Church; :it ~eriea. The prize, in addition advantage ,rtf the :poor 'Worker." and members will attal>.d ·3 folk F.ather 'Clemtmts .ad»ised ,fire is .a great .gain for .ib1~ <worldwide -to 'theG'old Medal, includes .a Mass Frida.y, Dec. .22 with tbe fitudents to make thei r .com ~:<l;OOO :grantandan interna~ion.al Church." Methodist Minist.e:r P..arables of Sacred Hear·ts plaints like gentlemen, Burnett ·tour-presen1ation. Aca~ ·as guests. A Commu related. '''This Woman is ¥ou," which nion supper will follow in the Announce Nominees F.ather D'Escoto describes .as .a Speaks at fRe~ulem Useful Meetin~ church hall. NELES (NC)-A Methodist Meanwhile, Father Daniel J. -television show for housewives fDr y o.uth A~If,or.ds
lIartigan, O.S.A., Mendel pl'inci .and mothers of ·slum ,areas minister in vestments spoke at .a IWZZARDS B~ WASHING'1l0N CN'C)-N~mes around the Chilean capital ~ requiem 'Mass ';f(lr Mrs. 'Evelyn ST. MARGARET, pal, ·denied there has been offi of five nominees <for Outstanding Santiago, was one ,of JUore than Kish in-Bt. :ColumbkiUe Cath tMembersof ,S1. M-hl:gm-d· (llic :Cturch ,here in Ohio. Catholic Young Adult of the ·83 ,entries from 67 foreign coun MarY Guild visited the Sacred Penna..Benedictines Y-ear 'and five nominees for '0ut tries. The Rev. Richard :Lee Bu ms, Heart Seminary in East Ware cstandi.ng ~Catholic Youth -of 'the .of Niles ''FirSt :Methodist Church, ham .and conduc.ted.a Christmas "This Woman Is Y,ou" is tele Select Coadjutor
'Year nave been released obythe cast weekly from Santi~o's spoke words rtf "comfort .and 'P.arty .nnddistributed gifts aoo LATROBE (NC)---.F.ather Eg affirmation" after the final ab 'Youth Department, United States Catholic University to 40 spe sweets to .the Brothers. bert H. Donovan, O.S.B., 54, has Catholic 'Conference. :A letter if\rom Bishop Medei o4li:allyprepar.ed -television centers. soluti0l\ was 'given by Father been elected coadjutor archabbot Nominees for ·.Cntholic 'Young J'OS w.as llead at .the .meeting ,p lmmediate1Y following the 'Robert ~. Sanson, 'St. Columb of the Benedictine community of Adult are Jean Kubiak of Sealy, 41iO.,minute program an 1l0ur- kille assistant. 1lressing thanks for the gift d St. Vmeent archabbey 'here in Tex.; Carol .Joanne Kenel of The husband .of Mrs. Kish, '$100 sent to the Brownsville P.enn..o;ylv.ania. He s u c,c e-e'ds Washington, :D.'C.; :Mary Eliza .Joseph, .had invIted the minis Bishop on the occasion of the Arcnab'6ot Ren';bert G. Weak ter to be_ present at the Mass. beth Clanc;y of East Barrington, Planning l:ns,titute recent devastating flood in The Xishes had been neigh land, O.S.B., who was elected N. H.; Matthew J. Bierl, Jr., of ,diocese. bors of the Rev. Mrs. Burns ST. ANTHONY OF \PADUA, abbott primate 1>f the world Williamsville, N. Y., and Richard 'On Admlnistration J. Quirk, Jr., of St. Louis. Benedictines in Rome last 'Sep WASHINGTON (NC) - T~ fur 'eight years. I<~LL B.IVER tember. Noininees for Outstanding 'fourth annual lnstituteon AQ The Council of Catholic Womell Catholic Youth of the Year are ministration in Catholic Agen Arcbabbot Donovan has been will meet at ,8 Tuesday night, Starts Lay CoundJ prior of Benedictine priory and ·Charles A. Vasquez of Houston; cies and Institutions will be held Dec. 19 in the parish hall, fol Linda Marie Paswiet of South Jan. 21-24 on the campus of headmaster of Benedictine Mili PATERSON (NC) - B.ishop lowing deyotions in the chUl'ch. tary School in Savannah since Bend, Ind.; William B. Seebeck Loyola University, Chicl:\go. Lawrence ·B. Casey of Paterson Members care .requested to brh1!:J of Staten Island; Anthony Luna The institute will be co-spon last June. His new :position in Christmas ,pastries for the socie1 has jna~gurated a diocesan lay of San Antonio; and Mahala sored. by the National Confer cludes the chancellorship of St. hour. Mrs. Georgelina Dessert, council COmPosed of 20 men and Robinson of St. Louis. ~nce of Catholic Charities, the Vincent College. 10 women. 'The council will be -chairman .of ,gifts for a penny The winners will be announced 'Loyola School Of Social Work aD. advisory and consultatiVe sale 'slated for Monday, Jan. 22, Born in Buffalo nnd reared in Jan. 1. and Catholic Charities of the body, serving as the officialliai Massillon, Ohio, he was gradu .also requests ,that donations 0011 Archdiocese of Chicago. It will son between the bishop and the ,gifts and canned goods be ated 5:rom St. Vincent Prep be staffed by key personnel of laity of the diocese. School and College, where he re bro\\ght to the Tuesday meetiQg. Wiscon-sin :Schoel
the University (If Wisconsin'-s eeived .bis ,bachelor's .and mns Center ,:for .Advanced Study in ter's degrees. He also holds a Bussing Successfu~
Organization .Science.and other mnster's degree in -education :MADIS0N (NC)-The siate experts in administration. from the Catholic University of sponsored program of transpor America in Washington. tation for parochial and priv:ate Mi~k A Benedictine monk :1'or 3B school pupils is '''working -But ~ars, Archabbot Donov.an WllS wcll," according ,to 'Wisconsin's :Grdained to the priesthood June state superintendent of publk OU :1.6, 1940. He will serve as.co instruction. :adjutor to Archabbot Dennis O. William C. Kahl said he -ex _ _ _'_G_U_/f_H_i_"_R_O_Uf_e_M_o_n_i_S_1.:1 'Strittmatter, O.S.B., 'who re pectsno substantial changes .in. FOR HOM£D1?L1VERY -cAll 9g;8-$69J linquishetl jurisdiction over the ilie legislation in ·thenear future.
I. Latrobe Benedictine community The number of JJon-public sch{)()l
Wins TV
Aw~rd
fl.
The Best
"You 'Can Whip Our Cream, but
You Can't Beat Our !"
Y _ Always .at. Your ,Service'!
in 1963. He is the eiglIth .arch -students using the transportation
abbot to succeed Boniface Wim is less than expected due to.eD JIIler who founded 81. Vincent in . Tollment declines in private and
1848. parochial schools.
For 'You, Co,
....
GULF' HIll DAIRY
so. DARTMOUTH. MASS.
-
18
THE J ~!CHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, '1967
C~HJ'@]DIT1l@~ ~~~®[fli'~ Negatrnve ~m@ge Ol~ ~[f@gOn ~LQ)[f®@@]
....
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SAO PAULO (NC)-Agnelo € a rdinal Rossi 'oiC Sao Paulo mas charged that "the biased lllIld. poisoned views of some in';' 'Ilernational newsmen, colummilts and'lecturers have manage-j to present a thwarted, negllltive image of Bl:azil." Cardinal Rossi sald in an inI/lerview that the Brazilian bishI9Ps attending the Rome Synod <Of Bishops last Octo.ber "felt the dut)t to reCtify thene views befOre other bishops and, before the Holy See;" He said that this clarification was particularly needed "regardkig the tremendolW effort the ; bishops and people of' Brazil are making under, the pastoral ienewal program; in orde'r to 'aPPly the· guidelines of the Secend'Vatican Council." "Unfortunately," he ContinUed, "little is 'being said of th,is Spring of the ChiJrch after the coundl, of the silent work go-· ing on to retr~n priests, and Religious, tQ b~g the council, ~rectives to' grassroots l$vel., ,Perhaps this is taken foe granted, as, the normal thing to do, , and therefore is no news. Only ~'when man bites' dog do the , PresS wires resound." , 'Cardinal Rossi who heads the· 'Brazilian Bishops' Conference, said he feels that "when the doc trinal and {)astoral renewal fos tered by the eouncil are taken llleriously and studied in depth, there is little room for erroneous wews. 1rhrive on Ignorance ',"Sensational opinions come from the novelty-seekers, the demagogues thriving on people's ignorance," he said. Earlier, the influential Fran- '
University Honors Williiam «;iargan , OMAHA (NC)-William Gargan, veteran movie actor and' TV'per:fo'rmer and a strong sup-' , I porter of the American Cancer Society, has been honored by . Creightop ,University here as a "professional act 0 I' , devout'· Catholic and dedicated humanitarian ."" . .. ,• Gargan, who lost his voice' after being stricken with throat eancer six years ago, haB learned to talk through what is called· " "esophagal language." Much of his free time is now spent ad1 ',dressing similarly afflicted perSons at hospitals, clinics and speech therapy seminar" across the country.
Society Observes 80th ;~nniversary STATEN ISLAND (NC) Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, ap ostolic dl~legate to the United States, presided at ceremonies ~mme~orating the 80th anni versary of the Society of, St., eharles at: the community's semInary herl~. ' , James .r. Norris, assistant to the executive director of Clith-, oUc Reliel: Services, and Father Thomas Carlesimo, C.S., were among the speakers. Known as the Scalabrini Fathers, the so ciety was founded in 1887, by Bishop John Baptist Scalabrini to aid Italian immigrant". The society has missions· today in more than a dozen countries throughout the world.
IniFormation DUBLIN (NC) - Ireland's bishop's have established a com
munications councjl aimed at :&ormulating a communications policy for the nation's hiemrchy and providing the bishops with information,' mass media t rain big and ~ieaU'l!a '~~
eo@~®d t?[]'®~~
ciscan magazine Vozes had charged that the Church in Bra zil lacks adequate, objective means of communication and has succumbed to "a perfect system of counter-information." Earlier this year, the Brazilian bishops expressed dissatisfaction with an unsigned article, entitled "Brazilian Schizophrenic: A Church and People at Odds," which appeared in Herder Cor respondence of Dublin, the En glish-Ianguage edition· of the German monthly,· Herder Korrespondenz. The article charged that the' Brazilian bishops are "divided despite all efforts on the part of the Second Vatican Council and officials in Rome to reestab lish harmony among them" and claimed that ihe discord lwouid prevent ,the' isuccess of any Church'· social and pastoral program. '
Episcopalian Prelate Denies Use Of Church for IPrct<e$t ServBce SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The Episcopal bishop of California denied use of Grace cathedral here to a group which wanted to hold a religious protest ser.vice featuring the turning in and burning of draft cards. Bishop C. Kilmer Myers announced in a policy statement on which he reportedly had worked for three days that the service planned by the Northern Californili clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam would not be permitted in the cathedral. To allow it, the bishop said, "would symbolically place the Church in the,position of espousing the breaking of the law concerning the national draft as the only possible or legitimate Christian response to the moral o APPOINTED: Administradilemma of the' war in Vietnam.~' tor of the Archd.iocese of New, "In refusing this request," said' ' Yo_rk, following the death o.f ·Bishop Myers, whq has himself. critiCized the nation's Vietnam Francis Cardinal Spellman, policy, "we do not· reject the Archbishop John J. right of those who feel impell~d guire. NC Photo. ' t o take such ,dras~ic action in:
Ma-
is
'Flays Press fO,r Misleading Propaganda
protest against the war 0 0 Q< We clo not consider their proposed action as an unChristian re sponse to the war." Bishop Myers said the church should not lend itself to a polar ization of extremes of left and right, but to encouragement of a "rhetoric Gf the center." He said the church, "even though though; of divine origin, is but one stitution among many" and therefore should call upon "the university, the industrial and the labor communities to join with us in the development of this rhetoric of the center." Bishop Myers acknowledged that his statement will be "re garded by some as a betrayal of freedom" and "rejected by others who are not in;terested in a cre ative middle way. ,"Nevertheless," he added, "it is issued as a serious call to all .mim ~f good will, to reject both the right and the left and to seek new alternatives to the de structive tendencies and actu alities· of. the extremes." ,
H,aiti Church-State Tensions Decrease
Cardinal Krol .Criticizes 'Reformist' Theology
GEN:gVA (NC)-Tensions be tween the Church and state have decreased in Haiti, Archbishop PHILADELPHIA (NC)~John Vatican Council. They creafe nentism, ~ho seek to transpose Francois-Wolff Ligonde'of Port Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia the impression that the Council into the Church the spirit and au-Prince said here. says "some sections of both the , consecrateli the victory of the structure. of a political democ Addressing a grcrup of Swiss Catholic and secular press" 'are. progressive majority and the de- racy, create a popular impres Catholics on the 40th anniver more interested in propaganda feat of the traditionalist minor':' sion that there is a valid parallel· sary of the founding of the Jus than in information. ity." , magisterium. tinus Fund, a Catholic institution "For this reason the publica- supporting Asian and' African Speaking at a concelebrated One Magisterium tion of books and of a Catho- students at Swiss universities, Mass marking the 25th anni versary, of the consecration of , "The selective reporting and lic press becomes of imperative Archbishop Ligonde said that the Ukrainian-rite Archbishop Am f~aturing of the .views of those: importanee in order to present fact that five of 'Haiti's seven brose Senyshyn. of Philadelphia, theologians who dissent from au- an accurate· appreciation of the bishops were porn 1here contrib Cardinal Krol noted one of the thentic tradition and the living difference between the various utes to the improvement of the archbishop's "less heralded but magisterium," the Cardinal as- views of particular schools of Church-state situation. more important contributions serted," and also the views of theology on the one hand and The Church in Haiti, he said, • • • was a dedicafion to the' those impregnated with imma-' the official teaching of the one is concentrating now on efforts , magisterium of the Church,", he to combat illiterarcy. Sohools eatholic press." , obServed. ' have been built in all parishes. .eformist The'~logy Philadelphia Priest Aiding the Church's literacy Press of Truth campaign and religious forma Then he declared: "Today we Shrine Director "It becomes. increasingly im- tion program, the archbishop observe the trend in some sec said, are the· recent translation of WASHINGTON (NC)-Father pO!-'tant to have a press commit tions of the ·communications ine dia to feature certain schools William F. McDonough of Phil- ' ,ted to truth-the full truth-~ Mass texts into the Creole lan guage and the increase in of theologians and to represent adelphia has been appointed di- information rather than to for
rector- of the National Shrine of I mation or propaganda or even trained catechists. them almost as a parallel ma . gisterium (teaching, authority). the Immaculate Conception, 10- I deformation. " uBecause of the news and cated on ·,the grounds of the . "Archbishop Senyshyn's in-, sensational value, some sections <::atholic University of America terest in 'developing a Catholie press for his faithful will be Where,A of both the Catholic and secular here. I a source of great blessing." , Fatner McDonough has been press almost give exclusive space not to the schools of theoiogians servin~ as assistant director who intel'ipret authentic tradi- since October, 1966. He suc tion and the living magisterium " ceeds Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Means A but to the so-called 'reformist', J. Grady of Chicago. schools' of theology." • FUNERAL HOME Father McDonough, born in ";Frequently," Cardinal Krol Philadelphia in 1921, was gradu 469 LOCUST STREET s~d, "the views of such schools ated from St. Charles Borromeo FALL RIVER, MASS. ar~ not labeled as views of parSeminary and ordained in 1945.
ticular 'schools of theology but Since his ordination he has held
, .672-3381 as views reflecting the Second pastoral posts in the Philadel
Wilfred C. James E. phia area, except from 1949 to
Driscoll Sullivan, Jr. 1951, when he served as secre
Detroit Inter-Parish tary, of the apostolic nunciature in Yugoslavia. He is a brother Plan Bears Fruit of Archbishop ThomaS J. Mc DETROIT (NC)-:-:-A year after .Donough of Lou,isville,· K~. Funeral Home its inception, the Detroit Arch diocese's Inter-Parish Sharing '571 Second· Street Program has' distributed' more than a half-million dDllars to poor, Fall River, Mass.
parishes, enabled one to hire 679-6072
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That report comes from Fa ther Norman Thomas, program, executive 'director, who' said $747,000 has been put into the sharing fund since the program' started in August 1966, and $584,000 has been distributed, much of it for maintenance work at poor parishes. This could not have been done without out side help, he observed. But the sharing program isn't'
just money, he said. Money help
ed hire a 'lay theologian. Buf
people also helped set up sum
mer camps and initiated a pro-"·
gram for tne ,elderl)'. ..':
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JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN Funeral Bome
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Murphy Starts 24th Year at P-Town:
fl1E
ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, 1967
19
Balance Marks Compet,itio'n Ted Regan of fall River In Caipe-Isiland Hoop Loo,P Coyle Graduate at Nebraska College ByPE'lERBAR!EK Norton
H~h
S,tudies for Career as Teacher-Coach
Coach
Balanceag.ain this Winter-as it waslastseasoD when .a trip!e first-:;place tie resulted-is the forecast for the Cape-Island seven..zl;eam scholastic basketball league which Jan. 2 next. Meanwhile,
BY .JOE MJlRANDA A former Coyle High athlete,
!Edward James Regan of Fall River is oontinuinghis studies at 4i\. C-I te..ll ·11 !Peru ...ue ' 'con Duers:VI' OOn- the so-caned young ,te.ams in the Nebraska. College inFeru, teDtthemselv-es wIth ,nOD- Cepe-IslllI1d competition. FirstRegan, !!mown at Ted' since
lea:g:ue engagemenits whiCh year Coach Curt Matson an- ooyh=d, is lPUTSUing a career :are likewise impo1'!bantin tici,pates a building season . at lin ;physitla[ ed!\.lcati1>n wath .asnl1le"!:l ns :se&3on-end tourna Chatham. Sandwich's sigbts are ho;pes e9:1' beeoming a teaclter :mentSElections ,;;rre bnserl :on;[I set on a winning season, so~e- cooeh a:l'tergraduation. . club's ~var-cl1 winning percent tbing it was una,ble .to aC~lleve .' 'Teihily is a neshman at Peru :age. NuntueketHi,ghand Chat last Winter whE!!1 It fimsbed entering cD]]lege after gr.aaua- , ham are expected 10 mov~ right ,~th an over~all 8-9 record, and, 4il1>n f:r~m M;:;gr. Coyle ,High in ' into the thhlk .~ '2-'8 league, mark. 'Chatham, Taunton where Ihe p!l2yed vnr <Oftha dlam ,wbicb 'WIll; 1-'9 in IDe ~eague,sity basketball aJ;ld baseball. pionshlp ll' a e e
completed the season WIth an'" JR,egcm is also a member of "with ,Morthll~ :ova-.all 1-14 record. 'iP-eru'slJmsketbalUl t!eamand Will V:J.D£:Yard Hal' 'storting 'his ·24th. year at the be used in a reserve ro:!e this witlh Nau belm, Cone1l Dave Mwphy bas season and has shown the po -set which were !four staril;el'S and a~nsferee, 'tentia'! to beoome a startex in m :last season~s mound Which to bUlld ~ethe future. 1three-way,dead ProvincetoWl[l High club ~llS look O o o e h L e o s e a s o n . Murphy weu; oounting St. l.\Iary's Parish Mill~r figures " ,on, Kim Rilleaufor .another A member of St. MaI:Y's Parms Nauset quin- 1 ,strong periformance this Winter, isb' in Fall River, 'Ted is the t it looks as if this ,youngster only ,son of l\lx.and M~. Ed:tet hlls :0., pretty Peter Bartek gpod shot at nll will be lost'to. the team. ~ause 'wai'd Joseph Regan of 22 Joh~ ,the honOrs. in the up-eo~g cl a football-mcurred UilJury. Street. enrr.p!ligns. " " . ' , ,~~ilfave 'Talent The, l:B'-year '-0111, fiv~ !foot, l:Iis Warriors will be out, ro ," Six~three Dana 'I'hQmas,. :a 'eight mch athlete, is a guard lmprove upon their J162 per- lI;;ronsfeJ;'ee ,!from the West pro-, :'and .geed, ball :handler. He eentoge ,ot. the '66-'67s!'l~on v;1ces Murphy willi 'l':eigil~ \be ,weighs 1.'55 pOImds an4 his, when .they rorilped to 16' \1i~o- ,":~;s seldom' ,enj:oyed 'dUTiing, his prowess as a' setup man and ' ries in 21 statts, over-all, while nlmostlo[uarter, century 'of backeourt operative 'have al compiling an 8-2 mark for, 'an . ,coachin~. H;e wHl be used, along :ready 'beeome apparent ,to the .800 league record. " ',with' forwarllts--Art and Frank Peru 'coaching ,staff. Scott Nickersroi and' :Erinn , ':iac1t:ett ~d Dick PeterS. " B l o n d e and well groomed, Lyons, who 'together formed "The veteraIl. mentor, Who has ' 'Ted has 'been on the alih.letic one of the best back-court com taken p-town to the Tech tOUl' seene iln the Fall River Diocese :tinnti1)lls ml rul Cape 'Coil lnst new atrteast nine ~ is :for many yeats, !first as a hoop season, :are .back for onother ~ounting on IFrcmk Hurst and ster and baseball play~r foI' :St. campaign in which they, hope, Sonny Rodrlquesas back-up Mmy's in the CYO Leagues. to j)rovide not only the best l!C.en. Steve Silva, Jim Rodriques league defense, but, also to add and Rock Papitsaq are fighting Played for Burns more power to the ,offensive to break into the first string Regan began his ,organized aUac1t:. While individual~y tht:Y' lineup. .Meanwhile, the battle baseball career in 'lfue Federal may rate on a level with sev is wide-open for two other Division -of Little League Base e~al ot~er Cape players, tbey s~uad 'berths. as Murphy con 'ball, graduated t1) .the CYO Jun T~D REGAN of Fall River give i Miller .pro?tably the best tin~es:: evaluate ;some eager wr iLeague and later divided ibis duo n the ClrCUI . ,asplran ' . . '~,~tween Coyle and St. Nucleus a.t Harwieli ',The Capeel';1b's PrY 1Ule.lid "!MaQr's of tl;:;e lntennediate Ted had been accepted ,at ~ ior Leagu~anq later played,:fM . ' ' .' ,; 'the"off the Winter mtlloor,cmnpmgn .' , , college in Florida and two local Ule Cathedral's entry in ,the Slx-f~t-fo~ JIm Rawl Ill, " . 'tomorrow night with 1Ilhe bigfilt , Loogue. but decided. upon the , Jntenned,iate loop. ~man J.D Miller's plans. p~y- sCheduled betw-ee:nDenn.Yar- , ()I;l the, diamonil, Re,gan institutes, Nebraska schooL Be ,had, aJso Regan also perfonned fol' ~. hIs i1bixd, ~~ he. lIB a "mouth, thefavonte in ,Ure Cnpe- ,!played tPree :seasons. under received 'a questionnair~, hom Coyle's entry in the Class A Jumor-:Rnwl,s lob ;agnm Will be '. ow.ny Ccmf.erence, lind ,t}re Miller-, !coach Jim, BUirns :at Coyle as.an Miilitaiy Academy at West Eastern Massachusetts (Tech) to~e care o.f the backboards." men of Nauset of the e-[ .iloop. infielder. Ted was the starting , tile 1FIomt, New York. wh:ic1l he did .oommen&ibly Whfleilihis is a :non-!league af- ,second baseman as :n junior and , IRegail played his se!hofustic and New Epgland tournaments. Pero, a !long way from the lastse~~. A ~ower of stren~'fnir, it mny proviesome:idea ,,:gained.the It'eputation asa s,p~y basketball for coach Jim Lan lFan River. Diocese, has a' tAl>uelb ~ast Wmter, Miller hope~ more, cf the pll)tentia:! m Mlesetwo ,type ibi1lter, wh0 had a respect cagan at' Ctnwle, participating of familiar surroundings aD - Imp~ent by lRaw1 this seatstanding clubs able batting average. son will find. him as one of the, ()UPrincl. "~ourneJ' ' ,Regana!so playeclbaseball with the f:reShman team, moVing Regan's roommat.e. Tom BGtel 00, is a member of Sacred Heart area"s be&'!; plvotmen. , ,v.dS'. . in the Summer Playground rlo the junior varsity -as a sopb How~;v:er, Coach ~ank The two top ran.ln~g -Cape Leagues for Kennedy Park 4:lmOre and playing varsitj "bis Parish in Fall River ancll" the :!final two cam.paigns. -pair were ap,poneIll'ls in the CYO checo at Martha's Vmeyard:as way Con!eren(le oeom'hi'Des meet JllHping his teEmmntes win sev Leagues. lmwilling :to make any conces- JIlhe 'two best C-Iteams.:at::sea eral championships as an in Bom~toWn Rool11ll1a.te siOIlll :to Nauset. :Ricll Harring- :son'sendiD the P.riinci,pais' fieider-outfielder. J Teddy gpent his Summer as a Regan was a member of twe ton and Charley Leighton, 'IDomnam'eDt. 'This lis >the mnne championship teams as a guard recreation., mstroctor for the standouts 5:or the Islanders last dinte objecliiv.e of :an Cape, Cod Boy's state Selectee for St. Mary's in the CYO Jun- Fan River Park Department,_ sensop., provide the mleleus for ~binatiODS wmcll, ilike :all COO1:bingbasebaJm at Keniiled, Following his junior y~ :at what Pncb:aeo hopes will lbe an- oUIiher :SOh'GGls m Massachusetts, Park. Coyle, Began represented the other 5Uooessful season ill theihav~ :an ey.e ~peeled ml 'the tile Sto:fford Post of Fall ilUver Orthodox Service
quest for ±he ',Pennant frog. 'Tech tommey-. The ;pri1ie of itbe at l3cy's State, :a pre-gram spon Mike Ford .and 'Byron Capliee itwo J1eagnes w'illibe at :stake 'soret'f 'by ,the American Legion, ,FoJ' Late Cardinal
are the only returning stallts l tomlllDrOW might W1heniD-Y Ell NEW YORK (NC)-AD 01'-' in which ,eaeh chapter ,sends two on Coach Charley Dunbar's rtertains:Na iU:S e .1" Barnstable boys nfter' a caref,uleValuat£on dox memorial' service for .FJraJl PlUMBING & HEATING. INC. rElUl'W.ich .quintet. T.he Harwidh, plays at Harwich, JBoume :at of their !Character, ipel'SGnality -cis Cardinal Spellman was con Sales ana se.r,vlte men'tnr~cts to 1USe 1h3, Sandwich, Provincetown at Fal ducted at dlhe prelate's ,bieil' in :and !eadership ,qualities. . for OomestlC Clyde Zeigler, a lltrong':re ,Diouth, Chatham at Hanover :the :nave -mf St.Patrick's, eatbe Regan's decision to :attend , " .",,:" 1lil1l 11ldustrlal bounder and equally compet;enti nn'd .Nantncket.lVS.Old Roches-, dral. on Burners . ' Pem was made carefully, as shooter, in ~neof the three open tel' m ,iMatto'p'tl1sett. he half-hour service called a 995-1631 spots he must riD. But,. Dunbarl On Satlmday,Mm1thl3'sVme '''Tr.isagiOI~':' was conducted. by 2283 AC\J~HN£T AVE~ is confronted with probably the yani iPUws :at Cnnne1ite :and' ,Arc1hbisbop 1akavos, G r.e e k 'Salary Boost
biggest Cll.peassignment iin Cardimil ·Cushing ,is ;at .Nan NEW BEDfORD primate of North and. South finilmg a replacement for ~eket. Teachel'S
Fol' America. Steve Robbins, one of the area's CLEVELAND tNC) - A w -o. ,? finest atbletes for the last ary committee of the 'Cleveland Investigate' Bombing . 'COu.p1e -of yenrs" who <has gXad -diocese school 'system bas rec uated.. Last Winter, the Rougb Of Catholic School ommended starting salatiesof riders carved out .an ,1lOO over MITCHELL. (NC} - An elll'ly lay teachers should range from ,all mark, winlling il06 o:f 20 con , -
morning .ex);f)losion ofa ibombin $6;300 to $6,700. , Jtests with an 8-2 league record. the entrance' to the audItorium The committee was appointed Wood, Metal Desks and Chairs
Cha:tham nnd SallldWich of JE[oJyS,pirit :School here 'in . 'by Ms~. RiehaTdE. MeRale, di roresan sch001 1R1perintendent. South Dakota is under investiga The ~t lthnt 'this is IN:antuck '"'JUST GIVE ME A CHANCE TO QUoU: tion by ;police. -rile' $6;300 salary .,voult'! be lor ,et's finrt senson in the Cape Those .resJ}Onsiblefor the bomb ~achers wiith a lbachelon de Island !Cir.euit gift:!! tile Island urI SHAWMUT STReer • NEW BEDfORD, MASS.
ers gr.anter des'i1'e Ito ,corral the' ing, whie'h caused some $:roo gree; tbe $6,700 fG'r ilJIosewith title honor.s.. Coach Howie in damage to the auditorium, a master"s degree. :P. O. Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque
Msgr. McHale said iLbe finance !North will build lbill club .have aotbeen <discoverUl. Father Te1ephone 993-1264
;around Glenn Menard, a 8-3 T. J. !IIaeP.hill:Jii ]Jl8S.tm, ;Baid be eommittee ~f 'the diocese board good :a1l-.'lll1OUllt'! courtman. tIad,l1lO idea :as to .~ the bomb of educatfton will 1lGDSder the proposal. Sandwich and Chatham are wall aet.
gets:::mcl.erw.ny on Tuesday night,
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Superiors Recommend' Individlual Contracts for TeCllchingSisters
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Dec. 14, 1967
-P~rtici-
lPolicemtrn!J1 otn Beat BackbO>l111e ~ Of e clPitr~unD s W or on'. C rnm~'
RICHMOND (N-C) Religious of tM Sacred Heart pants in an education meeting of Mary. here involving more than 40 A contract "would place the WASHINGTON" (NC) - The by policemen and to put mOl'e major superiors of religious· Sister's ~ork on a professional \il1ltional capital has made the patrolmen on the streets; acquicommunities have recommend-, . basis and give her a better feel tlirst move in its war on crime, sition of 66 new scout cars; imed that schools make contracts irig of involvement," Sister Cl part of President Johnson's provement in the gathering and directly with' tea~hing Sisters Trinity, said~ oompaign 19 make it a model dissemination of crime infor':instead of with their communiInsure Certification mation. t i e s . ' , Several speakers called for ~'t y. The President promised such Murphy comes to his job from They also called for a "real- salaries adequate to, provide El fight earlier this year when the, Justice Department, where istic look" at the salaries of Sisters with, a 'decent style of be installed the, city's new he was' assistant directo,r' of its teaching nuns, stressed the im- ,living. They said Sisters do not llJA,ayor-type of administration, Office of Law Enforcement Asportance of state certification of expect a salary comparable to ,OOd in recent days prodded the- 'sistance. He started his career teachers, and asked for estab- public school teachers, but do mew officials to get things under as a patrolman in New York and 'lishment of religious councils in feel it should cover their needs. way. They came up with a 21-, became head of that city's high schools to assist teachers A Sister's salary must cover ll»oint anti-crime program in ~O police academy. He 1s also credin religious instruction.' ,the cost of her food, clothing, iliays, and appointed a new offl- ited with revamping the police ' These were among major rec- education, medical . expenses, Glial for this city, a director of department of Syracuse. ommendations coming out of a ' cultural and :ecreatIonal exIJUblic safety, to implement it. Complicated Problem meeting of Teligious superiors penses, a~d, III some cases, The policeman on the beat Murphy said at his introduc'with Msgr. Richard J. Burke, transportatIon. l3ti.ll is going to be the backbone tion here that he still thinks the Richmond'diocesan superintendOn the subject of certifica (§f it all. , patrolman on the beat is the .' ent of schools and other edu- tion, one Sister stated that "if ' tea~h ers !"re not q u· alif'e'd I't I'S Wa lter E. Washington', Wash- most important instrument the' "The purpose of , our' meet1 '. " llngton's Negro' mayor, named police department lias, to fight ing," said Msgr. :ijurke, was to a dlss~r:Vlce to ~he commumty: Patrick J. Murphy to the office crime. He wants the policemen exchange thoughts and opinions 4ux1liary ~Ishop J .. LOUIS (i)f director of public safety. In here to identify themselves with , concerm'llg VI'tal I'ssues that are F.laherty of Ri.chmond .sald that , , th a t M urp h Y wou Id th e peopI "A. U X. I,L I A R, Y:. Bishop- 1 affecting our school, systems,." e 'm the n eI'oahborhoods 't> Just as a hOSPlta,1 admmistra~or _ Wlnounclllg &versee the police, fire. and 'they patrol. , Elect Richard J." Ham, a' " w o u l d not want a nurse WIth ei'Y'il defense departments here, Even in the toughest neigh- Maryknoller from Chicago" On Professlo~al Basis an incomplete course, a school 'bhe mayor pointed out that borhoods, Murphy said, "there Vas been appointed, by Pope,· Of the 2~ teachmg communi- administrator wants only,flilly IlnOdern-day crises could requi,re are a lot of law abiding citizens ,ties in the Richmond diocese, qualified teachers. ehat all three of these agencies who want a policeman there and :'Pai.ll VI to ',be 'auxiliary bish~ ,23 were Present at the meeting'. Sister, Rose Marie, who ~operate' to meet some emel'- who want to do something '. op of,Guatemala Ci,ty. " 'Msgr. Burke said the highlights handles' teacher certification !Jencies, . , about crime too." " " of the' group discussions will for the Richmond diocese, said , ' Give Big Try '" He added that it is the pollceform the' basis of recommenda- "every effort is being put forth The whole nation is watching ma!l'S job "to tind these peopie, tions to the diocesan board of to insure certification of all ~ what happens, because it is ,get to know them and use them , education.',.' , ' teachers by 1970." At present, 1gertain that the crusade against as sources of strength and inriG The suggestion ~hat schools some Sisters without degrees IJrime :wlll be given a big try formatiQn. '-He needs to be free ' , ", • "make contracts dIrectly with are' allowed to operate under facie, especially since 1968 is to go to P.T.A. meetings" take NE\V, YORK (:r-lC).-,-EPlS~' teaching Sisters' was made, in 'suPervision of experienced and. Slu election year. Some of the 21 kids to ball games or, whate~er , ,oopal ,Churchmen for South, a report by Sister Trinity of the . certified teachers. poihts in, 'the anti-crime pr~- is nec~sary to become part of ,Africa headquartered' here, I /if3m are new here, but they the neIghborhood." , , d 'n 1 th llillay not be new for some of the Asserting that it is "a very h~we .denounc~ as 1 ega . e eMher big cities.' These . points hard, complicated problem for b'lal m PretorIa, Sou~h Afnca, include: 'a middle-class white policeman of 36 South w:est ~rI~~ns, ac- " f:oordination and improve- to identify with people iiI ,poor, cused of terrorIst ?cttvlttes, ~d Gene'ral of Salesian Fathers Cites ment of programs dealing with Negro neighboroods," Murphy ,has asked people III the Umted juvenile delinquents; special said that is where the, training ,States to urge the U. S. goveqI. :, Need to ~Make Youth Feel They Are Loved' kaining in "community rela- comes in. "It means a lot of ment to protest to the South LOS ANGEr...ES (NC)-The, a :Ilollower of St. John Bosc:o iions techniques" for policemen hard work by the, p01Fcemen African government. (JOllcerlled with such relations; and the department," he added, The 36, men, who face a ,pos , Superior ,General Of ,the Salesian . (fuunder of the Salesians) he ooerger of police' precincts to "but this is what police-com-, 'sible death penalty, a're described : Fathers reports, that vocations to ,,"must defend young PC9ple. It "!o!t down on clerical jobs held' munity relations is all' about." . by the' Episc'opal Churchmen : his order are on the increase in is necessary to make youth feel . 8& "m'ostly peasant farmers, with . the U.S. and in other parts of they are loved.." 's'ome shopkeepers and artisans. .' the world-,.particularly.in Yugo'They are' Christians from the I slavia; Vietnam and Mexico. ' , Ovamboland 'section of South " : Father Luigi' Ricceri, S.D.B., o West Africa. Some are Anglicans, .says he' 'is not pessimistic abOut Alexian Bro«"~ers', Hospital Facilities '.... like Toivo Herman ja Toivo, an ,'youth. H~discoUnted the pro-' 'African 'nationalist, leader who ,portion of the aliegect youth re 'No Longer Appropri(lte~ was forbidden by government . bellion and"· claimed" that the CHICAGO (NC): - Alexian said .it will be at least several 'authorities to act as, a lay ,probl~m ;i~ 'with older people ' ,w~o ,fail to, giv:~ youth ideals. months before any 'announce : reader."" Sl'others Hospital here has re WV",an, ,Theadniinistration ,of South -, The, 'Sicilian-born priest, ,~n
!leased the results' of a year-long ment is made as to the hospital's , 3-6592 ,West Africa was vested in' the ~ute :toMexico, where, he' s,tudy' which concluq.ed thl;lt .the future. The study 'recommended con- . government of 'the Union of -participate.in the Salesians~ 75th'
Cacilities of the 70-year. old, CHARLES F. VARGAS South Africa in 1920 by mandate anniversary' ,celebration,' noted , building "are no longer appro , struction of 'a new, 350.,.bed fa ' ~hrough an interpreter .'tha~ . cilityon,the' same'site ,as' the, ,·of' theLeagu~ of Nations. ~I'iate"'for use on an indefinjte' ,~54 ROCKDALE AVENUE I .' . basis.' , , original building, with' compre .. . . ' hensive NEW BEDFORD, MASS. programs' which' would Anglicans Meet' '. The study" conducted 'by a ~'Lcity' make it the teaching and re ,~rivate consulting firm; was VALLETTA (NC) '- Some' 30 'initiated by the Alexian Broth search center for the Alexian , Continued ,from Page One, Catholic and Anglican repre- Brothers' entire community.' , ~I'S to help them determine pIe direction we need to begin . sentatives will meet here at the _ ' their future role and goals in our discovery of personal re , end of December for the third ,the local, health care picture. : in a series of discussions 'outlin: de,mp~ive lov~," he said. ' .' mg tjie problems' fa~ing 'ChrisBrother Reginald Gleasure, Our Problems : nan unity. Results, of tlie :meet @,F.A., hospital administrator, Los' An'geles Drs. Margaret :ings, scheduled to end on Jan. , Storkan and James Carey; both 3, 1968, will' be forwarded to TOR9NTO (NC) - A bill to , of whom have service with mis ,Anglican Archbishop Michael broaden the grounds for divorce Remembe~ ~cor sions in' Africa;' urged' physi was introduced in the Canadian cians to gi~e themselves to the Romsey of Canterbury and Continued from Pabe One' I!ope Paul VI. parliament amid a spurt of en application 'of this teaching by, \boo luxurious and only an ex thusiasm from legisators and volunteering to serve in under ternal holiday, an occasion of Protestant and Jewish spokes developect countries. " , CanC!l«lli«ull Petitions immoderate dissipa,tion or of men. , Dr.. Jolin R. Cavanagh of TORONTO (NC)-More than/ wasteful luxury and superfluous But the vice-chancellor of the Washington, D. C., ,a member vanity enjoyed at the expense Toronto archdiocese objected of Pope Paul VI's commission , 3,000 Canadian pastors are be of others. ,Let us recall that the that the new bill could olead to on population, family and birth, ing asked to circulate petitions , in . their parishes against pro true richness of Christmas is an "a real breakdown in family said the statements by Pius XII posed relaxation of Canadian HEATn~G mterior and religious one. 'life throughout the nation." , and Paul VI on birth control abortion laws. "And, sec(mdly, let us remem- Father Edward F. Bohler "represent the position of the bel' on Christmas the needs of said the proposed grounds' are Church for both priest and 0ur neighbors. Let no one for- so' broad that "there is grave physician. He urged doctors to :!.UIIIIIIIII11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1I111111111111~ get the poor on the day of the cause for alarm." ~:, WINTER STORE HOURS '~ speak on the pill only as physi poverty of Christ, but let each' search out and find a means of '~e noted that the Canadian Cians "and not as amateur theo hierarchy had filed a report logians.~' d<Jing some good deed on this with a government divorce Martin Work, executive di holy and most .l:l.Uman holiday. study committee stating that rector of the Natiomil Council . Mary is watching us." the Church would not oppose : of Catholic Men,- said the recent Sciturdqy, 9 t~ 5, ' , , . After his talk the Pope led moderate reforms. But the " World" Congress of the Lay the crowd in the recitation of proposed changes are far broad- " /\postolate, in Rome was not at ,,-, ~Iosed All Day, Sunday = the Angelus. In all, he was at er than that, he said. ' , tempting to dictate to the hier the window for 10 minutes and Meanwhile'spokesmen for the archy. "People from through lingered to acknowledge with United Church and for Jewish out the world were speaking to I'aised hands the cheers and ap- groups praised the bill, calling the Church an!i saying, 'Here
Tel. 997-9358 ~
plause of those in the square it "necessary" and "long overare our needs, here are our ~ UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN below.' "due." , ' problems.' " ,
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